Carol Ann Duffy — Never Go Back

In the bar where the living dead drink all day and a jukebox reminisces in a cracked voice there is nothing to say. You talk for hours in agreed motifs, anecdotes shuffled and dealt from a well-thumbed pack, snapshots. The smoky mirrors flatter; your ghost buys a round for the parched, old faces of the past. Never return to the space where you left time pining till it died. Outside, the streets tear litter in their thin hands, a tired wind whistles through the blackened stumps of houses at a limping dog. God, this is an awful place says the friend, the alcoholic, whose head is a negative of itself. You listen and nod, bereaved. Baby, what you owe to this place is unpayable in the only currency you have. So drink up. Shut up, then get them in again. Again. And never go back. The house where you were one of the brides has cancer. It prefers to be left alone nursing its growth and cracks, each groan and creak accusing as you climb the stairs to the bedroom and draw your loved body on blurred air with the simple power of loss. All the lies told here, and all the cries of love, suddenly swarm in the room, sting you, disappear. You shouldn’t be here. You follow your shadow through the house, discover that objects held in the hands can fill a room with pain. You lived here only to stand here now and half-believe that you did. A small moment of death by a window myopic with rain. You learn this lesson hard, speechless, slamming the front door, shaking plaster confetti from your hair. A taxi implying a hearse takes you slowly, the long way round, to the station. The driver looks like death. The places you knew have changed their names by neon, cheap tricks in a theme-park with no name. Sly sums of money wink at you in the cab. At a red light, you wipe a slick of cold sweat from the glass for a drenched whore to stare you full in the face. You pay to get out, pass the Welcome To sign on the way to the barrier, an emigrant for the last time. The train sighs and pulls you away, rewinding the city like a film, snapping it off at the river. You go for a drink, released by a journey into nowhere, nowhen, and all the way home you forget. Forget. Already the fires and lights come on wherever you live


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