One peaceful evening, as the sun dipped behind the trees and painted golden streaks across the still lake, something unusual
caught my eye near the water’s edge. Resting gently on the rocks was a single red rose—its petals fresh and vivid against the soft
glow of twilight. Attached to its stem was a note, the handwriting delicate and heartfelt,
as though every word had been written with care.
It was signed by someone named Clara, who explained that she could no longer make her way to the lake—her wheelchair made
the steep path too treacherous now—but this place held the most cherished piece of her past. It was where her late husband’s
ashes had been scattered two years prior. She had left the rose in hopes that someone might carry it to him.
There was something profoundly moving in her words—an aching honesty that stirred something deep within me. I gazed out
over the lake’s calm surface, then gently placed the rose on the water, watching as it floated toward the center. A gentle breeze
caught it, and it drifted like a whispered farewell. I stayed until it became nothing more than a blur in the distance, wrapped in
a feeling I couldn’t quite name—somewhere between sorrow and serenity, as if I’d unknowingly stepped into a sacred moment.
Clara stayed in my thoughts the next day. I couldn’t stop thinking about the note, about the quiet love it carried, and the
loneliness woven between the lines. I wandered into a small café near the lake, looking for warmth in a cup of coffee and a little
solitude. That’s where I met Evelyn, an older woman with kind eyes. We struck up a conversation, and when I mentioned the
rose and the note, her face softened with familiarity. She was Clara’s mother-in-law. Evelyn spoke about Clara with gentle
honesty. Clara had fallen in love with her son, Daniel, when they were in college. Their love had been deep and immediate, and
though their time together was heartbreakingly short, it was full of joy. Daniel had died suddenly two years ago. The lake had
been their sanctuary, and Clara chose it as the place to scatter his ashes one breezy autumn day. Since then, she had sent a rose
each year in his memory. As her health declined, it became harder to make the trip herself. This year, Evelyn had placed the
rose for her, hoping that someone kind might notice. Somehow, that person turned out to be me