Page 1 of Until I Shatter


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One

Aria

Thewindisaliar.

It shoves at my back, cold and insistent, pretending it has the power to move me. It doesn’t. I sit on the concrete ledge, seven stories above the asphalt, and my legs dangle in the empty space between the world and me. The city glitters below, a sprawling, fractured map of light and noise. I register the distant wail of a siren, the rumble of a truck down on Third Avenue, the chemical-pink glow of a digital billboard painting the undersidesof the clouds. These are facts, not feelings. Data points I collect to prove I’m still here.

My perch on the ledge is gritty and cold against my palms. I come here most nights. Not to jump. That would be too much of a decision, too active a choice. I come here for the opposite reason. I come here for the nothing. Up here the world is a muted spectacle, and I am its only audience, a ghost in a theater of one.

It’s been two years, three months, and twelve days since the car flipped. Since the world shrieked, the sun vanished, and Jade’s hand was ripped from mine. I woke up in a hospital bed, alive, while she… wasn’t.

This quiet, this emptiness—it’s my penance. A monument to the life Jade should’ve had, which I have no right to live. To feel joy would be a betrayal, to feel desire, a desecration. To feel fear is a luxury I don’t deserve. So I feel nothing. It’s the only honest thing I have left to offer her memory.

I trace the faint, silvery lines on my palms, old scars from the night the world ended. They’re from the shattered glass, from pushing against the mangled dashboard, from trying to reach her.

The air smelled of gasoline and something hot and coppery. A fact. Jade’s hand was warm in mine, and then it wasn’t. A fact.

I close my eyes, not to see the memory, but to confirm the void. There’s nothing behind my eyelids but a quiet, waiting darkness. It’s calm, it’s safe. It’s what I’ve earned.

A laugh echoes from a balcony a few floors down and across the street. A woman throws her head back, her silhouette sharp against the light of her apartment. A man leans in and kisses her. I watch them, my expression unchanged. I observe their happiness the way a scientist observes a chemical reaction in a petri dish. It is a phenomenon that exists, but it has nothing to do with me. It’s a language I no longer speak.

The wind tries again, whipping a strand of my dark hair across my face. I don’t brush it away. I let it sting my cheek. A reminder of the physical world I’m only visiting but tonight, the nothingness feels different. The quiet isn’t peaceful; it’s just empty. The void is starting to feel less like a sanctuary, and more like a cage. A familiar, low-grade restlessness begins to hum under my skin, a signal that my time on the ledge is over.

With a sigh that is more reflex than emotion, I swing my legs back onto the solid roof. My joints protest with a faint ache. I stand, brushing the grit from the back of my jeans. The city looks the same as it did a moment ago, but my position has changed. I am no longer above it. I am in it again.

The heavy steel door to the stairwell groans in protest as I pull it open. The sudden, enclosed darkness is a stark contrast to the open sky. The air inside is thick, smelling of old concrete, dust, and the faint, sour tang of garbage from the alley below. I let the door slam shut, the sound echoing down the seven flights of stairs.

Each step is a reluctant descent. The rooftop is my purgatory, a quiet waiting room. The stairwell is the path back to a life I’m supposed to be living. My apartment is on the fifth floor, but I bypass it. I don’t know why. The restlessness is still there, a vague itch in my brain. I keep going down. Fourth floor. Third. The numbers painted on the wall at each landing seem to mock me, counting me down, forcing me back to ground level.

The air grows heavier, the smell of damp refuse stronger. I reach the ground floor. A single, bare bulb flickers overhead, casting long, dancing shadows. There are two doors. One leads to the building’s sterile, brightly lit lobby. The other is a dented metal slab with a rusted push-bar, leading to the back alley.

I’ve never used it before. I always go through the front into the clean, predictable world, but the restlessness pushes me forward. I place my hand on the cool metal bar, and I push.

The door groans open with the sound of scraping metal, and the scene hits me all at once.

The alley is a narrow canyon of brick and dumpsters, slick with a recent rain that makes the ground shimmer under the lurid red glow of a neon sign from the bar next door. It reads “The Crimson Cat,” but two of the letters are dead, so it just says “T Crimson Cat.”

My eyes catch movement. Two figures are hunched over, scrambling away into the darkness at the far end of the alley like startled rats. They disappear around the corner, their frantic footsteps echoing for a moment before fading into silence.

They’ve left something—someone—behind.

He’s leaning against the opposite brick wall, his body coiled like a spring, still thrumming with an energy that makes the air around him feel charged. It’s a boy. No, not a boy. He’s my age, maybe a year or two older, but the word feels wrong. There is nothing boyish about the way he holds himself. He is a creature of sharp angles and coiled tension.

His head is bowed, his dark, messy hair falling into his eyes. His knuckles are split and raw, and a deep cut above his right eyebrow is bleeding freely. The blood traces a slow, deliberate path down his temple, stark and dark against his pale skin. He’s wearing a worn leather jacket, a black t-shirt, and ripped jeans. He looks like a stray. A beautiful, dangerous thing that has been fighting its whole life.

He’s a whirlwind of leftover violence, a storm contained in a human body.

He must hear the faint click of the door as it settles into its frame, because his head snaps up.

His gaze sweeps the alley, wild with adrenaline before it lands on me. It doesn’t just stop; it snags, snapping back to me with a violent focus that feels like a physical blow. He goes absolutely still. For a full second, the victorious fighter vanishes, replacedby a man staring at a ghost. The shock on his face is so profound, so deeply personal that it’s more frightening than the violence I’d just witnessed.

Then, just as quickly the shock is gone, replaced by a mask of dark, possessive fury.

He looks at me, and I know he’s expecting me to scream, slam the door, or run. That’s what a normal person would do, a person who feels fear.

I do none of those things.

I simply stand there, my hand still resting on the metal bar of the door, and I look back at him. My heart, that useless, forgotten muscle in my chest gives a single, hard, painful thump. It’s a shock, a system error. It doesn’t beat again, but the echo of that one beat reverberates through me.