There’s an old house at the edge of my memory, paint faded to whispers, roof weathered by quiet storms no one else sees.
I still walk past each evening, pausing where roses once bloomed, petals lost gently to seasons we didn’t notice were changing.
Windows darkened, but reflections remain ghosts of laughter, voices that felt like candles in empty rooms, glowing softly with something I still can’t name.
Inside, silence gathers like dust over tables set for conversations we never finished, chairs waiting patiently for someone to come home.
And though doors have quietly closed, I keep a single key pressed against my chest a quiet promise never broken, held softly in the hollow between missing and letting go.
Maybe someday you’ll pass this way, notice curtains move slightly like breath, and wonder who lives in the spaces we left empty