By Kim Chinquee
There are people stuck in cars. There’s a driving ban, save essential workers. The essential workers are getting stuck and the rescue teams trying to rescue the essential workers are getting stuck, snowplows are getting stuck trying to rescue the rescue teams, and finally the city gives up. Three people have already been confirmed dead and there are probably already more people dead in cars. It’ll take a while to find the abandoned cars, the abandoned bodies, the abandoned pets and children. Some folks call for help on a social media website. Loved ones have lost phone charge. Power, gas. There are babies needing respirators. Mothers giving birth. Diabetics. People needing oxygen. Water, food. We’re urged to stay inside. I have heat. I have power. I have internet, a computer. My TV. I have a fireplace. I have food and shelter. It’s Christmas Eve, 2022. I hear the constant howl of the wind, see the madness of the tree limbs. My windows shake. Meteorologists call this a cat-three hurricane with snow, the biggest weather event in Western New York’s history. Every hour or so, I don boots, a hat, a coat and gloves, and I shovel a path to my furnace vent, to clear it, to make sure my dogs and I don’t die of carbon monoxide poisoning. Two people, a mother and son, have already died from that.
Kim Chinquee is the author of eight books, most recently Pipette (Ravenna Press). She edits for New World Writing Quarterly, Midwest Review, and is chief editor of ELJ (Elm Leaves Journal). She co-directs the Writing Major at SUNY-Buffalo State University and lives with her three dogs in Tonawanda, NY.
Image courtesy of the author
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