It was numbness—
thick as wet ash in the lungs.
Silence,
packed tight behind the ribs.
The world hadn’t ended.
It had simply withdrawn—
like light from a dying room.
There were words,
armies of them,
clawing at the back of his teeth.
But his tongue—
stitched, salted, obedient—
lay still in its cage.
They praised him.
Such a gentle boy.
Such manners.
Such quiet.
They did not hear
the furnace under his sternum,
hell licking bone from the inside
while his body stood
cold as abandoned stone.
Energy drained slow—
like blood refusing to surface.
And in the hour when the dark
pressed closest,
when the air itself felt heavy enough to bruise,
steel found him.
Not loud.
Not dramatic.
Just honest.
Sharp enough to part skin
like a curtain.
There was color then.
Sudden. Defiant.
A bloom against the gray.
The scent of iron—
warm, metallic, undeniable.
Proof.
Proof he was not hollow.
Proof something inside him
could still answer when called.
Relief came first—
a breath he hadn’t known he was holding.
Pain followed,
bright and loyal.
They would have called it madness.
But in that red, breathing moment,
it felt like the only sane thing left
in a world that had already gone numb.
Feb 20
Feb 20, 2026 at 9:41 PM UTC