O xanthous brickwork, your scars canted with shadow... my mirror platter cries on the left hand side, and cool air settles in the burnished tree tops.
It's almost October and the days just pile on top of each other without any meaning in them. I wet my face at the vessel, soap to soak, waiting for the death of the aloe flower
that perches on its lonely stalk, defiant and sorrowful, tendril shaking in a cold busker's breeze. Scuttling traffic claws into the dim hour,
the sun wests away; brick goes dark, browning like steak. The air rises into the ape-hour to meet the landslide of dead angels flickering across the band.