Time is a clock, a face no-one forgets, a stopwatch on a stiff wrist beneath crisp white cotton, a feral black cat in the woods of adulthood that sneaks up on you in your prime,
I've only got one bar on my phone and there's only one more between here and home. Ten dollars in my pocket may as well be a thousand. Like a penny in the fusebox, I could make it last until the lights go out. There's a cowboy band playing. A wooden Indian by the door. I don't think he listens to their stories anymore. He's quiet on the subject. He's quite an object of curiosity. Instead of two-stepping all night long, maybe I should take that Indian home. Use the last bar to call Coleen. Tell her to put a *** of cowboy coffee on. We'll tell stories of our own. Sing songs in the old way about better days when we were young.
Night is an old blanket asleep on my pillow. Night is the mist on the river covering the willows. Night is the moon turning blue brushing her hair. Night is a black dress on the back of my chair.