
The walls within this sickly concrete sea monster always look too dull,
The faces are greyer than October sky, barely sticking to their skulls.
I bury all clues and shotguns where I know I’d never step my foot again
And blend in with the walls, breathing in fumes and fresh propane.
The lines are long but I’m used to waiting for an uneventful death.
Each humanoid figure around is the same – everything but a real threat.
We submissively march to the music and lower our eyes when it stops.
Some ashy buildings appear on the horizon just as my stomach drops.
I can sense the electric nervousness strings overtaking the numb crowd.
This is the moment we could run for cover – only if we were allowed.
Instead we brace for impact as cement fills the streets, we are tongue tied.
We’ve been taught since a very young age:
When the city calls, you must always be ready to die.
-JW