brain: let's change everything, again.
me: no.
brain: pls.
me: fine.
ooc: I can’t concentrate because I get to see Robbie Williams on Saturday and it’s making all my 12 year old girl dreams come true as a 31 year old woman. Will I cry? Probably. He is EXACTLY who he thinks he is and I love that for him.
bear with me, I’m returning from a year off and feel like Bambi learning to stand again.
Gold. Who was that guy that touched everything and, ‘ting!’ pure gold? All that money thrown at education and I don’t have the foggiest. I suppose mommy wanted me to have the best, and possibly meet some kids my own age, but honestly I’d have been better being thrown into the local high school, at least then I’d have had a chance at talking to people who are more likely to have a soul.
I am well aware of my place, and truly, I know I could fall in shit and come out smelling of roses. Most of the time I don’t have to think at all, days upon days of blissful nothing and fuck me, I have no idea why the rest of my family make it look so fucking difficult. Forever jamming their fists into where they can make more of it; green. The thing that makes the world turn on its axis, so they say. Don’t make us any happier though, does it? I’m sure the foundations of this place are built on valium and loud sighs.
We are, mostly, very stupid, and very far removed. It is wealth you simply cannot dream of, the gap between us and your average joe, middle class with a 401k, 2.5 kids and wife with a Louis Vuitton handbag is actually a fucking chasm. So deep and so wide it could unhinge it’s jaws, and snaffle the Grand Canyon. IT'S NOT REAL. A world of no consequence, no one need grow up, endless fucking frolicking at the bottom of Mary Poppins’ carpet bag with Peter bastard Pan and all of his merry men, or whoever the fuck Disney said.
We just are.
True enough, we could do more to help the needy, or…those that are on the breadline, whatever the PC term is now. But our ignorance means our own problems, usually of our own doing are usually far more important. Frivolous, but far more important than the fact you’ve shoved another kid out and can’t afford a grocery shop. The fact that those little colourful tickets designed to look like you aren't completely fucked, the ones you cash in at the foodbank, the proverbial begging bowl, is your life line. Who the fuck do we think we are?
Uncle Philip does an especially good job of knotting himself up to be the King on the funeral pyre of his making. Good businessman, fairly bad human, but so are we all I’d wager. Silly little footnotes stomping around unending halls crying at our fistfuls of cash. He hates it. Recently, he spends most of his time lurking and chain smoking, it almost appears it physically pains him to smile, which is a shame because I remember a time his lips would crack and his laughter would make his whole frame shake. He was, is…warm, he’s just forgotten in all the din of being one of the luckiest motherfuckers on planet earth.
Our family is odd, though. I see that now, The Sheas are very much new money, it's a dirty term around people like us. This miserable nature hasn’t become engrained in them yet, they are still worker ants, bringing their wares back to the nest, stockpiling wealth for a rainy day. But fuck me, they are like sunshine, and they are just so…well, REAL Their emotions aren’t regulated by having a stick up ones ass, they've just fuckin’ grafted for the world they inhabit. There is a certain levity, to having them around, and they have so much familial turmoil and yet they are simply magic. It’s fascinating.
I realise sometimes how tone deaf I am when I try to have conversations with them, or, well anyone outside of the Locke family prison. I am coveted, surrounded, and yet none of them fucking listen. I am nobody, not a victim, but a nobody. Just the prize pig, and I must say some of the most heinous shit, because our life is just playtime, and theirs actually means something.
I am aware how trite I sound, rich kid wants to mean something. What’s wrong with that though? Well, I suppose the sun shines out of my ass, and therefore, I have to work harder to prove not everything of value I am capable of producing was funded entirely by the obscenity of the wealth in my estate. All at once I want to hide and I want to be seen, instead I am balls deep in a stereotype I am incapable of shaking off. How tragic.
I tilt my head, there is something about being here nowadays that makes my skin itch, as if it should come away from me in parched, dry sheets, a snake shedding its layers. This used to be mine, and now it mocks me. I always did think it stuck out too far, too high, almost too regal of a skeleton for the disease it housed. All I see when I look at this fuckin’ building, is failure. Failure of a marriage, or failure of the chance at one and all its trimmings so to say.
Respected though he was, or feared, choose how you spin it, I still know him for what he was, is and had been to me all those years. How different things were, when they met, the Locke siblings were no more than blithering idiots trying to make a go of it after their maw and paw snuffed it.
I hate comin’ here, he’s so different nowadays. We became so poisonous to one another, I could sit here and play the victim, course I could, but it wouldn’t be honest. I ain’t the kinda girl to sink into the wall flowers and act small and unassuming. I could, and do hold my own. He could be a fuckin’ bastard, towards the end. I knew he wanted out, but he just wouldn’t say it, and part of me wanted to prolong the inevitable, cling to the power I had left. Already balls deep in her. Fillin’ her belly with the baby I wanted. I won’t say it’s karma one hasn’t stuck, but ya know.
I fuckin’ hated her then, because I thought she’d won. Miss Fuckin’ Sunshine. She had him, and she’d won, and I may as well have been screaming into the void cause every fucker just accepted it. We had been married since we were nineteen, all those years just gone. I prayed for the first time in my life, but there ain’t no-one up there that gives half a damn, and I also mildly considered the smooth metal of a shot gun bringing me peace. God wasn’t listenin’, and I figure that he don’t listen to folk like us. People that sink into the dirt and swim in it like dogs, writhing in their ruin. In fact, the only one of us that probably has any kinda ongoing conversation with the big man upstairs and maintains any kinda kinship is Sean is, orla’s crackpot lad. Too teeming with guilt to accept this cess pool for what it is.
I don’t hate her now, cause i see the life she leads, and the loss she wears on her gullet like a boulder. Blair shea is the victim i didn’t ever want to be. I often imagined what it would be like to crawl up inside her, feel the soft pink wetness of her innards and just get him to look at me the way he sees blair, just once.
Instead all i see is his face, twisted and cocky, cigarette ever perched at the end of yellowed fingers. I nipped the end off of one, lobbing a vase as hard as I could. I just wanted to hurt him. It was vapid, blind regret, lip didn’t even flinch, just accepted the onslaught with the same stony resolve he always had, peered at his finger as droplets of vermillion sank into the thick carpet between his toes. “Fuckin’ big now are ye?” he hadn’t so much as brushed past me. Violent though he was, to his credit, i was the banshee he had tried to tame all these years. A fuckin’ toddler stampin’ her feet as i’d always done. Fat lotta good it did me.
When that man was done, he was done, just wouldn’t say it if it killed him. Preferred to get on his soapbox after the fact. He only ever turned on me once, rattling my skull into the closet door until my ears rang. I cant really remember why, only that i’d poked and prodded too much, but as soon as he’d grabbed me, his fingers melted to a quiver and he let go. Too ashamed to continue the conversation he had walked out. Never touched her though; never would.
Shouldn’t have followed him and yet, i found myself nose to nose, bent over his desk as he bowed his head, pupils sinking into the words he couldn’t absorb on the papers in front of him. Quietly, and all too calmly, he dropped a heavy palm on top of mine, the hot metal of his wedding band as he removed himself again said all it needed to.
I’d been a cunt, we had been. Now it was all gone and he was different somehow, he glowed. We had settled over the years, i didn’t hate any of them. Turned out once you’d been married that long, you ceased to have an opinion at all. Years of toil, reduced to the unofficial alimony check he still delivered every month. Loyal as a labrador that man, it’s not the money, i can do without it. But we always have a coffee, and manage to laugh at the idiocy in our marriage, and i know there’s a heart beatin’ in that tin chest. We’re different folks when we’re with the person we’re meant to be with.
I do wonder though, what he’d do, if he knew most nights i still slept under this roof. I do wonder how he’d alter if he knew his brother was the one keepin’ me warm at night nowadays. That was difference I suppose, one of them would lay down and die for the other, dermot, however, only loves dermot.
𝐛𝐮𝐫𝐧 𝐢𝐭 𝐚𝐥𝐥 𝐝𝐨𝐰𝐧, 𝐚𝐧 𝐞𝐦𝐩𝐢𝐫𝐞 𝐨𝐟 𝐝𝐢𝐫𝐭.
They knew better.
Intimacy – their journey to a new recovery had revealed different layers this time, dynamics to their untraditional coupling. They had agreed to stop trying for a while, their bodies both holding evidence of too many failures. Failures of something that should come natural, but didn’t. Perhaps it was a punishment for the lives they were laced into.
However, of late, she had noticed a small shift, a reversal of roles; nights in which she lay at his side – she the one rattled awake, paranoid for his well being. Medicine induced slumber made stony features soften and she admired, soothed with delicate fingertip trails over clammy flesh. When he did stir, she watched, moved; fluid, pressed to him, skin on skin. Blair basked in newfound vulnerability. The animal in him lay dormant, revealing soft, exposed flesh.
The two of them were perhaps basking in the release of the pressure they had put on themselves. Too much. Her body betrayed them; and he could appreciate the weight it left on her frame. Words were never enough; gentle touches were no longer enough to soothe. He ached to give her what she so desperately wanted, They were not normal, and perhaps this was just another facet to a conclusion they could both see but wouldn’t meet.
They knew better.
Those shielded oceanic orbs, the discomfort in masculine frame began as a shudder, a nudge – the way thick lashes attempted to pry open his eyelids, to see who haunted his mind, but his resolve remained weak, eyelids too heavy.
“No, no….shhh. Shh.”
She would soothe, attempting to lull him back down before pain would tear through broken body – opening wounds he had thought long since healed.
“It’s alright, I’m here – it’s nothing.”
Cool knuckles brushing over set jawline, fingers tangling in his hair.
“It’s me, sweetheart, it’s Blair.”
Visage would loll into the pillow, slow, sluggish breaths marked sleep though his fingers would curl into her flesh. “I love you.” She would whisper. There was a version of them here; somewhere between night and day when they would exhibit tenderness. He’d peer at her through the blackness, reaching for her, rough thumb pad brushing over her lip.
But he’d remember.
Philip propped himself up in bed, the coldness rushed in quickly as with consciousness came memory - he remembered. It had only been a few weeks, and this time, in the aftermath, she appeared to be wearing it better than he. Blair watched as the man that had coiled to her but moments ago, now reached for a cigarette, wordless.
To many, it was a harmless movement as any, but to her it was another knife in her barren gut. She was the woman that couldn’t sire him a child. It was a paradox, archaic and all at once coveted. She was not, and would not be a natural mother, just as he would not be a natural father. For a couple that when they wanted something they had it; it was this, the most natural of loves, that evaded them.
The very praxis of her womanhood betrayed them. She should be able to - but she couldn’t.
He lit the cigarette, slowly, measured. The glow in the blue light the only thing she could find to focus on as his features blurred.
“Go back to sleep Blair.” He noted cooly. “I’m here.”
“Are you?”
He wasn’t.
They knew better.
Knew better than to think they could hang onto the promise of that tiny life. This path was well trodden; they memorised the steps, knew the way. The path had been lined with flora and fauna, but now, they had walked it too many times - it was lifeless. Dark, dry cracked earth. It never stopped her though, imagining, pink plump joy, the ache in her to hear a cry, to hold tiny hand in hers.
No one told them, how time after time; her body would prepare, swell. How each time she would begin to nest; and he would watch, the ghost in her doorway. It wasn’t something he could fix, nor did he have any right to stop her.
He knew better.
The bathroom floor had become a cold, stark companion. A reminder that perhaps this wasn’t meant for them. The white tile sullied all too quickly with the evidence of the life they were incapable of hanging onto, coming out in clots - their dirty secret and no one knew. It was never soon enough to tell, never safe enough to say. The soiled linens, mixed with sweat and tears. The hand wringing. The clinging. Then - silence.
It was a process. Clinical features would be restored. Linens would be replaced. Begin. Again.
They knew better.
The last time it had happened, it was he that rose to the guttural sobbing beside him. The warm wetness in the space between them. Blonde ringlets hung matted at the nape of her neck and he reached for her but she flinched. Hands pressed to the growing mass on night gown; she hadn’t had the energy to get herself to the bathroom. To hide. To close herself off as she normally would. This time; he had time to see from the inception what it did to her. Blair was haunted; the vacant look behind glassy eyes filled with tears.
The way hands stuck to the crimson at her gusset. The light in her was going out.
Though - this time it had gone far enough for Orla to notice, as she had done when Rose had fallen pregnant with Tadhg’s first. The woman just knew, had predicted ten tiny fingers and toes and a baby girl with raven hair as thick as her mothers - and then all at once, their burden was no longer just theirs. It was a shame that had spilled out; ugly. Unnatural.
A gaping scar on the knowledge that normalcy would never be there's. A reminder for him that the ring on her finger felt to her like a weight on her, pulling her under. Blair was drowning and he couldn’t stop it, he would never understand. It was not a man's place. Long, unending grief for children that would never be hers, be theirs. It was this stark, staring fact that drove the inevitable wedge between them every single time.
Grief that twisted itself into something more monstrous. It was easier to be angry at one another for letting another fuck it away. It was easier to cover the problem with another - it was easier to argue about infidelity than to watch the forlorn gazes at other parents with children. To watch expectant mothers gush over the promise of a new start whilst they would be eternally chained to this one.
This life of gutter crawling, squalor wrapped in diamonds. Deceit. Cheat. Lies. All dipped in nice white powder.
This was no place for a child.
They should’ve known better.
And yet.
𝐓𝐡𝐞 𝐒𝐇𝐄𝐀𝐒 are synonymous for where their elders crash landed. One of the only big travelling gypsy families to have grown roots and remained. They were drawn to the energy in its earth, and chasing the money they had heard on whispers could be had here. Four generations later, and they still remain, a mainstay and a respected one. Having finally made their fortune they could stand to see it crumble at the greed of one man.
None of the women take their husbands name, and until Michael Shea, women ruled the roost; men never did last long within their family.
Incredibly traditional in practice, it is thought the magicks they harness are stirring something even they can't hold down. Their family are no longer tied to the purity of their roots, corrupted and ugly, 5 siblings, all with a gift - except for the brothers. Some say this is the reason he turned, not able to harness or truly understand what it is to be powerful.
The beings behind the trees, those inexplicable, beyond nature trees at the edge of town, the boundary between stone and moor, where heat meats damp, are becoming more active. The sisters find it comforting to meet here, undisturbed by them, or their inhabitants.
Rare though it is, every born Shea woman has a gift, be it the ability to see beyond the veil of life and death, to charm dogs, read true fortunes and control the weather with emotion.
The pull in Spiriod, and the familial turmoil has forced their hand, and turned some intentions. While some sisters enjoy the thrill, others crave to pull from darkness and return to their roots. Afterall, personal gain never lead to anything good in white magic, did it?
There’s a light, and it flickers - philip watched his wife circle it, a look of exasperation mottling her face, and yet the image let solemn lips crack open into a smile. Be it that his gut tells him she is his wife, but the commitment says otherwise…or be it the idiocy he finds in watching her struggle rather than her asking for help, it curls the corners of slack maw all the same.
The hallway lightbulb, it was another something he had promised and not gotten around to. He watched her turn it on and off, each glow of the bulb illuminating a new line of frustration. Their house had so many knocks and notches now from a variety of fuckery and now it bore the scars of their life there. In truth, he liked it that way, in every crack lay a memory.
Both of them had the money to fix it and then some, but there was an unspoken understanding that they’d get around to it, the thin veneer of perfection was undone with a closer look, but it was them. It was their space and it illustrated every fight and every make up. Every kiss, every shag - the 𝐫𝐞𝐝 𝐰𝐢𝐧𝐞 𝐬𝐭𝐚𝐢𝐧 in the oak floor, the creak in a floorboard set free the laughter they forgot about when times felt too tough to bear.
Albeit it was a ‘man’ way to think of things. For his wife, it was merely something else for her to bleet at him for. It ignited the ever present need in her; to nest, and home make, regardless of whether or not there were children present. Their lives had never been any different, even after all this time. It held the ever present guilt that he hadn’t been able to give her children; they both blamed themselves but took care not to dwell.
He watched her ferret from room to room, and knew by now the exact moment she’d snap and call him out for the useless son of a bitch he knew he could be. Philip was his 𝐦𝐨𝐭𝐡𝐞𝐫’𝐬 son, god rest her soul, and there was something in him that loved the banter, the opportunity to rise and fulfil the husband character he so 𝐥𝐨𝐯𝐞𝐝 𝐭𝐨 𝐩𝐥𝐚𝐲. To prove his point; to make it upto her and force them back into the small box in which they just were : in love with each other and each of their imperfections.
He knew the life they shared wasn’t perfect, it was hardly the shit fairy tales were made of but it suited them.
The smile grew wider over the lines in his face, and he relished in the ache. Philip rubbed grubby mit through the mop of inky locks at his scalp, stubbing out puthering tab end in waiting ashtray. Blair was made for him, and he her.
Crossing one boot over the other, he leant back in his chair, and he watched as his dainty wife shot a look over her shoulder, blonde tendrils tumbling past her shoulder blade, he wanted to 𝐬𝐢𝐧𝐤 𝐡𝐢𝐬 𝐭𝐞𝐞𝐭𝐡 𝐢𝐧𝐭𝐨 𝐡𝐞𝐫 𝐬𝐤𝐢𝐧, he thought.
𝐆𝐚𝐦𝐞 𝐭𝐢𝐦𝐞. Everyone said he used to laugh, and with her, with her there was still some cause to. To cat and mouse, to play house like children would.
Cerulean irises fluttered to the banal on the television, a ticking wheel of some bullshit American dream game show. “Feck me, Shirley, the answers fuckin’ 𝐛𝐥𝐮𝐞.”
It was just enough, a whisper of change in the air and he watched dainty palm make contact with the living room door. Blair crackled, an electricity to their coupling. To be sure, she was on the ceiling now and in probability rules she could have shorted the electrics in the whole house with her temper alone.
His eyes flickered again to meet hers.
“What’s wrong bird?” Door handle met drywall and slotted into the last fight hole it made. Long fingers reached for the next cigarette, running the filter over his lower lip, he lifts struck match to tobacco.
“Are ye’ yankin’ my fuckin’ dick Lip?”
He blinked, raising a playful eyebrow. Shaking the match out, he watches grey smoke meet the blue of his cigarette, curling around one another, and allows himself a moment to dwell on glowing embers.
“And why would I be doin’ that?” He inhaled, slowly, measured, turning his head back towards the tv. “M’ just watchin’ television, love.”
Anger meets television screen as she launches the laundry basket perched on her hip at blue glow. “Catch Phrase?! Ya kiddin’ love- you ain’t watched this with any degree of seriousness ever, n’ Stephen fuckin’ Mulhern turns me stomach the diddy wee cunt.”
She sighed, exasperated, and pottered to the hallway. He pressed his lips together, brimming with adoration for the fire in her, comical that her reactions were always gigantic even in the face of the smallest inconvenience.
This was it. The 𝐟𝐢𝐧𝐚𝐥𝐞 - she’d make to do it herself, teetering delicately on step stool, he watched every curve of her and resigned himself to the fact she’d ruined him for all other women. To be sure - he was more than okay with that.
He sighed, hauling himself up off the chair on which he had sunk. “Baby.”
“Fuck off will ya? I’ll do it myself.”
“Baby.” He moves towards her. “Son of a bitch B, let me do it would ya? You’re gonna fall and snap ye chuffing neck, and then ye'd definitely be no use at all.”
“Philip, I mean it, go away.”
He laughs, a low chuckle; and she blows, swinging for him, but she stumbles, he grasps her hips. And he couldn’t be happier to be right it fills him with a warm glow, same as the one he feels at the crown of his head as flat palm meets it. Still - he clings to wriggling woman.
Slowly, he props her onto her feet on the floor, and moves to twist flickering bulb from its mount. “Let me do it, darlin’, a’ said I would didn’ I?”
She sniffs, resigned, an unexplained smirk on her face. For a second he thinks he’s won, before thumb and forefinger find the heat in the bulb.
“Mother fucker.” He spits and she crumples beside him. Shaking his hand he turns. “You little bitch.”
Laughter breaks and he scowls. “Ya fuckin’ useless with me even now love. Cmon, rinse ya fingers and do it with a rag next time.” She takes his hand in hers and leads him to the sink, tending to the growing redness on his fingertips.
Fuckin’ perfection. P’haps it was time after all these years to make an honest woman of her, neither of them even mentioned it much anymore.
She won, even when she didn’t. His wife. His Blair, she was a force of nature and would outsmart him even in 𝐝𝐞𝐚𝐭𝐡.