S2S
spirits to spirituality-A journey
Thursday, 21 May 2026
1 A Man Vanishes into Thin Air
A Man Vanishes into Thin Air
On winter mornings, the town of Blackwater carried silence the way old churches carried dust—thick, settled, and impossible to ignore. Fog rolled down from the hills every dawn and wrapped itself around the narrow streets, softening the outlines of houses and swallowing distant sounds. The people who lived there had grown used to it. They had learned to walk through the gray haze with certainty, greeting one another by voice before faces became visible.
But there was one thing the people of Blackwater never grew used to.
The train.
Every evening at exactly 8:17, an old passenger train thundered through the valley without stopping. It had no official schedule. No station listed its route. No one knew where it came from or where it went. Yet everyone in town heard it: the iron scream of wheels, the deep whistle echoing through the hills, and the faint rattling of windows as it passed.
Children were warned never to go near the tracks after sunset.
“Nothing good rides that train,” parents whispered.
Most children eventually ignored the stories. Fear grows dull when repeated too often. But Elias Mercer never stopped listening.
At seventeen, Elias had the restless curiosity of someone who believed every mystery deserved an answer. He lived with his grandmother in a crooked blue house near the edge of town. His parents had died years earlier in a car accident during a snowstorm, leaving behind only faded photographs and unanswered questions.
Elias hated unanswered questions.
That winter, Blackwater became colder than usual. Frost crawled over windows each night like pale fingers. The river froze solid. Dogs barked at empty streets. People hurried home before dark.
And then disappearances began.
The first was a farmer named Nolan Pierce.
He vanished while walking home from the tavern. One moment he had been seen crossing the bridge; the next, gone. Search parties combed the woods for days. They found only his lantern lying beside the railroad tracks, still warm.
A week later, a schoolteacher disappeared.
Then a mechanic.
Then a little girl named Ivy Holloway.
The town panicked.
Some blamed wild animals. Others whispered about kidnappers passing through the valley. A few elderly residents locked their doors and muttered the same explanation they had offered for decades:
“The train is taking people.”
Sheriff Boyd dismissed such talk publicly, though the deepening shadows beneath his eyes suggested he was no longer entirely certain.
Elias became obsessed.
Every missing person had vanished near the tracks.
Every disappearance happened shortly after 8:17.
And every witness described the same strange detail: the train whistle sounded different on those nights—longer, lower, almost mournful.
One evening Elias sat in the town library studying old newspapers while snow tapped softly against the windows. The library smelled of mildew and old paper. Shelves leaned under the weight of forgotten histories.
Mrs. Alder, the librarian, watched him from behind her desk.
“You’re looking into the disappearances again,” she said quietly.
Elias glanced up. “You think I shouldn’t?”
“I think curiosity can be dangerous.”
“That’s not really an answer.”
Mrs. Alder sighed and walked toward him carrying a thin leather-bound book. Dust floated from its cover.
“I hoped nobody would ever ask about this again.”
She placed the book on the table.
The title read:
BLACKWATER RAIL INCIDENTS — 1921
Elias opened it carefully.
Inside were newspaper clippings describing a train derailment nearly a century earlier. During a blizzard in January 1921, a passenger train carrying over eighty people had vanished while crossing the Blackwater Valley.
Vanished.
No wreckage was ever found.
No bodies recovered.
The railway company claimed records had been destroyed in a fire. Officials called it an administrative error. Over time the story faded into folklore.
But one clipping froze Elias’s blood.
A witness reported hearing the train whistle every night afterward.
Exactly at 8:17.
“That’s impossible,” Elias whispered.
Mrs. Alder nodded grimly. “People in this town stopped asking questions because questions lead nowhere.”
“Or maybe nobody looked hard enough.”
She leaned closer.
“Listen to me carefully, Elias. Some things survive because they are remembered. And some things survive because people fear them enough to stay away.”
“What does that mean?”
But Mrs. Alder simply returned to her desk and refused to say more.
That night Elias could not sleep.
Wind rattled tree branches outside his bedroom. The house creaked softly around him. His grandmother slept downstairs in her rocking chair, television flickering blue across the walls.
At 8:16, Elias grabbed his coat.
At 8:17, he stood beside the railroad tracks.
Fog drifted through the valley in ghostly waves. Snow crunched beneath his boots. The tracks stretched endlessly into darkness.
Then he heard it.
A whistle.
Long.
Low.
Mournful.
The ground trembled.
Headlights burst through the fog.
The train emerged silently at first, massive and black, its windows glowing pale yellow. Ice coated the metal sides. Steam curled upward like breath from a dying animal.
Elias stared in disbelief.
The train looked ancient.
Its cars belonged to another century.
And inside the windows—
Passengers.
Dozens of them.
Motionless figures sat beneath dim lights. Men in old-fashioned suits. Women wearing hats and long coats. Children staring blankly ahead.
None moved.
The train slowed.
Not completely.
Just enough.
One carriage door creaked open.
Warm light spilled onto the snow.
Elias should have run.
Every instinct screamed at him to run.
Instead, he stepped forward.
The inside of the carriage smelled of coal smoke and something older—wet earth, perhaps, or decay hidden beneath perfume.
The seats were filled with silent passengers.
None acknowledged him.
An elderly man held a newspaper dated January 14, 1921.
A little boy clutched a toy train against his chest.
A woman stared out the window with empty gray eyes.
Elias moved slowly down the aisle.
“Hello?”
No response.
Only the rhythmic clatter of wheels against rails.
Then he noticed something horrifying.
The passengers were not entirely solid.
Their outlines shimmered faintly, like reflections in disturbed water.
A conductor appeared at the far end of the carriage.
Tall.
Thin.
Dressed in a black uniform.
His face was unnaturally pale.
“Ticket,” he said.
His voice sounded distant, echoing strangely.
Elias swallowed hard. “I… I don’t have one.”
The conductor tilted his head.
Passengers slowly turned toward Elias in perfect unison.
Their eyes were hollow.
The conductor stepped closer.
“Then you should not be here.”
The lights flickered.
Suddenly the passengers began whispering.
Soft at first.
Then louder.
Hundreds of overlapping voices.
Cold flooded the carriage.
Elias backed away.
“What is this place?”
The conductor’s expression never changed.
“This train carries those who are lost.”
“I’m not lost.”
“Aren’t you?”
The whispers intensified.
Faces blurred around him.
Elias turned and ran toward the door, but the carriage behind him was gone.
In its place stretched an endless corridor lined with doors.
Each door bore a number.
Each number belonged to a year.
1921.
1922.
1923.
1924.
1925.
Some doors rattled violently from within.
Others stood slightly open, revealing darkness beyond.
The conductor’s footsteps echoed behind him.
“This train does not travel across places,” he said calmly. “It travels across absences.”
Elias’s pulse hammered.
“What does that even mean?”
The conductor stopped.
“It moves through the spaces left behind when people vanish. Every disappearance creates a doorway. Every forgotten soul becomes another passenger.”
“That’s impossible.”
“Yet here you are.”
One door suddenly burst open.
A woman stumbled into the corridor screaming.
Behind her stretched a snowy forest.
The door slammed shut before Elias could react.
The woman dissolved into ash.
The whispers became deafening.
Elias ran.
He did not know where he was going. The corridor twisted impossibly, stretching farther with every step. Doors blurred past him.
Then he saw one labeled:
2026
It stood slightly open.
Inside was Blackwater.
Present-day Blackwater.
Elias rushed through.
He emerged onto the train platform beside the abandoned station outside town. Snow swirled violently around him.
The train stood motionless behind him.
The conductor watched from the doorway.
“You entered willingly,” he said.
“So?”
“So now the train remembers you.”
The whistle shrieked.
The doors slammed shut.
The train disappeared into fog.
Not drove away.
Disappeared.
Like smoke carried by wind.
Elias stood trembling beside the tracks.
The silence afterward felt wrong.
Too complete.
When he finally returned home, his grandmother was waiting at the kitchen table.
Her expression changed the moment she saw him.
“You saw it,” she whispered.
Elias froze. “You knew?”
Tears filled her eyes.
“Your grandfather disappeared on that train forty years ago.”
The words struck him like ice water.
“He was investigating the same thing you are now. He thought he could stop it.”
“Why didn’t you tell me?”
“Because I didn’t want it noticing you.”
Elias sat heavily across from her.
“What is it?”
She stared at her trembling hands.
“No one knows. Some say it’s a ghost. Some say it’s a punishment. Others believe the train exists between life and death, collecting people who carry emptiness inside them.”
“That doesn’t make sense.”
“It doesn’t have to.”
Elias remembered the conductor’s words.
The train remembers you.
A cold realization crept over him.
“What happens to people it takes?”
His grandmother looked away.
“No one comes back.”
The next few days passed in uneasy silence.
Elias stopped sleeping properly. Each night he heard distant whistles echoing through his dreams. Shadows seemed to move strangely in mirrors. Once, while walking home from town, he glimpsed the conductor standing at the far end of the street before vanishing behind drifting fog.
Then came the seventh disappearance.
Sheriff Boyd.
His patrol car was found beside the tracks with the engine still running.
Inside, officers discovered a single object resting on the dashboard:
A train ticket.
Dated 1921.
Panic swept through Blackwater like wildfire. Families packed belongings. Some fled town entirely. Churches overflowed with frightened people praying for protection.
Elias knew running would solve nothing.
The train would keep coming.
And somehow, he understood it wanted something from him.
That evening he returned to the library.
Mrs. Alder looked unsurprised.
“You boarded it,” she said softly.
“Yes.”
“You shouldn’t have.”
“I need to know how to stop it.”
She hesitated before leading him downstairs into a locked basement archive.
Dust covered everything.
In the center of the room stood an enormous map of old railway lines.
Mrs. Alder pointed to Blackwater Valley.
“This line was abandoned after the 1921 disappearance. But records mention something unusual.”
“What?”
“A tunnel.”
Elias frowned. “There’s no tunnel near Blackwater.”
“There used to be. It collapsed after the storm.”
She handed him a brittle document.
According to the report, rescue workers searching for the missing train discovered strange symbols carved into the tunnel walls. Shortly afterward, the tunnel caved in, burying everything inside.
“All the workers involved disappeared within a year,” Mrs. Alder said quietly.
Elias studied the map.
The tunnel entrance lay deep in the forest beyond the frozen river.
“What if the train still passes through there?”
Mrs. Alder’s face tightened.
“Then you should stay far away from it.”
But Elias had already decided.
At dusk he packed a flashlight, rope, matches, and his grandfather’s old hunting knife. Snow fell heavily as he crossed the river and entered the woods.
The forest felt unnaturally silent.
No birds.
No wind.
Only the crunch of boots through snow.
After nearly an hour he found it.
The tunnel entrance.
Half buried beneath ice and rock.
Darkness yawned beyond like an open mouth.
Strange symbols covered the stone walls—circles intersected by jagged lines. Elias traced one carefully. The stone felt warm despite the cold.
Then came the whistle.
Closer than ever.
The ground trembled.
Light flickered deep inside the tunnel.
Elias stepped forward.
The train emerged from darkness without sound.
Impossible.
The tunnel was too narrow.
Yet the train slid through effortlessly, metal shrieking softly against stone.
The conductor stood at the front carriage.
Waiting.
“You came back,” he said.
“I’m ending this.”
The conductor almost smiled.
“No one ends the journey.”
Elias climbed aboard before fear could stop him.
This time the train looked different.
The passengers were awake.
All stared directly at him.
Among them he recognized faces from town.
Sheriff Boyd.
Ivy Holloway.
Nolan Pierce.
Their skin looked pale and translucent.
“Help them,” Elias demanded.
“They cannot be helped.”
“Why are you doing this?”
The conductor studied him carefully.
“Because they are forgotten.”
“That’s not true.”
“Every person disappears twice,” the conductor said. “First from the world. Then from memory.”
The train lurched violently.
Outside the windows the tunnel vanished, replaced by shifting landscapes.
A battlefield.
An empty city street.
A sinking ship.
A burning house.
Scenes of disappearance.
Scenes of loss.
Elias felt nauseated.
“This train feeds on absence,” the conductor continued. “The lost gather here because nowhere else remains for them.”
“You’re lying.”
“Am I?”
The passengers began whispering again.
But now Elias understood the words.
Remember me.
Remember me.
Remember me.
The whispers became desperate.
Painful.
Hundreds of voices begging not to vanish completely.
Elias looked at Ivy Holloway.
Tears streamed down her face.
“Please,” she whispered.
Something inside him broke.
These people were trapped.
Not dead.
Not alive.
Suspended.
Held together only by memory.
Then Elias noticed something near the conductor’s pocket.
A pocket watch.
Its glass was cracked.
Inside was an engraving:
EDWARD MERCER
Elias stared in shock.
“My grandfather?”
The conductor touched the watch slowly.
Once, perhaps, emotion flickered across his pale face.
“Yes.”
“What happened to him?”
“He boarded willingly. As you did.”
“You killed him.”
“No.”
The conductor’s voice softened strangely.
“He chose to stay.”
The train shook violently.
Lights flickered.
For the first time, the conductor seemed tired.
“Someone must guide the lost,” he said quietly.
Realization struck Elias with horrifying clarity.
The conductor was not a monster.
He was another prisoner.
Bound to the train.
“How long have you been here?” Elias asked.
The conductor looked away.
“I no longer remember.”
Outside the windows darkness swirled endlessly.
The passengers’ whispers grew frantic.
The train was accelerating.
“Where are we going?” Elias asked.
The conductor’s expression darkened.
“To the final station.”
Fear surged through Elias.
“What happens there?”
Silence.
Then:
“Nothing returns.”
The lights died completely.
Only moonlight illuminated the carriage.
The passengers began fading.
Their outlines dissolving like smoke.
The train screamed through darkness faster and faster.
Elias grabbed the conductor’s arm.
“There has to be a way to stop this.”
The conductor looked at him with hollow exhaustion.
“There is only replacement.”
“What?”
“One conductor leaves. Another remains.”
Elias stepped back slowly.
“No.”
“The train remembers those who enter willingly. It chooses people carrying emptiness because emptiness leaves room for the lost.”
“You mean grief.”
“Yes.”
The realization hit him like a knife.
His parents.
His loneliness.
His obsession with unanswered questions.
The train had chosen him long before he boarded.
“You can refuse,” the conductor said quietly. “But then the train continues searching.”
The passengers stared silently.
Waiting.
Elias thought of Blackwater.
Of future disappearances.
Of children vanishing beside cold tracks.
He looked again at Ivy Holloway’s terrified eyes.
And suddenly he understood what his grandfather had done.
The train could never truly stop.
But it could be guided.
Contained.
The conductor removed the pocket watch and handed it to Elias.
“Memory is the only thing keeping them alive,” he whispered. “Do not let them be forgotten.”
The whistle shrieked one final time.
The train slowed.
Ahead lay a station suspended in endless darkness.
No stars.
No sky.
Only black emptiness stretching forever.
The conductor stepped toward the open door.
Then he vanished into dust.
The passengers turned toward Elias.
Waiting.
The train fell silent.
Slowly, trembling, Elias picked up the conductor’s cap.
When he placed it on his head, cold flooded through him.
The world changed instantly.
He could hear every whisper.
Every memory.
Every vanished soul aboard the train.
Thousands of them.
Lonely.
Terrified.
Clinging to existence.
The train began moving again.
Far away, beyond darkness, Elias glimpsed Blackwater one last time.
Snow falling softly.
Lights glowing warmly in windows.
Life continuing.
Then it disappeared.
Years passed in Blackwater.
Or perhaps decades.
Time became uncertain.
The disappearances stopped completely.
People slowly forgot their fear of the tracks. New families moved into town. Children played near the old station again.
The story of the ghost train faded into legend.
Only a few elderly residents still spoke of it in hushed voices during winter nights.
Mrs. Alder remained one of them.
Every evening at exactly 8:17, she stood outside the library listening carefully.
Most nights she heard nothing.
But sometimes, when fog rolled thick through the valley and snow covered the streets in silence, a distant whistle echoed from the hills.
Long.
Low.
Mournful.
And for just a moment, through the drifting gray mist, a black train appeared beside the abandoned tracks.
Its windows glowed softly.
Passengers sat motionless inside.
And near the front carriage stood a young conductor wearing a faded black cap, watching the town with hollow, familiar eyes before vanishing once more into the dark.
Man caught in a historical event and loses his memory
Man caught in a historical event and loses his memory
The first thing Elias remembered was fire.
Not the comforting fire of hearths or lanterns, but a roaring wall of orange that swallowed the sky itself. Smoke curled over shattered rooftops. Bells screamed somewhere in the distance. Men shouted in a language he almost understood. Horses thundered through narrow streets slick with mud and blood.
And then—
Nothing.
Elias opened his eyes beneath a collapsed stone archway. Rain dripped through cracks above him, cold against his face. Every bone in his body ached. He tried to sit up and nearly blacked out from the pain slicing through his skull.
“Easy there,” a voice said.
A young woman crouched beside him, wrapped in a dark wool cloak soaked by rain. Her hair clung to her cheeks, and soot streaked her forehead.
“You’re alive,” she whispered, sounding surprised.
Elias stared at her blankly.
“Can you stand?”
He opened his mouth.
No answer came.
Not because he was weak.
Because he did not know who he was.
________________________________________
The woman’s name was Clara Weiss. She dragged him through the ruins of the city before dawn fully broke. Around them, buildings smoldered like dying giants. Church towers leaned at impossible angles. Dead soldiers lay where they had fallen, uniforms blackened by ash.
“Don’t look,” Clara muttered.
But Elias looked anyway.
He saw a child’s shoe beside a burned cart.
A shattered violin in the gutter.
A hand protruding from rubble.
His chest tightened with a grief he could not explain.
“What happened here?” he asked.
Clara glanced at him sharply. “You truly don’t remember?”
He shook his head.
She hesitated before answering.
“The city fell three days ago.”
“Which city?”
“Dresden.”
The name meant nothing and everything at once. It echoed inside his skull like a bell struck underwater.
Clara led him through twisting alleys toward a basement hidden beneath a ruined bakery. Inside, half a dozen people huddled around candles: old men, frightened mothers, two injured soldiers, and a boy no older than ten clutching a wooden toy horse.
When Elias entered, every face turned toward him.
“Who is he?” one of the soldiers demanded.
“Found him near the Frauenkirche,” Clara replied. “Barely breathing.”
“German?”
“I don’t know.”
The soldier narrowed his eyes. “Could be British. Or Russian.”
“I’m not Russian,” Elias said instinctively.
The room went silent.
“How do you know?” the soldier asked.
Elias opened his mouth again.
Nothing.
Because he didn’t know that either.
________________________________________
The headaches began on the second day.
Sharp flashes struck without warning.
A train station drowned in snow.
A pocket watch ticking loudly.
A man in spectacles shouting, “You must destroy the documents!”
Then screaming.
Always screaming.
Elias would clutch his temples until the visions faded.
Clara watched him carefully.
“You were someone important,” she said one evening.
“How can you tell?”
“You speak differently. Educated. Not local.” She paused. “And you have these.”
She handed him a pair of objects she had found in his coat pocket.
A silver lighter engraved with the initials E.M.
And a photograph.
The image showed Elias standing beside another man in military uniform. Behind them flew a red banner marked with a black swastika.
Elias stared at it in horror.
“No…”
“You know them?” Clara asked quietly.
“I don’t know.”
But his hands trembled.
He turned the photograph over.
February 1945.
Three weeks ago.
________________________________________
Outside, the war was collapsing.
Rumors spread through the ruined city like disease. The Russians were advancing from the east. Hitler remained in Berlin, raving to generals while Germany crumbled around him. Refugees flooded every road.
The people hiding in the bakery basement spoke in whispers about survival.
But Elias became obsessed with one question.
Who was he?
At night he searched his fractured mind like a man wandering a ruined library. Pieces surfaced without warning.
A laboratory.
Rows of files.
A woman crying.
The smell of disinfectant.
And one phrase repeated again and again:
Operation Eisenherz.
He had no idea what it meant.
Yet the words filled him with dread.
________________________________________
On the fifth night, soldiers arrived.
Boots thundered overhead.
“Search everywhere!”
The people in the basement froze.
Clara extinguished the candles.
Darkness swallowed them whole.
The hidden door burst open.
Flashlights stabbed through the blackness.
Two German officers descended with rifles raised.
“Identity papers!” one barked.
The refugees scrambled to obey.
Elias had none.
The officer seized him by the collar. “Name?”
“I… don’t know.”
The soldier sneered. “Convenient.”
Then his flashlight landed on Elias’s face.
The man went pale.
“You.”
The room stiffened.
“You’re dead,” the officer whispered.
Elias stared blankly.
The officer stepped backward in fear.
“Colonel Müller said you died during the bombing.”
The name struck Elias like lightning.
Müller.
A flood of images exploded behind his eyes.
A bunker beneath Berlin.
Stacks of papers.
Scientific formulas.
Children behind glass walls.
And Colonel Otto Müller smiling coldly.
“You belong to history now,” Müller had said.
Elias collapsed to his knees, gasping.
The officer raised his rifle immediately.
“Get up!”
Clara moved before anyone could react.
She smashed a bottle across the officer’s head.
Chaos erupted.
The second soldier fired wildly. Bullets shattered shelves. Refugees screamed.
Elias lunged instinctively, tackling the soldier into the wall. The rifle discharged into the ceiling. Dust rained down.
The boy with the toy horse bit the soldier’s arm.
The room became a frenzy of fists, smoke, and panic.
Finally, silence.
The soldiers lay unconscious.
Everyone stared at Elias.
He stared at his own hands.
He had moved like a trained fighter.
Without thinking.
Without hesitation.
And somehow that terrified him more than anything else.
________________________________________
They fled Dresden before dawn.
Clara insisted they head west.
“If the Russians find us, we’re dead.”
“What if the Germans find me first?” Elias muttered.
They traveled through forests and abandoned villages, avoiding roads whenever possible. Everywhere the war’s corpse rotted in plain sight: burned tanks, frozen bodies, starving civilians wandering like ghosts.
One afternoon they found a church filled with refugees.
An old priest offered them soup.
When Elias removed his coat, the priest noticed a tattoo on his wrist.
Not a concentration camp number.
A symbol.
A black iron eagle enclosed in a circle.
The priest recoiled.
“Where did you get that?”
Elias looked down in confusion. “I don’t know.”
The priest crossed himself.
“You should leave.”
________________________________________
That night Clara confronted him beside a dying fire.
“What aren’t you telling me?”
“I’ve told you everything.”
“No,” she snapped. “You’ve told me nothing.”
He stared into the flames.
“I think I worked for the Nazis.”
“You think?”
“I don’t remember clearly.”
“But you remember enough.”
Elias said nothing.
Clara’s expression softened slightly.
“My father disappeared two years ago,” she said quietly. “The Gestapo took him. No trial. No explanation.”
“I’m sorry.”
“You might have been one of them.”
The words hung between them.
Painfully true.
Finally Elias whispered, “Then why help me?”
Clara looked away.
“Because when I found you… you looked terrified.”
________________________________________
Three days later they reached Leipzig.
Or what remained of it.
The city crawled with soldiers and refugees. Allied planes droned overhead daily. Hunger ruled every street.
While Clara searched for food in the market, Elias wandered through a bombed library.
Something drew him there.
Among collapsed shelves and ash-covered books, he discovered a hidden office in the basement.
The moment he stepped inside, memory detonated.
He remembered everything.
Not all at once.
But enough.
His name was Dr. Elias Morgen.
A physicist.
Recruited by the Nazi regime in 1942.
At first he believed he was serving Germany’s future. Scientific advancement. National recovery.
Then he learned the truth.
Operation Eisenherz was not a weapon.
It was human experimentation.
Memory manipulation.
Psychological conditioning.
The regime wanted soldiers incapable of fear, guilt, or disobedience.
Elias had helped build the technology.
The realization crushed him.
He staggered against a desk, horrified.
Folders lay scattered nearby, half-burned but readable.
His own handwriting covered the pages.
SUBJECTS SHOW RAPID PERSONALITY FRACTURE.
LONG-TERM MEMORY INSTABILITY OBSERVED.
FURTHER TESTING REQUIRED.
“Oh God…”
Another memory surfaced.
He had tried to destroy the research.
Colonel Müller caught him.
There had been gunfire.
Then the bombing of Dresden.
Then darkness.
Elias fell to the floor shaking violently.
He remembered the children.
The prisoners.
The screams.
He remembered signing papers that condemned people to death.
And worst of all—
He remembered believing it was necessary.
________________________________________
When Clara found him hours later, he sat motionless in the dust.
“I know who I am,” he said.
She froze.
“And?”
“I should have died in Dresden.”
He handed her the documents.
As she read, her face drained of color.
“You did this?”
“Yes.”
“How many people?”
“I don’t know.”
Clara looked physically ill.
Elias could barely breathe.
“I tried to stop it,” he whispered.
“But not before helping create it.”
Silence stretched between them.
Then Clara asked the question he feared most.
“Did my father die because of men like you?”
Elias lowered his head.
“Yes.”
Clara slapped him hard across the face.
Neither spoke afterward.
________________________________________
That night Elias considered suicide.
He found an abandoned pistol inside the library ruins and sat alone beneath the moon.
One bullet.
That was all it would take.
Perhaps it was justice.
Perhaps men like him did not deserve redemption.
But as he raised the gun, he heard footsteps.
Clara approached slowly.
“You’re a coward if you do it this way,” she said.
Elias laughed bitterly. “You think I deserve better?”
“No.”
“Then why stop me?”
“Because dead men escape consequences.”
The words hit harder than the slap.
Clara sat beside him.
“You can still do something worthwhile.”
“How?”
She held up the stolen documents.
“Expose this.”
“The war is nearly over.”
“Then let the world see what happened before everyone starts pretending they knew nothing.”
Elias stared at her.
For the first time since regaining his memory, he felt something beyond horror.
Purpose.
________________________________________
They traveled toward the approaching American lines.
The journey became increasingly dangerous. Retreating German units roamed the countryside in desperation, executing deserters and suspected traitors.
Elias knew Müller would come for him eventually.
And he was right.
It happened near a railway bridge at dusk.
A black staff car emerged from the fog.
Colonel Otto Müller stepped out wearing a pristine leather coat untouched by war.
He smiled upon seeing Elias.
“Doctor Morgen,” he said calmly. “You survived.”
Clara gripped a stolen pistol beneath her coat.
Müller noticed immediately.
“Careful, Fräulein. My men are excellent shots.”
Armed soldiers emerged around them.
Elias felt cold terror settle in his stomach.
Müller approached slowly.
“You caused considerable inconvenience,” the colonel said. “Destroying government property. Attempting treason.”
“You murdered innocent people.”
Müller chuckled softly.
“You still misunderstand history.”
“History?”
“Germany was chosen to reshape humanity itself.” Müller’s eyes gleamed fanatically. “Weakness. Fear. Memory. All flaws to be corrected.”
“You tortured children.”
“For progress.”
Clara spat at his feet.
Müller sighed. “Civilians are always emotional.”
Elias stepped forward.
“The war is over.”
“No,” Müller replied. “Wars never end. They merely change uniforms.”
For a moment the distant thunder of artillery echoed across the countryside.
The Allies were close.
Müller’s smile faded.
“You should have stayed dead, Doctor.”
He drew his pistol.
But Clara fired first.
The shot struck Müller in the shoulder.
Chaos exploded instantly.
Gunfire erupted across the bridge.
Elias tackled Clara behind a concrete barrier as bullets sparked overhead.
One of Müller’s men fell screaming into the river below.
Another collapsed beside the car.
Smoke filled the air.
Elias saw Müller staggering toward the opposite end of the bridge, clutching his bleeding shoulder.
Without thinking, Elias pursued him.
They collided near the center.
Müller smashed the pistol across Elias’s jaw, sending him sprawling.
“You weak fool!” Müller snarled. “Do you think history remembers morality?”
Elias lunged again.
The two men crashed against the bridge railing.
Below them, dark water churned violently.
Müller’s face twisted with rage.
“You could have changed the world!”
“No,” Elias gasped. “Men like you destroy it.”
Müller reached for a knife.
Elias grabbed his wrist desperately.
The colonel slipped on rain-soaked steel.
For one suspended moment, their eyes locked.
Then Müller fell backward into the river.
Gone instantly.
Swallowed by darkness.
________________________________________
American soldiers found Elias and Clara the following morning.
The war in Europe ended two weeks later.
Germany surrendered.
Celebrations erupted across cities and nations.
But Elias felt no victory.
Only weight.
The documents from Operation Eisenherz were handed over to Allied investigators. Trials followed. Hidden facilities were uncovered. Survivors testified.
The newspapers called it one of the regime’s secret atrocities.
Elias was interrogated for months.
Some officials argued he should be executed.
Others believed his cooperation justified leniency.
In the end, he was imprisoned rather than hanged.
A mercy he often felt he did not deserve.
________________________________________
Years passed.
The world rebuilt itself atop ruins.
Cities rose again.
People married, worked, laughed.
Children grew up never hearing bombs.
But history never truly disappeared.
It lived in scars.
In silence.
In memory.
Elias spent twelve years in prison before his release in 1958.
By then he was an old man in spirit if not body.
One autumn afternoon he visited Dresden for the first time since the bombing.
The city had changed. New buildings stood where ashes once drifted through broken streets.
Near the reconstructed church square, he found Clara sitting on a bench feeding pigeons.
She looked older, sterner.
But unmistakably herself.
“You came,” Elias said softly.
“You wrote every year,” she replied.
“I wasn’t sure you’d answer.”
“I almost didn’t.”
He sat beside her.
For a while neither spoke.
Finally Clara asked, “Do you still forget things?”
Sometimes he did.
The injury from Dresden had left permanent damage. Names slipped away occasionally. Dates blurred.
But certain memories remained painfully sharp.
“No,” he said quietly. “Not the important things.”
Clara nodded.
Children laughed nearby.
A tram rattled through the square.
Life moved forward, indifferent to the dead.
“You know,” Clara said, “for a long time I hated you.”
“You had every right.”
“I hated that you survived when better people didn’t.”
Elias lowered his gaze.
“But then I realized something.”
She turned toward him.
“History is full of monsters who never regretted anything.”
Elias swallowed hard.
“And you did.”
The words struck deeper than forgiveness.
Because they were not forgiveness.
They were simply truth.
The evening sun dipped across the rebuilt city, casting long shadows over stone and glass.
Elias watched people passing through the square, ordinary lives unfolding around him.
For years he had believed memory was punishment.
But now he understood something else.
Memory was responsibility.
To remember was to carry the dead forward.
To refuse the comfort of forgetting.
He thought of the burning city.
Of the basement refugees.
Of children behind laboratory glass.
Of a frightened man awakening beneath ruins with no name and no past.
Perhaps losing his memory had saved him.
But regaining it had made him human again.
And that, he realized, was far more painful.
Yet necessary.
Because history did not vanish when ignored.
It waited.
Patiently.
Inside the people who survived it.
A woman divorced
A woman divorced
- Person is forgetful and various events take place in life
- But he is fibbing all along
- When Meera signed the divorce papers, the ceiling fan above the lawyer’s desk made a dry clicking sound every few seconds. She remembered that sound more vividly than the words on the documents. Seven years of marriage ended with two signatures, a stale cup of tea, and a silence that sat heavily between her and her former husband.
- Neither of them cried.
- That hurt the most.
- Outside the courthouse, Delhi moved as it always did—rickshaws weaving through traffic, vendors shouting over one another, buses coughing smoke into the humid afternoon. The world had not paused for her disaster. People still bargained for mangoes. Schoolchildren still laughed. Men still argued over cricket scores.
- Meera stood on the pavement holding a brown envelope that carried the remains of her married life.
- Thirty-eight years old. Divorced. No children. No savings worth mentioning. A career interrupted halfway because her husband had once said, “Why do you need to work so hard? I earn enough for both of us.”
- At the time, she had mistaken control for love.
- By evening, she found herself in a one-room rented apartment above a tailoring shop in Laxmi Nagar. The room smelled faintly of detergent and damp walls. A single window opened toward another building so close she could almost touch it. There was a narrow bed, a gas stove balanced on a plastic stool, and a cracked mirror nailed crookedly beside the bathroom door.
- “This is temporary,” she whispered to herself.
- But temporary things often become permanent when life loses direction.
- The first few weeks after the divorce blurred together. She woke late, skipped meals, and spent hours staring at her phone. Friends who once called every day now spoke cautiously, as if divorce were contagious.
- Some offered sympathy loaded with judgment.
- “You should have adjusted more.”
- “Men are like that only.”
- “At this age, starting over is difficult.”
- One aunt even said, “At least you don’t have children. Less burden.”
- Meera smiled politely during these conversations and then cried afterward, not because the words were cruel, but because a part of her feared they were true.
- At night, loneliness became physical. It crawled into the room with the mosquitoes and settled beside her on the bed. She missed ordinary things: hearing another person move around the house, arguing over television channels, someone asking whether she had eaten.
- Even pain can become familiar enough to miss.
- Her ex-husband, Rohan, had not been violent. That complicated everything. If he had hit her, people would have understood. But emotional erosion leaves no bruises. Over the years, he had reduced her confidence piece by piece.
- He criticized her clothes.
- Her laugh.
- Her opinions.
- Her weight.
- Her ambitions.
- Eventually, she stopped recognizing herself.
- By the end of the marriage, she asked permission for things she once did freely—meeting friends, buying books, visiting her parents. When she finally confronted him about his affair with a colleague, he sighed as though she were inconveniencing him.
- “You make everything heavy,” he had said.
- That sentence stayed inside her like a splinter.
- Three months after the divorce, Meera ran out of money.
- The small amount she had received in settlement disappeared quickly into rent, groceries, and old medical bills. She searched for jobs online but felt humiliated each time she updated her résumé. There was a nine-year gap in employment.
- Interviewers noticed immediately.
- One young recruiter glanced at her CV and asked, “So what exactly were you doing all these years?”
- Being diminished, Meera wanted to say.
- Instead she replied, “Managing family responsibilities.”
- The recruiter nodded with fake professionalism and never called back.
- Another company offered her half the salary of fresh graduates.
- One interviewer looked at her ringless hand and asked casually, “Your husband is okay with late working hours?”
- She stared at him for several seconds before answering, “My husband is no longer relevant.”
- Still, rejection piled up.
- One evening, after another failed interview, Meera sat near the Yamuna river watching dirty water drift beneath the bridge. Her phone battery had died. She had skipped lunch to save money. The city lights blurred through her tears.
- For the first time, she understood how people disappear into depression slowly, almost politely.
- No dramatic collapse.
- Just exhaustion.
- A quiet surrender.
- That night she returned home and noticed water dripping from the ceiling into a steel bowl she had placed under the leak days earlier. Plink. Plink. Plink.
- She suddenly began laughing uncontrollably.
- Her life had become absurd.
- A leaking room. An empty fridge. Forty missed calls from relatives during festival season asking why she never visited anymore. Anxiety attacks before interviews. Sleepless nights.
- She laughed until she started crying.
- Then she sat on the floor and whispered, “I cannot live like this anymore.”
- The next morning, she cleaned the room thoroughly for the first time in months.
- She washed the curtains.
- Folded clothes.
- Opened the windows.
- Threw away expired medicines and old photographs from her marriage.
- It was not transformation. It was survival.
- But survival is where recovery begins.
- A week later, she saw a handwritten sign outside a neighborhood coaching center:
- ENGLISH TEACHER REQUIRED.
- She almost kept walking.
- Then something inside her stopped.
- Before marriage, Meera had taught literature at a private school. She used to love discussing poetry with teenagers who pretended not to care. She remembered staying after class debating novels with students.
- Back then, her voice had carried confidence.
- She entered the coaching center.
- The owner, a middle-aged woman named Farzana, adjusted her glasses and asked a few questions. Unlike others, she did not focus on the employment gap.
- “Can you teach?” she asked simply.
- “Yes,” Meera replied.
- Farzana studied her face carefully. “Can you handle difficult students?”
- Meera thought about her marriage and almost smiled.
- “Yes.”
- The salary was modest, but she accepted immediately.
- Her first class consisted of twelve restless teenagers preparing for board exams. They looked bored before she even began. One boy slept openly on the last bench.
- Meera’s hands trembled slightly as she wrote on the board.
- She had forgotten how to stand in front of people.
- Forgotten how to trust her own voice.
- But then she started discussing a poem about resilience, and something unexpected happened.
- The students listened.
- Not perfectly. Not magically. But enough.
- When class ended, a girl lingered behind.
- “Ma’am,” she said shyly, “the way you explained the poem… it made sense for the first time.”
- Meera walked home that evening with a strange feeling in her chest.
- Pride.
- Tiny. Fragile. But alive.
- Months passed.
- Her life remained messy.
- Recovery did not arrive as a cinematic montage with uplifting music.
- There were setbacks.
- Days when she could not get out of bed.
- Moments when seeing couples in restaurants made her chest ache.
- Occasional drunken late-night calls from Rohan saying things like, “You know I never wanted things to end this way.”
- Once, after hearing he had remarried, she spent an entire weekend crying under a blanket.
- Healing is not linear. It circles back on old wounds repeatedly.
- But slowly, routines formed.
- Morning tea by the window.
- Classes at the coaching center.
- Evening walks through crowded markets.
- Phone calls with her mother that no longer ended in pity.
- She began saving small amounts of money.
- Bought a secondhand bookshelf.
- Started reading again.
- Then writing.
- At first, it was random thoughts in a notebook.
- Anger.
- Memories.
- Questions.
- Eventually, she began writing short essays about marriage, loneliness, and starting over as a woman nearing forty. She posted them anonymously online.
- People responded.
- Hundreds of women wrote comments saying:
- “This feels like my life.”
- “I thought I was alone.”
- “You wrote what I could never say.”
- One message came from a woman in Pune:
- “I read your post while hiding in the bathroom because my husband mocks everything I do. Thank you for making me feel seen.”
- Meera stared at that message for a long time.
- Pain, she realized, could either poison a person or deepen them.
- For years, she had believed her brokenness made her weak.
- Now she wondered whether surviving had made her stronger than she understood.
- One winter afternoon, Farzana invited her for tea after work.
- “You’ve changed,” Farzana observed.
- Meera laughed softly. “I still cry in supermarkets sometimes.”
- “That’s not what I mean.”
- Farzana stirred sugar into her tea. “When you first came here, you looked like someone apologizing for existing. Now you walk differently.”
- The comment unsettled Meera because it was true.
- She no longer lowered her voice automatically.
- No longer panicked before expressing disagreement.
- No longer waited for permission to occupy space.
- It felt unfamiliar and wonderful.
- Still, society remained difficult.
- At weddings, distant relatives asked intrusive questions.
- “So… any plans to marry again?”
- “Don’t you feel lonely?”
- “Women need companionship.”
- One man introduced his widowed cousin to her during a family function as though arranging discounted furniture.
- Meera endured these encounters with increasing calm.
- Earlier, such comments shattered her confidence. Now they merely irritated her.
- One evening, her younger cousin Neha visited unexpectedly after a fight with her fiancé.
- “He says I’m too ambitious,” Neha confessed tearfully.
- Meera looked at the girl—twenty-six, intelligent, hopeful—and saw a younger version of herself.
- “What will happen if I don’t compromise?” Neha asked.
- Meera answered carefully.
- “Compromise is necessary in relationships. Disappearing is not.”
- The words surprised even her.
- By the second year after her divorce, Meera had moved into a slightly larger apartment with two windows and enough sunlight to grow plants. She bought yellow curtains because Rohan used to hate bright colors.
- That small act felt revolutionary.
- Her online writing gained attention. A digital magazine published one of her essays under her real name. Then another publication contacted her.
- Soon she was writing regularly about women rebuilding life after emotional trauma.
- Not inspirational nonsense.
- Not “strong woman” clichés.
- Real things.
- The shame of moving back with parents temporarily.
- The humiliation of financial dependence.
- The loneliness of festivals after separation.
- The complicated grief of missing someone who hurt you.
- Readers connected deeply with her honesty.
- One Saturday, she was invited to speak at a women’s support group. Meera almost declined out of fear. Public speaking terrified her.
- But she went.
- The room contained around thirty women of different ages—some divorced, some separated, some quietly unhappy in marriages they had not yet escaped.
- Meera spoke without notes.
- She told them recovery was ugly.
- That healing involved unpaid bills and crying while washing dishes.
- That freedom sometimes felt terrifying before it felt beautiful.
- A woman in the audience began crying silently.
- Another nodded continuously.
- After the session, several women hugged her.
- One whispered, “You gave me courage.”
- Meera traveled home in an auto-rickshaw feeling overwhelmed.
- Not proud exactly.
- Responsible.
- Words mattered.
- Truth mattered.
- For years, she had hidden her suffering because society preferred silent women. Now her honesty helped others survive.
- That realization changed her relationship with her past.
- She stopped viewing the divorce as proof of failure.
- Instead, she saw it as evidence that she had finally refused to abandon herself completely.
- One rainy night, nearly three years after leaving her marriage, Rohan called again.
- “I was thinking about you,” he said.
- Meera leaned against the kitchen counter listening to rain hit the windows.
- “How are you?” he asked.
- The question felt strange coming from him.
- “I’m good,” she replied honestly.
- There was a pause.
- Then he said quietly, “You sound different.”
- “I am different.”
- Another silence.
- “I made mistakes,” he admitted.
- Years earlier, Meera had longed desperately to hear those words. She imagined they would heal something inside her.
- But now, standing barefoot in her small apartment filled with books, plants, and unfinished writing drafts, she felt unexpectedly calm.
- “I know,” she said.
- He waited, perhaps expecting anger or reconciliation.
- Instead she asked, “Why are you calling, Rohan?”
- “I don’t know,” he confessed.
- Maybe he was lonely.
- Maybe guilt had arrived late.
- Maybe he missed the version of himself reflected through her old devotion.
- But Meera understood something crucial in that moment:
- Closure rarely comes from the people who hurt us.
- It comes from rebuilding life so fully that their absence no longer defines it.
- “I hope you’re okay,” she said gently.
- Then she ended the call.
- Afterward, she stood by the window watching rainwater race down the glass. Her heart hurt a little, but not in the old catastrophic way.
- More like an old fracture aching during cold weather.
- Manageable.
- Human.
- She made herself tea and returned to writing an article due the next morning.
- The article began with a sentence she had once been afraid to believe:
- A broken life is not the end of a life.
- Years later, when people met Meera, they often described her as composed. Wise, even. They saw the published essays, the stable career, the confidence with which she spoke during workshops.
- What they did not see was the history beneath that calm.
- The nights she slept hungry to save rent money.
- The panic attacks in public bathrooms.
- The shame of borrowing money.
- The afternoons spent staring at walls because grief exhausted her body.
- Recovery had not erased those experiences.
- It had integrated them.
- She still had lonely days. Still doubted herself occasionally. Sometimes she wondered what life might have been if her marriage had survived.
- But she no longer romanticized suffering.
- Nor did she measure her worth through another person’s approval.
- One Sunday morning, Meera visited a bookstore café carrying her laptop and notebooks. Sunlight spilled across the tables. Nearby, college students argued loudly about politics.
- She ordered coffee and opened her manuscript.
- It was a collection of essays she had been writing for nearly two years.
- A book.
- The thought still startled her.
- As she edited a paragraph, her phone buzzed with a message from one of her former students:
- “Ma’am, I got into university! Thank you for believing in me.”
- Meera smiled.
- Outside the café window, the city moved restlessly as always. Cars honked. Street vendors shouted. Life continued in all its noisy imperfection.
- Once, she had stood outside a courthouse believing everything was over.
- Now she understood endings differently.
- Some endings arrive not to destroy us, but to return us to ourselves.
- Her life remained imperfect.
- The sink leaked occasionally.
- Deadlines stressed her.
- She still forgot to pay electricity bills on time.
- Some scars never disappeared completely.
- But the woman who once laughed and cried beside a leaking ceiling no longer existed in the same way.
- In her place stood someone softer and stronger at once.
- Someone who had learned that survival could become transformation.
- Someone who finally understood that recovery is not about becoming untouched again.
- It is about learning to live fully with the marks life leaves behind.
- Meera closed her laptop and looked around the café.
- For the first time in many years, her future did not feel like a punishment.
- It felt open.
An Unusual Picnic
An Unusual Picnic
The college picnic to Riverside Hill was supposed to be the most ordinary event of the semester. Forty students, three professors, loud music, cricket bats, packets of chips, and endless selfies — nothing unusual at all.
At least, that was what everyone believed when the bus left the campus at seven in the morning.
Among the students was Aarav, a quiet second-year literature student who preferred books over people. While his classmates sang Bollywood songs at the top of their voices, he sat by the window watching the mist-covered roads disappear behind them.
By noon, the group reached Riverside Hill, a beautiful place surrounded by dense trees and a slow-moving river. The students scattered immediately. Some began cooking noodles near the buses, some played badminton, while others climbed rocks near the riverbank.
Everything was cheerful until Riya screamed.
Everyone rushed toward her. She stood near a giant banyan tree pointing at something buried in the mud.
It was an old wooden box.
Naturally, curiosity defeated caution. Four boys dragged the box out with great difficulty. It looked ancient, with rusty metal corners and strange carvings on the lid.
“Treasure!” someone shouted jokingly.
Professor Mehta laughed. “Probably garbage from some villagers.”
But when Aarav brushed away the mud, he noticed something strange carved into the wood:
DO NOT OPEN AFTER SUNSET
The laughter stopped for a second.
Then everyone laughed even louder.
By evening, the sky turned orange. The students gathered around the box, daring each other to open it. Some girls looked nervous, but excitement spread quickly.
“Come on,” said Kabir, the class prankster. “What’s the worst that could happen?”
Without waiting, he forced the lock open with a stone.
The lid creaked slowly.
Inside the box lay nothing except an old mirror.
A small, dusty mirror.
“That’s it?” everyone groaned.
Disappointed, students began walking away. Kabir picked up the mirror dramatically and looked into it.
Then his smile vanished.
“What happened?” Riya asked.
Kabir did not answer.
He kept staring at the mirror as if hypnotized.
Suddenly, he whispered, “Someone’s standing behind me.”
But there was nobody there.
Before anyone could react, the mirror slipped from his hands and shattered on the ground.
The air changed instantly.
The cheerful sounds of birds disappeared. Even the wind became strangely still.
One by one, the students noticed something terrifying.
Their reflections had vanished.
Not only from phones and sunglasses — even the river showed no reflection.
Panic spread like wildfire.
Some students cried. Others accused Kabir of playing tricks. Professor Mehta tried calming everyone, but his own hands trembled when he looked into his watch glass and saw nothing staring back.
As darkness approached, the buses refused to start.
The drivers tried repeatedly, but the engines died every time.
Then came the whispers.
Soft voices floated through the trees.
At first they sounded like wind, but gradually the students realized the voices were speaking their names.
One by one.
Aarav noticed something horrifying: every time someone followed the voice into the trees, they returned quieter… stranger… almost emotionless.
Like empty shells.
Riya clutched Aarav’s arm. “Something is wrong with them.”
Aarav remembered the warning on the box.
DO NOT OPEN AFTER SUNSET.
“It wants reflections,” he whispered.
Nobody understood him.
But Aarav had an idea.
He collected every shard of the broken mirror and placed them back into the wooden box. Then he shut the lid tightly.
Nothing happened.
The whispers grew louder.
The trees seemed to move closer.
Desperate, Aarav picked up a stone and smashed the box completely.
The moment the final piece broke, a freezing wind burst through the hilltop. Students fell to the ground. The whispers became screams.
Then silence.
Complete silence.
Slowly, the river began reflecting moonlight again.
One by one, reflections returned.
The buses started normally.
Nobody spoke during the journey back to college.
The next morning, the picnic photographs were shared in the class group.
But every single picture taken after sunset showed the same terrifying detail.
Behind the students stood a shadowy figure with hollow eyes.
Watching them.
In every photograph.
-
Demons lurking in the mind of an insane man in Mumbai
Demons lurking in the mind of an insane man in Mumbai
The ceiling fan clicked like a metronome counting down to some private apocalypse.
Raghav Deshmukh lay awake beneath it, staring at the water stains spreading across the ceiling of his one-room apartment in central Mumbai. Midnight rain hammered the tin shade outside his window. Somewhere below, taxis hissed through flooded streets, and the city breathed in damp, restless gasps.
He had not slept properly in eleven days.
The doctors at the municipal hospital had given his condition names that sounded clinical and harmless—acute paranoia, dissociative episodes, auditory hallucinations. Words folded neatly into files. But the things inside his mind were not neat. They were alive.
They waited in silence.
Then they spoke.
“You left the door open again,” whispered a voice from the corner.
Raghav’s eyes jerked toward the darkness beside the cupboard.
Nothing.
Still, his chest tightened.
“You want them to come in?”
He sat up slowly, sweat cooling on his neck. The room smelled of mildew, stale cigarettes, and fear. The bulb above him flickered weakly. He scanned every inch of the apartment: rusted sink, overturned newspapers, steel plate on the floor, framed photograph face-down near the wall.
No one there.
But the voice was familiar.
It belonged to his father.
Dead for six years.
Raghav pressed his palms against his ears.
“You are not real,” he muttered.
The fan clicked.
Click.
Click.
Click.
Then another voice answered from beneath the bed.
“We are as real as you.”
He backed against the wall instantly. The bedsheet trembled. His breathing became shallow and rapid. He knew there was nothing under there. He had checked dozens of times. Yet his mind painted shapes in the darkness—thin limbs folded backward, teeth glinting wetly, eyes opening one by one.
A laugh crawled across the room.
Not loud.
Not human.
The laughter always began softly, like distant radio static. Then it spread through the walls until every object seemed infected by it. The sink vibrated with it. The fan clicked in rhythm with it. Even the rain outside appeared to mock him.
Raghav squeezed his eyes shut.
He remembered another rain.
Another night.
Another scream.
The year was 1994. He had been twenty-four then, working as a junior accountant in a shipping office near the docks. He still wore ironed shirts, still believed in futures, promotions, marriage. His younger brother Nikhil had idolized him.
And then Nikhil died.
A local train accident, they said.
Slipped while boarding during rush hour.
Thousands die in Mumbai that way.
Routine tragedy.
But Raghav knew it wasn’t an accident.
Or at least his mind had decided it wasn’t.
The guilt arrived first.
Then suspicion.
Then voices.
He became convinced he had killed his brother indirectly by refusing him money the day before the accident. Nikhil had begged for help. Raghav had shouted at him instead.
The next morning, the train crushed him.
From that day onward, the demons entered.
At first they appeared only in reflections.
Mirrors became dangerous objects. Raghav would catch movements half a second too late—faces standing behind him that vanished when he turned around. A woman with hollow eyes. A child missing half his jaw. Nikhil, soaked in rainwater and blood, staring silently from mirrors in barber shops and public toilets.
Then the whispers began.
“You pushed him.”
“You wanted him gone.”
“He died because of you.”
The voices multiplied over the years until they developed personalities of their own.
There was Father.
Cruel. Judgmental. Always disappointed.
There was the Woman.
Soft-spoken. Seductive. She promised relief if he surrendered completely.
And there was the Boy.
The worst of them all.
The Boy never shouted.
He giggled.
Tonight, the Boy emerged again.
Raghav heard tiny footsteps padding across the room.
Tap.
Tap.
Tap.
He looked down slowly.
Wet footprints.
Child-sized.
Leading from the bathroom to his bed.
“No,” he whispered.
The bathroom door creaked open on its own.
Inside, darkness pooled like black water.
Then came the giggle.
Raghav scrambled backward until he struck the wall. His nails clawed at peeling paint. He wanted to run outside into the crowded streets, into the noise of people and traffic and life. But every time he stepped outside lately, the city itself seemed possessed.
Faces watched him too long.
Conversations stopped when he passed.
Street dogs growled at empty air around him.
The demons traveled with him now.
The giggle echoed again.
“Come see,” said the Boy.
The bathroom tap began dripping.
Red.
Drip.
Drip.
Drip.
Raghav squeezed his eyes shut.
Not real.
Not real.
Not real.
But his mind betrayed him with brutal precision. He could smell iron. Could hear water thickening into blood. Could imagine tiny fingers curling around the bathroom doorframe.
When he finally forced himself to look, a small figure stood there.
Nikhil.
Eight years old instead of twenty-two.
Wearing the yellow raincoat he had owned as a child.
His head bent at an impossible angle.
“You forgot me,” the child said.
Raghav screamed.
The bulb exploded overhead.
Darkness swallowed the room.
Outside, thunder rolled over Mumbai like a collapsing mountain.
And in the darkness, the demons gathered close.
—
Morning arrived reluctantly.
Raghav woke on the floor beside the bed, cheek pressed against cold tiles. Sunlight leaked through the cracked window. The apartment looked ordinary again.
No footprints.
No blood.
No child.
Only exhaustion.
He lit a cigarette with trembling fingers and inhaled deeply. Smoke steadied him for a moment.
Across the street, vegetable vendors shouted prices. Local trains thundered in the distance. The city moved forward with merciless indifference.
He envied that.
By noon he forced himself outside. The psychiatrist had insisted he continue walking among people instead of isolating himself. “Routine is essential,” the doctor had said.
Routine.
As if madness could be disciplined like a stray dog.
Raghav wandered through the crowded lanes near Crawford Market. Humidity pressed against his skin. Human bodies brushed past him endlessly—office workers, schoolchildren, laborers, tourists. The chaos usually helped drown the voices.
Today it amplified them.
“That man knows.”
“Look at her staring.”
“They can smell your guilt.”
Raghav’s pulse accelerated.
A policeman glanced casually in his direction.
Immediately Father’s voice hissed:
“He’s here for you.”
Raghav turned away sharply.
Every sound became threatening. Vendors arguing sounded like conspiracies. Laughing teenagers sounded demonic. Even pigeons bursting into flight startled him.
Then he saw the Boy again.
Standing near a paan stall.
Yellow raincoat.
Head tilted.
Watching.
People walked directly through him without noticing.
The Boy smiled.
“Come.”
Raghav followed before realizing he was doing it.
The figure moved effortlessly through crowded alleys, always remaining visible just ahead. Raghav pushed through pedestrians, sweat pouring down his back. His breathing became ragged.
Finally the Boy stopped beside the entrance to an abandoned textile warehouse near the docks.
The building had been closed for years.
Broken windows.
Rusting shutters.
Darkness inside.
The Boy pointed toward the entrance.
Then vanished.
Raghav froze.
Every instinct screamed at him to leave.
But another force pulled him forward—the terrible hope that maybe the voices would stop if he obeyed them.
He slipped through a gap in the shutter.
The warehouse smelled of rot and seawater. Shafts of sunlight pierced holes in the roof. Dust floated like ash.
And someone was singing.
A woman’s voice.
Soft.
Melancholic.
Raghav moved deeper inside.
The singing grew clearer.
He found her standing near a row of broken machines.
The Woman.
Not a hallucination this time—or so he thought initially.
She looked impossibly real.
Long black hair.
White sari.
Bare feet.
Her face was beautiful except for the eyes.
No pupils.
Only darkness.
“You’re tired,” she said gently.
Raghav could not speak.
“You’ve been fighting us for so long.”
“I’m sick,” he whispered.
“No. You’re awake.”
She stepped closer.
The air around her felt cold.
“Do you know why we haunt you?”
Raghav shook his head.
“Because guilt opens doors.”
Behind her, shadows shifted unnaturally.
Shapes crawled along walls.
Too many limbs.
Too many teeth.
The demons.
Not metaphorical anymore.
Manifest.
“You invited us the day your brother died,” she said.
“I didn’t kill him.”
“But you wanted him gone for one moment.”
Raghav staggered backward.
“No…”
“One moment is enough.”
The warehouse darkened suddenly though clouds had not crossed the sun. The shadows thickened and rose from the floor like living smoke.
Faces emerged within them.
Dozens.
Hundreds.
Crying.
Laughing.
Screaming.
The demons circled him slowly.
“You belong to us now,” whispered Father’s voice from everywhere at once.
Raghav clutched his head.
His sanity cracked further.
He no longer knew whether he stood inside a warehouse or inside his own diseased mind.
The distinction had dissolved.
Then he heard another voice.
A real one.
“Sir?”
A hand touched his shoulder.
The world snapped violently back into focus.
A security guard stood before him, alarmed.
“Sir, you cannot stay here.”
The warehouse was empty.
No woman.
No shadows.
Only dust and machinery.
Raghav realized he had been kneeling alone on the floor, sobbing.
—
That evening the rain returned.
Mumbai drowned beneath monsoon fury. Roads flooded waist-high. Electricity failed across several neighborhoods.
Raghav sat in darkness inside his apartment listening to water batter the city.
The demons loved storms.
Without electricity, the room transformed into a breathing void. Every corner seemed alive. Every sound carried hidden meaning.
Then came the knocking.
Three slow knocks at the door.
Raghav stiffened.
No one visited him anymore.
Another three knocks.
He approached cautiously.
“Who is it?”
Silence.
Then:
“Open.”
Nikhil’s voice.
Raghav stumbled backward immediately.
“No.”
“Bhai…”
The voice sounded wet, broken.
“Please.”
Tears filled Raghav’s eyes.
For one dangerous moment, hope pierced through terror. What if madness could resurrect? What if guilt could open impossible doors?
The knocking became harder.
BANG.
BANG.
BANG.
The walls vibrated.
The fan overhead suddenly started spinning despite the power outage.
Click.
Click.
Click.
The room temperature dropped sharply.
Shadows thickened around the ceiling.
The demons were here.
All of them.
Father emerged first from the darkness near the cupboard, his face pale and decomposing.
“You failed him.”
The Woman appeared beside the sink.
“You failed yourself.”
The Boy crawled slowly from beneath the bed, grinning impossibly wide.
“And now,” he giggled, “you open the door.”
The knocking became violent.
Wood splintered.
Raghav screamed and covered his ears.
“This isn’t real!”
The demons laughed together.
Father stepped closer.
“You still don’t understand.”
The dead man pointed toward Raghav’s chest.
“We are not in the room.”
The realization hit like ice water.
The apartment faded.
The demons faded.
Even the storm faded.
And suddenly Raghav understood the true horror.
They had never been visitors.
They were residents.
The warehouse, the voices, the apparitions—none of them were external hauntings. They were fragments of himself feeding endlessly upon grief, guilt, loneliness, and untreated madness.
The demons were memories with teeth.
His father’s cruelty.
His brother’s death.
His self-hatred.
His fear of abandonment.
All fused together inside a fractured mind.
And because he feared them, they survived.
The knocking stopped.
Silence filled the room.
The demons stared at him expectantly.
For the first time in years, Raghav stopped running.
He lowered his hands slowly.
“You are me,” he whispered.
The Boy’s smile faltered.
Father’s expression hardened.
The Woman stepped backward.
“You hear me?” Raghav said louder. “You are me.”
The shadows trembled.
Every hallucination in the room distorted like reflections in disturbed water.
Raghav began crying—not from terror now, but exhaustion.
“I loved him,” he said.
The room remained silent.
“I was angry one day. That doesn’t mean I killed him.”
The demons flickered.
“And I am tired of punishing myself.”
Father lunged suddenly, face twisting with rage.
But before he could touch him, the apparition fragmented into smoke.
The Woman dissolved next.
Then the Boy.
His grin vanished first.
His eyes became sad.
Almost human.
Then he too disappeared.
The apartment returned to normal darkness.
Rain continued outside.
Nothing else.
Raghav collapsed onto the floor and wept until dawn.
—
Weeks later, the city moved as it always had.
Relentless.
Indifferent.
Alive.
Raghav still heard whispers occasionally. He still avoided mirrors on difficult days. Some wounds in the mind never heal cleanly.
But the demons no longer ruled him.
Now when the voices came, he recognized them.
Not ghosts.
Not curses.
Not monsters from another world.
Only broken pieces of a grieving man trying desperately to survive himself.
And sometimes, late at night, when the fan clicked above him and rain swept across Mumbai’s endless skyline, he imagined Nikhil somewhere beyond memory and madness—whole, smiling, free from guilt.
In those moments, the apartment felt a little less haunted.
And so did his mind.
A wreck who became a Monk
A wreck who became a Monk
When Mara arrived at the university in September, the campus still smelled faintly of new books and wet leaves. She had spent three years on fellowship applications, rejections, and short-term teaching stints; the acceptance letter from the Philosophy department had felt like a kind hand closing around hers in a long, dark corridor. Dr. Elin Varga’s name on the faculty page had been a promise: crisp publications, a certain severity of intellect, a reputation for demanding rigor and producing scholars who did original work. Mara was twenty-six, small-boned and stubborn, and she had never been afraid of demanding expectations. She imagined herself, in a decade, shaping arguments and mentoring students the way Elin seemed to have mentored others—merciless, exacting, but fair.
The first weeks were exactly what Mara had hoped for. She and Elin met twice a week in the shadowed library annex where Elin kept her files: a narrow room with glass boxes of dissertations, a portrait of some benefactor with a steely gaze, and a map of the department’s history affixed to the wall. Elin had a brisk, economical manner. She read Mara’s preliminary chapters with a razor eye; sentences that barely made sense were cut, footnotes interrogated. “Your aim is fine,” Elin told her once, tapping a page. “Clarity requires sacrifice. Don’t adorn confusion.”
Mara thrived on the corrections. She learned to tighten sentences until they hummed, to imagine footnotes as a conversation with ghosts—ancestors of argument she wanted to surpass. Her thesis—on ethical responsibility in emergent technologies—grew from a dissertation prospectus into an ambitious architecture of theory and case studies. But ambition had a price; the more she wanted to build, the more she realized the department and its gatekeepers wanted stability, quiet reputations, a tidy future for publishing lines and grant renewals.
The first crossing happened gradually. It arrived as an invitation to meet after hours, ostensibly to go over a particularly knotty section where Elin wanted to show Mara a different methodology. It was late autumn. The library annex closed at six, but Elin’s office, on the seventh floor, stayed lit longer than most. The corridor smelled of coffee and machine oil. Mara told herself it was simply convenience; she had a lecture the next morning and could zip through their notes in private. Elin poured wine from a thermos into chipped mugs, and they talked. The conversation slid from marginalia to margins of ethics, then to personal histories: Elin’s quick childhood in Budapest, her years as a visiting scholar in a colder, more cynical academy. She spoke of injustices she had endured and exacted. The wine loosened sentences, and Mara, who trusted words before she trusted people, found herself confessing doubts she had nurtured for months—doubts about whether her arguments were original or merely valuable to the department in a way that could be marketed: critique with familiar edges.
When Elin placed a hand—cool, deliberate—on Mara’s forearm, Mara flinched and then steadied. The gesture felt like calibration; it was intimate without being tender, measuring contact with an expert’s precision. Elin said, “You could do better, you know you could. If you want my help—real help—there will be costs.” She spoke like a dealmaker. “There will always be costs.”
Mara’s response was confusion. The costs, she had imagined, were intellectual: more evenings with dense seminars, an absence of sleep, the grinding of revision. She had not considered other currencies. But Elin’s tone carried experience. It was as if she were listing terms of a contract everyone in that part of the world understood yet never named. The office clock ticked, their mugs cooled. Mara thought of her fellowship funding—bare but steady—of her mother’s monthly transfers, the letters she sent. She thought of the last reviewer’s brutal note that labeled her provisional chapter “intrusive and amateur.” If Elin offered a blueprint to cut through such cruelty, who was Mara to refuse?
The first time she didn’t refuse, it was because Elin pressed her hand to her mouth and asked her to listen. There was a logic to the intimacy Elin promised. She would be tutored in confidence, introduced, recommended. The department’s inner circle was a small, well-lighted room with a thick carpet. Elin had keys. She could swing those keys with a delicacy that cut like a blade. To Mara it seemed a necessary sabotage: give the body an allowance in exchange for intellectual birthright. She told herself she was making a tactical surrender—an offering for a future triumph. Powerful women, she thought, practiced power differently.
Once the boundary had been crossed, crossing the next one required less persuasion. Elin’s corrections became more than textual; they were moves in a choreography Mara could not easily resist. There were nights where Mara rewrote entire chapters while Elin watched and suggested microadjustments, leaning close enough that Mara could feel breath against the pages. Then came moments where Elin would insist on revising in bed, where the line between critique and proximity blurred in ways the department’s manuals never accounted for. At first, the physical submission felt like an extension of academic submission: both required attention to detail, both demanded a readiness to erase one’s own flourishes. Later, Mara would tell herself that, in those moments, she could not tell where knowledge ended and control began.
Outside the office, the department rehearsed its normalcy. Colleagues exchanged grant gossip over coffee; a professor lectured on the Stoics; a student union hosted a panel on ethics and social media. Mara moved through those rituals with a pocket of shame she could not name. The institution had grand statements about consent, about mentorship boundaries, about equity. They were printed in glossy handbooks and posted at orientation. Elin, champion of exactness, signed grant applications promising equitable supervision. Mara, who read policies as though they were maps, could see no clause that permitted coercion dressed as mentorship. Yet when she tried to find recourse—an email asking whether such “mentorship arrangements” were sanctioned—emails bounced back with formalities, or else ignored her, or else offered advice that was more about process than protection: “Document everything,” they said, as if documentation could repair the mismatch of power.
The degradation of trust was not sudden; it was a condensation. Every favor Elin granted, every draft she polished, left Mara increasingly dependent on that favor. Each nod of approval that accompanied a closer was a tightening. Colleagues who might have noticed chose not to. There is a peculiar difficulty in seeing wrongdoing when it is performed by someone whom the institution endorses and by someone who teaches you with the language of excellence. Elin folded coercion into pedagogy so gently, so persuasively, that Mara found herself editing her moral responses along with her sentences. Shame and gratitude became braided until they were indistinguishable.
Mara tried to resist, twice. Once, after a weekend in which she had felt depleted and small, she announced that she needed distance, that she would submit the next chapter via email and meet only during official hours. Elin listened, her face unreadable, and then wrote a note: “You should not make choices that will later appear as excuses. Excellence requires sacrifice.” There was no threat in the words, only an implication: sacrifice was expected. The note felt like a verdict. Mara folded it away, older and more tired, but persistent in her intention to keep some borders.
The second attempt followed a conference, where Mara had presented a paper in front of strangers who did not owe her their reputations. An outsider—another female scholar from a neighboring university—asked a question and then, during the coffee break, offered a hand to Mara and said, “You do not owe perfection to anyone. You are allowed to be yourself.” Mara, for the first time in months, felt the possibility of a life beyond tidy sentences and rivered compliance. She imagined saying no without consequence. But when she returned to Elin that evening and said, with a sudden combustive hope, “I think I want to finish this on my own terms,” Elin’s silence was a calculus more chilling than anger.
Elin did not answer immediately. She folded her hands and spoke of commitments: her own career trajectory, the precariousness of funding, the weight of reputation. “We are all embedded in arrangements we cannot wholly control, Mara,” she said. “It is naive to pretend otherwise.” The words were not meant to explain; they were meant to stop something. Mara had thought the institutions were the problem because they were clumsy and slow. But she realized now that the institution had learned to inhabit bodies. It had mastered the art of making its will seem like a personal failing.
The thesis took a turn. Under pressure—or perhaps with the harsh tutelage of someone who had learned to use power as pedagogy—Mara’s paragraphs sharpened. Her arguments acquired a new austerity, a lean architecture that impressed colleagues and critics. Elin recommended her for a fellowship; Mara received it, the money arriving like validation and complicity all at once. At the award ceremony, Elin hugged her in front of the dean, whispering, “None of them needed to see how you were made.” The line clanged in Mara’s head: made. As if she had been fashioned in secret, like an instrument.
And yet, the more accolades Mara received, the less she could feel them. The praise tasted metallic. In private, she wondered whether the pilot lights of her intellectual curiosity had been stifled. Her original questions—those messy ethical dissonances about autonomy and responsibility—had given way to safer provocations, to arguments that were likely to be cited by sympathetic journals. Every citation her work accumulated felt like a nail in some private coffin: she was being recognized as the scholar she was expected to be, not the one she had wanted to become.
By the end of the third year, the dissertation defended with expected ritual. The committee’s questions were tough but manageable. Elin spoke with a cautious pride that bordered on proprietorial. When the committee called for a break to deliberate, Mara sat in the anteroom, a cup of instant coffee cooling in her hands, and found herself trembling for reasons she could not name. Her mother called the following morning to say how proud she was; Mara could not tell her that the triumph tasted like compromise. At the reception after the defense, colleagues raised glasses and offered toasts. Elin toasted the kind of success the department liked: rigorous, marketable, neat. Mara smiled and felt hollow.
Faith in the institution had never been untroubled. She had expected contradictions and inequities. What she had not expected was the institution’s capacity to appear as her ally while acting as her captor. It was not merely policies unfiled or administrators inattentive; it was the department’s ability to shelter predation within its acclaim. The veneer of mentorship masked patterns that made it difficult to point to wrongdoing without touching the institution’s foundation. The protection the department afforded its senior figures—tenure, networks, reputational goodwill—meant that allegations could be dismissed as “personal matters.” In faculty meetings, phrases like “due process” and “inconclusive evidence” kept such matters antiseptic. The institution was expert at preserving itself by absorbing complaint into ritual.
Mara tried to negotiate this paradox within herself. For months, she had kept a private litany: names, dates, the exact words Elin had used, the times when her hand had been pressed to Mara’s mouth or shoulder. Documentation, as colleagues had advised, was present. But documentation did not feel equal to the demand she wanted to make on the department. There were practical risks—damage to her prospects, the possibility that the committee that now knew her work might decide she was a troublemaker. And there was a deeper moral calculus: if she denounced Elin, what narrative would the department choose? Would they choose to believe the tender-faced professor whose citations were impeccable, or the raw graduate who spoke of coercion? For every system that claimed to seek justice, Mara had glimpsed a series of smaller calculations that would decide how heroic it wanted to be.
What finally pushed her was not a single act of violence but an accumulation—like rust eating through a chain. She attended a seminar where a junior male colleague presented research built on data he had not properly anonymized. The department chair, known for his public insistence on ethics, congratulated him on the methodological audacity. Mara, who had spent sleepless months worrying over consent forms in her case studies, felt something inside her crack. The department rewarded audacity when it could be translated into prestige; it tolerated personal failings when they were framed by resumes. At a committee meeting after the seminar, she heard a senior professor murmur that “disciplinary accompaniment” sometimes required “flexibility.” The phrase sickened her. Flexibility was a euphemism that kept the machine oiled.
She could have simply left the academy. Many people did. A friend from her cohort had departed for a research job in industry; another had taken a teaching post at a community college. Leaving would have been sensible. But Mara was not sure she wanted to walk away from a field she loved because the field loved some of its members more than others. There was a fissure in her that wanted to repair the institution, to insist that it could be better. That fissure was fragile; it was also tenacious. She decided to make a complaint.
Filing a complaint at a university has rules like any bureaucracy: forms to fill, offices to avoid, deadlines to meet. She submitted an account to the Office of Equity, careful to avoid the sensational. She wrote calmly, methodically, citing meetings and exchanges and emails. The office assigned an investigator. For a while, the process seemed promising. An administrator who had once been a student herself called Mara to say, “We take these things seriously.” Mara felt buoyed. For the first time in years, she put hope into a system instead of into the throat of an individual.
Then the institution’s response began to resemble the patterns she had always suspected. The investigator—polite, circumspect—arranged interviews and asked for corroborating witnesses. Many refused to speak. A few offered partial recollections. Elin’s defense was a model of disarmament: she admitted to transgressions of intimacy but framed them as consensual and mutually beneficial. “We both had needs,” Elin told the investigator, her voice even. The department, for its part, emphasized Elin’s contributions to the field and reminded the investigator of the disruptive effects of internal disputes. “We cannot lose a scholar of her standing,” a memo read, in measured tones that suggested preservation over justice.
Weeks lengthened into months. The investigator’s report, when it came, was an exercise in hedging. It noted that boundaries had been crossed, that the behavior was “inappropriate,” but it found no “clear and convincing evidence” of coercion. The language was surgical; it excised pain into categories. The worst part for Mara was that the report’s recommendations were softer than the finding. A counseling referral for Elin, a reminder of the code of conduct for the department, and the suggestion of a workshop on mentorship practices. The institution had, in effect, apologized to itself by taking small, symbolic steps that would leave its structures intact.
Mara felt betrayed in the way one feels betrayed by a parent who chooses reputation over protection. She had believed the university was an arena for truth; its machinery, she realized, prioritized continuity. When the investigator wrote that the institution had acted “appropriately within constraints,” Mara’s faith fractured into shards. The betrayal was not only of her; it was of any student who might later stand where she had stood, thinking that excellence required only labor and ingenuity. Institutions, she learned, could leverage the language of ethics while making room for the behaviors ethics claims to condemn—if the behaviors were embedded within those who produced prestige.
Anger, which had long before settled into a cool disillusionment, now became a raw, urgent force. Mara organized a reading group with other students on mentorship and power. She spoke, haltingly and then with increasing ferocity, at faculty meetings. She wrote op-eds about the institution’s response on anonymous platforms, careful at first to protect herself. The reaction was mixed. Some students thanked her for articulating something they had felt but been unable to name. A few faculty members praised her bravery. But there was also the inevitable backlash: whispers that she was self-promoting, that she wanted to torpedo reputations. Those whispers were familiar—part of the old machinery—and they had teeth.
The personal toll was enormous. Mara’s thesis, which had once been her lifework, now felt like evidence in a larger dispute. Elin, after a period of mandated counseling, resumed attending conferences and publishing. The department reported reforms—training sessions and new guidelines—but the reforms had the faintness of bandages. When Mara took a job interview outside the university, the hiring committee asked questions about her dissertation’s integrity, never about discipline-wide failure. The institution continued to certify its excellence, and Mara learned to extract herself from its orbit.
In time, something else happened: the rawness subsided into a different kind of clarity. Mara’s scholarship opened in directions it had not yet explored. Freed from the need to produce a particular kind of product, she returned to the messy questions she had once loved: what does it mean to be responsible in a world where power is distributed asymmetrically? How do institutions claim moral authority while protecting reputations at the expense of justice? She wrote differently now—less solicitous of the center, more attentive to margins. Her later articles were read not as triumphs of polish but as contributions that asked difficult ethical questions of the academy itself.
She did not regain her old faith in the institution. The university, with its committees and handbooks, remained a place where careers were made and ruined. But she learned to cultivate a cautious, activist skepticism—an approach that sought to hold institutions accountable without mistaking them for moral agents. She mentored students with an explicitness she had not been afforded; she insisted on limits, on witnesses to meetings, on shared minutes. She taught them to document, yes, but to do more: to build networks of care outside official channels, to recognize that solidarity was often a better protection than policy. She encouraged them not to confuse the brilliance of an individual for the righteousness of a system.
Years later, Elin retired with honors. The department hosted a celebration, and there were flowers and speeches that spoke of extraordinary mentorship. Mara was invited but did not attend. A friend, kindly, sent a photograph: Elin smiling, the portrait on the wall a faded echo. Mara put the photo in a folder and closed it. Her thesis—published, cited, and used—sat on a shelf in a library with glass boxes and benefactors’ portraits. It had opened doors and closed others; it had been bought at a cost she would never fully tally.
Losing faith in the institution was not a singular act of renunciation. It was, instead, a gradual unfastening, as if the threads of a belief had been rusted by repeated exposure to hypocrisy. To lose faith is not always to leave; sometimes it is to stay and see more clearly, to labor to prevent the same betrayals from happening to others. Mara’s relationship with the academy became one of wary engagement: she taught, she wrote, she litigated ethical boundaries; she demanded that mentorship not be an ambiguous favor but a set of explicit practices that protected the powerless.
At a conference five years after her defense, Mara sat beside a young doctoral student who asked her, quietly, “Did you ever think it would change?” Mara looked at the student’s earnest face—the same hunger she had once worn—and felt something open inside her. “Yes,” she said slowly. “I thought it would. But I also learned something else. Institutions rarely change because someone wants them to. They change when enough people require it, together.” She told the student about documentation, about allies, about how to hold meetings in groups and how to insist on witness notes after any sensitive conversation. She spoke of the institutional language of “constraints” and how to press those constraints into accountability.
The student listened as if Mara’s words were a map. Mara’s eyes flicked to the conference hall, to the banners proclaiming the university’s commitment to excellence. She thought of Elin—her mind still quick, her arguments still crisp—and she thought of the long route of compromise that had once felt like the only path to recognition. She felt anger, and also a steadier resolve. The institution, for all its failures, could be a place where lives were made. But it was also a place where lives could be diminished. That was the paradox she had to teach others to live inside without being consumed by.
When the conference ended, Mara walked back through the city, where late-summer light gilded church steeples and the river ran with people in small boats. She felt a kind of tiredness that was not defeat. Losing faith, she had discovered, did not mean losing the desire to create good work or to protect others. It meant seeing the cost of acclaim and deciding what price one would pay. It meant learning to build alternative structures: communities of support, explicit mentorship charters, public conversations that refused to let institutional memory be the authority. It meant staying awake to the grammar of power and teaching others to read it.
Mara would always carry the memory of that first winter in Elin’s office—the thermos, the small hand on forearm, the way the department smiled politely when called upon to judge. She would remember the documents and the investigator’s language and the way the institution had folded her pain into a bureaucratic sentence. But she would also remember the students who later called her to say, “We received your outline; we want to meet.” She would remember the small ways they changed: a supervisor who asked for witnesses, a faculty committee that altered its grievance process, a department that at last instituted anonymous reporting. None of these fixes was perfect. They were, like Mara herself, imperfect attempts to transform an institution that had once used power as pedagogy.
On quiet nights, she would sometimes reread the early chapters of her thesis—the ones she had written before compromises hardened into habit. The prose was fulsome, earnest, a little too exuberant. She would mark the margins with notes and strike out phrases that had been shaped by others. Then she would write again, in a voice she felt was truer: one that refused to render suffering into a lesson for white papers. She wrote to document, yes, but also to witness. In the end, losing faith with the institution meant becoming more faithful—to the people who passed through it, to the messy work of repair, and to the stubborn conviction that being a scholar did not require surrendering one’s body or one’s mind.
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Frame your story as an adult recalling the events of their childhood. All ups and downs in life . The good , bad and the ugly. Becoming a drug , alcoholic and sex addict and finally recovering to become a Monk.
When I close my eyes now, in the quiet of the monastery at dawn, the past arrives like the smell of rain on hot pavement—sudden, unmistakable, and full of memory. People imagine monasteries as places that begin in stillness, as if every life that enters them was carved from a single block of stone. My life was not carved cleanly. It was a room full of things knocked over: books, bottles, promises, and bodies. The child I once was would not have recognized the man in the ochre robes. And perhaps that is why I tell the story like someone reading an old, battered map—tracing routes I swore I would never take, then following them anyway until they led somewhere I could not foresee.
I was small for my age, always a little too quick to apologize when someone bumped me in the hallways of childhood. My mother kept the house quiet and clean; she worked nights and left me notes on the stove so I would remember to eat. There was a tenderness in those notes that tasted like refuge at the time, like the only fluent language between two people who loved each other but could not speak it plainly. School felt like a different world—brighter, louder, less worried about rent. Books were escape routes, and I learned early to fold myself into a paragraph and disappear.
Some of the best memories from childhood are small and bright: the first time I read Thoreau under the covers with a flashlight; the way my knees felt after running until dusk on the neighborhood courts; the enormity of summer, when the days extended like elastic and nothing urgent demanded attention. I remember a teacher—Mrs. Kaplan—who saw the way my mind worked and pushed me toward questions I loved. She was the first adult who made me feel like inquiry was worth the trouble. It is easy to remember her with gratitude now, and harder to reconcile that memory with the darker shapes that would come later.
There were other things beneath those early joys, quiet as rot: the landlord’s impatience when late rent arrived; the way my mother flinched when the phone rang late at night, the small lies she told to keep us afloat. Those fissures in the adult world taught me to look for safety in improper places. I learned to seduce the idea of certainty—of approval—from whoever could offer it. That hunger would follow me like a shadow.
The first time I felt seen by someone outside my family was a blessing that smelled faintly of danger. I was accepted into a prestigious program in a city I had only ever visited in books. There I met my guide—an older woman with a reputation like a lighthouse: brilliant, exacting, the sort who could bend conversations into arguments that left no loose ends. I admired her the way a child admires a star. She made me feel like I mattered. She opened doors.
Love and learning are not easy to separate when you are young and eager. At first, the mentorship was exactly that—late hours in the archive, furious debates over footnotes, sorrow shared over coffee. She taught me to tighten my sentences until they were surgical. She introduced me to networks that smelled of rare air and old money. When she placed a gentle hand on my shoulder in a moment of quiet approval, I mistook it for the kind of belonging I had been scouring for my whole life. She rewarded devotion with access, and I repaid devotion with the kind of loyalty that erases boundaries.
Then the subtle predations began. Invitations to meet after hours. A hand that lingered where a hand should not linger. Compliments that blurred into demands. She framed everything in the rhetoric of excellence—of sacrifice required for greatness—and I was too hungry to delineate gifts from coercion. There is a peculiar cruelty in being taught to be brilliant by someone who expects you to barter parts of yourself to get there. If the first betrayal was by a person I trusted, the second was by an institution that turned a blind eye when I reached for help.
I remember the exact moment I realized the institution would rather preserve reputation than protect me. An investigator asked questions in a voice that wanted to be neutral. Letters were written in bureaucratic fonts that hid sharp edges. The conclusion was polite and devastating: inappropriate behavior that did not reach the threshold of legal consequence. I left the proceedings with my papers intact and my faith in the academy broken. The institution had the same stern, soft voice as my abuser; it contained within it the logic that made predation possible—prestige as shield, process as smokescreen.
Where the university failed me, I learned to fail myself. The shame lodged in my chest like a stone, and I learned to carry it like ballast. I told myself I could drink it away, anesthetize the verdict the institution had delivered. Alcohol offered a soft, immediate relief. For a while it was an engine that smoothed the edges—offered courage for lectures, made dinners less sharp. Then other substances appeared as friends, adapters for moods I could not tolerate: stimulants when I needed energy, narcotics when I needed erasure. Addiction crept in like fog; it was tender and treacherous, promising to rearrange the world so that pain did not scream so loud.
Sex became another way to feel less alone. I learned patterns that were both survival and self-destruction: seeking connection in bodies, trading validation for closeness, confusing being desired with being whole. I became the sum of private transactions where my worth was measured in temporary intensity. The sex at first felt like reclaiming something that had been taken from me; later it felt like debt—each encounter chipping away at whatever remained of intimacy. My relationships were punctured by the bruises of addiction: promises broken, apologies begged, secrets kept.
There were good years embedded within the bad—moments that glittered like coins in a river. I fell in love once, in a quiet way that felt like breath being returned to lungs. For six months I believed healing might arrive through tenderness. We cooked, argued over books, and wrote each other clumsy poems. But addiction is an infidel partner, and even the softest love can be drowned by dependence. That relationship could not sustain my appetite for oblivion, and it ended the way too many fragile things end—quietly, with both parties pretending nothing terrible had been done.
Hitting the bottom was not a single catastrophe; it was a series of smaller collapses until the ground finally gave way. I lost positions I had worked for; friends stopped answering my calls; there were mornings when I woke and did not know which city I was in. One night I nearly died in the back of a car because I could not distinguish the road from the haze of a high I had chased past reason. The details blur by design: addiction dulls the memory that could save you. What remains clear is the moment after—the cold sting, the radiator’s clank in a cheap hospital ward, the face of a mother who had always been tired now breaking into fresh panic. That look—mixture of grief and furious love—was a pivot point.
Recovery was neither romantic nor tidy. I spent months in rehab where mornings began with prayer and ended with the silent inventory of things I had done and things I had left undone. I learned routines like new languages: how to set a sleep schedule, how to say no to a craving without collapsing, how to let someone sit with me while I trembled through temptation. I told my story again and again in circle rooms lit by fluorescent bulbs, and in telling it I learned to name what had happened to me without letting the names erase myself.
The sex addiction was a stubborn beast; one does not leave the habits of a lifetime as if taking off a coat. There were relapses—nights when I would call old numbers and feel the old familiar rush of imagined acceptance. Each relapse taught me humility. It taught me to forgive without forgetting, to set boundaries that protected not only others but myself. Sex and desire did not become enemies; they became things I could steward, not things that would rule me.
What finally opened the path to the monastery was not one luminous conversion but a growing hunger for a life that made room for others without asking for payment in flesh or silence. In recovery I had learned the inventory—amends to make, debts to acknowledge. I had also learned the power of ritual: the steady cadence of a meeting, the steadiness of a sponsor’s voice, the tiny mercies of a shared coffee. There was a monk I met by chance in a meditation group, a man whose presence was not judgemental but patient and who spoke of discipline as a kind of fidelity. He explained that becoming a monk was not an erasure of the past but a way to cultivate a life oriented toward care, toward attention.
Monasticism demanded what every recovery program demanded: accountability, humility, a commitment to truth. The monastery taught me to turn my days into offerings—silent prayers, chores done with care, meals eaten without distraction. The rules were strange at first: no alcohol, no sleeping in, no secret indulgences. But the clarity they offered was profound. In the quiet, I could hear the echoes of the old recordings in my head and examine them without being pulled into action. I learned to attend to grief like a patient neighbor—acknowledge it, speak to it, give it tea, then set it down.
Becoming a monk did not mean I was free of desire or memory. It meant I had learned tools to handle them. I still feel the urge to fill silence with noise, to find confirmation in another’s gaze. I still remember the warmth of forbidden hands and the sting of the investigator’s polite language. What changed is that my life now has structures that refuse the old bargains. If the academic institution taught me how institutions can protect themselves by burying truth, the monastery taught me how communities can hold people without making profit of their pain.
I do not romanticize the monastery as a cure for all ills. There are days when homesickness for a life of books and public argument pulls at me. I miss the thrum of a seminar, the electricity of an argument that ends in applause. But I also know the true cost of yearning for prestige when it comes at the price of your self-possession. The monastery gave me a new way to be tested: to show up each day without applause, to do work that asks for no accolade, to extend help without counting the loss or gain.
People sometimes ask whether I forgave the institution, or my mentor, or myself. Forgiveness is less a single act than a practice. I do not offer absolution lightly. Forgiveness for me meant building boundaries that prevented recurrence: teaching about consent and power wherever I could, mentoring with clear limits, helping young scholars understand how institutions function—both their promises and their protections for those who harm. I learned to hold the institution accountable not by burning it down but by refusing to be its instrument of self-preservation.
There are afternoons when a student sits with me and asks about how I moved from collapse to calm. I tell them the truth: that I was lucky enough to find people who would sit with me through the shame; that I replaced illicit gratifications with honest labor; that I entered a community that demanded honesty and offered mercy. I also tell them that recovery is never a straight line. It goes up and down: clean months followed by relapse; small victories followed by long periods of quiet rebuilding. The good, the bad, and the ugly—each has its place in the work of becoming.
In the end, the child in me—the one who hid under covers and read by flashlight—was not lost. He was bruised and reformed, not unlike a broken vessel that a careful hand tries to mend. The academy taught me how brilliance can be weaponized; addiction taught me how easily a wound can be clothed; recovery taught me how to stitch the wound into a story that could be shared without shame. The monastery taught me how to live with those stitches as part of the fabric.
Sometimes, at twilight, I walk the cloister and trace the carved stones with a finger. I remember the faces of those I hurt and those who helped me. The life that led me here—the hunger for approval, the betrayals, the stupor of addiction, the arduous climb toward repair—has taught me one stubborn lesson: fidelity to truth is not the same as reliance on institutions. Truth is practiced in the small things—showing up, making amends, refusing to exchange the self for acclaim. If I had to name what saved me, I would say it was not a single person or place but a community that asked for my honesty and refused my bargains.
I still carry scars. They are the history I read each morning when I chant. They remind me of the price of being seen without roofs to shelter me and the cost of learning refuge in the wrong hands. The robe I wear now is not a sign that I have escaped my past but that I have accepted it, learned from it, and vowed not to let it be repeated. The child who once folded himself into books is not dead—he simply reads now with the eyes of someone who has been through fire and decided to keep living, quietly and honestly, one breath at a time.
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