Diadem
         2014, a midwinter’s morning.   Winter courts spring with a bridal gown.  Laid on earth’s bare skin, the perfection of each crystalline stitch, divine.  It is melting, under shallow pools of sun.  A gem would not melt in this meagre heat: but we are temporary, we should understand.  A diamond is a thing of beauty, yet the pursuit of it, too costly. Laden with servitude, it shines sadly.  In the embroidered earth a moment holds, a proposal, a sign of hope sturdier than the materials that spark it.   A memory: a memory arrives -   1977, an early summer’s afternoon.  There was then a smaller version of me; I can observe her, as though she exists, independent of her adult self.  She had brought her necklace to school, a trinket from her Grandma, it dangled a bright jewel, like something from the Raj. She liked to wear it on her head, in the style of a warrior princess. Light fell and caught the dust as she led the class to the cloakroom and all the parents said how sweet she was.  ...