Yes.
I am only a wall.
A wall in Room 1010,
in one of the neighborhood hotels.
I have decided to write my memoirs.
Moments I lived through
unintentionally with the occupants of this room.
They move about…
they come and go…
they lean against me…
and sometimes, they strike me with their fists.
One leaves, and another arrives.
Someone stays for a few hours to rest or sleep.
Another remains in the room for days.
But what I have witnessed is this:
When the door of the room closes,
everything changes.
Behind that door,
the world outside loosens its grip.
What remains is raw and unfiltered —
love without performance,
anger without an audience,
grief without restraint.
Laughter fades…
then rises louder.
Laughter softens…
and returns as heavy tears.
Some laughter stays restrained…
and when the door closes,
it bursts free at last.
I have been a witness
to moments of truth without masks.
Moments
when I wished I could close my eyes,
so as not to endure their harshness.
And moments
when I widened them,
longing to hold the hope and happiness
that radiated through the room.
I did not spy on them.
But when doors close,
truth steps forward.
Behind closed doors,
truth rests without disguise.
I never intended to remember any of this.
Walls are built to hold ceilings, not secrets.
But forgetting has become heavier than carrying it.
So I began to write.
I write my memoirs, page after page.
Not to confess.
Not to expose.
Not to judge.
Not to reveal.
Not to accuse.
Not to glorify.
Only to keep safe
what would otherwise vanish —
the trembling laugh,
the trembling goodbye,
the brief miracle
of two souls daring to be fully seen
when no one else was watching.
These pages are not stories
of heroism or tragedy,
nor tales of heroes or villains.
They are echoes.
Traces of lives that
leaned against me for a little while
and left behind more than fingerprints.

Page 1 :The Valentine That Stayed
This week, the hotel was crowded—
as it is every year around this time.
Valentine's Day.
My fellow walls in the other rooms
were dressed in red. Hearts, roses, balloons.
Laughter spilled through hallways.
Expensive dinners arrived in silver trays.
Champagne bottles sighed open behind closed doors.
Music rose from every corner.
But not here.
No one came to decorate me.
Each time my door opened,
I expected a staff member carrying red ribbons and fragile symbols of celebration.
Each time, it was only passing noise from the corridor.
Inside my room, there was nothing but stillness.
I felt… forgotten.
I wondered, in my quiet way,
whether love had grown tired of visiting certain places.
Not even a single bouquet arrived.
The neighboring rooms overflowed
with indulgence and music,
yet I remained untouched.
Valentine's Day passed.
No footsteps.
No laughter.
No celebration.
By the next evening,
just before sunset,
a staff member entered and cleaned the room carefully.
I felt a flicker of hope.
Perhaps someone had chosen to celebrate late.
Perhaps love had been delayed.
But still—no decorations.
So I surrendered to the quiet.
Then, at dusk, they arrived.
A couple.
An elderly man and his wife.
They did not enter with loud laughter
the way younger couples often do.
Their smiles were softer—yet somehow brighter than
any music echoing through the hotel.
They walked slowly, but not from weakness.
Their slowness carried dignity.
Familiarity.
A shared rhythm shaped by decades.
They looked alike in a way
that only long companionship creates.
Not like twins—but like two portraits
painted by the same patient hand of time.
The lines on their faces were not merely wrinkles;
they were marks of staying. They were not wrinkles—they were brushstrokes in a painting that belonged in an old museum.
Their clothes were simple.
Their luggage light.
I heard him say gently,
"It's been a long time since we celebrated Valentine's Day alone.
Our sons and grandsons always interrupted us."
She smiled—almost shyly,
like a young woman remembering something sacred.
"I missed celebrating it with you. Just us. Do you remember our first one?"
He laughed.
"You mean when my tooth broke and we spent the evening at the dentist?
I couldn't even kiss you—my cheek was swollen and full of gauze."
They both laughed.
And I—though I am only a wall—felt warmth move through me.
She said,
"That's when we decided to celebrate after the fourteenth.
We wanted a Valentine's Day that belonged only to us."
A Valentine that wasn't shared with the world.
He ordered a simple dinner.
Nothing extravagant. No spectacle.
Then he turned on the old music player in the room.
The melody that filled the air was not loud,
not modern, not meant for crowds.
It was a song about devotion—the kind that chooses,
and keeps choosing.
I had not heard it in years.
He extended his hand.
She placed hers in it without hesitation.
With the first familiar words, time loosened its grip—and they began to dance:
"Take my hand
Take my whole life, too
For I can't help falling in love with you
Like a river flows
Surely to the sea
Darling, so it goes
Some things are meant to be"
Their footsteps were soft against the carpet,
but I felt the faint vibration travel up through my frame,
like a heartbeat I had not known in years.
They danced.
Not clumsily.
Not cautiously.
But as though the years
between their youth and
this room had folded neatly out of sight.
They knew every turn.
Every pause.
Every lyric.
The song seemed woven into the lines of their faces.
The song repeated again and again.
And each time it did, they danced again—
like students who had just begun to fall in love.
When the song ended for the third time,
she rested her head on his shoulder for a moment.
He kissed the top of her hair—not with passion, but with gratitude.
As though thanking her for every year.
Every dance.
Every Valentine they had chosen to celebrate late.
The only thing that interrupted them
was the arrival of their dinner.
They ate slowly,
speaking in quiet tones,
laughing between memories.
Afterward, they stepped onto the balcony
with warm drinks, watching the evening settle.
When they returned, they turned off the lights.
The room grew dark.
But it was not empty.
For the first time in a long while,
I did not feel like a cold wall inside a luxurious hotel.
I felt like a witness to something preserved from time—
something gentle and enduring.
That night, I decided to write.
About a Valentine's Day that refused to be forgotten.
And about a love that needed no decorations to endure.
-----
© 2026 , CorNer. All rights reserved.
This work is protected under international copyright law.
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