The tears fade in the screaming inside howling brick. It is our cancer swirling around, stone, flesh and home. Our history is in its eye, our profile in this wild night of carnage slouching towards mornings. We turn away and the brick frees us. We turn back and are inside our granite selves forming in the sculpting wind, erring in the perfect sad light, different, broken-whole. Our names are erased from brick, letters spreading like smoke in the all defining wind. It drops in the field of its birth, a flash in the silent mud and clay. It shimmers on my wife’s white blouse, and when she walks away, settles in memory. The wind chisels a robin falling, dying in my stare. The cloud of my neighbor floats towards me, pale eyes trying to define me but I am not a window. Her face is lost in the brick and the wind erases her, the street, their signs, the names of those in houses behind.