Cherreads

Chapter 11 - Echoes in the present

The light was colder.

Not the warm, golden haze of the past few days — this was pale, sharp, real. It streamed through the window and scattered on my bedsheet like truth.

I opened my eyes slowly. For a second, I held on to the silence.

Then I sat up.

My heart thudded.

The wall was white. Not blue.

The desk — my old desk — gone. Replaced by a sleek worktable with a dying office laptop on it. A stack of unopened bills sat beside it.

My hand reached out, trembling. The skin — rougher. Familiar scars returned. The years, the wear.

I was back.

It hit me all at once.

The weight of age.

The ache in my shoulder.

The smell of city smoke through the window.

I walked across the room in a daze. My reflection stared back from the mirror. Older. Quiet. Haunted. Me.

The calendar read March 24th.

A full week gone. Seven days since… what?

A dream?

A miracle?

A second chance I never deserved?

My throat clenched. I sat on the edge of the bed, gripping the sheet.

What had I changed?

Had anything truly shifted in the world?

Or had it all been inside me?

I reached for my phone. It was fully charged, glowing in the dim room. Dozens of notifications.

But I ignored them.

I opened the contacts.

Typed: Hari.

The name appeared. Still there. I had never deleted it — just buried it in silence.

My finger hovered over the call button.

Then, impulsively, I hit it.

One ring. Two. Three.

I almost gave up.

"Hello?"

His voice.

Older. A little huskier. Still unmistakable.

I couldn't breathe.

"Who's this?"

I swallowed. "It's me," I whispered.

Silence. A long one.

Then, slowly, a laugh. Quiet. Shaky.

"No way," he said. "I was just thinking about you. Yesterday, even."

We didn't say much after that. We didn't need to.

The space between us had closed.

Later that day, I visited the temple near the school. The chai vendor was still there. I bought two cups, left one on the bench.

I sat there, watching the sky turn amber.

Not everything had changed.

The past hadn't rewritten itself like a movie.

But I had carried something back. A version of us. A reminder. A heartbeat.

And maybe, just maybe, that was enough.

As I sipped the tea, a boy ran past, holding a notebook under one arm and a mango in the other.

I smiled.

Some days return to you.

And some days, you return to yourself.

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