By now, Cielo had a system.
Not the kind written in textbooks.
Not the kind doctors confidently explain while avoiding eye contact with mystery illnesses.
No.
Her system was simpler:
Shade → Komiks → Book → Survival → Repeat.
—
Jessa called it "The Cielo Ecosystem."
Cielo called it "not dying under sunlight."
—
One afternoon, Jessa dragged her—again—into the town's secondhand book corner near the market.
A cramped stall wedged between a repair shop and a sari-sari store that sold ice candy like it was emotional support.
—
"Why are we here?" Cielo asked, already positioning herself under the narrow roof edge where shade existed like a fragile promise.
Jessa grinned. "Because komiks guy said you need to diversify your emotional portfolio."
"That sounds like financial advice."
"It is. You are investing too heavily in medical explanations."
—
Inside the stall, pocketbooks were stacked like messy secrets.
Faded covers.
Bent corners.
Titles that looked like they had survived heartbreak and humidity.
—
The vendor, a tired-looking woman chewing gum, looked up.
"You buying or emotionally browsing?" she asked.
Jessa pointed at Cielo. "She does both. Very scientifically."
—
Cielo stepped closer carefully.
"Do you have books that are… non-threatening?"
The woman paused.
Then nodded slowly. "Depends. Are you allergic to drama or just sunlight?"
Jessa laughed. "Both."
Cielo corrected calmly. "Only one is medically documented."
—
The vendor slid a box forward.
"Try these."
—
Cielo picked one up.
The cover read:
"Letters Never Sent"
She blinked.
"…That sounds like emotional labor."
Jessa nodded. "That's the point."
—
Another book:
"Girl Who Waited Too Long"
Cielo frowned. "That sounds clinically concerning."
Jessa grabbed it immediately. "Mine."
—
Cielo kept searching.
Then found one tucked awkwardly at the bottom.
Worn cover. Simple title.
"Possibilities in Small Places"
—
She paused.
Jessa noticed. "Oh? That one speaks to you?"
Cielo flipped it open slightly.
"…It doesn't sound like it's going to hurt me."
—
The vendor smiled faintly.
"Those are the dangerous ones," she said.
Cielo looked up. "Why?"
"Because they make you imagine things you're not used to allowing."
—
Jessa leaned in. "Like what?"
The vendor shrugged.
"A life that doesn't constantly ask you to explain yourself."
—
Silence.
Even the ice candy outside seemed to pause.
—
Cielo closed the book gently.
"I'm not used to that concept," she admitted.
Jessa nudged her. "You mean happiness?"
Cielo thought about it.
"No," she said slowly.
"Permission."
—
The word landed heavier than expected.
Not sad.
Not heavy like grief.
Heavy like something real enough to stay.
—
The vendor watched her carefully.
"You know," she said, "most people come here to forget their lives for a while."
She gestured at the pocketbooks.
"But you keep collecting pieces of yours."
—
Cielo looked at the book again.
"I don't think I know how to forget," she said.
Then added softly:
"I only know how to understand."
—
Jessa exhaled. "That is the most emotionally advanced trauma response I've ever heard."
—
They bought three books.
Cielo insisted on paying.
Jessa insisted on calling it "group therapy expenses."
—
Outside, the street was loud again.
Tricycles. Vendors. Heat pressing against everything like an opinion nobody asked for.
Cielo immediately shifted under shade.
Habitual. Automatic.
Safe.
—
Jessa walked beside her, flipping through her book.
"So," she said, "what's your pocketbook saying today?"
Cielo glanced down at hers.
Then answered honestly.
"That I might be allowed to want things."
—
Jessa stopped walking for a second.
"…That's illegal in your previous emotional system."
"Yes," Cielo replied. "I'm adjusting."
—
They continued walking.
And for once, silence between them didn't feel like avoidance.
It felt like processing.
—
That night, Cielo sat by her small desk.
Window slightly open—but carefully angled away.
Book open in front of her.
Lamp light soft.
World quiet.
—
She read a line that stayed longer than the rest:
"Possibilities begin where fear stops explaining everything."
—
Cielo closed the book slowly.
Then opened her notebook.
—
Entry: Pocketbooks and Possibilities
Today I learned that not all stories are about surviving something.
Some are about imagining something after survival.
I am not sure if I am ready for that yet.
But I am reading anyway.
—
Outside, the night held the sun's absence gently.
Inside, a girl who once only understood fear through science…
began quietly studying something else.
Possibility.
And for the first time…
it did not feel like a dangerous diagnosis.
