Marooned
He awoke each morning to the first cold light slipping through the cracked blinds, his mind anchored in the present like a ship chained to the ocean floor. Time had no sway over him beyond the pulse of his own breath, the creak of the floorboards beneath his feet, the whisper of his worn jacket slipping onto his shoulders. Outside, the street murmured with the shuffle of newspapers against doorsteps, the clatter of garbage cans, the low rumble of a bus rounding the corner. He moved through it all, a ghost to the past and blind to the future, a man marooned in the endless now.
At the corner cafĂ©, he slipped into his usual chair, the one with the cracked vinyl and a leg that wobbled just enough to feel familiar. The hiss of the espresso machine, the clink of glassware, the soft scrape of a spoon against porcelain filled his ears. He wrapped his hands around the warm cup, the steam rising into his face, the bitter tang of coffee settling on his tongue. Conversations swirled around him, threads of lives with pasts and futures, but he grasped none of it. He had no memory of yesterday’s words, no thought for tomorrow’s, only the here and now, his moments measured in sips and breaths.
In the afternoons, he wandered to the river, the current always moving but never for him. He knelt at the water’s edge, his hand dipping into the cold flow, feeling it slip through his fingers, ungraspable. He watched the sunlight fracture on the surface, the reeds swaying in the wind, the creak of a rowboat pulling against its tether. The river spoke of distance and change, of long journeys to distant shores, but to him it was just this—the rush of water, the sharp bite of air, the hollow knock of wood on wood. He was a man without yesterdays, without tomorrows, doomed to live forever in the thin slice of time where the present never ends.
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