A collection of poems and other writings...

Monday 5 August 2019

Paired for Life

‘You have to become the swan,’ she said. ‘You do not simply see the swan upon the water, you have to BE the swan. Do you understand?’
‘Yes,’ said Charlie, but with little conviction.
‘Try it again, please, one more time before we finish.’
He rested his bow against the string, placed his left hand in its starting position high on the neck of the instrument and started to play.
He knew he was a little flat but Miss Radcliffe was already lost in her imagination of the most beautiful music. She could not resist the temptation to join in.
‘Yaaa da da, laaa da da... she is alone, the swan
Daaada da... Feel the water supporting you...Daaa da da da ... she weeps as she swims
Crescendo as you climb... her grief is overwhelming...
Better...
...and sweetly at the top there - you’re a little flat...’ she sang the words.
‘Let the current flow... it is exquisite pain for her...
the water is cold, powerful...
it carries you along... yes
yes, that’s better... more and more....’
Charlie drew his bow across the final note.
‘There, Charles. Did you feel the difference? You were finding the instrument’s voice there a little, do you not agree?’
‘Yes, Miss Radcliffe.’ He was ready to leave the fusty room and walk home through the afternoon air.
‘Right, well we’ll leave it there for this week, Charles. Good. Some improvement. Definitely. Some definite improvement.’
‘Yes, miss.’
‘Have you seen a swan swimming, Charles?’
‘Yes, miss, of course. In the park. On the lake. I’ve seen them there.’
She didn’t seem quite satisfied with his answer.
‘Yes, they do come to the lake, I suppose. But in the wild, away from humans and ducks and bread and picnic baskets - have you ever..?’ Her eyes glazed a little as her thoughts drifted away from her.
Charlie waited a moment to see if her sentence had an end...
‘Right. I’ll see you next week, miss’
‘Yes, Charles. Please be prompt.’
‘Yes, miss.’
He slackened the nut of the bow, released the wing nut on the spike of the cello and eased it back into the base of the instrument. He lifted the lid of his case and carefully packed cello and bow away.
Miss Radcliffe watched him, lost in her thoughts. He could still smell the peppermints on her breath with which she tried to mask the sour stain of cigarette smoke.
He stood and gripped the handle then realised he had not gathered his sheet music. Miss Radcliffe noticed at the same time and reached across from her seat and lifted the pages from the wire stand. She glanced again at the title.
‘They pair for life, you know,’ she said.
‘Pardon, miss?’
‘Swans. They pair for life, and if one of them dies the other slowly pines away.’
‘Right... Bye then, miss.’
‘Yes, yes. Goodbye, Charles. Goodbye. Practise please, practise.


At the park he swung the kiss gate open and clumsily manhandled the cello awkwardly through it. He would normally just stick to Clementson Road to avoid the difficult kiss gate manoeuvre but today... there was something in Miss Radcliffe’s tone that had stayed in his mind. So now he looped down between the rhododendrons, past the restored Victorian greenhouses and down into the park proper.
There were handful of children with their parents on the spinners and swings. Three boys were playing football on the grass, their bikes casually strewn across the path. As Charlie picked his way between them the ball came bouncing over towards him and struck the case of his cello. He shot an angry look at the boy who seemed to have kicked it but then, seeing him come running over to retrieve it, Charlie felt a little intimidated.
‘Sorry,’ he said, as the boy came into earshot, then he immediately felt stupid.
The boy didn’t even look at him- just trapped the ball, steadied himself and kicked it hard back to the others.

By the lake, Charlie lifted his cello and rested it on the bench. He stood by the end resting one knee on the wooden slats and looked out across the water. A few ducks muddled around on the grass and a row of grey pigeons sat uniformly spaced along the low wall at the water’s edge. Across the lake a little way, he spotted the swans. The same pair had been here for as long as Charlie could remember. Every year they would nest on the little island in the spring and a few weeks later four or five grey cygnets would follow them as they sailed serenely across the water. Charlie wondered where all those swan children were now. He imagined them flapping furiously across the water, beating their wings, until optimum takeoff speed was reached and then majestically rising into the air, swimming up into the clouds, the sun setting on the horizon. In his mind he saw them arced across the sky, formation flying like old footage he had seen of droning war planes, Lancasters, Wellingtons, brave warriors flying off to their destiny.
The swans had seen Charlie too. They came gliding across the water towards him as if powered by thought alone. Charlie wished he had something to feed them - bread, anything. He bent and pulled at a golden dandelion head. Tossed it towards the water. But it was too light and just fluttered down onto the mud. One of the swans swam closer drawn by the familiar movement of the throwing arm, but without even seeming to look it discounted the muddied flower.
Charlie noticed the moment the swans realised he had nothing for them - they subtly, coolly, simply, redirected their way parallel to the bank to a spot further down where a young woman was freeing her toddler from her pushchair. Charlie and the swans saw the woman reach for a paper bag beneath the seat and start handing pieces of white bread to her daughter. The little girl took each piece and held it extravagantly over her head before throwing it with abandon, mostly in the general direction of the water.
You shouldn’t feed them bread, Charlie thought, even while he envied the little girl. It’s not good for them.
He remembered the excitement of standing just there with his own mother, being handed the same pieces of bread, throwing with as much enthusiasm as this little girl did. His feet started to walk him towards them, until his hand on the handle of his cello case reminded him that he was older.
The swans moved with no hesitation. Theirs were perfect, easy movements, each reflecting the other as the water reflected each of them. A silent duo. A pas de deux. Their heads moved in perfect synchronisation, never deciding where to go but yet swimming with pure intention. Charlie found himself watching the space between them - an invisible silver, silken connection, sometimes stretching, sometimes shrinking, constantly changing shape. They were together and yet separate, a unity of swan and yet two distinct beings. They were paired for life, Charlie thought.
He thought of Miss Radcliffe sat waiting for him each week. He could only ever imagine her in the study, still, quiet, waiting. As if there were no other purpose in her life. Just music, and the teaching of it, the teaching of him. He saw her - a cigarette in her thin fingers, a column of ash growing at its tip as she waited. She had never paired, he thought. Or maybe she had. Maybe she had lost the one who had moved in slow easy arcs with her, the other separate being in her unity.
The bag of bread was empty now.





The swans glided slowly, separately, together, back out across the chilly grey water.


prompt: she asked him if he understood
written in one hour - with a little subsequent editing.
20.11.2018

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