“DON’T TOUCH HIM,” THEY WARNED YOU. YOU BOUGHT HIM ANYWAY… AND THAT NIGHT YOU LEARNED WHY MEN WOULD RATHER BURN THEIR SILVER THAN KEEP HIM CLOSE.

People whisper the way they whisper around storms they can’t control. One buyer approaches him, studies his arms, his teeth, the strength in his shoulders, then steps back as if he felt heat. Another buyer leans in, hears a few words from the broker, and immediately shakes his head, lips tightening. It repeats, again and again, like a ritual of refusal, and the air around the man grows strangely empty. You hear fragments, soft as dust but sharp as thorns: “bad luck,” “trouble,” “three owners,” “fires,” “ruin.” The broker laughs too loudly, a practiced sound meant to erase fear from a transaction. The man at the end of the line waits, still, watching everything with a patience that looks like a plan. You tell yourself superstition is for the weak-minded, for the bored, for those who want an excuse. Yet your skin prickles anyway, because the town rarely agrees on anything, and here they all agree on him. It makes you wonder what they’re protecting themselves from.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *