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. 7 Van Demonian Supernatural: Love's Riddle and the Priestess

Because: Nothing is ever so hard to recover from as the things that haven’t happened yet… 

So much of life is holding one’s breath for the brief hour we are given to breathe and shine. So comparatively brief. What else then is art but an attempt to shout out over the distances between those moments? To say:  here I am still! This is what I felt! This is what I loved. This is what I lost… Knowing that Arthur’s tendency to collect things was his art-form made me approach with reverence. I wanted to make sure I paid adequate attention to detail. 

The Allport Collection being just down there at the library made me afraid to break the seal on the moment. To let out all that old dust that had been holding it’s breath for a century. After all, it was possibly the last of his living communications with me, whatever hidden message had been left encoded for me alone to hear speaking, among those mute objects.

            His riddle walked with me everywhere. I wanted the answer to it the way I’d always wanted him. This riddle means something beyond finding the answer and getting to the destination of his message. It means congruence of affection and it means story collison. It means his mind rising to meet mine against the backdrop of eternity. I had not expected to be met so completely in this manner, life as I had learned it, was not kind, and the most I had hoped for was his affection. Why should I be the recipient of such an extravagant act of memory and devotion, whilst others died at the end of a rope or froze huddled and forgotten in someone’s doorstep? 

Yet now here it was, offered to me… What if I failed it? To be worthy of it? When so few are ever given half so much regard? What if I couldn’t answer his question and proved that we didn’t really understand each other at all? After all this time it would hardly be surprising… My mind is still young and his grew and deepened to the age of almost seventy in my absence. Young as we still were in those days… Such things as unexplored love affairs are a great breeding ground for Romanticised notions and illusions…That’s what older people usually say anyway. And one is given to believe they’ve learned something in their extra time in this world, beyond how to be bitter.

In short, during this time, doubts crowded in around me in hyena skin, snapping and slavering at the blood trail I was still leaving behind me on the oyster shells.  I knew it, I smelt them on my trail, but I couldn’t will myself to stop bleeding.

So I’m writing again… See? Happy? I thought it would have been best for Henry to tell it. I can imagine his atmospheric description of the streets at this time of year. Through the eyes of someone so alien to our way of life, it would fascinate me, plus he’s the real storyteller. Not me. Isn’t that what writers are for? They carry the burden of telling all our stories like a goat with a ribbon tied around it's neck? 

It was Dark MOFO when I found her. I thought maybe she wasn’t for real at first, just another tourist trap. [Carmen’s edit: that’s the Museum of Old and New Art’s, MONA’s, midwinter festival, for our international readers. If you want to understand what MONA is you just have to imagine that Willy Wonka was real, lived in Hobart, and was more interested in dark, twisted artworks than chocolate] There were fires burning in forty-four gallon drums around the streets and the whole city had started to feel like a giant art installation. 

A beacon light reaches up into the night as if to send a signal from our strange little city to get the attention of the darkness. There is a huge hand-fish where people stuff paper with their hidden fears inside before it is burned and sent out into the sea. I tried to get Henry to participate in the ceremony, but he was unsettled by the idea of any fish that contained Hobart’s collective fears.

He spoke of a hanging he’d witnessed as a child, one of the last public hangings in Hobart. His father told him that ‘such were the wages of sin in this world’ while the man’s body (to quote him): ‘jerked like a marionette whose strings are in the hands of a brutal child.’ That was his first shock of what he called man’s inhumanity to man. To know that men kill other men in violence was one thing, but to see the way the crowd jeered the dying man’s fear was another. 

I told him that in our era if a child witnessed people hang a man by the neck until he was dead we’d put them in post-traumatic counselling! He just shrugged and said that he’d had nightmares about it all his life. Of course I pointed out that is indeed a sign of posttraumatic stress. He laughed. “If that is a disease, Madeleine, then everyone in my world must have been suffering from it.” 

“Why don’t you write down the nightmare and put it inside the hand fish?” I suggested.

“Oh I’m not afraid of it anymore so I don't have it,” he replied with little sign of emotion. “Fear is a reflex response to hope.” 

 I didn’t poke anymore, as it seemed a tender point. The feeling I couldn’t do anything else to help him without guidance from someone of greater experience led me on to find someone who was more knowledgable in these areas. 

When I found the fortuneteller she was sitting on red velvet cushions and animal skins, behind colourful curtains. I noticed her dark eyes, the tattoos on her hands, and the cut of her clothing. I always see the quality of stitching, fabric and the lining in clothing. In this case it was odd, as you don’t often see people wearing designer clothing who also have tattoos on their hands and beads in their hair. I remember trying to work out how old she was for some reason, -like it really matters but what society trains into us can become knee jerk… My guess was she was in her thirties, but I wasn’t fully sure. Sometimes in different lights or with different expressions she appeared much older or younger. 

“Hi, my name’s Madeleine, -Madeleine Allport.” I’m not sure why I lied about my last name, beyond a general pride in being descended from Cecil, because of course his daughter Eileen hadn’t passed us his name. It felt important to do it though.

“I’m Sophia. Can I see your palms?” she asked me. I was pretty sure she was English from her accent but I’d be guessing if I tried to pick which county.  When she touched my hand I felt a charge of electricity from her hot skin. I was really awake in the human contact all of a sudden and it felt weirdly intimate, as if by some magic in her touch she had drawn me down into my womanhood. 

“Hello there,” she said, acknowledging the fact I was only just settling into my body. I saw the deep old wisdom in her eyes and the warmth in her smile. She was in no hurry with anything and suddenly neither was I. 

“Hi,” I muttered nervously. I had the feeling I was sitting in the presence of some ancient temple priestess whose warm self possession alone made me feel like she must be judging me infinitely inferior.

“You’re here about this aren’t you?” she asked, turning over a card with a heart on a rose bush on it. “There’s an important matter you’re caught up in the middle of, something to do with an interrupted love affair.” Even though she consulted my hands and the cards it seemed more like she was listening to something I couldn’t hear than really looking, much the way Henry appears to sometimes when he sits and rocks back and forth. 

“What else do you see?”

She closed her eyes, which didn’t seem to suggest she was considering the lines on my hand at all. “Love that was interrupted by untimely death, possibly a suicide or even… even a murder… Suicide, accident, murder, all…  It’s weird, twisted threads,” she looked up at me. “There’s multiple repetitions of the same story, all in slightly different ways, rippling out from a sleeper murmuring code, vomiting amanitas… Always close but not quite… The Tower is coming down, apocalyptic change rides in on four coloured horses, brewing storms, a great fire... You’re here on someone else’s behalf but this is about you too… You don't see that yet.”

“How can you see all that?” I whispered in awe, because I was already convinced. In any other context ‘accident, murder, suicide’ could sound like psychic arse-covering and guesswork but in this one it was a perfect description of Henry’s three-fold demise. 

“The heart and the hand have their own archeology, leaving traces and echoes... Someone I used to know told me it’s a rag and bone shop, -the heart…”

I jumped at this reference because I was sure that I’d heard it in a poem Henry had read us only recently, or that perhaps he had compared himself to a rag and bone man in some way? Either way it further convinced me of her power.

“You’re good,” I said leaning forward and speaking more quietly. “This is going to sound crazy…”

“Ha! Oh honey… You don’t know who you’re talking to!” she laughed with gusto suddenly, slapping her knee. She reached out and touched me. “Trust me, I’ve seen some shit.” Looking into her eyes at that moment I believed her.

So I took the leap and just said it. “Is it possible for the dead to come back?”

“It happens all the time. People just don’t notice.” 

I felt like I’d heard Henry say something very similar and I was becoming increasingly spooked but the fierce lady crush I was developing on her kept me staring at her. “But I mean… actually come back. Like the kind of end days resurrection stuff Catholics believe in kind of ‘come back’?”

She put the cards down then, ordering the cardboard to line up in the deck before sighing as if getting involved in something like this was way against her better judgment. Looking up at me she wore the expression of one world weary of miracles. “You don’t happen to have a cigarette on you, do you? Because I have a feeling I'm going to need one. when I hear what you’re going to tell me."  

I like what you’ve written about the meeting with Sophia. Take it from one of the dead: what you don’t say in life will haunt you in death. It is not the dead who haunt the living so much as the life unlived haunts us. It itches under our illusion of skin until we have to dive back into one to unravel the knots we're choking on. For what else am I here again, I wonder? With all that I loved dead and gone and a new world before me? If not to tell from the other side of the cold, to speak of the urgent life in me, in all of us, that chases the sun and only shows its power on the edge of the dark? 

            The fact I am good at this, this ordering of signs, this pleasing of the inner ear, needs have no bearing on the matter of who writes what. You and I, Madeleine, are not a competition, not a jostling for space, if we but breathe from the still point of grace inside us, -we are a dance. We are two parts in a symphony who must both learn to play together at the urges of the conductor. This way of thinking was taught to me by a master in the art of Harmony. Your great great grandfather taught me to think of human interaction as one of the arts. Of all of them it is the one most potentially exquisite, why should we not make it, above all other things, beautiful?

Words are such despots by comparison to music. This is both why they don’t really matter as much as some other things, and why you must master them at all costs. What is silent is what is victimized in this world, it is the same today as it was in my time. In this world silence equals death. When I made music nobody on the street could refuse me, even if they wanted to. It spilled out into the road, infesting the gutters and the alleyways with a guerilla act of beauty. Had a mob been organized to purge my perceived immorality from the town. those who liked to listen to me might have spoken against them because of it. My piano and my cello spoke for me when I was silent. My skill provided me with beauty currency. Writing is not like that, it’s quiet and humble seeming by comparison and people have to work harder to eke its beauty out, but it is a far more tyrannical business under the surface. After all, we are making each other ‘repeat words after me’ in our heads! 

 I used to think that because I could see and hear the dead I had to carry the responsibility to tell all their lost and forgotten stories. To speak for those who cannot speak for themselves. Now I see that nobody has to carry anything heavier than their own story, which is usually more than enough to shoulder. I am not the sin-eater of Hobart narrative nor do I pretend to be. I am but a confused young man with a gift for shuffling adjectives. Take it from someone whose silence was forced on them by the destruction of their life’s work, you will regret it if you don't fight hard for your voice.

                Just as in my day a man like me had no right to his own story, was told by every single tale and parable, in fact, that I didn't exist, could never be the protagonist in my own adventure or morality tale, this used to be the case for women also. At least in conventional literature anyway. When Bronte dared to make Jane Eyre the hero of her own narrative this was a revolutionary act in the nineteenth century. Empathy is engendered through stepping into another’s stream of consciousness. Men of letters of the day were made to become Jane and they all went ahead and married Mr. Rochester with her! At this moment people very unlike myself are reading these words in countries all around the world and for a moment they too are Other. 

            Without this ability we are all quite self-involved creatures at the bottom of it. Walking around cocooned in our own storylines… Such is the nature of basic survival. What choice do we have? There is no one else we can rely on to fully body us forth on our behalf, to walk our path for us. Yet still I think we have some obligation to enlarge our sense of self. That is what true friendship is, surely? That moment when you realize that someone else’s narrative has collided with one’s own? When the collision is deep and hard enough you can no longer fully distinguish where their tale ends and yours begins. In this way, when my life has intersected with those of women their stories are mine also. Their liberation is my liberation, their oppression is my oppression. If we could extend our story wider, to include cities and mountains, rivers and trees, whose stories are also part of the myth of ourselves, then surely we would be closer to our native human condition?

            Such a moment of atavistic surging happened to me when I went to the cafe to meet Sophia. I’ve always known that not everyone you meet wearing human skin is truly what they appear. Mythic beings jostle everywhere with the illusion of mundanity. When I saw her she was sucking down a cigarette like it contained her true love or her salvation or both. She was standing outside a café on Criterion Street preoccupied with her phone. She was dressed in red and purple and upon her forehead was written Mystery. 

            Brazenly she looked me up and down. The way she exhaled her smoke reminded me of the manner in which Arthur’s ghost had done it in the cemetery. “You remind me of someone I used to know,” she said. No greetings or ‘are you Henry?’, just straight to the point. She had the kind of features and complexion that one might associate with the Mediterranean, or even perhaps Middle Eastern origin, but her accent marked her out as English. 

            My quizzical eyebrow twitched in response to her words but I don’t think my face showed much more expression than that. “Did you like this person I remind you of?” I asked, because it seemed good information to have. 

            Her smile was partly wistful but her warm dark eyes glimmered with something of experience and its bitter sweets. Although I couldn’t have pinned her to a numerical age I knew by that look in her eyes she was older than I had ever lived to. 

            “He and I had our moments.” I could hear a lot more gurgling under the surface of those words and I knew instinctually, the way they say the Tasmanian devil can smell death from mile away that it was a story I was part of. My heart accelerated as it always does during a powerful collision of persons. 

She butted out her cigarette and we went inside. When we approached the café table I pulled out her chair for her and she laughed. Realising I’d drawn attention to myself with the antiquated gesture I felt flustered and quickly sat down across from her trying to regain my composure. 

“So…” she said, still looking me over, scrutinizing my body language and my clothing. “You’re the boy who came back from the dead then?”










Ep. 6 Van Demonian Supernatural: Down the Rabbit Hole

I’ve heard it said that the first people of this land sometimes wore about themselves bone relics of their beloved dead. Some might think the idea of wearing human bones uncivilized, and I won’t dispute the charge with them. I’ve seen what people believe civilization looks like... I would that I could take no part in it again, and keep my heart’s native territory girt round by the beautiful barbarism of love. 

As I approached his grave the primary urge wasn't a million miles from grave robbing. While we walked you seemed uncomfortable with my obvious desire for this strange reunion of the bones. Dread was indeed mixed in with my wanting too, but I doubt it showed. 

“So… am I getting the right end of the stick from your writing that you and great great granddad Cecil never actually… you know, did it? I mean, made love, or whatever sex was called in the olden days?” 

            The question should have stung like lemon juice in a fresh cut, but for some reason I was taken by a sad, poignant smile. A soft old longing tugged at my belly, an antique ache as old as the hills. It belonged to something bigger than both of us. Its bone-deep bruise was too far below the surface for a sting. “Not in the conventional sense, no,” I replied quietly, my voice almost a whisper, as I watched the lonely path of a gull in the talcum-smelling-blue of the sky. 

I sensed when I looked back at you that you felt a cultural gulf between us you couldn’t cross, Carmen… As though I was strange to you because of the year of my birth. And indeed it is still strange to me, the openness with which you ask questions around this topic. But in reality it was something different that lay between us in that conversation. A seer of visions has no mortal age, belongs properly to no era, nor country, for we are but hollow bones with stops upon which the devil plays tunes to himself. Transients pass through, setting up tent cities in the arches between the ribs of people like me. If I seem unfamiliar in some way have no doubt I did so to my contemporaries also. 

            “How many other ways are there to do it?” You asked, looking down at the map to try to locate the Allport’s gravesite as if the paper itself might solve all love’s mysteries. 

            I smiled to myself the secretive type belonging to those who have arcane joys in their lives undreamed of by most. There are things that pass between two sorcerers that cannot be spoken. Additionally, when the more immediate method of gratification is suppressed, the energy of the erotic is never fully quelled, it rises like a silent revolution, seeps back up like a blood stain of a murder victim through a carpet. The energy of sex pervades every little curl of hair pressed into our poetry volumes we passed to each other. Out into sound, as I would play while he watched me from behind, the very back of my neck feeling his gaze like a burn. 

I am always confusing the emotions with the feeling senses and colours with smells, so perhaps it is my personal peculiarity that eye contact itself was eroticized, conversation conjugal... The colour saturation of every sex-stained thing like this is hyper intensified in my memory, the pitch of reality turned right up. Repression is inhumane, but like all sacrifice it holds a terrific power that crouches waiting in the shadows for when its moment has come at last, ready to burn the world to the ground. 

            “A few.” I didn’t mean to be smug or enigmatic in this answer, I just didn’t know how else to answer your question. The black shapes of text on page place a membrane of ink between my viscera and your gaze that makes a full explanation more bearable. 

            I knelt down on the edge of the tomb he shares with his family and lay down above him. How good it felt… there was less of sorrow in the gesture than sensuality. Love tumbled from me in a white water gush, love washing out of me for every tiny thing, every creeping thing that had consumed him in his tomb and whose tiny legs he’d walked with, every bird he’d flown as and the mice he’d skin-rode who had eaten those crawling things that ate him, every graveyard skulking cat who had eaten those rodents... The love that I had secreted inside his skin popped free from the holes between his now exposed bones and gushed in a terror of universal overflow that manifested as peace.  

            It was only when I let my edges go until I had blurred out into the green of the grass and the blue of the sky, and the grey of the stone and the heavy wet of the grief and the light green-to-gold of the new growth, that I realized I was feeling his presence. Ecstatic tears and a smile of irrepressible beatitude took ownership of me. The world outside went down the drain backwards (like they say it happens here at the bottom of the world where the seasons are reversed and all is doubly inverted by our island of madness and rainbows) and my inner sight came on with a sound like the old school camera flash. 

            When Bronte had Jane Eyre say ‘reader, I married him’ far more is said of her and her Mr. Rochester than any explicit description of their happiness and its consummation.  For this reason part of me wants to say ‘and I saw him’, and leave it at that, poetically understated and breathless. Yet the me who enjoined our dear Madeleine to tell her story until she became as transparent as beach glass knows better. Every word of this telling is punched and kicked out while I scrabble with my enemy upon the edge of the void. My enemy wishes to subdue me and stuff my nose and mouth with seaweed so I may not name names, but this time I will never stop fighting. You might say I'm staging a late come-back. 

They tell us all life comes from the ocean and it makes sense. The oceans are the tear ducts of Grandmother Earth. It’s in the same wet place within the human eye socket that holds the salty seed of future life joy. I don’t think I really understood that until I saw him again, after having survived the Riga Mortis of grief, -what Elizabeth Barrett Browning termed ‘the hour of lead’… Just how much joy is possible to a landscape of the heart carved out deep through grief like the land torn up by retreating glaciers. 

            Arthur was leaning against his mother and father’s headstone casually, 

-despite his black three-piece suit, top hat and begloved elegance. He wore a great coat lightly and unselfconsciously, as though he’d known when he put it on how good it looked on him, but since forgotten. As always he owned the look of our period as if it was designed for him. Yet the way he smoked his cigarette had a cocky quality to it that I associated more with the wharf men. He blew his smoke in my direction while maintaining eye contact in a way that among the riff raff might have indicated sexual interest or threat. Under the surface of the perfect gentleman in Arthur there was an animal confidence that lurked, biding its time, feral and sniffing, dirty in all the places hearts were meant to be clean, clean in all the places Victorian hearts were usually dirty, still waiting for its moment to set the ridgeway and the Thames on fire. Still holding all four aces... 

            Before I could recover from the gut punch of the sight of him he pulled out his fob chain and consulted the pocket watch. “I’m late, I’m late, for a very important date.” The words were not delivered in the breathless, timorous tones of the rabbit in the story, or the way my father might have said them, but with the tone of the wolf that waits and salivates.

            “Arthur,” I think I whispered his name, taking a step or two forward and hesitating. Even though no words clustered I noticed how powerful he’d become. I knew I was in the presence of a strong spirit, a conjurer of note, because all the air was sucked away from my lungs when he entered. The black hole hidden under his buttoned down waistcoat, a force that drew all eyes and wills in his direction, the air that fizzed with electricity around him, as if reality was ready to take a different form at his whim, each told me a story. 

            “Hello Hen.” 

He moved from leaning on his parents to standing before me without having taken a step. I didn’t startle at his speed, but I did grab him the way someone starving might accost victuals. For a few moments, where planetary-sized forces seemed to collide, it felt that I clasped flesh to flesh. He did not ask me why I had disappeared so long ago or where I went. He didn’t ask anything and yet a dozen or so questions howled between us. Instead, with fierce mutual pressure, it seemed we tried to stuff each other back in through the hole we’d left in each other’s hearts. 

            I wept in his arms and I believe I told him ‘I’m so sorry’ many times over and over again and that he kept saying ‘no’, forbidding me sternly to apologize. ‘You have nothing to apologize for’… I can account more certainly for everything he said next. Because these words were slow, distinct and clearly articulated like a speech that someone has long planned to give and finally got the chance to deliver. He gripped me hard while he spoke lest I get away before he finished. 

            “Don’t explain! Not yet... I just need you to hear me in this first.” He held me back with his arms to force me to make eye contact. “I loved you all my life, Henry. It was always you. Always. I never felt that way before, or again. I wanted to grow old with you, to cherish and protect and bestow all my worldly goods upon you, to have given you my last name, for God’s own sake… But that wasn’t allowed to us of course… That sort of thing… So I had to put that feeling somewhere. I’ve hidden something away for you. There’s an object that I’ve put my family’s magic into. You will know which one as soon as you recognize what fairytale we’re in. When you find it you will know. Even after all these years, sweetheart…” he whispered with a tenderness that gutted me open like a freshly landed fish. “I still know you better than I know anyone or anything.” 

            I tried to press my forehead to his but he redirected me. Instead he took off his hat and placed the side of his head against mine until our ears touched. 

            “Blood of my blood… You awakened me to the darkness within me, and then you left me alone in it…It's not going to be easy to find my way home...”

            My heart broke apart for him. Drawing back I opened my waistcoat as if it were ribs and reached inside myself. In my hands I drew out diamonds, crystal bright shattered things. “There are some things we can give each other that are ever renewable, but not this… these are truly something of myself,” I explained as I pressed the light inside my bones into his hands. 

Arthur was ever one to return a gift for a gift. As though from his ear into mine the image of a shell within an ear came into my mind and then the image of a turning mill. I knew that I had received the clues to his riddle. But they were more than clues, they were distilled sadness. I could taste in them the complexity of years of quiet dedication.

I bit my lip hard with the knowledge. I was truly human then, not a faerie changeling that my mother had always called me because of my lack of obvious outward emotion. I was human to the core, for I knew utter regret. There was red blood flowing from the places I’d picked out from myself the diamonds to give him. I would turn that blood into a ointment to salve the wounds I’d left in him, that I vowed to myself.  

He touched my face. Though his smile was sad and gentle his eyes had a lupine spike under their old warm twinkle. “After you left silence grew inside me like a cancer. What started out as unwillingness to share became inability. All of us tasked with suppressing out deepest truth require our outlets, yours was your opium and your music… mine the act of collection... Objects are silent like I became, you see? A thing encoded for me with intricate layers of meaning and memory… To another it is but a pocket watch or a cigarette case. To me the doorway to another time, another way of being, a flurry of sense memories…  If you follow me down the rabbit hole into the worlds within things, down here you can hear my silence roar.”