i got woken up before the sun could rise. furniture scraped the floor as the moving van arrived.
my father shed tears, kissing the cats goodbye. i was only seven when their divorce was finalised.
the next time i was eight, only six months wiser than before. my mother said it was all a mistake — we couldn’t live like that anymore.
there were no cats to bring back. belongings were sold. when we moved again, we snuck out during the day so my father wouldn’t know. it was better that way.
we lived hidden in a half-house under a tree, as if the branches could smother the echoes of the screams.
my brother returned, shaping a new family with a girl. although a bit crowded, for a moment, i swear we were happy.
in between the bags and the weight of living, i jumped into the arms of a boy who gave me an out. his smile felt like escape, but left me empty and dry.
a decade later, i found a house — not a house. a home. in a country i was meant for.
they didn’t speak my tongue, but accepted my love, even the way i failed and learnt. the love was unconditional, and asked for nothing in return.
it took sixteen attempts to find one i could own. and now that it’s mine, i never want to leave.
if i made a move, it might stir the darkness — the kind that still breathes.
sometimes.
and i need to let it sleep.
this one is about the places we outgrow, and those we fit in. August 12, 2025