He clicked on the user profile. No posts since 2008. No activity. Yet the words “immortale, come scoglio” echoed in his chest.
Marco wasn't even looking for the poem. He was looking for a ghost—his father, who had used that username, Vento_del_Sud , before he passed away two years ago. The inbox linked to that account had long been deactivated. But the offer remained, suspended in digital amber.
That night, he couldn't sleep. He opened a new email draft and typed an address he’d found through a Wayback Machine capture: vento_del_sud@libero.it . Subject line: “Il PDF. Ancora lo hai?” (The PDF. Do you still have it?)
(My son, don’t look for me in old files. I am here, where the sea breaks without screaming. The true cliff is not the PDF you save, but the moment you choose not to forget. I’ll wait for you on the coast, tomorrow at dawn. Dad) come scoglio pdf
It wasn't a poem. It was a scanned letter, handwritten in elegant cursive:
Three minutes later, a reply appeared. No text. Just an attachment: come_scoglio.pdf .
Marco looked out his window. The sky was still dark. He grabbed his jacket, walked to the cliffs overlooking the Ligurian Sea, and sat on the cold rock just as the sun bled gold into the water. He didn’t find his father. But the stone beneath him was warm, solid, and impossibly patient. He clicked on the user profile
Marco’s hands shook. He opened it.
He pressed send, expecting a bounce-back.
Come scoglio. Like a cliff. Unmoved. Still there. Yet the words “immortale, come scoglio” echoed in
“Figlio mio, non cercarmi nei vecchi file. Sono qui, dove il mare si rompe senza urlare. Il vero scoglio non è il PDF che conservi, ma il momento che scegli di non dimenticare. Ti aspetto sulla costa, domani all’alba. Papà”
Most replies were dead links. “Page not found.” “File deleted.” But one user, Vento_del_Sud , had simply written: “Ho il file. Te lo mando via email. È immortale, come scoglio.” (I have the file. I’ll email it to you. It’s immortal, like a cliff.)