5 …

We open the shop.

Screws and metal pieces

are scattered across the floor,

every cup is spilled.

The window is unbroken

but the trophies and medals

are piled on the floor,

shelves turned over,

broken, flat.

I see the treasure box

perfectly together

like an island

in a rough sea.

The Agbayanis help my grandfather

sit in his big chair near the back.

He grabs Mrs. Li’s hand.

Your store?

Then so many things happen

all at the same time.

Mrs. Li goes outside,

looks at her store,

where the wood shelves

full of fruit have given way

and apples fill the street.

 

 

Mr. Agbayani tries the phone,

but the lines are all busy.

Malia folds her arms around her body.

I’m sorry about Blankie, I say.

She looks at me with something like a smile.

Our bikes! she says. And your notebook?

I picture everything buried

beneath a fallen ceiling.

I wish I had my green stone.

 

 

We feel for the ghosts of things

that once made us feel safe.