Ima May 2026
She closed her eyes.
When she opened it, the pages were blank.
She stood up, shaky. Her body felt different—lighter, as if she had been carrying a weight she'd never noticed until it was gone. She walked to the nearest wall and touched the symbols. They were still there, but they no longer burned. They were just… words. Beautiful, ancient, finished words. She closed her eyes
She stepped outside.
She found the section on extinct languages—a quiet corner where the air smelled of dust and ambition. She pulled a random volume from the shelf: A Grammar of the Xiongnu Language by someone she'd never heard of. Her body felt different—lighter, as if she had
And she smiled back.
She was the last of them. And the forgetting was failing. The next morning, she went to the British Library. They were just… words
Not a resemblance. Not a genetic echo. The same cheekbones, the same scar above her left eyebrow (earned at age seven, falling off a bicycle she'd never owned in this life), the same way of tilting her head as if listening to music no one else could hear.