The Vanishing Moment
The Echoes We Carry in Empty Rooms

The streets remember your absence,
though no one speaks your name aloud.
Cobblestones shimmer with the memory
of footsteps that no longer fall,
and windows hold the ghosts of light
you once carried through the dusk.
I reach for you in empty rooms,
for the laughter that trembled in the corners,
for the sunlight that pooled on worn floors,
for the quiet understanding
that never quite returned
once you were gone.

Even the clock seems complicit,
its hands circling without mercy,
marking the minutes where you should be.
I watch shadows stretch across the walls,
and they are longer now,
heavier with your absence.
I remember the small things:
the scent of rain on the old oak street,
the tremble of your hand in mine,
the way a song could rise like smoke
and fill the room with everything
we had not yet said.

Time was generous then,
a river carrying us without care,
and we thought it endless,
unaware that endings
often whisper first
in the silence between heartbeats.
Now I gather fragments:
a door left ajar,
a chair pulled back from the table,
a cup that waits for lips
that will never return.

I fold these moments into memory,
a patchwork quilt of loss,
warm against the cold
that follows where you once stood.
Somewhere, the world continues—
unaware of the missing piece,
unaware of the echo of your name
still pressing against the edges of my days.
But I feel it, subtle and unyielding,
in the pause before the next breath,
in the tremor of wind through empty streets,
in the hollow of the night
that stretches on
long after you have gone.
And yet, in absence,
you linger:
in the ache of remembering,
in the light that clings to what was,
in the quiet promise
that though you are gone,
you are never truly lost.

About the Creator
Algieba
Curious observer of the world, exploring the latest ideas, trends, and stories that shape our lives. A thoughtful writer who seeks to make sense of complex topics and share insights that inform, inspire, and engage readers.



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