Poetry, The Key in the Door and other poems

Making Tracks

day 18 of the Gulf War, February 1991

February, Sunday morning. Snow,

crisp on the hard ground and sun

filtering its way through the mist.

Turning off the Twinhoe road we

climbed the broken stile, inhaling

clean, cold air in the quilted quiet.

We followed twin tracks of man and dog,

criss-crossed by rabbits’ prints,

along the frosted, tree-edged path.

No birds, no wind, only the toll of the

church bell in Wellow, a mile away

and the creaking of compacting snow

under our boots like rolling tanks

crushing the bright, white ground.

Then you turned to me and spoke,

my very thoughts. “Out there, soldiers

are marking the sand with tracks,

criss-crossed by prints of desert rats”

“They’re wearing boots that will never

keep out the sand”. They too are muffled

in gloves and hoods – to keep out the horrors

of war, dazzled by the harsh reflected light

and thinking of home and snow and the

cold-comfort of a walk near Wellow.