She stood there dripping on my welcome mat, apologizing for being late with a meal I hadn’t even ordered, her eyes skimming past me like I was furniture. Success had changed my address, my clothes, my posture. It hadn’t touched the raw, stunned ache of realizing the girl who once knew every fracture in me now couldn’t place my face. I let her go that night, but I didn’t sleep. Instead, I dug through the boxes I’d carried from one rented room to another: the photos, the ticket stubs, the crumpled note where she’d called me brave before anyone else ever dared.
When I asked the app to send the same driver again, it wasn’t a coincidence; it was a decision. I put those artifacts in her hands and watched her remember herself in real time. When I finally knelt with the ring, her yes felt less like an answer and more like a homecoming—for both of us.
