Lulu Allison

Twice The Speed of Dark


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Sally Toosey

       Jane Toosey

       Debbie Walsh

       Matthew Ward

       Fiona Winterflood

       David Wolfe

      5

       With special thanks to my dear father, Philip Allison.

      Contents

        About the Author

        Dedication

        Dear Reader Letter

        Super Patrons

        Frontispiece

       

        Chapter 1

        Chapter 2

       

        Chapter 3

        Chapter 4

        Chapter 5

        Chapter 6

        Chapter 7

        Chapter 8

        Chapter 9

        Chapter 10

        Chapter 11

        Chapter 12

        Chapter 13

       

        Chapter 14

       

        Chapter 15

        Chapter 16

        Chapter 17

        Chapter 18

        Chapter 19

        Chapter 20

        Chapter 21

        Chapter 22

        Chapter 23

        Chapter 24

       

       

        Acknowledgements

        Patrons

       Sometimes I am hooked by a stray wisp of gravity and pulled back to the body of the Earth. Soft grass, hot dust, a sharp stone – for drifting moments I remember how they felt underfoot. I remember how it felt to have a place. Gravity is once more my friend, my engine. The breeze on my ghost skin brushes memories of life into shimmering being.

       In this endless black emptiness, this vacuum field of bright spilled beads, I yearn for form, a body. I long for a chance to face the eternal dark of death once more.

       Did I die because by chance I met a boy? Or did my destiny shape me in some way, to meet him, to become a component in his acts? No, it cannot be so. I died because he chose it. That shivers through me. The memory of it. How he could betray love so completely. He played himself so fully that he knew no boundary to his self-expression. Perhaps he didn’t choose to kill me, but he chose not to prevent himself causing fatal harm. He chose not to censor himself. He chose to hurt. It is puzzling, such a choice. There is so little to gain. And it hurt so much. The thud of my heart trying to hold that hurt still echoes in the blackness. This blackness is a rich enough medium to hold such waves.

       Other waves, records of love, also echo through me and the blackness. Minute, telling imprints, tiny waves. A disc, a furrowed dish. A plate of love spinning out from the warm beat of a body. The blackness holds thin echoes of those waves. So does my memory. The soft denim of my father’s shirtsleeve, the solid warmth of his shoulder beneath as I leaned my head against it. The two of us in profound and mundane harmony, sitting on the sofa, watching a film. Toast and jam cut into nine small squares. My mother sitting on my bed until I slept, because I was scared. Hours and weeks and years of familial love. And sunny days of friendship – happy girls, bright with the fun of going out, high-heel–and–lip-gloss happy. I died young, but I am ancient now. The light can’t find me any more to make me bright. I have no surface.

       I am part of this blackness, subject to it anyway, riding the waves of its vast echo, being ridden by the jags and troughs of its monstrous silent beat. It hurls me in ferocious arcs. Sometimes, I am thrown back to the softer realms of Earth, and how I try to cling, to form within myself a holding–on. To anchor in the calm blue orb of Earth.

       I often found myself, at the beginning, for long enough to gather, in the fields. I had memories of the clods of clay soil. When I lived, I was there often; it was so familiar. Many hours in these home lands. Pockets of countryside, fields and copses. Small ranges, but enough, when you look inwards for much of the time, as I did, to get lost for days. Stopping to stroke the skull dome of a chalky hunk of flint, the grey underside sheared smooth and cold as a blade. Tickling my palm with the fringed field edges – long grasses and cow parsley. A tingling memory of those sensations. I looked up at the sheltering sky for as long as I could, trying to consume, trying to become. Trying to breathe it, trying to make a new body, trying once more to become something out of nothing. But that trick belongs to a secret order. The seeds of something out of nothing are scattered liberally; it is a daily, hourly miracle. But not one