The student inside the classroom didn't leave.
Noah didn't stay to watch what happened next.
That felt like a decision.
And right now, decisions felt dangerous.
---
"Hey."
---
Daniel's voice pulled him back.
"What are you looking at?" he asked again.
---
Noah forced himself to look away from the classroom.
Back to the hallway.
Back to something normal.
---
"Nothing," he said.
---
It wasn't true.
But it felt safer than saying it.
---
Daniel studied him for a second longer.
Then—
"Fine," he said.
---
They started walking again.
---
The hallway noise hadn't changed.
But it didn't feel the same anymore.
---
Noah's attention kept slipping—
back to the classroom
back to the pattern
back to the second bell
---
He pulled it away.
Deliberately.
---
Don't focus on it.
---
That thought stayed in place longer than the others.
---
"Next class?" Daniel asked.
---
Noah nodded.
---
They turned the corner.
---
And stopped.
---
A small group of students stood near the lockers.
Arguing.
---
Not loudly.
But intensely.
---
"…I'm telling you, he was right there," one girl said.
---
"No, he wasn't," another replied. "You're mixing it up."
---
Noah slowed.
---
Daniel didn't.
But he didn't leave either.
---
"…He sits behind me," the first girl insisted. "Third row. Window side."
---
"There is no one behind you," the second said.
---
The first girl laughed.
Short.
Uncertain.
---
"That's not funny."
---
"I'm not joking."
---
Silence.
---
Noah stepped closer.
---
"Who?" he asked.
---
Both girls turned to him.
---
The first one spoke quickly.
"Adrian. He—"
She stopped.
---
Her expression shifted.
---
"…Wait."
---
Noah felt it immediately.
---
That pause wasn't confusion.
---
It was absence.
---
"You said his name," Noah said.
---
She frowned.
"Did I?"
---
Daniel glanced between them.
"Who are you talking about?"
---
The girl hesitated.
Longer this time.
---
"I… don't know."
---
The second girl crossed her arms.
"Exactly."
---
"That doesn't make sense," the first one said. "I was just—"
She stopped again.
---
Noah watched her carefully.
---
Her posture changed.
---
Not physically.
But the certainty was gone.
---
Like something had been removed mid-thought.
---
"Do you remember what he looks like?" Noah asked.
---
She shook her head slowly.
---
"…No."
---
"Then why did you think he existed?" Daniel asked.
---
That landed wrong.
---
Noah felt it.
---
The girl did too.
---
"I don't know," she said quietly.
---
The second girl exhaled.
"You're overthinking it. Come on, we're gonna be late."
---
She grabbed her friend's arm and pulled her away.
---
The first girl didn't resist.
---
But she looked back once.
---
Not at Noah.
---
At the space behind him.
---
Then she turned the corner.
---
Gone.
---
The hallway filled the gap again.
---
Like nothing had happened.
---
Daniel spoke first.
"That was weird."
---
Noah didn't respond.
---
Because something didn't align.
---
The way she said the name.
The way she lost it.
---
Too fast.
---
"You heard it, right?" Noah said.
---
Daniel nodded.
"Yeah."
---
Noah waited.
---
"…And?" he asked.
---
"And what?"
---
Noah frowned.
---
"The name," he said. "Adrian."
---
Daniel blinked.
---
"What name?"
---
There it was again.
---
Clean.
Complete.
---
No hesitation.
---
No trace of doubt.
---
Noah felt something tighten in his chest.
---
"You just heard her say it," he said.
---
"No, I didn't."
---
Flat.
---
Certain.
---
Noah stared at him.
---
That wasn't possible.
---
Two people.
Same conversation.
---
Different memory.
---
"You're sure?" Noah asked.
---
Daniel's expression hardened slightly.
---
"Yes."
---
Noah looked away.
---
Because pushing it further—
felt like repeating the same mistake.
---
But he had already made it.
---
He had asked.
Clarified.
Confirmed.
---
Locked it in.
---
Noah turned slightly—
toward the nearest classroom.
---
The door was open.
---
Inside—
students were seated.
---
Teacher at the front.
---
Normal.
---
Too normal.
---
Noah's eyes moved across the room.
---
Counting.
---
Rows.
Seats.
People.
---
Something was off.
---
Not visually.
---
Numerically.
---
He stepped closer.
---
Daniel didn't follow this time.
---
Noah reached the doorway.
---
Looked in.
---
"…There's one less," he said.
---
The words came out before he could stop them.
---
Mistake.
---
The teacher stopped speaking.
---
Slowly—
she turned her head.
---
"…One less?" she repeated.
---
Noah froze.
---
Behind him—
Daniel said, "Noah."
---
Warning.
---
Too late.
---
The students inside the classroom didn't move.
---
Not one of them.
---
All of them—
looked at him.
---
At the same time.
---
Noah stepped back.
---
The moment broke.
---
The class resumed.
---
Like nothing had happened.
---
Daniel grabbed his arm.
"Stop doing that," he said under his breath.
---
"Doing what?" Noah asked.
---
"Pointing things out."
---
Noah pulled his arm free.
---
"I'm not—"
He stopped.
---
Because he was.
---
And every time he did—
something responded.
---
Noah looked back into the classroom.
---
Counted again.
---
Same number.
---
Same arrangement.
---
Normal.
---
But—
---
He couldn't remember what it had been before.
---
That was the worst part.
---
Not the missing person.
---
Not the wrong memory.
---
But the fact that it didn't feel wrong anymore.
---
Like the absence had already been accepted.
---
Noah stepped away from the door.
---
Slow.
---
Careful.
---
Because now he understood something new.
---
People weren't just disappearing.
---
They were being—
---
removed
---
from everything.
---
And the only thing worse than noticing
---
was saying it out loud.
---
Because the moment you did—
---
everyone else
---
would forget
---
you ever said it.
