Ruslanas Kirilkinas - Tu Mano Mergytд— . Lietuviеўka Muzika. Geriausios Dainos. -

Lina leaned back, looking out at the lighthouse in the distance. "My mother always says that some songs are like anchors. They keep you from drifting too far from who you really are."

The amber sun was dipping toward the Baltic Sea, painting the Curonian Lagoon in shades of bruised purple and gold. Tomas sat on a weathered wooden bench, the salt air biting at his cheeks. In his ears, the gentle, rhythmic melody of Ruslanas Kirilkinas’s "Tu Mano Mergytė" played on a loop—a song that had become the soundtrack to his nostalgia. Lina leaned back, looking out at the lighthouse

She took his hand, her fingers cold but her grip firm. As they walked away from the pier, the song reached its crescendo. It wasn't just Lithuanian music anymore; it was a bridge. In the quiet of Nida, under a blanket of stars, the old lyrics felt new again. Tomas sat on a weathered wooden bench, the

There she was, wrapped in a heavy wool cardigan, her hair tossed by the wind. She looked different—older, with a quiet strength in her eyes—but the way she tilted her head was exactly the same. As they walked away from the pier, the

As the last light faded, Tomas stood up and reached out a hand. "I don't want to be an anchor anymore, Lina. I want to be the sail."

For the next hour, they didn't talk about the breakup or the years of silence. They talked about the music that defined their youth—the "Geriausios Dainos" (Best Songs) that played at every wedding, bonfire, and heartbreak in Lithuania. They laughed about how Ruslanas’s voice seemed to capture a specific kind of Baltic melancholy—hopeful yet tinged with the cold of the sea.

"I stayed in Klaipėda for a while," Tomas admitted. "But the city was too loud. I kept looking for the quiet we had here."