Friday, 29 December 2023

Silence

 



I was rummaging for a beanie I’d packed thinking kiwis know a cold winter. Black ice had stopped the trains to make a liar of me.

The panel windows of the French doors held the frost at their edges, and the postage stamp backyard beyond was so quiet I stepped lightly as if not wanting to disturb.

Tall shrubs had hunkered down against the slatted fences, they hung so heavily that drained of all colour their branches seemed to disappear into the dusted lawn.

A flash of red crossed the space, and back again, flitted side to side so that the smallest of avalanches fell from the tallest hawthorn.

It was all those Christmas cards strung across the mantelpiece every year at home in one and I rushed about searching out the big camera used yesterday for shots of Big Ben and red phone boxes, in a time when you hoped the shot counter didn’t show you needed more film.

He was gone when I pushed the doors open and stepped out. The few hardy sparrows too.

I threw my head back and blew hard so that my disappointment streamed out to the colourless sky.

An eeriness made me think the neighbour’s cat might have been lurking somewhere near, drawn by the movement.

A gentle shadow ran away across the terrace roofs, a Pied Piper seeming to take the very last of the sound of the morning with it, and at last Concorde ghosted past, engines off.