NaPoWriMo's Day 17 prompt suggests that we write a poem re-telling a family anecdote that has stuck with you over time.
My
mum's Uncle Dick, greyed and portly,
welcoming
us into his flat. Nine decades
of
stories, anecdotes and experience.
Royal
Air Force pension keeping him comfortable,
he
hands me a cold glass of orange juice
and
casts his mind back.
I
realise, too late, I should be recording this.
Granville,
my mum's dad, arrives at the RAF barracks,
war
weary, the grit and oil of a hundred trucks washed from his skin,
The
Cairo sand long gone from under his nails.
Some
time in the 60s, out near the Suez Canal,
Granville
is here to see his brother.
The
familiar strangling Egyptian heat,
A
world away from the mild and refreshing English sun.
Dick
is an officer, a few decorations on his blazer,
quiet
reminders of the roaring horrors of those six years.
His
friends and colleagues are all his level,
The
like-minded and fellow-afflicted.
A
spare jacket is an easy procure, Granville's size.
His
brother's disguise.
They
enter the Officer's Mess, Granville quiet,
eyes
roaming.
The
war ends, he thinks, and only now do I go undercover.
Crackle
of a snooker break towards the back,
a
couple of pints being clinked together
in
a thin layer of cigar smoke.
A
door shuts. Eyes head to the sound,
a
flock of salutes.
Warrant
Officer on deck. Granville mimics the officers.
Dick
makes some formal introductions. The blagging continues.
“I
see you have the Africa Star,” says the Warrant
Officer.
Granville
nods. He's not felt this uncomfortably warm since Cairo.
“Well
done.” A polite smile for Granville. A knowing glance to Dick.
The
Warrant Officer departs. The brothers had earned their breakfast.
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