The towers, dust-clouds of salt-sweat as thousands wound their way down endless stairwells |
One day the towers were standing, the next day they weren't. I have no memory of the pillars of smoke, the dust-clouds of salt-sweat as thousands wound their way down endless stairwells. A helicopter parent, my mother was determined to shield her children from what had transpired. I didn't learn about the terrorist attack until many years later, unfashionably late to the party of red-eyes and jingoism and dingleberries hang- ing from bayonets and powdered wigs, of the tanks and camo prints and trillions poured into the gopher burrows to poison the pests we'd bred ourselves, back in the eighties to fight thems Red Commies. I was busy watching Disney movies and Winx Club, and dressing up like a princess when my fraught schedule of school and social workers allowed it. My third social worker gave me a bird puppet named Peebird the Second, after the original Peebird who was canary-colored. Peebird 2 was blue, and I thought he was named after the vegetable for years, the wordplay lost on me. But my mind was on the Titanic, reading voraciously about that glittering woebegone liner. The world could go on tearing itself apart without me, and it would. And it does still. We started a war that lasted over twenty years. We make our beds then refuse to lie in them. And how is Afghanistan looking, now that American Freedom has left its mark on the face of their cities? Come by here, Lord, someone is crying. Come by here, Lord, someone is praying in mighty need, O Lord. * * * On the one-year anniversary, my elementary school's faculty planted a tree on its grounds, and had every student stand in a giant circle around it. Dutifully we held hands and danced a hora, singing Kumbaya, My Lord and Shalom Haverim, songs we had recently been taught in music class. I, who was nine-and-a-half then and had had only a vague understanding of what we were honoring, thought the whole idea was stupid. Sure, it was sad that some people had died, but how would planting a tree and singing songs bring them back? I muttered as much to my best friend, whom I'd made sure to stand beside in the circle. Our teachers stood solemnly, all tearing up at the sight of us young- sters singing and dancing and saving the Earth with our youthful optimism. O Lord, come by here, some- one is singing your song. O lord, come by here. Christ. ---Published by Last Leaves Magazine, Issue #8, May 2024 (pg. 108): https://www.lastleavesmag.com/_files/ugd/dccfc8_38f316ba0fca47d0a33b2a1f73fe26d6... ---posted here Dec. 20, 2024 |