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When the False Daylight Comes


It doesn’t happen every night. In fact, it’s very, very rare. I think that’s why most people don’t even know it exists. I’ve only seen it a few times, and only because I work nights. Occupational hazard, I guess.

It’s not even close to dawn when it happens, not really. It’s usually in the middle of night. Early morning. 2 AM. 3 AM.

It cracks through the window quietly, and it’s usually only when you’re up late—studying, reading, tossing and turning in bed. You catch it out of the corner of your eye, and you think maybe your eyes are playing tricks on you.

And you see little glimmers of light outside. But something that almost fills the whole sky.

Like a daylight that came too early.

Like a daylight that’s… not… quite…

It’s not morning. It’s not sunlight, and if you catch the sky lightening before it’s supposed to, do not look outside. Keep your eyes down. Shut the blinds.

Lock the doors.

And try not to listen to what’s outside the windows.

There’s nobody out there.

It’s just the noise of the wind.

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