Flood

Louise Wilford

I am halfway there when I see the cars turn back.

Rain bounces off the road, drums on the roof,

a lunatic percussion. The world has deliquesced

to edgeless blocks of muted colour.  Meadowhall’s

knee-deep in river-water; cranes paddle

beside the M1; sirens buzz like wasps far off.  

I crawl through silver sheets that spread like angel wings, 

curling over the windscreen. 

 

He first takes the hills, where country lanes dissolve 

in muddy cataracts. Village houses in the valley 

fret as Dam Flask, Agdon, Strines, Dale Dyke 

swell higher. The fractured veins across the moors – 

now sand and grit and stone with chunks of asphalt 

slithering down their flanks – reveal the land’s bones.

Trees raise their arms from lakes where fields once lay.

He takes the road back to the city. 

 

They crest the bridge, then stop. The River Don 

has shaken off its banks and spilled into a mere, 

drops recoiling off its oily surface. Several cars 

are stranded as the sun begins to set. Local radio 

tells people: stay indoors. Voices fluttering in and out. 

The trail of cars backs up. Later, waiting, they’ll  

watch newsfeed on a phone: 

 

The Wicker Arches now rise from a river. 

The current’s fingers knock us off our feet, 

one person dead. We feel dislocated – haven’t noticed 

slipping through the glass. I’ll watch the hectic image 

on the news: Ulley Reservoir. Clammy hands pressed

against its cracking dam, a village in its path, a power station.  

Desperate pumping and diverting, 

 

shoring up and praying.  It will seem unreal, film

from another place, like someone else’s story. 

Damp smell of flooded basements. Cold wind 

lingering over wet skin. Tomorrow, our local park 

will be a pond, dry-stone walls breached, sodden 

bungalows and gardens, ducks swimming down the high street.  

Tomorrow, the people

 

in the village below Ulley will breathe freely, rain 

stopped in time, waters edging back.TV will show 

the folk of Tinsley and Catcliff rescuing their pets, 

wading through a sea where children’s toys and garden chairs  

bob and drift. Tomorrow, the goyts will flow more freely, 

Rivelin and Loxley, Don and Rother will regain their tempers.  

Tomorrow, we’ll begin to dry out – 

 

And no one’s thinking, as the milksop sky revives,

colours firm up, soil skins over, and the dislodged world returns:

what happens when it rains again?

Genre: 
Author Bio: 

Louise Wilford’s work has been widely published, most recently in Bandit, Pushing Out The Boat, Makarelle and English Review. In 2020, she won First Prize in the Arts Quarterly Short Story Competition and the Merefest Poetry Competition, and was awarded a Masters in Creative Writing (Distinction). She is working on a fantasy novel. She lives and works in Yorkshire, UK.  https://louviewsnewscues.blogspot.com/

Issue: 
62