Tag: John Riley

The Fiddler

by John Riley

AT NUMBER 69A MELROSE STREET, above the funeral parlour now belonging to Dawkins & Booth, old friends meet up in the evening. Flo makes an observation from her favourite vantage spot. Tucked away from sight, she is behind heavy-duty lace curtains.

“I see that fiddler’s there again, haunting the street corner every night this week if you please. Can you see him, Maud, from your little window?
…I don’t suppose you can. I haven’t been to your place for a while. Your room looks small when compared to ours, doesn’t it?”

Maud continues to stare into space.
“Oh, that was so bitter, Flo…Fair sour…Are these new?”

Flo looked beyond the curtain, a slight side glace at the remark.

“Mrs Warboys always puts hers on a nice side plate.”

Maud’s letting it out she had been a guest at her house. She leans forward, curious to check.

“I see you’ve been to that cheap shop. Were they out of date, Flo? Are they okay to eat, don’t want to be up all night, my ulcer gives me gyp you know.”

Flo ignored her. “Opps! I thought he saw me looking at him then.”
“Come away, Flo.”
“I don’t think he saw me, not sure he can behind these nets.”
“He’ll know you’re looking. Come and sit down.”
She doesn’t and stops by the window.

“I say, Maud you should see the way he winks beneath that pulled forward brim.”
“Can’t say I have, Flo.” She eyes up the offering. “My chocolate cake’s melted. Was that from the same place?”
“Yeah, help yourself to more tea. I just want to keep an eye on him. I wonder if he’s got the dog with the hearing aid. Our Bernie says, her George, has got aids in both ears!”

“Is he still there on the corner..? …Haven’t told you, our Denise said he’d spoken to her. Asked if there’s anything she’d like…”

“What!”

“Oh yeah, she said can you play anything by Adele? He said no, carried on playing, I’ll string along with you.”

“You know that was mother’s favourite tune, Maud.”

“How is she Flo, are you regretting it now?”

“Not same person, Maud. Wouldn’t recommend it for your Fred, best letting nature take its course.”

“Is she…”

“…Sleeping at the moment, downstairs. Took plenty of precautions, as you do. It’s all getting out of hand. Pour us a tea would you.”

“Is it me or can I smell something off?” Maud picked up something vile.

“Come away from that window sit down here with me. I feel I’m talking with my back to you.” She thought deeply. “You can’t keep them forever, I mean your Henry’s put up with a lot, you’re very lucky to have him agree for your mother to stop with you as long as she has, what’s he say?”

“Well, Henry’s talked me round to it, said we’ve to put an end to her.” Flo, looking anxious.

Maud surprised. “Oh goodness, bad as that.”

Flo wringing her hands. “He’s melting down her old Rosary cross, using that along with a post hammer and stake.”

“My goodness, Flo, you must be beside yourself with worry.”

“Been too much trouble, Maud, having that fiddler on the roof getting in through the skylight biting mother to give life beyond what’s natural.”

-end-

 

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In Death’s Keeping

by John Riley

Veritas lux me

SLENDER AND SLIGHT IS ELIZA. Born of sign Capricorn, she needed solace in quiet ways and wandered alone in places that people rarely frequent. For might a suitor draw towards a presumption? One so innocent and vulnerable needs another affection to cherish.

Oh, Eliza, whose radiance shone beyond her form, illuminated by the moon’s arc across the night sky. There are events fated to take place in a life so young and naïve of experience.

Entranced was Darius, a young poet and Piscean and soon besotted. For such grace with words and deeds, casting spells of joy in a lover’s heart.

In the heavens, do signs reveal a synastry? Eliza and Darius are star-struck, two families uniting.

Would not the ancients comply that both luminaries, alongside Mars and Venus, foretell of lovers? But would they not also observe and take note of shadowy Saturn’s sorrowful influence on each life mapped at birth?

Each shall devote their love long through eternity even though promised until death does us part.

Sweethearts soon pronounce before the altar that they are husband and wife, sealed and bound by custom a ring and kiss.

Too brief is the year for newlyweds. Spring had arrived, then passed on with little sunlight and icy winds to nip back tender shoots.

Summer is suppressed by grey-laden days and deep lows that bring rain.

Autumn gives way too long a winter and misery.

Born out of a January chill consumption and death. A thief in the night and a widow alone. Lost forever is young love.

Saturn came out of the shadows.

A family cemetery whose plots are draped with misty cobwebby veils. Where the remains of a fence are splintered and bone that no longer protects from the encroaching unhallowed ground.

‘Tis a place unloved those final resting tombs of the family Lunanoir. Buried deep in solitude and abandoned beneath clods of heavy sod.

No parent, widow or widower, shall bear standing at these graves in deep contemplation. Weeping amongst this gloom of ancestral woe, save but one, Eliza.

Four seasons long grieving and lamentable song lain over her lover’s grave, she gives her soul to be with her Darius. He now six deep and clothed in oak and Eliza behind black and sorrow weeping day and night.

Retreating from family and life confined in a north-facing, sparsely furnished room, lit by a small fire and bedside lantern.

She comes and goes, fleeting as a memory. The family Lunanoir yield and accept her malady. Never is she spoken of in conversation, never more.

This late hour on All Hallows’ Eve, Eliza upon her lover’s grave, reciting from her troubled heart sorrowful prose. Swearing allegiance, promising her soul and no different on the evening’s new moon.

Upon midnight at the toll of the cemetery bell, when uttering the last of words, enters a stranger. It is all withered and buckled, appearing out of the night shadows.

It calls out for forgiveness and acceptance for startling a troubled widow.

He comes with a proposition, a passage beyond to take her where lover now remains in a place called limbo.

His master has taken pity and caught the cry from a heart deep as a water well. This stranger brings a revelation to Eliza’s graveside vigil.

In a wooded thicket, dense and complex, she weaves through intricate maze-crazed paths, following and meandering amongst the briar and nettle.

Eliza keeping near to the buckled-back stranger.

The darkness grows and spreads and reaches far in this place while upon the night air, old corruption remains. Eliza turned and looked sideward and checked back at the trodden track. For she felt things were watching and drawing near.

Then, a twinkling through the woven mass of wood. The stranger makes haste to a clearing and enters through a modest wooden gate.

In view is the manor house, hidden from the mortal world. A house of faded wear, lanterns lit from every window.

Eliza is now a figure alone, approaching the grand front door.

She stands before the door and is surprised when opened by a long-since dead relative in faded velvet and cloth, peppered with chalk-white dust.

Stepping across a threshold and gestured to move beyond, not noticing the others out at the side of the spacious hallway and staircase.

Her sights were dewy, fixed upon her lover, radiant and reaching out with open arms to embrace and seek solace.

The ensemble stands and marvels, witnessing a joining together. Coveted with joy, sadness no more, and Eliza seeking this moment to last an eternity.

Tempting they are for her to embrace and kiss those lips so denied when in his final sleep. Yearning is she for his caress.

She cannot resist and takes one final glance at others, smiling and willing to fulfil that passion.

Yet, in the corner of her eye, at the front door, did she spy a demon? Upon facing it, no, but smiling Uncle Hathaway, who had died when she had turned twelve.

She can wait no longer, rushing to Darius’s open arms that close around her and hold his bride.

Then a voice familiar, loud and pleading from outside the front door not to kiss dead lips for she will become the Devil’s bride!

Unable to cross the threshold is the spirit of Darius.

See that your real love stands outside. He tells the Devil, Eliza gave her soul to me. I am Darius, so go, Old Deceiver, by the rites of this place, you have no command over the soul of Eliza! She has not taken you to her heart now be gone!

The Devil’s spell is broken.

So it is in slumber Darius will wait until Eliza embraces death’s repose, and they lie together beneath a wild briar rose.

-end-

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Tell me your secrets tell me your lies

by John Riley

IT IS A YAWNING ROOM OF LONG SHADOWS, casting from the edge of its boundaries a reach to drown the light. A great pitted inglenook fireplace, charred and soot-stained, burns with an ember glowing. The flame lost, flickering that it might radiate heat. Alas, it brings no warmth.

Seated and huddled close on the high baroque chair is the current elderly master of the house, Earl Marmaduke Broughtonshire of the Vale.

A hollow wind, an age long in lament, lulls the night with its highs and lows. Cast and tossed icy rain, like splintered bone, does strike against the tall cathedral panes. That gives way to the strains of piping draughts wafting threadbare voiles and shaking snowy flakes of dust fluttering the dank air.

The Earl is a waiting, wrapped and layered thick inside padded housecoat, and on his head of thinning hair, an embroidered silk velvet-smoking cap adorned with a gold tassel.

Of his face, disfigured, covered with a mask fashioned by a Venetian costumier. Drawn unto himself contemplating the disclosure.

He is not a gentleman of status. No different from another, save the grand surroundings of an ancestral inheritance. Expressing he is the same susceptibilities of one’s nature and the good traits of a personality fortified by what life offers. A wiley man, seeking at his great age to lead the game despite ailing infirmities.

Here is a man accepting his deck of cards that others have held throughout their life and will continue to do in its great circle.

A man grieving over years at the loss of his beloved consort. His dearest pledged they should grow old together at the great oak tree by the riverbank.

There, each Spring season, they bind hand in hand with satin ribbon and speak those vows in simple rhyme to love and cherish each other unto their dying days.

How cruel that raging night. An angry storm laden with misery and woe that it should amass itself upon the earth to herald an arrival.

By the twelfth chime, death had gathered in the harvest, and she was nevermore.

On this night and come the hour, so mote it be.
“Sir, we have our guest.” George announced.
“Yes, thank you, play the part be deferential my good man.”
She was slender and slight by the angular way the black cloth draped over her frame.
Nothing was spoken, her head bowed and covered against the chill. Her movement glided the hallway in pursuit of her client.

In her wake came an icy cold breath that stroked the flesh, her cards clawed in a left-gloved hand.

Pausing at the study door, she drew back her hood, revealing silver threads amongst the knotted tresses. Her face was bone thin, eyes fixed and green, casting a gaze back.

The hallway was empty. The Earl is responsive.
“Please, have no qualms although I can well imagine the place looms with such gloom and otherworldliness. Please step forward, and sit with me; I have a card table brought for your needs.”

The woman said nothing, waiting, staring at the man hidden in his coat and mask.

“Forgive the appearance but I hide my disfigurement and that the cold does grieve my wounds that I should in all practicalities allow myself some relief from the sufferance. Please…” His hand shook, a slight tremor while he reached to offer the seat by the fire.

She thanked him. Her voice was soft and whispery, evoking distant memories.

Sitting, she peered into the depth of shadows beyond his small sanctuary kept safe by the weak firelight.

Lingering silence marked the minutes while outside, the wind moaned, and inside, a flame spat.

Gathering his courage, the Earl spoke again.
“Would you care for a warming drink? I fear the flame from the hearth no substitute for inner warmth. Perhaps a hot toddy of mulled wine?”
“No, thank you. I am accustomed to the cold. I should like to begin now.”
The Earl smiled thoughtfully.
“Indeed for your words shall be of interest to me this evening and I place much responsibility on what your visions reveal.”
Troubled, he is by a tickling cough just then.

“There have been others but none were able to tell me what I have needed to know. I hold no grudge should you not be able to provide the information I seek and crucial to my requirements.”
The lady poised in such elegance while preparing the cards.
“George will pay you well for your time stepping out on this bleak night. I understand you are quite a find.”
The lady placed the cards down on the table.
“I would ask that you shuffle the pack for I have a ritual and guided procedure that provides the information you seek.”
Her voice is enchanting and mesmeric.

He reached to take the outsized deck and, as best he could, shuffled them lengthways to perform the task. The cards were cut, split and drawn together, handed over again until the ritual was completed.

Presented in the moment came the telling of a story, and in the unfolding, Marmaduke Broughtonshire smiled. His face is scary without the mask. And would reveal his cunning plan should he be without.

A story told, lilting and whispered of a curse others had spoken about. This is an ancestral curse stretching back throughout the years. Heed a warning this evening underscored by thunder rumbling and rolling closer.

“I speak of a curse passed on to the next. A tormented soul in limbo that can only free itself by passing on the misery to another.” She studied the cards, aware of the Earl and his curiosity.

Allowing him time, she waited for the Earl to speak.

He thought on matters which in his searching might have brought him to this madness. The truth must be spoken.

Silent, she remained alert.

In the chill, something else haunts his mind and pricks a conscience.
At that moment, in silent work, George, in another part of the house, did catch something unseen and realised a memory.

“A curse you say?” Marmaduke asked. “That such a time can only strike when another acknowledges it by sight. You have confirmed what I had thought. That to catch one look, this creature that hunts us out, hunts me out! If we let it look us in the eye that is all it needs to pass on the curse… And… send into limbo for it, the former bearer of such darkness will then be free… It is a vicious circle.”

The card reader waited on the Earl who asked his question.
“Can this creature be stopped this is what I seek?”
She thought about his growing realisation.
“For one to realise then it is too late. When something catches their eye it triggers the Reaper’s collection. To see is to be condemned, and death is at hand to take the soul from one world and deliver to another.”
“Then I have my answer.” The Earl complimented. “I must thank you and reward you for your insight this night.”

The Earl was a clever man, reaching to remove the mask. Lifting his head, he revealed his face unto the woman. He had sought to trap her.
She glared with dead eyes; the mark of the curse was upon her, signalling that death shall come and take his soul to limbo so that she is free.

But the Earl was blind, skinned white eyes smiling back, and unable to see the death stare.

In his quickness and stealth, mastering his infirmity, he reached and pulled the cord to reveal the black mirror at his side, primed as others had told him during their readings.

It cast its black reflection at the woman. She stared hard at her own horror and demise, screaming loudly at the reveal.

Death summoned cannot return home without its bounty so marked for harvest. And reap for death cometh summoned. Casting her from the world of limbo into another place. Duly condemned, she is cast and trapped in a world of fire and brimstone.

In the quiet of the cold room did Marmaduke Broughtonshire sit ever so still while the last of the dying flames extinguished.

In his mind’s eye, trying to imagine what countenance framed that lilting whispering voice while waiting on George.

George was taking a long time returning to light the fire.

-end-

 

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The Cull

by John Riley

…I am sharing a memory given to me in 2016 and taking a risk so you do not think me mad. What is written does concern you and the other souls on this planet. If, like I, you remember and my words resonate, then you will know why you were born onto this planet at this time…

 

UPON THE HILL, I REMEMBER SEEING IT, yet doubt will persist about what is remembered.

A tall figure wearing black cloth caught me staring at its thin form. When I try to remember, I grow fearful, for more than a passing glance took place, and its form remains hidden from my perceptions.

Why I should contemplate such an unsupported opinion disturbs me, for my dreams are haunted by questions.

I have raked through these thoughts hundreds of times since it happened, pushing aside close friends and others with my persistence.

Digging to uncover a lost memory buried under the clod. It has me retreating from those yet to awaken. I try to find ways to lift the spirits, yet I end up with nothing but sadness.

And so, I share with you my memory and take a risk you do not think me mad. What I have written concerns you and the other souls on this planet.

If, like I, you remember and my words resonate, then you will know what is agreed and why you were born onto this planet at this time.

I shall begin.

In the darkness, a soul seeks the light when life down below takes solace from the stars.

Beyond do gather the multitude, their presence with me and yet I stand alone, staring in wonderment at the vastness of this vacuum outside of me, and I know… All can see.

Then, I beheld a vision of horror.

The Earth is screaming, tormented that I cannot break away from the suffering until some veil descends and protects me from the destructive vibrations.

She screams out, seeking to be released from her anguish and put an end to the tribulations.

Humankind, I learn, has fastened and bound over the planet, constrained her so that she cannot cast and destroy all evidence of our domain over her.

She can not rid herself of the source that causes her imprisonment.

Those people, the family of humankind has nurtured, saw the Earth captured, exercising their grip and control of reality.

Though I see the planet suffer, as do many, I enquire to those around me. Why is the Earth isolated, banished to an empty void?

From beyond given in spoken word… The Earth and all that dwell upon her remain isolated. To protect all of those things that do exist.

Why? Because man tampers with time and the fabric of realities, creating rifts in the delicate woven threads.

See, the Earth screams while man holds her with bonds of great force, exhibiting a crippling trial that does torture and breaks into submission.

So it is that Man, not allowed evermore, to see out his destructive plan.

-o-

When I turned to look higher, I beheld a reality beyond my station. To my surprise, entities of a kind that shimmer and appear angelic to my eyes.

It puzzled me that those angelic beings should express a countenance all worrisome, anxious, lost and in some consternation. Not something I’d expected to witness beyond our earthly doubts and fears.

For awareness be upon them, all drew some manner of contact that I did enquire of one anxious and at a vibration for me to engage.

It spoke that they, these light beings, cannot believe the order given and decision cast and that such a proclamation from a higher vibration sealed and made ready.

And so it told me that upon the Earth shall seed a virus. No fabricated virus that man can produce a cure.

He will not have the means to prevent the spread of a virulent and destructive life form. When cross-species contamination, and that known, all upon the Earth shall infect, and the extinction of life on the planet will occur.

And I saw the void and a great gathering, bearing witness to this moment. A decree spread amongst the gathered that the Earth needs cleansing of humankind, for it has gone too far too soon and cannot continue to endanger reality.

When I asked why I saw this, why here at this place? And it told me that I chose __a reminder of my role, as others have when incarnating on Earth.

I aligned myself to the mission. We are here to collect the experience of life on Earth, to remember the beauty of this planet, to take all that is uplifting, all that raises the vibration in our existence of life.

We are receptacles to collect and hold precious experiences that enrich, bring life, nurture, learn, unite, drive, grow and be the custodians. To keep close the laughter, happiness, and wonder of life in all its positive vibrations and hold precious love when succumbing to the cull.

Such are the chosen a receptacle that will go forth, born onto a New Earth resonating at a higher vibration.

Where nothing of the dark is allowed. For that of the dark and lower vibrations will perish.

And of the old Earth, it will begin again.

If my tale angers you, I am sorry, but these visions are to take place, and I bring the truth and warn that the virus is already upon the planet.

Cross-contamination across the species will begin in the Far East, and that man, trying in his panic, will realise. It is beyond his reality to cure.

Remember what you will of the good times, for that of us who do and seed a New Beginning, our mission fulfilled, and we return to the source.

-end-

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No 35

part three by John Riley

“What do you make of that Padre Simonstone?” Joyce picked up a previous conversation, distracted at the counter and asked which milk for the tea?
“I’ll give him his due; he’s tidying up that abandoned cemetery far end of the parish.”
“Aye, caring man giving back to those forgotten souls. The place was attracting vandals and the like. I mean, didn’t they light a fire at one of the gravestones?” Joyce was thinking about whether overcharged for the cost of these drinks.
“Well, about time something was done. It’s a right mess and I’d heard some horrible nasty goings-on.”
“Oh, pray tell?”
“C’mon Joyce, surely you’ve heard. I can’t believe you’ve not, story plastered all over last week’s Telegraph.”
“Aye, well I wouldn’t, would I, him indoors lines the new dog kennel before I’ve had time to read them. I’m not speaking to him at the moment.”
“Well, I’ll show you. I’m taking some fresh flowers down there given by the friends of the forgotten.”
Joyce shivered. “Oh, I don’t know… I always avoided that place, gives me the spooks.”
“Give over, come on we need people to help and return it to its proper state. A place of peace for the dead to rest.”
“Well let me finish my tea, I’ve paid for this and at these prices, I can’t afford to waste it.”

Longside Cemetery remains quiet, from clearly a hive of busy activity, returning it to former dignity. Still sends a chill over Joyce. She’s not totally oblivious to the stories told about this place. Anyway, during the day, it doesn’t look so bad, a lot better since her last visit.
“They’ve done a lot of work, looking tidier.” Joyce scanned across the gravestones.

The site is a mixture of old statues and moss-green tombstones teetering back on themselves. One is still damaged from the scorching when someone made a fire up against it. Above all this and catching the eye is a statue of Death. Tall, and stately, and such a looming presence it watches over all comings and goings.

Joyce, not wanting to catch its dead stare, was the main reason she didn’t want to be here. As if to look on it would mark you for its cull, and even tormenting herself with a worrying thought – did she look at it in the corner of her eye?

“Awe, look at that Joyce.”
Both take a closer look at the latest spray left on number 31. The one fire damaged. ‘To Mr and Mrs Garnett – forever in our hearts – Rest in Peace – All at No. 66’.
“Sixty-six, that’s that big family mausoleum over on the newer side. That’s where the money lot goes. I wonder if they were in service to them. Bit of a mystery…” She glanced over at the plinth upon which a statue of Death looked out.
“You know those wreaths never last more than a day by that statue. Some beautiful deep red almost black velvety roses, wither in a couple of hours. You waste money putting a wreath there.”
Joyce didn’t want to look. She ventured across the grassy track. “What about this one?”
She bent low to replace the card on number 33.
“Looks like the ink’s run, feels like a piece of wallpaper… I think… the name is Michael… and Georgina..? What are these numbers for? Are they markers?” Joyce asked aloud.

They both walked along tidied pathways, carefully stepping clear of the odd stray briar rose whipping across on a stray breeze.
“Joyce, I’ll go and get the carpetbag I’m borrowing, something thats seen plenty of life. I’ll bring the flowers over. You wait here, I won’t be long.”
She was unsure if she wanted to be alone but kept her doubts quiet. She’d her back to the statue__Death. She could sense its shadow and felt the cold shiver prickle her flesh with goosebumps.

 

Joyce was ready for something warm to eat when returning home.
“Joyce, is that your house?” Pulling the car into Laurel Avenue.

The paramedics were in and out of her home.

Joyce raced out of the car, running into the arms of a police officer and in the following minutes learnt upsetting news…

He indoors suffered a sudden heart attack while lining the dog kennel with newspaper. The dog howling alerted neighbours to investigate.

Over in Longside Cemetery, dusk cast far-reaching shadows stretching far. One appears to stand out from the rest in its spooky way. Death’s shadow spread across the ground, reaching that spot where Joyce had thought she’d caught its dead stare from the corner of her eye.

-end-

 

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No. 33

part two by John Riley

THE ONLY THING THAT GEORGINA CAN REMEMBER is having doubts about the stranger renting next door. She has been ignoring him.

George, her preferred name, but only close friends can call her that, is beginning to wonder if the informality should continue. Well, she hasn’t seen any of her old friends anymore.

What is she doing here? What possessed her to live out an existence in limbo in this backwater of a place.

Georgina hangs on to things and is unable to let go. Same with her memories. The house is up for sale, and the odd person shown around ignores her as if she is not there. How rude. She finds a lot of time to reflect now, hell! Even wonders if anyone knows she lives here. She doesn’t think the house looks good with that burnt-out wreck next door.

Georgina thought herself popular among the crowd, kinda was a social creature. Someone always eccentric, taking risks and all that, especially with those she got involved with, or you could say entangled. It is not the acquaintances she needs to be careful about better if they avoid Georgina.

Some days she can’t get herself off the floor, spends hours sprawled out in some rag doll discarded way. She won’t admit that she’s losing it. Wouldn’t you think it strange that she talks to the wallpaper? Just because the patterns in it look like faces, she’s trying to hear what they’re saying. She’s wondering if that puts people off the place.

Georgina likes to take the cards from bouquets of flowers left outside next door and do it before they get to know. That’s Georgina through and through. She pins them to all her dead flowers in the house. Scribbles out and adds a name, past acquaintances, although she would never add the name__William.

He put up a fight. Georgina didn’t know how she got away with it that night. She needs to be careful about the punters she brings into her house.

Damn it!

She drifted away then and missed the latest flowers for next door. Blast too late, they have been taken into the house. Georgina didn’t see her do it, or did she?

Well, that’s strange, a face on the wallpaper wanting her attention. Georgina got close. It was Michael again, the one before William. She shouldn’t be thinking of that name.

Michael, last heard of, dead in her deep freezer. She thinks the face is saying something to her; better to listen this time. Michael always did want to help. She’d have been better clinging on to him. Sounds like he’s saying – answer the front door.

Someone is approaching.

When she looked up, on cue, there was a knock at the door. Looking through the glass is a shadow.

Looks like that stranger renting next door with a carpetbag. Georgina had an idea she might need to leave and told Michael to tell the others she might not be coming back…

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