I stared at Emily’s phone for a long moment before I answered.
“Yes,” I said quietly. “That’s me.”
My hands were shaking.
Daniel hadn’t just remembered me — he’d been searching.
Emily didn’t rush me. She just waited.
Finally, I nodded.
“Okay,” I said. “You can message him.”
Two days passed.
Then three.
On the fourth day, an email appeared in my inbox.
I never stopped looking.
I didn’t know where you went.
I thought you’d be angry… or happy without me.
I sat at my desk long after the bell rang, reading his words again and again.
He explained everything.
The scandal. The move. The letters he wrote but never sent.
The ring he’d bought at eighteen and carried every Christmas, hoping one day he’d find me and finally give it back.
We met a week later at a quiet café.
When he walked in, older but unmistakably Daniel, he smiled like he’d been holding it in for decades.
“I was afraid you wouldn’t want to see me,” he said.
“I was afraid you were just a memory,” I replied.
He reached into his pocket and placed something small on the table.
The ring.
Some stories don’t end when you think they do.
Sometimes they just wait —
until someone brave enough decides to knock.