Zarrentin
    
        Sue Vickerman
    
        I remember the deathly silence afterwards,
        how flat the land was, a scribble
        of poplars, pencil-sketched bushes,
        the blank look of a lake in December,
        sky like a drawn-down blind
        as high and wide as a Suffolk winter
    
    
        but this was Zarrentin, six hours
        before the end of the year;
        a muddle of trees, a twisted puzzle
        of a root, a leafless bush,
        one last red berry in its claw like a pill,
    
    
        a weekender from Hamburg
        power-walking, shattering ice lids
        from the tops of puddles; the special issue
        dropped from his rucksack
        as he sprinted into the distance
        before I could call him back,
    
    
        leaving me with the English princes,
        tanks in a line, a lottery-winning family,
        a child's distended belly, a soldier's grin
    
    
        and the nakedness of a tree
        lying where it fell beneath the weight
        of disused nests, the rotting stomach
        of a rowing boat dragged out of the lake
        and upturned, the dried-blood smell
        of mushrooms on carcasses
    
    
        and still six hours: it wasn't over yet;
        and the sharp, ugly phrases of ducks.