i. hazard
we have to imagine it:
a satellite, in its secure orbit, shivering.
below: whistling, infrared, westward:
frothing about the neighbors’ banana trees,
frenzied. the telenovela, still somehow
louder than the braying strays. waves
press in, the banner rolls out—no class!
goes the first count, the next is the exhale
of a match. the walls begin to sag beneath
the sky, betray waterproofed courage.
a seasonal faith mumbles to the altar.
the wind arrives before we. imagine.
ii. disaster
in between lifting the pieces
of this household—quick, the albums—
we are drawn to the spectacle
outside the window, now at
our door. the banging of distant somethings
and the rushing of rivers and the overturning
and all, about, above. rat piss, tarp, fences,
the presence then absence of, the unbearable
slowness of the end. what are stairs
without a roof? our lungs steel
as our hands forget themselves.
the bared neighborhood communes in
each other’s knee-deep
fear, since this is the way
we know not to
drown
iii. tragedy
for miles and miles is mud.
even the bottled water in the evacuation center
tastes like it. the mud is intractable,
and nothing is distinguishable in its throes:
pant leg, motorcycle, debris,
chests, figures, we,
mud. nude and noiseless,
save the children. the mud
clumps and splatters on the papers,
nameless. the paddling dog is
better remembered; they,
unsure that they are of this earth,
to mud we are made to return.