across the street from where i grew up- lies an old house, rotting in its own silence.
paint peels like brittle skin, windows nailed shut, a monument to a bygone era.
it has seen better days, once stood tall, proud- boasting more rooms than people to fill them. they say it was the first concrete house in the village.
an old couple lived there, with their quiet maids, beyond the hush of long corridors. stories were whispered- tales of riches, gold and jewels, tucked in suitcases, hidden in the ceilings.
it was the ’90s, and they had the only tv in the village. a black-and-white box locked in a wooden cabinet, untouched, sacred- like a relic no one dared disturb.
every saturday morning they’d ask the maids to bring the TV down like a holy offering. we’d gather, sit cross-legged on cold floors, and watch ramayana in silence,
then one day- the wife died, just like that. and everything changed.
i don’t know if the children told the old man, or raided the ceilings first- i was young to know. but i heard: the suitcases held nothing but rats, and the jewels were only silver.
the old man followed soon after. the house remained- empty and stark, a relic left to mourn itself.
no one returned. no one repaired. years passed. and the old tv was never brought down again.
all that’s left are the memories, and the flaking paint and dying walls.
the house stands still- a reminder of time gone soft: a time of wealth and wonder, of innocence stitched into saturday mornings.
now, it barely stands. weathering the weather, a far cry from the majesty it once bore.
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