his_own_absence_embodied VIDEO.
miércoles, marzo 11, 2026his_own_absence_embodied VIDEO.
Slave to the image of the other's body.It was the phrase that haunted Kym long after the unalive stopped—the one that surfaced in dreams like a drowned thing rising. Not guilt, not regret, but this: the unbearable clarity of the body left behind. Not as evidence. Not as consequence. But as mirror.
He had never unalived out of hunger. Not for crimson liquid, not for power, not even for justice in the crude sense. He unalived because, in the final stillness of another human form, he saw his own absence reflected. The slack jaw, the emptied eyes, the way the hands curled inward as if trying to hold onto a self that had already fled—these were not trophies. They were questions. And Kym, in his terrible solitude, had mistaken them for answers.
The five had known this, too. Each of them had been enslaved—not by desire, not by rage alone—but by the image of the body they had unmade. The mortician remembered the cool weight of a child’s wrist in his palm, too light, too still. The librarian saw the priest’s throat pulse once, twice, then not at all, and in that cessation, she saw her own voice finally silenced. The soldier stared at the hollow of his stepfather’s collarbone and saw the place where his father should have been. The boy, young and trembling, watched his uncle’s breath fog the blade one last time and saw his mother’s face in the steam.
And Kym? He saw his sister’s shoe.
Always the shoe.
Small. Brown leather. Laces tied in a bow she’d learned to make herself.
He had never found her body. But in every one he left behind, he searched for hers.
That was the true slavery—not to violence, but to the image. To the unbearable fidelity of flesh after spirit had fled. The body became a text he could not stop reading, a sentence he could not finish.
Now, sitting across from the woman who had chosen to stay, he felt the chains shift.
She had not come bearing a body. She had come bearing a voice.
And in her voice, there was no image to enslave him—only presence.
“You don’t look at me like I’m a body,” she said quietly, as if she’d heard his thoughts.
He shook his head. “I look at you like you’re still writing your sentence.”
She held his gaze. “And you?”
“I’m learning to stop rereading the gone.”
Outside, the wind carried the scent of salt and pine. The house, once thick with the residue of endings, now held space for something unfinished. Imperfect. Alive.
She reached into her coat and pulled out a photograph—faded, creased at the corners. She placed it on the table between them.
It was a picture of a girl, no older than ten, standing barefoot on a porch, sunlight in her hair, one hand raised as if waving to someone just out of frame. Her eyes were bright. Her smile was real.
“My sister,” she said. “She didn’t make it either.”
Kym didn’t touch the photo. He didn’t need to. He saw the ghost in it—the same ghost that lived in his shoe, in his silence, in the ledger’s careful lines.
“But I’m not here to find her,” the woman continued. “I’m here because I finally stopped looking for her in every gone thing.”
Kym exhaled slowly. The weight in his chest didn’t vanish—but it changed shape.
He stood and walked to the fireplace. From the mantel, he took down a small wooden frame, its glass long since shattered, the photo beneath yellowed with age. He set it beside hers.
A boy. Dark hair. Wide eyes. Standing in front of the same kind of porch.
“My brother,” he said.
They didn’t say more. They didn’t need to.
Two images. Two absences. Two lives that had become prisons.
But here, now, in this room thick with unspoken grammar and hard-won silence, the images were no longer chains.
They were altars.
And Kym Mûryer, who had once been slave to the image of the other’s body, finally understood: the gone do not demand more unaliving.
They ask only to be remembered without being repeated.
He sat back down.
And for the first time, he looked at the woman—not as a reflection of loss, but as a living sentence, still being written.
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