ARS

Beatrice Bleakley

it’s an old Seventies control room,

like they had in Chernobyl.

 

there’s a circular gold table

much like the record

sent into space

and a man

with dark combed hair

in scrubs and a surgical mask

stands near it.

 

strewn across the table

are barely opaque tendrils—

not quite wires,

something made out of

firm plastic light.

 

and they are streaming out of a girl,

a woman, really,

although she appears youthful.

 

her eyes are closed,

nothing in the expression.

long straight brown hair

fans under her

somewhat slender skull

across the table on her left,

limp strands

cascading towards the floor.

 

the woman is torn in half,

but there is no blood,

only the tubes of light

connected to her midriff.

neither thin nor fat,

she is wearing something

like a hospital gown

although perhaps it is more to do

with a baptismal dress.

we see only the half of her

containing her arms,

one cast loosely

across her not quite small

(not quite large) breasts

and the other

hanging off the table.

 

you cannot tell

if she is conscious or not.

you cannot tell

if she is unconscious

whether it’s by choice

or by force.

 

“is this you?”

the man asks,

muffled by his mask.

 

you step closer

and look at the woman.

you see you

in the freckles on her arm,

her scrunched up little chin.

her eyelashes clump together,

like yours.

her breasts are

weighted somewhat

by gravity,

like yours.

her fingernails are bitten

and when you look at the hand

that is half reached out

of its own volition,

you see yours are too.

 

“i don’t know,” you lie.

“i don’t know who this is.

i don’t know if she’s me.”

 

“it is you,” the man insists.

 

you focus on the lights now.

the filaments

almost remind you

of the glowsticks ever-present

in your childhood.

one good hard yank,

one decisive crack,

and they burst all aglow.

 

but there is no touch of stress,

no point of severance

where the color is darker.

you reach out hesitantly

and brush your fingers

through them.

they’re stiffer

than you would have

expected them to be,

and when they brush together

they clack lightly,

like the balls

in a Newton’s Cradle.

 

“it is you,”

the man repeats.

“it is you.”

 

he’s getting louder

and angrier

and you don’t know

how to explain it,

that this creature

does not have your hair,

or your face.

 

she does not

possess your weight,

she does not

have the scar

on the bridge of your nose

from when your brother

threw a projector at you

when you were children.

 

this is not your body,

but the sheer you-ness of her

radiates out

glowing uranium,

making you sicker and sicker

just to look at her.

 

she is unwell,

you think.

all her unwell

is seeping out of her aura

she is irradiating all who come close,

anybody in her radius

will cough up blood

and turn black

and slough skin

and they will tell her

it wasn’t her fault,

she just happened to be there,

but she will know.

she will know

that the act of getting near

poisons them

with the air they breathe in,

and in that moment,

you are yourself

standing on the floor

and i am lying

strewn across the table.