After Bombardment
for Beit Hanoun
When a house falls it falls not like an empire
but all at once, paying no heed to prosody,
this stanza the only room left to populate
with what you would’ve taken had you had
the chance: postcards on the fridge. Foreign currency
in a plastic box under your bed, money sewn
into a feather pillow and the pillow to smother
the memory of mother’s crocheting, the junk
in the everything drawer that now appears
so essential, the kitchen table and armchair
accustomed to your movements. There was no time
to say goodbye to the plants, explain
you weren’t leaving them voluntarily.
It didn’t matter these were just objects deposited
in the deluge of years, everything
in that moment had a heart,
everything was precious and fragile like your one
and only life which you carried in your hands,
along with a blanket, for the night and its frost.
You would’ve taken the jackknife, a piece of gauze.
And something that’s useless but can’t bleed–
a page torn from a book. The house keys.