I still check ok.ru sometimes. Just in case.

She stopped directly in front of the lens. For a long moment, she looked past the camera—looked at me , I could have sworn. Then she raised a hand and pressed it flat against the screen, as if touching glass. I saw her mouth form two syllables. Pomni. Remember.

I turned up my laptop’s volume. Nothing. No crickets, no footsteps, no breathing. Just the hum of my own refrigerator three rooms away.

The video ended.

The summer of 2013 was not loud. It was the kind of silent that settles into your bones when the world forgets you exist. I remember it most not by the heat, but by the stillness—and by a website called ok.ru.

Only the echo of a girl in white, walking toward me through a field that didn’t exist, asking to be remembered in a language I never learned.

One humid night, unable to sleep, I found myself clicking through a labyrinth of old links. That’s how I stumbled upon a public page on ok.ru, the Russian social network my aunt used to share Soviet film clips. The page had no profile picture, no posts, just a single video file in black and white: Silent Summer, 2013 . No views. No comments.

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Silent Summer 2013 Ok.ru May 2026

I still check ok.ru sometimes. Just in case.

She stopped directly in front of the lens. For a long moment, she looked past the camera—looked at me , I could have sworn. Then she raised a hand and pressed it flat against the screen, as if touching glass. I saw her mouth form two syllables. Pomni. Remember. silent summer 2013 ok.ru

I turned up my laptop’s volume. Nothing. No crickets, no footsteps, no breathing. Just the hum of my own refrigerator three rooms away. I still check ok

The video ended.

The summer of 2013 was not loud. It was the kind of silent that settles into your bones when the world forgets you exist. I remember it most not by the heat, but by the stillness—and by a website called ok.ru. For a long moment, she looked past the

Only the echo of a girl in white, walking toward me through a field that didn’t exist, asking to be remembered in a language I never learned.

One humid night, unable to sleep, I found myself clicking through a labyrinth of old links. That’s how I stumbled upon a public page on ok.ru, the Russian social network my aunt used to share Soviet film clips. The page had no profile picture, no posts, just a single video file in black and white: Silent Summer, 2013 . No views. No comments.

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