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It’s been 40 years, but I still think of him. I decided to track him down.

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Forty years have gone by, but I still think about him. I finally decided to look him up.

I found him after all that time by accident scrolling online between a recipe for apple crumble and an ad for antiwrinkle cream. His name was right there, next to a photo: silvery hair, glasses, that grin I recognized instantly.

I froze midscroll. My heart thumped louder, as if my body remembered something my mind wasnt brave enough to name yet. I clicked. It was an artists profile, a tiny gallery in Camden, London, pictures of landscapes, old gates, a woman at a window. One of them bore the caption, Autumn remembers more than summer.

I knew it was him. Jack. My Jack from back then, the boy I loved silently through our whole Alevels year and long after. After the exams he left town, I stayed.

Life went a different way for both of us he married, had kids, then divorced; there was a long stretch of quiet routine. Yet that feeling never truly died; it just slipped away somewhere deep, like a letter hidden in a drawer.

Before I could think twice I typed: I dont know if you remember me, but I do. If you fancy a cup of tea, Ill be in London.

He replied the very same day: I remember. I always have tea after four. Youll find my address on the website.

I booked a train ticket, packed a small bag, a cosy sweater and that old letter I never sent. In the carriage I watched the trees whizz past gold, russet, frosted and felt something odd, as if time were turning back, as if I were eighteen again.

I got off at London Kings Cross and, for the first time in ages, felt that something important was happening. I didnt know what, but I wasnt about to miss it.

His studio was tucked down a side lane of Camden. Narrow, creaky stairs, a heavy door with a little glass pane, and above it a brass plaque that read: J. M. Painting Studio. My heart leapt when I knocked. After a moment of silence I heard a familiar voice: Open.

I stepped inside. It was nothing like Id imagined, yet exactly right: the sharp smell of turpentine, a dim hush, daylight spilling through a high window, canvases propped against the walls, a mug of brushes, a halfdrunk cup of coffee. He was at the easel, turned slowly as if he knew I was coming. He gave me a quiet smile, just with his eyes.

You havent changed a bit, he said, though it wasnt true. Still, there was no pretense in his voice.

You havent either, I replied.

He pulled out an old, overused armchair and put the kettle on for tea. We chatted at first about nothing trains, traffic jams, how London looks even lovelier in autumn. Then it slipped into everything: how the years had treated him, my own life, the loss of loved ones, how both of us were a little adrift despite being surrounded by people.

The table smelled of fresh bread. Our mugs steamed with tea spiced with cloves. Soft golden light poured in. It was so quiet I could hear my own breathing.

Do you ever think about that summer? he asked suddenly.

All the time, I answered before I could even think.

For two days we were inseparable. We strolled through Regents Park, ate fishandchips at a market stall on New Covent Garden, laughed about the things only someone who remembers the taste of orange soda from a glass bottle and the school bells ring can understand.

He never asked how long Id stayed. I didnt tell him when Id leave. It felt like a bubble fragile, silent, beautiful, and oddly real.

On the third morning I packed my bag and left it by the door. He handed me a mug of tea and said simply: Dont go back just yet.

But I have responsibilities, a home

He shook his head. Everything will wait back there. Here here waits someone who doesnt want to lose you again.

I stared out at the autumn trees and thought, maybe this time I should stay.

I didnt board the train. My bag stayed by the door, and I sat by the window with a mug in my hands, in his armchair, in his world. For a moment I felt foolish, like Id done something reckless, but that feeling faded faster than it had come.

I lingered another day, then another, and eventually I stopped counting.

Time moved differently in his studio. I helped sort paints, wiped frames, read aloud while he sketched. Suddenly it seemed possible to live simply, lightly, without taking everything apart.

In the evenings we walked through the Old City. Among the crowds, yet apart. No one gave us strange looks perhaps because it felt natural, or perhaps because nobody cared whether we were thirty or sixty.

One day I found a small sketch on his table: me, sitting by the window, bathed in light. The caption read, Autumn that returned. I said nothing, just brushed the paper with my fingertips and smiled quietly.

I dont know if this is forever. Im not making plans or asking questions. That single moment hearing him say Stay and really feeling it is enough for me.

Id waited forty years for this decision. Now Im done waiting.

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