THE SWAN THAT KNEW TOO MUCH - A Mother, A Memory, And A Truth Buried Beneath Still Water

 

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Guilt resurfaces when a swan dies — and the past refuses to stay buried.

Story: S A Spencer

Author of Popular FictionsThe Pink MutinyThe Black WatersDream In Shackles


Charles screamed before I even saw what he was pointing at. It wasn’t the startled cry of a kid who’d grazed his knee or dropped his snack. It was sharp, raw, the kind of sound that slices straight through the air and makes every adult freeze.

I spun around so fast my breath caught. My eight‑year‑old son stood at the edge of the lake, his small arm stretched out, finger trembling as he pointed at something floating near the reeds.

A swan.
White.
Still.
Wrong.

Michael reached him first, dropping to his knees. “Hey, mate… what happened?”

But Charles didn’t answer. His eyes were locked on the swan, wide and glassy, as if he were seeing something the rest of us couldn’t.

I hurried over, my heart thudding. “Charles, sweetheart, talk to me.”

He didn’t look at me. He didn’t look at anyone. He just whispered, “It knew.”

I frowned. “What knew?”

“The swan,” he said, louder this time. “It knew something.”

A cold ripple ran through me. I didn’t know why. I didn’t know what he meant. But something about the certainty in his voice made my stomach twist.

Michael stood and glanced at me. “We should call the council.”

I nodded, but my eyes stayed on Charles. He was still staring at the swan, his face pale, his lips trembling. And then, slowly, he turned his head and looked straight at me.

“Mum, you know too,” he said.

My breath hitched.
I didn’t move.
I didn’t speak.

Because for a moment — just a moment — I thought he recognised something in me. Something I’d buried so deep I’d convinced myself it wasn’t real.

But that was impossible.
He was eight.
He couldn’t know.

Not about that night.
Not about the man who drowned.
Not about the guilt I’d carried alone for years.

The council van arrived twenty minutes later. A man in gloves lifted the swan gently, placing it into a black bag. The sound of the zipper made Charles flinch. I wrapped my arms around him, but he didn’t lean in. He didn’t even blink.

“It’s okay,” I murmured. “It’s just nature.”

But Charles shook his head violently. “No. It’s not nature. It’s them.”

I stiffened. “Who’s them?”

He didn’t answer.

Michael touched my arm. “You alright? You look pale.”

I forced a smile. “Just tired.”

But I wasn’t tired.
I was rattled.
Shaken.
Unsettled in a way I hadn’t been since—

No.
I wasn’t going there.

We walked back to the car park, but halfway there, I felt a tug on my sleeve. I turned.

Charles.

He’d slipped away from Michael and was standing right behind me, his small hand gripping my jacket.

“Mum,” he said softly, “you were here before.”

My throat tightened. “What do you mean?”

He tilted his head, studying me with unnerving intensity. “The swan followed you.”

I swallowed hard. “I don’t know what you’re talking about.”

But I did.
God help me, I did.

Because years ago — long before Michael — I used to come to this lake with someone else. Someone who loved the swans. Someone who fed them from his palm. Someone who whispered secrets to me under the willow trees.

Someone who died.

Charles leaned closer. “It wasn’t an accident.”

My heart lurched. “What wasn’t?”

“The swan,” he said. “It didn’t just die. It was killed.”

I stared at him, my pulse hammering. “Charles, stop.”

But he wasn’t rambling.
He wasn’t confused.
He was certain.

And that terrified me.

That night, I couldn’t sleep. I lay awake beside Michael, staring at the ceiling, listening to the wind rattle the window. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Charles’s face. His certainty. His accusation.

You were here before.
The swan followed you.
It wasn’t an accident.

I got up quietly and walked to the kitchen. The house felt too still, too silent. I poured a glass of water, but my hands were shaking so badly I had to set it down.

I hadn’t thought about him in years.
I’d made sure of that.
I’d built a life so different, so distant, that the past felt like a story I’d once read and forgotten.

But the lake hadn’t forgotten.
And neither had the swans.

I stepped outside. The night air was cold, sharp, almost metallic. I wrapped my arms around myself and stared at the dark outline of the trees.

A soft rustle made me turn.

A white shape stood at the edge of the yard.
Still.
Silent.
Watching.

A swan.

My breath hitched.
It couldn’t be.
There were no swans this far from the lake.

But it was there.
And it was looking straight at me.

I blinked — and it was gone.

The next morning, I told myself it was a dream. A trick of the light. Anything but what it felt like.

By afternoon, I couldn’t take it anymore.

I drove back to the lake.

The council had cordoned off the area where the swan had been found. A sign read: WATER CONTAMINATION UNDER INVESTIGATION.

I walked along the path, my steps slow, heavy. The lake was quiet today. Too quiet.

I stopped near the reeds, staring at the water.

And then I saw it.

A feather.
White.
Floating alone.

I reached out with a stick, pulling it closer. When I lifted it, something dark clung to the base.

Oil.
Thick.
Black.
Fresh.

My stomach dropped.

This wasn’t contamination.
This wasn’t nature.
This was deliberate.

A twig snapped behind me.

I spun around.

Charles stood there, alone, his hands in his pockets, his expression calm.

“I told you,” he said. “It was killed.”

I swallowed. “Where’s Michael?”

“He thinks I’m at school.”

My heart thudded. “You shouldn’t be here alone.”

He stepped closer. “You’re not alone.”

I took a step back. “Charles… what do you want from me?”

He looked at the feather in my hand. “The swan was trying to tell you something.”

My voice cracked. “Tell me what?”

He lifted his eyes to mine.

“That he didn’t drown.”

The world tilted.
My breath vanished.
My vision blurred.

“No,” I whispered. “He did. I was there.”

Charles shook his head slowly. “You didn’t see everything.”

My knees weakened. “Charles… stop.”

He stepped closer, his voice soft but certain.

“You think he slipped. You think it was your fault. But someone else was there.”

My heart stopped.

“What did you say?”

Charles pointed to the far end of the lake. “He’s been watching you.”

I followed his gaze.

A man stood under the willow tree.
Still.
Silent.
Watching.

My past.
Alive.
Waiting.

And now it was coming back.

I froze. My breath caught somewhere between my chest and my throat. The man didn’t move. Didn’t wave. Didn’t call out. He just stood there, half‑hidden by the drooping branches.

“Mum,” Charles whispered, tugging my sleeve. “Don’t go closer.”

Before I could answer, the man stepped forward.

I gasped.

It wasn’t Aaron.
Of course it wasn’t Aaron.
Aaron was gone.

This man was older. Broader. His hair darker. His posture different.

He raised a hand. “Sorry — didn’t mean to scare you.”

My breath rushed out in a shaky exhale. “Who… who are you?”

“I’m with the council,” he said, lifting an ID badge. “We’re investigating the contamination. I saw you here yesterday too — thought you might’ve noticed something.”

Charles let out a breath he’d been holding.

“We found traces of engine oil in the water,” the man continued. “Someone’s been dumping it at night. The swan didn’t die naturally.”

Charles looked up at me, eyes wide. “Mum… that’s what I said.”

The council officer handed me a card. “If you see anything strange, call me.”

When he walked away, Charles tugged my sleeve again. “Mum… tell me the truth. Please.”

I sank onto the nearest bench. Charles sat beside me, his small hand slipping into mine.

“His name was Aaron,” I said quietly. “He was my partner before you were born.”

Charles’s eyes softened. “What happened to him?”

I stared at the lake — calm, glassy, deceptively peaceful.

“It was raining,” I said. “We were standing right over there, near the reeds. He leaned over to grab something — a swan feather. He loved them.”

Charles listened, silent and still.

“The path was slippery,” I continued. “He lost his footing. I grabbed his hand, but… I couldn’t hold on.”

Charles squeezed my fingers. “Mum… you didn’t let him fall.”

“I did,” I whispered. “I’ve replayed it a thousand times.”

“You tried,” he said firmly. “That’s what matters.”

A breeze rippled the lake. A swan — alive, graceful, impossibly white — glided across the water, heading straight toward the reeds where the dead one had been found.

It paused, lifted its head, and stared at us.

Not accusing.
Not warning.
Just… watching.

Charles whispered, “Do you think swans remember things?”

I squeezed his hand. “Maybe they do.”

The swan dipped its head once, as if acknowledging something — a truth, a memory, a release — then turned and glided away.

Charles whispered, “Goodbye.”

I whispered, “Goodbye, Aaron.”

And for the first time since that night, the lake felt like just a lake again.

Not a grave.
Not a secret.
Not a wound.

Just water.
Just wind.
Just life moving forward.

And I walked away with my son — my future — knowing the past had finally loosened its grip.


✍️ AUTHOR’S NOTE

Thank you for reading!
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This story is inspired by real emotions, but all names, characters, and events are fictionalised. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

Your support helps me keep writing stories that explore memory, guilt, and the quiet places where truth hides.


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