Of Elders and Olders

Like any occultist who is honest and still in growth, when I look back on my practice ten years ago, twenty years ago, even two years ago in some respects, I feel like I wasn’t really ready. Not ready for the things I was doing, whether that thing was a leadership role or a book I was trying to write. It’s a funny one really because without the many mistakes I made in that exact order I wouldn’t be where I am to look back so smugly on what my former self didn’t know. If all our creek beds are still flowing and bubbling with life then there will be no year in our life where we couldn’t look back and know we could have done it all better now.

I have had quite a few occult olders along the way, but few reliable elders. So whilst I am neither young nor yet particularly old I feel like it’s time to get in training to be one. It requires training, preferably through example of other elder witches in our lives who model all the good stuff: body and age positivity, reciprocal respect for the young and their new current of vision, skills and resources and the willingness to share them inter-generationally, respecting boundaries, openness to change balanced with a storehouse of wisdom you only get through lived experience. A big part of the spirit of Old Craft as I understand it lies in preserving and resurrecting the threads of inter-generational knowledge. When this isn’t available we resolve ourselves to becoming the elder we want to see in the world, and to helping to mend the threads that have broken. This is the work of communities not of individuals though, we can’t do it all on our own, and we won’t see it in our own lifetime. The grace to accept that is also a big part of polishing your elder.

Everyone can get older, but to be an elder you need a community to be an elder to. To open yourself to that you need two things:

1. Relevancy - you have a skill, wisdom, stories or even resources and you’re willing to share them with the young. ie: you bring something to the table.

2. A willingness to see the relevancy of what the young bring in return, or could potentially bring if listened to - you too are still learning about the new world that is unfolding around you, and they are your guide.

Everybody wants to feel they have something relevant to bring and derogatory comments about the young only breeds the same in return. Young people are learning from you all the time, or trying to, even when they don’t realise they are. An elder needs to model how healthy reciprocity works and what it looks like, because many may not have learned it from their parents. Yes, they might have said it about your generation first, but who is the fully-fledged experienced adult here? If someone has to make the first move in being mature it is probably the one trying to be an elder!

Younger people can also help to create a good inter-generational environment. Look at the way you speak about ageing and try not to use ‘you look so much younger than you are’ as a compliment, or anything that suggests beauty and sexuality are only to be found among the young. This can be alienating, it lets your older friend know aspects of their life and body are gross to you now and that they have to edit out their sexual being around you. Plus, if you don’t die before their age you too possess a future elder-self you need to start nurturing, don’t give your future self these ugly messages. If you’re a witch then the quintessential image of the witch is a hag. Mainstream society has Othered this image precisely because it is powerful. The face and body worn-into-character by the elements and the artistic hand of Time should be celebrated by witches if by no one else. What is the actual point of us otherwise?

Feeling like you weren’t or aren’t ready for things, the accumulation of mistakes and what you’ve done with them so far, these are all grist for the mill in honing your own future elder. Don’t just hone your elder in defiance of your olders and vow to do the opposite to them in every way. Being an elder has to be an act of mending, not an act of war. Otherwise you are still the reaction to their action. Or if you do do this I hope for you that it’s only for a time and you build realisations from it and move on. An elder needs to manifest a sense of at-one-ness with themselves, so that younger people can grow towards that like a plant towards sun. Starting out with a resentful or angry core drive will not take you there, or at least, if it does it will be down many a crooked trail. And perhaps you could have only got to your future elder in that way and no other. To be able to say, now or in the future, to the younger witch who comes to sit at your hearth with you, I affirm as necessary all the twists and turns of your path and acknowledged mistakes that brought you to be you, is perhaps one of the greatest gifts an elder can offer, and just like it were the kindly sister of the Evil Eye, it can be done with the gaze alone.

Ep.9 Van Demonian Supernatural: Soul Collector

The Allport Museum is an era pressed in the pages of a book like an old flower. Each room cordoned off from touching, our time, frozen, kept still forever, silent but for the backing of the ticking grandfather clock. When I paused before the room containing Mary Allport’s harp I stopped and frowned. 

“Who plays her harp?” I whispered.

“What do you mean?” My guide asked. “Oh, now, today? I really don’t know. I don’t think anyone is allowed to play it.”

 “Instruments are meant to be played.” I couldn’t have explained to her my strong identification with the unplayed instrument preserved as a relic of a bygone time, for seemingly no purpose but that of preservation itself.

“It’s for it’s own protection. It’s very old now.” 

I nodded my understanding yet my words argued the point. “Better, if one were a harp, whose sole purpose is to make music, to fall apart playing when your time has come than to sit unplayed for centuries.”

The cabinet I had to find is stored in a room you can only enter with a librarian escort, and generally speaking only writers and researchers are allowed. The Crowther Collection is separated on opposites sides of this vault of hidden, lost things are stored, because during life the man the world knew as Cecil had a long-standing grudge against Crowther. 

            “So why do you want to look at the cabinet of curiosities?” the librarian asked. 

            “I’m writing a novel in which Cecil is one of the characters.” On the spot I decided to do it so it wouldn’t be a lie. 

            “Why Cecil though? I think Moreton was a far more interesting sort of man. Cecil just appears to have been very good at making money. Nothing much personal shows through with him at all.” 

            I exhaled air through my nostrils in quiet humour. When you look at your own life and you remember how much you’ve already edited. The things you’ve burned, the edited photograph albums with old boyfriends removed, should we not see the dead in ourselves? The traces left of a life one hundred and fifty years later are but the ashes of a story fire that’s most pungent truths sometimes don’t make the cut when it’s time to decide what is preserved. What of a father’s life do we preserve to show to grandchildren? What of a grandfather’s?

“How do people know that yet, if no one’s written a proper biography?” I asked gently, not wanting to appear defensive of a dead man. “Surely no one with such a fine eye for beautiful things could have been so straightforward?”

            “True. Who knows what he was up to in his spare time, I guess?”

            We rode the elevator up to ‘11’ (which you can’t see on the visitor maps and is only reachable by staff that have a particular level card to swipe) we met two other librarians. They spotted where we were heading. 

            “Are you going up to 11? I’ve been here five years and I’ve never got to see 11! Are you a writer or something?”

            “Yes.”

            “Oh you’re here for the grisly medical equipment!”

            Clearly I have come to look like someone who is here for the grisly medical equipment. “No,” I muttered. “Just… shells…”

“Here it is, the whole thing’s Huon Pine,” The lady explained. As she opened the drawers the smell of my century poured out and I tried to breathe it in like it was snuff. The cabinet contained a great deal more than shells. Small packets of powders in red and white, little viols of dirt… “What is anyone going to do with little bits of dirt like that?” she asked. Fortunately I’d tucked away the very similar glass vial of dirt from his grave hanging around my own neck at that very moment.“Nobody’s really catalogued this properly,” the librarian remarked. “They were basically 19.th century hoarders. Moreton started keeping things even before Cecil carried it on. Moreton was the interesting one, with his photography and everything. Or Mary and her painting! What got you interesting in old Cecil out of all the Allports?” she queried again. “He just seemed to me like the rock who held the family together and lived only to perform his duties to his family, if he had a fun side there’s no record of it. Other than that he eccentrically pottered away collecting books and memorabilia in his spare time. What does a novelist do with that?”

            “It’s hard to explain,” I murmured, running my fingers reverentially over the tiny vials and boxes. 

Beyond all the tiny containers full of my century, and the mummified bat and toad, my eye was immediately drawn to the small spiral shaped white shell which is identical to the one I found on his grave. When I lay my fingertips on it and felt something jolt through my body. I picked up one of the cowries and held it to my ear. 

“Do you hear the ocean from the nineteenth century in there?” the librarian joked. 

“One has to check.”

As I left the library I found myself walking behind two young men close to my age. They were walking arm in arm, one of them wearing a suit and the other dressed more casually. The coincidence made the hairs on the back of my arms stand to. I thought it lovely, taking it for a friendly gesture as it once would have been in my time, but I smiled when I saw them shift to holding hands and realized they were in fact lovers. They were going the same way as me and I couldn’t help observing them as a slightly uncanny manifestation.

As I had not yet once seen two men go hand-in-hand up Liverpool Street with the blithe happiness of these two. They were gawked at by every second or third passerby, I’m sorry to report, even today. One old lady visibly jumped a little when she noticed they were both male. But something inside me flared up in rebellion and defiant elation even at this. I felt such an aching sorrow-softened species of happiness to see how unaffected by it they were, as though they neither noticed nor cared. And why should they? Despite what we've all heard in the news the law of this land allows them this basic right these days. See how that better world you promised me has partially arrived, my dear? I thought, feeling the gentle tap-tap of his grave dirt vial against my chest as I walked.

For many of us the ear to hear us and the heart to understand haven't been born yet. So we leave traces. A letter still unopened. A journal with subtle encoded meaning. A story unhoused at last. The echoes of their voice are still reverberating. Whenever someone catches the signal they come alive again for a moment. Nothing is ever truly over, just deferred. Ours is a story yet to be told, and always to be told.

Ep. 5 Van Demonian Supernatural: St Jude and the Lament of Mabon

Dear Henry, 


See? I’m practicing proper cursive script. Do you like it? It’s not as good as yours yet. But I’m good at picking up fussy, flourish things like this. Tiny stitches and loops on letters… Carmen’s always been the one who handles the blunt force things in our lives, and I put the finishing touches on. But I’m not so good at describing things in words. 

            You say it’s so important that we ‘say it all clear’ and tell our story loudly while we still can because you never know when it will all be snatched away from you. But I’m not really sure how to do that. I wish you could teach me how to write. I will try and describe what happened leading up to us finding our next lead, but I don’t promise it will be high art. 

            Carmen and I were in the kitchen getting ready for work and she was dressed in her nurse’s uniform. “He found this little prayer card of Saint Jude and he’s stuck it to an old jar with a tea light in it. I think he’s praying to it,” she told me as if it was pitiful.

            I shrugged. “Well, he’s a nineteenth-century Catholic in trouble, what do you want from him?”

            “Do you know who St Jude is?” she asked. 

            I shook my head. 

            “He’s the patron saint of lost causes...”

            I pressed my lips together sadly and we both acknowledged the poignancy. “Do you think we should tell him about great-grandad Cecil’s collection yet?”

            “Might be a good idea to do it soon, give him something to focus on, going through all that old stuff. You know, like busy work? That’s usually good for grief.”

            “Don’t you think we should talk to someone else about him? He needs more than busy work. He needs a future of some kind… I mean, by no fault of our own, or his, we have an illegal immigrant from another time with no ID... What are we going to do with him long term? How is he going to contribute to society? He tells me that his own major saleable skill was being able to play music, but he can’t do that anymore. I asked him to write down his major remaining skills and he listed ‘sending the evil eye’ and ‘laudanum tolerance’…” 

            “Well he was only recently a teenager I suppose… I know he says that maturity levels are way down since then, but his skillset sounds on point… What are you thinking we should do? Like going to the authorities or something?” Carmen crossed her arms. “Because fuck that, I’m sorry, but I know people who can get him fake ID done up…”

            “I think we need to find someone to help us. Not the authorities, but not necessarily criminals either… I mean, someone that knows about… well… the supernatural.” I was waiting for her to mock me because if she did I was going to remind her that you came back from the bloody dead so all the cards are on the table now. 

            “A priest? Are you thinking the Catholic angle?”

            I shook my head. “No I’m thinking of something a little more outside the box than that.”

            That’s what led me out there looking for witches, occultists, mediums, spiritualists, whatever turns up when you go looking for the psychic riff raff of the city. I will say right from the start that whatever Carmen says it was more than coincidence that an Allport descendent happened to be standing in the rivulet tunnel taking photographs after her hospital shift when you came along. And just as that was no coincidence neither was it that I then went to that particular card reader… 

I think I know what we have to do next now, Henry. I’ve found people who are specialists in the uncanny. That’s what I do, I think. Carmen saves people, I discover people. Her super hero name has to be Saving Carmen and I’m Discovering Madeline. See what I did there? You will approve of the double meanings I’m sure, if not the mangled grammar! 



Dearest Madeline,


I am a poet, not a schoolteacher, I’m not here to correct your grammar or hatchet out the joy from language as pedants do. Twist it to any shape that pleases you, yet touch it still, work it in your fingers, soften it to other shapes you haven’t tried before. You don’t have to be good at it, but write it anyway. Our mind is partially bound with words, it pays to make them supple. My kind are the outlaws of language, we capture and torture English until it gives up its hidden secrets to us. We put grammar on the rack and to the thumbscrew, stretching and rending them, while we ask again and again for them to confess to us where the devil sucked upon their witch-teats. 

            It vexes me when people say they are afraid to write. The whole of society seems to exist to clamp down on the main artery of creativity, anyone who creates does so in the teeth of all, risking mockery and infamy. Anybody with any sense is afraid to write, especially if it means bearing their jugular vein to the unkind masses. If you say you want to write but you won’t because you fear you will be derided, know that you will indeed be derided, by at least someone, somewhere, out there. But do you intend to let that bitter mediocrity own you? Or do you love language enough to do it anyway?

           You are right about Saving Carmen and Discovering Madeline, I like what you did there. ‘Maddie’ is quite lovely and I appreciate all she’s done for me, more than I can express, yet I am very much looking forward to discovering Madeline.

            It might interest you, (just as an aside and because I’d rather talk about just about anything than the matter at hand) to know I have a girl living inside of me, who has a different name to myself, just as you do. At least, she has the embryo of a name. She is something made of light. She lives inside the jaws of the wolf in my belly. I am the man, who swallowed the wolf, who devoured the girl… It isn’t around just anyone that she comes out, you have to hold open the jaws of the wolf like the lady with her hands in the mouth of the lion in Strength from the tarot deck. 

            My interior girl of light came out around you Madeleine when you let me brush your hair. I’ve always enjoyed it when ladies allow me little privileges, which would not be extended to normal men. That’s not how I’m meant to refer to myself anymore, is it? There are all these beastly new categorizations for attraction I need to work out. I never thought about it like that, this gay, straight or bisexual business, all I know for sure is that you aren’t the first lady to allow me the relaxed intimacy of a girl friend.  

That which is man in me indeed takes much less interest in the sexual features of women’s bodies, but the beast inside, and the girl… They have their own agendas. Usually it was only in Arthur’s presence that I could allow partial freedom to those other parts. To the sharp bird of prey beak that lives in my mind, ready to rend the visceral of an idea and to the hungry, feral she-wolf in my gut, and the girl hiding inside the beast skin, also. But despite struggling to fit my understanding to the three-pronged division of sexuality your era presents me with, I’m coming to feel safer here… Which really wouldn’t be terribly hard under the circumstances of the now absent death penalty that hung over our every move.

With the subsiding of fear I find myself able to think with lucidity again. When your mind is doused with the chemical wash of fighting or fleeing you are never really thinking rationally. It is only now that I can realistically assess the level of danger I was putting him in. It is only now that I discover what Arthur left behind him here in Hobart, like a resounding echo of his life ringing out still, that I can feel the true magnitude of my mistake. Fear swallowed me utterly, just as despair threatens me at times now. It was his job to protect me, and yet I could not bear the risk he would have taken for me. 

Now I can relax I see that I had no right to take that decision from his hands, it was his life to risk, his death to choose. What is love though, but that kicking out from the very centre of yourself against the death that has chosen your beloved? It was Arthur’s job to hold the cloak around me, to conceal me, to partially reveal me, but to neither report what he had seen nor record it. The work we did was secret, and he knew better than most how to Keep Silent. Such is the sacrifice akin to death, which is asked of the men who ward the edges of our House’s precinct. 

            For this reason I doubt I will find anything about myself in his papers…

Arthur would have destroyed any evidence from before my death, not because he was ashamed about he and I, in truth there was nothing, at the physical level, that we were guilty of. He would have done it still because it was his job to be an invisible man, a man made of many faces and no face, composed of nothing but shadows and ocean mist. 

            Sometimes I see echoes of his particular talents in yourself and your sister. Forgive me if my words come off sounding paternalistic, which might seem strange when you are physically older than I. If it sounds so it is because I am a contemporary of your forebear, and out of my love for your forefather I feel a strange stewardship or guardian role over you two. You are the product of my love, even if you could never have been the product of our love.

 At the physical level it has been you two who have shielded me from this new world, and I who can protect you from the other more arcane terrors that lurk below our feet and inside the walls of this city. I feel that in some way the luck force of his family line is therefore still with me, heralded by your arrival, still draped around me like his loving sponsorship. His spiritual patronage endures over the whole city having its roots in his collection. 


As to how to tell it all clear… we must tell and tell until our very skin becomes see-through that is what it means to get clear with yourself. If we are to empty out all the falsehood that’s been shoved down our throats we must go to the extreme ends with confession. I took my clothes off in the night and opened the window, standing naked beneath the moon and told the sky I was who I was, unchanged, unashamed. Before mankind I will put my clothes back on, I will put my human skin back on, and walk around taken for normal, but I have given back their voices. My voice is alone now in a stark sort of purity.

One simply screams in some form and tries to do it tunefully, that is all art is, that is all writing is, an eruption of what is unbearable otherwise, made beautiful so as to be tolerable to others…. One finds one’s self in a place, and one writes from there. One sits very still and listens to the story demons creeping up, barely breathing with anticipation. I felt them skulking around up from the rivulet about when the rain began to ease off. When I feel that breeze stir in a certain way I grab a pen and brace myself. 

            I over heard you and Maddie from the kitchen talking about how the dam had dropped in Les Revenants just before the zombies came back. I may have rolled my eyes at you, but I was intrigued. You noted that the dam was back in fine form again now in Hobart, after all this rain that ‘Henry has brought with him’.

Movies, songs, and the electronic world that interacts with your stream of consciousness so regularly are looked to as oracles of sorts, just as the sky and bush were looked to for omens once. You don’t notice that you do it, or count it as a belief system, but you believe these electronic stories and story fragments you are immersed in have some bearing on your reality. You believe these stories interact with each other and with reality in some way, just as my mother believed the folk stories she grew up with enough to claim I was a changeling. 

            When I heard you two talking it led me to consider what a man of Arthur’s talents would have done with such things at his disposal. Right when I was thinking it, the electricity went down and we were plunged into the reassertion of primordial night. 

            “Arthur?” I murmured into the now dark air of your flat. Perhaps it is the same species of mytho-logic you used to link your viewing of a French television series to a drop in Hobart’s dam water, and onward to my own synchronistic appearance? It is story logic to be sure, but what isn’t, when you break it all down? I knew what it meant in my marrow. It meant Arthur killed the lights, like our century split the night, and it means he can still hear me. 


Stimulus Question: Henry, could you please describe Cecil Allport, whom you called Arthur, and your relationship with him? I’m particularly interested to hear more about the reason you believe he would be capable of turning off our electricity? This might help give you something to do while I’m at work other than turning all of our jars into saint candles and hiding magical pee samples. –love, Carmen. 


There are some things in life so far outside the ordinary we can only express them in mythic terms. For this reason I will as yet give you no: ‘we met at the age of ten at my father’s house’ or ‘as we grew I would read poetry to him as we lay on our backs in the long, late-summer grass.’ Even those facts seem too pedestrian, and to do it justice in another form would require a novel-length endeavor. 

            Let me tell you, instead of describing our relationship, about the story of a child named Sorrow, whom my Welsh Grandmother spoke of in hushed tones. Pryderi, son of Rhiannon, stolen away on the night of his birth reappeared in the home of a horse breeder whose mare had been in foal, but the foal had been snatched away. Pryderi had reappeared, replacing the vanished colt foal, which had been taken from the stable by a monstrous hand of a creature of a troll being of the Otherwise. The loss of Pryderi caused Rhiannon much sorrow and care as she was punished for his murder, and for this the child was named for sadness.

            Pryderi and his equine double, are part of an ongoing story about divine twins of light and darkness. One who sees the sun through the sky and the other on its perilous nightside journey through the Underworld, one passing it to the other… Snow White and Rose Red, a feminine version of this ageless story with no beginning and no end, that is always going around and around like the sun seems to walk across the heavens and down into the salty arms of the sea. 

I knew a man once who claimed to have danced with the Vodou Queen of New Orleans, he used to say Arthur and I were the Marassa… Because even as far afield as Africa the story was still going around and around about twin beings that herald the beginning of things.

            Just as I was taken, and the unlucky Pryderi, Mabon ap Modron was also stolen from his mother’s side by otherworldly beings. Mabon grows to young manhood languishing in a strange land, little different to Sleeping Beauty in his isolation and the feats that must be passed to obtain him, except that he, like the caged bird, and myself, sings in his captivity.

‘What is to be got of me will be got through fighting’ –Mabon warns the intrepid heroes who would attempt the task. Oh I know all the words to the paean of Mabon… I know that old refrain like the Irishman in me knows the bittersweet tune of heartsick, and the scent of dawn after whiskey and tears. 

It is King Arthur and his war band who rescued Mabon, by entering the deathly domain of water on the back of the Salmon of Wisdom. I think that was one of the reasons I thought of calling Cecil ‘Arthur’, in the beginning. Though it was not the reason at the forefront of my mind I see now the form of the salmon of wisdom rising beneath me, monsterous, titanic, lifting me from the water that threatens to engulf me, with a strength greater than any human hands. I realize suddenly that it was not Arthur, or my angel who lifted me from the ocean and brought me here, but the specter of some rising immortality, its nature only partially knowable. It was who I am still becoming that lifted me.

That idea of Arthur, the raven-turning once and future graal king, lurked deeper in, within the wet, subterranean chambers of the heart where Mabon sings his lament inside me, waiting for his fated appointment with the sacral king. In a way that name, his secret name, is still only the echo of an idea gestating in the dark. But once unleashed into many minds, ideas can be powerful. 

When I fell into trance his were the hands that steadied me and the hands that held the fob watch that mesmerized me, also. When he and I touched hands in the séance, sparks could be felt as though were designed by nature to create a battery. When I went out into the world his arm was there through mine, mutely telling the world I was his friend, and therefore not to be bothered by anyone, or else… His voice the one that spoke for me when I was uncertain... When I trembled under the weight of my calling and my gift, his was the coat around my shoulders and the excuses for why we had to leave early. When The Ignorant came to persecute me it was his fists that drew my enemy’s blood and his quick tongue that left them stammering for a stillborn comeback. 

It was me who showed him how to break the fourth wall on reality, so that he saw for the first time how what we call life is but a stage play, and who the audience is and the people who leverage our puppet strings. It was me that pressed close the heat of the cunning fire in my own brow over his until his forebrain grew incandescent with the glow of our connection. I taught him how to see and hear what is called dead, but has merely moved its location to the interior spaces of life. It was I, since we were little more than boys, who held him when he was sorrowful, cooked for him when he hungered, tended him where he hurt, read to him and broadened and deepened his apprehension of the beautiful, and again and again decided to place our friendship above all petty irritations in life. Thus something of the divine nature touched upon us, lightly, perfectly, shyly... 

And it was good. 

That is all I know how to say of it for now. As to how he could have turned out our electricity, well… Your great great grandfather was a two-faced man, a crossroad’s walker, a taker and wearer of the faces of others and the skins of beasts, the kind of man a grave can’t hold down for long. He had a wolf inside him like I do, but there was a fecund and fearsome darkness that lodges close to his heart, a breathless outer space, close to the Void sensation.

I feel his influence here still and I know his collection of curiosities, which his son Henry bequeathed (as he wished it) to the people of Hobart, will prove this to be true when I can bear to go look at them. 

My avenging angel who watches over me told me once that I would need to come to terms with the sex in me to progress with my Art, because it is not enough to say that sexuality is part of magic. Magic, instead, is a sexuality, something which exists within the erotic nature of a person. If magic is up inside you it’s as unstoppable as if you are a boy who likes other boys, and it is felt and wanted with the same kind of intensity. I believe and know he is right. 

Yet for me I feel that if magic is an aspect of human sexuality then sexuality, for me at least, is a type of art. Some people have a gift for it, like music or dance. There is no discontinuity between my music and how it felt to love Arthur. There is no real line between the compulsion toward poetry and the intricate and mindful expression of love, which I desired to compose upon his flesh with mine. 

Make no mistake about it, to me that was what our relationship was, if you want to know, art… A thing of deep enduring beauty and a joy forever, a still unravished bride of quietness, a foster child of Silence and slow Time. Like the figures in Keats’ Grecian urn, we are suspending in mid-motion always, a lost refrain, or cause, a few unplayed notes lingering in the air, a reaching out hand ungrasped, a caress never quite landing. 

Maybe.

Ep. 4 Van Demonian Supernatural: Oisin of Hobart Town

That was when all the clocks stopped again. 

The rivulet was in full gush as it rained and rained. The dead have membranous feet you see, leaving behind the translucent mucous trails like snails, silvery footsteps that last only up until the nascent dawn. It’s easier for them to move around along wet tracks. Martha taught me that, many years ago and it made sense of what I’d always observed around the rivulet and the sea mist. 

            When you saw I had really stopped all the clocks in your house like I told you I used to, (both the clockwork and digital therefore ruling out an electrical surge) you started to really believe in me. -Not to contradict your earlier assertion about timing. Merely to say that our experience of belief has layers, like being slowly stripped by a lover. It’s one thing to accept the proposition that I have come back from the dead, in absence of another explanation. Quite another for a woman of a time that has grown so very modern to believe the whole story I bring up out of the Bridgewater Jerry with me… 

Belief has its own apocalypse wrapped up in it. Once people know something is possible it doesn’t take long before it must happen. The mustness gathers pace behind all possibilities like the early stages of an avalanche. Once you start to believe you can… It’s as if people cannot bear to sit with the tension of the uncreated, of the not-yet-come-to-being… To be honest I don’t blame them, my whole body for so long has been made up of not-yet and maybe-never, and who (given the chance) wouldn’t release one’s true soul song in a spasm of apocalypse? This urge in us, it comes from a place so deep morality has never been there.

I went outside in the rain after the ticking stopped for good, and walked through the deserted streets. With my fingers I reached out to touch old buildings that I recognized with my eyes closed, dragging my pink tips along the wet rock, reading the wear and tear of a century and a half of wind and rain in the surface like a brail message from the elements. The wind seemed to play music on my exposed ribs as I walked, even though I was fully clothed for the weather. Where once I was the musician I had become the instrument. This city is the artist, out of whose dark imaginings and underbelly I’ve come forth, slouching my way up out of the sludge of forgotten things. 

I longed savagely to play music. I think the wanting was what always made the clocks stop. But even as I delicately palpitated my fingertips against the stones I could already feel it was gone. The delicious tremor of music that used to thread through my muscles and tendons, starting somewhere in my hips and rising, had been sucked away by the retreating wave as I left the water. The sea will have her sacrifices, after all. I smiled softly, sadly, because I knew in that moment, passing through the curtain of rain, what it meant and why it was worth it. Later, as you know, when I first sat in front of a piano and tried to play and felt the stump of my cut out tongue flap uselessly against my mouth’s roof I reacted somewhat less gracefully… 

Nonetheless I’ve learned that its not about where you reach at your lowest that defines your courage, but it’s what decisions you make about how you will go forward from there. The purity of the decision I would make for him again and again, will outlive and outlast the memory of that graceless tantrum, where I kicked my feet about, flailing at the great binding of the Old Woman Fate. 

When you’ve had someone you love grow old while you were away, you slow your step even in the rain. I didn’t care if I couldn’t play anymore, only that  I would find him and with whatever art was left to me I would at last find expression, in some way that would reflect the fineness and intricacy of the feeling itself. Nothing else of who I was or what I could do mattered to me by comparison to that one dread wanting… The one I had broken my body against, inside the gullet of the rivulet in flood. 

I watched for his slower moving shade to keep pace. I lined our steps up so that they came into rhythm. I had wanted to grow old with him, after all, and so sometimes now, I do... The moisture in the air makes my old man joints ache and I am forced to shuffle. My feet are made of whatever the hands of frogs are made from. This is why no one can hear the dead when we’re walking beside or behind you. We move when you move and stop when you stop. Our patience is infinite. There are no ticking clocks where we come from, that’s why when the part of me that is Other arrives there are no ticking clocks around me either… Nobody can watch you sleep quite like us. My mother died in our rocking chair and whenever she would watch me sleep afterwards she would always rock back and forth just the same, as though caught in some eternal loop. 

If one could be as the dead whilst still alive the power one would have! There are some crooked paths I’ve walked, and know of, where feral visionaries meet you with meadowsweet in their hair and wormwood on their breath, they will tell you that such a thing is termed ‘initiation’ among the hedge-wise.  

If I’m still here does this mean I’ve achieved initiation?

All I know is that my mind tries to fill the blanks in, to catch up with the life lived while I was away. My love has become a dead man while I was gone and now the wind and the rain that sleet my face become eroticized, even with their moss-bleak taste. The feelings that once belonged exclusively to the shiver of his hand grazing my skin, diffuses, in the forever-absence of that touch, into the old stone, into the thick soul of our city… Don’t think I mean an easy letting of the edges, where grief just pop goes and weasels away... No…. This is a grim, cold joy-sorrow in the pit of the gut, a cutting elation. Our city caresses me with his many hands made of wind currents, rain running down the back of my shirt, jagged bird flight, and the way stone holds the sorrow salt and the tremors of shroud-muffled voices. 

I wanted to go with him where he’d gone. I suppose I only didn’t because you cared for me... Rather than sending me to the insane asylum as would have likely been my fate if I turned up in my time from yours, you have sheltered me, tended my wounds, cooked me strange and fascinating new foods... You showed me how music could be immediately conjured which seemed to suit any mood or taste, even my eccentric ones. Soon I found songs on your machine that gave voice to the music I could no longer make with my hands but had spilling out of my heart. Maddie worked for hours on repairing as much of my clothing as could be salvaged and you brought me home replacements in the modern style for what could not be fixed. With great gusto you dressed me up in this hybrid costume, much like my own mind, straddling two eras. 

            Instead of killing myself again I walked to his old house, because you cared. As I stood outside his home on Upper Davey Street that night in the rain staring up at the windows, I was on the outside looking in again. Never to be invited inside, a stray of sorts, part of time’s beach rubble and jetsam, floating in and out of the picture with too much agility for history to get a lock on me. The type of uncatalogued item he never could quite collect... The name that gets omitted, the part of the journal torn out, the letters confiscated... A watermark here, a scrawled name there but nothing that would stand up in court...

The wind that caught my clothes, blowing through the bone tunnels of me, spiked a longing so savage I heard a wolf’s howl echoing out over a frozen tundra inside me. So stark was the desolation of this feeling-sound that I shuddered as no returning cry answered. I had thought longing to be a hot, pulsing, palpitation of sound something thick and percussive that made me sometimes wish to hit the body of my cello with my open palm and hit out a beat. But instead perfect-want is a thing of stark, cold purity. Colder than the low-soft-ache of the cello, like a violin made of ice, lupine sharp and nuclear bright. 

          https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8Y7TAZtbqzI


You found me about dawn. I should have found it strange you knew to come to Fernleigh... It suggested a bit of knowledge about the Allports, but at the time I thought nothing of it and of it nothing... I was sitting in the gutter trying to hold so as not to fall off the surface of the world. 

            “Hey, look at me. That’s better… You’re doing so well, you get that?” Forcefully you made me hold your gaze as though with pure force of will and persuasion you could convince me I was all right. “What you’re processing at the moment… It’s huge. How many people have ever had to process something like this?”

            These words, said to fill the silence, in themselves seemed to mean very little. But what was more important was the certainty in your warm brown eyes. You seemed to believe I deserved to live, not everyone had always shared your opinion, and so I trusted you.

            “Indeed,” I replied.

            “Who are they to you?” you asked, looking up at the house.

            “You know of them? The Allports? You had heard of their family before I mentioned the name?”

            You smiled oddly at me, kind of ruefully. “I hope you’re not going to hate me when you find this out…. But when you mentioned Elizabeth Allport, Maddie and I went back through our family tree to check we were right… She was the grandmother of my great, grandmother Eileen Allport.” You came out with this all in one breath. “You don’t hate me now do you? Am I, like, descended from your arch nemesis or something?”

            “Who was your great, great grandparent?” My voice a husk of sound. “Which of the Allport children was Eileen’s parent?” 

            “Cecil Allport.” 

I swallowed down hard and closed my eyes. 

“Who was Elizabeth to you?”

“The mother of my dearest friend,” I replied quietly. Those words stuck thickly in my throat like I’d swallowed glue. “She did not wish me well, in a way, you could say... there was an action of hers that caused me much misfortune.”

Understatement sticks me together with sticking-plasters, always a sign you’ve hovering over a deep bruise. 

            “She’s the one you were setting out the witch bottles against? To avert her evil eye? Was my ancestor a witch or something? But… So… does that mean her son Cecil was your… friend?”

            I jumped at the mention of his name as I always do, even though it was the one his family called him, not the one I did, or even the one on his birth certificate. My friend was, you might say, a man of many faces. “Yes.” The fact you knew of him left of me nothing but an ache that harrowed up my lungs with its sucking power. I wanted to ask all the questions immediately, about what he did with the rest of his life, but the grief was still too near for words. 

Those moments outside his home were of the leaden hour. For focusing on the next breath that must be taken without him, and then the one after that. Grief is an endurance run and I am more of a sprinter... People depict the Victorian Age approach to mourning as hyperbolic and melodramatic but there is a discipline expressed in it that was part of our love language. To lose well and deep is part of loving what is mortal, part of holding it with no guarantees, knowing your life depends on it, and having it ripped away, or suddenly granted back, with no real understanding possible of why.

             “Are you just finding out that the love of your life married someone else, hun?”

The unexpected understanding I read in your words degloved me. Normally I’d not have confirmed it but I nodded. What was to be lost now?

“He named his son Henry, if that helps?” 

            “Lovely,” I murmured, because there weren’t really any words, but custom demanded I make a response. I was thinking through the pain of knowing there was a woman who did for him and gave him all that I never could. I was pushing through it to how this shrieking pain meant your skin and hair cells carried part of him alive into the future, so therefore it was worth it.... I found myself gazing into your face like it was a skrying ball, trying to see something of him still echoing up to the surface of manifestation and joining me in the world of the living.  

            “Your eyes are somewhat like his.”

“There’s something I want to show you,” you said getting to your feet and offering me your hand as if you were the gentleman.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2iSmrryfxGM

When we arrived at Parliament lawn you showed me the textual public monuments worked into the pavement there. The first of them said: ‘In the wake of your courage I swim’ the other: ‘Sorry for not holding you in my arms.’ Upon reading I closed my eyes for a moment and they misted with tears. I didn't yet know it's meaning to its creator, but I knew what it meant to me. 

 “What do they mean?” 

You came and put your hand on my arm. “They mean the city is saying sorry to you, Henry.”

It took me some time to understand what you meant, and after that what it meant, even once you explained about the Stonewall riots and the civil rights movement. I was coming to understand that I wasn’t a deviant deserving of death in your eyes, but a fellow human carrying the albatross of a story around my neck. Because you were his flesh and blood it was important to me that you knew. “He was a good man,” I said in the tight-lipped way that people use to gloss over the raw choking power keg of life when its gets stuck in the throat of their narrative. “A kind and decent man,” I continued, gaining courage in my convictions as I used that word I was told was off limits to me. “With a beautiful soul. If anyone spoke ill of him… well… evil be to he who thinks evil of it.” 


Episode 3. This is something that happens

Dear Miss Carmen, 

 

Stimulus Question: How did it feel when you realized I was real? Not provisionally real, but really-real? Describe your thought process in the moment so I may study modern mores as exhibited by a 2010’s female, for the edification of a Victorian Age audience. 

Kind Regards

Audience

 

Carmen: "You’re hilarious! So you’re going to be writing me stimulus questions now and leaving them about my flat? I’m guessing this is your way of saying you feel like you’re being studied? Well I’m sorry, but really… I spent the first couple of minutes after I found this note stashed under my coffee plunger staring at your beautiful handwriting lost in a bottomless well of grief. Not sure why it never struck me before now, (probably because it’s been so long since I sat down and wrote something out at any length with a pen and paper) but nobody has handwriting like yours any more… I guess you and your melancholy bullshit is rubbing off on me because I’m starting to see some epic tragedy encoded in all the pretty loops and flourishes of your old fashioned hand… My great grandmother Eileen used to write like you. I mainly write texts with my thumbs and I hate myself. -Put that down in your notes and mores. By the way, we’re called 'Millenials', or maybe 'Xennial' in my case and Millenial in Maddie’s… Nobody says ‘2010’s female’. LOL (that means laughing out loud, just so you know. Yep that’s right, you’ve missed some heavy shit.)

            I suppose it was after we’d shown you how to adjust the water temperature on the shower that it hit me, the whole this is ‘really real’ part. You understood the light switch and the basin but all the things that confused you were the right things. I paid attention. Of course I thought you were mad still but I noticed because sane people always hang onto this strange idea you can talk people out of their delusions. Like, if I was to point out that you should know about running water if you were alive in 1874 and I caught you out, the cognitive dissonance would just suddenly destroy the delusion. Right?? Wrong! But futility is a favourite human sport for all eras. I always thought that with our mother too, could never seem to stop thinking like I just needed to out-argue her crazy and it would all patch up with Band-Aids, sew some buttons on where eyes used to be and right as rain! It never worked, but the habits acquired in childhood are hard to break. 

            There was never anything to catch you out on though. You were smarter than me, and at first that’s all it seemed to mean. There are clever crazies, I learned that working in mental health for nearly a decade… Which, trust me, is basically the equivalent to a lifetime in any other profession. But their clever doesn’t get them out of the psych ward. Crazy is crazy, no matter what. At least that’s what I thought until you were in the shower and Maddie went through your coat pockets. She showed me the stitches and the lining as if something special about them should be immediately apparent. “Look at the label with the tailor’s logo on it. It’s water damaged now but it’s genuine to the time period and in remarkable condition.”

            I shrugged. “So what? Someone can still be crazy and like antique clothes. Probably some steampunk bullshit.” 

            But Maddie was persistent. “Look at these empty viols! You can still see they’re for Laudanum even though the ink’s running on the label.” 

            I frowned and took it from her. She’s the fashion designer but I’m the local history enthusiast and I was keen to find something wrong with the picture. Just as with the technological objects I could find no evidence you were faking. 

            I shrugged again but this time it was less certain. “So… What do you think’s going on? We’ve wandered onto the set of Les Revenants and people are coming back from the dead? Or what do you reckon? More of a In the Flesh vibe with this one? Full zombie?” 

            I was waiting for her to say: ‘never go full zombie!!’ I’d set it up for her but she didn’t take it. Maddie opened her mouth to reply but didn’t say anything. Her seriousness was contagious. I glanced in the direction of my closed bathroom door and the hairs went up on the back of my arms. 

“I don’t know what I think. But what if it’s like that moment in Magnolia where the frogs all rain down from the sky and the little kid is like, this is something that happens?”

            My sister’s a smart lady but it seems to be written into whatever coding siblings come with that it’s my job to scorn her when she gets sentimental. Maybe it’s because I’m pretty sure she fancies herself as Fanny Brawne and is still looking for her John Keats to arrive. I, on the other hand, work in the hospital juggling bedpans and when I get off my shift and its too late to go to bed I like taking photographs of Hobart by night. The town’s history interests me, but that’s about as weird as I get, so why would this kind of thing happen to me? 

            “So, is that what you’re going to do if it’s real? A quick fashion recap of the past one hundred and fifty years in dresses, a tour of kitchen appliances, a brief diversion through a couple of world wars, then its movie marathon time?” I teased her. The shower had turned off and I was joking to cover my growing unease. I got to my feet all of a sudden. “Fuck, what am I thinking? I’ve just left a mental health patient alone in the bathroom with a metric shit heap of pharmaceuticals and about ten other things you could self harm with!”

            I was about to go knock and check up on you when you abruptly opened the door and I jumped visibly, totally giving away how spooked I was. 

            “Don’t worry,” you replied dryly. “I got that out of my system already.” Your face was expressionless and your voice was almost toneless but I could just detect a cool, grim humour. Part of me was embarrassed that you’d overheard me describing you as a self harm risk, which I don’t think I would have been if I was still thinking of you as crazy... Maddie got up from where she was sitting on the floor and wrapped her robe tighter before decisively tying it around her, a clear sign she felt on formal terms with someone. You were standing there in my plain white dressing gown I’d given you to change into, so I made a show of taking your clothes off Maddie and hanging them up to dry in front of the heater. 

            “Sorry for touching your things,” Maddie muttered. “I was just…”

            “Checking to see if I’m lying,” you finished for her. I noticed that your gaze was very steady and you weren’t giving off any visible signs of psychosis. You crossed your arms in a way that seemed a bit self-protective, but you gave off a sense of determined functionality. “I don’t at all blame you.”

            It was only then that I noticed the contrast of red blood on my tiles beside your white robe. “Fuck!” I yelled. “You’re bleeding!” Within moments I was gloving up and rummaging through my medical kit. By the time I reached the door to the bathroom you hadn’t moved except to gaze down at your own feet like you were still working out what was down there. 

            “Oh. That’s just some cuts on my feet from the oyster shells,” you muttered. “My apologies.” 

            I frowned at your apology for bleeding on my floor. You didn’t get that often in the psych ward… 

But Maddie was quicker than me. “What oyster shells?”

“There are many upon the stones at the edge of the bay, as I walked to shore. I didn’t feel it until later.” 

I don’t remember how Maddie reacted because I was in full nurse mode by then. You didn’t get any say in being treated by me either. While I cleaned and dressed the wounds on your feet with ointment and bandaging my hair brushed the wet, bloody tiles. I should have restrained it in a hairnet like at work but I hadn’t thought and even though it was only my hair soaking in your blood I felt a shudder of infection paranoia, as if you could be carrying some exotic strain of disease from your time period. Your fingernails were torn and your hands were injured too. There was an eerie feeling in touching you, even through the membrane of latex. You weren't really colder than a normal living person but there was a weird stigmataery feeling about dressing those little bandages on your hands and feet. 

“Can I open this?” 

You complied but very reluctantly to let me open your robe. When I glanced up at your face it revealed actual shyness. As someone who sees people of all ages and sexes naked on a daily basis I can say true modesty is pretty rare in grown ups. So maybe it was that or something mysterious I can’t quite explain that I felt through the gloves while I examined you. Despite your mild lacerations there was no sign of necrotic bruising or anything that would suggest you’d recently been dead. My instruments said your temperature and blood pressure were both within normal range, if low-to-normal.

It wasn’t those things… Instead there was this other weird feeling your body gave off… It will sound weird but it’s as though the past is something you can smell on people. Not because of sanitary conditions of course, but is it perhaps that I had never been around the skin of a person who ate the food and breathed the air of another era? There was something that passed between us as animals, some sniffing sort of instinct that told me you were really real. Long before you started to produce the proof. 

Are you happy with that? On behalf of my tribe Millennial of Hobart Town, I would like it known that The Victorian Age can be a wee bit of a Princess sometimes… Just saying…

 New Stimulus Question! Why do we have little urine samples full of pins and needles hidden around the house now? I’ve heard all about you people and the happy snaps with your dead kids but what’s with the jar pee??

I was sitting by the window of the room you assigned me, listening to my death river gushing below, when I first started bringing up the witch-ball. You won’t even know what it is I suppose, so oblivious is your over-lit century to the darkness and her brood… You fancy you’ve vanquished the night far further than the old town boundary around Forest Road, but it’s a confidence that will only last as long as your access to electricity. 

            A witch ball is a concentration of malignancy sent against you by another person empowered with The Eye. If you were of Irish stock as I am you’d probably know already about how important it is to make the spirit traps that encircle the ill wishing in thorns and broken glass and tempt them away from their target into fragmentation. With your home so close to the rivulet, where the dead are want to slake their thirst it is unwise to have no protection beyond a few electrical light bulbs and heating devices. I’ve made some traps out of my old laudanum bottles and hidden them around your house. You’ll be safe now, you can thank me later each day you don’t cough up tangled masses of hair and pins.

            Sadly I was not so lucky as to avoid becoming mother to the abortions of my whole life's history in an unfortunately oral manner. The first ball was made of the hair of Elizabeth Allport, the woman who had Overlooked me with The Eye shortly before I arrived here. I can already anticipate you hearing this and taking it as further sign I suffer from some form of paranoid delusion. But her suppression of my voice was real and literal. 

They keep us quiet for a reason, people like her, you realize? The weavers of dreams threaten their very construct of reality, the comfortable status quo. They’re afraid of the apocalypse of daffodils we carry in our heart-cages, they’re afraid of the dandelions or our minds tearing up their fetish for concrete. They’re just afraid. It was this way in my time and I’m skeptical that the matter has altered. 

People without The Second Sight would have just seen her as a mother protecting her son, trying to prevent a non-advantageous situation for him. But I knew they were her sewing pins and her hair tangled around and around until they stuck in my throat like river-weed and dragged me into the great quiet. Wrapped up in coagulative malice and rolled tight into balls of spite, the witch ball has to be worked and worked between the fingers like an ulcer is favoured by the tongue, it finds no accidental victims. 

The second one… That was his hair… But not because he harmed me. I knew it meant something different, as I pulled the long, dark strands of it out of my throat by the fistful and gagged on all the sharp edges of his broken heart. She'd turned my love against me. I think I coughed out a whole music box while the death river rushed and rushed below me… I think I coughed out yesterday, and tomorrow, and all the times were happening at once again for a cacophony. I understood the anomaly that brought me here in that moment of overlap, standing at the crossroads of time… I understood completely how it is all, always, only ever happening Now. If you could break through the illusion that it’s otherwise then somewhere on the other side of the theatrical fourth wall… Somewhere over there, over West, further, further on, where the veil goes down and never comes back up again and the worlds melt in on each other, if I was standing there I could explain. 

 

 

But all I know is I came from there.  And now I can’t get back. So now you have witch bottles.