The headlights cut two pale tunnels through the dark, but they only reached a few feet before the blackness ate them. Elias pulled the car to the shoulder of the empty road and killed the engine. The silence that rushed in was absolute—no crickets, no wind, just the soft tick of cooling metal.
He lay back. The clouds began to break. One star appeared, then two, then a scatter of ancient light. They had been there the whole time, burning behind the veil.
He sat down on the cold ground. The night wrapped around him like a blanket too heavy to lift. He wasn’t lost geographically. He was lost the way a compass is lost when the magnet’s gone—still pointing, but at nothing true. Lost in the Night
Then he heard it—a low, humming note, like a cello string plucked far away. It vibrated in his ribs. He stopped. The sound didn’t repeat. But for a moment, the pressure in his chest eased.
He had been driving for three hours, or maybe four. He’d left the city behind—the glass towers, the fluorescent stares of strangers, the voicemail he couldn’t bring himself to delete. Now there was only this: a two-lane ribbon of asphalt bleeding into a sky without stars. The headlights cut two pale tunnels through the
He didn’t find his way back that night. He didn’t find answers. But when the first gray edge of dawn touched the horizon, he was still there—still breathing, still watching—lost, but no longer alone with it.
He walked until the road was a guess behind him. The darkness pressed against his eyes like a blindfold. He stumbled over a root, caught himself on a trunk, and kept going. No destination. No map. Every step felt like falling upward into something vast and indifferent. He lay back
Good , he thought.
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