Part 2 : Three months passed like a wound that refused to fully heal.

She learned how to live in smaller versions of her life—smaller meals, smaller laughs, smaller expectations. The world didn’t ask if she was ready. It just continued.

Then one morning, a letter arrived.

No return address. Just her name, written in handwriting she recognized instantly.

Her breath stopped before she even opened it.

I should have told you the truth sooner.

Her fingers trembled as she unfolded the page.

There was no “someone else.” I lied because I thought leaving would be easier than watching you fight for something already breaking.

The room blurred slightly. Not from tears yet—something heavier. Realization.

I was drowning in things I never told you. I was losing myself, and I didn’t know how to stay without destroying both of us.

A pause in ink. A hesitation made visible.

But I need you to know something else.

Her heart tightened.

Leaving you was the biggest mistake I ever made.

Silence filled the apartment again, but this time it was different.

Not empty.

Alive.

On the last line, one sentence stood alone, heavier than everything before it:

If you still remember us the way I do… I’ll be at the station tomorrow, 6 PM.

She looked up slowly.

Outside, the world was still moving.

But for the first time in months—

so was she.

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