The rain mirrored Ethan's mood. A steady, monotonous drizzle that seemed to seep into his bones, chilling him to the core. He stared out the window, the grey of the afternoon mirroring the grey that had become his constant companion.
It had been six months since the accident, six months since the world had lost its color. Six months since laughter had become a distant memory, replaced by a suffocating silence that echoed in the empty spaces of his life.
He should be doing homework, of course. Math. Mrs. Henderson would probably deduct another point for lateness, another notch on the downward spiral of his grades. But the numbers swam before his eyes, meaningless symbols in a world that had lost all meaning.
He felt hollow, a shell of the boy he used to be. The vibrant, energetic Ethan who had once been the life of the party, the one with a contagious laugh and a boundless curiosity. Now, he existed in a perpetual fog, his days a monotonous blur of grey.
He tried to force himself to focus, to pick up his pencil, but the effort was too much. He slumped back in his chair, the weight of the world pressing down on him.
"Ethan?" His mom's voice, a soft inquiry from the kitchen.
He mumbled a noncommittal sound, burying his face in his hands.
"Dinner's ready," she called again, her voice laced with a hint of worry.
He didn't answer. He didn't want to go downstairs, to face the forced cheerfulness, the awkward silences, the pitying glances. He just wanted to disappear, to melt into the grey of the afternoon and cease to exist.
The rain continued to fall, a steady, rhythmic beat against the windowpane. Each drop a tiny hammer against the fragile remnants of his sanity.