He wasn't just dying; he was profoundly, stubbornly drunk. It was his final act of rebellion against a world that had tried to sober him up for decades. In his clouded mind, the hospital room had transformed. The white sheets were the snowdrifts of his youth in the village; the IV drip was the rhythmic ticking of the clock in his grandfather’s kitchen.
"One more," he croaked, gesturing with a trembling hand toward the nightstand. There sat a bottle, nearly empty, a defiant middle finger to the heart monitor chirping beside him.
Ion let out a wet, gravelly laugh that turned into a cough. "My heart stopped forty years ago when your mother left. This? This is just the engine finally running out of fuel." sunt_betiv_pe_pat_de_moarte
"I drank so I could be the hero I wasn't," he murmured. "In the glass, I was a king. On the bed... I'm just a man who forgot how to live without a shadow."
The room smelled of stale antiseptic and cheap plum brandy—the kind that burns the throat and numbs the soul. Ion lay back, his breath a ragged whistle, staring at the peeling wallpaper as if it were a map of his own misspent life. He wasn't just dying; he was profoundly, stubbornly drunk
Elena leaned in, catching the scent of the spirits on his breath. "Why, Tata?"
His daughter, Elena, didn't move. Her eyes were red, not from the fumes, but from three nights of watching her father slip away. "The doctor said it would stop your heart, Tata." The white sheets were the snowdrifts of his
"You know," he whispered, his voice suddenly clear, "everyone thinks a deathbed is for apologies. But I don't want to apologize for the drinking. I want to apologize for the reasons I started."