Years later, when the uncle was gone, Yue Kelan buried a new cannonball beneath a marker of driftwood. He didnât need to throw it anymoreâthe act had woven itself into the townâs memory. Each New Year, families gathered, sharing stories of small, deliberate rituals that turn endings into beginnings. In that way, the uncleâs cannonball kept workingânot as a weapon, but as a quiet engine of hope and letting go.
Hereâs a short creative text based on your prompt:
On one particularly cold New Year, the sea held its breath. Yue Kelan had grown from a curious child into a young adult, still following his uncleâs ritual out of habit and reverence. As the cannonball arced, the townâs lanterns seemed to wink in time. The splash sounded like a promise. People whoâd come to scoff left with softened faces; those whoâd come heavy with regret felt, for a moment, lighter.
Yue Kelanâs uncle stood at the edge of the pier every New Yearâs dawn, a small cannonball tucked in his palm like a talisman. Neighbors called him eccentric, but children watched with wide eyes as he whispered blessings into the metal sphere. At midnight he would hurl the cannonball into the black waterânot to harm, but to send the old yearâs burdens sinking fast. Each splash was a small work of ritual: a tidy pause between what had been and what might come.