Vulgar Reverie Upd đŸ“„

By week two, he had a roster. 4B was Denise. She fake-laughed on the phone with her mother, then spent hours searching “how to know if you’re depressed” on a glowing laptop. 2A was the retired cop who drank gin from a coffee mug and talked to his dead wife’s urn. 1C was the newlywed who only stopped screaming at his wife when he started crying, and only stopped crying when he started screaming again.

That was the worst part of the vulgar reverie.

It started innocently. His apartment in the crooked part of the city faced a courtyard where seven other units pressed together like rotten teeth. He bought a cheap telescope for stargazing—a gift from an ex who said he lacked wonder. But the sky was always smeared with city light, so one night, he aimed lower. vulgar reverie

One night, Denise in 4B did something different. After her usual post-cry face wash, she turned off the light. But instead of disappearing into the dark, she walked to her window and pressed her palm flat against the glass. She stared directly at Marco’s telescope—not as if she had seen him, but as if she had always known he was there.

The vulgar reverie had begun.

He had forgotten to watch himself.

Marco hadn’t slept in three days. Not because of insomnia, but because he had discovered a new kind of hunger: the low, humming thrill of watching other people’s lives crumble through their own bathroom windows. By week two, he had a roster

The reverie was vulgar because it was honest. No filters. No audience. Just the raw, unvarnished rot of being alive. And Marco couldn’t look away.