I never thought brick dreams could tumble in the wind. My wife collects our scattered memories in a undersized bin like a child on the tide line collecting beach glass and seashells. She listen for the sound of blood amidst the dying wind mistaking rustling pages for her breath cycling in and out, her pulse beating on the surface of paper, cloth and wood. She searches for artifacts that match/mismatch my cancer- the progeny the tornado left scattered in the brick and wallboard.
I listen to the wind and rain ping on my wardβs windows unaware of her scavenging, unable to sleep in the harsh light that doesnβt erode the pain or the glitter of memory, the constant Kabuki of nurses, doctor and blood drawers, the chant of machines that make me mistake the sterile for the sacred, the soundtrack for the profound. I see my wife in the mud, inches from my eyes, putting away the jagged, clear granules of our life.