He read her reply three times.
“I hope you’re okay.”
It was kind.
And that’s what scared him.
No anger. No questions. No fight. Just distance wrapped in courtesy. He knew that tone—he’d used it before, right after losing something he didn’t fight hard enough for.
His fingers hovered over the screen, ready to explain everything. The empty wallet. The bruised pride. The fear of being seen as less. But explanations always sound loud when they arrive late.
He typed. Deleted. Typed again.
Then stopped.
Across town, she was somewhere else entirely.
Silence had taught her early lessons. A father who disappeared without goodbye. A past love who slowly stopped replying until she learned the ending by herself. Each quiet moment had trained her heart to brace for abandonment.
So when his call never came, her body remembered before her mind did. The tight chest. The calm face. The instinct to detach before pain could settle in.
Over there:
Back in his room, the weight finally hit him.
He realized too late that silence doesn’t feel neutral to someone who’s had to survive it before. It feels like confirmation. Like history repeating itself with a different face.
He locked his phone and lay back, staring at the ceiling.
Some people don’t need grand gestures.
They just need presence.
And sometimes, by the time you understand that, the space you created has already learned how to live without you.
The End!
Thank you for following through. See you soon in the next series.



























