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The wind at my window

Riri_sh_9009
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
The Wind at My Window is a tender, heart-wrenching journey through love, memory, and acceptance — told through the quiet thoughts of a soul learning to let go while still holding on. Lying on a hospital bed with only the wind for company, a young woman faces the quiet truth of her fading days. Her body is weak, but her mind drifts through time — to laughter once shared, promises once made, and a love that never truly left her. As the world outside her window keeps moving, she finds herself caught between memory and reality, between life and the soft pull of what comes after. In her final days, she reflects on the one face she knows she’ll see again when she takes her last breath — the face of the boy who once taught her what it meant to be alive
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Chapter 1 - chapter 1

The wind is gentle today.

It slips through the half-open window, touches the corner of my hospital bed, and brushes against my skin as if to remind me — the world is still moving. The trees outside are swaying, their leaves dancing to a rhythm I can no longer follow. I watch them and wonder how many more mornings I'll be here to see.

The smell of antiseptic fills the room, sharp and cold, but the air outside smells like rain. I imagine stepping into it, barefoot, the ground soft and forgiving beneath me. Instead, I sit here — a body connected to quiet machines that beep like tired heartbeats.

It's strange, knowing death could come at any time.

There aren't words for that feeling — it's not fear exactly, nor peace. It's something in between, like standing at the edge of a sea and watching the tide come closer, knowing you cannot step back anymore.

Through the glass, I see faces — nurses moving quickly, a child holding her father's hand, a couple laughing near the garden. Life goes on outside my window, untouched by my slowing heartbeat.

And then, without warning, a memory stirs.

A face.

The one I know will be the last thing I see when I close my eyes for good.

His face.

Even now, after all these years, I can see it as clearly as if he were standing right here — on the other side of this glass, smiling the way he used to when I said something foolish.

Funny, isn't it? The body forgets so much — pain, voices, the taste of things — but the heart remembers faces. Every line, every expression. Sometimes, it remembers too well.

I close my eyes, and the wind finds me again. It slips across my skin, like a whisper that knows my secrets. I imagine it carrying his name, brushing against his world somewhere far away. Does he ever stop and wonder where I went?

The nurse said I should rest, but what does rest mean when your mind refuses to sleep? I keep thinking how we all grow up believing there'll be time — time to say the things we never say, time to fix the mistakes we made. But time is the first to leave when you need it most.

If I could see him again, just once, I don't think I'd ask for anything big. Maybe just a quiet moment. Maybe just to say I remember, i remember him, I remember our memories.

The machine beside me beeps again — steady, patient. The rhythm of what's left of my life. And still, his face lingers in the space between each sound, like a song half-forgotten.