
“I really don’t want to take him — he’s a dumb freak.”
The sentence cut through the hallway like a blade. It belonged to Elizabeth Clark. It was sharp and practiced, the kind of cruelty she wore like perfume. She stood at the foot of the stairs with one hip cocked, five years younger than Ethan but tall enough in arrogance to make him feel small, like a stain that didn’t deserve to be noticed. He had known that feeling for as long as he could remember: unfit even to be the dirt under someone’s toes.
“You have to,” Lyndia called, her footsteps a steady march toward Ethan’s door. The woman owned the house with a posture, the kind that made other people’s protests sound like wind through a screen. “Ethan is the only one who can take you to the mall and bring you back.”
“You mean because he won’t complain and he won’t make a scene,” Elizabeth said, half-laughing, like it was a joke at his expense.
“You should be grateful,” Lyndia continued, as if she were giving charity. “No man could tolerate your attitude. You should be glad Ethan can’t even speak for himself — he won’t refuse.”
Elizabeth snorted: a quick, contemptuous sound. “Ha. As if. He should be grateful to be part of this family.” Her eyes flashed across the hall and landed, pointed and bright, on the closed door where Ethan sat. “I can’t believe Lila married him.”
Ethan listened through the thin wood, the words folding over him until his chest felt small and full. He had been happy once — a brittle, brief happiness — when he’d married Lila. He took their name because she wanted the story that paid her following, and because the money would see his grandmother through another month of hospital bills. It had been the best-arranged rescue he’d ever had. He would have chosen differently if desperation had not been whispering at his back.
He collapsed onto the bed in a crooked, exhausted hump, fingers scrabbling at his throat like it might open a door. The dark that had been pressing since dawn eased when his bare feet met the floor. He stood up and began scanning the room with the sort of clinical calm that belongs to people thinking about endings: the window ledge and how far the fall would be, the line of the road below, an old paperback with a spine already split — anything that would make dying less violent, less desperate. He wanted smooth. A river that took you without the business of choking, a sleep that didn’t wake.
A sharp knock startled him, Lyndia’s voice before the door swung inward. “Ethan! Open up this minute. I need you to take Elizabeth to the mall.”
From the hallway, Elizabeth’s voice climbed in tone and malice. “Is this freak even allowed to lock his door?” She kicked the wooden panel, the sound hollow and petulant. “Just tear it down if he won’t answer.”
“If you break it, you’ll pay to repair it,” Lyndia said without anger, only a fact. That was how she managed their world — punishments arranged like equations.
“Ugh, I can’t stand him,” Elizabeth said, a small, theatrical sigh.
Ethan moved to the window. The ledge stared back, an unblinking face. What he would give to jump and have his head smashed into pieces — a thought that came like a dare and surprised him with its clarity. No. The voice inside him — the voice that had arrived three years ago and never left — shouted back so violently he felt it in his teeth. NO.
He slammed a hand to his forehead; it burned. The voice had been born the day he’d tried to end everything. He had been newly married, raw with a loneliness Lila fed and laughed at, and on the bridge he’d believed the water would be mercy. Instead, he woke in the arms of an old man under the bridge, smelling of river mud and something older than regret.
“You’ll live,” the man had said, the words heavy like a verdict. “I have a proposition. Will you take it?”
Ethan had tried to crawl back toward the water. “No,” he’d whispered, the world still a gray smear. He wanted only to sink and stop being seen.
The old man’s voice had filled the space. “You have two choices. Die here and be forgotten, or become mute now and be great in three years. Which is it?”
“Mute?” Ethan had asked, baffled. The man’s eyes were dry, his hands fearless. “Your emotions will be locked inside you,” the man had said. “They will stay — smothered — until they are unleashed. Three years, and you will be someone people remember.” He closed Ethan’s mouth and poured a black powder down his throat. Bitter, metallic, wrong. Ethan swallowed because he had nothing left to refuse.
At first the voice inside him had been a whisper; over the years it grew, a presence that took up rooms within his mind. It kept him from speaking when it liked. It kept him from being loud enough to be a nuisance. It became both his guard and his cage.
Lyndia pushed the bedroom door open and stepped in as he stood by the window. Her face was composed in that practical way that made no room for pity. “Didn’t you hear me?” she asked, already answering herself. “Lila and I need to finish the cooking. Take Elizabeth to the mall.”
Elizabeth piled into the car like she owned the passenger seat, crossing one leg over the other with deliberate grace. The engine rumbled; Ethan’s foot absentmindedly found the pedal. Only when the metal warmed under his bare toes did he realize he’d come out in pajamas, shoeless. He stared at his feet for a second that felt removed. Why was the pain so bearable? the voice inside him asked without compassion.
“When we reach the mall,” Elizabeth said, her tone clipped and urgent, “you stay hidden. My friends cannot know I was driven by my sister’s dumb husband.” She pushed back a strand of hair, the motion small and practiced. “I still don’t know why Lila married you."
Ethan wanted to answer. Words lined up in his chest, patient and useless. The voice in his head folded them away like letters it had no use for. He put the car into gear, hands steady but eyes glassy, cocooned in a numbness that made everything feel both distant and sharp.
Ethan’s hands tightened on the wheel. He had no words. Only thoughts, endless and suffocating.
He drove, eyes glazed—until her shrill voice shattered the silence.
“Stop! Stop this car right now!” Elizabeth screamed.
Ethan blinked. Too late. They were heading straight into a building. He slammed the brakes. The car jolted violently. His head smacked against the steering wheel. Elizabeth’s face crashed into the dashboard.
And for a moment, there was only silence.

Latest Chapter
I will save your father.
Lila stood at the edge of the hall, her hands clenched at her sides, watching as her husband left with the problematic customer. The girl had her arms looped around Ethan’s like a lover, clinging to him with a giddy, almost childlike excitement. It made something sharp and cold unfurl in Lila’s chest—a strange, unknown emotion she could neither name nor fight.She followed them with her eyes, her heartbeat drumming louder than the surrounding whispers. The hallway buzzed with staff and clients, rumors swirling like gnats, but Lila could barely hear them. There was something about Ethan—something new, something otherworldly—that held her fast. He looked ethereal, charged, as though a current of power had been switched on inside him. She had never seen anyone cling to him like that before. She had never seen him like that before.Her mother’s sudden voice snapped her back.“What’s going on?” Lyndia demanded, appearing at her side, breathing hard like a woman who had run a mile. “It’s be
Can you save my father?
Mia held out the mirror with trembling fingers, angling it toward her reflection. Her breath caught. A startled gasp escaped her lips as she brushed her fingertips lightly over her cheek, tracing skin that only minutes ago had been marred.“It’s… it’s all gone,” she whispered, her voice caught between awe and disbelief. Her wide eyes flicked to Ethan, searching for an explanation that he himself didn’t have.Ethan’s throat tightened, his body stiff as if bound by invisible cords. His mind spun like a wheel in a storm. He couldn’t move, couldn’t think, couldn’t make sense of what had just happened. His chest rose and fell with shallow breaths.“How…” Mia’s voice quivered. “How did you do it?”Ethan blinked, his lips parting before words stumbled out, raw and uncertain. “I… I don’t know.” His soul felt detached, hovering like a shadow above him, watching with just as much confusion as Mia. “I don’t know how I did it. I don’t even know what I was doing here. You—” he drew in a ragged bre
I can do it.
“You can’t just make decisions that have nothing to do with you.”Kelvin snapped the words like a whip. His face was red, fingers drumming the edge of the counter. “Who gave Ethan the authority to come in here and decide anything? Does he even know how to treat acne? Since when did Ethan become an expert in curing the simplest ailments?”Mia glanced between Kelvin and Ethan, uncertainty carved across her features. “Was that… Ethan’s right to decide?” she asked, voice small. “Doesn’t Ethan work at the hospital?”Lila stepped Forward. “Ethan is my husband,” she said, her voice was steady and threaded with apology. “I’m sorry if Ethan gave you false hope. He has no medical experience. He’s just trying to help.”That admission was a fuse.“Since when can he talk?” Elizabeth snapped. “Has he been pretending all this time? What else has Ethan lied about?”Lyndia’s eyes narrowed into hard slits. “If he’s been lying about speaking,” she cut in, lethal and quick, “what else is he hiding?”Eliz
Let me heal you
Ethan’s eyes locked on Kelvin Stones, and for a moment the world blurred around him.It was no secret the man carried a torch for Lila—he bragged about it openly, boasting to anyone foolish enough to listen. Ethan had crossed paths with him twice before, back when his own voice was shackled in silence, and both times he had wished he could cut Kelvin’s tongue from his mouth.And yet, as much as Ethan had despised Lila over the years, she was the only constant in his life. The only person he knew. That was why jealousy had once burned through him whenever Kelvin’s name was spoken.But no one adored Kelvin Stones more than Lyndia. She worshipped him like a golden calf, always scheming, always whispering poison into her daughter’s ears. Not once, not twice, but countless times she had urged Lila to divorce the “mute burden” and run to Kelvin.And still, Lila hadn’t. Ethan had been shocked back then, and even more so each time she stood her ground.“I don’t like Kelvin,” Lila would say, h
The man no one want
Ethan woke slowly. He had just dozed off for a few minutes, but somehow it felt like forever.When he raised his head, something was different. His body no longer felt like a prison—it felt like a weapon, honed and alive. Thoughts came faster than he could grasp, whole streams of knowledge pouring into him before he even summoned them. His body moved without hesitation, a natural rhythm guiding him.He rose from the bathtub, water cascading off his skin and pooling across the bathroom tiles. The moment his bare feet touched the ground, it was as though a floodgate had opened. Medicine. Mathematics. Philosophy. Human secrets buried so deep no man should know them. His mind was no longer limited—it was open to all that there is and all that will be.And his body—light, agile, unnaturally powerful. He could see everything sharper, clearer. Almost invisible strands of cotton floating in the air, dust swirling in patterns like sacred symbols. He felt the mysterious forces of the universe c
Problem in the family
Lila immediately slammed the door shut behind her.Her hands were trembling as though she had just brushed against fire. She pressed them to her chest, trying to calm the wild thundering of her heart, but the sight before her wouldn’t leave her mind. Ethan—her husband—was shivering uncontrollably on the floor. His lips had gone pale, his body twisting as though every bone wanted to break free from his skin.“Ethan…” her voice cracked, breath shallow. “What’s happening to you? Why are you contorting like that? Are you—possessed?”He buried his head into his arms, raising both hands to clamp down the sides of his face as if to shut her voice out… or the countless others only he could hear. His whole body quivered like a string pulled too tight.The date. It wouldn’t leave him. May 28th. The cursed day. The swirling tide of knowledge that didn’t belong to him pushed against his skull like waves beating against a fragile glass wall. Books he had never touched, languages he had never learn
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