A rotten deal

There are stories; old, unrecorded things that only pass between lips in the dark. May be not the kind of stories you tell kids. The kind you whisper to yourself when sleep won’t come. About people who made pacts; not with gods, but with creatures that existed before gods had names. Things that live in corners of the world that maps deliberately forget.
They say some people once worshiped a “chathan”, known by many other names, but essentially a demon or some variant of it. An imp, perhaps?
Not the loud, grotesque kind from movies or cheap airport horror paperbacks. This one is quiet. Patient. It follows. It waits. It promises favors in a voice like still water. A job, a lover, a lucky number on a lottery ticket. You’d think it’s a coincidence. You think you’re clever. You think you made it happen. And the chathan laughs; a dry, brittle sound like burning hair.
The deal is simple: it gives while you live; it takes when you die. Your eternal soul for a few small worldly favors.
What anyone who ever made this deal failed to understand, in their greed or desperation, is that the chathan is inherently evil. It is the only language it knows, and therefore is not capable of giving anything good. Every fruit it gives will have a rotten core. And sometimes, most times, because it is not capable of honoring its own word, for what is honor to an imp, it doesn’t wait till you are dead to take your soul. It begins early; with small things.
Your focus starts slipping. No big deal. Just forgot your keys. Just missed a deadline. Just lost a sentence halfway through saying it.
Then the carnival kicks into high gear.
Your mind becomes a tent with its flaps open in a storm. Thoughts fly in and out. None stay long enough to be useful. There’s noise, constant noise; like ten TVs screaming in different languages. There’s static, like your brain is stuck between channels. You try to read a page and your eyes crawl off it. You try to listen and your own thoughts interrupt. There’s always a next thing; and a next thing; and a next thing. And you chase them all like a fool, hands full of nothing.
You forget people’s names. Then faces. Then birthdays. Then yourself.
Whatever happened to the smartest man in the room, the multi-talented artist, the one who had promise? You ask yourself as you’re being ridiculed by your own past, trying to cling on something that never was.
You won’t even remember making the deal. Some part of you assumes you once made such a deal. What else could possibly be responsible for this soulless existence. You accept your fate.
You live in the punishment. A sentence served without remembering the crime. You wake up every day in a body that is somehow yours and not. A brain that you pilot like a bad shopping cart; pulling violently to one side, resisting every turn. You try to fix it; with apps and journals and willpower. It’s like trying to cage fog.
You think: maybe I’m just lazy. Maybe I’m broken. Maybe I deserve this. And the chathan, always walking just behind you, rests its chin on your shoulder and says, “Exactly.”
And this; this soul-eviction, this fractured loop of shame and noise and forgetting; this is what they sometimes call adhd.