The Space Between the Last Seen and the Next Word
A life vanishes in plain sight, but the silence it leaves behind refuses to follow the rules of disappearance.

They say disappearance is not a moment
but a widening.
Not the door closing—
not the garage light blinking out—
but the air afterward,
stretching itself thin over the neighborhood
like plastic pulled across unfinished construction.
Her name still lived in the house.
It hung from coat hooks.
It rested in the shallow bowl beside the keys.
It leaned patiently against the inside of the refrigerator
as though it had always belonged there.
Neighbors watered their lawns
with the quiet concentration of witnesses
who would later insist
they had noticed nothing unusual
except perhaps the way the dog down the street
refused to stop staring at the same empty corner.
The cameras remembered differently.
They remembered a figure made of intention,
a silhouette cut from the fabric of decision,
standing where no invitation had been extended.
The mailbox contained only advertisements and dust.
Morning arrived as if it had earned the right.
Sunlight stepped carefully across the driveway
and paused at the threshold,
uncertain whether it was still welcome.
Her daughter spoke her name out loud
to test whether sound alone
could reverse direction,
could unmake whatever had already been made.
Search teams moved in grids,
their footsteps rehearsing order
against the chaos beneath the soil.
Somewhere, a clock continued
without permission.
This line is about a cracked coffee mug left in a sink in another city.
No one mentioned the way absence has weight,
how it presses downward,
how it settles into furniture
and refuses to be lifted.
The street remained obedient to routine.
Cars arrived.
Cars left.
The world kept accepting itself
without revision.
And still, something lingered—
not her,
but the exact shape where she had been,
holding its breath,
waiting for someone to notice
it was still there.
About the Creator
Lawrence Lease
Alaska born and bred, Washington DC is my home. I'm also a freelance writer. Love politics and history.


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