Quickbyte
Feb 23, 2026

My husband made dinner that night, and seconds after my son and I finished eating, we collapsed. I forced myself to lie still as if unconscious, and that’s when I heard him whisper on the phone, “It’s done. They’ll both be gone soon.” Once he stepped out, I whispered to my son, “Don’t move yet…” What happened next was something I could never have predicted….

It had been weeks since Julian had cooked, but that evening, he moved through the kitchen with an unsettling kind of grace. Not a single movement seemed to be made without intent, as though he were trying to convince himself, and us, that everything was normal. The scent of roasted chicken filled the room, mingling with the soft hum of the refrigerator. It should have been comforting, but for some reason, it only deepened the knot in my stomach. There was something off about the whole situation, something I couldn’t quite put my finger on.

“Look at Dad, trying out his star chef routine,” Evan joked, a tired smile tugging at his lips as he hopped into his chair, but there was no spark in his voice. His eyes, though tired, were bright with a hint of hope, like a child hoping for the return of something that had been lost for too long.

I returned the smile as expected, though it didn’t reach my eyes. My stomach twisted in knots, anxiety curling through me. It had become impossible to ignore the cold, calculated distance between us. Julian had changed, but he hadn’t grown colder. Instead, he had become controlled—every movement deliberate, every expression tested before it reached his face. He was hiding something, I could feel it

Dinner was nothing special: baked chicken with herbs, soft steamed vegetables, rice tinged with the faintest hint of garlic. Nothing out of the ordinary, nothing to raise suspicion. But even as I sat down and took my first bite, a strange heaviness crept through me, dulling my senses. It started with a tingling on the tip of my tongue, an almost imperceptible numbness. By the time the sensation had spread down my throat, I realized something was terribly wrong.

I watched Evan blink at me, his eyes suddenly glassy and unfocused. His voice trembled as he spoke. “Mom, I feel weird. I am really tired.”

Julian’s hand gently landed on Evan’s shoulder, his fingers brushing with a softness that sent chills down my spine. “It’s okay,” he said in that same controlled voice, “Just breathe and let your body rest.”

I felt a wave of panic grip my chest as my own body began to betray me. The fog in my mind thickened. I tried to push against it, to stand, but the room seemed to tilt beneath me. My legs gave out, and I collapsed into the chair, clutching the edge of the table. The world swam around me, dizzying and chaotic. The last thing I heard before everything slipped into darkness was Evan’s voice, weak and trembling. “Mom?”

I couldn’t answer. My body felt foreign, disconnected. The rug beneath me smelled of laundry soap, the only thing that seemed real as I struggled to hold onto the thread of awareness that remained. And then, silence. The room was still, save for the faint sound of Julian’s footsteps, slow and measured, approaching us. His shadow loomed over me as I lay there, pretending to be unconscious.

A brief, almost imperceptible kick nudged my shoulder. He was testing for a response, and when I didn’t give one, I heard a low murmur escape his lips. “Good.”

I forced myself to keep still, to let the darkness swallow me whole.

Minutes—or hours—later, I felt him leave. The door creaked open, the cold rush of winter air sneaking into the room as it closed behind him. There was a faint click, followed by footsteps retreating into the distance. I was still too weak to move.

But I wasn’t alone.

“Evan,” I whispered, my lips barely moving. My son’s hand was already in mine, his fingers twitching, squeezing. He was awake, and that was all that mattered.

Slowly, painfully, I opened my eyes just a crack. The microwave clock glowed in the darkness—8:42 p.m. The time seemed irrelevant, but it anchored me in reality for a moment. My hands shook as I reached into my pocket, desperate to find my phone. I needed to call for help.

The screen flickered. No service.

Of course, Julian had joked about the poor reception in the living room, but I never imagined it would become the barrier between life and death. The signal flickered on and off in weak bursts as I dragged myself across the floor, inch by inch. Evan crawled behind me, trembling and silent. By the time we reached the hallway, I had a single, fragile bar of service.

I dialed 911. The call failed. My heart pounded harder. I tried again. Another failure.

My phone buzzed.

A message from an unknown number.

“Check the trash. You will find proof. He is coming back.”

I froze. How could anyone know that?

Before I could even process the message, footsteps echoed downstairs. The front door creaked open. Two voices drifted through the hallway. One was Julian’s.

“You told me they would be out.”

“They are,” he replied, the edge of his voice betraying the lie.

My breath hitched. Panic surged. I clutched Evan to me, pulling him into the bathroom as I locked the door. The dispatcher’s voice was steady on the other end of the phone. “The officers are outside. Stay in the bathroom until they announce it’s safe.”

The next few minutes passed in agonizing silence.

Then the pounding came.

“Police. Open the door.”

This part sets the stage with a sense of mounting tension, showing Julian’s cold manipulation and the horrifying realization that something sinister is at play. It leaves enough mystery for readers to want to know what happens next.

The door pounded again, louder this time. My heart raced, a sharp rhythm in my chest, the sound of the police at the front door mingling with the pounding in my head. I pressed my back against the bathroom door, my hand still clutching Evan’s, trying to calm his shaking body. His breath came in ragged gasps, his pupils dilated, and his skin was cold to the touch.

“Mom,” he whispered, his voice barely audible. “Are we going to be okay?”

I didn’t know how to answer him. What could I say? That everything would be fine? That Julian hadn’t planned to kill us, even though it was clear he had? That somehow, this nightmare would end with us walking away unscathed?

I wasn’t sure of anything anymore. But I had to try. I had to believe that if we survived this, it wouldn’t just be by accident. We had to fight.

“Stay quiet, Evan,” I whispered, my voice trembling. “We’ll be fine. We’re safe here.”

He nodded, pressing himself against me, his tiny body trembling in the darkness.

The footsteps outside grew louder as officers moved through the house. I could hear voices now, a chorus of commands and questions. The tension in the air thickened, the weight of what was happening pressing down on me.

Then, a familiar voice cut through the noise.

“We have the wife’s 911 call. She is alive.”

It was Julian. His voice cracked with frustration, and there was something so cold, so calculated in it, that it sent a shiver down my spine. He had no idea that we were still alive.

I wanted to scream, to rush out and throw myself into the arms of the officers waiting outside, but I knew I had to wait. One wrong move, and we could be back in his hands before the police even knew what had happened.

There was another moment of silence, as if the world had paused in anticipation. Then, I heard the distinct sound of the front door opening. Footsteps shuffled in, and a voice, unfamiliar and stern, called out, “Police. Open the door.”

I felt Evan tense beside me, and I held my breath, my fingers pressed tight over his mouth to keep him silent.

The sound of keys jangling in the lock, followed by the door creaking open, was the most beautiful sound I had ever heard. A wave of relief washed over me, but it was quickly followed by the sobering reality that we were far from safe.

An officer stepped inside the bathroom, his expression both concerned and determined. He was tall, with sharp eyes that seemed to scan every corner of the room in an instant.

“Ma’am,” he said softly, kneeling in front of me, “are you okay? We’re here. You’re safe now.”

I didn’t have the strength to respond. The tears came unbidden, falling freely down my cheeks. I wanted to collapse in his arms, to feel the weight of the moment, but I knew there was still more to be done.

“Where’s your husband?” the officer asked, his voice low and serious.

I forced myself to steady my breath. “He’s gone. He… he poisoned us.” My voice shook with the words, the reality of what had happened still sinking in. “He… he’s been planning it for a long time. He was going to kill us.”

The officer’s eyes darkened with understanding. He nodded sharply and rose to his feet, signaling to another officer outside the door.

“Stay here,” he said. “We’re going to take care of everything. You’re not alone anymore.”

As the officers began to move through the house, securing the area, I held Evan close to me. He was still pale, his breathing shallow, but his fingers curled around mine, grounding me in this moment of terrifying uncertainty.

Outside, the chaos continued. Voices clashed, commands rang out, and the weight of the situation seemed to shift as the full scope of what Julian had done began to unfold. I could only guess at what was happening in the house now, but I had no doubt the truth would come crashing down soon enough.

It wasn’t long before I heard a new voice—one I didn’t recognize. A woman’s voice, cool and collected. “The poison traces in the food are conclusive. It’s pesticide concentrate. Enough to kill two people quietly.”

My heart dropped. Julian hadn’t just planned to kill us. He had been methodical, calculating, ensuring that his “accident” would look like a natural cause. It would have worked if not for the strangest twist of fate. Mrs. Ellery.

I remembered the neighbor, the woman who kept to herself, the one who had always been a little offbeat. She’d seen him moving suspiciously that night, heard parts of his conversation, and when she’d seen us collapse, she knew something was terribly wrong. She had acted without hesitation.

I felt a flicker of gratitude for her, a stranger who had risked everything to save us, someone I’d barely spoken to before. She had saved our lives.

As the minutes stretched into hours, I sat in the bathroom with Evan, the stillness around us growing oppressive. The weight of what had happened was starting to sink in, but I pushed it aside. We had made it through the night. We were alive, and that meant something.

But the battle wasn’t over. It was only beginning. Julian had a plan, and now I had to ensure that it wouldn’t succeed. He would face the consequences of what he’d done, and I would make sure of it.

Two hours later, I was sitting in the back of an ambulance, Evan beside me, when a detective named Rowena Harper arrived. Her face was solemn as she approached me, taking a seat beside me.

“We’ve got him in custody,” she said quietly, her voice steady. “Your husband’s already talking. But there’s more. We found something that could change everything.”

I looked up at her, barely able to comprehend the weight of her words. “What do you mean?”

Harper leaned in closer. “Julian rented a storage unit. Under another name. We’ve got a warrant. He’s been planning this for years.”

My stomach churned. All of it—the way he had acted, the way he had pulled us into his web of lies—had been a carefully constructed plan.

I didn’t want to know more, but I had no choice.

“We’re going to need you to come with us,” Harper said. “There’s evidence that could change the course of everything.”

As we pulled away from the hospital, the world seemed to fall away for a moment. Julian was still out there, still trying to control everything, but I could feel the weight of the truth growing heavier. And as the realization settled in, I knew one thing for sure: the fight wasn’t over. It had just begun.

The drive to the storage unit felt like an eternity. The streets outside the ambulance passed in a blur, but my mind was racing with a thousand thoughts I couldn’t control. I kept imagining Julian’s face—the cold, calculating look he had given me as I lay unconscious on the floor, his twisted relief when he thought he had won. He had truly believed he could get away with it. But he was wrong. He had underestimated me.

And now, we were going to find out just how deep his deception ran.

The storage facility was nestled at the edge of town, a nondescript building in the middle of an industrial park. As the ambulance came to a stop, I could feel the weight of what was to come bearing down on me. Harper was already out of the car, speaking with a uniformed officer. I could see the flicker of lights from other vehicles around the lot, the glow of police and forensic teams gathering for what was about to unfold.

Evan, who had remained eerily quiet since we left the hospital, shifted beside me. His small hand gripped mine tightly, and I felt a lump form in my throat as I looked down at him. This wasn’t a world any child should have to witness.

“We’re going to get through this, sweetheart,” I said softly, trying to keep my voice steady. “I promise you, we’re safe now.”

He nodded, but his eyes were wide with fear, the shadows of everything that had happened still lingering in his gaze. I wanted to protect him, to shield him from all of it, but there was no escaping the truth now. Julian had hurt us—he had poisoned us—and there was nothing I could do to undo the damage.

The officers led us inside the storage unit, where Detective Harper was already waiting. She nodded to the officer beside her, and he unlocked the door to a small room filled with shelves of boxes and various items, but nothing that seemed unusual at first glance. My stomach churned, and I could feel a knot tighten in my chest as I stepped inside. There was a chill in the air that made everything feel colder than it should.

Harper didn’t waste any time. “This is where it gets interesting,” she said, her voice calm but tinged with a heaviness I couldn’t ignore. “We’ve been going through Julian’s things, and there’s something here that connects all of this—something you need to see.”

She gestured toward the corner of the room, where two large duffel bags lay partially open. One was empty, the other packed with materials that sent a shiver down my spine. It was as if every step of Julian’s plan had been meticulously documented.

I walked closer, my eyes scanning the contents. The first thing I saw was a stack of research papers. The words “Poisons” and “Toxicology” were printed on the top sheet, and I felt my stomach turn. There were dozens of pages—notes on chemical compounds, their effects, how they could be used to cause harm without detection. Julian had done his research. He had prepared.

I flipped through the pages, the realization sinking in with each new note. This wasn’t a spur-of-the-moment act of violence; this had been planned for years. Julian had been studying how to kill us. It was methodical.

At the bottom of the duffel bag was a stack of fake IDs—identification cards in different names, some of them with Julian’s photo. He had been hiding in plain sight, using other identities to keep his activities under wraps. My heart pounded as I picked up the cards, the weight of their significance pressing down on me.

Next, I pulled out several prepaid phones, their screens cracked and old, as though they had been used for one purpose only: secret communication. My hands trembled as I set them down beside the research papers. But it wasn’t until I found a thick notebook that I stopped cold.

It was full of dates and calculations—Julian had been tracking everything. Our routines, our movements, when we ate, when we slept, when Evan felt sick and barely touched his food. The notebook was a record of everything he had observed over the years. And it wasn’t just about our daily lives.

“Every entry, every detail,” I whispered, my voice hoarse. “He’s been planning this for so long.”

Harper nodded, her eyes dark with the weight of the discovery. “He had to know. He couldn’t just risk it all. He tracked everything to make sure his plan would work perfectly.”

I felt my breath catch in my chest. The last page of the notebook was different. The ink was darker, almost frantic in its scribbles. It was a countdown.

“Day 1: Begin preparations. Find the right poison. Check.”
“Day 2: Set up diversion with work. Check.”
“Day 3: Test reactions, begin slow poisoning. Check.”
“Day 4: Final dosage, wait for collapse. Check.”

The last entry was the most chilling. It read, “Day 5: Execute final phase. Make it look like an accident. Call emergency services after they are dead.”

Tears burned in my eyes, but I forced them back. This man—this man I had loved—had planned to kill us. It wasn’t a moment of anger. It was a slow, deliberate execution of a twisted vision, all the while pretending to be a loving husband and father.

I looked down at the photo buried at the bottom of the bag. It was a picture of Evan and me, taken through the living room window. The realization hit me like a punch in the stomach. Julian had been watching us. He had been watching us for a long time.

Harper placed a set of printed text messages in front of me. I recognized the names immediately—Tessa, Julian’s ex, the woman I had never truly feared, even after all the subtle hints Julian had dropped. But these messages were different. They were darker, filled with promises and cold plans.

“She’s stubborn. She won’t leave. She keeps trying to fix the marriage.”
“If she’s gone, no arguments, no custody.”
“What about the child?”
“He can’t stay. He keeps her grounded.”

It was like hearing Julian’s voice again, but this time, there was no charm. No mask of affection. Just the cold truth of who he really was.

“He’s been planning this for years,” Harper said, her voice heavy with finality. “We’ve found everything we need. And we’re going to make sure he’s never able to hurt anyone again.”

But the weight of it all was unbearable. The truth had shattered everything I thought I knew. Julian hadn’t just been a man I had married. He had been a stranger, hidden behind a mask of affection, carefully orchestrating the destruction of everything I held dear.

I felt my hands tremble as I picked up the photo again, the one Julian had taken from outside our window. He had been planning to break me down for years, and he had nearly succeeded.

But I wouldn’t let him win. Not now. Not ever.

The days following our discovery at the storage unit were a blur of police interrogations, hospital visits, and cold, hard facts that I could no longer deny. Detective Rowena Harper remained a steady presence, her determination unwavering as the investigation into Julian’s actions deepened. I couldn’t escape the constant image of the photo—the one Julian had taken of us through the living room window. It haunted me, a reminder of how long he had been plotting, how carefully he had waited for the perfect moment to execute his plan.

We were still in the hospital, recovering from the effects of the poison, but every time I closed my eyes, the weight of what Julian had done pressed down on me. I had thought I knew him, thought I understood him, but I had been wrong. Every moment we had spent together had been a lie—a carefully constructed act to make me believe that everything was normal. And for so long, I had let myself believe it.

I couldn’t escape the haunting question: How could I have missed it?

Harper had promised me that Julian would face justice, but the road ahead was far from clear. Every time I thought about the trial, the realization settled in that the man who had been my husband, the father of my child, was a monster. The truth about him—everything he had planned, every step he had taken to destroy us—was too much to comprehend all at once.

But we couldn’t look away. We couldn’t ignore the reality of what was coming. It was time for him to answer for what he had done.

The trial began two weeks later.

I sat in the courtroom, my hands folded tightly in my lap, feeling the weight of every eye on me. The air was thick with tension, the courtroom a silent witness to the battle that was about to unfold. The prosecution had already presented its case, the evidence damning: the research on poisons, the fake identities, the hidden phone records, the notebook filled with plans.

But the hardest part was seeing Julian’s face. Even now, as he sat in the defendant’s chair, there was something about him that made it hard to believe this was the same man I had married. He looked smaller somehow, but the arrogance in his eyes remained. He sat there, hands folded in his lap, staring at the floor as if he were above it all.

When the prosecution called me to the stand, I could feel the eyes of the courtroom burning into me. I hesitated for just a moment, unsure if I had the strength to relive the horror. But I forced myself to stand, to walk toward the witness stand.

As I took the oath, my mind flashed back to the night we had eaten dinner, the night everything had changed. I remembered the numbness, the way the world had tilted beneath me as the poison took effect. I remembered the fear in Evan’s eyes, the desperation in my voice as I tried to stay awake, to stay alive.

“I never thought…” I began, my voice faltering. I stopped, trying to steady my breath, trying to push back the tears that threatened to overwhelm me. “I never thought I could be in this position. I thought I knew Julian. I thought we were happy. But he…” I swallowed hard. “He had been planning it for so long. He tried to kill me. He tried to kill Evan.”

I paused, the words sinking in as I looked out at the jury. The weight of the truth was almost unbearable. “He wasn’t just trying to end our lives. He wanted to take everything. Our future. Our family. He wanted to destroy us.”

I looked across the courtroom at Julian, his eyes cold and unmoving, as if none of this had ever mattered. His gaze didn’t flicker as I spoke, and I realized then that he had never seen us as anything more than obstacles in the way of his own twisted desires.

The defense tried to paint Julian as a man who had been pushed to the edge, a man who had simply snapped. They spoke of stress, of frustration, of a marriage gone wrong. But it didn’t matter. Nothing they said could justify what he had done.

I could hear his lawyer arguing in the background, but I wasn’t listening. My focus remained on Julian. His arrogance, his calm indifference to the pain he had caused, was like a slap in the face.

But I wasn’t afraid anymore. I wasn’t the same woman who had stood in that kitchen, trying to hold on to a life that was slipping away. I was stronger now. I had seen the truth, and I had survived it.

The trial stretched on for days. Witnesses were called, evidence was presented, and Julian’s lies were exposed for all to see. But the turning point came when Detective Harper took the stand. She laid out everything we had discovered: the fake identities, the meticulous planning, the poison. She spoke of the neighbor who had risked everything to save us. She told the jury about the messages Julian had sent, the conversations he had had with Tessa, his ex, about how he had planned to get rid of us.

But the most damning piece of evidence was the notebook. The one with the countdown. It was clear now that Julian had never meant to stop at poisoning us. He had wanted to finish what he had started. He had wanted to kill us, to wipe us out completely.

When the defense rested, and the jury deliberated, I felt a strange sense of calm wash over me. The truth was out. There was no more hiding. No more pretending. The man who had once been my husband, the father of my child, was a monster, and he would pay for what he had done.

The verdict came three days later.

“Guilty on all charges,” the judge declared, his voice heavy with finality. “Attempted murder of the wife. Attempted murder of the child. Conspiracy. Premeditation.”

I felt a rush of relief and disbelief. The weight of everything—of all the pain, all the fear—seemed to lift, just a little. The truth had won. Justice had been served.

As the guards escorted Julian away, he looked at me, his eyes narrowing into a thin, bitter glare.

“You lied,” he spat, his voice low, venomous. “You should have stayed down.”

For a moment, I felt a flicker of old fear, but it was quickly swallowed by something else. Something stronger.

“I didn’t lie,” I said, my voice steady. “I fought for my life. And I won.”

As the courtroom emptied, I stood, taking Evan’s hand in mine. We had been through so much, but we were finally free.

“You okay, Mom?” Evan asked, his voice quiet but full of hope.

I smiled down at him, the weight of everything lifting from my chest. “Yeah, we’re okay.”

As we walked out of the courtroom, the doors closing behind us, I knew we were stepping into a new future. A future that Julian would never control again.

It’s strange, how a moment can change everything. How a single decision—the choice to survive, to fight—can alter the course of a life, even after everything that’s been taken. I had spent so much of my life believing in the illusion that we could be safe, that we could be happy. But that happiness had been shattered, broken into pieces I was still trying to pick up. The pain, the fear, the betrayal—those wounds were still raw. But something had shifted in me, something stronger than before.

I had learned, through all of it, that survival wasn’t just about staying alive. It was about refusing to let the darkness define you.

It had been a week since the trial. A week since the day Julian was led away in handcuffs, his face twisted with hatred as he glared at me one last time. I’d seen that look before, in the days when we were still married—the cold, empty gaze he reserved for anyone who stood in his way. But now, it held nothing more than the reflection of a man who had failed.

It was over.

I sat at the kitchen table, staring out the window at the view I had once thought was peaceful. The sun was setting, painting the sky in shades of pink and orange, and for the first time in weeks, I felt something like peace settle inside me.

Evan was at the counter, working on his homework. His small hands gripped the pencil tightly, but there was a lightness to his movements that hadn’t been there before. The shadows in his eyes were fading, and that alone was enough to make me believe that, somehow, we would be okay.

I didn’t know what the future held. I didn’t know how long it would take for the scars to heal, for the pain to fade. But I did know one thing. We had made it. We had survived, and that was more than Julian could ever take from us.

The phone buzzed on the table in front of me. I picked it up, my fingers trembling slightly as I unlocked it. It was a message from an unknown number.

“I will testify. Just make sure he never gets the chance to hurt anyone again.”

I closed my eyes for a moment, the words sending a chill through me. The woman who had saved us—Mrs. Ellery—had been the one to send the message. She had risked everything, had seen enough to know that Julian’s plan wasn’t just an isolated incident. He had been a danger to everyone.

Her message was simple: she wanted to make sure that no one else would fall victim to him. She had spoken in court, behind the privacy screen, but her words had been powerful. She had given everything to ensure Julian wouldn’t hurt anyone else.

I typed a reply, my fingers steady now.

“Thank you. You saved us. I’ll make sure he never hurts anyone again.”

The reply came swiftly, just as quick and certain as the first message:

“You saved your son by staying awake. Now save yourself by finishing the fight.”

Those words echoed in my mind long after the phone had gone silent. I knew what she meant. It wasn’t enough to survive. It wasn’t enough to win in court. I had to make sure that Julian’s darkness didn’t seep back into our lives again, that he didn’t find another way to control or manipulate anyone else.

It was time for the final step—the final battle, not in the courtroom, but in our lives.

A few days later, I received a call from Detective Harper. She told me that Julian had rented another storage unit. This one, they had found through his records. It was a place he had used to store his plans in case things had gone wrong, a backup plan that could have ruined so many more lives. But now it was empty. Julian was gone—physically, but his presence still lingered in every corner of my mind.

“We found something,” Harper said, her voice grim but firm. “Something we need to follow up on.”

I listened closely as she explained that Julian’s final attempt to break free was not over yet. His assets, his resources—he had planned to disappear. But it was too late now. His name, his history, everything he had tried to hide, was exposed.

I didn’t need to know more. I didn’t need to dwell on what might have been. Julian had tried to destroy us. But in the end, we were stronger. His manipulations couldn’t last forever.

The doorbell rang later that afternoon. I opened it to find two officers standing outside, holding a large envelope. I recognized the seals—court documents, the final step in securing everything Julian had taken from us.

“We just wanted to make sure you knew,” one officer said, handing me the envelope. “The judge has ruled on the asset division. Julian’s money, his property—it’s all been seized. It’s going to the victims, to those he tried to hurt.”

I nodded, feeling the weight of those words sink in. Justice was moving in our favor now. We were reclaiming what had been stolen from us, and there was no room left for Julian to hide.

The rest of the day passed in a blur. But that evening, as the sky darkened and the first stars began to twinkle, I found myself sitting on the porch with Evan, the silence between us comfortable and full of quiet hope.

We were rebuilding. Not just our home, but our lives. One piece at a time.

And for the first time in a long while, I felt free.

I looked at Evan, his small face lit by the glow of the porch light. “Are you ready for tomorrow?” I asked, knowing there was still much to do, but feeling a sense of peace settle in my heart.

He looked at me, his face serious but filled with hope. “I think so,” he said quietly. “I think we can do anything now.”

I smiled, pulling him close. “Yes, we can.”

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We sat there together, watching the stars appear one by one. For the first time, I didn’t feel the weight of the past crushing me. The future was ours to shape. We were free.

The nightmare was over.

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