The name “Butter” surfaces in my mind like a forgotten melody, a ghost note from a song I haven’t played in a decade. It’s always triggered by the most mundane things: the sight of two girls sharing headphones on the subway, the particular scent of rain on hot pavement in July, or, as now, the simple, wholesome smell of popcorn wafting from a street vendor’s cart.
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My name is Popcorn. Or at least, it was, to her.
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We were twelve when we christened each other. It was the height of our obsession with piano duets, with four hands flying across a single keyboard in what felt like a singular, magnificent act of mind-reading. “We’re like popcorn and butter,” she’d declared, her face serious beneath a fringe of dark hair. “Separate, we’re okay. But together? We’re the whole thing. We’re the point.” The logic was irrefutable to our pre-teen selves. She, with her rich, smooth laugh and her ability to make any moment feel golden and warm, was Butter. I, with my tendency to get excited and bounce from idea to idea, was Popcorn. The names stuck long after we’d outgrown the other childish things.
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Our bond was a fortress. We built it note by note on the worn ivory keys of her grandmother’s upright piano. We spent our teenage years tangled together on a piano bench, our hips and shoulders pressed close, our breath syncing as we navigated the complex geography of Mozart’s Sonata for Four Hands or the playful rhythms of a simplified Brahms waltz. The music was a language that existed only between us, a conversation without words where a flick of my wrist against hers meant slow down, and a slight pressure from her knee against mine meant crescendo now.
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We knew everything. I knew the secret panic that fluttered in her chest before a math test, the name of the boy she’d meticulously printed inside all her notebooks, her dream of studying music in Vienna. She knew the shame I felt when my parents argued, the exact configuration of freckles on my back that I thought looked like the Little Dipper, my quiet fear that I was fundamentally uninteresting. Our dreams and secrets were not exchanged; they were pooled, a common resource in the country of us.
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I believed it was unbreakable. I thought we were a permanent duet, destined to play the score of our lives together, moving from a shared piano bench to shared apartments, shared futures. I could not conceive of a silence that would ever grow between us. Our world was too full of sound.
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The end, when it came, was not a dramatic explosion. It was a tiny, silent crack, so small I didn’t even hear it form.
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It was the summer after high school graduation. The air was thick with the impending vertigo of adulthood. She was preparing for her music program in a city two states away; I was staying local for a degree in literature, my passion for the piano having settled into a deep, abiding love rather than a career path. We were already living in the shadow of our coming separation, a little more fragile, a little more prone to misstep.
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The argument was over text message, a medium too cold and clumsy for the warm, complex history of us. I can’t, for the life of me, remember what sparked it. It took seeing a TikTok video years later, a video of two girls playing a flawless piano duet, for the memory to even resurface, and even then it was hazy. Was it about a boy? A thoughtless comment? A misread tone? It doesn’t matter. It was nothing. It was everything.
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The texts were short, clipped sentences devoid of our usual emojis and affection. A misunderstanding bloomed into a defensive posture, then into a sharp, surprising hurt. I remember my thumb hovering over the send button on a message that was a little too proud, a little too cold. I sent it. Her reply was immediate and final: a period where a heart should have been.
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And then, nothing.
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The silence began the next day. I waited for my phone to light up with her name, with a silly meme, with a “so that was stupid, right?” It stayed dark. My pride, a new and unfamiliar muscle, flexed. I’m not apologizing again. She knows she overreacted. The day stretched into a week. The silence became a presence, a third entity in my life. It was heavy and awkward. I’d pick up my phone to call her a dozen times a day, only to put it down again. Surely, this would break soon. This was Butter. This was Popcorn and Butter.
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A month passed. The silence was no longer an event; it was a condition. It was the new normal. The pathways in my brain that automatically reached for her began to atrophy from disuse. I went to college, met new people, learned new things. I’d see something she’d love—a vintage poster for a Chopin concert, a particularly ridiculous cat—and my hand would literally twitch to take a picture and send it to her. The impulse would hit, and then the reality would follow like a wave of nausea: I couldn’t. The bridge was out.
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I’d constructed a narrative: it was a mutual drifting. Life got in the way. It happens. It was a natural, if painful, part of growing up. I packaged the memory of her neatly and put it away on a high shelf, only taking it down on rare, quiet nights when a specific piece of music would come on the radio and the ghost of her shoulder against mine would be almost palpable.
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But daytimes are a routine. They are busy. They are efficient. They are expertly designed to drain away the energy required for such nostalgic hauntings. My days are a cycle of emails, deadlines, grocery runs, and subway commutes. They are full of people and empty of her. In the daylight, it is easy to believe I have moved on. The past is another country, and I no longer hold its citizenship.
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The TikTok video appeared on my lunch break. I was scrolling mindlessly, eating a sad desk salad. A girl, maybe nineteen, with fierce eyes and flying fingers, was playing the left-hand part of the Sonata for Four Hands. The camera panned to her right, where another girl, laughing, seamlessly joined in with the right. Their hands danced, intertwined, perfectly synchronized. They were us. They were exactly us.
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And the feeling that slammed into me was not a gentle, wistful nostalgia. It was a sucker punch to the soul. It was a grief so fresh and so violent that it stole the air from my lungs. Ten years vanished in an instant. I was eighteen again, on that piano bench, my entire world contained in the space of eighty-eight keys and the girl sitting beside me.
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The realization was absolute and horrifying: I had never gotten over it. This wasn’t a natural drift. This was a break-up. The most significant break-up of my life, and I had never allowed myself to mourn it. I had simply sealed the wound shut with busyness and time, and now, a decade later, it was festering beneath the scar, as raw and painful as the day it was made.
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The memory of our fight, the one I’d buried, suddenly clicked into place. I recalled my own petulance, my own stubborn pride. I saw her texts not as coldness, but as hurt. I had been an active participant in the demolition of our fortress. I had chosen my ego over her. And she, perhaps feeling the same, had let me.
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As if it were a fixed destiny, how could one choose? The thought arrives not in words, but as a pure, aching emotion. Was it fate that we would fracture? Or did we, in a thousand small, cowardly ways, choose it every day we didn’t pick up the phone? The more I hope that it was destiny—some unavoidable force—the more fruitless it feels, because the terrifying truth is that it was probably us. We did this. And that knowledge is a wearying weight to bear.
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Time and space intersect, each life suffers. She is out there somewhere, living a life entirely separate from mine. Has she become a musician? Does she have a partner? Children? Does she ever smell popcorn and think of me? The vast, unknowable landscape of her existence is a specific kind of agony. Our lives, once so beautifully intertwined, now run on parallel tracks, forever close but never again touching.
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I remain in that innocent dream. In my mind, we are forever on that piano bench, forever seventeen, forever playing the same song. The memory is a perfect, snow-globe world I can visit but never inhabit. Adulthood is the reality of the quiet apartment, the silent phone, the desk salad.
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I leave work early, claiming a headache, which is not entirely a lie. The emotional ache is now a physical throb behind my eyes. I walk without direction, through streets that feel both familiar and alien. The evening breeze picks up, a cool wash after the day’s heat. I used to believe that a wind like this could carry a message, that if I just listened hard enough, I could hear her in it. I used to search for a feeling in the evening air that could replace the comfort of her embrace, the solid, sure reality of her presence beside me.
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Searching for the evening breeze that would replace our embrace, I always find nothing. The breeze is just a breeze. It carries the scent of exhaust and street food, not answers. It offers coolness, not absolution.
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I find myself standing outside a old music shop. On impulse, I push the door open, a little bell jingling overhead. The air inside smells of lemon polish and aged wood, a smell that is a time machine. And there, in the corner, is an upright piano, almost identical to her grandmother’s.
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My heart hammers against my ribs. I look around; the shop is empty but for an elderly man reading a newspaper behind the counter. He barely glances up.
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I walk over to the piano. It feels like approaching a holy relic. I lift the fallboard. The keys are yellowed with age, but they are clean. Without thinking, without breathing, I sit on the stool. It’s the wrong height. It squeaks.
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I place my hands on the keys. The muscle memory is shocking. It’s all still there, locked in my fingers. I don’t play the right-hand part. I play the left. The supporting role. The foundation. The part that waits for its other half to come in and complete it.
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The notes echo in the quiet shop, rich and lonely. I play our part of the sonata, the part that yearns for its answer. The left hand sets the stage, creates the harmony, asks the question. It’s beautiful, but it is incomplete. It is a body without a heart. It is popcorn without butter.
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I play until my hands ache, until the light outside the shop window turns to gold. I play for the sixteen-year-old girls we used to be, for the silence that followed, for the ten years of nothing. I play for the friendship that was, and for the friendship that wasn’t, for the choices we didn’t make and the words we never said.
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I finish the phrase and let the last note hang in the dusty air, a question mark without an answer. The silence that follows is different now. It is no longer an emptiness. It is a space I have finally, after a decade, begun to fill with the truth. It is the sound of mourning. It is the first note of a new song, one I have to learn to play alone.
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