Headliners by Dave Rigby
‘Bonjour,’ says Beret, to a passing stranger,
As he flaneurs along the Seine embankment,
Happy to have no itinerary
Just to follow his nose
And see what turns up.
A bright orange beret, nothing dull, for him,
Worn at such a jaunty angle
You’d swear it would slip off.
But even as the breeze blows off Pont Neuf,
Beret stays in position, defying gravity, cocking a snook.
***
Baseball Cap, worn backwards, the essence of cool,
Or maybe not!
On her way to a gig,
She stares through the tube window into the darkness of the
tunnel,
The brightness of the stations,
Counting down the stops,
Her barely moving fingers running through the keyboard
riffs
Of their new number.
Jazz funk the music world calls it,
But she dislikes genres and refuses to be pigeonholed.
At Covent Garden, she rises to the surface,
Tall, erect, composed, shades on, Baseball Cap minutely
adjusted,
And glides towards the venue,
Knowing her trusty roadies will have everything ready
And her unreliable bandmates will suddenly focus,
When she strides onto stage, snaps finger and thumb,
Hovers over the keyboard
And plays that intro.
***
Bobble Hat, in colourful stripes is pulled down tight over
ears,
The easterly cold and cutting,
The sleet undecided as to whether to veer up to snow,
Or down to rain.
Should she raise the hood of her waterproof,
As further protection against the elements?
No, she decides,
As that would hide the evidence of her grandma’s
permanently clicking needles.
She climbs further up the steep slope,
Passing hard-bitten sheep who continue to eat, ignoring her
presence.
At the top she’s greeted by sudden shafts of sunlight,
breaking through black clouds.
For just for an instant, she’s in another world, before the
shafts close,
The snowflakes sting her eyes and Bobble Hat begins to turn
white.
She gazes out over the valley she can no longer see
And thinks about her mother,
At rest.
***
Flat Cap tries to keep up with greyhound,
As it dashes across the recreation ground after yet another
Imaginary rabbit.
Flat Cap still hasn’t got used to magic-extending-dog-leads
and the idea
That dog owner should be the one in control.
A treat does the trick.
Man and dog stand watching the local eleven as they
traverse the heavy pitch,
Trying desperately to score their first in weeks.
Their shouts echo across towards the decaying bulk of the
Green Dragon,
A dim light in the lounge bar window, a curl of smoke
Emerging from a chimney in need of a rebuild and drifting down
towards
A solitary, flickering street light.
Flat Cap is raised, head scratched, Cap lowered. Hands are
clapped together,
Not to celebrate anything as unusual as a goal, but simply
to keep warm.
Within five minutes and thirty seconds, the greyhound has
seen enough of the game
And drags Flat Cap away from the pitch and into the Dragon.
The logs are putting on a red-glow show and in the sudden
warmth,
Flat Cap is removed, a pint glass is lifted and a bowl of
water is lapped.
***
The soft felt of the Fedora sits comfortably on the retired
bank manager’s head.
The brim provides much-needed shade. The retiree
instinctively runs his hand
Over the Fedora’s lengthwise crease and gives it the
slightest of pinches.
He stretches out in the warm sun, not reading the book
placed face-down
On the glass-topped table by his side.
Instead, Fedora reads the dappled light on the slow
incoming waves,
Stories from other islands, far out across the bay,
Unoccupied, unsullied, un-touristed,
No inappropriate noise.
Fedora stirs, rises from the sun-lounger
And walks slowly across to the harbour master’s office.
He’s expecting a delivery, a parcel.
Come back in a couple of hours, he’d
been told.
The clerk hands him the parcel.
The Fedora is raised slightly in thanks.
Outside, clattering over cobbles in a donkey-cart,
He removes the wrapping and checks the contents.
The drugs are there.
Another month’s medication.
Another month of life.
***
She wonders about the collective noun for Fascinators.
A fascination perhaps?
Her own displays feathers, not real ones, though they do
look real,
Dried flowers, dried berries and beads which sparkle as the
sun sets.
The whole creation, is attached to her hair with a mother-of-pearl
clip,
Which has its own sparkling qualities.
It’s an evening of celebration. Her 60th
birthday.
But she stands by herself on the veranda, at peace,
Unwilling to rejoin the throng inside and the chattering, drinking
And dancing to tunes she’s heard too many times before.
She feels like walking away.
And suddenly she is.
Along the lake shore, pleased with her comfortable, un-fascinating
shoes,
Past the beached rowing boats
And the now-closed knick-knack stalls.
She buys herself a hot dog.
The vendor compliments her on the Fascinator.
She spills tomato sauce on her dress,
But is not bothered in the slightest.
Sometime soon she’ll have to turn and amble back to the
party.
But not just yet.
I absolutely love this, Dave and am so glad you included fascinators. Please can you do one about shoes? Virginia
ReplyDeleteI wonder what the hats would say if they all got together? Great observation that encapsulates so many little biographies. Lovely story-poem, Dave. xx Vivien
ReplyDeleteI take my hat off to you, Dave. This poem is a great way of reflecting on what we put on our head and what that can mean. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteDave you are a genius. So many writers would give their top hat to to have skills like this Chris
ReplyDeleteWhat a great poem. Never thought headgear could be so interesting.
ReplyDelete