Monday, 1 February 2010

La Coiffure

It is 6am, winter. Daybreak 

washes the empty roads with lilac.

A wolf crouches on the doorstep;

the cold patience of his blue eyes.


Inside, rose shadows flicker

onto marmalade walls. Amber

sees stories in the flames, 

licks woodsmoke from her fingers.


She leans back.  Apricot hair

pours into the gourd

of her mother's honeyed hands

to be brushed into submission.


Soft shock of static satin sends 

gold crackle skeins onto the hiss spit 

of logs as her mother weaves 

and welds her hand held hair


But Amber is thinking

about the wolf,

how he waits for her, and

how she cannot breathe


in this peachy swelter, how it

makes her sweat and shrink

from shelter. Christ! if she could only

drink the ice cool lap of his eyes


Her Last Breath

My sister is older than me.
She calls gay people queer.
In one of my gay moments
she offered me an insight:
'It's better than being lonely'
I don't see her that often.

My sister is louder than me.
I tried to tell her about my son,
how I nearly lost him,
and she told me about
her neighbour' s son who
wouldn't eat breakfast.
I don't ring her that often

My sister lives far from me,
close by.
First-born,
her last breath
will steal from me
her untamed mouth,
her untuned ears,
her fierce embrace.

The way she looks like our mother.