Three days before Armistice Sunday 
and poppies had already been placed
on individual war graves. Before you left, 
I pinned one onto your lapel, crimped petals,
spasms of paper red, disrupting a blockade 
of yellow bias binding around your blazer. 
Sellotape bandaged around my hand, 
I rounded up as many white cat hairs 
as I could, smoothed down your shirt's 
upturned collar, steeled the softening
of my face. I wanted to graze my nose
across the tip of your nose, play at 
being Eskimos like we did when
you were little. I resisted the impulse 
to run my fingers through the gelled
blackthorns of your hair. All my words
flattened, rolled, turned into felt, 
slowly melting. I was brave, as I walked 
with you, to the front door, threw 
it open, the world overflowing
like a treasure chest. A split second 
and you were away, intoxicated. 
After you'd gone I went into your bedroom,
released a song bird from its cage.
Later a single dove flew from the pear tree, 
and this is where it has led me,
skirting the church yard walls, my stomach busy
making tucks, darts, pleats, hat-less, without 
a winter coat or reinforcements of scarf, gloves.
On reaching the top of the hill I traced 
the inscriptions on the war memorial,
leaned against it like a wishbone. 
The dove pulled freely against the sky, 
an ornamental stitch. I listened, hoping to hear 
your playground voice catching on the wind.
http://www.janeweir.co.uk/
