She smiles and hugs me tightly.
I hug her back; I count ten seconds
in my head and then drop my arms
to my sides but Mummy doesn’t let go for
another nine seconds. Nineteen seconds
is the longest hug I have ever had.
On my seventh birthday, after my presents,
Mummy hands me a piece of paper:
Certificate of Name Change, Michael Angeli.
I don’t wanthisname
dragging behind me like a dead dog on a lead,
like toilet roll on the sole
of my new Converse All Stars,
like a shedded snakeskin,
like a second shadow,
like the thick vapor trails
of the Red Arrows,
diesel mixed with colored dye,
making a mark in the sky.
I don’t need a plane because
with my new name I can really fly.
That night
I have a dream
in which Mummy is killed
when a British Airways Boeing 747
crashes into our house.
The left wing cuts through her
bedroom window but I survive.
Would I live with my Uncle B,
Aunty B, or Granny B?