It rained at each night's birth, and I wonder how things never go as we intended. Each howl is a reminder of how dark it gets as we soldier along the low visibility from the meconium we dump on ourselves. But we tunnel our way into that night sky, lapping up any spark and shadow -- teetering between what is and was become us.
It shouldn't matter because it never did, not to you, not as much as it did to me. That's why the day came to you much earlier, and yet the rain still poured, murky and no matter how you clean it, it stains
between skin and nails, and that spot where it all begins, between lung and air. I could breathe it in and drown out of water.
II
Funny as the rain goes farther away, thunder is heard more distinctly. Still trying to breathe, that was when you cut us off. One by one, choking through the daylight at night, while the windows shatter on the white-tile floor. "Water!
I need water!" someone shouted. It was warm and cold at the same time, what my insides were telling me my outsides were feeling. Just then, some semblance of progression, a rhythm that tethered complacency began to show. Something made me believe it isn't suppose to be like this, but nothing showed me otherwise.
The rain has stopped.
III
Blood and glass litter the once pristine and antiseptic. Shards get missed, but it doesn't matter. No one talks about those. It's made for an easy clean-up. It all sounds fishy. The smell was the problem,
stuck to our hair, our skin, even the fresh linen covering our nakedness did not escape the memory of the congealed and spent. Our petrichor binds us all, until we're not anymore.