Her Old Chat History Became the Proof No Friend Could Explain Away Four Days Later-yumihong

My hand stayed above the keyboard while Maya’s new message glowed against the table.

Hey. Can you send me that résumé template you made?

The cursor blinked in the reply box, patient and clean, as if it had not watched four days of nothing with me.

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Outside, the rain had thinned into a fine mist. The kitchen light gave everything a tired yellow edge — the salt shaker, the coffee ring, the receipt with 8:10 p.m. smudged under my thumb. My phone was warm from being held too long. The apartment smelled faintly of old coffee and wet pavement drifting through the cracked window.

I typed one sentence.

I hope you find what you need.

Then my thumb hovered over send.

A part of my body still moved by old training. Maya needed something, so my hands prepared to provide. That was how it had worked for six years. I did not need to think. I located documents, sent links, drove across town, loaned cash, covered excuses, remembered birthdays for people who forgot mine.

The résumé template sat in my laptop folder under Career Stuff. It would take twenty seconds to attach.

Twenty seconds was how she kept getting back in.

I erased the sentence.

The phone buzzed again before the screen had time to dim.

??

Then another.

You there?

No apology sat between those two messages. No soft landing. No little knock on the door of my life.

I locked the phone and opened my laptop instead.

The screen lit up my dark kitchen. My reflection hovered in it — hair pulled loose from its clip, eyes dry, mouth flat. The laptop fan whispered. My fingers found the folder before I made the decision consciously.

Career Stuff.

Resume_Template_Final.docx.

Under it were files I had made for Maya over the years. Maya_Cover_Letter_Marketing. Maya_Interview_Answers. Maya_Rent_Proof. Maya_Landlord_Email_Draft. Maya_Apology_To_Camila.

There were twelve.

I stared at the names until they stopped looking like files and started looking like receipts.

The first one was from five years ago, when she cried in my car outside a frozen yogurt shop because she said her manager hated her. I had edited her résumé in the passenger seat while she ate the topping cup with a plastic spoon and told me I was better at sounding professional.

The second was from the year she wanted to move apartments and needed someone to write a message that made her late payments sound like a banking issue.

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