everybody, everything
i.
they buried her in the concrete and slapped
a grave between two chevys. city
girl made of brick made of mold made
of shattered bottles and cracked floors.
they buried her in the concrete because
she wanted to feel the cars thunder above
her. she wanted to feel them roar. and roll. and
sputter and bellow and eat the earth.
ii.
when the moon glows white at night the
air is thick and heavy. like bread it
rises and like bread it is stagnant.
she had drowned every day in that air, drowned
like everybody else. drowned in so much
smoke and drowned in so much exhaust
and drowned in so much gas
that when they found her dead it was no
different.
she’d already died a hundred times over.
iii.
the countryside used to be a wide green.
so green it hurt her eyes. so green it could’ve
swelled up and skimmed the sky, bursting
into a million little pieces. she never
wanted to die. but she knew that when the
green started to fade her breath would soon
stutter too.
iv.
the night before city girl made of brick
was buried between two chevys the stars
stopped shining. the air hitched. it was too
late but still everything stopped. it was too
late but still everybody thought. still they
wondered if what they’d done to the earth
was ever worth it. if everything they had
killed was going to kill them.