Whatever happened to Cain?
The bad son
the one who killed
the good son,
broke the family, appalled the neighbours,
got thrown out in to a hostile world,
walked the earth homeless, loveless,
followed the Majii (at a discrete distance)
stood on the road outside the stable
holding a small lamp beneath a sky of stars,
his clothes ragged
his tears tasting of salt.
Mick Corrigan lives in County Kildare with Trish his loving lifer, Molly and Ben the eight legged groove machine and a large collection of pork pie hats. He regularly has ideas well above his station.
Slipping Down
Boxing Day, and when asked what you ate
for Christmas dinner you say,
‘I should remember’.
You are slumped in a high-backed chair,
covered with a name-labelled blanket:
someone else’s.
We are told that at the Christmas party
you boomed out the unerasable hymns,
rallied the others to sing.
Today you remember your daughter’s face,
not her name; and of your son you inquire,
‘Have we met?’
You search my face much longer than you
would have thought proper if you were not
as you are.
I am introduced, again, as ‘Rob’s friend.’
You scan from son to daughter,
and back again,
the half-formed thought refusing to set
like jelly made with too much water,
and you shout, ‘I’ll have to think about that.’
You’ve slipped further in your seat,
as your grandson does when watching TV.
Now it’s Roger Moore as James Bond and
the woman in the red sweater wanders
in front of the screen and demands,
‘Does anyone know what’s supposed to happen?’
Your hands are bony thin; your thumbnail
thickened like a split hoof; and as you slip further
your shirt breaks free from belted trousers.
I have seen old photos, tie and jacket,
dapper. A care worker says
‘We do put a tie on him,’
‘But there’s health and safety to consider.
Joggers, that’s what they need
when they get like that.’
Your skinny bottom changed by day
from too-loose pyjamas
to baby rompers.
Time to sit up for the latest snack: soup,
two triangles of bread and ham.
You are lifted by three tabarded women,
one at each arm, a third at your waist.
You growl as you are raised.
You want to be left to slip down.
Maria C McCarthy is author of strange fruits (Cultured Llama 2011). Her collection of stories, As Long as it Takes, is forthcoming in 2014. She writes in a shed at the end of her garden in a village in north Kent.
Note: ‘Slipping Down’ is published in strange fruits by Maria C McCarthy (Cultured Llama and WordAid 2011)