WebNovels

Chapter 46 - The Shape of Absence

I woke up to the buzz of my phone vibrating on the nightstand.

Not the soft jingle of an old ringtone. Not a school bell or my mom calling from the kitchen.

Just emails. Missed calls.

Real life.

And for a moment, I lay there — unmoving — staring at the ceiling, afraid to breathe.

Because I knew it now.

The past was behind me again.

The room wasn't painted blue anymore. The posters of cricket players were gone. The edges of the desk were smoother, unfamiliar.

I was back.

Older. Heavier. Realer.

And the silence I carried was not of a paused world now — it was the kind that fills you after a long cry.

I walked to the mirror.

The man stared back — stubble, tired eyes, faint lines on the forehead.

I didn't look like him anymore. The boy. But I remembered him.

Every word he said. Every mistake he made.

And every small, beautiful thing he once took for granted.

The first thing I did was call my dad.

His voice was groggy. "Hello? Everything okay?"

I closed my eyes and let the sound of him fill the room.

It had been months since we spoke — properly, at least.

"Yeah," I said. "I just wanted to check on you. And… say thank you."

He paused. "For what?"

"For everything you carried. Even the things I never saw."

The silence on his end wasn't cold. Just stunned.

Then he said softly, "You're scaring me, you know that?"

I smiled. "I know. I'm okay. Just… remembering stuff."

I opened the drawer next.

Old notebooks. Documents. A photo of Harish from years ago — tucked under some receipts.

We hadn't spoken in almost a year. After the fight.

After we both walked away, choosing pride over memory.

I stared at the photo for a long time.

Then picked up my phone and sent a text:

Still remember the smell of dosas and how bad your serve was.

I'm sorry I let the silence grow.

Call me when you can. If you want to.

No response. Not immediately. Maybe not ever.

But I had spoken. That mattered.

I made tea the way mom used to. No shortcuts. Let the leaves sit. A pinch more sugar than usual.

The mug warmed my hands.

And for a moment —

even without her —

it tasted like home.

By the time evening came, the sky outside looked full of dust and flame, the kind of sunset that makes you stop.

I stood on the balcony, watching people pass by — hurried, talking, living.

And I thought about what I'd been given.

Not a time machine.

Not a second life.

Just a chance to remember better.

And love more deeply the parts of me I'd left behind.

I didn't need to stay in yesterday anymore.

Because I'd brought the most important parts of it back with me.

And in the quiet that followed, I whispered to the wind:

"Thank you. I'll carry us both from here."

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