18DRESSING THE GHOST

Of course his clothes don’t fit

no longer even look like him

and the blue light doesn’t suit

whatever tone it is his skin

still keeps. Armour him now,

glove him in chainmail, kit him

in something that clanks

and masks the terrible

thin wight within and

doesn’t mock his former

fuller self the way his old shirts

and pants now do with their whispering

threadbare gestures, their dull-

eyed buttons hanging limp

on wilted stalks. They have lost

their character, no wonder

they lie, resentful, being left

behind. Armour him now,

so we won’t detect the final

disappearing act until

19too late — he’s slipped

behind the arras, out

to the graveyard and

under the stone

flowing like smoke

into a signature that could

be anyone’s, imprinted

by the mason’s hand, our

common dress code.

Read the script.