书城英文图书District and Circle
10794400000007

第7章 The Aerodrome

First it went back to grass, then after that

To warehouses and brickfields (designated

The Creagh Meadows Industrial Estate),

Its wartime grey control tower rebuilt and glazed

Into a hard-edged CEO-style villa:

Toome Aerodrome had turned to local history.

Hangars, runways, bomb stores, Nissen huts,

The perimeter barbed wire, forgotten and gone.

But not a smell of daisies and hot tar

On a newly-surfaced cart-road, Easter Monday,

1944. And not, two miles away that afternoon,

The annual bright booths of the fair at Toome,

All the brighter for having been denied.

No catchpenny stalls for us, no

Awnings, bonnets, or beribboned gauds:

Wherever the world was, we were somewhere else,

Had been and would be. Sparrows might fall,

B-26 Marauders not return, but the sky above

That land usurped by a compulsory order

Watched and waited – like me and her that day

Watching and waiting by the perimeter.

A fear crossed over then like the fly-by-night

And sun-repellent wing that flies by day

Invisibly above: would she rise and go

With the pilot calling from his Thunderbolt?

But for her part, in response, only the slightest

Back-stiffening and standing of her ground

As her hand reached down and tightened around mine.

If self is a location, so is love:

Bearings taken, markings, cardinal points,

Options, obstinacies, dug heels and distance,

Here and there and now and then, a stance.