My little sister called me tonight. Her voice cracked before she even said hello. She saw the heart I typed, and thought I was saying goodbye.
She shouldn’t have to live like this— bracing herself every time I answer too slowly, learning to read my silences like warning signs.
She’s just a kid. My baby. The one I used to tuck in and promise monsters weren’t real.
But now I am the monster. Not to her. Never to her. But to myself.
I am the nightmare she can’t wake up from. The danger she can’t punch away. The reason she checks her phone like it’s a lifeline and a bomb at the same time.
And I hate it. I hate that she’s learning to live on edge because of me. Because I might break and take her with me.
So maybe— maybe the kindest thing I could do is just end it.
Once.
Not again and again in panicked calls and whispered fears and “I love you”s that sound too final. Not in sirens or hospital beds or birthdays where I couldn’t come.
Just once. One clean tear through the timeline. One scream. One silence. And then nothing.
She’d cry, yes. But she’d stop being afraid.
She wouldn’t have to wonder anymore. Wouldn’t have to scan my messages for signs of collapse. Wouldn’t have to carry this slow, rotting dread that her sister might be dying in a place she can’t reach.
Maybe grief would be easier than fear.
Maybe heartbreak would feel like freedom after years of holding her breath.
I think about that a lot.
How maybe the kindest thing I could ever do for her is disappear.