"Maybe that was the issue," wheezed an elderly gentleman. He'd just barely lived through World War II and had given the brunch crowd an earful of history from the perspective of just being caught up in it. At first, no one knew the Germans were out to eradicate Judaism. No one knew that war was going to touch and mostly decimate the whole world. Things just changed.
As battles and actions played out in "theatres" and across the established points of modern civilization, people carried on however they could.
"They took it as confrontation. Letting a bunch of women speak their minds from inside a Sharia Law zone, how dare someone."
"Do you have survivor's guilt Marie?"
The woman let another woman gently pat her remaining hair. Someone retrieved a hair buzz tool from a knapsack. "There are at least a couple spots that need a stitch or two." Marie ground the bit of orange peel to a pulp of chew in a mouth mulling grist in all that had happened thus far.
"How's your head dear?"
Stifling a puke, Marie answered, "Better than this woman's." Her gloved hands worked to remove the coated in blood and dirt garb from the body. The body had been dragged from a pile of bodies. In the silence others photographed the scene. A coroner's report form had been photcopied by the dozens and permanent markers were used to label on the skin and bones archiving information. "And better than this guy's," she pulled a man's head from a plastic garbage bag and despite the man's look of horror laid it to rest in a body bag. "Something's missing here," a man quipped as he took notes, photographed, video'd the head in the body bag and then zipped it up. Marie was pondering a stack of hands and feet. Zooming in with a still shot camera on the bottom of a foot. "Caned." Her notes a scrawly jumble of twitch notes to remind in a long journey of conversations. "What's missing darling?" Her feet wrapped in cotton tee shirts padded to the man. "Our good morning." She blinked herself into the moment. "Few and far between now. Three or four days stubble," she guessed of the man's face. "Have you guys been up the hill?" There was only one scrubby piece of higher ground jutting from the miles of sand. This, people ascended with backs covered, to gaze at horizon. Most had a paltry offering for description of where in the hell are we, and, "good news".

