Did you expect dignity?
All you see is bodies
crumpled carelessly, and thrown
away.
The arms and legs are never arranged
heroically.
It's the same with lovers,
after the battle-lines are drawn:
combatants thrown
into something they have not
had time to understand.
And in the end, just
a reflex turning away,
when there is nothing, really,
left to say;
when the body becomes a territory
shifting across uneasy sheets;
when you retreat behind
the borderline of skin.
Turning, turning,
barbed wire sinking in.
* * *
These two countries lie
hunched against each other,
distrustful lovers
who have fought bitterly
and turned their backs;
but in sleep, drifted slowly
in, moulding themselves
around the cracks
to fit together,
whole again; at peace.
Forgetful of hostilities
until, in the quiet dawn,
the next attack.
* * *
Checkpoint:
The place in the throat
where words are halted,
not allowed to pass,
where questions form
and are not asked.
Checkpoint:
The space on the skin
that the other cannot touch;
where you are the guard
at every post
holding a deadly host
of secrets in.
Checkpoint:
Another country. You.
Your skin the bright, sharp line
that I must travel to.
* * *
I watch his back,
and from my distance map
its breadth and strength.
His muscles tense.
His body tightens
into a posture of defence.
He goes out, comes in.
His movements are angles
sharp enough to slice my skin.
He cuts across the room
his territory. I watch
the cautious way he turns his head.
He throws back the sheet. At last
his eyes meet mine.
Together,
we have reached the battle-line.
* * *
Having come home,
all you can do is leave.
Spaces become too small.
Doors and windows begin
to hold your breath.
Floors shift underfoot, you bruise yourself
against a sudden wall.
You come into a room.
Strangers haggle over trivial things,
a grey hair curls in a comb.
Someone tugs sadly at your sleeve.
But no one screams.
* * *
Because, leaving home,
you call yourself free.
Because, behind you,
barbed wire grows
where you once
had planted a tree.