Snis-684

“You asked me to,” Akira replied, closing the door. The latch clicked with a finality that felt heavier than it should.

“You came,” she said, not turning around.

He looked up. Yuna’s face was unreadable. SNIS-684

“One minute,” she said. “Starting now.”

Yuna smiled, and for the first time, her eyes glistened. “Because I need to remember that the silence isn’t empty. It’s just the shape of what we couldn’t say. And maybe if I photograph it, I can finally let it go.” “You asked me to,” Akira replied, closing the door

She stood by the kitchen counter, her back to him, pouring tea. Yuna. Her hair was shorter, but her posture was the same—a careful, deliberate stillness, as if she were always waiting for a cue.

Akira felt a crack in his chest. He remembered now. The director would call for the minute of silence, and he’d break it—a cough, a line ad-libbed, a sudden need to check the lighting. He couldn’t sit in the quiet. Because in the quiet, there were no characters. No roles. Just him. He looked up

She had sent him a letter. Not an email, not a text—a handwritten letter, the paper smelling faintly of the incense they used to burn in the old shrine district. “I’m selling the apartment,” she wrote. “There’s one last thing I need to show you. Come alone.”

Akira stared at the chair. It was a simple wooden thing, unadorned. But he knew that if he sat there, he would not be playing a role. He would be seen—truly seen—in the wreckage of what they’d lost.

At twenty seconds, he noticed the small brass bell by the door. He remembered she used to ring it whenever he came home late, a silly ritual to “scare away the bad spirits.” He had laughed at it. He had never once rung it for her.

She gestured to the chair. “This is the last room. Our room. I want to take one photograph—of you, sitting there. But you have to sit for the full minute. No talking. No moving. Just the silence we never had.”

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