He sits on the cold pavement, back against the world, eyes lost in a sky too vast, too indifferent to a boy who once dreamed of touching it.
The cigarette flickers between his fingers, a quiet rebellion, a silent scream. Smoke coils like memories— of failures, of love lost, of roads that led nowhere.
Maybe this is all there is— a tired soul, an empty night, a battle no one sees.
Then, a voice—soft yet firm. "Got a light?"
He looks up, startled. A stranger, wrapped in the wind, eyes carrying storms of their own.
"You look like a man who’s been running from himself," the stranger says, lighting his own cigarette. "But the thing about running— it never gets you anywhere."
A pause. A knowing glance. "Maybe it’s time you walked instead."
The words settle like embers in his chest. For the first time in a long time, he exhales without regret.
The cigarette burns, but tonight, so does something else— a spark, a reason.
He stands up, dusts off the weight of yesterday, and starts walking forward