The road to Willow Creek curved like a memory — familiar, distant, and almost tender.
Amara drove slowly, her hands tight on the wheel as the soft hum of her car engine filled the silence. The late afternoon light spilled through the trees, gilding the leaves in gold. Each mile felt like a heartbeat echoing from another life.
She had left this place ten years ago with tear-streaked cheeks and the heavy ache of goodbye. Now, the same road seemed to breathe around her, as if the town itself remembered her return.
When she reached the ridge overlooking the lake, she pulled over and stepped out. The wind was cool, brushing against her hair, carrying the faint scent of rain and pine. Below her, the water shimmered beneath the old willow tree. Its branches still arched gracefully toward the earth, dipping into the rippling surface like fingers tracing a secret.
She stood there for a long while, her throat tightening.
It was all still here — the tree, the lake, even the worn path leading down to the shore. Everything looked smaller now, but that was how childhood memories worked: the world always seemed larger before you learned how fragile it was.
“You kept growing,” she whispered to the willow. “And I… never really left you, did I?”
Her phone buzzed in her pocket, breaking the quiet.
Lila.
“Don’t tell me you’re crying already,” her best friend teased through the speaker.
Amara laughed softly, brushing her hair out of her face. “Maybe just a little.”
“I knew it,” Lila said. “Ten years away, and you’re still sentimental about that tree.”
“It’s not just the tree, Li. It’s what it holds.”
There was a pause on the line, gentle but knowing. “You still think about him.”
Amara didn’t answer. The silence spoke for her.
“Amara,” Lila continued softly, “you were kids. Things like that don’t always last.”
“Maybe,” Amara murmured. “But what if they’re supposed to?”
Lila sighed on the other end. “Then you’ll find out. Just… don’t lose yourself in old memories. You deserve a present too.”
When the call ended, Amara sat on the hood of her car, watching the sunlight slide across the water. The willow swayed in the breeze, whispering secrets through its leaves. She remembered laughter — his laughter — and the warmth of a small hand gripping hers as they made a promise neither of them understood.
That night, she unpacked in her small rented cottage near the edge of town. The walls were bare, the furniture simple, but she didn’t mind. She hadn’t come for comfort — she’d come for closure.
As she arranged her art supplies by the window, she noticed a small wooden box at the bottom of one of her bags. Inside was an old locket, tarnished but still beautiful. She opened it carefully.
One side held a tiny pressed daisy. The other, a picture of two children — her and Eli — sitting under the willow, their faces lit with sunlight and youth.
Her chest ached.
“You promised, Eli,” she whispered, the words trembling out. “You promised you’d find me.”
She placed the locket on the table, beside a half-finished painting of a lake. The brush strokes were soft and dreamlike, her usual style — but lately, every painting she made felt incomplete, like something essential was missing from the frame.
She picked up her phone again, scrolling through old messages she’d never sent:
Do you remember me?
Are you still here?
Did you keep the promise?
She deleted them all, exhaling shakily. “You’re being foolish,” she told herself.
But part of her heart — the part that still belonged to a boy with messy hair and a crooked smile — whispered back: Or maybe you’re just waiting.
Across town, Eli woke from another restless sleep.
The dream had come again — the same one that had haunted him for months now. The willow tree, the lake, the laughter. Always the same. Yet when he tried to focus on the girl’s face, it dissolved into light.
He rubbed his temples and sat up, the room dim except for the amber glow of the lamp on his bedside table. His sketchpad lay open beside him, the page filled with rough lines — a tree bending over a lake. He hadn’t even realized he’d drawn it in his sleep.
He stared at it for a long time.
Something about it pulled at him, a dull ache in his chest.
The next morning, Amara decided to visit the café near the lake — Grounded & Gold. It was new, tucked between two art galleries, its windows spilling soft light onto the street.
She ordered a latte and stood by the counter, scrolling through her phone when someone brushed past her. Hot coffee splashed down her sleeve.
“Oh my God, I’m so sorry!” she exclaimed, turning quickly.
The man she’d bumped into looked startled. “No, it’s fine — I wasn’t looking either.”
Their eyes met.
The world went silent.
For a heartbeat, Amara forgot to breathe. Something about his face — his eyes, his posture — tugged at something buried deep inside her.
He smiled, awkwardly, and reached for a napkin. “Here, let me—”
“It’s okay,” she said quickly, taking it from him. “No harm done.”
Her voice shook. He noticed.
“Still,” he said gently, “I should’ve been more careful.”
Their fingers brushed when he handed her the napkin. The contact sent a current through her — familiar, painful, electric.
She looked away. “Really, it’s fine.”
He nodded, hesitated, then walked off toward the door.
And just like that, he was gone.
Amara stood still for a long moment. Her pulse wouldn’t slow.
When she finally sat down, she couldn’t stop herself from glancing out the window, half expecting to see him again. But he’d vanished into the flow of the street.
She opened her sketchbook, trying to distract herself. Without thinking, her hand began to move. Lines took shape — a jawline, a pair of eyes, a familiar softness in the smile.
She blinked at the page. It was his face.
And underneath, her hand had written one word:
Eli.
Across town, Eli sat at his desk, staring out at the same willow tree that had appeared in his dreams.
“Everything okay, boss?” his assistant Ryan asked, leaning through the doorway.
“Yeah,” Eli said, though it wasn’t true. “Just thinking.”
“About the new project?”
He hesitated. “Something like that.”
Ryan grinned. “You look like a man who’s seen a ghost.”
“Maybe I have,” Eli murmured.
That night, as the sun dipped behind the hills, both Amara and Eli stood by their windows — each watching the same golden sky, unaware that fate had finally set their story back in motion.
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Comments
+sakuran+
Totally mesmerized!😍
2025-10-12
0