We didn’t talk about school starting. We didn’t talk about the drive home. We just listened. The click-click of the neighbor’s wind chimes. The distant thrum of a motorboat cutting through the sound. The soft, wet slap of a crab scuttling under the dock.
The salt crusted on my skin like tiny diamonds, and the sun had painted my shoulders a shade of pink that promised to peel by morning. It was the last evening of our summer vacation, and for the first time in two weeks, no one was in a hurry. -PRED-274- A beautiful memories during summer v...
It wasn’t a summer of grand adventures or exotic places. But it was the summer everything felt enough . And as I fell asleep that night to the sound of the foghorn in the distance, I knew that memory would stay sharper than a photograph—the taste of butter, the blink of a firefly, and the quiet, beautiful truth that some things don't end. They just become a part of you. We didn’t talk about school starting
Then, as the sky turned the color of a bruised plum, the fireflies appeared. They rose from the tall grass behind the cottage like tiny, floating lanterns. Leo gasped. My older cousin, Mia, reached out her hand, and one landed on her fingertip, pulsed its green light once, twice, and then drifted away. The click-click of the neighbor’s wind chimes
“Make a wish,” she whispered.
We sat on the splintering wooden dock, our feet dangling over the edge. The water below had turned from green to molten gold, reflecting the dying sun. My little brother, Leo, who had spent the entire week complaining about the lack of Wi-Fi, was silent. He was watching a heron stalk the shallows, its legs moving with the patience of a saint.