paroles de chanson Neon City in Shattered Glass - Yoe Mase
6:42
again.
"Strange",
he
thought.
For
as
long
as
he
can
remember,
he
had
always
woken
up
at
6:42.
He
never
had
his
alarm
set
for
the
time
or
anywhere
near
it.
He
wasn′t
trying
to
wake
up.
6:42
seemed
to
be
observing
him,
and
it
never
seemed
to
lose
interest.
And
in
some
strange
way,
it
comforted
him.
He
flipped
his
lights
on
and
squinted.
It
had
been
happening
for
over
eight
months.
No
matter
what
pills
he
took,
or
how
late
he
went
to
bed,
his
internal
clock
always
prevailed.
He
wasn't
angry,
wasn′t
tired,
but
he
felt
helpless.
His
name
was
Oden.
He
lived
on
the
sixth
floor
of
an
old
apartment
building
with
a
balcony
overlooking
the
city.
The
view
was
nice,
but
the
neglected
projects
took
away
from
it
all.
The
city
was
odd,
the
sidewalks
almost
always
deserted
and
the
streets
seemingly
devoid
of
all
noise.
And
at
night,
the
stereotypical
median
signs
and
flashing
lights
were
replaced
with
a
quiet
far
away
hum
of
the
city's
factories
producing
steel.
For
as
long
as
he
can
remember,
graffiti
covered
almost
every
wall
of
every
building,
and
windows
were
cracked
on
floors
up
high.
Tommy
often
wondered
why
the
city
never
bothered
fixing
it
up.
Despite
the
eerie
emptiness,
the
citizens
seemed
happy
enough,
always
with
a
smile
and
a
friendly
greeting.
They
would
nod
and
say
hello
while
passing
in
the
hallway,
always
appearing
busy
with
something.
He
picked
himself
up
and
walked
from
his
bedroom
to
another
room.
His
small
television
was
hanging
on
his
dirty
blue
wall,
and
was
turned
off
as
usual.
There
was
an
old
grey
couch
that
seemed
small,
awkwardly
placed
in
the
middle
of
the
room.
It
was
dirty
and
faded.
He
felt
he
should
replace
it,
but
he
hardly
used
it
anyway.
He
was
never
in
the
room.
He
found
it
amusing
that
they
called
it
a
living
room,
because
he
hardly
lived
in
it
at
all.
However,
his
most
prized
possession
was
in
this
room.
His
rectangular
crystal
chamber
was
lying
on
the
desk
and
he
absolutely
cherished
it.
It
was
the
only
reason
he
entered
his
room.
It
took
him
to
a
world
of
mirrors.
What
was
it
like
to
see
the
world
through
the
eyes
of
a
glass
cage,
segregated
from
all
the
discomfort
and
awkwardness
of
life?
He
would
have
to
know,
he
needed
an
answer,
there
was
nothing
as
essential.
He
thought
for
a
moment
and
then
sat
down
on
his
couch.
He
glared
into
the
black
abyss
of
his
television.
That
was
the
only
show
he
really
liked
anyhow.
He
looked
into
the
black
abyss
of
his
television.
That
was
the
only
show
he
really
liked
anyhow.
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