TALLULA HAYNES
Commended - 2022 Tower Poetry Competition, 'Dream'
Alleyway Farmer
Sheepskin - my fingers run across the rug and
trace the faded roads, a nail tugging on a loose hair to
unravel its paths, its design - this is Year Four.
My sheet, my map, in one hand,
A pencil in the other between the stubs of three fingers and a “What
do you want to be?” Seriously, me? But drugged by
the garden’s fantasy and a youth of yoghurt pots
I trace round each letter with the probe of a pen,
pricking the sheet - grandmother’s embroidery - I create.
‘Farmer’. A fantasy.
Years of that carpet vaporise right before
me, and eyes lulled, I mould each day into a
final sculpture of clay childhood. One day
I’ll fly (aeroplane or not it, doesn't matter)
and far away, I bet, in the Bahamas, there’s
no puberty or drawer of left letters,
a loose thread, the number inscribed counting up,
periodically, as Ma watches it, a clock. Each
one once opened leads away Saturday’s
pocket money.
On my shoulder, a cupped palm,
cold, calloused but recognisable. That size, a fossilised imprint into my
skin. Looking, there’s a curve of her lips and
the rising of her cheeks so that her
eyes squint and she can’t see me;
lips begin to part, tongue rolling within to formulate
a sound, a syllable, an anything,
Ma - it speaks. No,
that is not my mother, can’t be. She’d never,
you can’t smile underground. A fantasy.
And I’d never, I blink, drinking in the blue of the morning. In the alley again,
still. Good, wouldn’t want to be anywhere else.
Because today’s fruit: A bouquet of crumpled notes, twenties,
green and rusting, soiled by a bloody nose -
found them on the floor, I’swear -
see how I clutch them, touched to my chest
cause petals fly away if they can.