Writing
The Sixth Minute
I heard a wave crashing nearby. Moments later, I felt it touching me gently. It hurt. It burned—not the clean burn of fire, but something deeper, more raw, like my nerves were processing sensations they weren't designed to interpret. I wanted to scream, but no sound came from my mouth. My throat worked uselessly; I tried to swallow, but started a fitful cough instead. Eventually, I managed a groan and slowly opened my eyes. Sunset? No. Sunrise. But the light felt off, the colours bleeding at the edges like a watercolour left in the rain.
Carefully, I exhaled deeply, ignoring the searing pain in my lungs—each breath pulled through glass. Good. Sunrise was good, no matter what it looked like. I had survived another day. Time to investigate the damage; one breath at a time.
Another wave came crashing in, this time rolling over me. I hissed through clenched teeth. The saltwater found every wound—I was naked, exposed, and it had a field day with me. My skin had cracked open on my back as well as my hands—the splits widening as the water receded, pulling at torn edges…
Fate
Last night, I heard a crazy woman playing the güiro in the middle of the night in a dark alley. - So what? It's the sound of death, and I think I died.
Cato still clutched the slip of paper as he woke, the words burned into his vision even when he closed his eyes. Usually, he didn't believe in fortune telling, but this message—probably written by some bored factory worker thousands of miles away—had sunk its claws into him and refused to let go…