Atlanticide
He came between us, but not like a secret love affair
there’s nothing secret about him
there’s no affair
we can see him though he’s absence
not his absence your absence.
my absence.
our absence from ourselves.
not our own selves, but the double self we
used to share when we were you and me
until he split this double self
split it into two
split it but without breaking
split it without breaking us
split us without breaking us up
, because that’s not in his power to do(!)*
*or is it?
He wedged the whole Atlantic between us
invited me to a day at the beach
on his briefs well-entertained raccoons
munch popcorn out of trashcans
waiting for me to make a move after
I used all my money to buy
freezers and fridges, lined them up
on the beach in August facing the water
I opened the doors hoping the cold
would expand, freeze a corridor into the sea
a bridge of ice that I could traverse
with a dogsleigh. Instead I am the
owner of twelve freezers at the beach
and he uses them to store popsicles
there goes my plan
to see you
there goes my plan
to save the planet
with colossal fridges
and a couple of nuclear power plants
meanwhile he juggles melons near the water
heels and ankles slowly disappearing
in the tide
Sand is clogging my
bamboo straw as I try to drink the fucking thing
gulping down salt and foam and more salt
until my stomache forces me to slow down
I am not convinced by the idea. How could there be an “us”
with all the fish and whales on our conscience(?) Not to
forget the seals, they move so awkwardly on land
like bouncing jelly balloons with a snout
now he rolls through the sand pretending to be one
wiggling every part of his body
Imagine once the ocean is gone, we could
smell the trash at the bottom
there would be a motorway from
One side to the otheR
with a fuel stop in Iceland: that’s where we’d meet
for a sandwich, pre-packed ready made
munching in the cold next to the sign that says
no smoking (CAUSE YOU COULD BLOW US ALL UP YOU IDIOT)
but in Icelandic so it looks cool against
the epic scenery of volcanoes and glaciers behind us
or just volcanoes soon, I guess
Out among the waves I spot him pretending
to be a jellyfish; salt/algae/flotsam continue to clog
my straw clog my intestines fill my lungs no way
we can pull it off like this
On a sandbank close to shore
he is trying to smooch a seagull
and I wonder if he knows they put
cables under the sea. I might
download good compression
software and
compress my self so I could send it to you
on the other
side; float with all the data (i’ll join the zeros over the ones cause I
want to sit next to likeminded people) Imagine
breezing along with all the porn on the bottom of the ocean
and the e-mails/credit card data/tweets/blog posts/amazon
orders/flight bookings but overtaking the planes
by miles, racing with the light
a free bird gliding forward at speed
[ inside an optical fibre cable that is
inside silicon jelly that is
inside high-strength steel wires that is
inside a copper sheath that is
insulated by polyethylene that is
bedded in nylon yarn that is
protected by galvanized armor wires that is
wrapped in tar-soaked nylon that is
pressed against the bottom of the sea by the weight of an entire ocean ]
you’d get the ping sound of your inbox
I’d be so ready to be unpacked stored on a stick or
loaded into a VR system or at least a tamagotchi
and carried around in your pocket finally being more
than the most responsive avatar in your messenger app
He stuffs his mouth with a mushroom
and hums a jingle, pretending to grow
like Mario. The Atlantic is here to
stay, together with every single
mile and metre filling the void
between you and me. I am
afraid he will continue
to mock us
until your absence
my absence
our absence
feels real.
Martin Breul
Martin Breul currently lives and writes in Montréal. His works have appeared in print and online in Wet Grain, The Wild Word, the Riverbed Review, Speculative Books, The Honest Ulsterman, and others. In 2021 he received the Mona Elaine Adilman Poetry Prize at McGill University. Twitter: @BreulMartin.