Missing Persons Bureau

I came here to find my father
but the faces on the wall are not my father’s.

I show the interviewer letters, bills, a bank statement,
he shuffles forms. How long since you saw your father?

Twenty nine years. He takes off his glasses, puts down his pen.
What kind of son waits so long to find his father?

This man must be dutiful. Christmases and outings,
walks every Sunday to please his father.

But I’m not going to leave. I might still find him –
filed away, name forgotten, waiting to be my father.

Departure

The night isn’t dark but my world is dark,
Stay with me a little longer.

Your hands on the back of my hands –
that’s what I’ll remember.
Before that, lightly stroking my jaw.
Like a woman training herself to love me.

In the other room, the ghosts of our pasts
putting out the light we live by.

Your hands on a chair perhaps, stroking
my body and the wood in exactly the same way.
Like a woman who wants to feel longing again,
who prizes longing.

And then, you are holding me because we are going away –
these are statements we are making,

not questions needing answers.

How can I know you love me
if I cannot see you grieve over me?

 

Permission

We spent our time together
happy and sometimes speechless,
ignoring the phone,
coordinating our breathing,
pressed slim by the weight of touch.

Come to think of it
our eyes would meet
and we would read each other, our skin,
studying it like a script
we had to learn those days, by heart.

We didn’t leave each other much,
just the invisible ink of our hands.
But I can’t help remembering
the way we held each other –
your hands in mine, the drumming song of our hearts.

I can feel the pressure sometimes still –
your fingers against my chest.
I feel it now. But I still don’t know
who gave my memory of you permission
to touch me, when I try to sleep.

Remembrance

We use our armour to shield our eyes
from starlight and flares,
but it’s no use. Even in silence
something keeps us awake,
lodged in our minds, painful as shrapnel.

In seventy year’s time
everything will be gone.
No one left to speak of us
although speech hurts, a flake of rust
in my mouth in place of a tongue.

Echo

Now I won’t live
any more
only once
Everything echoes

My footsteps echo
the ring of the telephone
every word
of yours
and of mine
our kisses
and our touch
echoes

Thinking back
how I first saw you
echoes

The impact
of our love
and our longing
echoes

And everything
I say
about this echoing
echoes
echoes

But I won’t
live again
only once