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Chapter 32 - Shadow of Memories

She stood near me, her eyes trembling with a fear she could not hide.

Yet she did not flee. She did not leave me alone amid the ash.

Simply her remaining there… was something strange, something I no longer knew the name of.

I looked at her long. Her face was not perfect—scratches from battle, dust trapped in her hair, a bewildered gaze. And yet… it was beautiful. Beautiful in a way unlike anything else. As if the beauty was not in her features but in that she remained standing, in a world collapsing around her.

I laughed bitterly and said to her in a tired voice:

— "You… look as if you're not from here. Not from this ruin."

She raised an eyebrow, first not understanding, then replied with an unexpected shyness:

— "I'm… just a girl who survived."

But I did not believe it. I couldn't see her as merely a survivor.

There was something in her face… something that made my insides tremble.

I stepped closer and looked directly into her eyes.

The words left my mouth on their own, without permission:

— "You… you resemble her."

She froze and asked in a faint voice:

— "Who…?"

I fell silent. I tried to speak the name—Mary.

But the name stuck in my throat as if it were forbidden.

I clutched my head; the pain intensified. I saw the image again.

A woman. Long hair. A smile. A hand holding me as if saying: "I will not leave you."

But her face remained foggy. The closer I tried to make it out, the more it dissolved.

I slammed my hand on the ground and screamed:

— "Why… can't I remember her? Why is her face a haze?!"

The girl flinched at my outburst, but she did not run. She took another step forward.

She stretched out her hand slowly and touched my shoulder as if testing whether I would break.

She said with an odd calm:

— "Maybe… you shouldn't remember. Maybe the past is just another chain."

I looked at her with burning eyes and said, voice dripping with anger and despair:

— "The past is what makes me me. My mother… my lover… they have become foggy images. How do I live without memory? What is my purpose if I cannot even see their faces?!"

I felt the curse stir inside me. Another laugh—deeper this time—echoed in my chest:

— "Because you were not made to remember… but to recreate hell."

I grabbed my chest and fell to my knees. The girl looked at me, pity in her eyes… or perhaps something else.

She whispered:

— "You are not a curse. You are just… lost."

But I did not believe her.

I was no longer only lost.

I felt myself… changing.

---

I rose again, wiped blood from my mouth, and regarded her long.

I spoke in a calm voice, but it was sharp as a blade:

— "Do you know what the problem is?"

She fell silent, waiting.

I continued:

— "You are beautiful. Beautiful amid the ruin. And that… makes me hate you."

Her eyes widened in surprise, but she did not step back.

I added with a bitter smile:

— "Because you remind me of what I lost. Of what I cannot reclaim. You remind me… of Mary."

When I spoke the name, something inside shook.

For a moment the image appeared clearer, but the face stayed misted—only the smile… and the hand.

I felt I might collapse again, but I forced myself to remain standing.

---

The girl whispered:

— "Who was Mary?"

I looked at her for a long time, then closed my eyes.

I wanted to say: "She was my life."

I wanted to say: "She was my beloved."

But when I opened my mouth only one sentence came out:

— "I don't know."

The word was heavier than a mountain. As if it was another betrayal of my past.

I struck my chest with my fist and screamed until my voice filled the place:

— "Why… can't I remember?! Why are even their faces stolen?!"

---

The girl raised her hand again, this time steadier, and touched my face directly.

She spoke in a calm voice like a breeze:

— "Maybe… you will remember one day. Or maybe not. But… you are here now. And that is enough."

I opened my eyes and looked at her. For a short moment I believed her.

But the curse inside me laughed.

A long, wicked laugh that reminded me I would never escape it.

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