No Ceremony

She waited on the platform where the light gave up trying to decide what she was. Not shadow, not brightness—just a woman standing in the gap, coat buttoned tight like a lie she’d practiced until it stopped sounding like one. The fabric was bruise-black, the kind that never quite turns yellow, only learns how to pass for healed. Rain worked her hair into a damp argument she didn’t bother to win.

The glass beside her held a version she didn’t trust. That woman looked finished—eyes steady, mouth neutral, the expression of someone who had crossed a line and discovered there was no lightning waiting on the other side. No voice of God. Just silence, clean and disappointing. This place was outside her remit now, but she came anyway. Old habits cling harder when they know they’re about to be abandoned.

She balanced one heel near the yellow edge, close enough to feel the threat without committing. Leaving was an art. The trick wasn’t escape—it was delay. Linger long enough and running starts to resemble waiting. Cowardice, rebranded as coincidence.

The commuters slid past her in fragments: headphones, wet collars, eyes trained on floors and phones. A man in a suit brushed by, close enough to smell his soap, and didn’t see her. Another looked once, then flinched away, as if her presence required an accounting he didn’t have time for. Good. She had no interest in being inventoried.

The lights overhead were merciless—fluorescent, flattening, turning every choice into a verdict. Stay or go. Be or disappear. She belonged to neither. She lived in the half-second before impact, the space where outcomes hadn’t hardened yet. There was something alluring about that suspension—possibility clenched tight, regret still out of breath.

Her phone buzzed inside her pocket. Twice. Then nothing. She didn’t check it. Whatever waited there had already failed its audition. She’d learned the shape of absence well enough to recognize when it fit.

When the train came, it did so without ceremony. No warning, no forgiveness. Just metal and wind and the sound of time keeping its appointments. Doors opened. She stepped inside and stood, refusing the comfort of a seat, watching the platform slide away. The city folded back on itself in reverse, erasing her inch by inch, reflection first.

She didn’t look back.

The glass already had.

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