“Sokolova? Marina Sokolova?! You really showed up?” Igor Valentinov stretched his lips into a smile, but his eyes stayed cold. “Guys, look who it is!”
Marina paused at the restaurant entrance. Fifteen years had passed, but his mocking tone hadn’t changed. She took a deep breath and stepped inside with quiet confidence.
“Hi, Igor. Hello, everyone,” she said, her voice steady despite her racing heart.
The restaurant was softly lit, cozy with warm lamps overhead. Nearly the entire class had gathered at a long table—around fifteen people. Familiar faces, dulled slightly by time, like old photos.
“Marinochka!” cried Anna Svetlova—the only friend from back then—as she rushed to hug her. “I’m so glad you came!”
“I couldn’t miss this,” Marina replied, managing a smile as the tension eased.
“Come on, sit with us,” Anna urged. “We were just reminiscing about Petrovich’s exams.”
Marina took a seat, feeling the curious stares. Next to Igor sat Olga Beresneva—once the beauty of their class, now perfectly groomed, though her eyes looked tired.
“Marina, you haven’t changed at all,” Olga said politely. “Still the same… reserved.”
“You look great too, Olya.”
“What do you do now?” asked Sergey Volkov, pouring wine. “Still trying to change the world?”
That tone—condescending, familiar. The same one they used when mocking her eco-business ideas in school.
“Something like that,” Marina said, accepting the glass. “I run a small company.”
“I bet,” Igor leaned in. “Still on those ‘green’ ideas? Remember the biodegradable bags?” He laughed, and a few others joined in.
“Yes, that’s exactly what we do,” she replied, unfazed.
“So… is saving the planet profitable?” Igor grinned.
“Sometimes yes, sometimes no,” Marina answered calmly.
“Well, not everyone can be successful,” he shrugged. “I manage a department at TechnoProgress. Dima launched his own firm…”
“Didn’t Marina mess up her thesis defense?” Svetlana Krymova interjected. “Got lost in the calculations?”
“That’s not quite true,” Marina corrected gently. “I got a B.”
“For a top student, that’s a failure,” Igor smirked. “Especially after all your talk about innovation.”
The silence that followed was heavy. Marina felt her cheeks flush—just like they used to.
“I remember Marina solved that finance case even the professor got stuck on,” came a quiet voice from the end of the table. Nikolai Lebedev.
She looked at him, surprised. He was always quiet—she didn’t think anyone remembered.
“That’s true,” she said softly, offering him a smile.
“Alright, enough nostalgia,” Igor raised his glass. “To the reunion! Fifteen years—gone in a blink!”
Glasses clinked, and conversation shifted to safer topics: work, kids, old campus stories. Marina tried to relax, but she still felt like the odd one out. Just like before.
“Are you married, Marina?” Olga asked once the conversation drifted to football.
“No, not yet.”
“Any kids?”
“No. Work keeps me busy.”
“Poor thing,” Olga said with a sigh. “I already have three. Igor works a lot, of course, but we manage.”
Marina nodded, unsure how to respond. To most of them, she probably seemed like a failure—no family, no kids, just a job.
“I’m going out for some air,” she said, standing up.
Outside on the terrace, the cool air was refreshing. Marina took a long breath. Why had she come? To feel like that insecure student all over again?
“Mind if I join?” Nikolai appeared with two cups of coffee. “Thought you might want to warm up.”
“Thanks,” she said, accepting one. “It got a bit… stuffy inside.”
“Not just the heat,” he smiled. “Igor’s still the same—loud and smug.”
“Some things never change,” Marina shrugged.
“Others do,” Nikolai looked at her. “You’ve changed. Stronger. More grounded.”
“Really?” She raised an eyebrow, surprised.
“Yes. Not just your appearance. In every way.”
“And you’re more observant than I remember,” she smiled. “Honestly, I barely remember you.”
“No surprise. I made a point of being invisible. Especially around Igor and his crew.”
“Everyone was a little afraid of him.”
“Except you,” he said quietly. “You stood by your ideas, even when everyone laughed.”
Before she could answer, Anna burst out onto the terrace, phone in hand.
“Marina! Why didn’t you say anything?!” she held out her phone. “It’s *you*!”
On the screen was a business magazine. The cover photo showed Marina in a sharp suit, the headline bold:
**“Green Billion: How Marina Sokolova Turned an Eco Idea into a \$50 Million Company.”**
“That came out recently,” Marina said, a little embarrassed. “I didn’t want to make a big deal.”
“Didn’t want to make it public?!” Anna grabbed her arm. “Come inside—now!”
The room buzzed as the phone made its way around. Faces changed—from polite curiosity to stunned silence.
“Is this real?” Igor finally asked. “Fifty million?”
“That’s the company’s estimated value,” Marina replied evenly. “Not my personal account.”
“But… you *own* it?” he asked again.
“I’m the majority shareholder.”
Silence.
Olga stared between Marina and Igor, struggling to process. Someone gave a low whistle.
“So… all that time we laughed at your ‘green’ projects…” Igor muttered.
“I was just following my path,” Marina said. “Like all of you.”
“Fifty million, though!” Svetlana gasped. “That’s massive!”
“It took twelve years of work,” Marina said simply. “And a lot of mistakes they don’t write about.”
The mood shifted. Suddenly, everyone wanted to talk to her, hear her story, remind her they “always believed in her.” She responded kindly—but with reserve. Their sudden admiration felt hollow.
Later, when most people had left, Igor sat beside her, brandy in hand.
“You know, I always said you’d go far,” he said with that same insincere smile.
“Interesting,” Marina replied. “I remember you saying I’d fail.”
“Oh come on, that was just teasing,” he waved it off. “Anyway—maybe we can work together? I’ve got some good contacts at TechnoProgress…”
“Sorry, Igor,” she stood. “Early morning tomorrow.”
Outside, she ran into Olga at the entrance, smoking alone.
“I didn’t know,” Olga said quietly. “That you’d become so successful.”
“It’s just work, Olya.”
“No. It’s more than that,” Olga looked at her. “I dropped out for Igor, thinking I’d be by the side of someone important. And now…”
“You have three kids,” Marina said gently. “That’s something.”
“Yes, but…” Olga hesitated. “Never mind. I’m happy for you. Truly.”
Marina nodded and walked toward the taxi stand. Soon Nikolai joined her.
“May I walk with you?”
“Of course.”
They strolled down the quiet street. Nikolai told her about life in St. Petersburg, his job as a financial analyst, his divorce. Marina listened, realizing how quietly kind he had always been.
“You know,” he said, “I still have your course paper on ecological management. The one they all mocked.”
“What? Why?”
“It was brilliant. I always thought you were special,” he smiled. “I just never had the nerve to say it.”
“And I was too unsure of myself to notice who supported me,” she replied, lightly touching his hand. “Thank you for telling me.”
At the hotel, they exchanged numbers and agreed to meet for breakfast.
The next morning, Marina entered the hotel restaurant. A few classmates were already there—including Igor and Olga. On the coffee table sat the magazine with her on the cover.
“Good morning,” she said, taking a seat beside Nikolai.
“Sleep well?” he asked.
“Hardly,” she smiled. “Too much to think about.”
“Good thoughts or bad?”
“Both. But I’m glad I came last night. It closed an old chapter.”
“And maybe opened a new one?” he asked.
“Maybe,” she said, smiling wider. “Time will tell.”
Out of the corner of her eye, she saw Igor pointing at her magazine cover for someone at the next table. But it no longer mattered.
Because Marina finally understood:
**True success isn’t proving yourself to others.
It’s living your truth—and finding those who truly see you.
Even if it takes fifteen years.**