The Dark Tetrad

The Dark Tetrad

Read more poetry by Britt Wolfe

I step into the room and it tells me everything.

Not immediately.
People imagine themselves far more opaque than they are.

But give it a few minutes.

Watch who laughs too quickly.
Who apologises for speaking.
Who scans the room before answering, checking for approval.
Who performs confidence with just a little too much precision.

The information is always there.

People leak themselves constantly.

A hand at the throat.
A tightened jaw.
The subtle flinch at a certain kind of joke.
The brightness that arrives a second too late.

By then, I already know where the soft places are.

Most people mistake attention for care.

That remains the most useful thing about them.

Ask a quiet question.
Tilt the head at the right angle.
Lower the voice just enough.

And suddenly childhood appears.
Old betrayals.
Abandonments still warm to the touch.
The humiliations they swore no one would ever know.

They hand these things over so willingly.

Trust is one of the strangest human reflexes.

Offer warmth and people call it safety.

Across the room, someone laughs too loudly.
The kind of laugh designed to arrive before insecurity can.

That one is easy.

A compliment, lightly placed.
Not cruel. Never obviously cruel.
Just precise enough to live beneath the skin.

Something that sounds generous at first.
Something that will replay later in the dark,
slowly changing shape.

That is the important part.

The delay.

Immediate pain teaches caution.
Delayed pain breeds self-doubt.

Self-doubt is far more useful.

People assume harm is loud.
They imagine slammed doors, raised voices, spectacular betrayals.

But the most enduring damage is usually quieter than that.

A suggestion.
A pause held half a second too long.
A look that asks a question no one else heard.

Tiny fractures.

That is all that is ever required.

The remarkable thing is how often people do the rest themselves.

I do not force anything.
I simply provide the architecture.

They build the prison.

By the end of the evening, the room loves me.
Or thinks it does.

Which, in practical terms, is the same thing.

There is always someone who says I feel safe.

That word.

Safe.

As though safety were a quality instead of a costume.

Later, alone, I replay everything.
Not with guilt.

Guilt implies violation.
An overstepping.

But nothing was taken that was not offered.

That is what makes people so interesting.

The endless need to be seen.
The willingness to dismantle themselves for anyone who appears willing to look closely enough.

Tomorrow there will be another room.
Different faces.
Different wounds wearing different clothes.

But the patterns remain beautifully familiar.

And I will arrive smiling,
warm-handed,
attentive,
already listening for the fractures.

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WHERE WORDS MEET MORNING LIGHT
BEGIN EACH DAY WITH SOMETHING BEAUTIFUL

Every morning at 11:11AM, I send a poem — sometimes soft, sometimes devastating, always true.

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Poetry by Britt Wolfe:

Britt Wolfe

Britt Wolfe writes emotionally devastating fiction with the precision of a heart surgeon and the recklessness of someone who definitely shouldn’t be trusted with sharp objects. Her stories explore love, loss, and the complicated mess of being human. If you enjoy books that punch you in the feelings and then politely offer you a Band-Aid, you’re in the right place.

https://bio.site/brittwolfeauthor
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