i fell asleep in dawn's arms, the horizon on its way. i gathered my shattered pieces and hid them under my black dress while he asked whose funeral i was attending. mine, i said. i kissed the violet pillows goodbye and saw the worry in its smile. i turned around and met with a thousand cameras held at knee-level, taking a million pictures of me and thinking i wouldn't notice. i ripped through his desert of laughter to reach her ocean of tears. she was all city lights and donut socks and carefree yet caring and i felt felt felt her arms around my waist for the last time. we posed for the camera and ripped his guitar strings from his vertebrae, but the dissonance of our amusement and his offense scared her. the waves were flooding the shore of her irises with the burning sun in sight. i felt her teeth sink into my shoulder blades as she cried out about the static noise coming from the tv and begged the sky to turn it off. she screamed desperation into my hippocampus as i sang every galaxy into her wrist, but when i looked into her eyes i saw nothing but satisfied demons and molten lava. i woke up on the edge of the moon and cried because i couldn't save her.