There's a reckless wind whipping 'round the frayed ends of my hair, its exodus from the sides of cars blurring by.
Jazz drummers cycle flurries of taps and nods. Twitching wrists for dollars, their cornflower blue suits rising with the street sound, becoming a tent for sweat, reaching for the dangling darkΒ Β held up by clouds and the screams of horns and the chimes of chatter.
And here I lean, inside a corner between an entrance and an exit. My dreams are starting to last as long as these cigarettes, I probably spoke into the chainsmoke -- being pretentious and afraid under the spill of streetlight.
And here I am, harmfully hoping my friend comes back, that he didn't suffer, that he is with god, that god exists, that I grow into something that would make him proud, my parents proud, make me proud.
All the pretty girls trot the walk, like surreal thoughts with white converses and high-waisted jeans holding the eyes of the few guys and girls going home alone.
There's no proper way to end this besides for raw ***, real violence, and more money.
My government only cares about me once every four years.
My bank account controls me.
I can't buy anything unless it wants to **** me or love me.