Every one of us is a complex and beautifully woven fabric of stories, and whether we tell them or not, there are no measuring tapes or weighing scales to speak of their worth. Talk You Round Till Dusk is a collection of tiny stories and big ideas celebrating the wonder of the moment. It’s about those journeys in a car driving across a desert, or walking from the bedroom to the kitchen, where we discover that what we have is enough. Stories so small they fit in the palm of a hand, yet carry the weight of the world with them.
Talk You Round Till Dusk is a collaboration between spoken word artist Rebecca Tantony and illustrator Anna Higgie. In a mix of flash-non-fiction, short stories, poetry and 16 full page colour illustrations, Rebecca and Anna take us on on a philosophical road trip from Bristol to AndalucÃa, Nicosia, India, San Francisco, Death Valley and Mexico.
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Talk you round till dusk by Rebecca Tantony sample
4. 5
It was a Thursday afternoon. Her hair had been dyed bright red since the last time
she’d seen him and walking towards the theatre she was concerned he’d no longer
recognise her. That he only liked women who felt safe without colour and peroxide
to hide behind. When she got there he was standing outside, smoking and fidgeting,
looking from side to side and trying to find her.
‘I’m here.’
‘You’re here.’He turned and his face broke into a love letter.‘You dyed your hair,’he
said. She nodded and her eyes flitted from his pupils to the ground where she counted
old cigarette butts, chewing-gum stains, a twenty-pence coin. ‘Can I see it?’
As she pulled the hat from her head all possible outcomes jumped from her to him:
he walked away; he asked her to dye it back; he pushed her over then kissed it better,
pulling his lips across hers like a blanket.
‘You look great.’
‘You like it?’
‘I like it.’
They walked to the waterfront, across cobbled alleyways and past expensive
restaurants. Drank pints of beer in crowded bars. She was underage but never told
him; being brave enough to add fake numbers to her seventeen years felt grown-up
enough.
‘Women don’t normally drink pints,’ he said, and she sipped her beer feeling both
empowered and unsure about what women did and didn’t do. I should go home, she
wanted to say; instead her words turned into stories of her family, her ambitions, and
her life so far.
‘Do redheads have more fun?’ he asked, and she laughed, throwing her head back,
mouth so wide it seemed like her insides would climb out between her teeth and
tongue.
‘Let’s find out.’ She grabbed his hand and they left the bar, headed for the harbour
and skipped along until they reached the edge. There, she stood on tiptoes swaying
back and forth, looked at him with a smile and threw her hat into the dark water.
‘What did you do that for?’
‘I did that for me,’she said,before the wind set her hair free,spilling it across the sky.
WHERE WE WERE
6. 7
THE ORANGE BLOSSOMS
OF ANDALUCIA
7
When winter ended the wastelands of AndalucÃa exploded into colour and everything
that had been bare was enriched by nature once again. The plants started living,
yearning and pleading for light, and alongside the mountains shoots and stems
broke through. Then there were the orange blossom trees. They grew everywhere,
scattering reminders of their presence across Las Alpujarras, each blossom full of
twisting veins, each leaf different from the next. For me they represented pure,
unquestionable beauty and as the wind swept them through the sky, I would sit on
the balcony and count them, thanking each one for spring.
Instead of breaking up we had moved to Spain.
‘It’s not us, you know,’ he’d said. ‘It’s this city. Let’s leave it behind and find
something more together.’ A week later we arrived in Capileira, welcomed in by
bitter winds and grey skylines; the beginning of a long winter. For the next eight
months we were surrounded by steep mountainsides, looking after a stone house
on top of a hill; a place where we would chop wood and walk together. Where we
would tend to the gardens and feed the dogs. Where we would separate ourselves
from the familiar in order to become closer again. Together, we would face the dark
and find the sun.
Our first month was a cold November. Every night we went to bed at dusk,
wearing thick fur coats that I’d found in the back of a wardrobe. I would lie there
trying to find Sebastian’s skin through the coarse hair and the smell of damp, feeling
my way across his body like it was something foreign. ‘You feel different here,’ I
whispered, and in the morning he would wake up, say that we were both different in
AndalucÃa, like dreaming had brought him realisation.
The light only lasted for a few hours each day and in the darkness we took it all
so much slower than we ever had before; roasting chunks of meat, brewing teas,
letting apples soak and pickling time together.The longer we stayed the stronger we
became, only it wasn’t a strength found through togetherness, but by living as two
independent people in search of who we could be this far from home.
Some days I’d slam the brakes on, extract memories and drop them in test
tubes locked in three-inch-thick snow. We scratched our initials on tree bark so
to remember how far we’d come. Our bones clicked, our eyes were small, we bled
underwater like silent war wounds. On those days we caught only glimpses of each
other. It wasn’t that we were doing anything wrong; we just didn’t know how to be
in AndalucÃa. There was nothing left to hide behind yet we still couldn’t absorb one
another fully, instead appearing as apparitions to learn from. I was twenty-two and
longed for the bassline of a nightclub or to see my friends’ faces; Sebastian was ten
years older and used to exploring the world alone. We were together in the stomach
of beauty, and those winter months only brought unbearable loneliness for us both.
7. 8
Opposite our house was a Buddhist monastery. Some days when the mist was
particularly heavy it was hidden, then a day or so later it would reappear, a body of
calm amidst all the confusion we were creating inside the big stone house.The hours
were long; time seemed to have an entirely different meaning in AndalucÃa. The
nearest village sold rugs and hams and little else; the nearest town was an hour away.
We’d been left the phone numbers of people who lived close by but I never felt able
to call; they were different somehow, they’d learned to live according to the seasons,
they’d found peace in the silence. I felt so very unsure next to them all.
During that winter I became fascinated with everyone I could no longer see: my
friends, family and colleagues, all of whom I missed now I was so far away from
home. With this came a want to understand the intricacies of Sebastian and me.
How could we relate to each other in the moment when there was a whole history
between us?
Having promised myself that I would understand everything much better by the
time I returned home, I spent hours reading. I discovered shamans through the
voices of anthropologists; they were seekers like us who listened to the wind sifting
through grains of sand and heard answers within it. I learnt of Native American
rituals, ceremonies full of smoke and sweat, hanging hooks from chests and sick
buckets full of magic leaves. I climbed mountains with these books in hand, the
fresh air stinging the back of my throat like cheap tobacco. I sat cross-legged under
waterfalls, trying to banish my thoughts to somewhere sacred. Though it never
worked and instead I learnt that my mind was uncontrollable, so I stopped trying
to fight it. I went on long walks. Huddled under pine trees. Breathed the smell of
forest mushrooms and watched the world grow from a place of wonder.Throughout
the enduring loneliness I experienced such intense explosions of clarity that little by
little I learnt what it meant to feel surrounded by something.
When spring arrived we took to driving into Órgiva. As we sped along the windy
Spanish foothills, I would sit in the passenger seat, counting all the orange blossom
trees I saw on that hour-long journey.
‘You’re miles away from here,’ Sebastian told me.
‘Do you think there’s a god who made all this?’
‘No, I don’t think a god made it. But I know why you ask. It’s because it’s hard to
understand how somewhere like this could be so perfect.’And he looked both heavy
and hopeful all at once.
On one of my lone explorations I read how an anthropologist living with the
Yanomami tribe in Venezuela had wanted to start all her relationships again so
she could relate in the moment rather than from memory. She raked through her
past, finding every person she’d ever encountered in order to let them go again.
Immediately, I pulled out my notebook and began writing down the names of
THE ORANGE BLOSSOMS OF ANDALUCIA
8. 9
everyone I had known, not because I wanted to forget them, but because I wanted
to see them again, without marks, without having to look at them through an old
frame.
It took four days of endless,frantic writing.I scrawled down the names of children
I’d known in primary school, the names of people I couldn’t remember anything else
about. I wrote down my parents, friends of my parents, cousins, aunts, childhood
playmates, lovers, boyfriends, teachers, housemates, co-workers, the woman who
served me coffee every morning, the man behind the counter at the post office, my
dance teachers, the boy next door who played basketball. I wrote them all down, and
after I’d finished writing, I climbed to the top of the hill behind our house and burnt
the paper beneath the sun’s glare. Then I stood as still as the mountains, watching
everyone I had ever known turn to ash. Realising I never needed to turn a past into
a future in order to love someone now. Watching the wind and the orange blossoms
carry them somewhere I had yet to discover.
THE ORANGE BLOSSOMS OF ANDALUCIA