1st Place Short Story - "With Friends Like Us, What Do Enemies Matter?" by Martin Bennett
2nd Place Short Story - "The Dream-Weaver's Son" by Sue Haigh
1st Place Poem - "Africa" by David Swan
2nd Place Poem - "Thy Keeper, Thy Shade" by John Alexanderson
Finalist - Poem
"The Unvisited Flower" by Bryan Creech - 1st Runner Up
"Ecstasies" by Dee Rimbaud – 2nd Runner Up
1st Place Poem - "Africa” by David Swan
Africa
From the ashes rose Africa,
A phoenix of pure sunlight
Its vast wings of antiquity,
Shadowed across its continent.
A mother's arm shielding
Its newborn from an imperialist
Sun.
It's feathered voice now soars across
Violet and orange tinged skies.
Singing songs by fallen angels
of hidden fruits they once tasted.
Hoping one day they could return
On wings borrowed from Africans
Sorrow.
Copyrighted
2nd Place Poem - "Thy Keeper, Thy Shade" by John Alexanderson
Thy Keeper, Thy Shade
Grieve upon a plastic chair,
like nothing else is left,
head in hands,
a warning scolds in yellow stain:
PLEASE DON’T SMOKE …
OR THINK OR EVEN FEEL
Fake flowers stage a dream
before the rats of magazines
that seem to sneer when no one looks.
Smart Money. House Beautiful. Self.
Listen!
An elevator slams its door,
the corridor chants some steps.
A comrade comes and gapes about,
as would an old, lost dog,
meaning well,
but even more afraid.
Words become the final stop,
the best of mortal men and women,
who sit atop the hills
like gods,
yet brief
as vapors in July.
… God’s will. …she’s in a better place … we’ll pray.
Even the smallest folds of skin cry out.
Copyrighted
1st Place Short Story - "With Friends Like Us, What Do Enemies Matter?" by Martin Bennett
With Friends Like Us, What Do Enemies Matter?
Bright Gold sat on a ragged armchair and wondered what quirk of fate had
possessed his parents to give him such a name. Stephen, Ignatius, or any
number of martyrs might have fitted. But why Bright Gold? And he had not
been paid his salary now for three months running...
But his thoughts were interrupted by his wife Gladys’s discontented
muttering from the corrugated-iron kitchen next door.
His empty stomach tightened with anger. “It’s not me who’s to blame for
the state of the economy,” he felt like screaming. But he did not want to
start another argument.
“If only I’d married Ebenezeer,” his mind echoed with Gladys’s latest
reference to his ex-rival, now a big government contractor and commander of
kick-backs. “Now there’s a man who knows what what.” Next, like salt into a
wound, she had added a proverb. “If you don’t buy your wife enough cloth,
her buttocks may be become a public spectacle.” Half an hour later had come,
“Absence of powder turns a gun into a stick.”
A few months ago such discord had been unknown. Yet now his marriage was
in the doldrums at best. Austerity was setting apart what God had joined. An
economic devil, it roamed like a lion roaring, seeking whom to devour. Or
like a lion muttering, as Gladys appeared in the doorway.
“...And we don’t have sugar...we don’t have eggs...we don’t have milk,” she
presented him with a shopping list of blames.
Bright Gold’s stomach tightened another notch.
To prevent her inevitable “If only I’d married Ebenezeer,” Bright Gold
rose from his chair and said, “Alright, my dear, alright. I will go and do
some shopping then...”
A minute later he was across the open gutter and in the potholed street.
The diagonal green and red stripes of his T- shirt flashed in the morning
sunlight. The sky was a peaceful blue, and from a nearby record kiosk flowed
the sounds of highlife. For a hundred yards or so he felt an uneconomic
surge of well-being. Only several streets later did this turn back to anger
as he recalled the purpose of his mission. He was not a beggar but a
qualified teacher. Inside his head that highlife was replaced by a quote
from one of this year’s set texts: ‘Neither a borrower nor a lender be.’ But
then Polonius had not had to suffer the austerities of a Government
Reconstruction Programme. Why, he had even been a minister of sorts. No
salary problems for him or perhaps the old fellow might have advised
otherwise.
Bright Gold’s gait had become a hesitant plod. No, indeed. Borrowing was
not good, he knew as well as anyone. But what other choice had he? And he
began rehearsing what he would say to Festus, his creditor, this time. As an
inroad into Festus’s pocket which would work better: A falsely nonchalant,
“Well, Austerity has caught me gain, my brother”, or should it be a frankly
shame-faced “I’m sorry to trouble you yet again but...”
*****
As Bright Gold balanced these bleak earthbound alternatives, somewhere at
the sky’s blue edge Miles Wheeler smiled sweetly at the air-stewardess
unloading two miniature champagne bottles from his table. A minute later he
was lighting a postprandial cigarette. Making the most of his company-paid
Horizon Class ticket, he stretched his legs. “We shall shortly be making our
approach to...The weather...clear...Our height...”
So the in-flight speaker crackled and swallowed information. Down below, the capital’s outskirts wheeled into view like a massive switchboard. He could make out corrugated roofs small as microchips, ant-sized vehicles and pedestrians going about
their business. Miles Wheeler put out his cigarette, clutched his brief case
tighter as the plane touched down, and was soon making his way across the
sweltering tarmac. Few would have imagined his well-manicured hands held the
inventories of enough weaponry to lay waste half the city and turn half of
its bustling citizens to corpses.
This was something Miles found difficult to imagine himself, he had his
euphemisms so well-polished and stamped with government approvals. Why talk
of war - especially of civil war - when there was a ready translation in
‘projected threat development’? ‘Combat efficiency’, ‘damage limitation’,
‘readjustments in inoperative personnel’: These were the elements of his
sales pitch. He was here in Dhira to market a product, not to put
prospective buyers off with needless candour. Particularly as the profits
came in tens of thousands and even millions. This was real money, unlike the
trickling amounts he had once made selling hospital equipment.
It was a good sign then when General Ali, Deputy Minister of the
Interior, boomed across the airport concourse in his best Sandhurst English:
“Hey, Mister Miles, my good friend, how absolutely marvellous to see you!”
And true to rank and title, the General was soon brushing aside
immigration officials like bluebottles, and clearing a way with his
swagger stick to the limousine outside.
Beggars, hawkers, drivers gawped fleetingly at the sleek-haired and suited European VIP. The car-doors thudded shut. No spare parts problem here, the limousine purred through the morning go-slow while out in front rode two burly and jack-booted military policemen on fat new motorbikes.
Behind the tinted glass Miles unlocks his briefcase. Inside, amidst glossy
brochures of armoured cars, weapons suites, stenguns and other hardware,
nestles a fresh bottle of White Horse whisky. “Just a small token,” mouths
Miles as he hands it over.
Later there will be other larger tokens. Much larger and almost as secret. But who is Miles, a foreigner, to question local custom? It was their country after all...
“Ah, these people!” General Ali scowls a commentary at the line of
over-optimistic shoppers spilling into the road outside Safeways
Supermarket.
“Hmm, money miss road!” scowls back a man in diagonally red and green
striped T-shirt. If that limousine were to stop and its passengers to
exchange tinted glass for a so-called ‘walk-about’, the man might have
explained to them how he had just borrowed some money. But now there was
nothing to spend it on. Even after two hours queuing. Unless one counted
wooden ducks from Bulgaria, a shelf full of ladies’ gloves for when this
tropical country hit another ice-age. Then there were the dozens of jars of
Rumanian greengage jam with which, if the worst came to the worst, he might
have to make do instead of the sardines, sugar, meat listed by his wife back
home...
All this the man in the T-shirt might have mentioned, one educated
somebody to another, along with the problem of unpaid salary. “Neither a
borrower nor a lender be.” That might be alright for old Polonius, except...
Except the limousine and its outriders have moved on. What are greengage
jam, grumbling wives and so on set beside the nation’s security?
Another official thud of doors and Miles Wheeler is being hush-hushed
through corridors to the plush heart of state. General Ali marches alongside
with his swagger-stick now tucked beneath his arm. Secretaries and clerks
drop away behind. European visitor and Deputy Interior Minister are ushered
to fresh leather seats. The door of thickest mahogany closes, a guard in
place to ensure it stays that way.
“When one’s guns are few, one’s words are few,” the main Minister winds up
his introduction with a proverb.
Around the polished table echo five star chuckles, top-level murmurs.
“And now Mr Wheeler, it’s over to you...”
The gathered faces grow suddenly grave. Again Miles Wheeler unlocks his
briefcase, flicks on an overhead projector set up for his use.
“...Operational flexibility...penetration-optimised warhead...” Miles’ voice
matches the images beamed onto the wall. “...Superior
accuracy...user-friendly...tailor-made to meet customer needs...”
The faces around the table look suitably impressed. The talk moves on to flow charts,
cost benefit ratios, post-sales back-up, matters of commission. So in the
teeth of who knows how tough competition from elsewhere, the deal is sealed,
the order secured. On behalf of his company, Miles hands over a model of an
armoured car. Toasts in bottled water, Johnny Walker, bottled beer are drunk
to “unity of Purpose”, “this special friendship”, et cetera, et cetera...
Later Miles gazes from his suite at a mountain of rubbish inhabited by
several families of lizards and counts the hours till his arrival back in
his London suburb.
On the other side of the settee General Ali clinks down his
seventh whiskey.
Now peace has been successfully underpinned, Miles starts to
find his escort rather less entertaining company. Or maybe it’s just jet lag,
the tropical climate, the stress of having so much money hanging on each
word and gesture. Already the jokes are repeating themselves. The silences
between the two men get longer. Then, to Miles’ relief, the limousine
arrives.
As the outriders set about instilling the necessary deference into a
sprawling cyclist, a watching marketwoman screams, “These soldiers, may God
deal with them!”
Miles glimpses through the tinted glass only a mouth going
open and shut while General Ali laughs whiskily into his ear, “So you see,
my friend, how important you are!”
A protest rises in Miles’ mind. But then, overriding the unfortunate
cyclist and other facts on the ground, he recalls that ‘special friendship’.
An air-conditioned silence prevails until the limousine reaches the airport
and Miles, half-asleep, is stirred by an urgent tapping at the window. Coup!
He impulsively translates the noise into clicks of released
safety-catches...He freezes in his seat...Only by the ensuing wail of
“Allahu ar-rahman ar-raheem” does he register the taps as coming from a
beggar too blind to recognise the limousine’s special number-plates, the
status of its passengers.
*****
“A good trip, darling?” Helen Wheeler enquires a safe ten hours and
however many thousands of kilometers later.
“Excellent, as these things go,” her husband smiles back.
A fortnight passes, summery and peaceful, roses and chestnut trees in the
garden outside coming into bloom.
Then, one evening, five minutes into the Nine O’clock News, Miles hears,
“Government troops in Dhira, the capital of Suridan, opened fire yesterday
on crowds protesting against the latest price rises. Unofficial sources put
the number killed as high as twenty with many more people injured...Last
night gales off the coast of Florida...”
“Anything of interest?” goes Helen, arriving downstairs from her evening
bath.
“Just a spot of trouble in Dhira,” says Miles. “After what I saw there, I
can’t say it’s a surprise. But let me fix you a drink, dear. What will it
be? The usual?”
****
As Miles crosses from sofa to cocktail cabinet, Bright Gold feels the piece
of metal in his thigh expand. A cold upward pressure threatens to take over
his whole body, barging his sense of self aside.
No, no, no...Against loss of consciousness he deploys memories in a
counter-offensive: His mother and father back in the village; the
affectionate before austerity Gladys, his wife; brothers, sisters, cousins;
Festus, his friend and creditor. Even those shopping lists are converted
into a sign of life and therefore hope. In priceless quantities he feels the
air enter, leave, enter his lungs. He concentrates upon it lest it suddenly
slip away: Breath,then the sounds going on around him, nurses’ whispers,
clink of surgical instruments, somewhere beyond the window-blinds the
ground-to-air cries of black-marketeers and beggars, harmlessly low tech,
dozens to the pound...
Copyrighted
2nd Place Short Story - "The Dream-Weaver's Son" by Sue Haigh
The Dream-Weaver's Son
Calcutta, February, 1947.
Eenoo McLennan, en route from Dundee to the McCormack Mill in Serampore, steps onto the gang-plank of the SS Narkunda and gazes at the harbour far below. The acrid heat of the late afternoon sun hits him as if he has walked into a wall of flames and he wipes his brow with a rough handkerchief and stands like a schoolboy evacuee with his cardboard suitcase at his feet, waiting for events to overtake him. He looks up at the Howrah Bridge, hanging mirage-like over the River Hooghly, and across to the railway station. The roar and clamour of humanity make his head spin. On the quay beneath, vast crowds of people in family groups are lying on the ground, and cattle meander with leisurely confidence between the supine bodies. Dust has absorbed the humid rays of the sun until it is at boiling-point and blazing rain-drops of light dance on the stones. Eenoo’s shirt – one of the only two he possesses – clings to his back and beads of sweat run down his temples and neck. His ears buzz as if a swarm of the flies which ride on the backs of the cattle were heading straight for his brain via his ear-drums.
Everywhere in the teeming, racketing streets, people who are not actually horizontal and sleeping seem to be on the move as overflowing trams and buses rattle along, ploughing their way through the impenetrable throng. There is a unknowable order in the mighty confusion of taxis, cycle-rickshaws, ancient cars, cattle and pedestrians as Eenoo bends down to pick up his case and make his way slowly down the gang-plank, carried along by the pushing and elbowing of the other passengers, now anxious to escape from their month-long incarceration at sea. He recognises a platinum blonde woman who is mincing crabwise down in front of him, until she stumbles awkwardly over the boards, twisting her ankle as she teeters unsteadily on her three-inch red heels. Eenoo drops his case again and leans forward to break her fall. Recognising her rescuer, Platinum Blonde sniffs mightily, glaring angrily past his left ear, then disdainfully at his feet and his shiny black shoes and snatches her arm away from his hand as if it had been burned. With a disgruntled toss of the head and vermillion curl of the lip, she makes off down the steep gangway, leaving Eenoo to retrieve his belongings. When he finally steps onto the teeming harbour, the familiarity of the faces of the Indian workers at home in the gloomy world of the Dundee mills fades amid this sprawling alien culture, evaporating into the smoky sky with the overpowering stench of stagnant spiced air.
Seeing the mass of people crossing the floating Howrah Bridge, Eenoo is suddenly overcome with a foetal longing to retreat to the dark warmth of his tiny, airless cabin below the water-line of the Narkunda. The explosive din and clatter of the railway station on the far side of the viscous brown river draws him like a magnet through the jostling crowds towards the bridge. He has never seen so many people all together, even at the Overgate Carnival. At the far end of the bridge a dilapidated sign announces the entrance to the Howrah railway station.
The McCormack Mill, according to the piece of paper in Eenoo’s hand – now practically illegible after the number of times he has pulled it anxiously out of his pocket to study his employer’s instructions as he paced the deck of the Narkunda – stands ten miles up the Hooghly on the riverbank. He studies the train-warrant, issued by McCormack’s Reform Street office in Dundee.
“You need help, Sahib? Can I show you to your train?” An emaciated youth with a withered leg and rough crutches is squinting up into his face – he is even shorter than Eenoo – his open hand thrust forward. “Where are you going, Sahib? Is this your first visit to India? I welcome you and wish you much good fortune in my country.”
Eenoo looks away warily, not wanting to invite the beggar to further intimacy, but the boy stares directly into his eyes, smiling crookedly, one eye-lid drooping as if he has suffered a stroke, waiting patiently for an answer, his head on one side like an inquisitive blackbird. His hair, as black as Eenoo’s, stands on end and his eyes, one of which turns inward, giving him a louche expression, are so dark that it is impossible to see where the pupils end and the irises begin. Eenoo cannot tell if the boy’s lop-sided posture is the result of his deformity or merely an attitude of polite enquiry.
“Ah havnae a clue aboot the trains or yer rupees, lad,” Eenoo answers, at last, embarrassed at his own ignorance in the face of the perfect English and courtesy of the almost naked youth.
“But this is not important, Sahib.”
The boy bows and gestures with the outstretched hand, placing it over his heart to show he is no longer a beggar but a new-found friend. “Tell me where you are going, Sahib, and I will show you to the right train. Where do you come from? Do you have a family? Why are they not with you here? Are they well? I hope I am not asking too many questions, Sahib. I will tell you about my family, if you like.”
The side-ways smile, which appears to have a life of its own, fixes itself in place again. The questions, now that the matter of money is no longer an issue, trip off his tongue and tumble over one another like children in a sack-race, making Eenoo’s head spin again. His only dealings with foreigners, apart from the mill-workers, have been with the Aberdonians who sometimes come down the coast to see their home team play United at Tannadice. And extracting a word from them is, as he tells Jeannie, like trying to squeeze blood from a stone. And when they do speak, it is in a dialect so alien that they might as well come from another planet. The young man – for Eenoo can now see that he is older than he at first appeared, his lack of height and physical substance giving an impression of pre-puberty – persists.
“My name is Muhesh, Sahib, I was born here in Calcutta. My father’s name was Chidam. He is dead, but my mother and sisters live near here. My mother is very unfortunate that she is blind and can only weave baskets to earn a few rupees and that her only son cannot work and has to sell her baskets or beg to keep her family alive. But she is a weaver of dreams. I would like to give you one of her dream-baskets, Sahib, to bring you luck. Tell me where you come from, please.”
Eenoo hesitates briefly, but there is not a trace of irony or self-pity in Muhesh’s voice and his chirruping frankness makes a welcome change from the hoity-toity hauteur of his fellow-passengers on board the Narkunda, especially the platinum blonde with the vermillion sneer. Apart from the Welsh coal-master with legs like leeks, who sings Sospan Bach at the top of his voice after two whiskies and his wife with her floury raisin muffin of a face, none of them has, in the space of a whole month at sea, paid the slightest bit of attention to him.
“Ay, well, ma name’s Eenoo, lad. Eenoo McLennan, and Ah come frae Dundee in Scotland.”
Muhesh looks puzzled and his eyebrows draw together in concentration as he struggles to decipher some recognisable sounds amongst the cacophony of vowels and glottalstops. Then his dark forehead clears and the smile becomes a cavernous laugh, which escapes from a hole in the centre of his bony skull. The teeth, broken and protruding at all angles, appear for the first time.
“Sahib, I know Dundee!” he exclaims after a lengthy pause. “Many of my cousins and uncles have been to Dundee. They are sailors and take jute to your mills. The Verdant Works, the Eagle Mill, the Manhattan Works!” He recites the names of the unknown edifices like an excited child, then lowers his voice reverentially, “Do you own these mills, Sahib? You must be a rich man! Why is such a rich man travelling by train without servants? Why has the chauffeur not been sent to fetch you? But, excuse me, I have seen many British people, but I have never heard a name like yours. Is it a high-caste name, Sahib?”
Eenoo laughs his low-pitched laugh out loud and claps Muhesh on the back, so that he staggers, much as the Welsh coal-master did to him in the bar of the Narkunda.
“Ah’m afraid the enswer tae bathe yer questions is no, Muhesh! Ah’m no a mill-owner, Ah’m a mill-worker, a tenter – Ah work wi the weavers, lookin efter the looms. An mah name’s an Inuit name – ma mither wus an Eskimo an ma faither wus a Dundee whalerman.”
Still straining to catch the meaning, Muhesh repeats Eenoo’s pronunciation of the word “Inuit”.
“In-oo-it. I have never heard this word before, Sahib”.
“She wus an Eskimo – Nanou, her name wus – frae Baffin Island, in the Arctic Circle, an ma faither baide wi her family fer five year after he wus shipwrecked. He faither an brothers rescued him frae the ice. Lost a foot wi the frost-bite-they cut if aff wi a flensin-knife. The cold froze his blood, they say. Then he brought Nanou an me an ma wee sister back tae Scotland, but bathe o them died o influenza before they reached Aberdeen. So Ah wus brought up by ma faither an ma gran. Ma gran wus working on the weaving-flats frae six i’ the mornen tae six at nicht, an never aff the feet. When the Great War started he wusn’a fit tae sign up wi the Black Watch, so he stayed in the hoos tae be a kettle-boiler, as they cried such men as didna work and couldn gang tae the war. Sometimes he’d stand on the shore an’ he’d stare oot ower the wa’er fer an age, an Ah’d ask him how he wus takin sae lang, an he wouldna enswer. Ah think he wus thinkin aboot ma mither an ma sister, lyin under the sea, but he never said.”
Muhesh is standing silently, his head still on one side, but Eenoo’s words wash over him like a bow-wave, falling untouched by interpretation onto the gritty platform behind him. In the distance, a noisy crowd of men is making its way chanting towards the station gates, and Muhesh turns to watch the turbaned gang as they wave and shout and jeer at passing cars.
“Eenoo, Sahib, I think you should go to the waiting-room now. It is at the other end of the platform. I will show you the way. But please come quickly, Sahib!
Eenoo follows the tiny figure, whose urgently hurpling gait puts him in mind of his father as he hobbled along with his false boot, woven from strips of whaleskin and sealskin by Nanou and her mother in their Baffin Island igloo. When they reach the relative calm of the waiting-room, Muhesh turns and takes Eenoo by the wrist, pulling him through the door.
“I am not allowed to stay here, Sahib”, he whispers, looking anxiously behind him, “but you must sit here until the danger is past. These men wish to free India from the British. They have come here to await the arrival of the train from Ishapore. They are waiting for the Viceroy, Sahib. They are supporters of the Congress and they will not be happy to see British people like yourself. I am most sorry to tell you, Sahib.”
As Muhesh speaks, a train clanks and wheezes haltingly into the station and comes to a grinding stop opposite the station-master’s office. The station-master, a fat, greasy, irritable man, shuffles self-importantly along a threadbare red carpet towards the first-class carriage and bows low as a tall, aristocratic-looking European in a white topee steps out onto the platform. The volume of noise from the crowd at the gate rises to a crescendo with fanatical howls of “Hind Jai! Hind Jai!” and “Nehru! Pandit Nehru! Hind Jai!” Angry fists wave in the direction of the European, and punch the vibrating air like boxers. The Viceroy, attended by a retinue of impassive Indian servants, hesitate imperceptibly, then strides along the red carpet towards the gate, ignoring the din of the jostling, calling men as they begin to surge forward into his path.
“What’s goin’ on Muhesh? What are they shoutin’ aboot?” Eenoo is cowering behind the door of the waiting-room, the only other occupants of which are a frail-looking European woman of about forty and her daughter, a sallow girl of eighteen or nineteen. When they hear the roughness of Eenoo’s accent, they exchange a doleful glance and lower their eyes to the books they are reading. Their Indian servant looks at Muhesh and gestures to him to move away. Muhesh does not move, but whispers loudly to Eenoo.
“They are followers of Mahatma Ghandi, Sahib. He is the Living soul of India! And Mr Pandit Nehru, the President of the National Congress, Sahib. They wish the British lo leave India and India to become two nations. There have been many riots in Calcutta, and many soldiers to stop them. I have seen them. But I do not want you to leave, Sahib. Please do not leave, you are my friend. Just wait here and I will go and see what is happening. I will come back soon, I promise”.
With that, Muhesh disappears into the crowd which has gathered to see the action. The Viceroy has not yet reached the gate when the barrier gives way and the chanting hoard spills out onto the red carpet. From nowhere, police with batons and soldiers in puttees charge onto the platform and two shots ring out among the rioters. Eenoo stands transfixed as he sees Muhesh’s spindly legs dragging along the ground and his small body being hauled roughly out of the station gate by uniformed thugs, a dark trail of blood staining the earth behind them. His eyes turn briefly towards Eenoo before he disappears into the throng and Eenoo moves forward to follow, but a hand on his arm restrains him and he turns around. It is the Indian servant from the waiting-room.
“I would not attempt to do what I think you are about to do, Sahib. A boy such as this is not worth the trouble. He was a foot-path dweller in the pay of followers of the Congress party and would die soon, in any case. Look, he has dropped his bag of cheap ornaments. Take them, they are worthless. You can do nothing, Sahib. Believe me.”
For a long time, Eenoo sits in numbed silence in the waiting-room. His stomach churns and waves of nausea break over him as he tries to make sense of the extraordinary events of the past half-hour, as if he has walked by mistake into someone else’s house and has witnessed an incomprehensible act of private violence. At length, he opens the rough jute bag the servant has thrust into his hand, and a pungent, luteous aroma of spicy wood rises from a jumble of tiny, exquisitely woven baskets, each with a closely-fitting lid. It is the smell of sandalwood. Closing his eyes, Eenoo gently runs his fingers over each work of art created by Muhesh’s mother, the blind weaver of dreams, while the two women stare out of the dusty window.