Spleen

My nephew describes a  string of objects  he found by the  estuary:  the separated  eyes  of a
plastic dog,  the paper wings of a miniature plane,  apple stickers.  And already when he came
in I could tell that something  was wrong,  seeing him looking up at the ceiling and rubbing his
head the way his mother, my sister-in-law,  would,  when he was a toddler,  something he had
transferred to himself now,  at the age of seven,  and which I found a little strange,  seeing him
here in the doorway as he told me  how he and his older sister had gone out past the estuary,
where  the  trash  gathers,  to the  carpark  beside the  old  New World,  and how  he had seen
something in a puddle there, he said, that he thought was a wrapper in the mud,  but  realised
was a bird,  a small bird in a puddle of oil,  and  that even though his sister told him to leave it,
to let  it  die,  he couldn’t  help  picking  it up  to try and  save it,  watching  it  spasming  in his
hands, against his palms, trying to massage the oil off,  without water,  the bird sort of pulsing,
struggling  against  either  him or the oil,  which covered it like a membrane,  a sac,  and then I
saw the oil on his shirt, in a black layer,  like the network of bile in the laparoscopic  photo of a
spleen they took of my mother,  his grandmother, when she got sick, and which I used to  take
to school  as a kid  and show to people,  claiming it was mine,  watching them  run their hands
over its surface, this weird semi-intimacy approaching understanding, a photo which is still in
our  family  album,  and  which I still  feel  ashamed  to  look  at,  my  mum  always  refusing  to
remove it,  placing it arbitrarily between a photo of our trip to Mt Ruapehu and a birthday my
brother had  at  McDonald’s,  so that my memories of these things collect together,  gathering
in time:  ice on the floor in the bathroom,  plastic balls in the snow on the ground,  networks of
bile over the lettuce,  snow fields melting over the tiles.  And  even  as  he  spoke  my  nephew
kept rubbing his head,  adjusting his shirt,  covering both slowly  with a thin  layer of oil,  which
was still on his hands,  but even as he spoke he didn’t notice,  kept speaking,  saying how dark
it was getting in the carpark, how dark it was getting as he held the bird,  the carpark seeming
to go on forever,  he said,  to go on and on,  the trash gathering in heaps in an edge beside the
streetlamps,  a heavy layer,  grey,  and in the end,  he said,  in the end he put it down,  the bird,
because he couldn’t help it.


Will Salmon is a writer based in Te Whanganui-a-Tara. He has an MA from the IIML where he received the 2025 Biggs Family Prize in Poetry.