The figure leaned in, the violet 'S' burning bright. "The sun was just a dream you had in the dark, little spark. It’s time to wake up."
"Elias," the figure breathed, and the temperature in the room dropped until the coffee froze in its pot. "You held the line long enough. Give it back."
"If I give it to you," Elias asked, his voice trembling, "does the sun come back?" dark s
Elias sat at the far end of the counter, his fingers tracing the deep gouges in the Formica. He wasn't waiting for food; he was waiting for the static. It started as a low hum in his teeth, a vibration that signaled the city was about to "slip." "He’s late," a voice rasped.
The neon sign above the "Dark Star" diner flickered, casting a rhythmic, bruised light over the empty sidewalk. Inside, the air smelled of burnt coffee and ozone. The figure leaned in, the violet 'S' burning bright
"The shadows are longer tonight," Elias muttered, watching his own reflection in the window. It wasn't mimicking him anymore. His reflection stood perfectly still, staring back with an expression of profound hunger.
Elias looked at his hands. Between his palms, a small, obsidian sphere began to glow. It was the source of the dimness, the heavy heart of the city's gloom. He felt the weight of every lonely night and every forgotten secret pressed into that tiny point. "You held the line long enough
A figure stepped in, draped in a coat that seemed to be made of woven smoke. Where a face should have been, there was only a shimmering, violet "S" carved into the dark, pulsing like a dying star.