• At Eliburn reservoir
    you arrived again —
    blue unfastened from the air,
    a bright wound of motion.

    You took the alder branch
    above the bridge pool,
    body angled darkward,
    poised at the thin hinge
    between surface and depth.

    Stillness gathered;
    even water listened.

    I thought of my grandmother —
    the quiet way she laid bird cards
    along the table’s edge,
    aligning them,
    as if order itself were prayer.

    Now she has gone beyond
    the last mapped water,
    past current and name,
    leaving a pale hollow
    where evening pools.

    You tipped.
    The light narrowed.
    Then the fall —
    pure angle,
    a silver breach
    in the skin of the world.

    I stood cold-breathed,
    rooted to the bank.
    You returned with silver in your beak,
    struck the branch,
    and the pool sealed.

    For an instant
    the border thinned —
    enough to feel
    another silence
    press through.

    Then you were gone.
    Only widening rings,
    the branch easing back to stillness.

    Yet something remained —
    not message, not ghost,
    but the afterheat of looking,
    as if the water
    had briefly learnt to see.