[Intro]
[Three telephone tones descend over a single low Hammond chord.]

The number still lives in the back of my mind.
Three for the storm. Two for mankind.

[Verse 1]
The station clock said two-oh-four,
Rain traced the dirt across the door.
I found a phone beside the stand,
Fed my last coins in with my hand.
I dialed the line the priests once knew,
Where ten thousand voices once broke through.
A tone replied, both thin and red:
“This service has been disconnected.”

[Chorus]
The prayer hotline is dead,
No candles on the line, no faithful thread.
No farmer asks for rain ahead,
No soldier begs to wake from bed.
I speak, but only silence spreads—
The prayer hotline is dead.

[Verse 2]
I called again and pressed for “storm,”
A recorded voice remained lukewarm:
“For flood relief, please contact town.
For lightning risk, remain indoors now.”
“For grief, seek friends or licensed care.
For miracles, no agent’s there.”
I shouted, “Put your god in view.”
The message said, “We cannot process you.”

[Break]
[The instrumentation stops except for faint telephone-bandwidth vocals.]

If this is wrath, press one.
If this is grief, press two.
If you have lost all worship,
Please hold for someone new.

[Verse 3]
I held. A little music played,
Four notes polite and cheaply made.
No oracle, no sacred drum,
No warning that the end had come.
The line went flat at two-fifteen;
My face stared back from the plastic screen.
I whispered low, without command,
“Did they outgrow me—or did I leave them damned?”

[Chorus]
The prayer hotline is dead,
No candles on the line, no faithful thread.
No farmer asks for rain ahead,
No soldier begs to wake from bed.
I speak, but only silence spreads—
The prayer hotline is dead.

[Bridge]
Perhaps a prayer was never praise,
Nor smoke arranged in golden rays.
Perhaps it was the smallest plea:
“Do not make this world about thee.”
How many voices reached my throne
And found a ruler, not a home?

[Buildup]
[Floor tom enters beneath the returning Hammond motif.]

I dial Athena.
Stop before the tone.
I dial Hera.
Let it ring alone.

[Final Chorus]
The prayer hotline is dead,
But every unheard word remains unsaid.
The temple doors are boards and led;
The priests found other ways to feed.
I asked the empty line for bread—
The prayer hotline is dead.
No god replied inside my head.
The prayer hotline is dead.

[Outro]
[The call ends, leaving one dry organ note.]

“Your credit has expired.”
The receiver clicks.
No thunder follows it.
