“The Camp Fire started on Thursday, November 8, 2018, in Northern California’s Butte County . . . an urban firestorm formed in the foothill town of Paradise.”
“Remembering the Camp Fire: The deadliest and most destructive wildfire in California’s history.” CAL FIRE, State of California. fire.ca.gov.
Smoke sweeps down Oakland sidewalks
in the skin of a climate killer
ravaging lungs.
Inside Pete’s Coffee on Lakeshore,
a woman says to her friend,
“The smoke no longer carries
burnt bodies
from the people of Paradise.”
Around noon, the Camp Fire
moved on to the forest
that once hugged the town
now aflame on TV and phone screens.
“It’s better to breathe burnt trees
than burnt bodies, right?”
I flip on my face mask,
exit the cafe into a haze
past Grand Lake neighbors with only
their eyes in sight.
At home on Rand Avenue, I welcome indoor air
when the couple I rent from
stumbles in through the back door.
They take off their masks,
inhale the clean.
“Hey, do you wanna share a smoke?”
David asks. “Yeah. I just bought a pack,”
Beth answers with a smile.
In the doorway, she leans outside
to strike a match.