The light dimmed. Mist curled around my ankles. The pavement blurred at the edges.
Silhouettes moved through the fog – not ghosts, but the spaces where connection failed to form.
The silence here was spacious, not heavy.
The Borderlands didn’t ask me to forget. It asked me to release.
I breathed in. The mist breathed with me.
When I turned back toward the city, I felt lighter, clearer, ready to go.
“The Transit Lounge” (poem 1.)
I arrive at the Transit Lounge
just as the morning crowd begins to gather,
travelers in bright, mismatched shirts
carrying the colors of places I’ve never been.
The air smells of coffee, citrus,
and the faint electricity of departure.
This is the city’s breathing space –
the practiced present,
where no one belongs for long
and no one is out of place.
I take a seat by the wide glass window.
Ship horns echo from the Industrial Fringe,
and somewhere behind me
cutlery clinks against plates
in the breakfast buffet of the newly unburdened.
Around me, people check maps,
repack bags,
tie their shoes with the quiet certainty
of those who know they’re going somewhere
even if they haven’t named it yet.
For a moment, I think of the Gallery of Echoes –
the lives I almost lived,
the selves that flickered and faded
as I walked past them.
But none of them followed me here.
They stay where they belong:
in the past, acknowledged,
but no longer steering the ship.
I look down at my own shirt –
stitched with the symbols
of the things I love,
the interests I’ve reclaimed,
the colors I once thought
were too bright for me.
I am not waiting for anyone now.
Not for a doorway I hoped someone else would open,
not for a life I didn’t know how to build alone.
I am the one boarding.
I am the one carrying the ticket.
A soft announcement hums overhead.
The room shifts –
not with fear,
but with readiness.
I stand,
feeling the steadiness of being among others
who are also in motion,
also between stories,
also learning that presence
is a kind of courage.
When I step toward the gate,
the city doesn’t hold me back.
It simply nods,
as if to say:
You’ve packed what you need.
The rest will meet you on the water.
And so I walk forward,
lighter than I arrived,
toward a ship whose destination
I haven’t mapped yet –
but whose horizon
finally feels like mine.
“The Marble Sepulcher” (poem 2.)
The Cathedral of Echoes rises
from the oldest quarter of the city,
its marble veined with silver,
its spires dissolving into a pale, drifting mist.
The air hums with a low, ancient resonance,
as if the building itself remembers
every voice that ever passed through it.
I cross the threshold,
and the temperature shifts –
cool at first, then warm,
like a hand closing gently around mine.
This is the Sepulcher:
not a tomb,
but a sanctuary for what endured.
Columns carved with faint constellations
line the nave,
each star a salvaged line
from my suffering youth –
words I wrote in haste,
truths whispered into the dark,
small sparks I thought had died
before they ever reached the page.
But here they gleam,
set into the marble
as if the city itself
refused to let them vanish.
My footsteps echo softly,
and the sound folds back on itself,
layer upon layer,
until I can no longer tell
which echoes are mine
and which belong to the poets
who walked here before me –
Keats murmuring from a distant alcove,
Emily’s quiet defiance drifting like incense,
Lawrence’s fire crackling in the rafters.
Somewhere among them,
my own voice rises –
steady now,
finally strong enough
to join the chorus.
At the ninth milestone,
the Veiled Archway waits,
draped in a living mist
that glows with a sovereign light.
A figure stands there,
holding a gown of transformation
woven from memory and breath.
I offer it one feeling
I carried too long –
the ache of being unseen –
and watch as it dissolves,
reforms,
and returns to me
as something gentler,
almost luminous.
Deeper still lies the Great Echo,
the heart of the Sepulcher.
The chamber opens like a vast,
hollowed bell,
its dome catching every sound
and turning it into music.
Here the past is not a burden
but a harmony –
a resonance of everything that endured,
everything that refused to die,
everything that made me.
I place my hand on the marble altar.
It is warm.
It is alive.
It is mine.
The Cathedral exhales,
and the echoes settle
into a single, radiant truth:
Nothing I created was wasted.
Nothing I survived was silent.
The beauty I thought had vanished
was only waiting
for me to return.
When I step back into the city,
the mist follows like a blessing.
The Transit Lounge glows ahead,
and beyond it,
the open horizon.
I leave the Sepulcher
lighter than I entered,
carrying not the ruins,
but the radiance
that rose from them.
Feb 28
Feb 28, 2026 at 1:58 PM UTC
The light dimmed. Mist curled around my ankles. The pavement blurred at the edges.
Silhouettes moved through the fog – not ghosts, but the spaces where connection failed to form.
The silence here was spacious, not heavy.
The Borderlands didn’t ask me to forget. It asked me to release.
I breathed in. The mist breathed with me.
When I turned back toward the city, I felt lighter, clearer, ready to go.
“The Transit Lounge” (poem 1.)
I arrive at the Transit Lounge
just as the morning crowd begins to gather,
travelers in bright, mismatched shirts
carrying the colors of places I’ve never been.
The air smells of coffee, citrus,
and the faint electricity of departure.
This is the city’s breathing space –
the practiced present,
where no one belongs for long
and no one is out of place.
I take a seat by the wide glass window.
Ship horns echo from the Industrial Fringe,
and somewhere behind me
cutlery clinks against plates
in the breakfast buffet of the newly unburdened.
Around me, people check maps,
repack bags,
tie their shoes with the quiet certainty
of those who know they’re going somewhere
even if they haven’t named it yet.
For a moment, I think of the Gallery of Echoes –
the lives I almost lived,
the selves that flickered and faded
as I walked past them.
But none of them followed me here.
They stay where they belong:
in the past, acknowledged,
but no longer steering the ship.
I look down at my own shirt –
stitched with the symbols
of the things I love,
the interests I’ve reclaimed,
the colors I once thought
were too bright for me.
I am not waiting for anyone now.
Not for a doorway I hoped someone else would open,
not for a life I didn’t know how to build alone.
I am the one boarding.
I am the one carrying the ticket.
A soft announcement hums overhead.
The room shifts –
not with fear,
but with readiness.
I stand,
feeling the steadiness of being among others
who are also in motion,
also between stories,
also learning that presence
is a kind of courage.
When I step toward the gate,
the city doesn’t hold me back.
It simply nods,
as if to say:
You’ve packed what you need.
The rest will meet you on the water.
And so I walk forward,
lighter than I arrived,
toward a ship whose destination
I haven’t mapped yet –
but whose horizon
finally feels like mine.
“The Marble Sepulcher” (poem 2.)
The Cathedral of Echoes rises
from the oldest quarter of the city,
its marble veined with silver,
its spires dissolving into a pale, drifting mist.
The air hums with a low, ancient resonance,
as if the building itself remembers
every voice that ever passed through it.
I cross the threshold,
and the temperature shifts –
cool at first, then warm,
like a hand closing gently around mine.
This is the Sepulcher:
not a tomb,
but a sanctuary for what endured.
Columns carved with faint constellations
line the nave,
each star a salvaged line
from my suffering youth –
words I wrote in haste,
truths whispered into the dark,
small sparks I thought had died
before they ever reached the page.
But here they gleam,
set into the marble
as if the city itself
refused to let them vanish.
My footsteps echo softly,
and the sound folds back on itself,
layer upon layer,
until I can no longer tell
which echoes are mine
and which belong to the poets
who walked here before me –
Keats murmuring from a distant alcove,
Emily’s quiet defiance drifting like incense,
Lawrence’s fire crackling in the rafters.
Somewhere among them,
my own voice rises –
steady now,
finally strong enough
to join the chorus.
At the ninth milestone,
the Veiled Archway waits,
draped in a living mist
that glows with a sovereign light.
A figure stands there,
holding a gown of transformation
woven from memory and breath.
I offer it one feeling
I carried too long –
the ache of being unseen –
and watch as it dissolves,
reforms,
and returns to me
as something gentler,
almost luminous.
Deeper still lies the Great Echo,
the heart of the Sepulcher.
The chamber opens like a vast,
hollowed bell,
its dome catching every sound
and turning it into music.
Here the past is not a burden
but a harmony –
a resonance of everything that endured,
everything that refused to die,
everything that made me.
I place my hand on the marble altar.
It is warm.
It is alive.
It is mine.
The Cathedral exhales,
and the echoes settle
into a single, radiant truth:
Nothing I created was wasted.
Nothing I survived was silent.
The beauty I thought had vanished
was only waiting
for me to return.
When I step back into the city,
the mist follows like a blessing.
The Transit Lounge glows ahead,
and beyond it,
the open horizon.
I leave the Sepulcher
lighter than I entered,
carrying not the ruins,
but the radiance
that rose from them.
This final chapter brings the Shifting City to its quiet conclusion, crossing the Borderlands where release becomes possible and the past settles into its rightful place.
