BOYS There’s a feather on my pillow. Pillows are made of feathers, go to sleep. It’s a big, black feather. Come and sleep in my bed. There’s a feather on your pillow too. Let’s leave the feathers where they are and sleep on the floor. - P3
DAD Four or five days after she died, I sat alone in the living room wondering what to do. Shuffling around, waiting for shock to give way, waiting for any kind of structured feeling to emerge from the organisational fakery of my days. I felt hung-empty. The children were asleep. I drank. I smoked roll-ups out of the window. I felt that perhaps the main result of her being gone would be that I would permanently become this organiser, this list-making trader in clichés of gratitude, machine-like architect of routines for small children with no Mum. Grief felt fourth-dimensional, abstract, faintly familiar. I was cold. - P3
Very romantic, how we first met. Badly behaved. Trip trap. - P8
In other versions I am a doctor or a ghost. Perfect devices: doctors, ghosts and crows. We can do things other characters can’t, like eat sorrow, un-birth secrets and have theatrical battles with language and God. I was friend, excuse, deus ex machina, joke, symptom, figment, spectre, crutch, toy, phantom, gag, analyst and babysitter. - P14
What good is a crow to a pack of grieving humans? A huddle. - P14
But I care, deeply. I find humans dull except in grief. There are very few in health, disaster, famine, atrocity, splendour or normality that interest me (interest ME!) but the motherless children do. Motherless children are pure crow. For a sentimental bird it is ripe, rich and delicious to raid such a nest. - P15
I’ve drawn her unpicked, ribs splayed stretched like a xylophone with the dead birds playing tunes on her bones. - P16
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