A Dance on the Edge of Dystopia: Part 2.
Roadkill
A fearful heart, a deer in headlights,
Dark hair pouring over bloodshot eyes.
Were you ever going to tell me?
Was I ever going to know?
You lay on that bed like roadkill,
Paralysed from the pain of this.
Pale-faced and teary-eyed,
She asked you why,
Asked you to die, to end this suffering.
Your eyes searched for warmth
In that room of ours
But everything was as dull as your pallor;
Grieving from the loss of your father.
A quick mind, a dangerous storyteller.
Brown eyes and blood-stained sheets,
Was she ever going to tell me?
Was I ever going to know?
I lay on that bed like roadkill,
Glaring at that 80’s popcorn ceiling,
Searching for any kind of meaning,
Any alternate feeling.
She asked me how, asked me why
Then outright told me to die.
My eyes hunted for love
In that little box room of ours
But everything was being reinvented;
A new life from the ground up.
Ashes of You
These people, these places
Are burnt into my skin like cigarette stains.
I open a 20-pack of songs you showed me,
Chain-smoke them like you’re only a text away
And I’ll get another fix anyway.
But our cigarettes burnt out years ago
And the ashes of you are infused in these tunes.
These people and these places
Are nothing but little traces of nicotine
Fuelling me, ruling me through the night.
And on the rare occasion I see a sunrise,
I grab a coffee and blast your songs
Because I was happy then.
And I can be happy now.
One Day
Washed up on the beach,
I lay there with my mind in disarray.
The static sand drowning my fingers,
The soft breeze eased my confused, chaotic head.
The waves washed away any feelings
That lingered on a little too long
And the clouds painted pictures
Only I could see.
One day I’ll be these grains of sand,
One day I’ll be the breeze in the air
And the water beneath me.
One day I won’t be able to care
So that’s why I do, most of the time.
One day I washed up on the beach
And just lay there.