They laid me to sleep in a coffin made of glass lined with velvet apologies thinking I'd dream of oceans or forgiveness or that one perfect nectarine I'd dropped in 2003. The ceiling shattered while a symphony played ... wolves chasing Peter, and me. They chewed on my ankle - wearing a voice that once prayed for me. My nerves bloomed bruises. My hands turned to questions, tossing runes to the laughing sky that held no answers. My skin peeled, old wall paper from worn bones, regret curling smoke above untended altars. This is what it must mean to be haunted by your own heartbeat, to taste rust on your tongue, with feet that remember what a mind will not admit. Love letters delivered in salt, signed in static, that simply read "Persephone, come home."