No sundial’s gnomon could cut this air before— the dial long-slept, moonlight glows, lines our palms, its grip of frost, its calculus we tore, until our spines aligned, unguarded—warm.
The gnomon’s scorn now bends to our skin’s dawn— its frost-etched law undone by breath’s slow rise. Our shadows fuse as Brahms unwinds the calm, rewriting fate in tongues that flesh denies.
The gnomon’s edge, once steeped in solar lies, now bends to taste the salt along our throats, its calculus of light a husk, takes flight— a butterfly that drinks what dawns promote.
Let ruins chant the creed of numbered skies— our pulse, a clock that dares to harmonize.