I stood at the bridge on Monroe, peering into a stale brown river hoping to be swept away by a historic flood.
Reflections of these steel towers bent, cracked and refracted, becoming ripples where the water lay flat. And as I turned, a great roar exploded like a thunderous train galloping over a brittle iron bridge.
Slabs of forged metals and concrete crumbled like an autumn leaf under a footprint. Mighty architecture burst out in a spectacular grey; a Fourth of July before 1855. Everything built, believed and once conceived now fell like deflating balloons: slowly, calmly without hurry--only certainty.
And I stood amid the wreckage, where we once built cathedrals surrounded by heavy lights and one-way flights. One step wedged another mile between us, and our dusty promises became harder to see.