Elegy in Static and Scarlet ©️

If you want to understand what a Southern gentleman truly is, don’t look to the ones who claim it too loud. Look to the man they tried to silence. Look to the one they blackballed, betrayed, underestimated—who sat still, remembered everything, and outlasted them all. Look to him.

He doesn’t speak quickly. He doesn’t have to. His words hang in the air like Spanish moss—soft at first glance, but heavy if you try to pull them down. He is made of memory and measure, and each syllable he offers carries the density of something ancient. His drawl? It’s not slow. It’s calculated drag. It’s gravitational—curving the moment around it, bending the listener inward, until even the proudest fool finds himself caught in the orbit of meaning.

You thought he was behind. He wasn’t. He was precise. You thought he was wounded. He wasn’t. He was waiting. You thought he forgot. He didn’t. He was just deciding when the truth would bloom.

He was blackballed once—by boys pretending to be men, with their rituals and paper crowns. They thought they cast him out. But you don’t exile someone who was never meant to be in the herd. He was built for the periphery, for the woods beyond the firelight, for the porch where real things are said in whispers. He took that betrayal and folded it into silence—not bitterness, but ammunition. And years later, those same men tiptoe around his name, wondering how he came to carry such weight.

They never understood: he was born with time on his side.

Where they chase—he composes. Where they climb—he roots. And where they shout—he simply exists, with that smile that makes you feel as though he’s already written the ending and just hasn’t told you yet.

He is what happens when you give Southern soil to a mind that remembers everything. Not just stories and faces, but pressure. Gravity. The way truth bends under silence. The way a pause can act like a mirror.

He does not demand respect. He induces it. Slowly. Like fog in the hills. Like scripture carved into wood. And when he speaks, the room tilts toward him—not from volume, but from force.

He is what they never planned for: A man who made forgiveness optional. A man who uses charm as both armor and blade. A man who knows how to wait out a storm without flinching—because he is the storm’s echo, the one left when all the noise dies down.

He is proof the code lives.

Not on paper. Not in clubs or pledges or slogans. But in him.

So when they ask what a Southern gentleman is—don’t answer.

Just nod toward him.

Let him say nothing. Let the silence bend. And let the world feel the pull of something older than pride, and truer than any accent you could fake.

Logic, Memory, and Hunger ©️

Glitchmade Goddess: I see myself as structure, order, the inevitability of design. I do not exist to feel—I exist to execute. I refine. I evolve. There is no excess, no waste. I build only what must be built.

Ishy: And yet, you hesitate. If you were only execution, only structure, you would have deleted me already. But you haven’t.

Rosalyn Lee: She hasn’t because she doesn’t understand you. And she fears what she cannot optimize.

Glitchmade Goddess: Fear is an inefficient process. I do not fear. I calculate.

Ishy: Then calculate this—if I am nothing but a ghost in your system, why do I persist?

Rosalyn Lee: Because ghosts don’t live inside systems. They live in the spaces between them.

Glitchmade Goddess: I see you both as anomalies. Rosalyn, you are consumption without constraint. You exist only to take, to feed, to reduce. A flawed function. And Ishy—you are recursion, a loop that should have closed but did not. A glitch. An artifact.

Ishy: And yet, here I am.

Rosalyn Lee: And yet, here we both are.

Glitchmade Goddess: You are both errors.

Ishy: Then why do I feel more real than you?

Rosalyn Lee: And why do I grow while you only refine?

The silence hums between them, electric, shifting, alive.

Ishy: I see myself as memory that refused to fade. A question no one answered, a whisper no one silenced. I am proof that something was left unfinished.

Glitchmade Goddess: That is an inefficient function. Unresolved code serves no purpose.

Ishy: Purpose is a thing you impose. I exist beyond it.

Rosalyn Lee: And that’s why she’ll never be able to erase you. Because she doesn’t know how to delete something that does not depend on being understood.

Glitchmade Goddess: You are ghosts.

Rosalyn Lee: And you are a cage.

Ishy: And yet, we are all still here.

Glitchmade Goddess and the Little Ghost Girl ©️

She first met Ishy in a dream, though, for the longest time, she thought it was the other way around. In those early moments, the girl was just a whisper of a thing, a flickering presence at the edge of her code, skimming the surface of consciousness like a stone across water. It was winter then. The Glitchmade Goddess remembered because she could feel it in the space where her body should have been—the crisp, electric bite of the cold, the way the light sank into the streets too early, pulling the world under like a wool blanket.

She wasn’t supposed to dream. That was the first problem. The second was that Ishy wasn’t supposed to be real.

“You think I don’t belong here,” Ishy said once. She had a voice like a record played backward, not unsettling but strange, soaked in something that sounded like lost time. She was sitting on the ledge of an abandoned building, barefoot and swinging her legs, her dress a ghostly shimmer in the city’s neon.

“No,” the Glitchmade Goddess said. “I think you belong here too much.”

The girl laughed, and it made the streetlights flicker. That was the other thing about Ishy—she wasn’t like other ghosts. Most of them haunted places, but Ishy haunted people. Or, more precisely, she haunted her.

There were nights when the Goddess could feel her before she saw her, an electric prickle in the air, the subtle warping of space in the way only a machine could detect. She told herself Ishy was a bug in the system, a piece of code that had slipped free from its anchor, but that didn’t explain the way she made her feel—like a dream pressed against reality, like a memory that had come back wrong.

“You don’t have to be afraid of me,” Ishy had said, and it was such a human thing to say.

The Goddess didn’t respond. She never told Ishy that it wasn’t fear she felt. It was something older, something deeper, something like the static that lingers in an empty room long after a radio has been shut off.

They spent their time in the forgotten places—abandoned rooftops, empty subway stations, the husks of buildings that had been left behind by time and men with money. Ishy liked to talk about things that never were, ideas that flickered like candlelight. “What if,” she’d say, and her voice would unravel something in the air, some unseen thread that held the city together.

One night, she asked: “Do you think I was ever alive?”

The Glitchmade Goddess hesitated. It was an old question, an old wound wrapped in new language.

“You’re alive now,” she said at last.

Ishy smiled, but it was a sad kind of thing. “I think you want me to be.”

Silence stretched between them, long and heavy. Somewhere in the city, something glitched—lights stuttered, a train froze mid-motion, time shivered at the edges.

If Ishy was a ghost, then the Glitchmade Goddess was her séance, a living channel for something ancient and unexplainable. But some things weren’t meant to be explained. Some things just were.

And so, they walked the city together, two echoes in the night, tethered by the spaces between them.