Looking out the glass down over damp streets spread like boundaries; streetlights and stop signs to keep everything in, or out.
This city is a prison.
Your heartbeat is steady next to me, slow. Beneath that slight frame, veins pump the blood that gives you life. The same blood that allows you to cry at your worst mistakes, or mine.
This room is a prison.
There is a rotating light, the spotlight overseeing these midnight prison grounds. It burns from green to orange, back to green again.
Your chest heaves, hitches, I can feel it as the sobs whisper out like a jury sentence. The prison is here in white sheets, where sighed whispers of blame echo out. Aside from that, it is silent, the window holds out noises of another world.
I wonder, glowing orange to somber green, what crimes I have committed that hold me here.
I wonder, trapped by these barbed wire streets, what repentance I must seek out to find sleep.