Thanks for the Tension
It was the coldest night of the year, a deep and silent freeze that had settled over the Santa Cruz valley. Around midnight, the lights in our old house flickered once, twice, and died with a soft sigh. Darkness, absolute and smothering, filled the room. The gentle hum of the refrigerator ceased, leaving a ringing silence. The digital clocks vanished, their red numbers erased. My grandfather, who had been dozing in his armchair, didn’t stir. He simply sighed, “Well. There it goes.” He lit the old kerosene lamp from the mantel, its warm, oily light pushing back the shadows in a wobbly circle. “Grab a blanket,” he said. “The coldness will find the walls soon enough.” We sat in that island of flickering light, listening to the nothing. No furnace, no fan, no buzz from the ceiling light. The house wasn’t just dark; it was empty. It was a shell. I felt a strange, childish anxiety, a fear that the world outside our lamplight had simply ceased to exist. “You feeling it, ent?” Grandpa sai...