Iron
Coffin
I’ve seen them waiting in docks, nervous of eyes,
like
Mothers waiting for their children at the school
gate.
Gaunt, an iron fist, a gauntlet, rocking to sleep
the children
In their bellies, meandering across vast oceans,
laden and creaking
With secrets contained inside a iron coffin, sealed
with sealing wax
Of wire and embossed like a Lord Mayor’s ceremonial
chain of office
Weighted down, bow-legged on a legless sea-camel,
Interlocked like rusting Lego, numbered by once
white sprayed stencil
Now, scratched like a whores back, logo over-painted
to lie or confuse
Disfigured, laying naked on top of each other, like
spent lovers
Abandoned, metallic mouths now wide open waiting for
rented food
Below a red and yellow Self Storage sign, signed off
with an afterthought,
‘24/7 Access’ in a brazen new-speak of lazy
shorthand communication
That promises the prospect renter a new key and
little else.
Beside one of these iron, echo-cavern monsters I sit
in my car awaiting
All my worldly goods to arrive in a rented van
loaded by a dubious
Russian and two mid-European banal muscles who don’t
even try to hide
The new scar, jagged on the dining table, crafted
like a jealous idiot running
A screwdriver along a new car’s paintwork.
I trace my rain wet finger along the defaced table,
remembering when once
This dining table was our pride, running your newly
ringed finger along the veneer
Marquetry, inter-spliced with apple and rose-wood
that perfumed the showroom with
Lavender polish that
masked the salesman’s overpowering breath.
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