She was a woman
as morning over misted rivers—
luminous, and unerringly true.
Even silence, near her, took on colour:
a hush shaped like the song of a lark.
All things her spirit touched began to bloom.
Bread rose in her palms as if it breathed;
paints fell upon canvas
like wind-stirred ripples on water.
Her words were not spoken—
they rang,
like a bell left swaying
in the nave of some forgotten chapel.
But love—
love was her most native element.
She did not bestow it—
she drew breath through it.
And he—
he was the one her breath had chosen.
Her light warmed his winters,
her gaze a northern star to steer by.
Yet even wrapped in all her warmth,
he could not speak the language of feeling.
Fear lived in him—
not of her,
but of what he might lose
by standing bare before her truth.
Fear of misstep,
of rejection,
of seeming small beside so vast a love.
So he turned elsewhere—
to ease, to refuge, to someone
whose nearness asked less of him.
With her, words flowed.
No stakes,
no mirrors held to the soul.
He mistook that ease for life.
It was only escape.
He did not see:
to speak freely to one
who holds no map of your depths
is not intimacy—
but absence in disguise.
He fled the weight of real connection.
He forgot that true love
does not offer shelter from fear—
it bids you walk through it.
And she,
his wife,
felt it as if through skin—
first wonder,
then ache,
then the great hush
of soul withdrawn.
Not anger stilled her—
but weariness.
She became quiet
as a candle ceases to burn
for eyes that no longer watch.
He saw her dimming
and thought: age…
He did not see—
it was not youth that was fading,
but the thread between them.
When he reached for her again—
with offerings,
with gestures,
with words too late—
her spirit had turned
from all that glitters.
It sought what does not tarnish:
truth.
And there,
within the marrow of stillness,
deep beneath grief,
she found a voice.
Not borrowed.
Her own.
At first it wavered—
a bell in dawn-mist—
but day by day
it gathered tone.
She remembered:
the love she had given,
so freely,
had never left her.
It had always lived
in the hush before speech,
in the breath before touch,
in the Source.
In God.
And in finding Him again,
the silence within her
gleamed—
brighter than any song.
He no longer knew her.
He searched for the flame
that once burned for his warmth.
But she no longer burned—
she shone.
She asked not to be understood,
but felt.
Not possessed—
but approached,
with awe.
As one approaches a miracle
that demands
presence.
The road to her heart
had not vanished.
It had risen—
steep, narrow, unwavering.
It could still be walked.
But only barefoot.
Only brave.
For love—
real love—
is not a flight from fear,
but a pilgrimage through it.
Only thus is light born.