The Blender
The Blender
By Linda Ankrah-Dove

After the fires in Paradise, California, 2019.

They had no warning and died.
What was it like those last seconds?
Was it bruises, blasts, blows from bricks,
wires whipping, electric shock?
Then nothing?

Or was it take-off, flight into clouds,
dreamlike daring the impossible
until a soaring truck, wheels whirring
in the whirlwind, collided head-on?
Then nothing.

They had no warning. Out of the blue
like a high-speed train, thundering flames
swept away parents and children,
twenty-three people flayed.
Then nothing.

Survivors stagger through hot rubble,
bleeding hands scrabble
at concrete blocks, twisted metal,
upended trucks. All can’t be lost.
But nothing.

A man, legs cross-cut by boulders,
gropes for a trouser pocket, his phone.
He wheezes as fingers fumble
to call his wife. Dead battery.
Then nothing.

A woman in a nightshirt sits on a tree trunk
by a baby-bike, one wheel twisted.
She hugs a mangled silver blender on her lap,
Cuisinart in black letters on its side.
Nothing else.

What is it like to be in the kitchen
getting dinner on a weekday night
and with no warning be stripped
of home and family—
except the Cuisinart?

Before poetry, Linda Ankrah-Dove was an academic in socio-economic development in the UK and worked for the World Bank and other international organizations in poor countries in Africa, Asia, the Middle East and the Caribbean. Ten years ago, she founded First Monday Poets in her new home in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia where poets enjoy and critique each other’s work. Members participate in Valley artistic events to encourage poetic appreciation among local residents. Notable was a month-long exhibition, Poetic Vision, hosted by the Arts Council of the Valley. Linda Ankrah-Dove is currently completing her MFA in poetry. Her poems focus on communion with nature, life’s meaning and worldwide social and climate issues. Her poetry from 2007 to 2018 features in her full-length publication Borrowed Glint of Jade. Recent poems are published in the Virginia Literary Review, EchoWorld, several Bridgewater International Festival anthologies, Spiritual Direction International, the Hunger-X website and the forthcoming Written in Arlington.

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