Paper Boats
It had always rained on the day Mira loved most.
Every year on June 20th, she'd take the afternoon off, sit by the small lake near her childhood home, and fold paper boats. She would write a memory on each one. Her mother's laugh, her brother's pranks, the time her father carried her on his shoulders, and let them drift away, carrying pieces of her heart into the rippling unknown.
This year, the lake felt lonelier.
She had just ended a five-year relationship that drained more from her than it gave. “You’re too emotional,” he used to say. “Too soft.” But Mira never saw softness as a flaw. To feel deeply was her strength.
She folded another boat and wrote: “To love and be left, but still love anyway.” She placed it on the water and watched it float.
“Is that one for me?” a voice asked from behind.
Startled, Mira turned. A man stood there, holding a drenched umbrella that had clearly lost the battle with the rain. He wore a crooked smile and had the kindest eyes she’d seen in a long time.
“Depends,” she said cautiously, eyeing him. “Do you deserve a paper boat?”
He laughed, holding up his hands. “Maybe not. But I do have coffee and no one to share it with.”
She hesitated. Then, something about the way he didn’t try too hard, the way his presence didn’t interrupt her solitude but rather softened it, made her nod.
They sat on the bench, sipping from shared paper cups, watching her boats dance away.
His name was Aarav. He had just moved back to town after years of working abroad. As they talked, Mira felt something. There was no rush, no performance. Just two people sitting in the rain, sharing stories like old friends.
By the time the sun broke through the clouds, she was laughing.
“I haven’t done this in years,” she said, wiping her eyes. “Talked to someone and felt... light.”
He looked at her then, seriously. “I haven’t felt real in a long time.”
She blushed, smiling. “Want to write it on a boat?”
He nodded and took the paper she offered. His handwriting was careful, like he didn’t want to ruin it.
“June 20th - The day I met her.”
One year later, they returned to the lake, hands intertwined, laughter echoing across the water. This time, they let a single paper boat go. It read:
“To softness, to second chances, to love that feels like home.”
And this time, it wasn't a goodbye.
Comments
Post a Comment