
I woke before the sun. The world hadn’t started yet. It was quiet, too quiet—the kind of quiet that feels like the earth is holding its breath. I sat up, bones aching, throat dry, and for a moment I forgot what I’d done. Just for a moment. But memory has sharp teeth, and it bit down fast.
The silver was still in the pouch. I hadn’t touched it. Couldn’t. It sat in the corner like a live thing—shiny and smug. I hated it. I hated myself more. Not for the act, not for the kiss. For the belief. I actually thought I was helping Him. I thought, if I pressed the world hard enough, He’d rise. Call down fire. Split the sky. Prove everyone wrong and usher in the Kingdom with blood and thunder.
But He didn’t.
He surrendered.
I wandered through the market, people brushing past me like I was already a ghost. I wanted someone to look me in the eye and ask what I’d done. I wanted someone to hit me, curse me, tell me it could still be undone. No one did. That silence screamed louder than the crowd ever would.
By midday, I heard the chants echoing off the stone. “Crucify Him!”
I couldn’t breathe. My knees buckled.
This wasn’t how it was supposed to go. I didn’t sell Him to be killed. I sold Him to be revealed. He was the Messiah. The fire. The storm. I gave Him the stage, and He walked to it in chains.
I went to the priests. Threw the silver back at them.
“I have sinned,” I told them.
They wouldn’t meet my eyes. Just looked bored. Indifferent.
“What is that to us?” they said.
That was when I knew—none of them understood what I’d done. Not even Him, maybe. Not even God.
I ran.
The sun was sinking when I found the tree. A twisted old thing on the edge of the field, crooked like my spine, gnarled like my soul. I stared at it for a long time. Not thinking. Just… knowing.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t pray.
I just whispered: “I’m sorry. I thought I was doing something holy.”
And maybe I was.
Maybe someone had to play the villain.
Maybe someone had to break so the world could wake.
So I did.
And the rope held.