The wind howls to the craters of the moon, wondering if its lack of breath is another respiratory disease waiting to happen As bodies crash into the ocean and casualties increase by every bottled up sensibility The cracks of cardboard doors fill up the voids of emptiness, Emptiness of washed up filth and five days worth of street toxic meant for the guts too vacant to feel Their doors quiver to every knock and exhale, families too hungry, awaiting to devour assurance of safety Just this once, they are asking for a little more Than numbered days of handfuls of rice and rock salt, enough to feed the mouths of eight Teeth clicking to every bite, bones clashing together to prolong the food not more than a mouthful However this time the clicking doesn’t stop It intensifies as street light poles plummet into windows and shards are washed away, seeping through soaked doors They are told to leave these places without titles but this unnamed land is their entitlement and home Their mother whose tongue is a symphony of lullabies remains silent, hoping for the storm to pass Lips swollen from biting, she looks at her children with fear in her eyes, tears reflecting the shattered bulb that hangs by the kitchen ceiling She links her arms to her children’s, grips their skin tightly hoping to warm their shivering exterior while whispering the words “they’ll come for us”
Time elapses and the water rises, their properties enveloped by the disease Their house disappears along with it, in a downward current of pitch black and rotten forestry What is left is a family of seven, arms linked and accompanied by the howling wind, Slowly diminishing with its lack of breath, becoming a nationwide debris