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I did not reach out my hands to grasp. Not out of restraint, nor out of fear of disturbing the fragile balance of what was unfolding there, but because I knew — with a certainty that had no na, but already held the texture of the body — that touching was not necessary, that what was presenting itself to could not be received by the skin, nor even intercepted by a gesture, however gentle, however bare it might be, because it did not ask for action, but for space, not for impulse, but for porosity. It was less about opening than about forgetting oneself. Less about reaching than becoming porous. It was not about wanting, but about letting it happen.

I did not need to touch, no, because what he was returning to ... did not weigh anything. Not even a little. It was not an object. Not a weight. Not a substance. It was a breath, too old to still seek a form, too old to even desire having one anymore. It slid between his fingers without sound, without friction, like a mory passing through a body without resistance, a vibration, a lukewarm warmth, a formless pulsation, almost without direction — like an idea that had been left to sleep for so long it had forgotten its own na, its own voice, and which ca back now, fragile, trembling, without language. A presence that hesitated, as if it too doubted whether it still had the right to exist.

I did not grasp it. It would be false to say I received it. It was not handed over, nor offered, nor transmitted with intention. It ca. To . Not through movent, not through distance, but through gliding. Directly. Not into the hands. Not into the eyes. Not into the skin.

Into the chest.

And there was neither pain, nor piercing, nor impact. It struck nothing. It split nothing. It did not impose itself.

It integrated.

And that mont, though so tenuous, so invisible, provoked a strange reaction, almost imperceptible, but total — a shiver, fine, precise, just under the sternum, as if the flesh had rembered too late that it had been crossed, as if a light wave, soft but unusual, had nestled where nothing had pulsed for a long ti. A new pulsation, timid, but obstinate, as if the body had been brushed by a season it believed lost.

And yet, in this strangeness, I knew imdiately. It was not an intrusion. It was not a gift from elsewhere. It was mine. Or more precisely: it had been. But what I recognized was not what I was expecting. It was not a return. It was not a restoration. It was a misalignnt. A persistence from a forr self I had never really known how to na, and which, nonetheless, returned to with the quiet obviousness of an organ one hadn’t quite lost. Sothing that had survived, not by strength, but by forgetfulness — and which now flowed back to like a soft but distorted mory.

But the more I felt it vibrate... the more sothing in opposed it.

Not on the outside.

Inside.

Not violently. Not in rejection. But in that dull inertia of things that refuse to be called by their na. My own body — not the surface, but the deep layers, the mute density within — seed not to recognize it. Or rather, it still resisted admitting that it had truly lost it, one day, at a mont too distant for mory to speak it, but not distant enough for the body to ignore. There was an old crack there, a forgotten fold, a crease of absence that presence awakened too gently to tear open.

It did not hurt. It invaded nothing. It did not impose its presence. It settled.

With slowness.

With that patience that only fragnts possess, those that know they have never stopped waiting.

It embraced my contours — not those of the visible torso, but those of the inner space, of the invisible folds of breath, those I had not inhabited for so long that they had beco mute. It sought its place, not with urgency, nor with pain, but with that gentle persistence of things that do not know how to return, but return nonetheless. A silent fidelity, almost embarrassed, like a hand still extended in the shadows.

And every heartbeat, now, resonated differently. In the rib cage. In the very texture of the silence around. As if a second rhythm had slipped into the forr one, misaligned, autonomous. And I, I no longer knew whether I should flee it, retune it... or simply survive its strangeness. There was no pain, but there was a discordance, as if my body were singing in two voices, without knowing which to follow.

A mory? Perhaps. An instinct? Perhaps that too. A forgotten organ? I did not know. But what I did know, what I could no longer ignore, was that it did not vibrate to my rhythm. No. It beat beside it. It beat differently.

It had kept its own tempo. As if the world, in its slow digestion of absences, had nourished it with a breath other than mine. And I, standing in that soft room, between a departure that had never happened and a return that no longer fully belonged to , I was no longer sure how to welco it. Nor whether I still should. Can one embrace what has lived without us? Can one love what has survived outside of us?

So I lowered my head. Not out of sha. Nor even out of disturbance. But because the body, at so point, knows better than the mind when it must yield. I placed a hand on my chest — not to soothe it, nor to contain it, but to feel. To check. To question the ground beneath the breath.

And in that contact — so simple, so human — I felt a subtle discordance, almost invisible, but irrefutable. As if my skin, beneath my fingers, no longer quite belonged to . As if sothing, underneath, was beating without my knowing. With love perhaps — yes, there was a gentleness — but still without . As if this fragnt still carried the mory of another rhythm, another body, another wound — and was asking , silently, if I was ready to beco that other.

And when I looked up again, the being was no longer there.

It had not faded.

It had not disappeared into the light, nor fled into a dream.

It had returned to where it needed to be, where it had always been, where only I could one day join it, if the breath managed to retune itself.

Now that I had received what I had never dared to ask for, now that I had accepted what I did not know I had lost... it no longer had to stay.

And I, alone at the center of that soft room, between absence and return, between the forr heart and the new beat, I could not tell whether I had just healed... or if sothing within had simply begun to vibrate to a frequency that no longer quite belonged to — but which, nonetheless, now... would be mine.

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