Over the gulf of the dark, a thousand-mile
sway of green water, love makes its link,
fibreoptic, your breath translated into light.
My ear cupped to a handset, I’m listening
for the heartbeats under your words,
systole and diastole, our binary code
and I think of light’s racing pulse,
the thousands of voices hurling through glass,
silica hairs in a skin of steel
ducking the Pacific, surfacing for air,
pitched in waves through the veils of space,
mesosphere and ionosphere,
to an ink-rinsed emptiness
where dragonflies of metal sip the sun,
solar-panelled wings gripping the dark,
antennae pointing to earth’s blue lake
where I wait to catch the sleet of your voice
and on roofs, in towns, on hills, at Madley,
Docklands, Goonhilly, other ears tilt to the ebb
of night. Moon-white dishes scattered like shells.
Listening. As if to some other lover.

Supported by Arts Council England