The Yellow — Scarf
She wrapped the scarf around her neck, and for a moment, the gray pier seemed to brighten. The weight on her shoulders didn't disappear, but she stood a little taller. Elias smiled, a small, tired movement of his lips. He no longer had his tiny sun, but as he watched her walk toward the ferry, the yellow fabric fluttering like a bird’s wing in the wind, he realized he didn't need to carry the light anymore. He had finally helped it find its way home.
For Elias, the scarf became a quiet companion. He never wore it, but he carried it. When his hands grew stiff from gutting fish, he’d touch the silk to remember what warmth felt like. When the loneliness of his small cottage became too loud, he’d lay the yellow fabric on the wooden table, a tiny sun in the center of his kitchen. It was a fragment of a story he didn't know, a lost treasure from a stranger who had moved on. The Yellow Scarf
The woman’s breath hitched. She reached out, her fingers trembling as they brushed the silk. "I lost this years ago," she whispered, her voice barely audible over the crashing waves. "My mother gave it to me the last time I saw her. I thought it was gone forever." She wrapped the scarf around her neck, and
The sun was a pale smudge behind the morning mist as Elias walked the familiar path to the harbor. It was a cold Tuesday, the kind that seeped into your bones, but he barely felt the chill. Tucked into the pocket of his heavy coat was a small, vibrant square of silk: a yellow scarf. He no longer had his tiny sun, but