We woke to laughter breaking glass. not hers, not mine, not morning yet. The ceiling blinked a single eye. A moth drew circles on my chest.
Outside, a streetlight peeled its skin, blue steam hissed from its broken throat. A train passed through the bedroom wall. it's hiss, then roll, steel cabled float.
last night was full of paper moons, of bitten spoons, of matchbook lies. My pulse made bargains with her skin, her hands spoke truth her mouth denied.
I drank from bottles filled with bells. Each swallow rang a darker note. My name was stitched in spider silk and pinned inside her winter coat.
The carpet bloomed with cherry pits. A handprint shimmered on the sink. The mirror mouthed a warning once, but I forgot how not to blink.
I gave her maps I’d drawn in ash, each road a lie, each city torn. She read them like a child reads stars, then vanished through a quiet storm.
She left no rope, no cage, no nail, just shadows folded under wings. I walked into the hallway’s mouth to hear a single echoed string.
Some mornings take a different shape, a wristwatch ticking in the trees, a flame that speaks in borrowed words, a bed unmade in seven keys.