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I saw yonder— leaves the colour of rusted coins flattened into the soil, their veins crumbling at a touch. Coffee-stained envelopes lay scattered, their paper-thin as skin, ink bled blue by rain, a Paris stamp whispering 1928 from a corner eaten by time. They kept company with a bruised brown apple, bitten once, abandoned, its sweetness turned to rot in the chill of a narrow room in the mammoth province of Brandenburg, Prussia. The rickety Tudor house groaned— timbers bowing like old men, windows clouded with breath that had not been drawn in years. The past lingered here, a pale thing pacing the halls, knocking without fists, begging to be loosed. Cobwebs clung to my wrists, dust rising like breath as I pried open the forgotten mail— letters folded and refolded, addresses crossed out, sentences that never found their mouths. “Let’s ride the rails,” he said. His voice—young, low, certain— rang through me like iron striking iron. My knees softened. The floor tilted. “We should get going.” Two women in white scrubs smelled of soap and starch, their hands firm, practiced, final. Step by step, I was lifted onto wheels that hummed and rattled, carrying me through corridors of echo toward a place newly named, a place I would never call home. The economy collapsed like wet paper. The war broke what remained. Yet memory stayed— warm as breath inside the chest, refusing burial, refusing silence. It never died.
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Sep 29, 2018
Sep 29, 2018 at 5:43 PM UTC
Years had passed.
I saw yonder— leaves the colour of rusted coins flattened into the soil, their veins crumbling at a touch. Coffee-stained envelopes lay scattered, their paper-thin as skin, ink bled blue by rain, a Paris stamp whispering 1928 from a corner eaten by time. They kept company with a bruised brown apple, bitten once, abandoned, its sweetness turned to rot in the chill of a narrow room in the mammoth province of Brandenburg, Prussia. The rickety Tudor house groaned— timbers bowing like old men, windows clouded with breath that had not been drawn in years. The past lingered here, a pale thing pacing the halls, knocking without fists, begging to be loosed. Cobwebs clung to my wrists, dust rising like breath as I pried open the forgotten mail— letters folded and refolded, addresses crossed out, sentences that never found their mouths. “Let’s ride the rails,” he said. His voice—young, low, certain— rang through me like iron striking iron. My knees softened. The floor tilted. “We should get going.” Two women in white scrubs smelled of soap and starch, their hands firm, practiced, final. Step by step, I was lifted onto wheels that hummed and rattled, carrying me through corridors of echo toward a place newly named, a place I would never call home. The economy collapsed like wet paper. The war broke what remained. Yet memory stayed— warm as breath inside the chest, refusing burial, refusing silence. It never died.
adelethewriter
Written by
Sep 29, 2018
Sep 29, 2018 at 5:43 PM UTC
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