1. the time around scars

    A girl whom I’ve not spoken to
    or shared coffee with for several years
    writes of an old scar.
    On her wrist it sleeps, smooth and white,
    the size of a leech.
    I gave it to her
    brandishing a new Italian penknife.
    Look, I said turning,
    and blood spat onto her shirt.

    My wife has scars like spread raindrops
    on knees and ankles,
    she talks of broken greenhouse panes
    and yet, apart from imagining red feet,
    (a nymph out of Chagall)
    I bring little to that scene.
    We remember the time around scars,
    they freeze irrelevant emotions
    and divide us from present friends.
    I remember this girl’s face,
    the widening rise of surprise.

    And would she
    moving with lover or husband
    conceal or flaunt it,
    or keep it at her wrist
    a mysterious watch.
    And this scar I then remember
    is a medallion of no emotion.

    I would meet you now
    and I would wish this scar
    to have been given with
    all the love
    that never occurred between us.