One autumn afternoon, she noticed something strange. The sunlight had paused.

She never told anyone. But every afternoon after that, she poured two cups. Would you like a different tone — more melancholic, more magical, or perhaps set in a modern city instead of a mountain house?

The house was small, leaning slightly into the damp soil of the mountain valley. Her children had long since moved to the city. Her husband’s photograph on the butsudan had faded to sepia and silence. But the sunlight never forgot her.

When the light finally moved again, slipping toward the corner, the tea was gone.

The old woman’s name was Sachi, and every afternoon, she sat in the hizashi no naka — the narrow patch of sunlight that moved across her tatami room like a living thing.

It hung in the middle of the room, suspended, as if the earth had stopped spinning for a breath. Inside that gold, dust motes floated like tiny stars. And for a moment — just a moment — she saw her husband’s silhouette. Not as a ghost. Not as a memory. But as a shape within the light itself, sitting across from her, hands cupped around an invisible cup.

At two o’clock, it entered through the east window, touching the rim of her tea bowl. At three, it stretched across the kotatsu, warming the worn fabric where her fingers rested. At four, it climbed the wall, illuminating a crack in the plaster that she had grown fond of — a river of time she traced with her eyes.