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When the Last Fire

Endings always choose their own pace

By Gladys W. MuturiPublished 2 months ago 1 min read
When the Last Fire
Photo by Adam Wilson on Unsplash

I watch the fire dwindle

a slow-breathing creature

curling into its final sleep.

Its orange spine bends,

crackling softly,

like someone whispering

a goodbye they hope

you won’t hear too clearly.

Endings always choose their own pace.

Some roar out, demanding applause,

but not this one.

This flame shrinks with grace,

turning its brightness inward

as if searching for the moment

it first learned to burn.

Ash gathers at its feet,

a gray memory of everything

that once dared to glow.

The logs, half-gone,

lean against each other

like old friends too tired

to keep holding up the story.

I feel the warmth thinning

not disappearing,

just loosening its grip.

It pulls away the way

a final hug always does:

slow enough to feel,

fast enough to miss.

In the dimming light,

I hear the faint pops

of unfinished sentences,

things the fire meant to say

before time caught up with it.

But maybe endings don’t require

grand declarations

maybe the soft surrender

is the truest way to close.

The last ember blinks,

a tiny red heartbeat

deciding whether to continue.

For a moment,

the whole world hangs

on that flicker

that brave, stubborn spark

that refuses to admit the end.

Then, gently,

it settles into silence.

No burst, no final blaze

just a quiet yielding

to whatever waits beyond heat.

And in that stillness,

I understand:

fire ends the same way

all stories do

by offering what remains,

by warming what it can,

and by trusting the darkness

to carry the rest.

AcrosticartBalladProsesurreal poetryslam poetry

About the Creator

Gladys W. Muturi

Hello, My name is Gladys W. Muturi. I am an Actress, Writer, Filmmaker, Producer, and Mother of 1.

Instagram: @gladys_muturi95

Facebook: facebook.com/gladystheactress

YouTube: @gladys_muturi

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