Last month, my house was on fire.
No short circuits.
No faulty wiring.
No electrical mishappenings.
My house was on fire because my words
had punctured through
the flimsy skin
of a neighbour's magnanimous narcissism.
The sort of neighbour
who sold self-love
like it was antiseptic,
and accountability
like it was an infectious disease.
Most of the neighbours
pretended to be asleep.
While some,
with their doors bolted shut,
discussed how inevitable this all was,
and how the realisation
was merely a matter of time.
A few telephoned the arsonist.
Congratulated them
on their latest victory.
Told them
they had waited years for such a day,
and now that it had finally arrived,
they would celebrate it
over an evening of whiskey
and a lifetime of relief.
Two of the neighbours
jumped aboard my lifeboat.
Spoke of brotherhood.
Of grief.
Of despair.
Of anger.
Promised they would do
the right thing
regardless of consequence.
After all,
spines are what make vertebrates
stand upright,
and they were very proud vertebrates.
The firefighters came.
The police came.
The smoke left fingerprints
on every house in the lane.
Yet not a single door opened.
Not out of concern.
Not out of courtesy.
Funny how quickly
basic decency becomes
a strategic liability
when the fire belongs
to someone else.
You see, courtesies aren't warfare mannerisms.
The self-anointed brothers
visited every evening
for a week.
They unpacked sympathy slowly,
between gossip and speculation,
like men comparing vegetables
in a marketplace.
They spoke for hours.
About grief.
About justice.
About loyalty.
About consequences.
Grief,
I discovered,
becomes communal property
the moment it belongs
to somebody else.
On the eighth day,
they remembered
their houses were untouched.
And suddenly,
household priorities returned.
The one who had a spine
sold it.
Along with my stories.
For roughly the price
of a month's groceries.
The one who never had a spine
lost his appetite for justice.
Being a good neighbour
to the arsonist,
it turned out,
was far more nutritious.
Time passed.
Ash settled.
People resumed
their ordinary hypocrisies.
The neighbourhood
went back to discussing
weather, property values,
and conversations about morality,
at a safe distance from consequence.
Today,
the arsonist was finally arrested.
The neighbourhood watched
through closed curtains.
The man who sold his spine
is still selling stories
for bread and butter.
The one who never had one
is still hoping
to be remembered
as a good neighbour.
As for me,
the house survived.
Poorly.
Incorrectly.
But sufficiently.
Funny thing about fires.
They never really teach you
who your enemies are.
Enemies are predictable.
Fires teach you
who was already standing
at a safe distance
waiting for the smoke.
The house has since been rebuilt.
The door now has a sign that reads:
"Nuisances and neighbours are not welcome."
Experience has taught me
the difference
is mostly grammatical.