It started the way most dreams do.
I was somewhere I didn't recognize — but somehow, I knew I'd been there before.
A field maybe. Or a shore. Or a garden.
The air felt like early morning — cool, gentle, full of fog that didn't cling.
I wasn't scared.
I wasn't waiting, either.
I just… was.
And then I felt it.
The presence.
I turned before I saw him.
My heart knew before my eyes did.
Elián.
But not like I remembered him.
He looked the same — tall, warm-eyed, half-hidden behind that quiet expression I used to chase meaning from — but he was wearing something that didn't belong to this lifetime. A soft linen shirt. Dark slacks. Barefoot.
He walked toward me like the earth made room for him.
And when he spoke, it didn't sound like a voice.
It sounded like a thought I'd been holding in my chest for years.
"You waited," he said.
I nodded. I couldn't speak.
He looked at me for a long time. Then said, quietly:
"This time, it's right."
I frowned. "What do you mean?"
He smiled — not with his mouth, but with his whole face. The way he used to smile when he let his walls down for half a second.
"I had to go. You had to stay," he said. "But we'll meet again."
"I don't understand."
"I know," he said softly. "But you will."
He reached out — not to hold me, but just to touch. A brush of fingers against my wrist.
And the moment he did, the dream blurred.
Colors folded. Time thinned. The whole world bent inward — not collapsing but converging.
I felt everything all at once:
The first moment I saw him.
The last moment I let him go.
And everything in between — the laughter, the silence, the waiting, the ache.
"I loved you," I whispered.
"I know," he said. "And I never stopped."
I wanted to ask why, to ask how to ask why it wasn't enough back then.
But instead, I asked the only question that mattered now:
"Will I see you again?"
He nodded once.
And then —
"I'll find you," he said. "In the next one, or the next. I always do."
I woke with tears on my pillow.
But not the kind that burns.
These were soft. Steady. A strange, aching peace.
The dream didn't hurt.
It didn't feel like missing him.
It felt like remembering.
Like I had crossed through some quiet veil to find him again — not to bring him back, but to understand why I had to let him go.
And for the first time since he left,
I didn't feel abandoned.
I felt chosen. Even if only in another lifetime