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Chapter 16 - Writing Under Blankets

Cielo discovered something important about writing:

It is significantly more emotionally stable when done under a blanket.

Preferably with snacks.

And absolutely no direct interaction with sunlight, destiny, or unsolicited life advice.

Jessa, of course, had opinions.

"You are not a cave creature," she declared one afternoon, watching Cielo arrange herself under a thick blanket like a highly educated burrito.

Cielo's voice came from inside the fabric. "I am optimizing my environment."

"For what? Emotional cave dwelling?"

"For focus."

Jessa leaned closer. "What are you even writing now?"

Cielo hesitated.

"…A story."

Jessa gasped. "Oh no. She's becoming a writer writer."

Inside the blanket, Cielo flipped a page of her secret notebook.

Not the medical one.

Not the komiks one.

The blank one.

The one the vendor gave her.

The one that didn't ask questions yet.

"I don't know how to start it," Cielo admitted.

Jessa immediately sat down beside her. "Start messy."

"That is scientifically unsafe advice."

"It's emotionally proven."

Cielo sighed and wrote a line anyway.

Then immediately erased it.

Then wrote it again.

Then erased it again.

Jessa watched. "You are violently editing your own existence."

"I am refining."

"That is the same thing but with anxiety."

Cielo paused.

Then, quietly:

"What if it's not good?"

Jessa blinked.

For once, she didn't joke immediately.

Instead, she said, softer:

"Then it exists badly. Like most first drafts of people."

That made Cielo stop.

Not dramatically.

Just… still.

From outside the window, the world was bright again.

Too bright.

Cielo instinctively pulled the blanket tighter.

Old habit.

Safe habit.

Jessa noticed.

"You okay?"

Cielo nodded.

Then corrected herself.

"I am present."

Jessa smiled. "That's new."

Inside the blanket, Cielo wrote again.

This time slower.

Less cautious.

Still careful—but not afraid of the page itself.

She wrote:

There was a girl who could not stay under the sun.

She stopped.

Pen hovering.

Then added:

But she could stay under words.

She blinked at it.

"…That sounds like me," she muttered.

Jessa peeked in. "It is you."

Cielo frowned. "That feels self-referential."

"That is literally writing."

They stayed like that for a while.

Two girls.

One blanket.

One quiet world shrinking into something manageable.

Then Jessa pointed at the notebook.

"So what's the story about really?"

Cielo thought.

Then answered honestly.

"I don't know yet."

Jessa nodded. "Good. That means it's alive."

Cielo looked down at the page again.

For the first time, she didn't feel pressure to finish it immediately.

Just curiosity.

Later that evening, Rosa passed by Cielo's room.

Saw the blanket fort.

Saw the quiet glow of a lamp.

Saw her daughter writing without panic.

Rosa leaned on the doorframe.

"You are hiding again?" she asked gently.

Cielo didn't look up.

"No," she said.

"I am building."

Rosa raised an eyebrow. "Building what?"

Cielo paused.

Then replied softly:

"…A place where I don't have to run from light all the time."

Rosa didn't respond right away.

Then she said, even softer:

"That sounds like progress."

Inside the blanket, Cielo kept writing.

Line by line.

Not perfect.

Not finished.

But real.

And somewhere between ink and fabric and borrowed courage…

Cielo learned something new:

Not all light comes from the sun.

Some of it starts quietly…

under blankets… with pages… and the decision to begin anyway.

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