Waking at Fish Hoek
By morning,
both the cormorant and the house
are blind.
A grain of sleep in each eye,
I stroke the dead bird,
its feathers black as oil.
Its death
and the decorators
interrupt our holiday
on the Peninsula’s sheltered side;
as we take it back to the sea,
our lungs carry
paint fumes and salt spray;
the brown paper
taped to the glass
crackles in the Cape wind
and the brushes make sure flicks –
like the sound of a bird
as it shakes the spume from its wings.
(First published in "Open Earth II" anthology, Pudding Magazine, April 2017.)