Now the cuts have faded to pale seams, from the girl who left her key on the counter, and took the why with her, and the friend you hadn’t seen in years but still called brother, his paintings hanging quiet on walls in rooms no longer yours.
like the ghost of an old song, still in key you rise again fingernails dark with soil, burying sunflower seeds in morning’s cold fog.
The dog needs feeding. There’s toast to burn, and leaves to steep. You carry your small life like a cracked bowl that still holds water.
After years bent in ritual hunger, knees pressed to rice, tongue dry from vow, nights lit like altars, no revelation came. No divine telegram. No trumpet of truth, just the kitchen humming and the silence after the call.
Only the widow neighbor, waving through fogged glass. Only the pipes in the wall clunking like an old lung. Only the light barging in without your consent.
You believe in coats with missing buttons, safety pins where zippers gave, old threads that never matched but held anyway. You forgive the past not because it asked but because you need the room.
It builds in your bones like wind in an empty house, constant, uninvited, and full of old names. Like a tune half-remembered, only the hum remains.