Chapter 03 · 3 min 59 sec

Warehouse Vespers

The invisible inheritance — what our ancestors planted in us without us knowing.

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Lyrics· 252 words

[Verse 1] Aisle forty-two, bin seven, item code in red The scanner beeps a note I know like a hymn I learned in my head Three hundred items by the hour, that's the rate they set I walk eleven miles a night and never leave this debt

[Verse 2] The walls don't have a window so I made one in my mind A kitchen, a quiet table, a porch light left behind I scan a box of birthday candles meant for someone's six-year-old And I say a small thing for them that the system never told

[Chorus] This is my vespers, this is my evensong Sung in beeps and conveyor belts the whole night long Nobody's listening but I'll sing it anyway Let the warehouse hear me say what the warehouse can't say

[Verse 3] The vest tracks my walking, the watch tracks my hands There's a number for my idle time that nobody understands Is idle when I'm breathing, is idle when I'm grieving The scanner doesn't ask, it just keeps believing

[Chorus] This is my vespers, this is my evensong Sung in beeps and conveyor belts the whole night long Nobody's listening but I'll sing it anyway Let the warehouse hear me say what the warehouse can't say

[Bridge] Seven forty-five, the trucks start to load I think of the box of candles somewhere on the road I hope she got her cake. I hope the candles light That's the only church I've got at the end of the night

Short Story

*A story for curious minds*

In a building with no windows at all, there worked a young man named Oto whose job was to fetch boxes from tall metal shelves and place them on a moving belt. The shelves went up higher than he could see in the dim light, and the belt never stopped, and the walls, being made entirely of corrugated steel, did not believe in views.

Oto decided this was a problem he could solve without anyone's permission.

On his third week, while reaching for a box of batteries on the ninth shelf, he noticed a single rectangle of pale yellow paint, slightly different from the gray around it, just at eye level. He didn't know if it was a forgotten paint sample or an old safety marking. But he decided, quietly, that it was a window.

He didn't tell anyone. Each night, on his way past that shelf, he would glance at the yellow rectangle and imagine what was on the other side. Some nights it was a kitchen with a kettle on. Some nights it was a quiet street with one dog trotting past. Some nights, when he was very tired, it was simply morning, plain and golden, the kind that comes after a long sleep.

A coworker named Béa noticed him glancing at the same spot every night and asked what he was looking at.

"My window," he said, and felt foolish the moment he said it.

But Béa didn't laugh. She walked over, looked at the yellow rectangle, and said, "What's on the other side tonight?"

"A garden," Oto said. "Tomatoes. Somebody's grandmother is out there in slippers."

Béa nodded slowly, the way people nod when they've decided something is worth keeping rather than worth explaining. The next night, she paused at the same shelf on her own route and looked too. She told him what she saw — a harbor, gray and ordinary, with one small boat coming in.

Word travels strangely in a building with no windows. Within a month, four or five workers had their own private window somewhere on the shelves — a scuff mark, a sticker, a dent in the metal — each one opening onto a different invented world, each one entirely theirs.

Nobody ever told the warehouse manager about this. It would not have shown up on any productivity report, because it changed nothing about how fast the boxes moved. But on the long stretch between midnight and dawn, when the building was at its most silent and most steel, there were now five small windows scattered across nine miles of shelving, each one looking out on somewhere warmer than where they stood, each one keeping its little watch until the trucks came to carry everything away into the actual morning outside.

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