Sun comes up, she goes down on some upended main drag, if i were an archaeologist i still wouldn't dig this place, every other day she dwells in tedious, empty cafés, but on the weekends she flashes her "license and registration" to oncoming traffic, hoping for grifted furlough to wear as silken, shiny beads, and so we ride this merry-go-round, because moving in circles is far better than being trapped in a square, we've stopped climbing the calendar in search of higher elevation, she used to pour it on thick, stirring drinks inside my head, i used to shake worries from her hair, now with bitter orange marmalade low in the sky, and stacked against us, it's home before dark, lest our eyes open wide to see we are nothing more but strangers at sundown.