#archaeologyoffeeling
I came back to the place
where the echoes stopped breathing,
to the city our voices once built
stone by stone,
argument by argument,
touch by hesitant touch.
Now the silence lies over everything,
not emptiness,
but a substance with weight,
a pale drift of ash settling on my shoulders
like a language I no longer speak.
I walk through collapsed doorways
where our laughter once lived,
my footsteps sinking into the hush
as if the ground remembers
how heavy we were with wanting.
The air tastes of cold iron,
like the hinge of an ancient gate
that hasn’t opened in years
but still remembers the shape of movement.
I sift through the ruins
not for closure,
but for the one artifact
I know must have survived.
And there it is,
half‑buried,
untouched by time or tide:
the word you once gave me
without hesitation.
A promise so small
it could fit in the palm of my hand,
yet so clear
it refuses to erode.
I lift it gently,
brush the silence from its edges,
and for a moment
the city stirs —
arches straighten,
windows inhale,
the old streets remember their names.
But only for a moment.
The silence settles again,
patient as dust,
claiming what it always meant to claim.
And I understand, finally,
that some ruins are not meant to be rebuilt.
Only visited.
Only witnessed.
Only left with the artifact
that stayed true
when everything else
slipped from present to gone.
Feb 14
Feb 14, 2026 at 12:32 PM UTC