The Third Song of the Songstress
The Toppling of the Chairman of the Board

By Avon and Somerset Police – Original publication: Avon and Somerset Police websiteImmediate source: avonandsomerset.police.uk, Fair use, https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?curid=64348624
The songstress yawns, her lips forming a sleepy smile,
feeling much fresher today. The chancellor comatose
beside her, his body shuddering dubiously
with each troubled breath. She ne’ertheless wishes
him well, not in his vile project, but in life,
recalling the diazepam-fuelled dream she had
the night before.
*
“The cobbled footwear of the chairman clatters across
the sturdy quayside stones; a single silver buckle
adorns each shoe. His cane taps at his merchandise
approvingly and points admiringly at tall sails
ready to journey abroad. The Indies beckon
with their sugar, spices, and snuff. Tea is all the rage.
The chairman is the center of a little global
village, lord of this country manor writ large
in blood and gold and blessed in the Palladian
style by his almighty Lord. The Hierarchy
from uncreated God through Angels, Governments,
and Squires down to the unwashed plebs and beasts and worse
is sure as granite rock, safe as a stable precious
metal currency amidst a paper market storm,
stern as a patriarch’s staff against the bodies
of his cowering servants and sons. Corseted daughters
good only for dancing and marriages, dowries
and duets on the piano forte, their fineries
afforded by the labor whipped from the backs
of slaves. Daddy is a philanthropist…”
The songstress
pauses in reminiscence a while remembering
her own father, the tatters of Ancient Kakania,
the fading graces of its Empire still littering
her parental home. Perhaps in yesteryear their paths
had crossed, her mum and dad, the jolly chairman and
the chancellor’s avuncular ancestors,
together in a flashing waltz of swords, they’d heard
the pop and swish of corks exploding and champagne
gushing out and sipped from sleek slipper-shaped glasses,
lapped at alike by hypocrite infidel with decadent
western tastes, swanning around the courts of Europe
kissing ladies’ gloved hands. A culture as stagnant
and decayed as dry wild flowers propped in a miry
pool of brownish green liquid in a vase, for whose
grim decoration the little drummers flocked to serve
in war. Back in the age of innocence before
Wagner and Freud, before movies and rock ‘n’ roll
filled up the dance halls with their chicks and yobs. The car
that Eddie drove into the ditch and wrecked en route
to Chippenham. The parties, drugs, policemen and members
of the tabloid press trashing young lives. The ashtrays
for the fag-end youth of plutocrats and landed
heirs of fortunes gathered long forgotten years ago.
*
“They toss a noose over the Chairman’s iron neck
and drag him down. His steely body first totters
like a toddler or a geriatric trying
to walk without a Zimmer frame; then collapses
into a mess of broken metal on the ground,
one leg snapping clean off, scooting away across
the cobblestones. The chairman’s brittle dismembered body
is then drawn by the cheering crowd on ropes
and dunked with curiously unceremonious ceremony
into the waters of the dock that wait to reclaim their son.”
*
The Chancellor lets out a sudden gruff grunt in sleep,
as if annoyed by some unwelcome interruption of his repose.
A punctured vein provides the brief bliss of relief and he falls back
into the calming arms of nothingness from whence his ever-living
soul once issued forth at the beginning of all time.
[…] Part 5 […]