I catch a thousand spider-webs, until I'm home. Caught up with all this silk, tickling my arms it's a trap.
I've never had more than I've had, a share of love that loses money every day is the only investment I've made, and I'm poor in her hands.
My caretaker might be meeting the undertaker soon, the gingersnaps baked until they burned, but she served them anyways, and she made me feel good, because she was as heavy and reassuring as an indigo-less night, she was my black night.
But I'm seduced in the night, caught up, held down force-fed debt, and reassured.
A night is heavyness.
A night is a ceiling, in whichever way you think of ceilings: either in your home, your job, or your love.