Some sins wash away, others cling to the skin. She came to the river not to forget, but to remember who she once was.
Prompt
The river didn’t judge — it remembered.
Fog rolled in like regret, soft and heavy. She stood at the edge of the dock, the city’s lights trembling across the water like broken promises. The badge she’d once worn hung cold against her palm.
The trafficking ring was gone. The names exposed. The guilty punished. But redemption isn’t paperwork — it’s penance. And the river was waiting.
She dropped her gun into the black current. It sank without a sound, swallowed by the same silence that had followed her since that night. Somewhere behind her, sirens echoed — too late, as always.
In her coat pocket was a letter, unsigned: “Justice isn’t blind. It’s learning to see again.” She smiled. For the first time, the river said her name — and she didn’t look away.
⸻
💬 Question for Readers:
Can redemption ever erase the past, or does it simply teach us to carry it with grace?