Fault Lines
What happens when the hands that traced your fractures call them fiction

You knew where I kept the fractures.
...
Not the visible ones —
not the polite scars I show at dinner tables,
not the stories trimmed and pressed
so they fit between coffee cups.
...
You knew the ones that hummed at 3 a.m.
The ones that only spoke
when the house was dark
and my chest forgot its rhythm.
...
I let you see me unarmored.
Let you trace the fault lines
with careful hands.
I called you safe.
And I meant it.
...
You were the place
I set my weapons down.
...
And now you look at me
like I am a language
you never learned.
...
You say my name
like it's unfamiliar in your mouth.
You tell me what I "always do,"
what I " never meant,"
who I "really am."
...
And I stand there,
bleeding quietly,
wondering who you've been studying.
...
Because the person you describe
is a stranger to me.
...
You once knew the exact pitch of my silence.
The way my jaw tightens
when I am trying not to disappear.
You knew the difference between my anger
and my fear.
...
Now you call my fear manipulation.
You call my boundaries cruelty.
You call my exhaustion indifference.
...
How can the one who memorized my pulse
misread my heartbeat?
...
It feels like waking up
and finding the house rearranged —
all the doors in the wrong places,
all the windows bricked over.
...
I keep searching your face
for the version of you
who held my shaking hands
and whispered,
"I see you."
...
Did you?
...
Or did I just feel seen
because I needed to?
...
What terrifies me most
is not that you left.
...
It's that you stayed long enough
to know me better than anyone,
and then used that map
to get lost on purpose.
...
You were my safest place.
And now,
when you speak,
I flinch.
...
Tell me —
when did I become someone
you don't recognize?
...
Or were you never really
looking at me
at all?
About the Creator
E.S.Flint
I’m an Indigenous storyteller using poetry and short fiction to explore identity, love, loss and all the spaces we return to.
What I can't say, I write. Because feeling it all is the point.
Follow me on Instgram: es.flint



Comments (1)
Fascinating using fractures as an emotional term. Thank you E.S.!