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The House with No Windows

  • Writer: Jaime David
    Jaime David
  • Apr 19
  • 3 min read

In the middle of a quiet street, surrounded by bright homes with trimmed hedges and wind chimes, there was a house with no windows.

No one remembered when it had been built, or who owned it. It was always just there—a squat, gray shape that swallowed light and offered none. Children avoided it. Neighbors mowed around it. Some said it was empty. Others said someone lived inside but never came out.

They were both right.

Inside the house lived a man named Eliot.

He wasn’t old, though the weight of the days made him feel that way. His back curved inward, not from age, but from carrying something invisible. Every morning, he woke in darkness, no sunlight to rouse him, no clock ticking, no birdsong. Just the hush of a world muffled behind thick walls.

He didn't remember the last time he opened the front door.

At first, Eliot had tried. Tried to keep up. Tried to answer messages, meet friends for coffee, go for walks. But the light had felt too sharp, and people’s words too loud. His smile had become a costume, his laugh an echo of something he didn’t feel anymore.

So he stopped trying.

Days lost their names. Time blurred. He drifted from bed to chair, chair to floor, sometimes eating, sometimes forgetting. The silence wrapped around him like a heavy coat he couldn’t take off. The sadness wasn’t always sharp—it was dull, like a hum just under his skin. Constant. Familiar. Unshakable.

Sometimes, he heard knocks. From the outside.

Once it was his sister’s voice, calling, “Eliot? Please, let me in. Just for a minute.”

He’d sat in the hallway then, back against the door, wanting to answer. Wanting to say I’m sorry, I don’t know what’s wrong with me, I’m trying but I can’t. But the words stuck in his throat like stones. He let the moment pass.

Years might’ve gone by like that. Maybe only months. Eliot couldn’t tell anymore.

One day, something changed.

Not dramatically. There was no epiphany, no magical recovery. It was a thud. A bird had flown into the wall. He found it outside the back door—small, fragile, stunned. Still breathing.

He stared at it for a long time.

Then he picked it up, wrapped it in an old towel, and sat with it. Minutes passed. Hours maybe. The bird didn’t move. Eliot didn’t either.

Then, with a twitch, it stood. Looked at him with black eyes. Then it flew away.

It was so small. So simple.

But it did something.

The next day, Eliot opened the back door again. Just a crack. Just enough to feel air on his skin. And the day after that, he stepped outside. The sun felt strange. His legs were weak. But the sky was still there. The world had not ended without him.

He started writing again. Not stories—just words. One a day. Tired.Heavy.Hope?

He found a therapist. Called his sister. Took slow walks around the block. Sometimes he made it halfway before turning back. Sometimes he cried in the shower and couldn’t say why. But other times, he laughed. Softly. Carefully. Like testing the sound of it.

One spring, he installed a window in the front of the house.

It wasn’t much. Just one. But light came in now.

Eliot still lived in the same house. Still had hard days. But he started planting flowers in the yard. He painted the front steps blue. He waved at neighbors and meant it.

And sometimes, when someone passed by, they could see him through that window—sitting at his desk, pen in hand, the sun on his face.

Not healed.

But living.

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