ALL IS IMPERMANENT
My house is on fire, they won’t let me in.
I trip over hoses, slip on snakes underfoot,
shoved back by masked men who pull me away.
I burst into tears: “Let me in, let me pass!”
Adrenalin surges, I lunge for a fireman’s axe.
I’d burn down to the bone for my wife and kids
but I’m hustled away; acrid smoke fills the air,
soot covers my face, cinders rain on my head.
The heat is intense as a funeral pyre,
an armada of sparks invades the sky.
A blazing dragon’s breath ravages the roof,
windows shatter like Kristalnacht’s ominous clatter,
walls are flocculent ash under ebonized stars.
Are bodies charred or collapsed on the floor
breathing a last breath?
Without them my body may stand
but my soul would be skinned and impaled.
Escorted away to a neighboring porch
a frazzled family waits frozen in shock.
We tremble together laughing and crying,
giddy with fright as we watch our house burn.