Rope
    
        Vicki Feaver
    
        I gripped with my feet, climbed
        until I could see through the hoops
        of the netball posts; slid back,
        burning the skin off my fingers.
        Until the mound of coarse new hair,
        curved bone, secretly-folded flesh
        where the rope pressed, I'd roused
        a live nest: a wriggling litter
        like the baby voles I'd found
        in a squeaking hole in the grass —
        hearts palpitating in furless,
        pastry-thin sides; or featherless
        chicks — all claws and beaks
        and black-veined wings —
        that dropped from gutters.
        I had to squeeze my thighs
        to stop them breaking out:
        squealing and squawking
        into the gym's blue steel rafters;
        or scrabbling down the inside
        of my legs, over whitened plimsolls,
        making the games mistress shriek.