are we just in their way?"
She'd asked the question in the jungle as boots and barefeet walked over and over what had been a person.
She'd asked a wounded camera person and then a freaking out soldier who'd fallen to knee. The camera person was probably bleeding out yet her hands stuffed a can top size hole through the body with big soft leaves. The soldier's hands tied in front of him with a muddy gray silk scarf.
It was a long time before the cicada picked up where they'd left off, the cadence of us and them.
In the morning the sun could not find it's way through the soupy milk sky. Someone had tied newspaper plastic wrappers to many of the branches of trees surrounding the yard. The three people that had been in the jungle were asked to recreate the scenario.
The store smoldering sent a long whisp of dirty cloud into the air. An offshore wind jagged it's middle. It somehow spoke of what's happening to us.
"Make the foot work," to "I can't there's no more pulse."
A child imagined flexible. Slithered under the driver's seat, reeeeached, and couldn't quite jam the foot on the gas. A man hand shimmied a butt-end of a 2x4 up his arm, around the driver's seat. Putchitsh. The tangled mass of bodies shivered. Marker smell filled the air.
The candy-striper wiped hands on pink and wipe stripes. Tucked a wool lap blanket more tightly under the legs of a man in a wheelchair. Pushed the contrapshun into the vestibule. Picked up a black medical bag from behind a glory statue and hurried.
The posterboard sign smashed up against the passenger side glass read
Iwe need you