Cracks: Vertical Updated

You reached in. Something reached back.

Not a hand. A word. Your name, spoken in a voice you’d forgotten you had—the one you used before you learned to lie, before you learned to call a crack settling instead of splitting . The voice said: You don’t have to hold it together anymore. vertical cracks

That night, you dreamed of the house before you were born. An empty lot. A single tree. A woman in a long coat digging a trench with her bare hands. She wasn’t burying anything. She was opening something. When she turned to look at you, her face was your mother’s, then yours, then a face you would wear in twenty years—older, wearier, with vertical lines etched beside your mouth like parentheses holding a secret too heavy to speak. You reached in

The second crack appeared in the hallway mirror’s reflection. No, not in the mirror—behind the glass, splitting the silver backing into two distinct worlds. On one side, your face, tired but familiar. On the other, a version of you that hadn’t slept in years, eyes hollow as wells. You turned around. The real wall was smooth. But the crack in the reflection stayed. A word

The house fell open like a book dropped from a great height. Pages—no, walls—flapping in the sudden silence. And in the center, where the cracks all met, there was no void. No darkness. Just a small, vertical version of you, curled on the floor, knees to chest, exactly as you had been at seven years old, waiting for someone to finally see that the crack had always been there.

Only the whole.