He_faced_him_in_the_darkness_of_oblivion_VIDEO

lunes, marzo 02, 2026

He_faced_him_in_the_darkness_of_oblivion_VIDEO

He faced him in the darkness of oblivion, where no stars remembered their names and no wind carried the echo of their footsteps. The void itself seemed to breathe, a slow, tidal exhalation that pressed against the skin like the memory of water. 


I thought you were gone, the first man said. His voice did not travel; it simply existed, a cold bead of mercury resting on the tongue of nothing. 


The second man—if man he still was—smiled without moving his mouth. The expression assembled itself from shadows, a curvature of absence that implied teeth. passing is a hallway with two doors. You stepped through one; I stepped through the other. Both rooms are dark. 


The first man lifted his right hand. Once it had held a sword; once it had held a child. Now it held only the weight of its own history, fingers calcified into a sculpture of regret. I came to forgive you, he lied. 


The second man tilted his head, and the darkness around him shifted like cloth sliding from a body. Forgiveness is a lantern you carry upside-down. The oil drips behind you and burns what you have already passed. He took a step forward, and the distance between them neither increased nor decreased; the darkness merely folded, so that the two men stood at opposite ends of the same breath. 


The first man felt the years collapse. He saw the battlefield again, the river running red with the reflection of a moon that refused to look away. He heard his own voice screaming a name that was not the second man’s true name, but the name of the crime he had committed. I was trying to save her, he whispered. 


And I was trying to save the idea of her, the second man replied. She became a story we told ourselves to survive the night. Stories sharpen when you rub them against each other; eventually they cut everything they touch. 


A sound began, too large for hearing: the slow grinding of tectonic epochs, the cough of galaxies swallowing their own tails. The darkness developed texture, a wet velvet that clung to the palate. 


The first man realized he could no longer remember his own face. He reached up to touch it and found only a smoothness like the inside of an eggshell. What happens if I unalive you here? he asked. 


The second man’s laughter was the sound of frost cracking on a windowpane seen from the wrong side of sleep. Then the darkness will have to decide which of us was the echo. 


The first man felt the absence of a sword in his hand become the presence of an idea: that every weapon is only a question posed to flesh, and every wound an answer that cannot be unread. He stepped forward; the darkness folded again, and this time the two men occupied the same space, their hearts beating in counterpoint like mismatched wings. 


I forgive you, the second man said, and the words tasted of iron. 


The first man closed his eyes—though whether he still possessed eyes was negotiable—and saw a single ember floating in a well of black water. He understood then that oblivion was not a place but a conversation, endless and recursive, and that they would stand here forever, speaking the same sentences backward until the concept of betrayal became indistinguishable from the concept of love. 


When he opened his eyes—if eyes were what opened—the second man was gone, replaced by a silhouette of light so thin it could only be described by the darkness it held at bay. The first man reached toward it, and his hand passed through, leaving ripples that spelled a name he finally recognized as his own. 


Somewhere, a star remembered how to burn.


The car stopped. There was no engine that passed away, no brake that squealed; simply, the darkness parted like a veil. Wenzel looked out the steamed-up window, but he didn't see the Car Yard, nor the flames, nor the swing set. Only a narrow alley, lit by flickering streetlights that cast shadows that writhed like snakes. The air smelled of wet earth and something else, something sweet, like rotten honey.


This is your first floor, Kym Mûryer said, opening the door. The first floor of what you will be.


The shadow slid from the car, its long fingers grabbing Wenzel's arm, dragging him outside. The cold pierced his chest like a sharp object, but the pain was different now. It wasn't the memory of Erich, nor the anger of the fire. It was something older, deeper: the feeling that his body was no longer his own.


The alley was a labyrinth of damp walls, covered in graffiti that seemed to move under the flickering of the streetlights. On the ground, puddles of black water reflected images that didn't belong in the city: children playing on a swing, a zinc bathtub filled with dark liquid, an eye without a pupil.


See? the shadow whispered, its voice an echo that resonated in her head. Here, time doesn't exist. Only pain. Only play.


Kym Mûryer walked toward a rusty iron gate, which opened without anyone touching it. Behind it, a flooded garden with black flowers that throbbed like hearts. In the center, a dried-up fountain, where the water had been replaced by a thick, smoke-black liquid.


Your first step, Kym Mûryer said, pointing to the liquid. Drink.


Wenzel knelt, feeling his body obey without resistance. His hands dipped into the liquid, and as he touched it, images burst into his mind: Erich on the swing, Kym Mûryer smiling as she dragged him toward the basement, the shadow watching from the shadows. But other scenes too: a girl with marsupial eyes, a wooden house with broken windows, an hourglass spinning backward.


You are the chosen one, the shadow said, stroking his head with an ice-cold hand. The one who will take our game further.


Kym Mûryer approached, holding a torch that didn't burn, but instead emitted a pale glow.


Wenzel, the fire you used was weak. But here... here the fire is eternal.


The shadow swirled around the torch, and the black liquid churned, reflecting not memories now, but future ones: Wenzel burning down a church, a school, an orphanage. Each image made him tremble, not from fear, but from an ecstasy that paralyzed him.


Do you want to know? Kym Mûryer asked, her voice a whisper that seemed to come from within his own mind. Do you want to know the price of being one of us?


Wenzel nodded, unable to speak. The shadow smiled, showing sharp teeth.


The price is Erich, it said. Not as a souvenir, but as an offering.


Kym Mûryer handed the torch to Wenzel. As he took it, the pale glow turned into blue flames, which didn't burn, but froze.


Now, the shadow said. Burn what binds you. Burn what makes you weak.


Wenzel looked out at the flooded garden, and in the center, an image floated in the black liquid: Erich, laughing on the swing. Without hesitation, without resistance, he set the image alight.


The blue fire consumed him, and with it, the last trace of his humanity.


The shadow embraced him, its long fingers intertwining with his.


Welcome, it whispered. Welcome to the house of eternal games.


Kym Mûryer moved away, disappearing within the walls of the labyrinth. The shadow led him to the fountain, where the black liquid enveloped him, and Wenzel knew, in the instant before the darkness swallowed him, that he was no longer a criminal. It was a rule of the game.


And the game, in that house, never ended.



The darkness thickened like cold tar. Wenzel lay on his knees on the cracked asphalt, the taste of soot and defeat filling his mouth. The charred swing creaked behind him, a metallic wail merging with the passing crackle of the burning cars. Kym Mûryer Mûryer loomed before him, her coat flapping like a raven's wings in the smoke-laden breeze. Her eyes, two crimson embers, reflected the passing flames with a depraved gleam.


The fire goes out, Wenzel, Kym Mûryer whispered, her voice a razor's edge slicing through the silence. But the pain... the pain is eternal.


Wenzel tried to get up, but his legs gave out. The memory assaulted him with the force of a punch: the night at The Omen orphanage, when Kym Mûryer had burst into his brother Erich's room. The backyard swing set, where Erich laughed while Wenzel told monster stories under the moon. Until the real monster took shape. Until Kym Mûryer took Erich away, leaving only a pool of crimson liquid and a silence that still echoed in Wenzel's bones.


You... you unalived Erich, Wenzel murmured, the words tearing at his throat like rusty wire.


Kym Mûryer smiled, showing teeth stained with dried crimson liquid. He approached the charred swing set, running a finger along the melted chains. The metal squeaked beneath his touch, a sound reminiscent of broken bones.


Erich was... weak, Kym Mûryer said, her voice tinged with a hint of pity. But you... you have fire. She likes fire.


A shiver ran down Wenzel's spine. He wasn't alone. In the thickest shadows, where the smoke from the fire tangled with the darkness, he saw two eyes. They were round, shiny like wet embers, and belonged to a childlike silhouette with marsupial features. The shadow didn't move; it just stared at him, motionless like an insect pinned to a board.


She'll follow you now, Kym Mûryer said, her hot breath fanning the back of Wenzel's neck. Because pain... is her food.


The shadow took a step forward. Its skin was pale as old wax, crisscrossed with bluish veins that throbbed like worms beneath the surface. It extended a tiny hand, with long fingers and black nails like ticks. When it touched Wenzel's shoulder, absolute cold invaded him, an emptiness that drew a silent cry from him. It wasn't physical cold, but the sensation of his soul unraveling.


Don't fight it, the shadow whispered, its voice a damp echo that resonated in Wenzel's mind. Let me in.


Wenzel closed his eyes. The memory of Erich flooded his mind: his laughter on the swing, his tiny hands gripping the chains, the sparkle in his eyes before Kym Mûryer took him away. The pain was a sharp object in his throat ever since. And now… now the shadow wanted him for food.


Kym Mûryer laughed, a dry, bitter sound that drifted into the breeze.


See? There's no escape. The fire is out, but the pain… the pain is eternal.


The shadow leaned closer, its cold breath caressing Wenzel's ear.


Play with us, it whispered, its voice mingling with the creaking of the rusty swing. The game of pain.


Wenzel opened his eyes. The moon peeked through the clouds, illuminating the Car Yard with a pale glow. Kym Mûryer stood beside the swing, smiling like a fallen angel. The shadow, beside him, looked at him with eyes that glowed like burning coals.


Come, Kym Mûryer said, extending a messy hand. The game has just begun.


And Wenzel, with the shadow's chill still on his neck and the memory of Erich burning in his chest, knew he had no choice. Because pain, in the end, was all he had left. He took Kym Mûryer's hand. And darkness enveloped them both, while the shadow laughed with the voice of a child who never grew up.


The air of the Car Cemetery smelled of humid rust and old gasoline, an odor that clung to the throat like sandpaper. Wenzel Germeuz squeezed the torch in his right hand, feeling the heat of the fire lick his fingers as if it were a living creature. Burn, burn everything, he whispered, his voice hoarse from the smoke that was already beginning to stain his face black. Sweat ran down his forehead, mixing with the soot, and his eyes shone with a fervent madness.


The fire does not forgive, he thought, while the flames devoured the first abandoned car. The chassis, once the pride of some forgotten driver, now creaked like bones being torn apart. He remembered the night when Kym Mûryer  tore away the only thing that mattered to him: a secret, a memory, something that connected him to his humanity. Since then, fire had been his only ally. That shadow… it’s mine. Kym Mûryer stole it from me. Today I’ll get it back!


He had arrived at the Car Cemetery after weeks of investigation: following Kym Mûryer’s steps, studying his movements in the archives of the The Omen Orphanage, reviewing old photos where the child Kym Mûryer played in this very place. Now, among the rubble, an old swing — the same one that appeared in those photos, with its white paint peeling and its rusted chains — was burning. The chains screeched as they melted into silver droplets that fell onto the cracked asphalt. For an instant, Wenzel saw a shadow in the fire: the silhouette of a child with marsupial eyes, identical to those Kym Mûryer used to draw in his diaries. Wenzel’s heart raced. It’s him… the demon Kym Mûryer worships. But today… today fire will give me back what is mine.


Suddenly, a voice emerged from the darkness, behind a rusted car: Do you think fire will save you?


Wenzel spun around sharply, the torch trembling in his hand. Kym Mûryer  emerged from the shadows, his coat fluttering like crow’s wings in the smoke-laden breeze. His eyes, crimson, reflected the flames with a sadistic glint. That shadow… it feeds it, Kym Mûryer added, his voice a whisper that made the hair on Wenzel’s neck stand on end.


The fire bad guy clenched his teeth. That shadow is mine! You stole it from me… Today I’ll get it back with fire! he shouted, pointing the torch at Kym Mûryer. The heat of the fire burned his palm, but the pain didn’t matter; only possession. Kym Mûryer, however, smiled, showing teeth stained with dry crimson liquid. The shadow belongs to no one. It belongs to the one who knows how to wait… and to the one who understands that pain is a gift.


Wenzel laughed, a dry and bitter sound. Lies! The fire is mine… and the shadow will be too. But in his mind, doubts crowded. What if Kym Mûryer was right? What if the shadow truly fed on the flames? Fear froze his crimson liquid, but rage kept him steady. Stop! he ordered, throwing the torch at Kym Mûryer.


The fire flew through the air, a trail of sparks lighting up the night. Kym Mûryer moved with the speed of a snake, dodging the torch before it touched the ground. The flame exploded in a puddle of oil, and the darkness grew denser afterward.


A few minutes of silence to drown out the noise, and then the room exhaled.

Not with a sigh—sighs are human, and this place had forgotten how to be that.

It exhaled the way an abandoned church exhales, rafters settling deeper into their own shadows, the way a battlefield exhales when the last boot is dragged away, leaving only the mud to remember the weight of living.


Elias sat at the table’s head, fingertips resting on the scarred oak as though it were the ribcage of something once warm.

The others—three, four, depending on whether you counted the one who had not yet decided to remain alive—watched the candle between them melt into a shape that resembled a spine.

No one had lit that candle. It had simply realized it was expected to burn, and so it did.


Outside, the city kept its own heartbeat: a distant siren, a dog whose bark had learned to echo like a gunshot, the slow grind of a tram that hadn’t carried passengers since the embargo.

Inside, the silence grew teeth.


Anya, youngest and therefore least surprised by betrayal, spoke first.

They’re sealing the river at dawn. Paper says it’s for public health. Paper’s started tasting like copper when you hold it to your tongue.

She did not look at Elias when she said it; she looked at the candle, as if expecting the wax to confirm her suspicion.


The man with no surname—only the letter K stitched onto his coat where a monogram should have been—shifted enough to make the chair scream.

Health is a word they use when they mean disposal.

His voice arrived from someplace far ahead of his body, a messenger running late.

We’ve got six hours before the water forgets how to reflect the moon. After that, everything sinks.


Elias lifted his right hand.

Not in command; the gesture was gentler, the way you lift a child’s chin to see whether they’re still dreaming.

We’re not leaving by water, he said.

The sentence sounded final, but the room knew better.

Finality required witnesses, and half of those present had already begun to fade, outlines humming like bad reception.


The fourth person—if she was a person—had no name anyone had risked asking for.

She wore the night itself, tailored close, seams of starlight glinting where a lesser tailor would have used thread.

When she breathed, the temperature of the room rearranged its loyalties.

Now she leaned forward, and the candle shivered, flame bowing as if receiving orders.

There is a train, she said, that never arrived at its first destination. It has been en route for thirty-one years, carrying the same passengers, who no longer recall whether they are fleeing or returning. At 04:12 it will pass beneath this house. The tunnel is narrow. You will have to decide, each of you, whether you are thinner than your regrets.


Anya’s hand found the underside of the table, nails searching for splinters to anchor her pulse.

And if we board?

Then you become cargo, the night-clad woman replied.

Cargo does not choose the port. But cargo also does not drown alone.


K laughed, a sound like a projectile casing kissed by a magnet.

I’ve been cargo since the day I was born. I can live with not choosing.

He turned to Elias.

Can you?


Elias did not answer.

Instead, he reached into the chest pocket of a coat that had once been military, before armies were replaced by algorithms and polite atrocities.

He drew out a photograph yellowed along its edges, the kind of yellow that suggests time itself has jaundice.

In it: a woman on a bicycle, skirt hitched, mouth open mid-laugh, hair flying like a flag that had never heard of surrender.

He laid the photo face-up beside the candle.

The wax crept toward it, curious.


This is who I was supposed to become, he said.

She’s younger than all of us, and older than the conflict. I keep her to remind myself that versions exist in which no one needs rescuing. Tonight I stop carrying her. She can pedal her own escape.


He looked at each of them in turn—Anya, K, the woman stitched from darkness—waiting for objection.

None arrived.

Objections required futures, and futures were in short supply.


The clock on the wall had surrendered its hands years ago, but they all felt 04:11 settle over the room like dust that had learned to whisper.

Somewhere beneath the floorboards, steel began to sing against steel, a lullaby for insomniac rails.


Elias stood.

Not heroically; chairs scraped back from him the way shore recoils from a tide that has decided never to return.

He extended his palms, open, empty, the way you do when the only thing left to offer is the shape of your leaving.


Downstairs, he said.

Through the pantry. Behind the false wall where we kept the sugar before sweetness became contraband. The tunnel mouth is narrower than memory. We go single file. Do not look back unless you want to see what the house decides to remember.


Anya rose first, because someone had to prove courage was still possible.

K followed, coat clinking with the percussion of everything he had not yet thrown away.

The woman of night moved last, extinguishing the candle between two fingers that did not blister.

Darkness completed itself.


In the hallway, their footsteps sounded like typing on a manuscript no editor would dare touch.

The pantry door sighed open, revealing stairs spiraling down in the reluctant geometry of a throat.

Somewhere far below, the train exhaled—steam or ghosts, impossible to tell.


Elias paused on the top step.

He did not turn; he spoke to the air over his shoulder, the way you speak to a grave when the body is still walking.

If we meet again, he said, do not expect me to recognize you. Names will be contraband where we’re going. But if you hear someone whistling the first three notes of a song that ends mid-breath, follow. That will be me, pretending I still know how to finish things.


Then he descended.

One by one, they followed, coats brushing the stone like apologies.

Behind them, the house sealed its own mouth, beams settling into the shape of a story that would never need telling again.


Below, the train waited—

a comma of iron in the sentence of the dark—

ready to carry them toward whatever paragraph the night had decided to write next.

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