1

When she came to the finger-post

She turned right and walked as far as the mountains.

Patches of snow lay under the thorny bush

That was blue with sloes. She filled her pockets.

The sloes piled into the hollows of her skirt.

The sunset wind blew cold against her belly

And light shrank between the branches

While her feet shifted, bare,

While her hands raked in the hard fruit.

The reindeer halted before her and claimed the sloes.

She rode home on his back without speaking,

Holding her rolled-up skirt,

Her free hand grasping the wide antlers

To keep her steady on the long ride.

2

Thirteen months after she left home

She travelled hunched on the deck of a trader

Southwards to her sister’s wedding.

Her eyes reflected acres of snow,

Her breasts were large from suckling,

There was salt in her hair.

They met her staggering on the quay;

They put her in a scented bath,

Found a silk dress, combed her hair out.

They slipped a powder in her drink,

So she forgot her child, her friend,

The snow and the sloe gin.

3

The reindeer died when his child was ten years old.

Naked in death his body was a man’s,

Young, with an old man’s face and scored with grief.

When the old woman felt his curse she sickened,

She lay in her tower bedroom and could not speak.

The young woman who had nursed her grandchildren nursed her.

In her witch time she could not loose her spells

Or the spells of time, though she groaned for power.

The nurse went downstairs to sit in the sun. She slept.

The child from the north was heard at the gate.

4

A light wind fled over them

As the witch died in the high tower.

She knew her child in that moment:

His body poured into her vision

Like a snake pouring over the ground,

Like a double-mouthed fountain of two nymphs,

The light groove scored on his chest

Like the meeting of two tidal roads, two oceans.