From the album Blue Fairy
This is a song about fighting alone while pretending it's mutual. Every promise of loyalty doubles as a plea not to be abandoned. The narrator frames themselves as the fighter, the holder, the one reaching out, but the entire structure reveals they're terrified the other person has already let go.
I will fight for you / I always do until my heart / Is black and blue
The damage is already done, not theoretical. That shift from future tense to present perfect means this loyalty has been costly for a while. The bruising is real.
I'll reach my hands out in the dark / And wait for yours to interlock
The hands never actually meet. This is the only moment that names what the other person might do, and all they do is... maybe show up. The waiting is the entire relationship.
Even when they say there's nothin' left / So don't give up on
That line break cuts off mid-thought. 'Don't give up on' what? On me, on us, on this? The incompleteness isn't accidental. The narrator can't finish the sentence because they don't know what they're asking for anymore.
No matter what this world'll throw / It won't shake me loose
The threat is external but the fear is internal. 'This world' is doing the throwing, but the real question is whether the other person will do the shaking loose. The enemy stays vague because naming it would mean admitting who might actually leave.
So don't give up on me
The final line lands alone, no build, no resolution. It's not triumphant. It's exhausted. This might be the most honest moment in the song—just asking not to be left, with nothing left to offer as proof it's worth staying.
This is what it sounds like when someone realizes they're the only one still fighting but can't stop long enough to admit it. The song never names who or what they're fighting, because the real battle is internal: convincing themselves that loyalty alone can hold two people together. It can't.