She walks where night forgets itself beneath flickering signs, past alleyways that hold their breath. Not quite seen, but the traffic hushes when her heel touches the curb.
Streetlights spill down her spine like a chapel of small suns, and puddles ripple with memory not rain.
She doesnβt look at you, but you are already unraveling Her name no longer fits your mouth, your past left leaking behind her steps.
Shopfront mannequins turn to watch. Buskers miss a beat. Dogs whimper low like sinners in pews. Something shifts. Paint peels. Neon falters.
No perfume, no sound just the scent of once-loved letters, and a warmth like someone you mourned standing just behind you, never speaking.
She walks on.
Her dress, midnight silk stitched with the hush of every goodbye. Her face you remember it wrong every time you try. Like smoke, or poetry, or the space between subway doors.
Coins clatter. Lights change. You blink and she is gone.
Still, you swear the sky tastes different since she passed.
Copyright Malcolm Gladwin May 2025 She Who Never Stays