Running Away
He packed like a thief in his own room, quiet and fast, the way anger teaches you to move. A shirt, a pair of socks, the flashlight with the weak yellow eye. His hands shook, not from fear but from the heat of words still ringing in his ears: Because we said so , You don’t understand yet . He didn’t slam the door. That would have meant asking to be stopped. Instead, he slipped out into the evening, the sky low and bruised, the neighborhood holding its breath as if it knew what he was trying to do. The road felt different once he stood on it, longer than it had ever been on a bicycle. The houses leaned back into their porches, lights coming on one by one, small suns behind curtains. He walked until his anger thinned, until it began to tear like paper left too long in rain. The world did not open up the way he had imagined. It did not beckon or promise. It only waited. In that waiting, memories rose uninvited—the smell of toast in the morning, his father’s quiet cough ...