Barnacle Geese

 

She sat all day outside the poultry tent

behind a bric-a-brac table

and sunglasses.

 

 

She didn’t notice, no, she didn’t care

about the sunburn on her shoulders.

She quite liked the pain,

 

something pink and visible

a singe, not a thud.

 

Everyone was being so nice.

 

The lady who had written,

with deepest sympathy,

gave her a long, close hug

during the ferret racing announcement.

The lady’s watchstrap stung her sunburn

and she sobbed once, loudly and low.

 

Deb asked her to look after

her little boy, which was insensitive,

actually, thinking about it,

which she did after Deb came back

with an ice cream

to say thank you for looking after

her little boy

whose name she couldn’t remember

when really he’d been no trouble.

 

She didn’t ask what he was called,

just in case.

 

She bit at the ice cream

in spite of sensitive teeth

and it dribbled from the sides of her mouth.

 

She didn’t notice, no, she didn’t care

about brain freeze

or the ladies walking past

 

who, deaf and numb, clucked

her son

cliff

Alum Bay

child of his own

how selfish

how very sad.

 

She abandoned the bric-a-brac

with an honesty box

and a sign saying

 

donations welcome,

sorry

 

She ducked under the doorway

of the poultry tent and tugged

the flap over and closed.

 

It was quiet and stuffy

and she sat down at the back,

her head on a cage,

a rosette cupping her cheek.

 

 

 

The goose inside didn’t even hiss.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Lily Blacksel is a final year English with Creative Writing student at the University of Birmingham, with a dear love for the three Rs: Reading, Riting and Rperforming. IShe has just begun the poetry MfA at Columbia University, New York.