your humerus, your pelvis and your spine.
   The scans and dyes allow each one to shine.
   The Second-Last Time
   We never knew
   when it would be
   the last time.
   It was important
   not to know.
   We made love
   the second-last time,
   always the second-last time,
   as many times
   as time allowed.
   We’d go to bed
   and put our heads
   together, trying to find
   where you had gone.
   Your illness was a vast
   terrain, but somehow
   again and again
   we found you.
   Refractory
   The killing’s done offstage.
   On all the websites, no one ever dies
   of your disease. They swap advice,
   give updates on their holidays,
   celebrate anniversaries
   of their remissions.
   They cheer each other on.
   Three thousand musketeers.
   Myeloma’s on the run.
   Then, one by one,
   they falter in their flight.
   Where do they land?
   Why don’t we hear from them again?
   Why is a search party never sent?
   Each time a cancer buddy disappears,
   she, or he, winks out without a trace,
   and, like the smoothest sleight-of-hand,
   a trembling newbie, armed with fears,
   a valiant doctor, symptoms, and a treatment plan,
   slips in to take their place.
   Old People In Hospital
   Possessing, of their own,
   only a toothbrush and a comb,
   like victims of earthquake, fire or flood
   fleeing from the threat of death or blood
   they’ve come
   for the sanction to go home, restored.
   Instead, bored
   in their appointed cots they lie
   waiting to be cured at last, and die.
   Darling Little Dress
   On the way
   to the hospital today
   I saw a darling little dress.
   No, not too little: just the right
   size for you now.
   The label says
   14
   but you know how that can mean
   almost anything.
   I’d say
   it’s more like a 12,
   but not a tight 12.
   No, not at all.
   Stylish, light and well-designed
   in stretchy fabric.
   Quite a find.
   No, not baggy, not what you would call
   a tent. I only meant . . . elasticised.
   There is give, that’s what I’m saying;
   there is give.
   The sleeves have cuffs to stow
   a tissue in, but otherwise
   are loose. But not too loose.
   Just comfy on your swollen arms.
   Not that your arms are
   very swollen, just slightly
   lacking muscle tone
   after the broken bone,
   just in need of exercise.
   The bosom?
   Promising, I think, at first glance.
   There’s a real chance this might be
   nearly optimal.
   You’d look shapely; as shapely
   as possible
   now that you can’t wear a bra
   anymore, and now your figure
   has grown bigger.
   The cons? Well, nothing much.
   The neckline – I should let you know –
   is not as low as you require.
   How high? Here, where I touch.
   I see you frown, but listen:
   this gown, it stretches,
   so when the crimson flushes come,
   you could simply pull it down.
   And at the back? It comes up high,
   and I suspect – without seeing it on,
   you realise – that it might minimise
   the hump that dexamethasone
   has dumped in there.
   It has no stitches to tear,
   no buttons to strain,
   no zips to pull in vain.
   It would go well with your hair –
   no, not the brown you have on now,
   another one.
   Will it cover your bum? I’m not sure,
   that’s why I took this picture
   for you to study at your leisure.
   Yes, I’m aware that all your tights
   are threadbare at the rear,
   the seams half-perished and worn through,
   but I only thought: this dress
   would look so beautiful on you
   even in bed.
   But yes, I must concede, now that we
   have the evidence before us,
   it does appear quite small.
   I could have sworn it said
   14, but I agree, it doesn’t look it.
   Which maybe is the asset of it,
   now that your favourite smocks
   are on the ample side,
   your chemotherapy couture,
   your fluid retention range.
   This darling little frock
   would make a lovely change.
   But no, now that you mention it,
   I don’t believe they had it
   in a 16.
   It was a one-off,
   end-of-season sort of thing,
   that I saw on a rail
   in a sunny street, not far
   from a busy intersection
   full of healthy women walking
   briskly past this dress
   in the opposite direction
   from where you are.
   Escape Attempts
   A tunnel under a prison
   dug out with a spoon.
   It has been done.
   Don’t tell me it has not been done.
   Let me put your slippers on.
   We’re going to get you home.
   Place one foot on this stair.
   One hand on this banister.
   Bend at the knee (the stronger one).
   Ascend by fifteen centimetres.
   It can be done.
   It has been done.
   Pretend your legs were broken
   in an accident, and now
   are on the mend.
   This is not about cancer.
   This is about the Achilles tendon.
   This is about the soleus and the tibial nerve.
   This is routine convalescence.
   This is common physio.
   Take my arm, let’s go.
   Today, two stairs.
   Tomorrow, three.
   Twenty to get into the plane.
   We’re going to get you home.
   We’re going to get you fit.
   We’ll get you back in shape.
   You’ll wear clothes of your own
   at last, and shoes, real shoes,
   and your hair will grow.
   It all starts with a single step.
   It all depends on how resolutely
   you desire escape.
   Pretend your legs were broken.
   A few stairs and I’ll let you sleep.
   It’ll be easier than it was before,
   you’ll see. Trust me. Please.
   Just take my arm.
   Or let me take yours.
   Let’s get this done.
   Don’t be
   like that.
   Nipples
   Nipples all over you.
   Excited peaks of plasma.
   Red, purple, some with areolas.
   Your flesh is riotous with the pleasure
   of predatory cells.
   Each nipple swells
   a bit more each day.
   I have decided
   to watch the one on your foot.
   Watch it lovingly
   
					     					 			; until it flattens
   and disappears.
   Or until you do.
   Whichever happens
   first.
   Ten Tumours On Your Scalp
   Reeling from what I had
   uncovered,
   I washed the blood and sweat
   out of your wig.
   It came up good as new.
   Ready to go back on you.
   Switzerland
   You tried to phone but
   Dignitas was busy.
   You begged me, so I wrote instead.
   My typing fingers made vibrations
   on your bed.
   But Switzerland gave no reply.
   Or, If Only
   It’s so easy to die
   when you’d really rather not.
   The menu of quick demises
   is marvellously ample.
   You can, for example:
   slip on a leaf and break your neck,
   be squashed by falling rocks,
   be splattered by a train,
   be zapped by an electric shock,
   burst a vessel in the brain,
   sink with a cruise ship,
   choke on a fruit pip,
   be stung by an exotic mite,
   perish in a freak fire,
   bleed to death from a bird bite,
   be stabbed in someone else’s fight,
   expire from a hiccup of the heart,
   be eaten by an alligator,
   be gassed by a faulty radiator,
   discover suddenly
   that you have a fatal allergy.
   This air freshener – ‘Magnolia Vanilla’ –
   issues a stern warning
   that solvent abuse can kill
   instantly.
   How strange, then, that you and I
   have so few options open to us.
   We’d jump at any offer.
   Any speedy death would do us.
   Is there no amenable jihadist
   who could be persuaded to behead you?
   We’d be quite willing to insult Islam
   if some resolute young man
   could bring his sword to Parkside Hospital
   (on the District line to Wimbledon,
   then catch the 93 bus).
   Or, if only
   we could transport you to Westminster,
   where armed police stand ready
   for terrorists to jump out of the mob.
   Your morphine pump – that gizmo squirting dope
   into your gut – would make a suspicious bump
   if hidden under a shirt. We could hope
   it looked enough like a bomb
   for the cops to mow you down.
   Or, if only
   we could buy a ticket to the top
   of Tokyo Tower, and smash a window for you.
   Or, if only – let’s be less ambitious –
   you could go to Disneyland, and
   unleash yourself from a roller coaster,
   fly into the sky of Anaheim or Marne-la-Vallée.
   Or, if only you could walk (for goodness’ sake,
   how simple should this be to organise?)
   just a few steps from your bed
   into a cab, and from the cab onto a busy motorway,
   and, in a wink, be dead.
   Instead, we wait.
   Each muscle takes its time to lapse.
   Each corpuscle spins out its collapse.
   We wait for your cells to decay,
   one by one.
   We wait for each nerve to succumb,
   nerve by nerve.
   Observe, minute by minute,
   millimetre by millimetre,
   the tumours take
   what they do not deserve.
   Another Season
   On your bedside cabinet:
   a wristwatch with a very quiet tick.
   You are too sick to wear it anymore.
   It’s the old-fashioned kind.
   It does not know it is forgotten.
   It takes up hardly any space.
   Its face points at the window.
   It sees the trees in miniature.
   You do not see the trees at all.
   Spring it was, when you last wore this watch.
   Now it is summer, and you do not know.
   Your watch is keeping time for you.
   When you are ready, its tiny hands
   will show they never stopped
   being utterly
   loyal.
   Cowboys
   As a child, watching westerns on TV,
   I knew cowboys
   could be shot and not
   die.
   They were only dead when
   a trickle of blood
   appeared at one side
   of their mouth,
   down to the chin.
   That trickle meant
   The End.
   Now I watch you sleep
   and, at the corner of your mouth,
   that same dark cedilla.
   Together last night we
   laboured to clean your teeth.
   You with your spastic hands,
   me with toothbrush and plastic pick.
   Chicken crud between your molars
   lodged stubborn as your cancer.
   We won
   in the end
   but fought a little too
   hard.
   Fluid Balance
   I’ve kept a measure of your sips,
   your shuffling visits to the loo,
   captured in a blue dish inside the bowl.
   The 75 ml of milk
   in your corn flakes.
   The soup, the custard.
   The bags of saline.
   The bags of blood.
   The platelets, thick as the orange sauce
   on the duck you never ate.
   I ate it for you.
   I drink your water for you, too,
   in these last days when
   I’m no longer measuring.
   Purring
   Purring was your favourite sound.
   Having slept all night at your feet,
   the cat – whichever of our cats was then alive –
   would wake up when you finally stirred.
   You’d lure him, or her, onto your chest
   and the joyful noise would thereupon begin,
   released by a tickle under the chin.
   How many times have I lain by your side
   while your hands caressed sweet-smelling fur,
   and the best part of an hour slipped by
   as a rapturous mammal purred?
   Now that same noise can be heard:
   an animal presence, with us, in this room.
   All those who enter, listen:
   where’s it coming from?
   That rhythmic, guttural thrum,
   that gentle growling in the diaphragm.
   It’s your lungs: your lungs are purring.
   Presumptuous fluid burbles in your breast.
   A nurse comes and injects midazolam.
   A doctor recommends glycopyrronium.
   They’re keen for you to die
   serenely, like a baby with its lips around
   a nipple of morphine. They know what kind
   of death is best; they do not like
   what’s happening to your breath. Their mission
   is to stop this bestial sound occurring.
   This purring.
   This purring.
   This purring.
   The Time You Chose
   It was a smallish space
   and we lay close together.
   No doubt, to some extent,
   we breathed each other’s breath.
   The angle of my chair
   in tandem to your bed
   meant that I couldn’t see your face,
   although I was an arm’s length from your head.
   I dozed. The hour was late.
   You were, I’m almost certain, unaware
   that I was even there.
   I dozed. You were  
					     					 			not dead.
   The bedclothes rose and fell.
   You were helpless and scary,
   like a bear in labour,
   like a newborn baby.
   For twenty minutes, thirty maybe,
   my eyes were closed.
   That was the time you chose.
   Tight Pullover
   In life, you did not relish
   being hugged by strange men.
   Now, the mortuary van is parked
   right near Reception in the dark
   at the climax of this hellish night,
   and two guys in fancy suits –
   one young, one not so young –
   are here to rendezvous.
   They treat you gently,
   undress you with gloved fingers,
   roll you on your side,
   roll you on your back,
   roll you into their arms,
   clutch you to their chests.
   They shroud you in gauzy white,
   wrap you up, immobilise
   your limbs, you, who panicked
   when caught in a tight pullover.
   In minutes they are satisfied.
   I have watched but not touched,
   impotent to spare you from their grasp.
   I thank them, these strange men.
   These men you never knew
   and did not wish to know.
   These men who take you with them
   to their van.
   II
   F.W. Paine Ltd, Bryson House, Horace Road, Kingston
   This is the way it is:
   we’ll spend the night apart.
   I have your new address
   on a printed card
   but I don’t know this city well enough
   to picture where you’re sleeping.
   Besides, it’s over now.
   I’m surplus to requirements
   You are with others of your kind
   and I, at last, am absent from your mind.
   There are so many people I should tell
   that you have left me.
   A challenge for another day.
   How warm it is! It has become July.
   I look up as I walk, and in the sky
   I see the first of all the moons
   we will not share.
   Amateur
   The planning of your death
   left a lot to be desired.
   Right in the middle
   of the school vacations.
   Most of your teacher friends
   vaguely imagined you were
   on the mend. Thirty years’ worth
   of children you had taught
   no doubt recalled your kindness,
   your good humour, your inspiration,
   but thought – as grown-up pupils tend to do –
   that you’d vanished from the earth
   after their graduation.