
The city leaned toward midnight, its spine bent by years of weather and worse decisions. They moved with it, two figures descending an alley that felt designed for secrecy. The stones underfoot were slick, dusted with rain and soot, each step stirring a faint echo that refused to settle. From somewhere above, a tired streetlamp cast a thin beam of light—weak, jaundiced, unable to decide what deserved illumination.
She walked to his left, he to her right, the arrangement deliberate and old. Once, it had been instinct. Now it was habit, the kind that survives after meaning has burned off. The space between them was exact, calibrated, a distance duplicated so many nights it no longer felt accidental. Anyone watching from a window might have mistaken them for a pair, but the city knew better. The city always did.
The alley’s walls were dark, their bricks breathing out the memory of arguments and bargains struck too cheaply. The air smelled of wet iron and neglect. Each shuttered window felt reminiscent of something neither wanted to name—other walks, other endings postponed by cowardice or hope.
Near the top of the incline, he remembered the night he’d told her she was the only thing in the world worth keeping. He’d believed it then. That was what made remembering dangerous. A promise, once cherished, doesn’t fade quietly—it sharpens.
She stopped without warning. He took two more steps before the absence registered, before the silence took shape and weight. It felt ceremonial. Final.
“This is where I turn,” she said. No tremor. No plea.
He nodded. Anything more would have been an insult—to what they’d been, or to the truth they’d finally stopped dodging.
She turned away, footsteps receding until they dissolved into the city’s indifferent breathing. He stayed where he was, letting the streetlamp buzz overhead, letting the cold settle in his bones. Then he turned back the way they’d come, alone now, the alley already closing ranks behind him as if he’d never been there at all.