The Star
The star hung from the ceiling like a secret the house was waiting to share.
It wasn’t just a light. It was a presence—an old soul with pricked metal arms and a warm, steady glow. The first time they walked into the sunroom, the light wasn’t even on, but it still caught their breath. Something about the way it hovered, as if it had always been there, watching. Waiting.
At night, when the rest of the house surrendered to sleep, the star woke. It cast constellations across the beadboard ceiling, gentle as lullabies, quiet as prayers. Over the years, it saw laughter and sorrow, kisses and quiet. It was there when love was young, and it stayed when love matured into something deeper—less spark, more glow. Even now, as they sit in the same room with tea cooling on the table, the star remembers everything. It shines not just with light, but with memory.

Comments
Post a Comment