The Black-Backed Gull
    
        Sue Vickerman
    
        After you'd gone, I returned to the beach one day
        with a Tesco's bag, picked plastics out of the jaw
        of the wide-mouthed cave, extracted bottles
        from the line of chewed flotsam. Flies, disturbed
        from seaweed nests, complained around my head
        and a gannet came close then plunge-dived
        between the waves rushing at my boots.
    
    
        Finally all the unnatural colours were collected
        in my carrier. Hearing a cry, I turned to face
        the cove's dry throat and saw a Macdonald's-red
        slit neck staining the bric-a-brac left by the tide,
        the lemon-fizz bill of a puffin. I scanned the cliffs,
        aimed rocks at the dog-bark of the murderous
        black-backed gull. Get away. Go. Get away.
    
    
        After restoring the cove to shades of grey,
        to how it was with you, I heard the cry again
        and, looking back, found myself whisker-close
        to the past; to the hollow, widowed eyes of a seal.