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The river doesn't forget

Kim_Dokka
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In a world where pain lingers like shadows on still water, a boy learns that memory flows endlessly—like a river that refuses to dry. After losing someone dear in a moment that felt ordinary, he finds himself drowning in echoes of what could have been. Every step he takes is haunted by silence, every smile is weighted by a name he can no longer say. But grief is not the only current that runs through him. In the quiet hours, he discovers something strange—moments lost in time begin to surface, flickering like light on a restless stream. Memories not just of his own life… but perhaps someone else's. Or are they visions of a forgotten past? As reality begins to shift around him, he chases a truth submerged beneath sorrow. Love, loss, regret, and forgiveness flow together in this tale of healing. Because no matter how far one runs, the river doesn’t forget.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1-

There are girls who smile when they're happy.

And then there are girls who smile when they're broken.

She was the second kind.

I met her on a Tuesday, past 11 p.m., in a convenience store that smelled like burned fluorescent lights and cheap microwaved curry. I came in to buy cigarettes I'd never smoke — something about holding them calmed me. She stood behind the counter, wearing the uniform wrong: her collar loose, her hair messy, her name tag flipped the wrong way.

She didn't say hello.

Just looked at me like she was trying to see through my ribs.

Then she asked:

> "If you knew the world was ending tomorrow, would you sleep... or scream?"

I told her I'd probably sleep. I was used to things ending.

She laughed like it hurt.

Then handed me the cigarettes and whispered,

> "Same."

---

That was the first night.

The second night, she told me she had a place she wanted to show me.

A river just outside town. Where couples used to jump, back when newspapers still reported that kind of thing.

She didn't say the word suicide. She didn't have to.

She just asked if I ever felt tired of pretending everything was okay.

I did.

That's how it started.

Not with love.

Not even friendship.

Just two strangers, both pretending they weren't drowning, standing by a river that didn't forget.