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Otep - Baby's Breath lyrics
The soft sound of snow crunching
 underfoot gives me comfort.
 Her building is at the end of the block. 
 She lives on the north side.
 Bottom floor. Middle apartment.
 I see her: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 steps.
 Wrong key. Lock clicks. She drops her
 coat and scarf in the entry and
 kicks off those...vixen shoes.
 She shuffles to the kitchen and pours
 a glass of scotch. (I am inside)
 She lights a cigarette and blows
 the smoke over the match. (She doesn't notice)
 The gray smog rises from her
 lips like a cremation furnace.
 The simple elegance of this quiet
 moment is almost irresistible.
 (But, I wait)
 She slugs back the scotch,
 finishes her smoke and ashes it
 in the sink. She unties her hair
 and enters the hallway, past the
 childless bedroom with the empty
 crib, past the altar coated in wax
 like a wedding cake, and the tiny
 packages of meat, dead flowers,
 and baby's breath.
 She enters the bathroom, where 
 she undresses. She sits on the 
 edge of the bath. Her naked body 
 folded in half, heavy tits hanging
 like mushy stalactites over her
 lap. (Oh, precious) She closes her 
 eyes and holds her head as if it
 might float away.
 For a moment, my thoughts drift
 again, this time to the hammer 
 I am holding. The handle is
 smooth as bone, the forged steelOtep - Baby's Breath - http://motolyrics.com/otep/babys-breath-lyrics.html
 head is heavy, and I feel powerful. 
 She reaches for the faucet
 and I snap back to the moment.
 Bubbles brim the edge of the 
 tub. Her fingers check the water
 temperature and I am ready.
 I move behind her. She doesn't
 hear. I swing the hammer. She
 doesn't see. I crack her skull.
 She's in the tub. Face down. I am 
 drowning her, mashing her head
 to the bottom, knifing the claw of
 the hammer into her spine and
 ribs over and over and over and
 over and over and over and over
 and over and....
 Her body stops pretending to
 care and surrenders as it is supposed
 to. just to be sure, I press
 hard, keeping her head beneath
 the bloody water a few moments
 more. Her neck snaps, her nose
 breaks, and her face collapses
 against the bottom of the tub. I 
 see my reflection in the mirror
 and soapy foam has formed a half
 smile over the black nylon mask I
 am wearing
 I lean to her. The water glistens
 like glass. I hover over the 
 surface, soft breath causing tiny 
 quakes, and whisper, "I have done
 to you what nature has done to me."
She doesn't reply.
 I stand and turn off the light.
 The room is dark and empty.
 Just like I am now.









