LOGINThe next morning came too early. The city was already awake before I was, and the noise outside my window felt heavier than usual. I dragged myself out of bed, eyes half open, and went straight to the kitchen for coffee.
One sip. Bitter. Just how I needed it.
The fitting was scheduled at eleven, but Martha’s message from last night still echoed in my head. “Add more sessions before Saturday.” Like it was that easy. Like I could just walk back into that clinic and pretend nothing happened.
I looked at my reflection on the kitchen window, my hair tied loosely, dark circles visible under my eyes. She was right. I did look tired. Maybe that was reason enough.
Before I could change my mind, I grabbed my phone and searched her clinic’s number.
“Flawless Aesthetics, good morning,” the receptionist greeted.
“Hi, this is Ena Garden. I’d like to schedule a session with Dr. Williams today, if she’s available.”
There was a pause on the other line, followed by a polite tone. “Let me check, ma’am. Please hold for a moment.”
I held my breath. I didn’t even know what I wanted to hear. That she was fully booked? Or that she was waiting for me?
When the receptionist came back, her voice was lighter. “Dr. Williams has an opening at three this afternoon. Would you like to confirm it?”
“Yes,” I said before I could think twice.
After the call, I set my phone down and stared at it for a long time. What was I doing? I told myself it was just for maintenance. Skin care. Professional. Normal. But deep down, I knew I was going because I wanted to see her.
The thought annoyed me.
I finished my coffee, grabbed my keys, and forced myself to get ready for the fitting first. Modeling required you to look perfect even when you felt like breaking inside. You smile, you pose, you survive.
By the time I reached the studio, the usual chaos greeted me. Lights, stylists, racks of clothes, and the smell of hairspray thick in the air. Martha waved from across the room, her phone glued to her ear.
“You’re early for once,” she said with a teasing grin when she hung up.
“Traffic was on my side today,” I replied, keeping my tone casual.
She eyed me for a moment, as if studying something she couldn’t quite name. “You look… different.”
“Do I?”
“Yeah. Not sure if it’s good or bad yet,” she said, half-laughing.
I smiled faintly and walked toward the makeup chair. “Let’s hope it photographs well.”
But as the artist started working on my face, I caught my reflection again. Beneath the foundation and lipstick, my thoughts drifted back to her.
Three o’clock.
I shouldn’t be counting the hours. Yet somehow, I was. But shit, why? I think I'm out of my mind already?
"Miss Ena, why do you look so pissed?" my make up artist, asked.
I pushed myself to smile and laughed a bit, "Just remember something." I said trying to play it off.
"Oh, is that a boyfriend?" she teased.
"I wished!" I answered right away.
She laughed and continued doing my make up. I thought she's done asking questions but she's not.
"If not a boyfriend, then what? You looked pissed but you're blushing so I thought you already got a boyfriend. What's that, a fling?" she asked, really intrigued.
I laughed again, forcing it this time. “You’re watching too many dramas,” I said, hoping she’d drop it.
But she didn’t. “Come on, Miss Ena, just tell me. Who made you blush like that?”
I looked at her through the mirror, my lips slightly curved. “If I tell you, you wouldn’t believe it.”
“Try me.”
I shook my head, amused at how persistent she was. “It’s not what you think. It’s nothing, really.”
She smiled knowingly, her brush gliding across my cheek. “That’s what they all say before it becomes something.”
Her words lingered longer than they should.
When she finished, I thanked her and stood up, fixing my hair in front of the mirror. My face looked flawless again, but my thoughts were anything but.
We proceed to shooting some photos for the upcoming event. After that, I tried on multiple dresses and gowns for it as well.
Martha called out from across the room. “You’re free to go, Ena. Rest before Saturday, okay?”
“Got it,” I replied, picking up my bag.
Outside, the afternoon heat slapped against my skin. I slipped my sunglasses on and walked toward my car, trying to ignore the way my heart picked up speed the closer it got to three o’clock.
It was just an appointment, I told myself. Just another treatment. I sighed and made up my mind. I shouldn't be this bothered. Knowing how she acted after she kissed me last time, I should chill like her. She's the one who initiated it so why would I be scared?
Right. I did nothing wrong. If there's someone unprofessional between us, that's her.
I decided to stop by a coffee shop to get myself some drink before going to the clinic. I was greeted by the secretary when I entered the clinic.
"Good afternoon, Miss Ena. Doctora is already waiting for you," she said.
"Thanks," I said simply.
The faint scent of antiseptic and lavender filled the air as I stepped inside. Everything was white, clean, and calm... too calm, like the silence before a storm.
I signed the logbook and followed the familiar hallway. My heels clicked softly against the marble floor, each step heavier than the last.
I don’t know what I expected to feel. Guilt? Nerves? Maybe a little of both. But the truth was simpler. I just wanted to see her again... to see how she'll act after that.
When I reached her office door, I stopped. My hand hovered above the knob as my heart started to beat faster, like my body already knew something my mind refused to admit.
Then I heard her voice from inside; calm, low, and unmistakable.
“Come in.”
I froze for a second before pushing the door open.
She was there, standing by her desk, flipping through a file. Her white coat made her look colder than I remembered, but her eyes... they still had that same quiet intensity that made it hard to look away.
“Miss Garden,” she greeted, her tone neutral, professional. “It’s been a while.”
I forced a polite smile. “Yeah. Been busy.”
She closed the folder and met my eyes. “Let’s get started then.”
Her voice was steady, but something in her stare felt like a challenge.
And as I followed her toward the treatment chair, I couldn’t help but wonder— was I the only one really bothered by that kiss?
I closed my eyes and felt everything slowly shattering on me. This love... I thought would thrive no matter how hard things can get but seeing Aria being kissed by someone else, I don't know. I just know that I can't look at her anymore. Her explanation isn't needed anymore. And I regret choosing to stay with her. My tears continued to flaw as memories of us flash back in my mind. I wonder if any of that was true? If she ever loved me? Or if all this time, she was just proving something to me? Maybe she doesn't really love me. Maybe she just wanted to show me that she can control me. Foolish me. I believed every lie she uttered. - "Ena... please, you need to rest." I shook my head and wiped the tears on my face. "I can't rest until I leave. I want to leave, Xavier." My voice sounded too firm than it should. My brother looked at me confused. I closed my eyes firmly and took a deep breath before looking at him again, calmer. "Can you still find a way to contact
The door slammed behind me, but I didn’t hear it. Or maybe I did—and my mind just refused to register it. Everything felt… muted. Like the world had been wrapped in something thick and suffocating, dulling every sound except the one thing that wouldn’t stop echoing inside my head. That image. Him. Her. I walked blindly. I didn’t even remember grabbing my keys. I didn’t remember stepping outside. The only thing I was aware of was the way my chest felt like it was being torn open, breath by breath. I couldn’t think. I couldn’t process. I couldn’t even cry properly. It was like my body didn’t know how to react to that kind of pain. My phone buzzed in my hand. Xavier. I stared at the screen for a second before answering. “Hello?” My voice came out uneven, barely there. “Ena? Where are you?” His tone shifted immediately. “You don’t sound okay.” I laughed weakly, but it broke halfway through. “I’m… driving.” There was a pause. “Driving where?” “I don’t know,” I admitted.
I cried myself to sleep. And when I woke up the next day, everything seems gloomy. I get up and hurried to where Aria has been sleeping for the past months, the guest room. I opened the door aggressively but she wasn't there. It was just her lauggae piling up near her bed. She really is going. The realization didn’t hit all at once. It crept in slowly, settling deep in my chest until it became something I couldn’t ignore. I stepped inside the room. The bed was neatly made. Too neat. No sign that she slept there last night, even though I knew she did. The air still carried her scent, faint but familiar, and it made my chest ache even more. Her luggage sat by the corner, zipped, ready. Prepared like she had been planning this longer than I thought. I walked toward it slowly, my fingers brushing against the handle. Cold. Still. Final. “So this is it,” I whispered to myself. No answer. Of course, there wouldn’t be. I stood there for a while, staring at the room t
Later, alone in the living room, I sat in the dim light and finally understood the depth of her fear.She didn’t doubt my love. She doubted permanence. She believed ambition and devotion could coexist—But not without consequence.And she was trying to absorb that consequence before it could hurt me. The problem was—It was already hurting me.I had stayed because she was my choice. But now I had to convince her that I wasn’t trapped. That I wasn’t diminished. That loving her didn’t feel like loss. Because if she kept stepping back, If she kept convincing herself she was temporary, then the only thing that would disappear— was us.And I wasn't wrong. A month had passed and Aria barely talks to me anymore. The last conversation that we had was about her decision to pursue her research abroad and postponing her clinic opening.It hurt me— not because I choose to stay but because she doesn't trust that I could still bloom here. With her.She planned so much about her career and she wanted
Tears didn’t fall—but they gathered.“I don’t want to be the reason you stop growing,” she whispered.“You’re the reason I know what matters,” I said.Her lips trembled slightly.“And what if one day that changes?”I didn’t have an answer.Because love didn’t erase ambition.And ambition didn’t erase love.We stood there, caught between devotion and fear.I had stayed.But staying hadn’t solved anything.It had only shifted the battlefield.And now, instead of fighting my mother—I was fighting the woman I refused to lose.Not because she didn’t love me.But because she loved me enough to step back.And I didn’t know how to convince her that she was not my limitation.She was my choice.And yet she stood in front of me like she was preparing to become my sacrifice.The space between us felt fragile, like glass that hadn’t shattered yet but would if either of us breathed too hard.“Aria,” I said more softly this time, “why are you deciding what I’ll regret?”“I’m not deciding,” she rep
I made my final decision the morning before the deadline. It wasn’t dramatic. No tears, no shaking hands hovering over the keyboard. Just clarity. I drafted the email slowly, reading every line twice before sending it. I thanked them for the offer. I acknowledged the prestige. I expressed sincere appreciation. And then I declined. Not because I was afraid. Not because I was pressured. But because every time I imagined boarding that plane, I saw Aria standing at a distance I could not measure. I could let an opportunity go. But I could not let her go. When I hit send, I expected panic. Instead, I felt still. Certain. I walked out of my office earlier than usual that day, the city moving around me in its usual rhythm. Cars, conversations, people rushing toward their own ambitions. For once, I didn’t feel like I was racing anyone. I was choosing. And I chose her. Aria was in the living room when I got home. She was sitting on the floor, back against the couch, fil
The restaurant smelled like polished wood and restraint. Everything about the place felt deliberate—the muted lighting, the neatly spaced tables, the low hum of conversations that never rose above polite murmurs. It was the kind of place my mother favored. Somewhere appearances mattered more than
The calm didn’t disappear. It stretched.It thinned in places, tugged gently by responsibility and expectation, but it stayed. That was what surprised me most. Even when things became heavier, the peace Aria and I had built didn’t collapse—it adapted.That morning, I woke up before my alarm.The ho
Mornings with Aria were different.Not dramatic. Not rushed. Just… steady.I woke up before her that day, the light barely slipping through the curtains, the house still wrapped in quiet. She was on her side, facing away from me, one arm tucked beneath the pillow, breathing slow and even. Her hair
People kept looking.Not staring aggressively—just curious glances. Whispered conversations. Subtle phone movements. The kind of attention that comes when your face becomes familiar to strangers.I noticed it.Aria didn’t.Or maybe she did and just didn’t care.Her hand stayed wrapped around mine l







