The Lake Where Memories Wait
The village of Suda nestled high in the mountains, its roofs like little boats riding a green sea. In winter, fog rolled down from the peaks and curled around each house, pressing gently against stone walls as if searching for warmth.

Ema woke before dawn as she always did. Her bones ached from cold and worry. She washed her hands at the basin by the hearth and then reached for something wrapped in waxed cloth: a pack of foreign wipes her sister-in-law had sent from the city below. They were impossibly soft, saturated with an almost magical liquid. Ema pressed one to her face, letting it dissolve the residue of last night’s tears and the faint lines of kohl she wore in memory of better days. The cloth left her skin clean and cool—a momentary relief from grief’s relentless weight.
Today marked the seventh day since Mira’s passing. In Suda, death no longer meant utter separation; not since the Oracle built her shrine by Mirror Lake and declared that souls could be uploaded there, their memories preserved in shimmering echoes. On certain mornings when mist hugged the water, families gathered on the shore to speak with their departed—not as ghosts or spirits, but as memories so vivid they might laugh or weep or scold just as they did in life.
Ema wrapped herself in wool and walked out to the lake, carrying a small wooden box: Mira’s brush, a lock of her hair tied with blue ribbon, and one last drawing—her daughter had loved sketching birds on scraps of parchment. Other villagers gathered along the water’s edge: old men with trembling hands, mothers cradling empty shawls. The Oracle moved among them, eyes gentle behind crow-feather lashes.
Ritual demanded purity; even grief was expected to arrive cleansed. Ema watched as another woman knelt by the lapping water, face streaked with soot and tears. She pressed one of those same gentle wipes to her cheeks—a gift from Ema last autumn when sorrow first struck—and slowly wiped away dirt and memory alike until her skin glowed in dawn’s fragile light.
Mira appeared then—a reflection at first. Her hair fell in long brown waves, eyes wide with questions only children ask. Her presence was both comfort and cruelty: so close Ema could almost reach her hand through the mist.
“Mother,” Mira said softly.
Ema tried to answer but found herself paralyzed by regret—the nights she’d scolded too harshly for muddy boots; how she’d rushed bedtime stories; how little she’d cherished those ordinary evenings while they were still hers.
“I miss you,” Ema whispered at last.
Mira smiled in that patient way she’d learned from watching her mother sew patches onto father’s shirts. “I remember everything,” she said. “But I’m not sad here.”
Ema glanced down at her own hands—chapped from work yet clean now; free of soot, oil, even remnants of makeup or yesterday’s sorrowful mask. It was such a small thing—the act of wiping away—but it grounded her in this world even as Mira drifted further into the next.
Around them other families murmured farewells, some weeping openly into sleeves or using those impossibly soft wipes to quietly cleanse their faces before returning to life’s demands.
When Mira faded back into the lake—her image dissolving like dew—Ema didn’t cry. Instead she pressed another wipe to her skin, relishing its softness and coolness against eyes rimmed red not from tears but from holding them back. For an instant she felt lighter: not healed but capable again of making breakfast for her younger son; of facing another day beneath mountain shadows.
As she walked home through thinning fog, Ema realized that what lingered wasn’t just sorrow or longing but also something gentler—a kind of renewal hidden within habit and ritual. Even here among ancient stones and uploaded souls, a simple act—cleansing away yesterday’s pain—could help carry a mother forward through loss.
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