On the broken shelf,
a vase stood still, alone—
porcelain, carved, quietly hewn,
Around it, everything was bright:
paintings hung in careful pride,
furniture polished smooth with years,
cotton pillows, modern windows,
a stately clock, a patient door,
a carpet so clean it seemed untouched.
The room knew how to look beautiful.
It did not know how to love.
No one noticed the vase.
It watched the others
not with envy,
but with the strange peace
of something that had survived
being overlooked.
The ordinary furniture
decided it was wrong—
a disturbance,
a misplaced thing,
too strange for such a cheerful room.
It did not belong, they said.
Its silence offended them.
Its stillness looked like accusation.
So the clock struck heavier.
The door slammed harder.
The windows exhaled their cold breath
against the thin and splintering shelf.
The carpet curled at its corners.
The paintings leaned in their frames.
The whole room conspired—
a polished violence,
an elegant cruelty.
And it was enough.
The old shelf, tired of holding,
gave way.
The vase, once upright and whole,
fell.
It shattered—
each piece a small confession,
each fragment reflecting back
the room it had loved
despite everything.
And inside, where roses
should have rested,
there were no petals,
no roots,
only the soft rot of old neglect,
spider nests,
dust-fed silence,
and the small dead things
no one wanted to name.