She caught babies in winter,
laid fish to dry in summer,
was eager to sop blood, guts
of anything pierced that needed
her. When the first baby came,
she fished him into her arms,
wiping his face with her thumb,
so enraptured by the sudden touch
of blood that she didn’t see
the twin who slithered out
as if on pelvic fin, hidden
by afterbirth, cradled in placenta
into the Old Port salt beef bucket,
destined for the greedy harbour
to be released, returning
to something wet, smelling of home.
The bucket started howling on the walk
to the water, cold night wind
waking small lungs. The father
looked down. As he rubbed
his baby’s eyes, sound broke from him, too
like a blow in the nautical chorus.
Copyright © 2024 by Maggie Burton, Chores, Breakwater Books
The Midwife
Maggie Burton