Toast.
I know that there's toast burning.
Somewhere in the back of my mind, I can sense it with every passing second, smell its charred edges
It slashes harshly, a dull buzzing in my skull-
But it is not there.
I know there must be toast, though.
Somewhere in this kitchen there is a fire that I cannot stop or control
But it seems so far away when all there is to see is smoke.
I can't even touch the kitchen, anymore.
I can't feel the table I thought my hand was on, I can hardly smell anything at all now,
The smoke only grows thicker
And I am pulled into the gray,
A gentle tug.
The tug of a child's smaller hand wrapped around mine, promising me it will be safer this way
So I follow.
And within the smoke,
Rather than the toaster still teeming with fire, a flame that will likely begin to lick at the rest of my kitchen -
Tables, cupboards, so many compartments turned to ruin
Yet so easy to forget -
I am in a forest.
The smoke has become an inescapable fog
And I lay myself to rest,
Allow my eyes to go unfocused
And my limbs to grow still
Because
Who wants to be stuck in a room with burning toast, anyway?
I'd rather stay here for a while till the heat of the flame jars me back to life.
There's so much less chaos among the towering, winding trees that I might
There's so much less chaos among the towering, winding trees that
I might
Just
Disappear a while.