











Shadows lengthen like spilled ink,
the air folds itself into a thinner silence.
Light frays at the edges—
amber, dust, a slow unraveling.
Trees hum in dry tongues,
their leaves half-memories of green,
half-promises of rust.
Time feels porous—
a sieve of cicada-song,
a breath that will not hold.
And somewhere in the field’s dim marrow,
the year pauses,
one hand still on summer,
the other already loosening.