• I. Approach

    Out of Ladywell’s wood
    I come unstitched from brick,
    from the mild tyranny of pavement,
    and enter the dark breathing soil.

    The playpark lifts itself first—
    a gentle mound
    concealing the reservoir
    as palms cup water,
    not to hoard
    but to offer.

    Crows cry from the canopy—
    rough bells
    marking the threshold.

    Then the bridge,
    the pond’s shallow eye,
    and sometimes the kingfisher—
    blue syllable of flame,
    so still
    it tutors silence.

    Here the world narrows
    into edge.

    I pause where mud begins,
    refuse haste.
    The water takes the sky
    without applause,
    dark, obedient,
    keeping the old grammar of rivers.

    Not Jordan—
    yet the body of water remembers
    how to bow.

    I do not step in.
    I wait for the surface
    to answer first.
    I enter
    by consenting to arrival.

    II. Anticlockwise

    Without command
    my feet turn left.

    Against the clock—
    the longer obedience,
    the direction the body trusts
    before the mind can argue.

    Along the northern rim
    the path thins.
    Trees incline inward.
    Water comes, goes, returns—
    a recurring sentence
    between trunks.

    Some days we walk only this side,
    measuring distance
    by what remains
    for swans and ducks.

    Some days the full circuit,
    and the circle instructs us
    without speaking.

    A robin accompanies us—
    branch to branch,
    unannounced,
    unhired.

    I do not translate it.
    I receive its staying
    as I receive breath:
    given, continual,
    not mine.

    This wood does not entertain.
    It keeps me
    until I soften.

    Step.
    Curve.
    Shadow.
    Water.
    Return.

    Again I turn,
    and something clenched in me
    loosens its hand.

    III. Stone Bench

    The bench waits—
    faithful to its coordinates,
    overlooking the fishing platform,
    holding the patience of stone.

    Here we remain longest.

    Squirrels approach—
    small liturgies of hunger,
    hands lifted without shame.
    Nuts pass from skin to fur.
    Crumbs fall,
    an unnoticed blessing.

    Jenny leans close,
    nibbles the toggles of my hoodie—
    noodles, she says,
    and I become soup.
    Cold air, laughter,
    borrowed warmth.

    Cider opens its small fire.
    Film lines surface,
    jokes consecrated
    to this place alone.

    My mother watches the path
    for dogs,
    so she can offer a treat—
    the sacrament of greeting
    repeated without fatigue.

    Behind us
    the embankment keeps its old posture:
    earth lifted,
    water disciplined,
    industry pressed into quiet.

    Still the light does not abandon this bench.
    Rain fails to unmake it.
    Grey cannot thin it.
    Even frost sharpens its edges
    without withdrawing welcome.

    I stay.
    Stone steadies.
    The afternoon kneels around us.

    IV. Spillway

    Near the weir
    sound humbles itself.

    Here the reservoir releases—
    water pulled down concrete
    toward the waiting burn.

    The bridge spans this giving:
    stillness on one side,
    motion on the other.

    Aircraft pass above
    and Jenny names them,
    training our eyes
    on the second sky
    sliding over the first.

    Below, birds adjust their balance.
    Fish turn unseen.
    The work continues
    without our witness.

    I remember the swan—
    its sudden panic of wings,
    the blunt impact with branches,
    fear made heavy.

    Jenny went down the slope,
    slow, careful,
    guiding it toward water
    until motion remembered itself.

    Water lets go
    without vanishing.

    I stand at the crossing
    and permit something unneeded
    to leave me.

    V. Frost Light

    Clouds part
    and brightness enters—
    clean, exacting.

    Frost whitens the path.
    The reservoir tightens its skin,
    thin ice holding silence
    like fragile glass.

    Mist arrives later,
    drawing a veil
    between inwardness and sight,
    between thought and attention.

    Once, in blizzard wind,
    I came anyway with food—
    not brave,
    only obedient:
    seed carried through white violence,
    hands numb and faithful.

    Often I arrive worn,
    weighted by labor,
    tired of noise,
    tired of myself.

    Still I come
    expectant.

    After the bench
    the town loosens its grip.
    Houses thin.
    Distance deepens.

    And sometimes—
    without striving—
    the reservoir rises inward,
    matter remembering
    its capacity for fullness.

    Those who anger me
    draw near.
    Noise becomes hospitable.
    Even my flaws
    stand briefly unaccused.

    Then the veil returns.
    Footsteps resume.
    Planes cross.
    Birds speak.

    I turn toward Drumgelloch,
    carrying nothing visible
    except the faint aftertaste
    of a world
    momentarily gathered.