Brenton Booth

TATTOO

Mark had his right bicep tattooed completely black to hide an old tattoo of a male stick

figure he got several years earlier. It would have been easy to cover with a much better

tattoo, but he didn’t want the hassle of choosing another one he could grow to hate

eventually like the first one. He was always reading from a thick novel at work. Everyone

talked about him, saying how smart he was. One day I noticed his book was upside down,

told him. Now you know my secret, he said laughing. He never had much money, telling

me most of his wage went supporting his mother’s alcohol, and gambling addiction. It was

just the 2 of them: he had to look after her. I remembered my uncle spending the first few

years of adulthood in jail. None of the family visiting him while he was there, or ever

speaking about it after. The silence in his eyes when he was released. Never breaking the

law again. Mark stopped turning up for work. I’d see him occasionally, walking with an

older woman, I assumed was his mother. Over a month passed. Tom our manager sacked

him, apologised, said he had no choice. Shortly after Mark took his life. Leaping from a

scenic cliff on a beautiful clear Monday morning. I thought about his tattoo. The stick man

he got completely covered in black: all the other tattoos he could have used to hide it.

Brenton Booth lives in Sydney, Australia. He started writing when he was 19. Began sending literary journals when he was 24. After nearly 10 years of rejections he had his first poem accepted for publication. Since then he has been published in over 200 journals and anthologies internationally, including Gargoyle, New York Quarterly, North Dakota Quarterly, Chiron Review, Main Street Rag, Naugatuck River Review, Heavy Feather Review, San Pedro River Review, 3AM Magazine, Epic Rites Press, Modern Drunkard, Lummox, Big Hammer, Pski's Porch, Van Gogh's Ear, Underground Voices and Nerve Cowboy. He has been nominated twice for the Pushcart Prize and is the author of 3 chapbooks, Dying Under an Unforgiving Sun, Dancing on the Cactus, Drowned as the Fish, and the full-length collections, Punching the Teeth from the Sky, and Bash the Keys Until They Scream, both available from Epic Rites Press (Canada)... Full Profile