Chapter 8: When the Heart Remembers
That afternoon, the wind was still. The sun tilted slightly, casting golden rays over the square where a charity event for orphans was taking place. Colorful balloons swayed high above, and the children’s laughter echoed like a gentle melody, draping the scene in joy.
Camila stood by the gift table, her eyes soft as she watched the children rush to hug stuffed animals and grasp candy in their small hands.
She didn’t know that, among the bustling crowd, a pair of eyes was watching her from afar. Eyes she once knew by heart — eyes that had once made her heart skip a beat, and later, shattered it completely.
Leon Sterling.
He approached, as refined as ever — black suit, ash-grey tie, his face composed as though nothing could ever unsettle him. But the moment his gaze found her silhouette, his pupils narrowed — just a flicker of stunned recognition.
She saw him too.
But her face showed nothing.
No surprise.
No greeting.
No trace of anger.
Just a glance — cold and fleeting — as if that man had never once stepped into her life. And then, she turned away.
Leon stood still, his heart tightening beneath her cruel indifference. No words. No voice. No confrontation.
But that silence — light as air — hurt more than any outburst. Because in that moment, it was as if he had never existed in her memories at all.
Behind the charity center was a garden — a quiet little space designed like a miniature park, where children could run and play. Camila needed a moment to compose herself after that sudden encounter. She wandered through the garden, following a winding stone path toward a large central pond — an artificial lake built for landscaping, with a soft wave system. Trees leaned over the edge, their shadows spilling onto the mirrored surface below, reflecting the floating clouds.
She sat on a stone bench, gripping her light scarf as if to steady her own heart. But inside… chaos churned.
“Why can’t fate leave me alone? Why must I keep running into him… like this?”
A sudden scream from the children startled her.
A little girl had tripped near the edge of the pond. Instinctively, Camila rushed to catch her — but in her haste, her foot slipped on the damp grass…
And then — she fell.
The splash tore through the tranquil air like a scream.
Her body plunged into the icy water. Arms flailing, reflex lost to panic. The lake, over three meters deep — pristine, yes, but merciless. She couldn’t swim. And that old, buried memory came rushing back like a wave of terror.
“...Leon... help me...”
Leon heard the shout.
A staff member came running, breathless.
“Someone fell in the pond! A woman... I think it’s Miss Camila!”
He didn’t think. His heart stopped for a split second — and then he ran. The expensive suit didn’t matter. When he arrived, the crowd was in chaos. Without hesitation, Leon dove into the water.
The cold wrapped around him like a vice. But he had swum in icy rivers before, had fought storms in boardrooms and on battlefields — this artificial lake would not stop him.
He found her.
Unmoving. Eyes closed. Her long hair drifting like silk in the water.
He pulled her close, kicked hard, and surged toward the surface.
When he dragged her to shore, she was drenched, her skin pale, lips tinged blue. Staff rushed over — someone called an ambulance.
And there she was — Camila, floating between layers of wet velvet shadows like a petal with no harbor.
No pain. No breath.
Only a chilling weightlessness.
She didn’t know where she was — a dream? Or death, calling gently in a warm whisper?
Leon knelt beside her. Pressed his hands to her chest.
His mouth against hers, giving breath — as though pouring life back into her. Again. Just like before.
A voice came to her — from a distant place, echoing down a tunnel made of time and tears:
“Camila! I'm Leon! Camila!”
She heard it.
Clear.
Like a call from an old memory.
Her heart fluttered.
Leon...
She wanted to open her eyes. To rise. To reach for the glimmering voice that shone like starlight in the dark.
But her limbs were stone. Her body trapped in a deep, foggy sleep.
All she could do was tremble — in the shadows of herself.
Again, that voice — closer now. Urgent. Desperate. Like a hand trying to pull her soul back from the brink.
“Camila, please wake up — our child needs you...!”
She wanted to answer. But her lips couldn’t move. Her voice — stuck in her throat, aching like someone had sliced through her breath and her longing.
But the heart… the heart doesn’t lie.
A spark.
Just one.
Like a final flame in the snow.
And then, from the depths of that coma, Camila whispered — faint as breath through cracked stone:
“...Leon...”
“ ...Leon...”
He froze.
Not just because she called his name.
But because it felt so familiar. As if it had happened before.
And yes — it had.
Five years ago.
That night—heavy with rain and unspoken fears—she was . The argument had been sharp, his voice taut with urgency as he begged her to come to America. One misstep, one slippery edge by the pool, and she had fallen. Without hesitation, he had dived in after her, arms slicing through the storm-drenched water. And when he pulled her into his chest, soaked and breathless, she had looked up through trembling lashes and whispered his name—just like now.
He remembered.
Perfectly.
The same voice.
The same trembling murmur.
The same girl — only time had changed.
Leon’s heart was yanked backward into the past, aching cold.
But in that moment, a tiny crack opened within him.
Not just from memory.
But from the realization…
He had never stopped caring.
And maybe… just maybe…
She hadn’t forgotten him either.
The thought came — and vanished.
Because Camila was now someone else’s wife.
She wasn’t his little girl from years ago.
Her body, her soul, her heart — could never be his again.
Leon looked down at her.
She was still breathing — shallow but steady. Her trembling had eased. The crowd stepped aside as the ambulance arrived.
A worker reached to lift her onto a stretcher.
But Leon raised a hand gently.
“Let me.”
His voice — low, tender, but firm.
He lifted her.
As if she weighed nothing.
As if she were made of mist.
And beneath the dying sunlight filtering through the trees, their shadow stretched long upon the ground — like a memory that once had been a dream.
And now…
Was starting again.