(for the one who stands at the edge, where the fabric begins to fall)
She had once been known— but only through a portrait painted in the shades of misunderstanding.
A silhouette mistaken for substance. A voice mimicked before it ever found its own breath.
She knows this. And so the chains that bind her now are not forged of cruelty, but memory— a memory that clings to who she was before she could ever choose to become.
And still, she dreams of the sunlight. Of fabric falling, not ripped— but released. Softly. Willingly. In the warmth of a gaze that promises no weight will be added to the skin that already bore so much.
She does not want to be reclaimed. She wants to be re-seen.
Not as the story once told, but as the story now unfolding. A woman not returning, but arriving.
And if the beholder must grieve the version of her he once adored, so be it—
for only in that grief can he welcome the miracle of what is finally, freely, and beautifully real;
and hope upon hope--
not one of his own chains in sight
It's like a loan when all debt has been forgiven..