She Reopened His Old Messages at 10:45 P.M. — Then Closed Them Like a Stranger-yumihong

At 10:45 p.m., she opened the conversation again because the apartment had become too quiet.

The kind of quiet that made small things loud.

The refrigerator clicked. Rain slid down the window in thin silver lines. The old blanket on her lap scratched the inside of her wrist where the tag had come loose. On the coffee table, a mug of chamomile tea had gone cold enough to leave a pale ring on the wood.

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Her phone was face-down beside the mug.

For twenty minutes, she had pretended not to know what she wanted to do.

She folded laundry that did not need folding. She wiped the same clean counter twice. She opened a grocery app, closed it, then opened her bank account and stared at numbers she had already memorized.

Then, at exactly 10:45 p.m., she picked up the phone.

The screen lit her fingers blue.

Nathan’s name was not pinned anymore. It had not been pinned for months. That used to feel like progress. She had moved the thread down, then further down, then out of immediate sight, letting appointment reminders, delivery codes, office updates, and her sister’s pancake invitations pile on top of it like dust over a sealed box.

But the thread was still there.

Six letters.

Nathan.

No heart. No private nickname. No inside joke left beside it.

Just a name that once made her ribs tighten before she opened it.

She tapped.

A tiny gray loading circle spun in the center of the screen.

For one second, her hand prepared for the old reaction. The small rush. The sharp inhale. The embarrassing hope that maybe the app had hidden something from her, maybe a message had been delayed across nine months, maybe a sentence had been waiting behind bad timing and weak signal.

Nothing new appeared.

Only the same blue and white bubbles.

The same blank spaces.

The same ending.

Her thumb rested on the glass, not scrolling yet.

Back in February, she had opened that conversation at 2:13 a.m., 3:41 a.m., and 7:06 a.m. She knew because she had checked the clock each time like the hour might change the meaning. In the dark, she had treated every punctuation mark like evidence.

A period meant distance.

No period meant softness.

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