"Greece is Wide, Cebes.", Wayne Low

cw: Death, Religion, Allusions to terminal sickness


After Vashti Bunyan and Mount Eerie.

I'd have liked to walk around in your mind

if all the grass didn't make our toes feel so good humming
as if the throat can somehow sorrow

through a crow and a microphone.
I'd have liked to say something just then,

but last week a package arrived with your name
after being lost for ten years while the card

on it took its time to brown. So, like a crunch
of an apple, I thought of your skin, and your

bones out of a jar. The stew you made smelled
ready, so I, with parcel limply in hand, turned 

to call no daughter, no sister, no music,
no son. We were busy with other

things in the little time
we spent mostly catching termites.

On the lost mail slip I trembled. It'd been so long
since I'd held a pen and written next to you while

you told me something from that pleather armchair
a room away; the one with grandma's needles and a coin stuck 

in the backboard, which was never a problem since I could see
you always. Then you turned away, and I always felt you were burning up 

so, I rushed to hug you. Maybe I thought
I'd find you still in the fire, whistling while you 

peed, thinking you could cover the sound
with something far less musical. But the way

you'd laugh for what seemed like forever 
and then some when I told you that I missed you

and you called me an old person because of how
stupidly emotional I'd get, all while standing in the lawn

grumbling about new cars outside with stereos
that didn't pump with music but gasoline and wax.

Now the music doesn't even sound like the terrible ones did
even out of the better car stereos bought from the big chain

stores further down the street where I sometimes think
everyone sits in the backroom, playing a prank on me

with all these alien sounds like birds, and maybe in that world
I'd still be on the couch out on the lawn that I put to piss

you off, and slept sadly on bad nights and always read old men
talking about the soul without all the anguish

of a man about to die; saying 
that we'd live forever just like how my grandpa did. Only when he said that,

he meant the picture above the cabinet that is dusty
since you don't remind me to clean it. The old man 

was about to die and all of us sometimes felt that way,
especially when you were right there, with a glass, shaking,

thinking it was grief that later buckled your legs and made us all scream
because we knew the day was coming and the night was

rolling in fast. With one arm hoisting you, and another
with a box of butter and the best mat your sisters

had, we were going to the festival and I didn't think I'd cry,
at least until I was there, but I was so terribly sad

that I shouted at you in the car where you still held
me as if it was religion. The radio broke just then,

which was fine, since ten minutes later we were sitting
in the parking lot, listening to faint whispers of sound

checks, and finally music, but not the bands we wanted.
But it didn't matter since we got the old light sticks

to work and we could pray. And since the world was good,
God could find us in all that racket like we were kids.

/ Wayne Low is a poet and fictionist from Singapore who has previously been published in QLRS and Of Zoos. His work revolves around scenes of isolation, domesticity and media mythology.

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