I've unpacked the moon from her nightboard box so many times I've worn out the ribbons. I've hung her up where she couldn't be missed unless you were watching TV.
After a time, however things loosen. The moon falls. That paper crackle under the boot is the crumpled bonesnap of last night's hopeful crescent, broken like a shotgun that has two black eyes for what it scars and always fires blind.
So I gave up being a moon-hanger years ago. Now I'm retired--fallen by the way some say-- too tired to lift that heavy glow or to reach a sky that high, but I have gotten by by being very good at dodging bullets.