I_Woke_Up_in_Silence…_And_Someone_Was_Already_There

martes, abril 21, 2026

 The first thing I noticed was the silence. VIDEO


Not the absence of sound… but the kind of silence that feels intentional… as if something had removed every noise on purpose… just before I became aware of it.


I was sitting at a table.


My hands were resting flat against the surface… fingers slightly spread… as if I had placed them there carefully… following instructions I didn’t remember receiving.


There was a glass of water in front of me.


Half full.


Or half empty.


I couldn’t decide… and that felt important.


Because I couldn’t remember anything else either.


Not my name… not how I got there… not even how long I had been sitting in that exact position… staring at that exact glass… in that exact silence.


And then… the glass moved.


Just slightly.


Not enough to fall… not enough to spill… just enough that I knew… I hadn’t imagined it.


I didn’t touch it.


I hadn’t breathed.


But it moved.


And that’s when I saw the note.


A small piece of paper… folded once… placed just beyond the edge of the table… as if it had been waiting for me to notice it.


The handwriting was mine.


I knew it instantly… with the same certainty you recognize your own reflection… even if you don’t remember your face.


It said:


“Don’t react.”


I froze.


Not because I chose to… but because something inside me understood… that I had already reacted too many times before.


Slowly… carefully… I lifted my eyes from the note…


And that’s when I saw him.


Sitting across from me.


Same posture.


Same hands.


Same glass of water.


Same face.


My face.


But he was smiling.


Not a normal smile… not relief… not recognition…


It was the kind of smile you make when you already know how something ends.


I tried to speak.


Nothing came out.


He tilted his head slightly… studying me… like I was the unfamiliar one.


Then… he looked down at something in his hand.


Another note.


He read it silently… and his smile widened.


And I knew… before he even spoke… that whatever was written there… was worse than mine.


“You’re earlier than usual,” he said.


His voice was identical to mine… but steadier… practiced.


Like he had said those words many times before.


I shook my head.


Or at least… I think I did.


It felt delayed… like my body was catching up to a decision I hadn’t consciously made.


“What is this?” I managed to whisper.


He didn’t answer immediately.


Instead… he pushed his glass of water slightly forward.


It stopped exactly halfway between us.


Then he said:


“This is the part where you start asking questions.”


A pause.


“And this is the part where I decide how much you’re allowed to remember.”


Something cold settled in my chest.


“Remember what?”


That made him laugh.


Not loudly.


Not mockingly.


Just… tired.


“See? That’s always the first thing you ask.”


He leaned forward slightly.


“And it’s always the wrong question.”


I felt it then.


Not fear.


Not confusion.


Recognition.


Like hearing a sentence you’ve heard in a dream… just before waking up.


“What should I be asking?” I said.


His eyes locked onto mine.


And for the first time… his smile disappeared.


“You should be asking why there’s only one glass.”


I looked down.


The table.


The hands.


The glass.


And he was right.


There was only one.


But I could have sworn…


Just seconds ago…


There had been two.


I looked back at him.


And for a moment… something was wrong.


Not with him.


With reality itself.


Like the space he occupied… didn’t fully agree with his existence.


Edges slightly blurred.


Movement… half a second out of sync.


“You’re not real,” I said.


He didn’t react.


“You said that last time too.”


A pause.


“And the time before that.”


My throat tightened.


“How many times?”


He hesitated.


Not because he didn’t know.


Because he was deciding if I deserved to.


Then he reached forward…


And slid his note across the table.


I didn’t want to read it.


But I knew I would.


Because whatever this was…


It had already happened.


I unfolded the paper.


Same handwriting.


Same ink.


Same certainty.


It said:


“This version lasts longer.”


My hands started trembling.


Finally.


A delayed reaction.


A useless one.


“What happens to the others?” I asked.


He leaned back in his chair.


And for a moment… he looked almost relieved.


Like we had reached the part he’d been waiting for.


“They ask too many questions,” he said.


“And then they disappear.”


A silence.


Not empty this time.


Heavy.


Occupied.


Watching.


“And me?” I whispered.


His eyes softened.


Not with kindness.


With familiarity.


“You’re getting close.”


A pause.


“Close to what?”


He smiled again.


But this time… it wasn’t directed at me.


It was directed… past me.


Behind me.


At something I couldn’t see.


“Close to noticing the third chair.”


My breath stopped.


Slowly… very slowly…


I began to turn.


And just before I could see it…


Before I could confirm whether we had ever been two…


Or if we had always been three…


I heard something.


A pen.


Writing.


Right behind me...



...

...

You Might Also Like

0 comments

Compartir en Instagram

© Carlos del Puente 2026 Aviso legal © Carlos del Puente 2026 | Aviso legal Copyright