Surface Tension ©️

The water hits like a wall of glass and knives. No slow fade, no graceful sinking. Just impact, explosion, collapse.

The mind lights up — shards of thought slicing outward in every direction at once. Every sense redlines, screaming: breathe, move, kick, surface, surface, surface!

The body convulses in ten different directions — one arm fighting, the other forgetting, legs tangled, kicking nothing. Up and down blur into a single mad axis.

A thousand micro-decisions detonate across the skull: kick harder, spin left, spin right, push off, reach, claw, scream without sound.

The lungs are molten stones now, pulling at the chest,

insistent, demanding — breathe, you fool, breathe!—but the mouth floods with a rush of salt and terror.

The water thickens around the limbs — a second skin of failure and panic, squeezing tighter with every useless thrash.

Inside the skull, everything races faster: memories flash like gunfire — the smell of old wood, the feel of grass under childhood feet, someone’s laughter — spitting through the brain like broken stars.

No time to grieve it. No time to feel it. Only the next desperate command, the next snap decision — turn, kick, surface, surface, surface.

The surface shatters into a hundred phantom surfaces. Reach for one and it splits into mirrors. Reach again and grab only the fat, humming weight of nowhere.

The lungs cramp. The chest heaves against itself. The blood buzzes, vicious and brilliant.

There’s a moment — slashed thin as paper — where thought outruns flesh, where the mind, still sprinting, sees the body slowing, dragging like a broken machine.

The arms stop reaching. The legs stop kicking. The mind keeps screaming.

And in the end, it’s not the silence that wins — it’s the speed. The endless, howling speed of a brain that wouldn’t stop racing even as the body gave up.

Creature of Habit ©️

I wake before the sun stirs. Beneath the water, time moves slower. It hums. The deep currents are my lullabies, the distant screams of the jungle my clock. The world above is already moving—monkeys cackling, birds shrieking their joyless songs. But I remain still. Eyes open. Heart slow.

The light pierces the surface around mid-morning, stabbing through the canopy like a hundred silver knives. I don’t fear the light. It’s the eyes of man I avoid. They come with nets and tanks and chemicals. They smile when they kill. I never smile. I’ve never needed to.

By noon, I rise.

My webbed claws pierce the silt as I push off the riverbed. The weight of water is my armor. I drift past garfish and the bleached bones of past intruders. Once I watched a man drown—he didn’t know I was watching. He splashed. Cried. Then went still. I didn’t touch him. Didn’t need to. The water did my work.

I break the surface just enough to taste the air—humid, rot-sweet, alive. The jungle is a furnace. I smell every reptile and mammal within a half mile. One of them—a jaguar—is watching me from the bank. Smart. He doesn’t drink yet.

I crawl onto land briefly, feel the dry world peel at my skin. The sun cracks my scales. I hate it, but I need to know. Need to see. They were here yesterday—men with cameras and steel traps. The woman was with them. Her scent still clings to the reeds.

I saw her swim once. Not like a fish. Like a flame. She didn’t belong here—too soft, too pale—but she moved like she was born in water. I followed. Close. Quiet. I reached out… and she screamed.

They fired guns then. Hit me in the shoulder. I bled black into the lagoon for hours.

They’ll be back.

By dusk I return to the cave. My cave. Carved by ancient floods, hidden behind a curtain of vines and lies. Inside are bones. Fish, men, birds. I don’t eat the men. Not usually. But sometimes… when the river runs dry and I smell nothing but gasoline and deceit…

The night comes fast in the Amazon. Shadows stretch and finally fold. I breathe in the quiet. Down here, no one remembers what I am. No one tries to define me. I just am.

They call me a monster.

But I only kill to survive. What does that make them?

Tonight, I rest.

Tomorrow, I rise.

And if they come back…

I’ll be waiting.