The glass weeps first, its surface swelling, a tidal ache of what I could not say. My face ripples, a wound unwound, a thousand silver petals shattering against the silence of your name.
I drank the world tonight, its bitter roots blooming under my tongue. Colors swarmed, fever-bright, and the flowers beneath my feet began to whisper— all their petals were made of your breath.
I see you in shards, a thousand years gone, your eyes like black pearls waiting to drown me. I reach for forgiveness, for the hand I killed with my waiting, but the mirror holds only its tears, and my reflection bleeds.
Adorned in trinkets, hollow stones that wink and glare, I journey onward— a pilgrim of regret, wearing evil eyes like prayers for the dark. The gemstones hum, an elegy, and the road swallows my feet as though it knows I will never turn back.
The flowers grow brighter now, their roots twisting into my skin. I feel the earth shift— a tremor, a message: Forgiveness is a ghost that speaks in riddles, a sign that blooms only when the mirror finally breaks.