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“The Barker After Hours” Hear he. Hear he, staying on after the gates are chained, walking the length of the midway with a torch that flickers like a tired star. A few coloured bulbs keep their vigil, constellations pinned to the pitch‑black as if the night sky was a circus tent where the carnival once stood. The machinery has hunched into itself— no brass‑bright music now, just the low domestic murmur of motors cooling, belts settling, a distant clatter like dishes in a sink. From far off, even the small creatures step off their wheels, their tiny circuits paused as though the whole world has agreed to rest. He checks the stalls one by one, counting what the day has left behind: a stray ticket stub, a feather from a costume, a smear of colour on the boards where someone leaned too close. He notes each thing in his pocket ledger, not for profit, but because night unfolds to be witnessed. At the coaster’s base, he listens for the last sigh of the track, that faint metallic settling that tells him the day is truly over. He touches the rail— warm still— as though greeting a friend who has worked too hard. When he reaches the Ferris wheel, its lights blink in slow rotation, a quiet sky-map drawn by human hands. He stands beneath it, letting the colours wash over him, a private ceremony for a place that will wake again only when the crowd returns. Then he locks the final gate, turns toward the empty field, and walks home through the dark carrying the soft afterglow of a world that only fully breathes once everyone else has gone. .
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May 4
May 4, 2026 at 4:02 AM UTC
the barker after-hours
“The Barker After Hours” Hear he. Hear he, staying on after the gates are chained, walking the length of the midway with a torch that flickers like a tired star. A few coloured bulbs keep their vigil, constellations pinned to the pitch‑black as if the night sky was a circus tent where the carnival once stood. The machinery has hunched into itself— no brass‑bright music now, just the low domestic murmur of motors cooling, belts settling, a distant clatter like dishes in a sink. From far off, even the small creatures step off their wheels, their tiny circuits paused as though the whole world has agreed to rest. He checks the stalls one by one, counting what the day has left behind: a stray ticket stub, a feather from a costume, a smear of colour on the boards where someone leaned too close. He notes each thing in his pocket ledger, not for profit, but because night unfolds to be witnessed. At the coaster’s base, he listens for the last sigh of the track, that faint metallic settling that tells him the day is truly over. He touches the rail— warm still— as though greeting a friend who has worked too hard. When he reaches the Ferris wheel, its lights blink in slow rotation, a quiet sky-map drawn by human hands. He stands beneath it, letting the colours wash over him, a private ceremony for a place that will wake again only when the crowd returns. Then he locks the final gate, turns toward the empty field, and walks home through the dark carrying the soft afterglow of a world that only fully breathes once everyone else has gone. .
hellopoet
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May 4
May 4, 2026 at 4:02 AM UTC
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