Small Change

Excerpt

I started walking, away from the fence. After about fifty yards, I came to an apron of freshly cut grass that bordered a wide road and a neighbourhood of the largest, most beautiful houses I had ever seen. Brick and fieldstone, white clapboard and freshly oiled cedar, some of them three and four storeys high, with ample porches and verandas and sprawling lawns. I limped a bit, but managed to make some progress along the wide, grassy median in the centre of the street I immediately thought of as a thoroughfare. What is this place, I wondered, and who lives here?
They were oddly dressed. The boy wore a striped tee shirt, a white cap which I later learned was a Polo hat, and knickers that were tucked into black stockings just below the knees. Two of the girls wore summer dresses in soft pastels, yellow and sky blue, with puffed shoulders, matching socks, and matching bows in their hair. They had white shoes with ankle straps, not sandals, exactly, but something like, and the third, taller girl wore white court shoes, white shorts with a white leather belt, and a vee necked tee shirt. Her honey blond pony tail hung half way to her waist and was tied with a white band.
I was astonished, but drawn toward them as if by a huge magnet. They seemed like sky children, but were so recognizably earth-bound I wanted to talk with them, to know what their lives were like. Especially her, with the startling eyes.
I stood very still until they became aware that I was watching them. They stared back, then they looked at each other. They seemed puzzled. I crossed back to the sidewalk and started up the lawn that sloped down from their slate grey house. They seemed hypnotized, or stilled by bewilderment, alarmed, but unable to break the spell of my dirty, sweat streaked face, torn jeans and bloody shirt.
Except for her. She looked straight at me, so directly and with such an open stare it stopped me in my tracks. I felt something I’d never felt before. It seeped into my chest and throat from a place I never knew was in me. It was as if I had seen her before, or known her all my life. Her face – the smooth skin, deeply tanned like her arms and legs, the full mouth, high cheekbones, and green, green eyes – burned itself into my memory and what I read there was not fear, but curiosity, because I was strange to her, and concern, because it was clear that I was hurt. There was something else too, and it made my heart accelerate.

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763157

Still Waters

excerpt

Tyne felt her heart sink to the top of her loafers. “So what’s to be
done?”
She heard Millie sigh. “We’ll do the best we can, that’s all. I’ll be
there whenever they need me, you can rest assured of that. And Jeff
Milligan won’t get away with any of his nonsense when I’m around.”
Hearing the old feistiness in her aunt’s voice, Tyne almost laughed.
But she sobered quickly. She knew what had to be done. Why had she
asked? A fleeting vision of the future made her weak in the knees as
she saw herself, a few years down the road, as another Miss Stevenson.
Nevertheless, her voice was clear and firm. “I’m coming home to
stay, Aunt Millie. I’ll be on the bus tomorrow afternoon.”

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763068

Ugga

three
Three hundred and thirty years before zero
the Great Hellene Conquering General
of Globalization
discovers the concept
and gloriously carries the glorious message
to the Heraclean Steale and beyond.
The conquered wrongly explained
the message of peace
into “Tyrannic Empire”
a small child in the suburb of the Ideal City
thinks of perhaps the march of ideas
may create the wrong precedent
and suddenly against that concept
they start a war: dragons, Jedi, Valkyries, Stymphalian Birds, Craken,
Vampires, chivalrous Knights, Lilliputians, Mermaids, Condors, Orcs
and a blind witch from Bulgaria
and with twelve different bites
they degrade:
the invention of flexible boycott

https://www.amazon.com/dp/192676370X

Marginal

Susan
The nipple of the southern wind
wedges its pleat between the lips
of the virgin yet to be kissed and the
innocence of the first night
draws a breath of relief as
the cherry blossoms mourn
for the death of Madame Butterfly
while the young samurai scribes
his funereal three-verse poem
black claws holding onto
flesh and torn muscles
as Susan’s lips lock with mine
the torn hearts sigh when
endless black hides behind
the trivial and the momentary

https://draft2digital.com/book/3747032#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1771715987

The Unquiet Land

excerpt

the good life of the gentry kept her there, an eccentric about whom stories would be told long after her name was forgotten. Her son Finn, her fifth of six children, inherited his mother’s love of the mountains and the sea. The sea, however, is faithless and fickle and given to unpredictable outbursts of savagely bad temper. One Friday in January 1854, a large fishing fleet set sail from Carraghlin harbour in fine, sunny conditions. But some hours later those benign conditions changed dramatically, the tranquil sea turned tempestuous, and the fleet was storm-tossed in gales and driving snow. Thirty-six Carraghlin fishermen perished. Among them were Finn MacLir’s twin brothers. The date was Friday, the thirteenth.
That same year, 1854, Finn himself was a sailor on board the tea clipper, Gypsy Lady. Having crossed the South China Sea from the ancient walled city of Fuzhou with a full load of the first tea of the season, the clipper ship caught fire on the thirtieth of May in the Sunda Strait, off the coast of Indonesia. Aware that his crew were unable to control the raging fire, the captain took the decision to sink the fast, sleek ship. Some of the crew, including Finn MacLir, scuttled her by cutting holes on the waterline, and she sank in seventy-three feet of water.
Finn swashed through a life of Conradian adventures till 1880. Then the Land League, a political organisation founded in County Mayo in 1878 with the aim of helping poor tenant farmers to win back “the land of Ireland for the people of Ireland,” embarked on a campaign of violence across the ravaged countryside. The principal aim of the Land League was to abolish landlordism in Ireland so as to enable tenant farmers to own the land they worked on. So began the so-called Land War. Tenants refused to pay their rents, resisted evictions, attacked land agents. English-owned farms were burned, animals killed or maimed, haystacks set ablaze, the English owners set on like curs. The land-owning MacLir family, close friends of the land-usurping Hamiltons, was targeted. In one bleak October night old Brigadier Richard Hamilton was brutally butchered in his bed, and Finn’s father and older brother were locked in the barn behind their large house, and the hay-filled barn was set on fire. Bullets from the hill above kept any would-be rescuers away until the blazing barn collapsed in on itself and on the two hapless men within.
When his father and brother were murdered during the Land War disturbances, and both his sisters had married and moved to England with their husbands, Finn MacLir returned to Corrymore and took over the farm. He stayed on in the village, out of defiance, according to some;

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562888

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763203

Titos Patrikios – Selected Poems

Irremovable Vision

After many postponements of our dreams
I’d always think of a smelting, knowledgeable furnace
with thousands of workers cleaning its teeth,
feeding it steel and coal.
A smelting furnace that will smoke as much
as we haven’t smoked the last few years,
that won’t cut its cigarettes in half
that won’t stop its craving half way
that will produce enough rebar
to tie together all the great scaffolds
that will reach up to the sky.

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562972

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08L1TJNNF

Red in Black

Goal
Goal was to set them free
to liberate them from houses
from peaceful bucolic songs
from Saturday matinees
from solemn saunter in the parks
from silent high-noon meditating
our moto was to free them
from themselves
general said whimsically
and thousands of bombs fell
with unprecedented accuracy
replacement order emailed
to bomb factory, machines
in overdrive calibrating
new models, new explosive might
our moto was to liberate them
from their despicable peace

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1771713208

Constantine Cavafy

The Favour of Alexander Valas
Ah, I am not upset that a wheel of my chariot
is broken, and that I lost this silly race.
With good wines and amid beautiful roses
I’ll spend the night. Antioch is mine.
I am the most glorified young man.
I am Valas’s weakness, his adorable one.
Tomorrow, you will see, they will say that the race was unfair.
(But if I were inelegant and if I had secretly ordered it,
the flatterers would have declared me winner,
along with my crippled chariot.)

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562856

https://www.amazon.com/dp/1926763823

Wheat Ears

Shrug
He sleeved his cold hands
shrugged his shoulders didn’t
see the prism bent by
leaden clouds
cursed for his bad luck pointed
to dark glass of his room
resembling empty sockets of
his skull
two different fates hover
one for him the one for others
staggering on flagstones
considering
café garbage bin
pile behind the pub

https://draft2digital.com/book/3748127#print

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0BKHW4B4S

Swamped

excerpt

“Well, don’t make it. There’s no need. Ariana is a woman I enjoy
being with, and that’s that.”
“I can’t believe you’ve gotten yourself involved with someone and
are even bringing her to the house and…” She left the sentence unfinished.
Eteo felt hot and flushed at hearing these words.
“You might have thought of that before you left.”
There was silence for several seconds. Eteo listened to her rapid
breathing, expecting the other shoe to fall at any moment. Finally he
said, “I’ve got to go, Roula. I’m very busy.”
“Don’t go, wait,” she pleaded. “You are not serious about this
woman, are you? In any case, you shouldn’t have her around my
sons.”
“As I said, Roula, where I have her is none of your business. You
have no right to tell me who I can bring to the house.”
“Oh God, have you forgotten all the years we lived together? How
could you?”
“You’re the one who left. Now leave me alone,” Eteo said and put
the phone down.
Now he really needed to relax, but his mind wouldn’t let him. He
turned toward the eastern horizon again, feeling as gloomy as the
cloudy sky. His reflection in the glass looked as sullen as the darkening
horizon.
His bitter thoughts were interrupted by Helena buzzing to let
him know Bernard was there to see him.
“Hello, Bernard. What brings you here?” Eteo asked as the
shaggy-haired man strode into the office
“Your associate,” Bernard barked without any preamble. “I see a
dead market, and I wonder what kind of hole I’ve gotten myself into
with your help.”
“What do you mean? You made a deal with him and he looked
after you. Why are you complaining to me?”
“I placed those shares because he gave me his word that he’s got
the well. I only hope he hasn’t double-crossed me. If he lied to me,
he can kiss his market goodbye for a long time.”
“I can’t say one way or the other, Bernard. He told me the hole is…

https://draft2digital.com/book/3562976

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08WP3LMPX