Chapter 1: When Life Stopped
Mary Thompson was seventy-two years old. She lived alone in a small American town. The house was quiet, almost too quiet. Every sound felt heavy, like time had stopped. She sat near her old wooden chair and looked at the wall clock that moved slowly, just like her life. Her husband was gone for ten years now. Her son called once a month, sometimes less. She told herself she was fine, but her heart knew she was not.
Each morning was the same. She woke up, made tea, and placed her pills in a small dish. She took one for her heart, one for her sugar, one for her sleep. The table looked like a small pharmacy. She looked at it and whispered, “This is what my life has become.” Tears came, but she quickly wiped them away. She didn’t like to cry anymore. It made her feel weak.
At night, she sat beside her bed and looked at her husband’s photo. “You left too soon,” she said softly. “You promised we would grow old together.” Sometimes she felt she heard his voice saying, “You are strong, Mary.” But it was only her imagination. The silence after that felt even louder.
One morning, she felt a strange pain in her chest. She sat on the bed, breathing slowly. Fear entered her heart. She looked around and whispered, “If I fall now, no one will even know.” The thought broke her. For the first time, she truly felt how alone she was. The phone was silent, the house was empty, and the world outside kept moving without her.
She walked to the mirror and looked at herself. Her face had lines of time. Her eyes had no shine. Her skin looked pale. “Is this me?” she asked. She placed her hand on her chest and said, “Where did that woman go who used to smile?” The reflection did not answer. It only stared back with sadness.
Her hands shook as she poured water into a glass. She tried to eat, but her food tasted like nothing. The doctor had told her to rest, to take her medicines on time. But what was the use of medicine when the heart refused to live? She sat on her chair and whispered, “Maybe my time is near.”
That afternoon, the sun was bright outside, but Mary kept the curtains closed. The light hurt her eyes. She wanted only darkness and silence. She thought about the days when her house was full of laughter. Her husband playing music, her little boy running around the table, her garden full of voices. Now, there was only one voice — her own. She said to herself, “This house feels like a box.”
That night, she couldn’t sleep. She sat by the window, watching the street lights. A small tear rolled down her face. “God,” she said in a weak voice, “if you are still listening, please tell me why I’m still here.” The wind moved the curtains slowly. She waited for an answer but none came.
Days passed. Each one felt like the same old picture. She watched television without interest. She cooked only soup or bread. She stopped answering calls. She didn’t want to speak to anyone. The sound of her own voice felt strange. She whispered sometimes just to remember what it felt like to talk.
One day, while cleaning the drawer, she found an old diary from her younger days. Inside it were her dreams — “Travel,” “Learn painting,” “Dance again.” She smiled for a second, then closed it quickly. “That woman is gone,” she said. But the diary stayed in her hands, heavy like a forgotten promise.
That evening, she looked at her table full of medicines and sighed deeply. She took one pill and stared at it. “You can’t fix what’s broken inside,” she said. For a long moment, she just sat there — no sound, no movement. Only silence.
She went to bed early that night, but her heart didn’t want to rest. She turned to the side, held her pillow, and whispered, “I wish someone could just tell me I can still live.” A soft tear touched her pillow. Her eyes closed slowly. Sleep came, not from peace, but from tiredness.
It was the night when something small changed — just a tiny spark of hope inside her heart, still too weak to be seen. But it was there, waiting to wake her life again.
