Course, she says
you might have never been born.
Your little nana worked hard,
at her three floor, full bed and board
guest-house.
I slept under tables,
sorted place settings before school
until 1955 and these Burmese boys
arrived in Weston-Super-Mare
started using our kitchen,
as small as it was, as small as I was.
And we loved their spices
and off-peak curry.
RAF Locking, where those
posh slim pilots
spent daytimes learning
some state of the art radio thing
and there was this one, Tin-tun,
who took a shine to me and me to him
How I remember that summer,
me with my mother, Tin-Tun and Thanian
on a short London weekend
me at thirteen and he twenty-three
and we all seemingly off to Burma.
All was set, we were going for good
until mum couldn’t get hold of
her husband, out there in Cardiff
gambling and unreachable again.
No contact means no joint permission
so their High Commission broke my heart.
Forlorn, I was unsure if my life could go on,
so, you see my dear
in more ways than one
you and your siblings
just might never have been born.
.