We found the skeleton of a bird, tiny and perfect, its ribs a cathedral of thread. You covered it with ferns, and we didn’t say a prayer, but we stood in silence for the exact length of a held breath.

We found a glass bottle with a dried-up letter inside, the ink faded into ghost-squiggles. We couldn’t read a word, but we buried it again, deeper, because some messages are meant to stay lost.

We didn’t set out to find anything in particular that summer. That’s the secret of all good discoveries—you stumble into them while looking for something else, or while looking for nothing at all.

We found a rusted bicycle half-swallowed by morning glories. Its bell still rang, a single, clear note that cut through the cicada drone like a dropped coin.

We found a fox’s path instead—a narrow, almost imaginary trail where the grass bent differently. You said it was the kitsune road, the one spirits use to cross between our world and the next. I laughed, but I followed.

We never caught the beetle. We forgot about it by the time the sun began to bleed orange into the paddy fields.

The cicadas were a wall of sound, a screaming static that made the air itself feel thick and lazy. Our hunt was supposed to be for kabutomushi, the rhinoceros beetles that lived in the big camphor tree behind the abandoned shrine. We had nets, a plastic cage, and the kind of sunburn that peels into maps of forgotten places.

The cicadas agreed. They stopped screaming just long enough to let us hear the quiet.