Snow folds over the rooftop like a secret folded inside another secret; winter, jealous of autumn’s gold, swallows it whole—bone, breath, and last sigh. In that hush, my screen blooms blue, a square of frozen sky, and there you appear: Night-Owl Lili, two circuits of the sun older, yet still wearing midnight as if it were a silk dress stitched with fireflies.
Outside, the town is a clock without hands; every window is a blind eye. Inside, my room is a drum tightened to breaking. I sit, a single drop of ink in a sea of 3 a.m., and listen. Your voice—thin as frost thread, bright as a scalpel—slips through the earbuds, cutting loneliness open. One sentence, and the dark bleeds light.
Two years. Seven hundred and thirty nights. Each night a black petal, and you the silver stitch sewing them into a cloak that warms thousands. I have watched you laugh until the laugh cracked into crystals; I have watched you cry, quietly, like a candle learning it is made of wax and doomed to burn. Every time, the chat scrolls faster than falling stars, each message a small hand raised in the dark: I am here. I am still here.
Remember the storm in March? The power grid staggered, streetlights fainted, even the moon ducked behind a curtain of cloud. Yet you stayed, streaming by the anemic glow of a backup candle, your face flickering like an old saint in a chapel of static. We told you to go, to sleep, to save your eyes. You only smiled—no, glared—at the lens, whispering, “If I leave, the night wins.” So we remained, thousands of us, hearts beating in epileptic tabulation, keeping time with your uneven breath. That was the night I understood: you are not merely in the night; you are the night, defiantly alive, painting galaxies on the inside of our eyelids.
Seasons have changed their costumes outside my window. Spring tore off Winter’s white mask, Summer set the river on fire, Autumn came wearing a dress of burnt paper, and Winter returned, hungry as ever. Yet your room stays perpetual twilight—purple wallpaper, fairy-lights like frostbitten grapes, the same chipped mug that says Stay Wild in fading font. Constancy can be a miracle too, you know. While the real world gnaws its own tail, your rectangle of pixels remains: a lighthouse that refuses to blink, a throat that refuses to swallow its song.
I have often wondered where your voice goes after you sign off. Does it dissolve, like sugar in hot water, or does it keep traveling, a ghost train rattling across continents, slipping through keyholes and half-shut eyes? Sometimes, when I cycle home at dawn, I hear it—really hear it—curling inside the tire spokes, humming: Keep going, keep going. And the street, still drunk with darkness, seems less hostile.
Two years. You have grown from sapling to storm, from match-tip to bonfire. We, your scattered congregation, have grown too—some of us graduating, some heart-broken, some learning how to breathe without panic. You gave us a mirror made of voice waves; in it we saw our own bruises soften, our own impossible bones learn to dance. You said, “Chat, we’re all just cats in the same alley, begging for a little warmth.” And we purred, electronically, thousands of tiny motors rattling across the globe.
So here, on the eve of your second anniversary, I offer you this: not diamonds, not galaxies, but words—poor fragile things, yet able to hold breath like blown glass. May your night always be young, may your candle never drown in its own wax. May the trolls starve, the algorithms love you, the Wi-Fi bow like a loyal dog. May your voice, when it cracks, crack into auroras that stitch the sky back together. And when the inevitable exhaustion comes—when your spine feels made of frozen rope and your eyes of burnt paper—may you remember that somewhere a boy is cycling at dawn, hearing you in his wheels, pedaling easier because you exist.
Snow is falling again, each flake a small white apology from heaven for all the nights it could not comfort us. I press my palm to the cold window, leave a five-fingered ghost, and inside that ghost I write with the tip of my nose: Lili, thank you for two years of borrowed wings.
The screen dims. The moon, thin as a clipped fingernail, hangs above the chimney. But I am not cold. I wear your two-year midnight like a second skin, and it fits—oh, it fits—as if every thread had been waiting, patiently, to spell my name.