Here I am in the deep curve of the pavement's push toward salt-bleached ends.
There is a stillness within my ear so that I only hear my hanging breath, wreathes of frost like smoke rings in the dried sub-zero.
Snow is coming, probably the usual Mid-Atlantic dusting, though it falls fat like the soap flakes that I poured from a box when I was a child.
I distrust quiet. I need noise & music & voice to still my inner self. It reminds me over and over I don't belong, I don't belong. Snow dulls the world, wakens the mind.
The late night thoughts are far the worst. They part me out like a side of meat under the butcher. I lay on the bed, the cat kneading my gut, & I think yes, go ahead, turn me inside out.
The snow comes as an ambush, though you could almost sense it, vaguely. The traffic slows until only the city trucks pass, with the rattle of rock salt which skitters like dice across the face of the street.
No more passersby under the yellowed blush of the streetlight. Windows of the neighboring buildings are closed against the buckling gusts of wind so cold it hurts.
Nothing left against the snow except myself. When the mind begins its thoughtful treason, & advances the first pawns in a despairing game, I have no good defenses.
Open the window, catch the scent of snow over the world, & feel attuned to the many pieces of the clouds, that fall and fall until they vanish forever.