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Sham Boy

Published first by LEON Literary Review

My hometown is cut in two

its knife a river

a sacred stream of flotsam

whose muscular scum-lipped eddies

slash and score and whittle their way

through marshy land

swirls like musical runes

spell out thuggish poetry

from North to South

from high street to low.


Sham Boy was Northside born

of that snobbish watermark

to a moustachioed mother

on infertile ground

where twisted scody streets run

like the river runs

like he ran

through sunless alleys

littered lanes

and gallows humour

how could anything grow there?

what freshly-sprung newborn could ROAR,

blasting from open lungs, throat and heart

singing into hope?

but he tried.


Sham Boy’s father was a boxer

got punch drunk

so drunk, even the docks

had no job for him

after the ring had spat him out

closed its gates in his mashed face

his mother was schizo

his sister too

talked to the air

wallpapered their rickety house in shiny tinfoil

in case the voices told them to set it on fire.

Sitting on a milkcrate

socks soaked by dirty puddles,

Sham Boy SWORE

as he cut into a Cornflakes box

slivers of light glinting on the kitchen’s silver walls

cutting out cardboard

to replace the broken soles of his shoes

that he would never be poor again


He would do

whatever it took

to run from that river

towards fertile ground

and sunny streets

and rooms that didn’t smell of piss

to take a bounding leap and SOAR

for a change.


Sham Boy found a way

a murky path

where sludge and slurry

slurped and slapped at his ankles

he rose and rose

rose to Lord

of all the land

so sought after, so high

so “Wanted!”

he became a tabloid star

a young Micky Rourke

a Celtic Scarface.


From across a jointed rave he saw me

striding,

he cleavered his way through cheek-to-jowl crowds

Moses parting his ecstasy-soaked throng

jumping, fist-pumping, glowsticking

he grabbed my face with gurrier-rough hands

and kissed me, hard

branding me as friend, as insider

and released me

even though he had no right

to do that, to mark me so

I was not his

or anyone’s

not even my own.


He told me his dreams of running further

of soaring higher

with devil dust rimming his nostrils

and I naysayed his way

though charmed was I by

snakes that coiled ‘round each inked bicep

indigo like his eyes

I had dabbled and now withdrew

No longer longing for the gutter.


Sham boy demanded too much

from all he supplied

he flowed outwards

from the Northside

peddled with bigger, hungrier thugs

in the shadowy corners

of sunnier streets

became more sham than boy

until no cardboard could fix his broken soul.


Who can stop the cascade

once coursing water has made up its mind

to burst its banks

to go and go and go?

I wish I could have saved him

before he was found

every cut up bit of him

frozen

in a freezer

in the Cote d’Azur

where the river runs clean

and clear.


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