I stand where painted playground colors gleam,
Where childhood games wear masks of sharpened stakes;
A fevered pulse beneath a neon dream,
Where every fragile hope trembles and breaks.
Green light—my heart sprints forward, fierce and wild;
Red light—I freeze with breath held in my chest.
The rules are simple, cruelly reconciled:
Survive the round, let fate decide the rest.
Masked watchers loom like gods without a face,
Their silence louder than a thousand cries;
Yet still I’m drawn into that fractured place
Where desperation strips away disguise.
For in that game of shadow, risk, and flame,
I find strange beauty—and I love the game.
