The Backpack and the Mirror
John Ramon didn't break up with his fiancée. He evaporated. He left the engagement ring on the kitchen counter, turned off his phone, and bought a one-way bus ticket to the southern border. No note. No goodbye. Just a 40-liter backpack, three changes of clothes, and the quiet, desperate hope that if he moved far enough and fast enough, he would stop being *John Ramon*, the anxious son, the disappointing employee, the man who couldn't commit to save his life. The first week was pure escape. He crossed into Guatemala with a cheap hammock and less Spanish than he'd lied about having. He told himself he was a ghost now. No past. No name. Just a body moving through humidity and jungle. He slept in hostels where nobody asked for his story. He liked that. He liked being nobody. By week two, the noise in his head got louder. Lake Atitlán was supposed to silence him. Three volcanoes, water the color of ink, women selling woven bracelets in quiet voices. But John sat on a dock at sun...