A Stuart Broad back of a length delivery took the edge off a flinging bat of Mohammad Abbas and captain Joe Root at second slip, gobbled up a regulation catch. That was it, the second Test match ended with England resgitering a resounding innings and 55 run victory over Pakistan at Headingley.
The reserved celebration by the English players bears special significance. No fist pumps, no screams, no running away with stumps, nothing to suggest a victory completed inside three days that saw England level the two-match series at 1-1 after Pakistan won the first Test at Lord's by nine wickets.
It was also England's first victory in a Test match since they beat the West Indies at Lord's in September, with the side having endured a winless run of six defeats in eight Tests coming into this fixture.
By sharing the spoils in this short campaign, England avoided a third successive series defeat after reverses in Australia and New Zealand.
Jos Buttler's blistering 80 not out today saw England to a total of 363 and commanding first-innings lead of 189.
Pakistan then collapsed to 134, losing their last seven wickets for just 50 runs. Stuart Broad took three for 28 and off-spinner Dominic Bess grabbed his first wickets at Test level in a return of three for 33.
The match ended when England captain Joe Root, on his Yorkshire home ground, held a sharp slip catch to dismiss last man Mohammad Abbas off the bowling of Broad.
England resumed on 302 for seven, a lead of 128 runs, with Buttler 44 not out and Sam Curran, unbeaten on 16.
Curran, however, was out for 20 on his 20th birthday when he was well caught low down at second slip by Shafiq off Mohammad Abbas.
At this stage, no batsman in the innings had scored a fifty, although Dominic Bess had made a commendable 49 in his role as nightwatchman.
Buttler, dropped on just four on Saturday when Hasan Ali failed to hold a straightforward chance at midwicket, soon altered that statistic.
He went to fifty in style with two boundaries in as many balls off paceman Mohammad Abbas -- an extra-cover driven four followed by a hooked six into the site where the Football Stand is being rebuilt.
Buttler was missed in the deep by Salahuddin on 66, the ball going for four.
The very next ball saw Buttler drive medium-pacer Faheem Ashraf for six over long-on.
But with Buttler five runs short of equalling his Test-best 85, made on debut against India at Southampton in 2014, No 11 Anderson was caught in the slips off Hasan Ali.
Buttler faced 101 balls, including 11 fours and two sixes.
Azhar Ali struck the first ball of Pakistan's second innings, from Anderson, through extra-cover for four.
But Anderson, England's all-time leading Test wicket-taker, bowled Azhar for 11 when the batsman played round a full and straight delivery that knocked over his middle stump.
And Pakistan were 30 for two when Haris Sohail (eight) saw a hard-hit drive off Anderson brilliantly caught one-handed by a diving Bess at extra-cover.
Any hope Asad Shafiq, one of Pakistan's more experienced batsman, might steady the innings ended when he was given out on review for five after a thin glove down the legside off Stuart Broad was caught down the legside by wicket-keeper Jonny Bairstow.