[Warning: This epilogue was written for those that wanted our leads to end up together. If you are strongly against their pairing, I would ask you to skip these few chapters or read them with a grain of salt. As for the others? Enjoy.]
It was a fairly rainy day. The sun was scarce, and the droning of intellectuals on the Vedic education system would have put to sleep had it not been for my own paper. My days of diligently taking notes of all the important aspects of one's speech had often helped to question parts of the thesis throughout my ti at different conferences. It had been a surprise when the University of Glasgow had chosen my paper on the possible impact of the Vedic education in African tribal communities for the conference. Despite my interest in child welfare and female workforce developnt in the underprivileged strata of the society over the past few years, I had never considered myself to be a part of the larger intellectual movent. It felt right to contribute to society as it had helped nurture into who I was.
Today's presentation had been a risk. I had remained out of the public eye for quite so ti and by putting my na out there, I was risking my safety. Sowhere deep in my heart, I was hoping that Anthony would make good on his promise and protect . I wasn't insecure enough to believe that he had forgotten , not only because of his impeccable mory but because of his boundless love for .
When my na was called—yes, my real na, I felt my body react instinctively. No one had called by that na in years, but I was moving towards the podium, offering a polite smile to the host and expressing my gratitude to the people present in the room.
I felt a buzz in my bones, almost at edge. No, I was certainly happy, not nervous in the least, but there was sothing different about the room. The bright lights, the expectant faces were new for . No one had expected sothing as benign as a speech from —ever.
Once, it had been expectations of fulfilled contracts, then the faces of young children trying to find a ray of hope. In between, there had been lonely human beings who did not share my idea of solitude. They wanted my company, wanted to know my story. I would jokingly tell them the truth, and they would laugh it away because who in this world would face such a strange yet movie-like turn of events in their life?
It was strange, indeed.
In my mont of reminiscence, I realized that I had stopped talking. The slight confusion in the crowd vanished when I began speaking about my topic with renewed vigor.
They seed in awe with how well inford I was, and it was expected as none of them had ever been to the places, experienced firsthand as to what these children went through to gain a proper education. They had an impersonal look on education, while I wanted it to be the weapon that eradicated grief and poverty in the world. We ca from different worlds.
The pleasure of helping soone with your own hands, feeding them and sharing stories of lost childhoods had been far more satisfying than hearing the click of the safety lock or the whizzing of the bullet through the air. Trigger happiness was nothing compared to the feeling of fulfillnt that ca with knowing that it was you that put a smile on soone's face.
My outlook on life had changed drastically, and I couldn't very well bla it on my own superhuman healing. It had more to do with nurous specialists who tried to make talk, but one who actually was able to break through and guide through the darkness. Her na was trivial as mine was to her, but she was a good listener. She asked the weirdest questions, and if I didn't know better, I would think that she knew better than anyone else on the planet.
Yes, she was my therapist. I wonder where I would have been without her help. Maybe, lying in a gutter sowhere because I was too bitter to let my past go, to keep away from Anthony, let go of my past... so many things. I might have even decided to kill myself, but I didn't. I worked through it all, and I was finally happy.
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