Jamie's Monologue

Okay. Mom was  CE. DAD WAS DENNIS. DENNIS MET LOUISE WHEN SHE WAS 18. HE WAS 24. TOTAL SURPRISE, A YEAR LATER, MY BROTHER DENNY. AND ME, LESS OF A SURPRISE, I GUESS. DAD STARTS WORKING IN A COAL MINE. IT'S, UH, MORE MONEY. SLIGHTLY MORE, BUT HE'S BARELY HOME NOW AND LOUISE, WELL... LOUISE IS HOME WITH THE KIDS, BUT SHE'S BASICALLY A KID HERSELF. A KID WITH TWO KIDS, AND A HUSBAND 600 METERS DOWN. SO, SHE DOES WHAT KIDS DO. SHE PLAYS. SO, DAD'S UNDERGROUND, AND MOM'S UNDER SOME BLOKE, AND... THE THING ABOUT A COAL MINE... WELL, THE THING I THINK ABOUT MOST NOW I'M OLDER... NO PLANTS DOWN THERE. NO LIFE AT ALL. SEE, THESE MEN... WE SEND THEM DOWN INTO THIS DARK MESS, DIGGING FOR SOMETHING DEAD. SO... DEAD THAT IT'S NOW LUMPS OF DEAD THINGS, SO OLD AND LIFELESS THAT THEY WILL LITERALLY BURN, AND THAT WAS HIS LIFE. WHILE SHE DID WHATEVER SHE COULD TO FEEL ALIVE. ALL THAT DEATH, THAT DARK, POWDERY DEATH IS ALL OVER HIS FACE, HIS HANDS, HIS FUCKING LUNGS, WHEN HE COMES UP. THERE'S NOT A LEAF, NOT A BRANCH, NOT A FLOWER IN HIS WORLD, AND WHEN HE FINALLY CLIMBS OUT OF THAT GRAVE, FINALLY CLIMBS BACK TO THE LAND OF THE LIVING... THEY LAUGH AT HIM. THEY LAUGH BECAUSE THE WHOLE TOWN KNOWS THAT THE NEW BABY, MY LITTLE BROTHER MIKEY, ISN'T HIS. SO, DENNIS BURIES HIS HEAD IN THE SOOT, AND THEY... [CHUCKLES ...praise him for his loyalty, while they mock him for a cuckold. Louise, on the other hand, call a spade a spade and they call my mum a whore. Call he daughter one, too, bully her at school, on the streets. Even makes its way home. Little Denny piles on, tries to save his own skin by blaming all the females in the family, and in '67, Louise bolts. She splits, and I come home to find Mikey... alone... screaming his little head off. He's still a baby, and he doesn't understand what he's done wrong. I try and take car of him. But I'm just a kid. Kids cant raise kids. I forget things. Like watching over a pot when it boils. So, one day there's an accident. Social Services get involved and we're split up. Dad did his best. He spent so long underground, didn't know what to do with a kid, let alone... three kids. So, he disappeared into the dirt. Then, it was foster care. Just a bunch of stale, perverted men with bitter wives, hoping to make a few quid by taking care of the local trash. I left for London pretty soon after that.  SNIFFS Got myself into all sorts of trouble there. Wound up serving a couple of years. And it's there I start gardening. Busy work for idle hands. But I fucking love it. Love it. And it's so clear then... how people... aren't worth it. But plants... you pour your love, and your effort, and your nourishment into them... and you see where it goes. You watch them grow, and it all makes sense. So, yeah  SCOFFS everyone is exhaustive. Even the best ones. But sometimes... once in a blue goddamned moon, I guess... someone, like this moonflower, just might be worth the effort. Look, I know your struggling. I see it, I know you're carrying this guilt around, but I also know that you don't decide who lives and who doesn't. I'm sorry, Dani, but you don't. Humans are organic. It's a fact. We're meant to die. It's natural... beautiful. And it all breaks down and rises back up, and breaks down again and every living thing grows out of every dying thing. We leave more life behind us to take our place. That life refreshes and recycles, and on and on it goes. And that is so much better than that life getting crushed, deep down in the dirt, into a rock that will burn if it's old enough. So much better to see the leafling... and flower. We leave more life behind to take our place. Like this Moonflower. It's where all its beauty lies, you know. In the mortality of the thing.