Dust Bunnies' Quiet Lives
They gathered where the light forgot itself, beneath the low horizon of the bed where the floor turned dim and patient. There, in the quiet country of lost things, the dust bunnies made their small, persistent lives. They were not much to look at, soft clots of lint and thread, a gray suggestion of something that might once have belonged to shirts or socks or yesterday’s air, but they moved, in their way, when no one watched. They drifted with purpose, collecting what the world above let fall: a strand of hair, a whisper of paper, the thin husk of time itself. The largest among them kept to the shadow near the wall, where the dark was steady, and the drafts told stories of footsteps passing overhead. At night, when the house settled, and the boards spoke in small creaks, they came awake in earnest. They nudged one another along the cool grain of the wood, rolling gently as if guided by a memory of wind. They listened to the breathing above them, the slow rise and fall of a sleepe...