In Retrospect
for Elisabeth Kroeger I'd swear when first I looked you were there waving -- window down, door just ajar for your hazardous entrechat to the leaping platform. Here's my hand still outstretched to steady your landing (or test for rain). The other ponders the weight of itself in your absence -- only too clear on a second glance along the rubbished railbed. Spraycans of long-painted-out graffitists lost for words. Fox-turds like age-encrusted walnut whips. Hushed sidings much obsessed by stubborn buddleia and polystyrene beakers. While you, I should imagine, will have missed a much earlier train -- ambushed at St Pancras by a squad of awkward milk-churns; impeded by birds charmed down from beshitten girders to flounce among the limp confetti of bygone workmen's pasteboard tickets and damp, star-punctured day-returns. My arm aches, stretching out of focus into the vanishments of twilight, as it dawns on me: perhaps we're each of us only a figment of the other's hindsight.