A02-a03-a01-a08-a09-xa06 !new! [UPDATED]

The last train had left twenty minutes early. Not a mistake—an execution. The platform, still wet from a sudden evening rain, reflected the dim orange of the departure board like a second, submerged station. One man remained. He wasn’t waiting. He was remembering.

He recalled the way her fingers moved when she explained things—tapping the air once for each point, as if punctuation were a physical act. “You always leave before the end,” she had said, not accusing, just stating. He had laughed then. Now, standing alone, he understood: she hadn’t meant trains. a02-a03-a01-a08-a09-xa06

So he decided to walk. Not home—home was a geometry of absence now—but toward the old bridge where the river cut the city into before and after. The rain had stopped, but the air still tasted of metal and wet stone. Each step felt like turning a page in a book written by someone else. The last train had left twenty minutes early

At the bridge’s midpoint, he stopped. Below, the water moved without memory, smoothing over rocks and broken glass alike. He pulled a folded photograph from his coat—not of her, but of a doorway. Their doorway. The one he’d passed a thousand times without seeing. He tore it carefully along the fold lines, then let the pieces fall. They floated for a moment, then sank. One man remained