Communion (2025)

He sat back down, the rain still drumming on the roof, feeling, for the first time, like he truly belonged to the world.

Today was his first communion, a day his grandmother had spoken of as a "joining." Communion

When his turn came, Elias stepped into the aisle. The floorboards creaked under his polished shoes. As he reached the front, the light from a high stained-glass window caught a grain of dust, making it look like a floating spark of gold. "The Body of Christ," Father O’Shea whispered. "Amen," Elias replied, his voice small but steady. He sat back down, the rain still drumming

As he returned to his seat, the silence of the chapel didn't feel empty anymore. It felt shared. He looked at the cracked plaster on the walls, the worn wood of the pews, and the faces of the people he had known his whole life. In that moment, the "joining" made sense. It wasn’t just about the bread or the prayer; it was the quiet realization that his breath was part of the room’s breath, and his story was woven into the ancient, salt-stained stones of the village. As he reached the front, the light from

The air in the small stone chapel smelled of beeswax and old rain. Elias sat in the third pew, his hands resting on knees that still felt too bony for his twelve years. Outside, the Irish coast was a blur of grey mist and crashing Atlantic waves, but inside, the world was held in a hushed, golden suspension.

He watched Father O’Shea move with practiced, heavy grace near the altar. The old priest’s robes rustled like dry leaves. Elias felt a flutter in his chest—not quite fear, but a strange weight. He looked at the others: his cousin Mary, biting her lip; old Mr. Hennessy, whose eyes were closed in a deep, weathered prayer; and his mother, whose hand briefly squeezed his shoulder.