kesbeacon: stylised sun over water (Default)
I dreamed I was some sort of Robin Hood type figure, in some form of grey vampiric dystopia; previously I had been one of my RPG characters* caught in a dance of ‘whose daughter is whose’ with various overlords of the verse. Ze made one of the vampires very insecure because he thought ze was better for both of their daughters than he was.

Anyway, in this verse, the peace was enforced by Templar knights, in their big bucket helmets. I knew that by proclaiming my revolutionary statements I would bring their wrath down on me. But every time this particular Templar caught me, we would exchange romantic banter, I would offer my apparent co-operation, and then I would wriggle away. And then one day he said to me, ‘I give up.’ He wasn’t trying to catch me anymore. It was... beautiful.

We stood two inches apart. I considered truly offering him my own surrender, as I had - falsely - before. I turned away and began to walk. After some time, he followed.

My heart was pounding. He was faster than me, and I didn’t know if he really had given up - if he was going to jump me. I didn’t turn, because if he was - that was okay, sort of. He was so very close. I was going to my ship, to leave, and half of me wanted to bring him with me. Most of me did.

We reached my ship. He tried to enter with me, but at the last, I couldn’t do it; I pushed him away from the threshold. The ship locked. Sealed. And could not take off, because the overlords had broken it. I lay down to starve, alone.

-

*note: NOT the character who canonically (sort of) has a daughter......
kesbeacon: stylised sun over water (Default)
So this is something that I posted on tumblr in 2015, and I definitely do not want to lose it.


It is raining. You have not left shelter and you are soaked. You take a walk, because you have nothing to lose. You were wrong. You have everything to lose.

The ghost of Margaret Thatcher roams these hills, and in her footsteps needles sprout. The children are taught to pelt her with stones from the beach and the river, but every generation she takes her due.

You have grown up resenting England. When you go there, your accent changes. You keep quiet until half time in the rugby when the litany of a thousand years’ griefs comes pouring out. You do not remember learning it. You want to speak of something else. You cannot control your tongue.

‘I am Rebecca’s daughter,’ you say, but there are no toll-gates to storm. Resistance is in your bones, but the streets are full of cracks and the sand is smothering you. This is the new age. You have been forgotten, made redundant. Perhaps the council is hiring.

You pass four churches on every journey you make. They are different churches every day. Some of them are not churches anymore. On holy days, the people gather.

Hiraeth tastes bitter in your mouth and that of everyone you know, even though you barely speak the language. When you leave, you will come back, but you will still feel it. The real world is a dimension shift away from the-world-that-should. Sometimes people play the ‘where did it go wrong’ game. It has always been as it is. You will yearn, and you will return, and you will wonder where your home went. Hiraeth, they tell you. We can’t translate it, but we know it. So do you.

You are driving through the spoil tips. Or are they slag heaps? You are still driving through the spoil tips. You will always be driving through the spoil tips. You remember Aberfan. It is raining. You are afraid.

Your grandfather tells you there are ghosts in the waterfalls. He may be pulling your leg. Your leg is so long. There may be ghosts in the waterfalls. You do not go to find out.

The church with all its graves was the only thing to survive the bombs, when the city turned into a bowl of flame. After that, there were more graves, and everything was different. Everyone remembers. The church forgets.

You drive up the valleys. Your friend says they could hide a body up there. You are not sure they are your friend. You think you once had other friends; more friends. You could hide a body up there.

There are kites wheeling overhead. You are proud that they have established a foothold in your country, such beautiful, endangered birds. You know they eat carrion, but you do not see any for them to eat. Their numbers are growing.

You can hear the lighthouse from your house. You cannot see it, but it is there. You hope it is there. The fishing fleet is not in the harbour. The fishing fleet has not been in the harbour for a long time. Fresh fish still comes to the market.

Welsh coal fuelled the industrial revolution, and now it is gone. Something else left with the coal. You do not know what it was. Sometimes, the bodies in the mines sing.

Nothing in the museum is real except the things stolen from other lands. One day, you are in England and you find the real bones from your hometown. You hiss. This must be how the people who visit your museum feel, you think.

You have been to hundreds of castles in your local neighbourhood. The laughter of children rings hollow in the grassy, rubble-strewn courtyards. You did not buy the guidebook. You already know why the castle was built. They were planted by the English kings to anchor down the land so the dragon in the hills cannot get up. They are crumbling. You can feel the dragon breathing.

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