More roof gives away, and the part of the loft that holds my mother’s painting splinters and falls to the floor below.
 
 I’m out of time.
 
 I put both legs over the ledge, ignoring Shae’s repeated, “Storm!”
 
 One hand on the rope.
 
 The other.
 
 I love you, Shae
 
 Boom.
 
 More glass, more wood, rains down as most of the roof collapses. I try to maintain my grip, try to rush down the makeshift escape.
 
 Keep going, keep going?—
 
 Halfway there.
 
 Crack!
 
 And then…
 
 I close my eyes as I fall.
 
 Down.
 
 Down.
 
 And hear nothing but her scream.
 
 FORTY-EIGHT
 
 SHAE
 
 I’ll never forget the sound of my heart breaking.
 
 It sounds like:
 
 The drumming of my pulse?—
 
 (Ba-dum-ba-dum-ba-dum)
 
 The screech of air splitting as your body falls.
 
 It’s your lover’s wail,
 
 watching the world end
 
 as you drift, surge, fly toward the ground.
 
 Graceful like a feather; sharp like a stone.
 
 (Shield the babies. They can’t see.
 
 Cover their ears.
 
 They still hear my screams.)