LightReader

Chapter 82 - Writing Again

It happens without announcement.

No emotional breakdown.No cinematic moment.No background music of realization.

Just Cielo sitting at the table one afternoon—

and opening her notebook again.

Jessa notices immediately.

"You're writing?"

Cielo doesn't look up.

"I'm not writing. I'm… checking if I still know how."

"That sounds like writing with extra steps."

The pen hesitates above the page.

For a moment, it feels foreign in her hand.

Like an object she used to know in another life.

Then—

it moves.

Slow at first.

Careful.

Like her thoughts are learning how to walk again.

"Today I stood under sunlight for 43 seconds without collapsing."

She pauses.

Looks at it.

Then adds:

"This is either recovery or a glitch in my biological system."

She leans back.

"…Still funny," she mutters to herself.

Jessa leans over her shoulder.

"You're documenting your health like a suspicious government report."

"I am my own case study," Cielo replies.

"That is concerning."

"It is efficient."

But there is something different this time.

Writing does not feel heavy.

It feels… organized.

Like chaos finally agreeing to sit in rows.

That night, she writes again.

Not because she has to.

But because she cannot not.

"Dream frequency: increasing."

She stops.

Pen hovering.

Then continues:

"Subject: Lee ."

She pauses again.

Longer this time.

And for the first time—

she does not erase the name.

Outside, the wind moves through the trees.

Soft.

Almost approving.

She writes:

"Observation: emotional response is no longer purely subconscious."

She stops again.

Laughs quietly.

"…That sounds like I'm malfunctioning romantically."

Jessa, from the other room:

"You ARE malfunctioning romantically!"

Cielo calls back:

"I am aware!"

But the humor doesn't hide everything anymore.

Because writing has a side effect.

It makes things visible.

And what becomes visible cannot stay small.

That night, she dreams again.

But this time—

she expects it.

Lee is there.

Waiting.

Not intruding.

Not chasing.

Just… present.

Like he has been waiting for her to return on her own.

"You came back," he says softly.

Cielo crosses her arms.

"I didn't go anywhere."

He tilts his head slightly.

"You stopped writing me."

That lands differently.

Not like accusation.

Like observation.

Like fact.

"I don't write you," she says.

He smiles a little.

"Then who do you think you've been writing about?"

Silence.

Because that is the problem now.

She doesn't know.

She wakes up with her notebook still open beside her.

Ink drying.

Hand slightly cramped.

Heart slightly… unsettled.

Morning feels louder than usual.

Even Jessa is louder.

"Okay, you're back to writing again. That means something is happening."

Cielo sips coffee.

"Nothing is happening."

Jessa points at the notebook.

"That thing disagrees."

Cielo looks at it.

Then softly:

"I think I'm remembering something I didn't live properly."

Jessa stops teasing.

Just watches her.

"…Is it about him again?"

Cielo hesitates.

For once, no sarcasm comes first.

"…I don't know if it's him," she says.

"And I don't know if it's me."

That answer sits in the room longer than expected.

Because it is not confusion.

It is honesty.

Days after that, writing becomes routine again.

But different.

Not escape.

Not obsession.

Something in between.

Like stitching gaps in reality with ink.

She writes about sunlight tolerance.

About dreams.

About silence.

About a man she cannot fully define.

And each page makes one thing clearer:

She is not just remembering someone.

She is remembering herself in relation to someone.

And that changes everything.

One afternoon, she pauses mid-sentence and whispers:

"What if I'm not losing my mind…"

A pause.

"…What if I'm retrieving it?"

No one answers.

But somewhere inside her—

something shifts.

Not loudly.

Not violently.

Just like a door slightly unlatched.

And for the first time in a long time,

Cielo does not feel like she is disappearing.

She feels like she is being rewritten.

End of Chapter: Writing Again

More Chapters