Where the Waves Remember complete book

Where the Waves Remember | CH 11-22

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11 The Melody of the Burning Cypress

The autumn air in Konavle was crisp, carrying the scent of ripe grapes and damp earth. Ivana wrapped her shawl tighter around her shoulders as she walked the familiar path between her cottage and the vineyards. At sixty-five, she had spent most of her life in this quiet corner of Croatia, where time moved at the pace of the seasons.

But tonight was different.

A strange restlessness had settled in her bones, an invisible thread tugging her toward the western edge of the valley, where an old cypress stood in solitude. She had seen the tree beforeโ€”tall, dark, and slightly crookedโ€”but had never felt drawn to it. Until now.

The sun dipped below the horizon, painting the sky in fiery oranges and deep purples. As Ivana stepped into the grove, the air grew thick with an energy she couldnโ€™t explain. Then she saw itโ€”the cypress was burning.

But these were no ordinary flames. They flickered blue and gold, spiraling up the trunk without consuming the wood. And then came the soundโ€”a low, mournful cry, like a voice trapped within the bark.

Ivanaโ€™s breath caught in her throat. The tree was singing.


The melody was ancient, a wordless song of sorrow that seemed to echo through the valley. Ivanaโ€™s knees trembled, but she did not flee. Instead, she stepped closer, her hands outstretched as if to touch the impossible fire.

โ€œWho are you?โ€ she whispered.

The flames pulsed in response, and for a fleeting moment, Ivana saw shapes within themโ€”faces, hands, fragments of lives long past. The tree was not just burning; it was remembering.

A gust of wind rushed through the grove, and the fire vanished as suddenly as it had appeared. The cypress stood untouched, its bark smooth and unmarred. But the song lingered, fading into the night like a ghost.

Ivana fell to her knees, her heart pounding. She had spent her life believing in the quiet magic of the landโ€”the way the vines thrived under a loving touch, the way the river whispered secrets to those who listened. But thisโ€”this was something beyond folklore.

The cypress had a soul.


The next morning, Ivana returned to the grove, half-expecting to find scorched earth. But the cypress stood as it always had, its branches swaying gently in the breeze.

Determined to understand what she had witnessed, she sought out the oldest villagersโ€”those who still remembered the tales of their ancestors.

Old Marin, the last living keeper of Konavleโ€™s oral histories, listened intently as Ivana described the burning tree. His milky eyes grew distant.

โ€œThe Weeping Cypress,โ€ he murmured. โ€œI thought it was just a story.โ€

According to legend, the tree was a guardian, bound to the land by a tragedy centuries past. Some said it was a woman who had lost her family in war, her grief so immense that the earth itself had absorbed her spirit. Others claimed it was a priest of an old faith, punished for daring to speak to the gods.

โ€œBut one thing is certain,โ€ Marin said, tapping his cane. โ€œThe tree only sings for those who are ready to hear it.โ€


From the day she first heard the cypress sing, Ivanaโ€™s life took on a new rhythm. Each morning, after tending to her small vineyard and feeding the chickens that scratched around her cottage, she would pack a simple mealโ€”a crust of black bread, a wedge of cheese, a flask of wine made from last autumnโ€™s grapesโ€”and walk the winding path to the grove.

The journey was not long, but she took her time, savoring the way the light filtered through the olive trees, the way the earth softened beneath her feet after rain. She had walked these hills for decades, yet now, with the cypress waiting, every stone and wildflower seemed newly alive.

At first, she said nothing. She would simply sit at the base of the tree, leaning against its rough bark, eating in silence as the wind played through its branches. She did not know if it could hear her thoughts, but she hoped, in some way, it understood her presence.

Then, one evening, as the sun bled into the horizon, she heard itโ€”a whisper so faint she might have imagined it. A single note, lingering in the air like the hum of a distant violin.

Her hands stilled. She held her breath.

The sound did not come again, but something shifted in the grove. The birds, usually chattering in the branches, had gone quiet. The breeze stilled. Even the insects seemed to pause in their buzzing. It was as if the world itself was listening.

Ivana exhaled slowly. โ€œI hear you,โ€ she murmured.

The cypress did not respond. But that night, for the first time in years, she dreamed of fire.


Weeks passed, and the ritual deepened. Ivana began bringing offeringsโ€”not just food, but small tokens she thought the tree might cherish. A sprig of rosemary from her garden, its scent sharp and clean. A smooth river stone, polished by time. A ribbon she had worn as a girl, its color faded to a soft blue. She placed them at the roots, half-expecting them to vanish, swallowed by the earth.

They never did. But sometimes, when she returned the next day, they seemed to have shifted slightly, as if moved by unseen hands.

Then came the evening of the ember.

It was late summer, the air thick with the scent of ripening figs. Ivana had stayed longer than usual, watching as the first stars pricked the darkening sky. She reached out, as she often did, and let her fingers brush the cypressโ€™s bark.

This time, it was warm.

She jerked her hand back, startled. Then, hesitantly, she pressed her palm flat against the trunk.

The warmth pulsed, gentle as a heartbeat. And thenโ€”light. A single ember, glowing just beneath the surface of the bark, like a coal buried in ash.

Ivanaโ€™s throat tightened. She had seen strange things in her lifeโ€”the way mist curled like living things over the river at dawn, the way storms sometimes seemed to speak in voices just beyond hearingโ€”but this was different. This was for her.

A sound filled her mind. Not a voice, not quite, but something older, something that bypassed words entirely. It was the sigh of roots drinking deep, the creak of branches in the wind, the whisper of leaves telling secrets to the sky.

And beneath it all, a meaning, clear as spring water:

You see me.

Tears pricked her eyes. She did not speak aloud, but her thoughts rang loud in the stillness.

โ€œYes,โ€ she answered. โ€œI see you.โ€

The ember flickered, then faded. But the warmth lingered beneath her palm, and with it, a sense of something vast and ancient settling around her, like a cloak woven from time itself.


After that night, the cypress did not speak to her in words againโ€”not in any way she could name. But it spoke in other ways.

In the way the wind would suddenly still when she entered the grove, as if the tree was holding its breath to listen.

In the way the birdsโ€”always skittish around humansโ€”began to alight on the lower branches when she was near, their black eyes watching her with something like recognition.

In the way her dreams grew vivid, filled with images of a Konavle she had never known: forests untouched by axes, rivers running silver with fish, and people dancing beneath the cypressโ€™s branches, their faces painted with ash and ochre.

Sometimes, when she pressed her ear to the bark, she heard a sound like distant chanting.

She began to understand that the tree was not just alive. It was alive in a way she could barely comprehendโ€”a creature of slow, deep time, its thoughts unfolding over centuries, its memories older than the oldest stories of her people.

And yet, it had noticed her. A woman of fleeting years, her bones already beginning to ache with age.

Why?

The answer came one evening, as she sat with her back against the trunk, watching the fireflies rise from the grass.

A feeling settled over her, heavy and sweet as honey.

You listen.

Not with your ears, the tree seemed to say. With your soul.

Ivana bowed her head. She had spent her life listeningโ€”to the land, to the stories of her neighbors, to the quiet voice inside her that had always known there was more to the world than what could be seen.

And now, at last, something was listening back.


As weeks passed, Ivanaโ€™s bond with the cypress deepened. She began to dream of its pastโ€”visions of a Konavle long forgotten, where the land was wild and untamed, where people lived in harmony with forces modern minds could scarcely comprehend.

In her dreams, she saw a woman in a flowing dress, kneeling at the base of the cypress, her tears watering its roots. She saw wars, fires, rebirthsโ€”the tree had witnessed it all.

And then, one night, the visions shifted. The cypress showed her herselfโ€”not as she was now, but as a child, running through the vineyards, laughing. It had been watching over her all along.


Years passed. Ivana grew older, her steps slower, but her visits to the cypress never wavered. Villagers began to speak of her in hushed tones, calling her โ€œthe Keeper of the Grove. โ€Some brought offeringsโ€”flowers, honey, handwritten notesโ€”which Ivana placed at the treeโ€™s roots.

One spring morning, as the first buds appeared on the vines, Ivana did not return to her cottage. They found her beneath the cypress, a smile on her lips, her body curled against its trunk as if in sleep.

And though her heart had stilled, the villagers swore they could hear two voices in the windโ€”one old, one newโ€”singing together at dusk.


Today, if you walk through Konavle at twilight, you might see itโ€”a cypress, tall and proud, its branches swaying in a breeze that touches nothing else. And if you listen closely, you might hear itโ€”a song, soft and sweet, carried on the wind.

Some say itโ€™s just the trees whispering.

But those who knowโ€”those who rememberโ€”will tell you itโ€™s Ivana and her cypress, still singing, still watching, still bound to the land they loved.

12 The Day the Adriatic Spoke

Lina squinted through the salty breeze as it swept across the rugged coastline of Croatia. The Adriatic Sea stretched out before her, its turquoise waves crashing rhythmically against the shore. The sun hung low in the sky, casting a golden glow over the landscape. Lina kicked at a stray pebble, sending it skittering across the rocky beach.

โ€œThis feels pointless, Davor,โ€ she sighed, the frustration evident in her voice.

Davor, her older brother, grinned and shook his head. โ€œThereโ€™s no point to anything, Lina. Except maybe this.โ€ He bent down and picked up a perfectly round, pearly white shell from the sand.

Linaโ€™s eyes widened as she took the shell from Davorโ€™s outstretched hand. It shimmered faintly, like moonlight trapped inside. โ€œWhat is it?โ€ she asked, her curiosity piqued.

Davorโ€™s smile softened. โ€œThey say these shells hold wishes. If you listen closely enough, you can hear the oceanโ€™s purpose.โ€

Skeptical but intrigued, Lina pressed the shell to her ear. At first, she heard only the roar of the waves, a familiar and soothing sound. Then, as she concentrated harder, a faint whisper emerged, like a forgotten memory: โ€œRememberโ€ฆโ€ The shell pulsed warm in her hand, sending a shiver down her spine.

Lina looked up at Davor, her eyes wide with wonder. โ€œDid you hear that?โ€

Davor nodded, his expression serious. โ€œItโ€™s said that these shells are gifts from the sea, meant to remind us of something important. A purpose, a memory, something we need to remember.โ€

Lina clutched the shell tightly, feeling its warmth seep into her skin. โ€œWhat do you think it wants us to remember?โ€

Davor shrugged. โ€œThatโ€™s for you to figure out. Everyone hears something different. Itโ€™s personal.โ€


That night, Lina lay in bed, the shell resting on her nightstand. Moonlight spilled through the window, painting silver streaks across the wooden floor. She couldnโ€™t shake the feeling that it held a deeper meaning, a secret just waiting to be uncovered.

Her mind raced with possibilities, but sleep eventually claimed her. In her dreams, the sea was both a friend and a mystery. She walked along a shoreline painted with stars, and the shell whispered again, faint but urgent: โ€œRemember…โ€

She reached out toward a distant lighthouse, its light pulsing like a heartbeat in the night. But before she could get closer, the vision dissolved into mist, leaving only the echo of the word remember ringing in her ears.


The next morning, Lina woke with a sense of determination. She needed to understand the shellโ€™s message. She slipped it into her pocket and headed to the local market, hoping to find someone who could shed light on its mystery.

The market was a bustling hub of activity, filled with the scents of fresh produce, herbs, and the briny tang of the sea. Vendors called out their wares in a chorus of cheerful voices, old men played chess under the shade of ancient fig trees, and children chased each other laughing between stalls.

Lina navigated through the crowd until she found an old woman sitting behind a table laden with seashells and trinkets. Her hands were weathered and strong, her eyes sharp and knowing.

โ€œExcuse me,โ€ Lina said, approaching the woman. โ€œI found this shell on the beach. My brother says it holds wishes and whispers secrets. Do you know anything about it?โ€

The old woman looked up, a small smile playing at her lips. She took the shell from Linaโ€™s hand and examined it closely. โ€œAh, a wish shell,โ€ she murmured. โ€œThese are rare. The sea doesnโ€™t give them up easily.โ€

โ€œWhat does it mean?โ€ Lina asked, her heart pounding with anticipation.

The woman smiled, her wrinkles deepening. โ€œThe shell holds a memory, a purpose. Itโ€™s different for everyone. You must listen carefully and trust what you hear. The sea speaks to those who are willing to listen.โ€

Lina nodded, feeling both encouraged and frustrated. She thanked the woman and left the market, the shell warm in her pocket. She wandered aimlessly through the village, her thoughts consumed by the mystery.


Days turned into weeks, and Lina continued to carry the shell with her, listening to its whispers whenever she had a quiet moment. The word โ€œRememberโ€ echoed in her mind, but she couldnโ€™t decipher its meaning. She grew increasingly restless, feeling as though she was on the brink of a revelation that remained just out of reach.

At the village cafรฉ, Lina sat with Davor over strong coffee and freshly baked burek, the flaky pastry filled with cheese and spinach. The cafรฉ hummed with lifeโ€”elderly men argued about football, young lovers whispered in shadowed corners, and fishermen discussed the dayโ€™s catch.

โ€œI still donโ€™t understand,โ€ Lina confessed, her frustration bubbling over. โ€œI listen, but all I hear is โ€˜Remember.โ€™ What am I supposed to remember?โ€

Davor put a comforting hand on her shoulder. โ€œSometimes, Lina, itโ€™s not about understanding right away. Itโ€™s about the journey. Keep listening. The answer will come when youโ€™re ready.โ€

Lina sighed, but she knew he was right. She couldnโ€™t force the answer. She had to be patient.


As autumn settled over the village, Linaโ€™s determination waned. The golden leaves danced down cobblestone streets, and the smell of roasted chestnuts filled the air. But Lina felt trapped in her own mind, caught between hope and doubt.

One rainy afternoon, she sat by the window of their small cottage, watching the raindrops race down the glass. She held the shell in her hand, its once comforting warmth now a source of frustration.

โ€œMaybe itโ€™s just a shell,โ€ she muttered to herself. โ€œMaybe Iโ€™m chasing a dream.โ€

But as she gazed out at the stormy sea, something shifted within her. She remembered the stories her grandmother used to tell her about the sea and its secrets. She had always been fascinated by the tales of lost treasures, hidden messages, and the magic of the Adriaticโ€™s ancient waters. Maybe the shell was a part of that legacy.

Determined to give it one last try, Lina closed her eyes and pressed the shell to her ear. The familiar roar of the waves filled her senses, and she let herself get lost in the sound. Slowly, the whisper emerged, clearer this time.

โ€œRememberโ€ฆ the lighthouse.โ€

Linaโ€™s eyes snapped open. The lighthouse. Of course. How could she have forgotten? It was where her grandmother used to take her and Davor when they were children, a place filled with stories and memories. She had neglected it in recent years, consumed by the busyness of life.


The next morning, Lina set out for the old lighthouse, a sense of purpose driving her forward. The path was overgrown with wildflowers and tangled vines, and the air was crisp with the promise of winter.

As she approached the lighthouse, she felt a surge of nostalgia. The weathered stone structure stood tall against the sky, a beacon of the past. Moss clung to its base, and the iron door creaked as she pushed it open.

Inside, the air was cool and musty. Dust motes danced in the sunlight that streamed through the narrow windows. Lina made her way up the spiral staircase, her footsteps echoing softly in the silence.

At the top, she found the lantern room, its windows offering a panoramic view of the sea. The waves sparkled like diamonds beneath the soft light of dawn.

Lina stood there, clutching the shell, and closed her eyes. The memories flooded backโ€”her grandmotherโ€™s laughter, the stories she told, the sense of wonder and adventure that had filled her childhood. She realized that the shellโ€™s message was not just about the past but about reclaiming that sense of wonder and connection.

As she stood there, the shell pulsed warm in her hand once more. She held it to her ear and heard the whisper again, clearer than ever.

โ€œRememberโ€ฆ who you are.โ€

Tears filled Linaโ€™s eyes as she understood. The shell had been guiding her to reconnect with her roots, to remember the person she had been before lifeโ€™s demands had taken over. She felt a weight lift from her shoulders, replaced by a sense of clarity and peace.


Lina returned to the village, her heart lighter than it had been in months. She found Davor sitting on the porch, carving a piece of driftwood.

He looked up as she approached, a question in his eyes.

โ€œI figured it out,โ€ Lina said, smiling. โ€œThe shellโ€ฆ it was reminding me of who I am. Of our past, our family, and the magic of this place.โ€

Davor nodded, a proud smile spreading across his face. โ€œI knew you would. You just needed to listen.โ€

Lina sat beside him, feeling a renewed sense of purpose. She knew that the journey of self-discovery was ongoing, but she felt more grounded, more connected to her roots than ever before.

The village continued to thrive, its rhythms dictated by the sea and the seasons. Lina and Davor worked together, honoring their familyโ€™s legacy and the lessons they had learned from the sea. The wish shell remained a treasured possession, a reminder of the journey that had brought them back to themselves.


Years passed. Lina often walked along the beach, the shell tucked safely in a small wooden box on her dresser, its whispers no longer a puzzle but a gentle presence, a connection to the Adriaticโ€™s ancient heartbeat.

She became a storyteller in the village, sharing the legends of the sea and the wish shells with children gathered beneath the cypress trees. She spoke of the lighthouse, of memory and magic, and the power of listeningโ€”not just with ears, but with the heart.

The sea watched everything, a silent witness to human lives weaving through its tides.

And as the waves crashed on the shore, Lina knew that some wishes are not about changing the world but about remembering who you are and where you come from.

13 Night of Unforeseen Fate

In the heart of Dubrovnik, a coastal gem touched by the gentle brushstrokes of the setting sun, Lea, a celebrated Croatian songstress, graced the shores with her presence. Her voice, a captivating melody that reached the depths of the soul, resonated amidst the whispers of the waves against the rocky embrace of the shore. The salty breeze carried the essence of the Adriatic Sea, wrapping Lea in a cocoon of solitude as she stood, a solitary figure, against the canvas of an orange-pink sky.๏ปฟ

Once, her name had filled concert halls and headlines. People called her โ€œThe Nightingale of the Adriatic.โ€ But now, stripped of stage lights and the applause of strangers, Lea stood quietly by the sea, her soul heavy with the weight of an unfinished love.

As daylight surrendered to the horizonโ€™s embrace, Leaโ€™s internal tempest mirrored the crashing waves. A love left unspoken and unanswered weighed heavily on her heart โ€” not one born of passionโ€™s haste but carved gently over years, through stolen glances, moments unsaid, and letters never sent. His name was Andrej. And he had been both her muse and her mystery.

In the quiet of that evening, compelled by an undeniable force, she gave voice to the emotions that had long sought liberation.

โ€œDoes my love mean nothing to you?โ€ Her once-strong and melodic voice now trembled with vulnerability, carried away by the breeze, a poignant plea to the universe. โ€œMust I leave once more, abandoning everything?โ€

Unbeknownst to Lea, her personal storm unfolded under the watchful eyes of Marko, a loyal friend hidden in the shadows of the cypress trees. A childhood friend who had seen her rise, break, heal, and rise again, Marko had always known when to step forward โ€” and when to hold back.

He approached, his heart beating to the rhythm of the waves, carrying not answers but presence.

โ€œLea,โ€ Marko spoke gently, emerging from the shadows, โ€œsometimes, the sea cannot bear the weight of our unspoken words. Perhaps itโ€™s time to face him and let your heart find solace.โ€

Surprised by his presence, Lea turned. Her eyes, glossy with unshed tears, softened.

โ€œYouโ€™re not alone in this,โ€ he reassured. โ€œLet me stand by you.โ€

And for once, she didnโ€™t protest. She let herself lean, if only for a moment, into the comfort of someone who had never wavered.


Two Days Later

The stone alleys of Dubrovnik shimmered under moonlight. Streetlamps flickered like uncertain stars, lighting Leaโ€™s path as she walked with Marko through the Old Town, the scent of fig trees and sea salt in the air. They didnโ€™t speak. Words were not necessary. Not yet.

Andrej waited near the Jesuit Steps โ€” the place where he and Lea had once spoken about the possibility of a future they were too afraid to name.

He looked older than she remembered. Not in the way of time, but in the way regret etches itself across oneโ€™s soul.

Lea stepped forward alone.

โ€œAndrej,โ€ she said, her voice quiet but steady.

His eyes lifted to meet hers. โ€œLea.โ€

A silence stretched between them โ€” not empty, but overflowing.

โ€œDoes my love mean nothing to you?โ€ she asked again, this time firmer, her gaze unflinching. โ€œMust I go away, leaving everything behind once more?โ€

Andrejโ€™s jaw tensed. โ€œItโ€™s complicated, Lea. You know it is.โ€

Tears welled in her eyes. โ€œComplicated doesnโ€™t justify the silence. It doesnโ€™t excuse the years of wondering, of second-guessing myself.โ€

โ€œI didnโ€™t know what to do,โ€ he murmured. โ€œWe were both chasing different lives then.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ she said. โ€œWe were both afraid.โ€

Before he could respond, she turned away, her head bowed in resignation. โ€œPerhaps I do need to go away,โ€ she whispered, unwittingly walking towards a fate unforeseen.


The Crash

The moment happened fast โ€” like life always does when youโ€™re trying to breathe through sorrow.

The screech of tires.

A sharp cry.

The blare of a horn.

Leaโ€™s body crumpled under the impact of the speeding car. The world stopped.

Marko screamed her name.

Andrej stood frozen, horror carved into his features.

The driver โ€” a tourist, drunk and dazed โ€” stumbled out of the car, but neither Marko nor Andrej saw him. All they saw was Leaโ€™s still form on the stone-paved road, her white dress soaked in crimson.

Marko dropped to his knees, cradling her head.

โ€œStay with me, Lea. Please, please…โ€

Andrej approached slowly, as if walking through a nightmare.

โ€œI never wanted this,โ€ he whispered. โ€œI never wanted any of this to happen.โ€

The ambulance arrived within minutes, its blue lights painting the buildings in surreal color.

Marko let go only when the paramedics pried his fingers from hers.

โ€œYou deserved answers, Lea,โ€ he whispered. โ€œNot this.โ€


The Waiting

Dubrovnik continued โ€” its rhythm unbroken. Tourists clicked photos. Cafรฉs buzzed. But for Marko, time stood still.

At Dubrovnik General, room 317 became his world.

Lea lay unmoving, a ghost between life and somewhere else. The steady beeping of the heart monitor was both comfort and torment.

He held her hand and spoke to her about music, about how the sea missed her voice, about how the fig trees had started blooming early this year.

Then, one afternoon, the door creaked open.

Andrej stood there.

Markoโ€™s jaw clenched. โ€œYouโ€™ve done enough.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ Andrej said. โ€œBut I need to see her.โ€

Something in his voice โ€” or perhaps the unbearable weight of silence โ€” softened Markoโ€™s edge.

โ€œThen say what you should have said long ago.โ€

Andrej stepped forward, tears rising.

โ€œLea,โ€ he began, his voice trembling. โ€œI never stopped loving you. I let fear win. I was a coward. But Iโ€™m here now. And I want to stay โ€” if youโ€™ll let me.โ€

Marko sat in silence. His own heart breaking โ€” not out of romantic love, but the helplessness of watching someone he adored suffer.


Hope Returns

Days turned into weeks.

Lea fought.

And slowly, like the tide reclaiming the shore, consciousness returned.

It began with fluttering fingers. Then a soft murmur. Then, one evening, she opened her eyes.

Marko was there.

โ€œLea?โ€ he asked, disbelief etched in his face.

She blinked. Her voice was faint but certain. โ€œWhere… am I?โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re safe,โ€ he whispered, taking her hand. โ€œYouโ€™re safe now.โ€

Andrej entered, tentative. When she saw him, her eyes filled.

โ€œYou stayed,โ€ she whispered.

โ€œI couldnโ€™t leave again.โ€


Healing

Recovery was slow.

But Lea was stronger than anyone realized.

Physically, she healed. Emotionally, she struggled.

Andrej visited daily. Sometimes they talked. Sometimes they sat in silence. But something was changing.

One afternoon, Marko joined them on the hospital terrace.

Lea looked at them both โ€” two men who had loved her in different ways. She realized then that love wasnโ€™t just a story you fell into. It was a choice โ€” sometimes daily, sometimes terrifying.

โ€œI need time,โ€ she said. โ€œTime to understand what I want. Who I am now.โ€

And they both nodded.

Marko smiled gently. โ€œYouโ€™ve always known. You just need to remember.โ€


Return to the Sea

Weeks later, Lea stood once again on the shores of Dubrovnik. The same orange-pink sky wrapped itself around her.

But she wasnโ€™t alone.

Andrej walked beside her, not behind. Marko walked a few paces ahead, throwing pebbles into the tide.

They paused.

โ€œI asked you once,โ€ she said, turning to Andrej. โ€œDo you still think itโ€™s complicated?โ€

He smiled, softly. โ€œItโ€™s life. Itโ€™ll always be messy. But that doesnโ€™t mean we give up on it.โ€

She nodded. โ€œIโ€™m not ready to say forever. But I am ready to begin.โ€

And together, they watched the sunset โ€” not as a farewell, but a promise.


Epilogue: A Song Remembered

Months later, in a modest concert held in the old city walls, Lea returned to the stage.

The hall was silent. The audience โ€” locals, friends, and strangers alike โ€” waited.

She sang one song. Only one.

A love song, once unfinished.

Her voice, raw with vulnerability, soared.

Not polished. Not perfect.

But real.

When she finished, she looked into the crowd.

Andrej was there.

Marko too.

She smiled.

And for the first time in years, she felt whole.

The Adriatic Sea roared outside, not with sorrow this time โ€” but with applause.

14 The Unforgiving Storm

The headaches were like relentless storms in her mind, striking without warning and battering the shores of her consciousness. Lara had grown accustomed to the pain over the years, though it never dulled her suffering. She likened it to a tempest, raging in the deepest recesses of her thoughts, a tempest that no physical storm, not even the harshest of wars, could ever match.๏ปฟ

On those days when the pain was at its worst, Lara would retreat to the quiet solitude of her home in Zadar. She had chosen this small coastal town for its tranquility, its distance from the cacophony of fame that had once engulfed her. Her modest house, tucked away from prying eyes, was both sanctuary and prison โ€” a place where she could escape the world but also a constant reminder of her seclusion.

As she sat in her dimly lit living room, her fingers idly tracing patterns on an old photograph of her younger self, the pain gnawed at her skull. She blinked back tears, trying to recall who she once was, to grasp the memories of her past glories and the adoration of her fans. Yet, like grains of sand slipping through her fingers, those memories eluded her.

The world knew her as a powerhouse of a voice, a woman who had given her soul to music, a star who had once graced the worldโ€™s grandest stages. Her face had been splashed across magazines, her voice had filled concert halls, and her name had been synonymous with musical excellence. But who was she now, in this quiet house by the sea?

Lara rose from her chair, clutching her temples as if she could physically wring out the pain. She moved to a corner of the room where an old piano stood, its ivory keys yellowed with age. Music had been her lifeline, her escape, but now it was her most bitter foe. She stared at the piano keys, longing to play, to let her fingers dance on the keys and lose herself in the melodies of her past.

With trembling hands, she began to play, her fingers finding the familiar notes of a beloved song. The music flowed, a river of nostalgia, carrying her back to the stages where she had once shone so brightly. Her voice joined the pianoโ€™s lament, a haunting duet that echoed through the empty rooms of her home.

But even as she sang, even as the power of her voice filled the air, she could not escape the cruel reality that gnawed at her soul. Who was she? What had become of the woman who had once commanded the worldโ€™s attention? The pain in her head intensified, threatening to consume her.

And then, in the midst of her song, it happened. She forgot the lyrics. Her voice faltered, the melody crumbled, and she sat there, defeated and broken, tears streaming down her cheeks. It was as if a curtain had fallen, separating her from the Lara who had once been.

In the silence that followed, she realized the depth of her isolation. The world had moved on, but she had been left behind, a fading echo of her former self. The adoration of her fans, the memories of her past glories โ€” they were all slipping away, like grains of sand in a merciless storm.

Lara lowered her head, her thick brown hair falling like a curtain, shielding her from the world. In that moment of vulnerability, she felt more alone than ever before. The pain in her head was a cruel reminder of the battles she had fought, both on and off the stage. But it was the battle within herself, the battle to remember who she was, that was the most painful of all.

She longed for an escape, for a way to silence the relentless storms in her mind. But for now, all she had was the music, the melodies that offered brief respite from the darkness that threatened to consume her. And so, with trembling hands, she began to play again, singing with a voice that still held the power to move hearts, even as her own was breaking.

The days drifted by in a haze of pain and fleeting memories. Laraโ€™s routine became a somber dance of medication, short walks along the beach, and the occasional visit from old friends who still remembered the star she once was. Each visit brought a bittersweet reminder of the life she had lost and the life she now led.

One afternoon, as the sun dipped low in the sky, casting long shadows across her living room, a knock echoed through the house. Lara, her head pounding from another relentless headache, hesitated before answering. She opened the door to find Mira, her childhood friend and one of the few who had stayed by her side through the years.

โ€œLara,โ€ Mira greeted with a warm smile, though her eyes betrayed her concern. โ€œI brought some soup and bread from the market. Thought you might need something warm.โ€

Lara managed a weak smile, stepping aside to let Mira in. โ€œThank you. You didnโ€™t have to.โ€

โ€œNonsense,โ€ Mira replied, setting the basket on the kitchen counter. โ€œI wanted to. How have you been?โ€

Lara shrugged, her shoulders heavy with the weight of unspoken words. โ€œThe same, I suppose. The headaches havenโ€™t let up.โ€

Miraโ€™s expression softened. โ€œIโ€™m sorry, Lara. I wish there was more I could do.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re doing enough just by being here,โ€ Lara said, her voice barely above a whisper. She looked away, her gaze drifting to the piano in the corner. โ€œSometimes, I think about playing again, butโ€ฆโ€

Mira followed her gaze, understanding dawning in her eyes. โ€œYou donโ€™t have to prove anything to anyone, Lara. Youโ€™ve given so much already.โ€

Lara nodded, but the ache in her heart remained. โ€œI know. But it feels like Iโ€™ve lost a part of myself. The music was everything to me, and nowโ€ฆโ€

Mira reached out, taking Laraโ€™s hand in hers. โ€œYouโ€™re still Lara. Whether youโ€™re on stage or here in this house, youโ€™re still the same incredible person. Donโ€™t forget that.โ€

Lara squeezed Miraโ€™s hand, grateful for her friendโ€™s unwavering support.

The following weeks brought a semblance of routine. Laraโ€™s headaches persisted, but she found solace in small moments: a walk along the beach at dawn, the sound of waves crashing against the shore, and the warmth of Miraโ€™s visits. She began to write again, her thoughts spilling onto the pages of an old journal. It wasnโ€™t music, but it was an outlet, a way to process the storm within her mind.

One evening, as Lara sat by the window watching the sun set over the Adriatic Sea, she heard a familiar melody drifting through the open window. Intrigued, she followed the sound, her footsteps leading her to the beach where a young woman sat, playing a guitar and singing softly.

Lara stood at a distance, captivated by the hauntingly beautiful voice. The womanโ€™s song was one of longing and loss, and it resonated deeply with Laraโ€™s own experiences. As the final notes faded into the evening air, Lara found herself clapping, tears streaming down her face.

The woman looked up, startled but pleased. โ€œThank you,โ€ she said, her voice carrying a warmth that matched the sunset. โ€œI didnโ€™t realize I had an audience.โ€

Lara approached, her heart pounding. โ€œYou have a beautiful voice,โ€ she said, her own voice trembling. โ€œWhatโ€™s your name?โ€

โ€œSara,โ€ the woman replied with a shy smile. โ€œAnd you?โ€

โ€œLara,โ€ she answered, sitting down beside Sara. โ€œI used to sing, too. A long time ago.โ€

Saraโ€™s eyes widened in recognition. โ€œLara? As in Lara, the famous songstress? Iโ€™ve heard your music! Youโ€™re incredible!โ€

Lara felt a bittersweet pang of nostalgia. โ€œI was, once. But nowโ€ฆ now I just listen.โ€

Sara reached out, placing a hand on Laraโ€™s arm. โ€œWould you sing with me? Just one song?โ€

Lara hesitated, the familiar fear and doubt rising within her. But there was something about Saraโ€™s earnestness, her genuine love for music, that stirred a long-dormant part of Laraโ€™s soul.

โ€œIโ€™ll try,โ€ Lara said finally, her voice barely above a whisper.

Sara handed Lara the guitar, and together they began to play. Laraโ€™s voice, though shaky at first, found its strength as the melody wove through the air. The song was a simple one, but it held a profound beauty that transcended the years of silence.

As they sang, Lara felt a sense of liberation she hadnโ€™t known in years. The storm within her mind calmed, if only for a moment, and she remembered who she was: a woman who had once commanded the worldโ€™s attention with her voice, a woman who had touched countless hearts with her music.

When the song ended, Saraโ€™s eyes were shining with admiration. โ€œYou still have it, Lara. You never lost it.โ€

Lara smiled, a genuine smile that reached her eyes. โ€œThank you, Sara. Youโ€™ve given me something I thought Iโ€™d lost forever.โ€

The storms in her mind might never fully abate, but Lara had found a way to weather them. She had rediscovered the joy of music, the power of friendship, and the strength within herself to keep moving forward. And as the sun set over the Adriatic Sea, casting a golden glow over the town of Zadar, Lara knew that she was exactly where she was meant to be.

The music, the memories, and the love that had once defined her life continued to resonate, a timeless melody that echoed through the halls of her home and the hearts of those who knew her. Lara had found her voice once more, and it was a voice that would never be silenced.

15 Where Time Deepens

There are places in Croatia where time doesnโ€™t pass; it only deepens.

One such place lies hidden along the southern edge of Dalmatia, where the sea meets stone in a secret accord. To reach it, you must take the old path that winds past cypress groves and forgotten chapels, where every breeze carries the scent of immortelle and salt. The trail is so ancient that even the stones seem to whisper stories underfoot. It is not marked on any tourist map. Even locals do not speak of it easily. Not out of secrecy, but reverence.

The village of Luฤina lies at the end of this trail.

From afar, it appears abandoned โ€” a pocket of stone houses pressed against the cliffs, roofs red with ancient tile, shutters sun-washed and crooked. Ivy climbs through the broken window panes, as if time itself were trying to stitch something closed. But look closer, and youโ€™ll see that it is not abandoned at all.

Smoke curls from one chimney โ€” always the same one โ€” and a flicker of candlelight can be seen through the glass of the chapelโ€™s rose window at dusk. The chapel stands small and proud, despite its cracked bell tower, and when the wind is right, the sound of an old harmonium can be heard drifting from within.

Nobody builds anything new in Luฤina. They only restore. And not too much. They say even the hammers there strike more softly, out of respect for the silence that lives among the stones.


The village is home to eight souls.

None of them are young. None of them speak of the world beyond the olive groves. They carry wooden buckets down to the spring and bring them up again with hands as weathered as the stone walls they lean against. Every year on the feast of Saint Elijah, they lay out white linen cloths and wildflower crowns beneath the plane tree in the square, singing songs that no one remembers learning.

But it is not the people of Luฤina who hold the deepest secrets. It is the house above the village, perched just beyond the last olive tree, hidden behind tall rosemary hedges. A winding staircase carved into the rock leads to it โ€” worn smooth by generations of footsteps, though no one can recall who last lived there.

Yet, someone does live there.

Her name is Magdalena Ristiฤ‡.

To most, she is only a whisper. The villagers of Luฤina will speak of her only after a second glass of rakija and always with a quick glance toward the hills. โ€œSheโ€™s older than any of us,โ€ old Luka once said, โ€œbut her eyesโ€ฆ her eyes have never aged.โ€ Then he fell silent for the rest of the evening.

It is said that Magdalena came to Luฤina in the winter of 1943, when German troops set fire to the villages in retaliation. She fled Split as a girl of fourteen, barefoot and frostbitten, carrying a leather-bound notebook and a mandolin. Her parents were killed in the square in front of the palace of Diocletian. No one knows how she made it to Luฤina. Some say she followed the birds. Others believe the sea brought her.

She was taken in by a woman named Ruลพa, the village midwife, who lived in the house above the olive trees. Ruลพa taught her herbs, silence, and the old songs โ€” the kind not found in any book, sung in a dialect even older than Dalmatian itself. When Ruลพa died, Magdalena stayed. She never left again.

She aged in reverse, the villagers said. Her hair remained dark, her voice soft, her steps careful but light, like someone who had mastered the art of walking beside time, not through it.

And the notebook?

She still carries it.

No one has seen its pages, but they say it smells of ink and sage and the sea. Some claim it contains prophecies. Others believe it holds only music. One boy, curious and foolish, tried to sneak into the house. He came back before he reached the rosemary hedge โ€” pale, silent, unable to speak for a week. He now lives in Rijeka and avoids looking at the sea.


Visitors come sometimes.

Not many, and never twice.

A German woman in her sixties, who arrived with a suitcase full of photographs and trembling hands. A young man from Rijeka who carried his grandfatherโ€™s name and a silver locket. A Japanese woman who cried when she touched the gate, saying only, โ€œI found it.โ€

None ever spoke of what they saw. But each left lighter, as if something had been taken from them โ€” not stolen, but gently lifted, like fog by morning sun.

Some say Magdalena is the last keeper of something sacred โ€” a living echo of all that was lost but not gone. A guardian of memory. She is not immortal, they say. She is simplyโ€ฆ remembered.

And that is how time works in Luฤina.

It does not pass. It gathers. It does not erase. It engraves. With every wave that crashes below the cliffside, with every sigh of the olive leaves, the air grows denser with memory, not older.

There is a fig tree near Magdalenaโ€™s house that bears fruit out of season. A wild cat with one eye who comes only when someone is dying. A stone bench that warms itself just before the rain. These are not superstitions in Luฤina. They are landmarks in the landscape of deep time.

When Magdalena walks to the chapel on Thursdays โ€” always Thursdays โ€” the bell rings though no one touches it. The villagers pause whatever they are doing. Not in fear. In reverence. And they say that sometimes, if the sky is very still, the harmonium plays songs from a war that hasnโ€™t happened yet.

Years pass outside the valley. Empires rise, nations shift, the world digitizes, accelerates, forgets. But in Luฤina, everything remains. It changes, of course โ€” roofs fall, trees grow โ€” but it deepens, like a painting that grows richer the longer you look at it.

Magdalena is not young now, but neither is she old. Her hair has streaks of grey, but her back is straight. She speaks in whispers, but when she sings, birds fall silent to listen.

When she dies โ€” for even she must โ€” the villagers say she will not leave. Not really. Her footsteps will remain in the stone. Her songs will linger in the chapel air. Her name will be remembered, not as a tale, but as a presence.


And the notebook?

It will return to the sea. Or the wind. Or perhaps find another girl in flight, barefoot and wide-eyed, carrying a mandolin and questions too old for her age.

There are places in Croatia where time doesnโ€™t pass.

It waits.

It sings.

It deepens.

And if you ever find yourself in Luฤina โ€” or think you do โ€” donโ€™t take photos. Donโ€™t ask too many questions. Donโ€™t try to find Magdalenaโ€™s house.

Just sit. Breathe.

And listen.

Youโ€™ll know when time begins to deepen.

16 The Winds of My Heart

In Croatia, they say the wind has names โ€” bura, jugo, maestral โ€” each with its own rhythm, its own song, its own mood.

The locals believe the winds are more than weather. They are moods of the land, temperaments of the sea, voices of the gods that once watched over Dalmatia. The bura, fierce and howling from the north, cleanses. The jugo, heavy and brooding, maddens. The maestral, kind and cooling, brings comfort. On the island of Vis, where stone houses lean into each other like gossiping old women and fig trees twist in the sun, the wind was everything.

And to Lena, it had always been more than just wind.

She was born on a night when the jugo had lingered for a week too long โ€” long enough to drive the fishermen to drink and the cats to yowl mournfully on the rooftops. Her mother used to say she came out squalling like a gust herself, with wild black curls and wide, storm-dark eyes.

โ€œSheโ€™s marked,โ€ the midwife had whispered as the storm rattled the shutters. โ€œBorn under jugoโ€™s hand. Sheโ€™ll feel too much. Love too hard. Hurt too deep.โ€

The midwife wasnโ€™t wrong.


Lena grew up in a stone house nestled in the hills above Komiลพa, where goats clambered over rock walls and old men played cards beneath ancient mulberry trees. The house belonged to her grandmother, Teta Mara, a woman as solid as the land, who always smelled of sage and lavender.

From the moment Lena could walk, she wandered. Down through the vineyards, past the sun-bleached olive groves, and to the edge of the cliffs, where the wind had no mercy. Sheโ€™d stand with her arms outstretched, hair whipped back, eyes closed โ€” and listen.

โ€œTheyโ€™re talking to you, these winds,โ€ Mara said one day, watching the child on the cliffโ€™s edge with a blend of fear and awe. โ€œBut donโ€™t let them carry you too far.โ€

Lena never quite listened.


She was seventeen when she met Jakov. He came from Split for the summer, a cousin of the woman who rented the house next door. He had the careless charm of someone who knew he was handsome โ€” olive skin, a swimmerโ€™s body, laughter that tasted like sun-warmed wine.

Lena, wild and unformed, didnโ€™t stand a chance.

They met in the cove beneath the pines, where the sea was so clear you could see the pebbles glinting at the bottom. Jakov said he was studying literature; Lena told him about the wind.

โ€œYou sound like an old soul,โ€ he teased, brushing a fig leaf from her hair. โ€œOr maybe just island-crazy.โ€

โ€œMaybe both,โ€ she smiled.

That summer was jugo-heavy. The sky thick with humidity, nights restless, emotions deeper than usual. They made love under fig trees and inside abandoned stone churches. He read her Rilke; she showed him the path where the bura screamed.

And when he left, as she knew he would, he kissed her hard and said, โ€œDonโ€™t let the wind carry you away.โ€


Lena didnโ€™t weep when Jakov left. Not at first. The maestral had returned by then โ€” light, calming, playful. She wandered the hills like a ghost, trailing her fingers through rosemary bushes, humming the songs her grandmother had taught her.

But the maestral has a way of softening grief, not erasing it. And so the ache came slowly, like a tide that couldnโ€™t be stopped.

She wrote letters. Dozens. Never sent them. Burned some. Buried one beneath the fig tree where theyโ€™d lain naked, their skins salty and sunburned.

One evening, as she sat beneath the stars with Mara, the old woman handed her a bundle wrapped in a faded scarf.

โ€œYour motherโ€™s,โ€ she said. โ€œShe listened to the wind, too.โ€

Inside were journals, full of looping, passionate script โ€” notes about dreams, moon phases, herbs, heartbreak. And in one, a line underlined twice:

The jugo unravels the soul so that the truth can speak.


Years passed. Lena grew into her bones, her wildness tempered but not tamed. She stayed on Vis, unlike many of her friends who fled for the cities, the world. She worked at the islandโ€™s small museum, cataloging old fishing tools and Hellenistic pottery, walking the same paths daily, speaking to the wind in silence.

Then came the email.

From: [email protected]

Subject: Hello, after all these years

Lena stared at it for three days before opening it.

He was in Zagreb now. Teaching literature. Married once, divorced. No children. He had thought of her often, especially when the jugo blew.

โ€œIโ€™m coming to Vis next month,โ€ the email ended. โ€œWould you meet me?โ€

She didnโ€™t reply. But when the ferry docked a month later, she was there.


They met beneath the bell tower, where the sea meets the town like a whisper. He looked older โ€” silver at his temples, lines around his mouth. But his smile was the same.

โ€œYou still listen to the wind?โ€ he asked as they walked.

โ€œOf course,โ€ she said. โ€œIt never stopped talking.โ€

They walked for hours. Talked about poetry, cities, exile. Sat in the same cove where they once undressed each other with trembling fingers. But now there was something sadder, more grown โ€” the knowledge of loss, of time, of roads not taken.

That night, the jugo arrived. Thick clouds blanketed the moon, and the wind grew heavy, pressing on the soul.

Lena invited him to her home. They drank rakija on the terrace. The jugo howled.

โ€œYou feel it too,โ€ she said. โ€œThat old pull.โ€

โ€œI never stopped,โ€ Jakov replied. โ€œI just tried to drown it in the mainland noise.โ€

He stayed the night. They didnโ€™t make love. They just lay close, wind in their ears, hearts wide open.


The next morning, bura came in like a slap. Clear skies. Brutal wind. No room for lies.

Lena woke early, watched the branches shake. She felt raw. Clean.

โ€œI canโ€™t stay,โ€ Jakov said when he joined her in the kitchen. โ€œThis isnโ€™t my world.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ she said. โ€œItโ€™s mine.โ€

โ€œBut Iโ€™ll come back. If you want me to.โ€

She looked at him. At the man who had once shattered her. And now, so many years later, stood before her with softness in his eyes.

โ€œI donโ€™t want promises,โ€ she said. โ€œJust truth. And presence.โ€

Jakov nodded. โ€œThen Iโ€™ll come back when the bura allows.โ€


That winter, Lena walked the cliffs often. The island was quiet, stripped bare by the wind. She wrote poems in her journal, watched the sea grow violent and calm again. Jakov wrote letters, sometimes sent books. He returned once in spring, again in autumn.

But Lena remained rooted. And the winds remained her truest companions.

Some nights, sheโ€™d sit with her back to the stone wall of the old church, eyes closed, and listen.

Maestral brought memories. Jugo brought longing. Bura brought clarity.

Each with its own rhythm. Its own song. Its own mood.

And the wind, as always, knew her name.


The winter passed with the bura dominating the coast. Days when the sky seemed scraped clean of color, when clothes cracked on the line, and even the seagulls flew sideways.

Lena found a rhythm in the silence. She no longer feared the solitude. There was richness in it โ€” in waking before dawn to boil water for coffee, in feeding the stray cats that gathered on her stone wall like a congregation. In the crackling fire, the scratch of her pen, the sound of the shutters shaking like an old manโ€™s laugh.

Jakov visited less often. Not because he didnโ€™t want to, he explained in long, careful letters โ€” but because he didnโ€™t want to interrupt whatever sacred thing she had made for herself on the island.

โ€œI feel like a foreigner there now,โ€ he admitted once. โ€œNot to the island, but to your version of it.โ€

Lena wasnโ€™t sure if it hurt. It was strange to realize you had grown past your need for someone. Stranger still to be grateful for it.

Still, when the jugo came again in late February โ€” thick with salt and sorrow โ€” she wept for no reason at all. The tears came like rain, sudden and unannounced. She stood on the veranda in her old sweater and let the wind blow through her like she was a ruined house with open windows.

The jugo didnโ€™t comfort. It cracked something open.

And when she looked in the mirror afterward, Lena realized she was no longer a girl. She hadnโ€™t been for years.


That spring, Mara fell ill. Quietly, without drama. The doctor came from Split and shook his head in that way that means: thereโ€™s not much we can do, but weโ€™ll pretend a little longer.

Lena moved into the old womanโ€™s room, laying beside her in the evenings, braiding her thinning silver hair, listening to her whisper memories.

โ€œThere was a man once,โ€ Mara said one night, her voice like parchment. โ€œA fisherman with eyes the color of wet stone. We would meet in secret by the old monastery ruins.โ€

โ€œWhy didnโ€™t you marry him?โ€

โ€œI loved him too much,โ€ Mara said, matter-of-factly. โ€œAnd I knew he was born for the sea. A man like that canโ€™t be kept.โ€

Lena swallowed her tears. โ€œDid you regret it?โ€

โ€œNever. I mourned him often. But regret? No. You only regret what you do without love.โ€

The wind stirred the curtains. Jugo again.

Mara died on a calm day. No wind. No fanfare. Just a single olive leaf falling outside the window.

They buried her beside the chapel near the cliffs. Lena stood alone with the priest and the cats and the wind that didnโ€™t dare show its face.

For the first time in years, she sang โ€” just a low melody, something ancient, something her mother used to hum when the fig trees bloomed. A lullaby for the dead.


The months after Maraโ€™s death were slow. Lena spent them tending to the garden, restoring the shutters, reading the old womanโ€™s recipe books and making things sheโ€™d never dared before โ€” quince jelly, dried fig jam, brandied cherries.

But it wasnโ€™t enough.

She needed to move. To walk. To feel the wind again as more than memory.

One morning, she took the path that led west, to the abandoned lighthouse at Stonฤica. Locals said it had been closed since the war, but Lena had always believed someone still lived there. A flicker of light, a shape in the distance โ€” ghosts, maybe, or stubborn men who refused to leave.

When she arrived, a man was sitting on the steps, drinking coffee from a chipped cup.

โ€œYouโ€™re not a ghost,โ€ she said.

He laughed. โ€œDisappointed?โ€

โ€œA little.โ€

His name was Marko, and he had indeed lived in the lighthouse since 1997. A war veteran. A former engineer. A man who spoke very little but had eyes like moonlight on the sea โ€” silver and calm, with storms behind them.

They spoke for an hour that day. Then again the next week. Then every few days.

Marko never pushed. He didnโ€™t flirt. He just listened. And in return, Lena told him stories about the wind. About her grandmother. About the cove where love had once bloomed and died.

One evening, he handed her a small, leather-bound notebook.

โ€œFound it in the lighthouse cellar,โ€ he said. โ€œMaybe itโ€™s for you.โ€

Inside were observations โ€” wind patterns, wave rhythms, bird migrations โ€” written in the same looping script as her motherโ€™s journals.

She ran her fingers over the page. โ€œShe was here.โ€

Marko nodded. โ€œThe wind brings everything back eventually.โ€


That summer, the maestral returned early, cooling the afternoons with its soft laughter. Children played on the beach until dusk. The vineyards were full of song.

Lena spent more time with Marko. Not in the urgent, lustful way she had with Jakov, but in something slower. Truer. Like a boat drifting gently into harbor after years at sea.

They didnโ€™t speak about love. They just were. Sharing olives and bread. Watching the sea. Sitting in silence without the need to fill it.

One day, as they repaired the old fence near the lighthouse, Lena turned to him and said, โ€œDo you ever wish the wind would stop?โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he replied. โ€œI just wish I always knew what it was trying to say.โ€


In late August, the jugo returned with fury.

Boats swayed dangerously in the harbor. Tempers flared in town. Even the cats seemed on edge, yowling and hissing like they could feel something just beneath the skin of the world.

That night, Jakov called.

โ€œIโ€™m in Split,โ€ he said. โ€œI need to see you.โ€

โ€œWhy now?โ€

โ€œBecause I finally understand what you meant โ€” about the wind, about the island, about you. I should have stayed. Or at least tried.โ€

Lena listened to the storm outside her window. The jugo was rattling the shutters like a drunk demanding entry.

โ€œJakov,โ€ she said gently, โ€œsome storms are meant to pass.โ€

โ€œI love you.โ€

โ€œAnd Iโ€™ll always carry you,โ€ she said. โ€œBut Iโ€™m not who I was. And youโ€ฆ you were the wind that shaped me, not the harbor I belong to.โ€

Silence.

Then he whispered, โ€œGoodbye, Lena.โ€

She stayed up all night after that, watching the sky churn, letting the jugo do what it must โ€” unravel what was left.


When the bura came days later, it was like the world had been scrubbed clean. The sea was a sharper blue. The hills gleamed. Even the stones seemed to sigh in relief.

Marko came down to Komiลพa with her for the first time. He walked through the market, nodded at the old men, helped her carry bags of figs and lemons.

โ€œYouโ€™re letting me in,โ€ he said quietly, later that day.

โ€œI didnโ€™t lock the door,โ€ she replied.

โ€œNo,โ€ he smiled. โ€œBut you built walls.โ€

She took his hand. โ€œMaybe itโ€™s time to plant something new in their place.โ€


By October, Lena had turned forty.

She celebrated with rakija, grilled fish, and a handful of friends in the garden where her grandmother had once dried lavender.

The wind that day was maestral. Playful. Gentle.

Later, as twilight turned the sky to indigo, Marko gave her a carved wind chime โ€” made from driftwood and sea glass, strung on old fishing line.

โ€œFor the winds that carried you,โ€ he said. โ€œAnd the one that brought you home.โ€


In Croatia, they say the wind has names โ€” bura, jugo, maestral โ€” each with its own rhythm, its own song, its own mood.

But on Vis, thereโ€™s another name they whisper now, among the olive trees and beneath the cliffs.

They say the wind once fell in love with a girl named Lena.

And she listened so well, it never stopped singing for her.

17 The Woman with Violet Eyes

On the third Thursday of June, a stranger with violet eyes stepped off the ferry in Zadar and changed everything.

No one remembered the last time someone with violet eyes had visited Zadar. Violet wasnโ€™t a color that belonged here โ€” at least not in human eyes. Lavender bloomed in the hills beyond, yes, and wisteria clung stubbornly to the balconies of old stone houses, but eyes that shade? No. That was a color for paintings, for dreams, for stories whispered late at night under wine-stained stars.

She stepped off the ferry just after six in the evening, when the sun was beginning to soften, casting warm gold across the Riva. Her arrival was quiet, almost too quiet for someone who looked the way she did โ€” tall, graceful, dressed in an oversized beige linen coat and worn leather sandals, with a single silver ring shaped like a crescent moon glinting on her left hand.

Marija saw her first. Marija, who ran the flower stall across from the ferry terminal and hadnโ€™t missed a single arrival in twelve years, narrowed her eyes and frowned behind her sunhat.

โ€œSheโ€™s not from here,โ€ she muttered to herself, adjusting the lavender bundles in their baskets. โ€œAnd not a tourist either. Tooโ€ฆ still.โ€

Still. That was the word. The stranger stood at the edge of the terminal for several minutes, unmoving, as if the weight of her journey needed to settle in her bones before she could walk. Then she moved slowly, like someone remembering how, and wandered into the maze of marble streets, disappearing among the sandstone and shadows.


No one knew her name. Not at first.

She took a room at the old pension by the sea, the one owned by groggy, soft-spoken Matko who rarely asked questions and barely noticed if his guests stayed a night or a year. She paid in cash. She didnโ€™t ask for recommendations. She didnโ€™t take photos, didnโ€™t carry a guidebook, and never once visited the Sea Organ, despite its siren call to every traveler who ever landed in Zadar.

Instead, she wandered.

Each day, just after sunrise, she left the pension barefoot, her sandals tucked under her arm. She walked along the pebbled shoreline, stopping to collect small, unremarkable stones and tuck them into the pockets of her coat. She sat in the church courtyard for hours, not praying, just listening. Children said she talked to birds, but adults dismissed it as imagination.

โ€œSheโ€™s some kind of artist,โ€ whispered Jelka, the barista from the cafรฉ near the university. โ€œOr a poet. She writes things in that little notebook.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s a witch,โ€ muttered Bepo, the night watchman at the archaeological museum. โ€œI saw her staring at the Roman ruins for twenty minutes. Not moving. Like she could see the ghosts.โ€

โ€œSheโ€™s sad,โ€ said Lovro, age nine, who had watched her feed an injured cat and carry it in her arms like a baby. โ€œBut kind.โ€

The city didnโ€™t know what to make of her. Yet somehow, slowly, imperceptibly, it began to change.


It began with the violinist.

Luka, who had played the same old waltzes for tourists near the Forum for the past six summers, found his bow trembling one afternoon as the stranger passed by. He didnโ€™t see her, not really. He only felt something in the air shift. That night, he dreamt of new music, something raw and strange and beautiful, and by morning his fingers could barely keep up with the notes. People began to stop and listen again, really listen, not just toss coins out of obligation. Someone called it haunting. Someone else said it was like sunlight trapped in a storm cloud.

Then there was Maja, who hadnโ€™t painted in five years โ€” not since her mother died and sheโ€™d buried her talent in a box of grief. She saw the stranger once, just a glimpse, on a rain-spattered afternoon when the violet-eyed woman stood staring into the sea like it was telling her secrets. That night, Maja pulled out her brushes. By morning, her kitchen walls were filled with canvases the color of memory.

Old Ivan, who ran the used bookstore near the square, swore he hadnโ€™t cried in forty years. Not since the war. But on the first of July, he found a poem folded between the pages of a forgotten volume of Neruda. It was not in his handwriting, nor in the shopโ€™s register, and the words were simple, handwritten in looping script:

โ€œYou who bury your heart in silence โ€”What if the world still hears you?โ€


He sat down and wept like a child.

No one could say for certain what the stranger had done. She had spoken only a handful of words to anyone, always soft, always polite. She never entered churches, but lit candles outside them. She never gave her name, though the children began calling her Viola, and eventually the whole town followed suit.

By mid-July, people were meeting each otherโ€™s eyes again. They spoke less about politics and more about poetry. Tourists found the locals warmer, more alive. A group of high school students started a theatre group in the park. Someone played jazz by the fountain at dusk. Someone else proposed, barefoot, on the stone steps beneath the stars.

Viola had nothing to do with it, not directly. But she was always near, always watching โ€” like the soul of the city had grown eyes.

On the last Sunday of August, the wind changed. Locals say it always does, just before summer begins to die. Viola came down to the Riva, wearing a white dress for the first time, her long dark hair loose around her shoulders. She stood at the edge of the promenade, where the sea kisses the stone, and looked west โ€” toward the islands, toward the sky, toward something only she could see.

And then she walked away.

Not into town. Not toward the pension. But toward the ferry, which was boarding again, just as the sun began to sink.

Marija saw her go.

โ€œSheโ€™s leaving,โ€ she whispered, as if afraid saying it aloud would make it real.

โ€œShe already left,โ€ said Luka, lowering his violin bow.

And she had. Not just from Zadar, but from whatever spell she had quietly cast over the place. The air felt different again. Not worse, but quieter, like a dream half-remembered after waking.


They never found out who she was.

Matko said the room she stayed in smelled faintly of lavender and salt. The notebook was gone. The ring too. Only a single stone remained on the windowsill โ€” a small, violet one, smooth and cool to the touch.

People still speak of her, sometimes in whispers, sometimes with laughter, sometimes with tears. The city she left behind is not the one she entered. There is more music now. More kindness. More art and mischief and wonder.

And on the third Thursday of every June, someone always leaves a violet flower on the ferry dock.

Just in case she ever decides to return.

18 Leaving the Crossroads Behind

The afternoon sun spilled gold across the worn stone crossroads, somewhere between ล ibenikโ€™s quiet inland hills and the shimmering coast. Iva stood still, one foot forward, as if that might decide her fate. The road sign was crooked, its lettering faded โ€” left toward her familyโ€™s village, right toward Split and the life she had half-built, half-escaped from.

She didnโ€™t check her phone. She didnโ€™t need more noise.

Instead, she listened โ€” to the chirping cicadas, the wind teasing the olive trees, the heartbeat in her throat. She was in a contemplative mood, and the longer she stood, the more the silence pressed in, demanding honesty.


Did she really want to return to the past, to her motherโ€™s kitchen and unfinished conversations, to the guilt of leaving? Or did she dare go forward, uncertain but her own?

โ€œI canโ€™t stay here forever,โ€ she whispered, voice raw.

But the crossroads didnโ€™t answer. They never did.

She closed her eyes. Inhale. Exhale. Again.

And then โ€” one step. Not left. Not right. Just forward, through the field, where no path was marked but the wildflowers grew defiantly. She didnโ€™t know where it led.

But sometimes, to move at all was the bravest choice.


Ivaโ€™s shoes sank slightly into the earth as she stepped away from the worn road, leaving behind the familiar gravel crunch beneath her feet. The wildflowers swayed gently, their petals catching the sunlight like tiny flames. The scent of thyme and rosemary thickened the air, and somewhere close, the distant bleat of goats added a strange melody to the quiet afternoon.

Ahead of her, the field stretched like an untouched canvas โ€” green and golden and wild. There was no map for this path, no certainty in her step, but something inside her felt lighter, as if stepping off the crossroads was stepping out of a cage.

Her breath caught suddenly when the wind brought a soft sound โ€” a melody, faint and carried on the breeze.

She paused, the notes teasing her memory. It was a song her grandmother used to hum when Iva was a child, something about the sea and longing. She had never known the words well, only the tune, but it was enough to pull her forward.

The field dipped gently into a shallow hollow where a small stone well stood, ancient and moss-covered. Iva walked toward it, heart thudding. She ran her fingers over the cool surface and peered inside. Darkness stretched deep.

When she turned back, the sky had softened, the sun now hanging low and lazy like a golden coin against the blue.

Her thoughts drifted to the family she had left behind.


The village, barely twenty kilometers behind her, was like a memory wrapped in warm earth. She remembered the narrow streets, the faded shutters painted sky blue, the smell of baked bread from her motherโ€™s oven.

Her mother โ€” the stubborn, loving woman who never quite understood why Iva had left. Her father, long gone, but whose shadow still loomed over every family gathering.

Ivaโ€™s heart ached thinking of them โ€” the fights, the silences, the words that got lost in translation between generations.

Her last visit, months ago, had ended in tears. Her mother had said, โ€œYouโ€™re running away. This is your home.โ€ Iva had replied bitterly, โ€œAnd yet, I feel like a stranger there.โ€

But maybe, she thought now, it wasnโ€™t running away. Maybe it was finding a way back โ€” not to the same place, but to a new understanding.


The evening approached as Iva wandered from the field toward a low stone fence that marked the edge of an olive grove. She slipped through a narrow opening, the silver leaves rustling above her.

She walked slowly among the trees, each one ancient, gnarled, and rooted deep in the Croatian soil. She thought about the war stories her grandmother told her โ€” tales of loss, resilience, and stubborn hope that seemed woven into these very trees.

Here, beneath the dappled sunlight and the sky stretching wide above, Iva felt the weight of history and hope intertwine.

She stopped and sat on a fallen stone, pulling her knees close.

A breeze stirred a cluster of leaves and carried a faint scent of sea salt, reminding her that the coast was not far.


Suddenly, a shadow crossed her path.

โ€œLost?โ€ a voice asked, gentle and amused.

Iva looked up. A man stood nearby, leaning casually against a tree trunk. He was middle-aged, with silver-streaked hair and kind eyes that looked like they had seen a lifetime of stories.

โ€œI guess I am,โ€ she admitted.

He smiled. โ€œSometimes the best way to find your way is to admit youโ€™re lost.โ€

She studied him for a moment. โ€œDo you live here?โ€

โ€œFor a long time. My name is Davor.โ€ He extended his hand.

โ€œIva,โ€ she said, shaking it. His grip was firm, warm.

Davor looked out toward the horizon. โ€œThat field you crossed โ€” itโ€™s wild and unmarked, like life sometimes. But it leads somewhere, even if you canโ€™t see it yet.โ€

Iva nodded slowly. โ€œI think thatโ€™s what I needed to hear.โ€

Davor chuckled. โ€œGood. Now come with me โ€” Iโ€™ll show you something.โ€


He led her deeper into the grove, where sunlight broke through the leaves like shards of glass. Ahead, a small stone cottage appeared, its walls covered in creeping vines and blooms.

Inside, the air smelled of herbs and old wood. On a low table, a teapot steamed gently beside handwoven baskets of dried lavender and sage.

Davor poured tea for them both and sat across from her. โ€œThis place has been in my family for generations,โ€ he said. โ€œItโ€™s a reminder โ€” roots and wings. You need both.โ€

Iva took a sip, feeling warmth spread through her.

โ€œWhy are you showing me this?โ€ she asked.

โ€œBecause,โ€ Davor said, โ€œI see someone whoโ€™s on the edge. Between past and future. Between fear and courage.โ€

She looked down, words failing.

โ€œYou donโ€™t have to choose right away,โ€ he said softly. โ€œSometimes, standing still is part of moving forward.โ€


That night, Iva lay beneath a quilt made from patchwork memories. Outside, the stars twinkled bright and fierce, scattering their ancient light like whispered secrets across the velvet sky. The gentle hum of the cicadas had softened to a lullaby, and the cool air wrapped around her like a quiet embrace.

For the first time in a long time, she dreamed not of escape, but of home โ€” not a place, but a feeling she could carry with her wherever she went.

In her dream, the fields stretched endlessly, wildflowers swaying beneath an endless sky. She felt the soil beneath her bare feet, warm and real, grounding her in a way the city never had. Her grandmotherโ€™s voice drifted on the wind, singing the old melody sheโ€™d heard today by the crossroads, words woven from sun and sea and sorrow. The song wrapped around her heart, filling spaces sheโ€™d forgotten were empty.

She saw her motherโ€™s handsโ€”strong, calloused from years of work, yet tender when kneading dough or smoothing a childโ€™s hair. The unfinished conversations flickered like half-lit candles, fragile but not lost. In the dream, Iva reached out to them, and instead of the sharp sting of guilt, she felt a gentle forgivenessโ€”an unspoken promise that the past, with all its mistakes and silences, could be held without breaking.

The sea appeared then, vast and shimmering beneath a moonlight silver as quicksilver. Its rhythmic pulse matched her own heartbeat, steady and sure. She was no longer a girl running away from shadows but a woman who could breathe in the salt-tinged air, feel the pull of tides and time, and know that belonging was not about geography โ€” it was about acceptance.

When the dawn brushed soft pinks across the horizon, Iva awoke with the taste of salt and wildflowers still lingering in her senses. The quilt beneath her felt less like a relic of memory and more like a shield, a woven armor of all she had been and all she might become.

She rose slowly, the weight of indecision lighter on her shoulders. Today, the road ahead was still uncertain, but the compass within her heart had begun to steady.

Home, she realized, was no longer a question of where โ€” but of who she was willing to be.


Iva stood at the cottageโ€™s doorstep and looked toward the road.

The crooked sign was gone, replaced by the wildflowers she had walked through โ€” a path undefined but undeniably hers.

She smiled and stepped forward once more, the sun rising behind her like a promise.

19 The Island of Missing Keys

It began with the wind.

On the tiny Dalmatian island of Sveti Blaลพ, where the stone houses hugged the rocky hillsides like barnacles and the sea whispered secrets into every crack, a strange wind arrived one night. It came without warning, not a bura or a jugoโ€”nothing the islanders recognized. It rattled shutters, whispered through the olive trees, and died away by dawn. And when the villagers awoke, every key on the island had vanished.

Not misplaced. Not stolen. Gone.

House keys, shed keys, padlocks, church keys, boat cabin keys, desk drawers, diaries with little locksโ€”all of them. Gone.

Ivan Puliฤ‡, the postman and self-declared mayor of the 83-person island, discovered it first when he went to unlock the post office and found only an empty keyring in his hand.

At first, he assumed it was just him. He cursed under his breath, patted his pockets, retraced his steps.

But within an hour, everyone was gathered in the church square, muttering, pointing, waving empty hands with empty rings.

Every lock. Every key. Gone.

โ€œWeโ€™ve been robbed,โ€ shouted Darija Marinoviฤ‡, the feisty cafรฉ owner, โ€œby ghosts!โ€

โ€œOr sea pirates,โ€ said old Petar, who hadnโ€™t spoken to another human in three years and preferred talking to his goats.

โ€œItโ€™s a sign,โ€ muttered Sister Magdalena, clutching her rosary.

But no doors had been broken into. Nothing had been takenโ€”except the keys.


That first day was chaos. People didnโ€™t know whether to laugh or panic. For generations, the islanders had relied on their locks. Not for protectionโ€”crime was almost nonexistentโ€”but out of habit, order, and the rhythm of island life.

Without keys, they had to kick open doors, pry windows, or leave things as they were.

By sunset, every home, store, and gate was unlocked.

At first, it was uncomfortable. Like standing naked in your own living room. But slowly, things began to shift.

People wandered freely into one anotherโ€™s homes, calling out, โ€œOnly me!โ€ before stepping into kitchens or bedrooms to borrow sugar, check on an old friend, or see if someone had found their own keys.

The village carpenter, Luka Brailo, offered to make new locks, but without metalworking tools on the island and no deliveries expected for a week, there wasnโ€™t much he could do.

Instead, the island settled into an odd openness. And strange things began to happen.


On the third day, Anica Kriliฤ‡ found something in her neighborโ€™s drawer while helping herself to some coffee filters: a stack of old love letters addressed not to her neighborโ€™s deceased husbandโ€”but to Anicaโ€™s own mother, written in the same curling script she remembered from her childhood.

Down by the harbor, little Tino and Petra, while playing hide-and-seek in the old abandoned schoolhouse, found a rusted box under a loose floorboard. Inside were dozens of tarnished keys, none of which fit any door on the island today. It was the first real clue. But a clue to what?

Later that evening, Marko, a widower and retired fisherman, found a small brass key stuck in the crack of his kitchen floorboards. It was the key to the drawer his late wife had always kept locked. Inside: a journal, half-filled, the last entry dated just days before she died.

He read it twice, his fingers trembling. Then he left his house for the first time in months and walked to the church.


As the days passed, the island shifted.

Without barriers, physical or emotional, people began speaking more openly. Confessions spilled over wine in open kitchens. Meals were shared at long tables where the doors were never closed. Arguments flared tooโ€”truths that had festered behind locked doors now burst into the air.

Darija confronted her sister Josipa about the secret bank account she had found statements for. Josipa admitted sheโ€™d been saving to leave the island forever.

โ€œI donโ€™t want to die here like Mama did,โ€ Josipa whispered. โ€œAlone.โ€

โ€œYouโ€™re not alone,โ€ Darija said. โ€œYouโ€™ve just stopped telling anyone when youโ€™re sad.โ€

The two sisters sat by the sea in silence for an hour before walking home together.

Meanwhile, Ivan the postman received an anonymous note in his own mailbox: โ€œYou never delivered my motherโ€™s final letter to her son. You kept it.โ€

Ivan, red-faced and shaken, called a town meeting and confessed. It was true. Twenty years ago, an angry letter meant to sever a family bond had arrivedโ€”and he had hidden it. He had thought he was protecting them. But the silence had done more damage.

Now, father and son, long estranged, sat beside each other in the square, neither speaking, but not walking away.


On the sixth night, a stranger arrived.

She came by boat, just as the sun melted into the sea. She was no touristโ€”her clothes were simple, her backpack small. Her name was Nina, and she claimed to be a locksmith.

โ€œNo one called for a locksmith,โ€ Ivan said suspiciously.

โ€œI didnโ€™t say you did,โ€ she replied. โ€œIโ€™m here because of the wind.โ€

That answer was odd enough to allow her to stay. She was given a room in Lukaโ€™s attic, and the next day, she walked the island with a notebook, examining the locks, touching doorframes, asking questions.

She had a curious way of listeningโ€”not just with her ears but with her eyes, as if she were reading a personโ€™s soul.

She told people they didnโ€™t need locks anymore. They needed answers.

โ€œLocks are only symbols,โ€ she told Sister Magdalena. โ€œAnd keysโ€ฆ keys are just what we think keeps us safe.โ€


That night, nearly everyone on the island dreamed of keys.

Some saw them floating in the sea, like silver fish. Others saw them fall from the sky like rain. Some held them in their hands, but when they tried to use them, the doors crumbled into sand.

In Anicaโ€™s dream, her mother whispered, โ€œThe key isnโ€™t what opens the door, Anica. Itโ€™s what youโ€™re ready to face when it does.โ€

When they awoke, something had shifted again. No one said it aloud, but they all felt it.

The island, once so rooted in tradition and silence, now breathed with stories.


On the seventh morning, the old church bell rang on its own.

People gathered quickly. The heavy iron key that had once locked the vestry doorโ€”missing like all the restโ€”was now lying on the altar.

But the lock it belonged to had been removed. The door swung open easily.

Inside was a sight that left them speechless.

The missing keysโ€”hundreds of themโ€”hung suspended in the air, glittering in the sunlight that streamed through the stained glass windows. They werenโ€™t hanging from hooks or threads. They simply floated, gently rotating, as if waiting.

Nina stood beside the altar, barefoot, her eyes wet but smiling.

โ€œThey were never lost,โ€ she said. โ€œOnly hidden. And now they donโ€™t belong to locks anymore. They belong to you.โ€

โ€œWhat does it mean?โ€ someone asked.

Nina shrugged. โ€œYou tell me.โ€


In the days that followed, the keys began to fallโ€”one by one, quietly, onto the church floor.

Each person who picked one up found it didnโ€™t fit a lockโ€”but it fit something else.

Darijaโ€™s key opened a tiny music box she hadnโ€™t touched since childhood.

Markoโ€™s key opened a compartment in his fishing boat he hadnโ€™t known existed, inside which was a photo of his wife, smiling, holding a seashell.

Petarโ€™s key led him to a hollow in the old olive tree behind his house, where he found a letter his mother had written him before she died.

Anicaโ€™s keyโ€ฆ opened her own heart. She went to see the man she once loved, who had returned to the island after thirty years. They walked the beach until night.

And Ivan? Ivanโ€™s key didnโ€™t open anything. It simply lay in his palm, warm, until he understood: he didnโ€™t need to control the island to be part of it. That night, he danced for the first time in decades, wild and laughing under the moon.


One morning, Nina was gone.

No one saw her leave. But her notebook remained in Lukaโ€™s workshop. Inside were pages of observations:

โ€œThis island remembers everything.โ€

โ€œThe locks were never on doors.โ€

โ€œThe wind only takes whatโ€™s ready to be set free.โ€

And on the final page:

โ€œIf youโ€™re reading this, then you know: itโ€™s not the key that matters, but the courage to walk through the door it opens.โ€


Life on Sveti Blaลพ returned to a new kind of normal. Doors stayed open more often. People visited one another without needing invitations. Children played inside houses that werenโ€™t their own. Arguments still happened, but so did laughter.

The locksmith never returned, but no one needed her to.

The keys were kept in the church now, in a bowl carved from olive wood. People took them sometimesโ€”not to lock, but to remember. They called them โ€œreminder keys.โ€

Every year, on the anniversary of the wind, the whole island gathered in the square for a feast. They danced barefoot, hung keys in the trees like ornaments, and told the stories they once tried to keep locked away.

Some say the wind may come again. Others say it never leftโ€”that it just whispers more softly now.

But everyone agrees on this:

On that island in Dalmatia, the day the keys went missing was the day the people truly found one another.

20 Blue Fire of the Fields

There is a village cradled between the sea and the mountains, called Modra Poljana โ€”Blue Meadow. It is a small place, more like a dream held softly in the palm of the Dalmatian hinterland. Stone houses sit under red roofs, olive trees bend under the weight of years, and narrow paths thread through fields kissed by wind and sun.

And in May, just before summer lays its golden hand upon the land, Modra Poljana turns blue.

Blue like the sea in shadow. Blue like the sky before the storm. Blue like memory.


For in May, the blue irises bloom.

The villagers call them perunike, after the ancient Slavic god Perun. In legends, where his thunderbolts struck the earth, blue irises grew. The old people of Modra Poljana said you should never pick them near a crossroad unless you want the dead to whisper your name.

But the irises of Modra Poljana were not haunted. They were guardians โ€” of secrets, of longing, of home.

At the edge of the village, in a house of whitewashed stone, lived a woman named Leda. She was a botanist in her thirties, quiet, composed, with a voice as gentle as running water. She had once lived in Zagreb, with her late husband Luka, and worked at the university. But after his death in a traffic accident, she returned to her childhood home in Modra Poljana, bringing her grief like a suitcase that never quite unpacks.

Leda spent her days walking the hills and fields, documenting wildflowers, taking photographs, and writing notes in a leather-bound journal. But each spring, when the blue irises bloomed, she stopped everything else.

She had a ritual: barefoot before dawn, sheโ€™d walk through the meadows, letting the dew soak her feet, letting the color sink into her bones. Sometimes she wept, sometimes she sang, sometimes she whispered Lukaโ€™s name and told the perunike about him.

One May morning, just after the village bell tolled six times, a letter arrived. It was from the Ministry of Culture in Zagreb. Leda opened it slowly, already suspecting the contents.

The government had chosen Modra Poljana as the site for a new highway extension โ€” a project meant to improve transport between the inland and the coast. A straight cut through the heart of the villageโ€™s meadows.

Through the land of the perunike.

Leda sat under the fig tree in her garden and stared at the letter for a long time. The wind rustled the irises blooming beside her, as if they were listening.

She stood up slowly and went inside to boil water. While the kettle sang, she took down an old photo album. One picture showed her as a little girl holding a single blue iris in front of her grandmotherโ€™s grave. Another showed Luka, grinning in a field of them, arms spread wide like he could catch the whole sky.


She knew what she had to do.

The next day, Leda climbed the hill to the old schoolhouse, now used as a community hall. She stood before the mayor, the villagers, and even two bored engineers from the ministry.

She brought slides. Maps. Records. She spoke of biodiversity, of fragile ecosystems, of how the Croatian blue iris was more than a flower โ€” it was a legacy. A symbol. A thread connecting the ancient past with the fragile present.

โ€œDo you know,โ€ she said, holding up a pressed iris, โ€œthat these grow nowhere else quite like here? Not with this color. Not with this strength. Theyโ€™ve survived wars, droughts, earthquakesโ€ฆ and now, we want to bury them under concrete?โ€

Silence.

Then an old man stood. Petar, the beekeeper, his back bent like a crescent moon.

โ€œMy wife picked a perunika the day I returned from the war,โ€ he said. โ€œIt was the only thing that felt alive.โ€

Others followed. Anecdotes. Family stories. Even the schoolteacher, who taught children to draw perunike every spring, begged the engineers to reconsider.

The engineers didnโ€™t make promises. But they took notes.

And the villagers started something rare in this land โ€”they united. They wrote letters, gathered signatures, contacted botanists, journalists, and nature organizations.

It became known as โ€œThe Blue Petition.โ€


A month passed.

The Ministry of Culture relented. The highway would be rerouted two kilometers south, preserving the Modra Poljana meadows. The officials called it โ€œa win for biodiversity.โ€

But for Leda, and everyone in the village, it was something else entirely.

It was a victory for beauty.

That summer, artists came to paint. Poets came to write. Children ran barefoot through the meadows with blue petals in their hair.

And one warm evening in August, Leda stood at the edge of the field, now a protected natural reserve. She saw something shimmer in the air โ€” perhaps a trick of the light, or perhaps something older, more sacred. A presence. The echo of something once lost but never truly gone.

She knelt, touched the soft petals of a newly opened perunika, and whispered:

โ€œYouโ€™re safe now.โ€

Today, if you walk through Modra Poljana in late spring, youโ€™ll see the blue irises waving gently in the breeze. There are signs along the trail that tell their story โ€” about Perun, about legends, about Luka and Leda and the villagers who saved the blue fire of the land.

And if you pause for a moment, if you let the silence of the hills settle around you, you might hear the rustle of petals.

Or maybe itโ€™s a whisper. A promise.

That beauty will not be forgotten. That roots run deeper than roads. That love, once planted, can bloom again.

Like the perunikaโ€”

soft and strong,

wild and free,

Croatiaโ€™s blue crown beneath the sky.

21 Seagulls Donโ€™t Sing at Night

The seagulls didnโ€™t sing at night.

It was one of those truths Marija had known all her life but never thought about until it became symbolic. In the silence of the sea after dusk, when the town of Stari Grad went to sleep, and the ferry lights blinked faintly across the water like drifting prayers, sheโ€™d listen โ€” hoping, perhaps, for a cry. But seagulls, creatures of sun and salt and shrill defiance, kept their voices for the day.

So at night, when Marijaโ€™s world felt quieter than it should, the absence of their calls made everything feel even more wrong.

She stood at the edge of the dock, her hands sunk deep in the pockets of her windbreaker. The sea breathed slowly against the stone, sighing like an old man too tired to speak. The sky above the Adriatic was a bruised tapestry โ€” violet fading to obsidian. Somewhere inland, the lights of Hvar town twinkled on the hills like tiny, stubborn stars refusing to go out.

Marija had lived her whole life on this island. Fifty-eight years. Enough time to love and lose, to grow roots and watch them rot. She had been a teacher for thirty years, then a librarian for ten more. Now she was nothing. Not even a widow โ€” no ring had bound her to Andro. Just memories and the echo of his laughter in the courtyard where the lemon tree once stood.

The island had changed. Tourists came in waves now โ€” German hikers, American yoga seekers, Swedes with boats. They took pictures of stone walls and posed with fig trees, but they didnโ€™t see the way the shutters still trembled when jugo rolled in, or how some old men avoided certain streets as if ghosts still walked there.

Marija saw it all. And she carried it. Quietly.


Earlier that day, she had received a letter.

Not an email. Not a WhatsApp message. A real, handwritten letter โ€” the kind that smells of ink and time. The name on the envelope had stopped her cold: Ana Braliฤ‡.

Ana.

The girl who had left at seventeen, back in 1993. Left during the war, with a backpack and a motherโ€™s tears drying on her cheeks. No one had heard from her since 1999. People had whispered she had moved to Ireland. Others said sheโ€™d joined a monastery. Some said she had killed herself in Berlin. The truth was never confirmed. Marija, who had once been Anaโ€™s teacher, had kept a faded photograph of her in a drawer, along with an unfinished essay titled โ€œWhat I Want My Life To Be.โ€

The letter had arrived with no return address. Inside, it read:

Dear Marija,

If youโ€™re still alive, I hope youโ€™ll forgive the intrusion. Iโ€™ll be arriving on the island next week. Iโ€™ve booked a small house near Rudina. Iโ€ฆ I have something I need to do here. Something I should have done a long time ago.

If you can, meet me by the cypress tree near the cemetery. The one with the broken bench. 7 p.m. Wednesday.

Ana

Marija had read it three times, heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped gull. She had considered ignoring it. Burning it. Pretending it had never come.

Instead, she had folded it neatly and tucked it into her coat.


The cemetery above Stari Grad was as old as memory. Cypress trees stood like silent sentinels, their roots knotted in the bones of generations. Marija climbed the path slowly, her joints aching, breath fogging in the sea-chilled air.

And there she was.

Ana.

Not the girl Marija remembered โ€” not the reckless, wide-eyed child with chipped blue nail polish and a sketchbook always tucked under her arm. No. This Ana was thin, pale, wrapped in a long black coat, her dark hair streaked with silver. But her eyes were the same: fierce, haunted.

โ€œYou came,โ€ Ana said softly.

Marija nodded. โ€œI had to see if you were real.โ€

Ana offered a thin smile. โ€œSometimes I wonder the same thing.โ€

They sat on the broken bench beneath the cypress tree. Silence stretched between them like the Adriatic.

โ€œI didnโ€™t know where else to go,โ€ Ana finally said.

Marija looked at her. โ€œYou were missed.โ€

Ana laughed bitterly. โ€œNo. I was forgotten. Thereโ€™s a difference.โ€

โ€œYou donโ€™t know that.โ€

โ€œYes, I do.โ€

A pause. The wind stirred the branches above them.

โ€œI left because I couldnโ€™t breathe here,โ€ Ana said. โ€œEverything felt like a funeral. Every street, every face. After my brother died, my mother was a ghost. My father drank himself into a stranger. I thought โ€” maybe if I left, I could start over. I didnโ€™t know that memory follows you.โ€

Marija said nothing. What could she say? She too had learned that memory has wings and teeth.

โ€œTwo weeks ago,โ€ Ana said, โ€œI was diagnosed with cancer. Stage four. They give me maybe six months.โ€ Her voice was steady. โ€œI wanted to come back. Before the end.โ€

Marija looked at her, throat tight. โ€œWhy now?โ€

Ana looked up at the stars. โ€œBecause the sea doesnโ€™t ask questions. And because I never got to say goodbye.โ€


Over the next few weeks, the two women met often. Sometimes at the cemetery, sometimes at the small cove near Rudina where no tourists ever ventured. Ana walked slowly, her body frail, but her mind sharp as ever. She asked about the island, about who had died, who had stayed. She listened to the waves like they were speaking directly to her.

Once, they sat beneath a fig tree, and Ana said, โ€œDo you think people can belong to two places at once? Or none?โ€

โ€œI think,โ€ Marija replied, โ€œthat people belong to those who remember them.โ€

Ana nodded slowly. โ€œThen Iโ€™ve been nowhere for a long time.โ€


Anaโ€™s illness advanced faster than expected.

By September, she could no longer climb the path to the cemetery. She slept more. Ate less. But still, she refused to leave the island. โ€œI want to be buried here,โ€ she told Marija. โ€œNot because I loved it. But because itโ€™s where I was real.โ€

They laughed sometimes. Remembered Anaโ€™s drawings, her obsession with stars, the time she broke into the school at night to paint a mural on the wall of the chemistry lab. Marija had pretended not to know who did it. The mural was still there, beneath ten coats of paint.

And one night, when the wind howled and the jugo turned the sea into a thrashing thing, Ana said, โ€œI thought Iโ€™d come here to die. But I think I came here to forgive.โ€

โ€œForgive who?โ€

โ€œMyself.โ€


When Ana died, it was quiet. Marija was with her, holding her hand. There were no family members, no funeral procession. Just the sound of the sea, and the scent of lavender drifting in through the open window.

Marija buried her in the cemetery above Stari Grad. Beneath the cypress tree, near the broken bench.

She used her own money. Bought a simple stone.

Ana Braliฤ‡ (1976โ€“2024)

She returned to the sea.

No one asked questions. The island had learned to accept quiet departures.


The days that followed felt strangely bright. Marija walked more. She cleaned her house. She reopened the tiny village library that had been shuttered for years and filled it with Anaโ€™s old books and drawings. She named it โ€œThe Night Seagull.โ€

โ€œWhy that name?โ€ people asked.

โ€œBecause seagulls donโ€™t sing at night,โ€ she said. โ€œBut some do return, even in silence.โ€

She started hosting poetry readings on Fridays. Teenagers came, hesitant at first, then hungry for words. One girl wrote a poem about grief that made Marija cry. Another brought his grandmother, who recited lines in Italian from a childhood long gone.

The library became a place for those who thought they had nowhere left to go.

And Marija, who had thought her life was over, realized she had quietly begun again.


One evening, standing on the dock, Marija watched the sea darken. The lights of Hvar town blinked in the distance. The ferry pulled away, leaving ripples in its wake. A soft breeze carried the scent of salt and pine.

And then, faint but clear, came the cry of a seagull.

One call. Sharp. Out of place. A mistake, perhaps.

But Marija smiled.

Because maybe, just maybe, some seagulls do sing at night โ€” when no one expects them to.

And maybe thatโ€™s when the most important songs are sung.

22 Donโ€™t Look Back at Dubrovnik

The first time Ella saw Dubrovnik, she was twenty-two, wild-haired, barefoot, and convinced she would never grow old. That summer, her laughter echoed between the sunburnt stones of the Old Town, her skin smelled of salt and citrus, and the only baggage she carried was a canvas backpack full of sand and unfinished poems.

Now, twenty years later, she stood at the same city gate, suitcase in hand, breath caught halfway in her chest. The stones were still warm from the sun, the sea still murmured beyond the city walls, and somewhere beyond the terracotta roofs, a seagull screamed as if it knew something she didnโ€™t.

Her taxi had dropped her at Pile Gate, and the driverโ€”a polite man named Tomoโ€”had helped her with her bag and offered a crooked smile. โ€œDonโ€™t look back,โ€ heโ€™d said cryptically, in a tone that mightโ€™ve been friendly or warning. โ€œDubrovnik has a long memory.โ€

Ella watched as he drove off, the red tail lights winking like a farewell. She turned back toward the gate and took her first step inside.


The apartment sheโ€™d rented for the month was tucked along a narrow street near Buลพa Bar, above the cliffs where brave boys still hurled themselves into the sea for coins and attention. The owner, Marijana, greeted her with cautious warmth, the kind reserved for foreigners who speak a few words too many of Croatian and ask too few questions.

โ€œYouโ€™ve been here before?โ€ Marijana asked as she handed over the key.

Ella hesitated. โ€œYes. A long time ago.โ€

โ€œDubrovnik remembers its visitors,โ€ the woman replied, locking eyes with her for just a beat too long.

Inside, the flat was simple and clean: whitewashed walls, lace curtains, a balcony with iron railings that overlooked the rooftops and the distant shimmer of Lokrum island. Ella placed her suitcase by the bed and sat down, pressing her hand to her chest as if to calm a pulse that had become unreliable lately.

In her youth, she had come here with Luka.

Heโ€™d been a student, a photographer, older than her by six years, his accent like honey and gravel. Theyโ€™d met in a bar in Split, kissed by the ruins of Diocletianโ€™s Palace, and by the time they reached Dubrovnik, she was already in love. That summer had passed like a fever dreamโ€”sunlight on their skin, borrowed mopeds, sea urchin wounds, and Lukaโ€™s Nikon camera forever clicking.

But she had left. Too young, too scared, too full of her own ambition. He had asked her to stay. She had promised to write. And then she hadnโ€™t.

She didnโ€™t even know if he was alive now.

She closed her eyes. The past was a country you couldnโ€™t return to. Still, it haunted you, especially in places that hadnโ€™t changed.


The next morning, Ella wandered.

She let her feet carry her through the cobbled streets, where shopkeepers arranged postcards and lavender sachets with casual grace, and tourists clicked their cameras in awe. She paused by Onofrioโ€™s Fountain, where children splashed and an old man played melancholic songs on a violin. She stopped at a bakery and bought a still-warm burek, then sat on the steps of a quiet alley and let the oil drip onto a napkin as she listened to the voices around herโ€”English, German, Italian, and always, somewhere close, Croatian.

When she reached the old Franciscan monastery, she stood for a long time in front of the cloister, watching the light play through arches of stone and shadow. She could hear her younger self laughing there, barefoot again, spinning in circles while Luka took her picture.

She nearly left, nearly ran from it allโ€”but then she heard someone say his name.

โ€œLuka?โ€

She turned. A man stood speaking to a vendor across the square, but it was not him. He was older, his hair too short, the wrong eyes. Still, her pulse tripped.

The city was full of ghosts. Dubrovnik, she thought, never truly lets anyone go.


It was late afternoon when she found the gallery.

Tucked behind the Jesuit Stairs, its doorway was small, nearly hidden. The sign above read Galerija Svjetlostโ€”Gallery of Light. Something about it pulled her in.

Inside, the air smelled of wood polish and the faintest trace of sea salt. Photographs lined the wallsโ€”black and white images of the city and its people, moments captured in quiet clarity: an old woman hanging laundry above a rain-slicked alley, a boy holding a broken umbrella like a sword, lovers asleep on a bench beneath the city walls.

She stepped closer, studying the signature at the bottom of the frames. Luka M.

Her throat tightened. The air seemed to disappear.

In one photo, she saw herself.

She was 22 again, her back to the camera, standing on the cliffs near Buลพa, arms lifted to the sky, hair whipping in the wind. She hadnโ€™t known heโ€™d taken that one.

A voice behind her said, softly, โ€œThat oneโ€™s older. From 2002.โ€

She turned. The man before her was weathered now, his once-boyish face lined, his hair flecked with grayโ€”but it was Luka. His eyes, impossibly kind, impossibly familiar, met hers.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t sure youโ€™d recognize me,โ€ he said.

โ€œI wasnโ€™t sure you were real,โ€ she whispered.

He smiled. โ€œDubrovnik never forgets.โ€


They went to a quiet cafรฉ near the sea, where the scent of rosemary drifted in from a garden nearby and the wine tasted like dusk.

They spoke cautiously at firstโ€”how the years had passed, what had changed. Luka told her heโ€™d never married, had stayed in Dubrovnik after the war, taking photos, volunteering, finding solace in the lens. She told him she had lived in London, worked in publishing, left it all behind a year ago when the migraines became too frequent and the silence too loud.

โ€œIโ€™m here,โ€ she said, โ€œbecause I didnโ€™t know where else to go.โ€

โ€œYou came back,โ€ he said simply. โ€œThatโ€™s something.โ€

She studied his face. There was sadness there, but not bitterness. She had expected anger, or at least the echo of itโ€”but he was soft-spoken, warm. Changed.

โ€œI thought youโ€™d hate me,โ€ she admitted.

โ€œI did. For a while. Then I realized Iโ€™d loved a ghost of you for too long. And ghostsโ€”โ€ he raised his glass, โ€œโ€”should be allowed to leave.โ€

That night, she stood on her balcony long after the city went quiet, watching the moonlight on the Adriatic, wondering what it meant to come back, and whether you could ever truly stay.


The next day, Luka gave her an envelope.

โ€œI kept these,โ€ he said. โ€œFor a while I wrote back, even though I never sent them.โ€

Inside were ten letters, all in her handwriting. She had forgotten she ever wrote them. Each one folded carefully, yellowed slightly at the edges.

She read them in the shade of a fig tree near the old fort, her heart bruising with each wordโ€”so young, so full of longing, so unsure. In one, she wrote: Iโ€™m sorry I left. I thought leaving meant freedom, but it only meant I had nowhere to return to.

In his repliesโ€”never sentโ€”he wrote of the cityโ€™s healing, of photographs he took in her absence, of a quiet loneliness that was not cruel, only persistent.

She wept, and then walked to the sea.

She let the wind tangle her hair again. She stepped barefoot onto the stones.

She did not look back.


Days passed in a rhythm that felt both ancient and new.

Ella wandered the walls at sunrise, sipped bitter coffee in hidden courtyards, watched elderly men play chess in Luลพa Square, and children chase pigeons in the shade. She sat at the same cliffs where she had once danced, and this time, Luka sat beside her.

They did not speak of the past anymore. It was there, between them, but quieter now. Like sea glassโ€”sharp once, softened by time.

One evening, as the sky melted into shades of tangerine and plum, Luka said, โ€œI want to show you something.โ€

He led her to his darkroom. On one wall hung a large, framed photograph.

It was her again.

But not the girl sheโ€™d been.

This time, the photo showed her nowโ€”leaning against a stone wall, lost in thought, her hands curled in her lap, a quiet strength in her eyes.

โ€œYou took this without asking,โ€ she said.

โ€œI did,โ€ he smiled. โ€œBut this time, I wanted you to see her.โ€

She looked at the image for a long time. Then she smiled, too.


The day before she was meant to leave, she went back to the Pile Gate.

She stood where she had arrived, the stones still warm, the voices around her rising in a hundred languages.

She thought of the girl she had been.

She thought of the woman she had become.

She closed her eyes.

Then, slowly, she turned and walked back into the city.


It was the last night of August.

Dubrovnik pulsed softly under the stars, its streets quieter now that the peak season had passed. A maestral breeze moved gently over the rooftops, rattling shutters and making the sea shimmer like a memory just out of reach.

Ella and Luka sat beneath the grapevines on his terrace. A candle flickered between them. The wine was local, amber-hued, almost smoky. She had only half a glass, but her heart beat like sheโ€™d had three.

He was quiet tonight. His fingers traced the lip of his glass, and his gaze drifted often to her face, as though afraid she might vanish again.

At last he said, โ€œI used to think I dreamed you.โ€

She looked at him.

He continued, โ€œAll these years, I thoughtโ€ฆ maybe you were only a summer illusion. One of those people who pass through like mist and leave a mark anyway.โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t mist,โ€ she said softly. โ€œI was justโ€”afraid. And young. And selfish.โ€

He nodded, then looked at her again, this time with something heavier in his eyes. Not pain, not angerโ€”something deeper.

โ€œI love you, Ella.โ€

The candle between them sputtered slightly.

She blinked, stunned into silence.

โ€œI donโ€™t know what you want from life now,โ€ Luka said, his voice steady but quiet. โ€œI donโ€™t know what London has waiting for you, or if itโ€™s home anymore. But I do know this: I never stopped loving you. I just got better at living without you.โ€

Ella reached for the tableโ€™s edge. The words had landed like sea stones on her chest.

He went on, โ€œYou donโ€™t have to say anything. But if thereโ€™s even a part of you that feels somethingโ€”stay.โ€


She didnโ€™t sleep that night.

She sat on her balcony wrapped in a blanket, the city hushed below her, the moon low and golden. She thought of what heโ€™d said. Not the love partโ€”though that tooโ€”but the invitation.

Stay.

What did it mean, to stay?

She had a rented flat in London she hadnโ€™t lived in for months, a publisher still emailing her about manuscripts, a friend cat-sitting in the hopes of adopting the cat outright. Her life back there was in boxes, some literal, most emotional.

Here, the days were slower. Her thoughts made room for silence. She no longer woke with a clenched jaw or a headache sharp behind the eyes. She no longer feared the ghosts that had once haunted this cityโ€”they had become companions, gentle reminders that love once existed here.

And it might exist again.

She looked out across the rooftops toward Lukaโ€™s terrace.

The candle was still burning.


She found him the next morning at the cliffs.

He stood with his camera, facing the sea, the wind tugging at his shirt. He turned as she approached, but didnโ€™t speak.

Ella stepped closer. โ€œI havenโ€™t made up my mind yet,โ€ she said.

โ€œI didnโ€™t expect you to.โ€

She looked at the waves crashing below, their rhythm like the beating of a stubborn heart. โ€œBut I do know one thing.โ€

He waited.

She reached for his hand. โ€œI want one more day.โ€

His smile was quiet but deep. โ€œYou can have as many as you want.โ€


The days that followed were not dramatic. There was no grand decision. No suitcase burned or ticket torn.

Instead, there were mornings of coffee on the terrace, of walking the Stradun while the stones were still wet from the street cleaners. There were trips to the green market where an old woman insisted Ella take figs for free โ€œbecause love makes them sweeter.โ€ There were nights where they listened to the waves together, their chairs side by side, their hands brushing but not always holding.

Ella found a secondhand typewriter in a shop near Gruลพ port and started writing againโ€”not work, not anything sheโ€™d submit, just pieces of herself. Fragments. Poetry. Memory.

Luka gave her space. He never asked again. But each evening he kissed her forehead like she was a promise he hadnโ€™t yet broken.


September came with its soft sighs.

Tourists thinned. The light turned gold earlier in the day. The scent of summer shiftedโ€”less sunscreen, more rosemary and wind-dried laundry.

Ella sat by the city walls one afternoon, a notebook open on her knees. Below her, the sea moved like liquid glass. Behind her, the city pulsed with everyday lifeโ€”bakers, children, old men shouting about card games.

She wrote a sentence, then another, then stopped.

Then she smiled.

That evening, Luka found her by the harbor, watching the last ferry leave for the islands.

โ€œI bought something today,โ€ she said, holding up a set of keys.

His eyebrows rose.

โ€œAn apartment,โ€ she said. โ€œSmall. Nothing fancy. Outside the Old Town walls, near the bakery where the woman sings opera while she works.โ€

He blinked, speechless.

โ€œIโ€™m not staying just for you, Luka,โ€ she added. โ€œIโ€™m staying for me. Because I donโ€™t want to keep running from all the versions of myself. I want to live where they all meet.โ€

He took the keys gently from her hand, then kissed her with such certainty it felt like sunrise.


Dubrovnik, in late autumn, is something else entirely.

The stones glisten with rain and silence. Locals reclaim the streets. Tourists come only in twos and threes, whispering like theyโ€™re inside a cathedral.

Ella walked those streets now as if they were a second skin.

She knew where the cats slept at midday. She knew which grocer carried pears wrapped in soft paper and which cafรฉ served the best ลกtrukli. She knew how the light fell on Lukaโ€™s face when he worked in his gallery, and how her own reflection changed when she looked into his eyes.

One day, she stood again at Pile Gate.

A tourist couple asked her for directions. She gave them happily.

Then she turned her back on the gate and walked deeper into the cityโ€”not because she was running away, but because this time, she wasnโ€™t leaving.


In her notebook, tucked between pages of half-finished stories and ink-stained sketches, Ella wrote one last letter.

She didnโ€™t know who it was to.

Maybe to herself. Maybe to the girl sheโ€™d been.

Maybe to the city.

Dear you,

You left. You were right to leave. But now youโ€™re home, and it doesnโ€™t matter how long it took.

You thought love would be dramatic, cinematic, something with orchestras and train stations. It isnโ€™t. Itโ€™s a man with sea in his voice who waits until youโ€™re ready.

You thought the past would haunt you. It didnโ€™t. It welcomed you back like an old friend with coffee and silence and a view of the sea.

You didnโ€™t look back this time. And that made all the difference.

Yours, finally,

E.

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    The master and the maid

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    CH 1-10 Chapter | 17 Story Notes This story grew out of a question rather than a plot: What happens when attraction is structured like a hierarchy, and desire is mistaken for entitlement? The house came first. Not as a setting, but as a system. A place that rewards...

    The Warm Up

    The Warm Up

    CH 1-10 Chapter | 22 Story Notes Victor, young, good-looking, modest, and broke. Living in New York gets expensive, especially when you have a family to support. When an opportunity presents itself to Victor named Carmen. Can Victor stomach what she wants him to do?...