Lady I don’t know barges into my stall at the nightclub toilets She looks at me with a grim smile that’s trying to split her face in two Before I can stumble she grabs my arm, looks at me with eyes Rolling and rioting inside their sockets and says Don’t forget With her nodding frantically I ask what I am forgetting And she shakes me and points at the neon fluorescent humming on the ceiling The sun she says she says the SUN we have forgotten it I give her my palms and say lady I don’t know you She is already laughing It’s a laugh that sounds like the splintering of bones Like dragging a sharp knife across a rotting ribcage A laugh you know is a precursor to wild and empty weeping The light flickers and I notice that it does look like the sun A bit, from this angle, from where my head is pressed under the heavy weight Of the whites of the lady’s eyes Another stall door opens, whispering across the ground and taking her smoke-thin body with it But all I see is the sun, flickering like the beating of wings and I want to touch it so bad that I am burning Truly burning, ignited on the promise of remembrance There is a name I have forgotten and I know I will hold it again if only my fingers could stretch to touch the light The girl that exited the stall puts her arm on my shoulder to move me away from the sink And I fall into wakefulness, coughing and spluttering ash all over my bed I see I have left a single candle burning by accident There are dead moths everywhere