Result 1 is a LinkedIn. Smiling, cropped, corporate. Result 2 is a wedding announcement from 2019—wrong state, wrong spouse. By Result 7, he’s already skipping. By Result 10, he’s already lying to himself that he’s just curious.
He doesn’t want 82. He wants the one that proves she still thinks about him. The one that turns up zero results. The one that says: “Did you mean: the life you walked away from?”
10 of 82.
It’s too many to be nothing, and too few to be everything. The perfect, lonely arithmetic of a man googling an ex’s maiden name at 1:47 AM.
The grey line disappears.
He closes the tab.
But the “Xx” haunts him. That little kiss before the number. A relic from the era of dial-up and AOL chatrooms, when search engines were polite enough to flirt before handing you the wreckage. Xx Search Results 1 - 10 of 82
And tomorrow night, when insomnia calls, he’ll start again at 1.
But somewhere in the server logs, a timestamp records his longing. Result 11 waits, unseen, forever. Result 1 is a LinkedIn
That line hasn’t changed in twenty years. Same grey font. Same mechanical colon. Same quiet promise that the answer is in there, somewhere, buried in the other 72 results you’ll never click.
He stares at the number: .