BUBBLES IN TIME

UNBEGUN

 

          1

 

I hovered in doorways

behind her chair – always at my back

a father, a brother.

 

Later, she shoved leftovers around

the frying pan with a wooden spatula

supper-time already,

The London Palladium da-de-da’ed

across the screen.

 

I carried dishes to the kitchen

and caught her

in the door-walled lobby, whispered

at her face – she reeled

Oh hen, I’ve nothin’ fur ye

But there’s an auld white sheet

In the wardrobe.

 

          11

 

Liz pulled his face out

of her purse like an extra condom.

We danced, arms waving

I want him, introduce him to me.

 

Then he was there

in the pub next door

eyes that bubbled and popped

a Patrick Mower look-a-like

before look-a-likes were the thing.

Glimpses of hair

through shirt buttons

Christmas Old Spice,

the definite nod in his eyes –

he was mine.

 

He declared me his

enforced

with love-kissed punches

and shadowing.

A strong lover who wept

the streets of Manchester at midnight

I love you to death.

 

I dressed for winter in summer

made excuses for hibernation

splashed red on a white car

then said, I do.

          111

  

…salt, pepper and spice

…and little fancy jars of

house-smelling herbs –

this man caught me in drink

sticky thighs the only evidence

of meeting

except for his face by mine

beneath the same quilt in a sun shaft.

 

Now

I can’t keep my hands off his scaffolding

…and dried onions in case I forget fresh

Keep the cupboard full of stock cubes

and you’ll never starve

…and porridge.

He doesn’t like potatoes

…jars of Piccalilli and jam

…and sink-tidy

yellow to match curtains and tiles.

 

I get to do all this by myself

and keep the change.

 

He wants to be a daddy

makes me scream for more.

 

Over a common-law threshold

If you ever spend my money

I’ll empty the cupboard, even of salt

And spend the week with my mother.

 

          1V

 

Sixty quid for the bronze and rust

that rattles and rolls but

jump-starts first time.

Vauxhall Victor with a bash at the back

goodbyes me and mine,

numbered black bags settle against walls

in my old bedroom.

My mother has seen all this before –

I’ve never really belonged to Glasgow.

 

Victor is a tin beef-olive

tied at the top

video and furniture into gold,

food for us and the car.

Newcastle, a hole on the horizon

we smooth down the motorway, rolling

the children to sleep

South and East

into February the 2nd

with a faulty something

that kept us in Glasgow till five.

 

Ppublished in London Review of Books October 1991

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