I had been staring at the same sentence for forty-five minutes: “The light through the stained glass fell on Vera’s notes like a question.” I couldn’t move past it. The words were right, but the feeling was wrong.
Because questions end. Promises don’t. Jarw would stop waiting eventually. Merida’s tower would fall and rise again. Vera was dead, but her handwriting was not.
I thought he was waiting for someone. But as the hour turned, I realized: Jarw was waiting for time itself to admit it had made a mistake. By the window, Merida was building a house of cards. She was seven, maybe eight. Her mother (presumably the woman who kept checking her phone by the biography section) had told her to “be still.” Merida had interpreted this as “be still except for your hands.” vera jarw merida sat
There are some Saturdays that feel like a sentence rather than a gift. This was one of them.
That’s when I looked up and saw the three of them. He sat in the far corner, though I hadn’t heard him come in. His name, I would later learn, was Jarw . No first name. Just Jarw. He wore a grey coat that smelled of rain and dust, and he was not reading. He was watching the clock. I had been staring at the same sentence
I looked from Jarw (waiting) to Merida (building) to Vera’s words (defiant).
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It was a congregation. “The light through the stained glass fell on Vera’s notes like a promise. Jarw tapped his ring. Merida placed another card. And somewhere, in the silence between the clock’s ticks, a forbidden poem whispered: ‘You are allowed to begin again.’” Your turn. Who are the Vera, Jarw, Merida, and Sat in your life? Look around the next quiet room you enter. Someone is waiting. Someone is building. Someone left a note. And it’s always Saturday somewhere.