The unspeakable moved through me like a pageant.
I watched it run its course;
I was in control and still
I marveled, a child clamoring
for the rainbow flowers
until up close she sees the shredded tissues,
all those reds and pinks
bleeding in the heat.
(Stop, rewind:
It was not hot
here, in September, late evening,
first lightning of the season.
And I didn’t so much watch
as follow directions: This is where
the roof caves in, laddering to ash;
this is where your desk flies
from the second story window
in flames . . .)
I never knew
a house could be so lovely
exploding. A closet, a bedroom,
such tidy novas; but the entire
upstairs hallway spared
because fire craves air and will
leap leagues to find it.
I stood there as long as I could,
I accepted everything –
the firemen’s shouts,
the worn bathrobe,
my neighbor’s glistening cheek
and despair holding me up like a torch,
even the weird refreshment
of the breeze the rain swept in on,
finally: first drops
of the promised storm.