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    The Weight of Water

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    Longer hair than me.

      So, I decide to grow it.

      And wear a flower in it,

      So I won’t look

      Like a Polish lesbian

      Any more.

      All Wrong

      Today I was told

      I have the wrong bag.

      Today I was told that

      My bag is ridiculous.

      I have looked carefully

      At the offending bag.

      It’s an ordinary satchel

      For school books,

      With sections

      For smaller items.

      Today I was told

      It is all wrong.

      I’m looking at the bag.

      I’m desperate to know

      What doesn’t work.

      But I just can’t figure it out.

      Karma

      If I were back in Gdańsk, I wouldn’t be friends

      With a new girl either.

      If I still had Magdalena

      To copy homework from

      And sit with at lunch,

      I’d ignore a new girl too,

      Like we snubbed Alexsandra who stood

      Far enough away

      To be discreet.

      Close enough to be invited.

      We just ignored her.

      We played doubles, pretended not to notice

      She was holding a racket and

      Wearing shorts with pockets.

      Why did we do that?

      But we weren’t mean to her.

      We didn’t whisper and laugh,

      Avoid touching her in case we caught something.

      We simply ignored her.

      If I Were on the Swim Team They Might See Me

      Sometimes I want to tear off my clothes

      And show them I’m the same

      Underneath –

      Maybe better.

      It doesn’t matter what I wear.

      I always look different:

      My clothes are too heavy –

      That much I can tell.

      And I have no real vision,

      I just don’t see what’s wrong.

      If I were on the swim team

      I’d wear a costume

      Like everyone else,

      There’d be more skin than fabric.

      If I were in the swim team,

      They might see me.

      Name Day

      As I rub away cold sleep,

      Mama pulls out a box

      Wrapped in starry blue paper,

      A card taped to the top –

      Kasienka on it

      In neat script.

      I sit up in the bed

      And rip open the paper.

      Mama cheers: ‘Your own iron!’

      I want to stop unwrapping.

      I want to cry.

      What do I need an iron for?

      We already have one, which leaks,

      like the tap

      in the kitchen.

      When I take the box out of its wrapping

      I see Mama’s mistake – or mine –

      It’s a hair iron,

      ‘A straightener,’ I say,

      Genuinely joyful

      And read the box aloud:

      Ceramic plates.

      Mama shrugs. I shrug.

      We don’t know if ceramic plates is good –

      It sounds good,

      Printed in bold, square letters.

      Later on, after we’ve lunched on fresh golabki,

      And I’ve straightened my hair,

      Mama, Kanoro and I march to the cinema.

      We gorge on sweet buttered popcorn and

      Orange sodas.

      We sit in the front row, me in the middle,

      Smiling all the way

      Through a sad film.

      The Hunt

      They don’t have to say

      a thing.

      They just have to stare

      At my hair,

      For me to know

      It isn’t enough

      To impress them,

      Though it’s so straight now

      You could paint with it.

      Clair confirms that

      It is still too short,

      I still look gay –

      ‘Are you gay?’

      A paper appears in my locker.

      FYI: You smell like old meat.

      I hurry to the toilets to sniff myself,

      And when I’m there,

      Clair and Marie arrive

      With a gaggle of girls.

      ‘Can you smell something?’

      Clair wonders,

      And Marie holds her nose,

      And then the other girls too.

      They are hunting,

      Circling me to prevent my escape.

      They yap and snuffle,

      Jostle to be close to Clair,

      Covering their mouths

      To stifle laughter.

      I am a fox surrounded by beagles.

      They will eat me alive and spit out the fat.

      I am their prey and there is nothing

      I can do to stop them pouncing.

      Maybe

      Leaning on the lockers,

      Chewing on a straw,

      Clair pretends she can’t

      See me because she’s

      Alone –

      Without the pack.

      I close my locker loudly,

      With a

      BANG

      And for a second she shudders

      Then turns

      And shows off her braces.

      ‘Hi, Cassie!’ she says,

      Blinking.

      That’s all.

      And I wonder if

      This means

      We’re friends.

      Art Class

      A shadow frowns over my sugar paper,

      And then a warm voice: ‘That’s good, Cassie.’

      Arlene puts her picture down next to mine.

      She’s slight, with round glasses that hide

      half her face.

      We sit together using our thumbs

      To blend chalk dust into

      Fat green marrows,

      And I think, maybe she’s the one,

      Maybe she’s the friend

      I’ve been waiting to find.

      But Clair tracks me down at the sink

      Where we go to wash the colours from

      Our hands.

      ‘Is it true what you said about Arlene?’

      I gaze at Clair,

      Too amazed to protest.

      Arlene looks sideways at me.

      She wipes her hands on her trousers

      And backs away from the

      Danger of friendship.

      ‘Arlene’s a bit sensitive,’

      Clair hisses and slinks away too.

      Nothing more.

      In the sink the colours have washed away,

      And the water runs clear.

      Not Alone

      William finds me in the dining hall.

      He moves to my table, drops his tray,

      And sits.

      He slurps and burps,

      Wipes his mouth on his sleeve

      And stares.

      Year Nine boys watch us

      From across the hall.

      They are gesturing,

      Guffawing.

      ‘My friends,’ William says,

      ‘Are idiots.’

      And then, ‘You haven’t been to practice.’

      I shake my head and sip my Coke.

      I know it’s better when I don’t talk.

      ‘So maybe I’ll see you at the pool this week.

      Maybe you’ll be there on Thursday,’ he says.

      He waits for me to speak.

      I nod and

      Dip my chips

      In ketchup.

      ‘So you’ll be there on Thursday,’

      He says.

      Walking to science he takes my hand

      and squeezes it

      As though testing a piece of fruit in a market

      Before buying.

      Then he puts his hands into his trouser po
    ckets

      And says, ‘I’ll see you at the pool then.

      Thursday.’

      Thursday

      In the changing room

      I check myself in the mirror.

      I want to be sure

      I look normal.

      I do not:

      I am sharp-cornered,

      Like a piece of Swedish

      Self-assembly furniture

      Gone wrong.

      I am all lines,

      No curves.

      My fingers and toes are too long.

      My nose is pointy, my bottom flat.

      When did this happen?

      I tiptoe to the pool,

      My towel hiding my shape.

      Apart from a lone lifeguard

      Sitting in what looks like

      A baby’s high chair

      The place is deserted.

      I cannot see William anywhere.

      I drop the towel and let the water

      Take me.

      And I do lengths:

      Up and

      Down,

      Up and

      Down,

      Waiting for William

      Who never shows up and

      Trying not to think about

      Rejection.

      Grating

      I am hairy.

      I have thick

      black

      shoots

      Under my arms

      And on my legs

      And between them too.

      I am hairy.

      I did not know this until

      I noticed the women

      In the pool

      With their velvety skin.

      I am hairy.

      So when I get home

      I swipe Mama’s razor,

      Sneak down to the bathroom

      And work on the problem.

      I rest one hairy leg on the toilet seat

      And drag the blade up it.

      I scream. Loudly,

      Like someone is trying to murder me

      And Mama runs up the hall

      And knocks on the door:

      ‘What is happening, Kasienka?’

      She wants to know.

      She wants to know

      I’m not being murdered.

      Little red rivers

      Run down to my ankles

      And pool on the toilet seat.

      ‘I’m OK, Mama,’ I say.

      I have not shaved the hair

      But grated the skin.

      There is pink flesh

      In the blade,

      No hair at all.

      When I emerge from the bathroom

      I am still hairy.

      And covered in cuts.

      What William Says

      I wanted to call you

      But I didn’t have your number.

      If I had your number

      I would have called

      For sure

      You know.

      I was really sick.

      I was so queasy

      I couldn’t eat.

      I couldn’t get out of bed.

      I had a stomach bug, the doctor said.

      Anyway,

      If I’d had your number

      I would have called

      For sure

      You know.

      Sorry I didn’t show up

      At the pool.

      Man, I was so sick.

      But I couldn’t get in touch with you.

      Let’s do it another time.

      I won’t be sick.

      I’m done with sick.

      You know.

      For sure.

      Back in Gdańsk

      I dream about Tata.

      We are in a train station.

      Maybe we are in

      Gdańsk Główny.

      People are

      Milling yet purposeful,

      Like ants

      Around a sugar bowl.

      Mama and I are trailing

      Tata

      Through the crowd.

      He glances back,

      Encouraging us.

      Then disappears

      Suddenly.

      And I wake up

      Soundlessly sobbing.

      Finding Tata

      Mama will not give up.

      It is cold and drizzles most nights,

      So Mama buys a scarf and umbrella,

      But she will not give up.

      Even as a door closes

      She looks to the next one,

      Each time with a sleepier smile,

      But she will not give up.

      Her boots need to be reheeled.

      They are worn out, as I am,

      From the hard pavements.

      So Mama borrows my boots

      Though they’re a little tight,

      But she will not give up.

      I wish Mama would give up.

      And stop dragging me around after her

      Like a human dictionary.

      I Wish Tata Were Dead

      Dead fathers don’t deliberately leave home.

      They can be sainted.

      We can hold candles to their memories

      And keep their headstones clean.

      You can’t do this with a missing father.

      Questions

      Kanoro is in our room

      Holding hands with Mama.

      They look like they are praying.

      Kanoro’s face is moist

      And his eyes are cloudy,

      The stars bitten out.

      Later I want to know the story,

      The reason for the quiet closeness.

      ‘Did he explain the scar on his cheek?’

      Mama won’t tell.

      Mama says, ‘Always too many questions

      With you.’

      So I decide, right then,

      Never to ask her anything else ever again.

      And to tell her even less.

      Dare Devil

      Marie Mullen is the messenger:

      If I agree to do

      Three dares

      In three days,

      Dares Clair will devise,

      I’ll be allowed to sit with

      Everyone

      During lunch

      For a week

      As a trial.

      I think it’s a joke so I laugh.

      Marie Mullen glances about –

      She thinks I’ve seen something

      Funny.

      What kinds of things? I ask.

      Marie Mullen says: ‘I don’t know.

      Take a piss on the tennis courts.

      Ask a sixth-former on a date.

      Drink a litre of olive oil.’

      Did you do all that?

      Marie Mullen looks away.

      I’m sorry for her,

      But my answer is no –

      I’d rather eat alone all year

      Than piss on a tennis court.

      I’d rather eat alone for ever

      Than jump at Clair’s bidding.

      This is what I tell myself.

      I Try to Tell Mama

      And all she says is,

      ‘Girls are like this.’

      As though I’m like

      This too.

      The Pity Club

      Not all girls are savage.

      Some stand away

      When Clair starts.

      Some turn their backs.

      They won’t take part.

      They are The Pity Club –

      The girls who look at me

      With sorry eyes when

      I’m the only person

      Without a partner in PE.

      But they have their own group,

      And it’s established.

      And exclusive.

      And a newbie would

      Mess it all up.

      So –

      They aren’t cruel.

      They are The Pity Club,

      And I don’t know what’s worse:

      Pity or persecution.

      Smokers’ Corner

      William leads me to a corner of the playground.

      I pat down my hair and flatten out my skirt

    />   Expecting to be kissed.

      But when we get there it’s crowded

      And smoky and William doesn’t kiss me.

      He doesn’t move any closer at all.

      Marie and Clair are there.

      They run their hands through their hair,

      Reminding me I’m missing something.

      William pulls a pack of cigarettes from

      His blazer pocket and holds it out to me.

      I’ve no choice with the girls gazing and grinning.

      When I inhale it’s like breathing in dirt,

      The kind Mama shakes out of the rug.

      William smiles, takes the cigarette from me,

      Inhales, swallows, licks his lips.

      Then he blows the smoke out through his nose

      Like a shaman, and I am bewitched.

      When I looked at William

      I saw a swimmer.

      Now I see a smoker.

      And it doesn’t matter.

      He talks easily to the girls

      Because he is older and that

     

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