Summer Holiday Memories With The Ladies Special... (2027)

The plan had been the Amalfi Coast. Instead, a last-minute flight cancellation and a collective stubbornness landed us in a rented Fiat Doblo with a temperamental AC and a boot full of prosecco. We drove south from Rome, not to the sea, but to a forgotten stretch of olive groves in Umbria.

The summer of 2019. Before mortgages doubled. Before the world learned to wear masks. Before Maya moved to Berlin and Priya’s twins turned her schedule into a military operation.

On the drive back to the airport, we listened to Robyn’s “Dancing On My Own” on repeat, singing so loudly the Fiat’s speakers distorted. Maya cried when we dropped her at her gate. I cried when I got home and saw my own reflection in the elevator mirror – sunburned, exhausted, and lighter than I had been in a decade. Summer Holiday Memories with the Ladies Special...

We didn’t want to leave. We packed slowly, deliberately, leaving things behind on purpose – a pair of Chloe’s sunglasses, a bottle opener, a note for the next guests hidden under the mattress. “The Ladies Special was here. Be loud. Be lazy. Be honest.”

The photo album had been sitting on the top shelf of my closet for seven years. Dust motes danced in the afternoon light as I pulled it down, the faux-leather cover warm against my palms. The Ladies Special – that’s what we’d called ourselves, a rotating cast of five women bound by book club meetings and a collective, simmering need for escape. The plan had been the Amalfi Coast

Priya admitted she was terrified of becoming her mother, a woman who measured her life in Tupperware containers and quiet resentments. Maya confessed she had applied for the Berlin transfer that morning. She hadn’t told her husband yet. Chloe, the doctor, the one who held everyone together, whispered that she sometimes forgot to breathe. That she felt like a fraud.

Summer isn’t a season. It’s a decision. And I’ve just made mine. The summer of 2019

In the image, it’s 4 PM. The heat is a physical weight. I am floating on a unicorn inflatable that has a slow leak. Maya is teaching Priya how to do a handstand in the shallow end, and they are both failing spectacularly, a tangle of limbs and shrieks. Chloe is asleep on a lounger, a book open on her face, one hand still loosely holding a half-eaten peach. Sana is sitting on the edge, legs in the water, looking not at the chaos but directly at the camera. She is smiling. Not her polite, workplace smile. A real one. It reached her eyes.