as i bathed in the ashes of a swirling monstrous din the cries of a woman hysterically expunging ghastly portions of an all consuming horror pierced my ears, cuddled my heart
as i huddled in a corner biting lacerated knees i beheld ax wielding firemen swagger into the jagged dangers of a metallic avalanche, its voracious maw swallowing last acts of heroic love
as i genuflected toward Trinity's steeple, i was cowed by the rushing noise of a splintering tower collapsing downward, billowing outward, a gray predation scattering the proud humbling the mighty breeding terror threshing anything fearfully racing through the city's cavernous breaches
as i fled down Wall Street screaming adrenalin outran bits of the city cascading down stalking, nipping, gnashing at fleeting steps chasing reeling refugees into miraculous sanctuaries shielding trembling confusion in blanket's of grace
as i peered into the mortal wound of the South Tower incomprehensibly wondering what my eyes refused to understand; a slow astonishing epiphany of the grisly hell unfolding in the upper floors was confirmed by the intermittent slow cascade of leapers deciding it was a good day to die
as i decamped temporary refuge i entered an unsure midnight of a blackened street joining a growing mass of refugees trundling eastward, our burning eyes yearning to perceive a river of escape hoping the bits of torn cloth will shield nostrils and cover mouths protecting tinged lungs from emulsified ash of glass and asbestos laden air
as i made my way northward, enveloped in ambivalent confusion, shell shocked by civic turmoil, covered in terror dust; amassing voyeurs rushing downtown incredulously asked what we witnessed, a Jersey Journal stringer refused to believe people jumped from the upper floors, as vendors in Chinatown marked up bottles of water and a barkeep of a crowded SOHO saloon refused me entry to use the bathroom fearing contamination risk...
as i stood depleted on Christopher Street ATMs and wireless phones out of service and my PATH way home shut down; a Sisters of Charity AIDS hospice brought me in, wiped the terror dust from my clothes, gave me grape juice to drink, set me a bed for the night and put me to work in the kitchen to feed God's children.
as i stood on a late afternoon Washington Street, witnessing Seven WTC plunge into another raging billow the collapsing day ended in a room shared with a young man traumatized by the days events. We related our halting incomprehensions as the sound of fighter jets circling the city filled the void in our disjointed narratives. My roommate related that he was on the plaza as jumpers splattered around him. A tearful PA Cop pleaded for help to cover the dead. It was the last request of this trembling public servant as a jumper crushed him as he finished speaking.
as i fell off to sleep that night my young roommate tossed and turned in the maelstrom of a deeply troubled sleep.