Blue-bruise gore slips down the slick mirror face of the lithe knife that skips between the ribs - I've looked at our old photos again. Rotting ash knots choke the slow red rhythm of the blood.
A bird dies against the window pane, just a small thump in rain.
A ghost-head cinder leaps from a white stalk thrown to the gritted curb - the moon is a wrecking ball.
It's a night to fold away my thoughts like old sheets. I let my submerged face swim like a black-scaled fish in my glass, before raising it to my lip slash.
The roof tiles peel away. Bellies of shadow perish in the autumnal cascade.
This grief settles in the grave-gully of the pillow. Crooked queasy dreams rise like foxglove from the sheets. A thick paste fills my mouth: sleep.