The Ministry owns every syllable.
The fountain sings freely, water speaking for us.
A brass meter ticks on my throat, a clock wound too tight.
I come to hear it, because it says what we cannot.
Most have grown spare: clipped commands, no confessions.
I have grown used to nods, to eyes speaking instead of mouths.
But I am a poet. Silence is a storm caged in my ribs.
I have watched her: ink bruising her fingers, silence like thunder waiting.
Once I spent a week’s bread on one word: Careful.
Once she gave me Careful—I held it like a jewel, a bell ringing inside me.
Now three coins jingle in my pocket: life or confession.
I feel her coming, choosing me over survival.
I press them into the slot. The gears release. Three words only.
I cannot afford reply. Silence burns in my throat.
At last I speak: Without you, nothing.
Her words strike like fire. My bottle overflows. My hand trembles.
Tomorrow they will come for me, to gag me, to strip me of voice.
Tomorrow they will take her—but tonight I smile, slow and certain.
Three coins spent. Eternity bought.
Her words, my silence—together, unowned, ours.
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