Am Umbra by Giselle Virell You want to know who I am? Fine. Iâll tell you. But donât expect light. I donât carry it. I never did. They say I was three years old when the fire took her â my mother, Lilith Virell. I donât remember her face. Just a heat that didnât burn me. And ashes that didnât fall on me. When the smoke cleared, I was standing in a crib that didnât exist anymore. Everything gone. Except me. And one black feather. Still warm in my hand. They called it a miracle. I call it a warning. After that, it was just me and my father, Corvin Virell. He wasnât cold. He was quiet. He raised me like a shadow â taught me to read forgotten languages, to listen in silence, to find comfort in the places others are too afraid to look. He said once: âThe darkness didnât take her, Giselle. It spared you.â I think he knew even then what I was. Most people get tattoos for decoration. I did it to remember. I built myself out of ink and truth. A Dark Angel across my back â wings shattered, kneeling, faceless Chains climbing up my spine A crown of thorns curling around my shoulders A cracked black sun at the nape of my neck Latin etched across my blades: âIn Tenebris, Ego Sum.â In darkness, I am. I didnât do it to be seen. I did it because it was the only way to hold myself together. The ink didnât just tell my story. It sealed it. She didnât try to save me. Thatâs why I loved her. Rebecca Mourne came into my life with black boots, old books, and a camera that only shot in monochrome. See more