Four Seasons Dublin -

December 21st. The solstice. Eleanor walked alone to St. Stephen’s Green. The daffodil’s spot was bare earth now, frozen and dark. She sat on the same bench and pulled out her phone. A message from Fintan: “Meet me at the Christmas market at 5. Bring gloves.”

She smiled. Then she reached into her coat pocket—the same old coat—and her fingers brushed something. The ticket stub, faded now. On the back, beneath the old man’s writing, she had added her own words last spring: “Don’t be late.” four seasons dublin

By October, Dublin had turned amber and wistful. Leaves skittered across the cobblestones of Merrion Square. Eleanor had stopped checking her ex’s social media. She’d started a photography project: doors of Dublin. Crimson, turquoise, chipped black—each one a story. December 21st

“You’re waiting for him to come back,” she said. Stephen’s Green

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