Only me.
Raghav’s smile faded first.
Not dramatically.
Slowly.
Like something inside him had stopped receiving oxygen.
“Sir Khanna,” someone said quickly, stepping forward.
But Arvind did not respond.
He kept walking.
Each step measured.
Each second heavier than the last.
Then he stopped.
In front of me.
The silence that followed was different from before.
Not social silence.
Structural silence.
The kind that happens when a system realizes it is no longer the reference point.
Raghav finally laughed.
Small.
Forced.
“This must be a misunderstanding,” he said quickly.
“She’s—she’s just an old classmate.”
Arvind did not look at him.
Not even once.
He extended his hand toward me.
Not offering.
Recognizing.
I took it.
No hesitation.
No explanation.
Just alignment.
Behind me, the room shifted again.
Because now they were watching something they hadn’t anticipated.
Not a reunion.
Not a reveal.
A correction.
Arvind finally spoke.
His voice was calm.
Not loud.
Not emotional.
Certain.
“She didn’t leave you,” he said.
“She outgrew the story you wrote about her.”
Raghav blinked.
Once.
Then again.
As if repetition might undo meaning.
Priya stepped back slightly.
Confusion replacing confidence.
Arvind turned slightly toward the room.
Not addressing them.
Acknowledging them.
Then back to me.
“Let’s go home,” he said.
That was all.
No drama.
No announcement.
No explanation.
And that was what made it absolute.
Because power that needs validation is still negotiating.
Power that does not speak twice is already decided.
I looked at Raghav once.
Just once.
Not for closure.
Not for satisfaction.
But for distance.
Then I walked.
The room did not stop me.
It could not.
Behind me, silence followed.
Not emptiness.
Recognition.
The kind that arrives too late to be useful.
As we reached the exit, I heard it.
Not applause.
Not noise.
Something quieter.
The absence of disbelief finally settling into understanding.
And for the first time in years, I didn’t feel like someone being remembered.
I felt like someone who had already arrived.