I thought of the poet who had entered hospice,the way his mouth had finished its long job.His body parts tying things up. I sensed that thepoet had died that night. All the writers’words became hours. Everything they talked of,I no longer cared about. Everything I had seenin my life turned to wood. Without softness,I became so lost that I knocked on the woodenmoon and my dead father answered. I asked himwhy he wasn’t in my heart. He handed me asmall cloth to wet my eyes for seeing in the fires.Another to cover my mouth. He hung a spyglassaround my neck, said nothing, detached mysadness, held onto it like a briefcase. He turnedme around and sent me back down. When Ireturned, the mirrors were wood too. Withoutthe mirrors, all the writers had scattered. When Istood in front of the mirror, I saw nothing butwood too. I had seen death up close twice, but Ihated that I was still no better than anyone else.