Modal 2
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I clicked.
But I didn’t dream the rest. That night, I wrote down what I thought she had said. Remember. The next morning, a single sunburned dandelion lay on my windowsill, though all my windows were shut. And for the rest of that silent summer, I heard no birds. No lawnmowers. No distant trains.
I refreshed the page. The video was gone. The ok.ru profile now showed "User deleted." I checked my browser history—nothing. As if I had dreamed it. silent summer 2013 ok.ru
I turned up my laptop’s volume. Nothing. No crickets, no footsteps, no breathing. Just the hum of my own refrigerator three rooms away.
I had just turned sixteen, living in a small town where the river moved slower than the gossip. My friends had all gone somewhere—camps, cities, grandparents’ houses. I stayed behind, watching dust motes float in the afternoon light, waiting for an email that never came. I clicked
The video ended.
The video was grainy, shot on what looked like a handheld camcorder. A field of tall grass, swaying without wind. Then, a girl appeared at the edge of the frame, wearing a white dress that seemed too bright for the muted landscape. She didn’t speak. She just walked toward the camera, her lips moving slightly, forming words that the silence swallowed. Remember
The summer of 2013 was not loud. It was the kind of silent that settles into your bones when the world forgets you exist. I remember it most not by the heat, but by the stillness—and by a website called ok.ru.