There was a still darkness seeping in through the car windows, and we turned up the music and we smoked six cigarettes and we talked louder than we had to and we laughed at things that weren't funny and we drove passed your house, eight or nine times before we stepped out into it We did all we could to keep it outside but it was inside of us all along so all the noise was just noise And all the movement was just movement And we knew that as soon as we were alone in our beds at home, we would have to face it And we were better at hiding than we were at confrontation But there was an eerie, sharp pain in the backs of our calves, through all the pretending, that served as a reminder that we couldn't talk forever and we couldn't smoke forever and we couldn't drive to the ends of the earth Not in your beat up two seater But we just wanted heat and closeness and music We just wanted something other than the darkness to hold us We could never hold ourselves, We knew that We weren't the kinds of people who held themselves But we were sick of feeling like we were dreaming, when we were wide awake We were sick of feeling like we were seeing the world through a scratched, and dusty lens There was something growing in our bones that we didn't know how to describe It was a dull aching that didn't come from the outside And the thing that would eventually drive us out of our minds was that we never really could find a safe place to hide