One day our spines’ll tesselate under sage soft duvets as storms sweep across us and no one will cry; not one noise shall slip from tongues ‘cos strength comes from keeping quiet or carrying on.
You’re a now realised kindness that doesn’t know what breath is or how the north circular works in festive rush hours home, but I’ll kiss the answers upon your tender carbon tapered chest and hope the toner never runs low (your dad would’ve handcrafted every thing he knew in semaphore if he’d have pulled through, but you’ll learn in time, too, that time does not ruin fewer experiences than being).
I lean in. Whisper this (above) across your one body, three eighths the size of a coffee table hardback book: the result of patience pined for that I mimed along to motherhood the best I could for nine months and now, here, I lift the hood and work out what to do next in this rush to settle down and sit, sip until you snooze off into silence. Here I carry you and do not notice the weight, stare at the gape of you, my newly framed little one held in the palm of my hand, squat full four pinter named after someone we knew. You landed lunar surface side up, smoothed new to the toes and I wonder how I’ll meet you I wonder how this goes.