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Chapter 3 - CHAPTER 3 — Things She Doesn’t Show

Arthur discovered that some conversations only worked when they happened too late to be interrupted.

It wasn't exactly the middle of the night. There was still the distant sound of cars, some neighbor insisting on existing. But the day had already given up on participating. That was enough.

He was sitting on the bedroom floor, his back against the bed, the laptop closed beside him. The phone lit his face from below, casting shadows he preferred not to think about.

All the mirrors were still covered.

They always were.

The chat had been open for minutes, no new messages. It wasn't an awkward silence. It was the rare kind that stretched without breaking. Arthur liked that. Not feeling urgency was a luxury.

The phone vibrated.

She: you disappear when you get comfortable

Arthur frowned, then smiled.

Arthur: is that good or bad?

She: still deciding

She: but I think it's good

He typed slowly.

Arthur: I only get like that with you

Three dots.

Gone.

Back again.

She: don't say that like that

Arthur: why?

She: because it sounds important

He stared at the screen for a few seconds. Funny how simple words could carry weight when placed wrong.

Arthur: sorry

She: that's not an apology

She: it's just a warning

He accepted it without arguing.

Shifted position, stretching his legs. The room was too warm, but he didn't open the window. The world outside demanded too much.

Arthur: how was your day?

She: calm

She: the way I like it

Arthur: no people?

She: the minimum necessary

He laughed quietly, alone.

Arthur: you're strange

Arthur: in a good way

She took longer to reply this time.

She: you are too

She: that's why it works

Arthur felt that familiar sensation in his chest. Something between relief and belonging. Like he'd gotten it right without trying.

Arthur: I think normal people wear us out

She: they look too much

She: ask too much

She: want to understand things they don't need to

Arthur agreed instantly.

Arthur: looking too much is the worst

He regretted it the moment he sent it.

Not because it was untrue.

But because it was too close.

The three dots appeared again. This time, they stayed.

She: when I was younger

She: I thought the problem was that I didn't know how to hide properly

Arthur adjusted his posture, attentive now.

Arthur: how so?

She took her time. He imagined her rereading, deciding how much of herself she could let slip without breaking the invisible agreement between them.

She: there was a time

She: when I wore a huge brace

She: one of those really noticeable ones

Arthur pictured something awkward, exaggerated. He smiled with tenderness.

She: and I only wore an old coat

She: always with the hood up

Arthur: cold?

She: no

She: protection

He understood immediately.

She: people looked too much

She: even when they had no reason

She: even when I didn't want them to

Arthur felt a knot tighten in his stomach.

Arthur: teenagers are idiots

She: adults too

She: they just learn how to disguise it better

He stayed quiet, leaving space.

She: I thought if I made myself less visible

She: things would get better

She: that they'd stop seeing just that

Arthur frowned.

Arthur: just that what?

She took longer again.

She: what they thought I was

Arthur rested his head against the bed, staring up at the invisible ceiling in the dim light.

Arthur: that's unfair

She: most things are

She: but we learn to live with it

Arthur thought about the bathroom mirror.

The towel.

The mask.

Arthur: you must've been really strange back then

He typed without thinking. Idiot. The moment the message was sent, he realized the mistake. It wasn't offensive, but it was… reductive.

She replied too quickly.

She: I was quiet

She: that's not being strange

Arthur: it is

Arthur: quiet scares people

She: maybe

She: or maybe they just don't know how to deal with not being the center

He laughed, genuinely.

Arthur: you sound like someone who's watched a lot

She: I watched too much

She: because talking drew attention

Something inside Arthur clicked wrong.

Arthur: so you understand me

She didn't reply right away.

Arthur went on, encouraged by his own conclusion.

Arthur: I mean

Arthur: you get this thing about disappearing

Arthur: about existing better at a distance

Arthur smiled at the screen, satisfied. It was comforting to believe they stood in the same place. That they shared the same crooked way of being in the world.

The three dots appeared.

Disappeared.

She: I understand you

She: just not in the same way

Arthur blinked.

Arthur: what do you mean?

She: some people hide

She: because they don't want to be seen

She: others

She: because they're seen too much

Arthur read the message three times.

Arthur: I don't know if I get it

She: that's okay

She: you don't have to

A different silence followed. Not uncomfortable. But alert. As if both were aware that something had been brushed too lightly to hurt, yet firmly enough to be remembered.

Arthur decided not to push.

Arthur: I like how we talk

Arthur: no pressure

Arthur: no expectations

She: me too

She: here no one asks me for anything

Arthur: not a photo

Arthur: not an explanation

Arthur: not proof

She: especially that

He smiled.

Arthur: it's perfect

She didn't disagree.

But she didn't confirm it either.

Arthur looked around the dark room. Thought about how he'd never asked what she looked like. Never felt real curiosity. In his mind, she was like him: someone who preferred not to be seen because there was something wrong, displaced, out of place.

It was comforting to imagine that.

Arthur: sometimes I think if we saw each other

Arthur: it would ruin everything

She: I think so too

She: our world works better like this

She: separate

Arthur: I agree

Arthur: at a distance everything feels gentler

She: more honest too

He closed his eyes.

Arthur: good night

She: good night, Arthur

His name, written like that, felt more intimate than it should have.

He set the phone beside him and stayed there, breathing in the dark. Thought of her in the old coat, hood pulled up, trying to disappear. Smiled with a strange sense of recognition.

"We're the same," he murmured to nothing.

In the bathroom, behind the closed door, the mirror remained covered.

In the bedroom, Arthur was convinced he had found someone just as strange as he was.

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