I let him speak, his words uncoiled like smoke in the quiet room, each sentence a serpent wrapping itself around the soft throat of the night.
He spoke of boredom, of voices like dead birds falling from the trees, of his hands searching the air for the tender pillars of life, and squeezing, until silence became a god.
I listened uneasily, my breath a quiet river, my heart a stone sinking into its depths. His voice brushed against my skin, and I held it, like holding a flame bare-handed.
Then he stopped. The silence cracked. His fingers felt my pulse— a stillness I could not hide. It betrayed me. But I, too, held his hand, offering my quietness as a gift, a wall, a mirror.
Now I wake in another room, safe from his dreaming. But the night carries his voice, a tide that laps against the shore of my memory.
Did I save myself? Did I save him? Or are we both adrift in the dark sea of what was left unsaid?
Sometimes he scares me although he has a lot of self-control.