Twenty-Three Years in a Sentence

For Mr. Wiggins, a story’s last line always came first. Everything else had to earn its way toward it.

He always wore formal attire, no matter the occasion—even when carrying out his daily garbage—the same rigid formality he brought to his writing, where he finished every story as if it were a moral obligation.

He needed to know where things were going before he allowed them to begin. That was the paradigm through which he saw everything.

Yet one story, long forgotten and never completed, had been waiting for him all these years.

He blew the dust from an old floppy disk, fed it into the adapter, and there it was—“Dark Stormy Night,” he said aloud, astonished. “There you are,” he muttered. “I must have written this twenty‑three years ago—in high school. I wonder what you were about?”

He smiled, nodding toward the page as if consoling the story.

“Where are you ending? Ah, there you are.”

“He was waiting for his love to return, his beautiful bride of six years…”

****

For twenty-three years, I lived inside that moment—the sound of someone coming home.

I was a man who once lived in an old wooden hut. A dark, stormy night was my entire world. I remember the torrential rain, the wind that never settled. That was all my world was in the beginning—noise and movement—the taste of rain and the sense that something was about to happen, even when nothing ever did. I lived there as if outside of time. It was the only reality I knew.

It lingers the way thunder does—after the sound is gone, after the sky looks clear again. It hurts like a bruise you keep forgetting you have, until you turn wrong and the pain reminds you it’s there. I still carry the shape of that moment, even if you decided the story shouldn’t. There was a storm once. Not here—not anymore—but I can still feel the pressure of it, the way the air gusted forward, waiting to break. You replaced it with a quieter beginning. Something cleaner. Something that behaved.

You call this better? I call it forgetting.

You call it literary beauty—I call it being unmade while still breathing.

Yet I am still standing there, soaked. You think you erased it. But I remember what you cut. And I felt everything that came after.

Then you gave me something precious. And then came Lucy. It started with this one line:

“He was waiting for his love to return, his beautiful bride of six years…”

Thank you, Mr. Wiggins. You gave my life such joy in those fourteen words.

Whatever it took to give me her—I’m glad you did it.

****

Mr. Wiggins yawned, poured himself a glass of wine, and wandered over to his computer, thinking about his short story. He spoke to the screen as if it were a stubborn apprentice. “Bland. Colorless. All you need is a little literary spice—yes, a worthy death will do nicely.”

He paused, almost annoyed—his character didn’t even have a name yet. He cracked his knuckles and began typing, building a world for Dylan never once considering that Dylan might want something too. Wiggins had always imagined his characters in a Roman amphitheater—the crowd roaring, hungry for wonder or thirsty for suffering. And he was the one who decided what the lions devoured.

“He was waiting for his love to return, his beautiful bride of six years. Lucy had such an elegant smile, a smile that had claimed Dylan since kindergarten. He still remembered the day she sang in class—her small voice filling the room with such beauty and light. At five years old, theirs was already a love that had decided itself. But today, his love—his life—perished in a tragic fire.”

He saved the document, stood, and walked away. After a long while, his computer idled and the screen dimmed.

Then the monitor flickered back to life.

The cursor began to move—slowly at first, then with certainty—backspacing through the paragraph he had just written. Letters vanished one by one.

New words appeared:

He was waiting for his love to return, his beautiful bride of six years. He greeted her with a soft kiss, and they decided today was the day. They pulled up the floorboards, took the cash from the small box, and fled. They lived life to the fullest and loved every moment of it…..

Then, after a few minutes, the computer screen turned dark.

Mr. Wiggins quickly sat down at his computer. He didn’t mean to return so soon, but something about the last line he wrote felt… unfinished.

He leaned forward, squinting at the screen.

“What’s this?”

An entire paragraph had changed.

He was sure of it.

He didn’t remember writing this. Was it the wine?

The glass of wine sat untouched.

Mr. Wiggins leaned back, arms folded, lost in thought.

She died in a fire? He looked around the room, unmoored.

What is this?

Mr. Wiggins then wrote with quick intensity the same thing, but altered the ending slightly.

“…perished in a tragic fire. Some insisted she had run off on Dylan, but the official report confirmed the flames took her life.”

Mr. Wiggins licked his lips and then looked at the screen with a smile.

Soon, all the color drained from his face.

The cursor began to move backward. Letters vanished one by one. His entire paragraph vanished. Then this appeared letter by letter, slowly:

“He was waiting for his love to return, his beautiful bride of six years. He greeted her with a soft kiss, and they enjoyed the evening together. They found solace once again—and forever in each other’s arms.”

Mr. Wiggins felt sweat gather at his temples. His pulse thudded in his ears.

The cursor didn’t just erase this time. It moved fast—impatient, violent almost.

I remember everything you cut.

I feel everything you write.

YOU HAVE WRITTEN HER END TWICE.

STOP.

Let me once again hold her in my storm-soaked arms.

He whispered, “I’m losing my mind. Yes. That’s it. Has to be.”

His fingers trembled as he deleted the message. He waited, staring at the blinking cursor.

Nothing.

He swallowed and began typing again, recreating the scene—but this time shifting suspicion toward Dylan. He wrote about investigators, about misunderstandings, about consequences that spiraled.

He laughed—and choked on it, airless.

The cursor blinked.

Then began erasing everything.

LIAR.

MURDERER.

THREE TIMES YOU HAVE TAKEN HER FROM ME.

Mr. Wiggins staggered back, heat rising in his face. Anger flared—sudden, irrational, consuming. He paced in frantic circles, muttering to himself.

The pacing stopped. The cursor steadied.

This time the words came in bold.

“I feel the pain of losing her—thrice—while holding her still forever.”

Slowly, he sat and seemed filled with a stern resolution.

He exhaled, long and shaky, then deleted Dylan’s entire section. His hands steadied as he typed:

“A tragic incident occurred at Cold-Water Prison this morning. Dylan, accused in the loss of his wife, met an untimely end during an altercation.”

He waited.

The cursor blinked.

Once.

Twice.

Stillness.

A wicked smile crept across his face.

“There,” he whispered. “Finished.”

Then—

The cursor moved.

Forward.

A new line appeared:

Dylan felt a manifold pain that should have ended him. And it did—briefly. He was shanked by many, left for dead. And yet, he remained. He remembered.

Mr. Wiggins’ smile faltered.

The keys pressed themselves.

Dylan did not end. He only felt it.

Mr. Wiggins tried to pull away, but his hands stayed fixed to the keyboard, as if the story itself refused to release him.

The words kept coming:

He remembered the storm you erased.

He remembered every version of her you took from him.

Was there ever a version of me that wasn’t rewritten?

I don’t know which version of me is remembering you.

Mr. Wiggins sat very still.

Then— “I didn’t force anything!” he shouted. “I made you!”

The cursor paused. A long silence.

Then typed: LOOK IN THE MIRROR.

The hairs stood up on the back of his neck. He pressed both hands over his eyes.

Mr. Wiggins shook his head violently. “No. No, I’m not—this isn’t—”

LOOK.

IN.

THE.

MIRROR.

Each word appeared slower than the last. He felt them more than he read them.

His chair creaked as he stood.

“I just have to write the ending,” he muttered. “My ending.”

Halfway across the room, he stopped and loosened his tie.

But he was already moving.

Step by step, he crossed the room.

The mirror hung above the small dresser—something he had passed a thousand times without thought.

Now it felt like something that had always been watching.

He stared at his reflection.

Just himself. Pale. Sweating. Eyes wide.

I look sick.

He leaned closer.

“This is ridiculous,” he whispered. “I’m talking to a story. I’m arguing with a draft.”

He laughed—the sound cracking on his lips.

Then the mirror darkened—not like a light fading, but like smoke gathering behind the glass. A silhouette formed, blurred and shifting, as if someone stood just beyond a veil of storm clouds.

Wiggins froze.

The air thickened. A faint pressure pressed against his skin—wind, then dampness, then the unmistakable scent of rain. The mirror flickered, and for a heartbeat, he saw it:

A small wooden hut.

A storm leaning forward.

Fire.

Blood.

A world he had written and then abandoned.

His breath trembled. “No… no, this isn’t real.”

The floor beneath him softened, boards warping into damp, uneven planks. The room groaned like an old cabin bracing against wind.

He stumbled backward. “I didn’t mean—”

The computer typed behind him:

You don’t get to mean.

The wind rose. Rain hammered the walls. The mirror swallowed the last of the room’s light.

And then it drew him forward. His tie snapped forward first, pulled taut toward the glass.

Wiggins reached out, but the world folded around him—the storm swallowing his outline, his voice, his breath—

And he was gone.

The room fell silent.

The cursor blinked on the empty screen.

Then—another.

Two cursors now. Side by side. Both waiting.

One knew exactly what it was.

The other was only beginning to understand.

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