LOGINFriday morning arrived much earlier than I would have liked.
My alarm went off at six, and for a few seconds I just lay there staring at the ceiling.
The events of the night before slowly came back to me.
Dinner with Mom and Dad.
The interrogation.
The shopping trip I had somehow been volunteered for.
And Saturday.
I rolled over and looked at the empty side of the bed.
Chris had already left for work.
Or at least I assumed he had.
Lately, our schedules had become so disconnected that some days we barely saw each other.
There had been a time when that would have bothered me.
Now it just felt normal.
And that realization made me sad.
Not angry.
Not bitter.
Just sad.
I got ready for work and headed out the door.
The entire drive, I kept hearing my father's voice.
"Are you happy?"
Such a simple question.
Yet I hadn't been able to answer it.
Not honestly.
Not without admitting things I wasn't ready to admit.
Work was busy, which was exactly what I needed.
For eight hours, I buried myself in reports, meetings, and client calls.
Anything to keep my mind from wandering.
Unfortunately, my coworkers had other plans.
Around lunchtime, Ron appeared in my office doorway.
The grin on his face immediately told me he was up to something.
"Oh no."
He laughed.
"What?"
"That look."
"What look?"
"The look you get when you're about to make my life difficult."
Ron sat down.
"So."
I pointed a pen at him.
"No."
"So?"
"No."
He smiled.
"Saturday."
I closed my eyes.
"I hate you."
"No, you don't."
"You're enjoying this entirely too much."
He leaned back in the chair.
"Maybe a little."
"A little?"
"Okay, a lot."
I shook my head.
"You're unbelievable."
"So are you."
I narrowed my eyes.
"What does that mean?"
Ron smiled.
"It means I've known you for years."
Uh-oh.
That was never a good start.
"And?"
"And I've watched you slowly disappear."
His words caught me off guard.
I wasn't expecting that.
The joking tone had vanished.
Now he sounded serious.
Very serious.
"What are you talking about?"
"You know exactly what I'm talking about."
I looked away.
Because I did.
"You used to laugh all the time."
I said nothing.
"You used to tell stories."
Silence.
"You used to light up when you walked into a room."
I stared at the paperwork on my desk.
"You don't anymore."
The room felt quiet.
Too quiet.
Finally, I sighed.
"People change."
Ron shook his head.
"No."
I looked at him.
"No?"
"People get tired."
That hit harder than I expected.
Because tired was exactly what I felt.
Not physically.
Emotionally.
Spiritually.
The kind of exhaustion that sleep doesn't fix.
Ron smiled softly.
"I'm not trying to push you toward Jack."
I laughed.
"Could have fooled me."
He laughed too.
"Okay, maybe I pushed a little."
"A little?"
"Fine. A lot."
We both laughed.
Then he grew serious again.
"I just want you to remember what it feels like to enjoy life."
I sat quietly.
Because hearing the same message from multiple people was becoming impossible to ignore.
My parents.
Ron.
Even my own thoughts.
Everyone seemed to be telling me the same thing.
Somewhere along the way, I had stopped living.
I had simply been surviving.
When Ron finally stood to leave, he stopped at the door.
"One more thing."
I groaned.
"What now?"
"Promise me something."
"No."
He laughed.
"You don't even know what it is."
"I already don't like it."
He pointed at me.
"Go into Saturday with an open mind."
I shook my head.
"That's your advice?"
"Yes."
"I thought it would be something profound."
"It is profound."
"It isn't."
He laughed.
"Just go."
And with that, he walked out.
Leaving me alone with my thoughts.
Which was dangerous.
Very dangerous.
Because the more I thought about Saturday, the more nervous I became.
Not because of Jack.
Not entirely.
I was nervous because I couldn't remember the last time I had done something for myself.
That felt selfish.
And after years of putting everyone else first, selfish felt uncomfortable.
The workday finally ended around five.
As I gathered my things, my phone rang.
I looked at the caller ID.
Mom.
Of course.
I answered immediately.
"Hello."
"Be ready at six."
I laughed.
"Good evening to you too."
"We don't have time for that."
"Apparently not."
"You need shoes."
"I have shoes."
"No."
"Yes."
"No."
I started laughing.
"I'm a grown woman."
"Then act like one and be ready at six."
Before I could respond, she hung up.
Just hung up.
I stared at the phone.
Then burst out laughing.
Some things never changed.
Sure enough, at six o'clock sharp, Mom pulled into my driveway.
Not six-oh-five.
Not six-ten.
Six o'clock.
Exactly.
I climbed into the passenger seat.
"You know this is insane, right?"
"No."
"It is."
"No."
"Mom."
She smiled.
"Trust me."
Those three words should have terrified me.
And honestly, they kind of did.
As we drove toward the mall, she glanced at me.
"You nervous?"
"No."
"Liar."
I laughed.
"I'm not nervous."
"Then why do you keep checking your phone?"
I looked down.
Sure enough, I had checked it three times in the last few minutes.
Without realizing it.
Mom smiled knowingly.
"Oh, sweetheart."
"What?"
"You like him."
I immediately started laughing.
"No."
"Yes."
"No."
"Yes."
"No."
She laughed.
"Then why are your cheeks turning red?"
I looked out the window.
Because annoyingly enough, she was right.
Not about liking him.
At least I didn't think so.
But I was curious.
And curiosity was dangerous.
Very dangerous.
Especially for someone whose life suddenly felt balanced on the edge of change.
I didn't know it yet, but somewhere between shopping with my mother and Saturday night's dinner, my entire future was about to shift.
And nothing would ever be the same again.
Mom hit the kitchen first.She came around the corner in leggings and a cashmere wrap thrown over whatever she’d worn on the plane, hair half-fallen from its clip, face pale and exhausted and already wet with tears.The second she saw me, she made a sound I never wanted to hear again.Not a scream.Not even a cry.Just that sharp, broken inhale mothers make when they’ve spent an entire flight imagining the worst.“Lela.”I barely got out of the chair before she was across the kitchen, arms around me so tightly I almost lost my balance. She smelled like perfume and airplane air and the peppermint gum she always chewed when she was nervous.“I’m okay,” I said immediately, because of course that was the first thing out of my mouth.Mom pulled back just enough to cup my face in both hands and look me over like she was checking for damage.“Don’t tell me you’r
I stared at Paul across the kitchen island and immediately knew there was no good answer to that question.Because the truth?The truth made me look stupid.Weak.Embarrassing.Like one of those women everyone swears they’d never be—the ones who keep too much to themselves, make excuses for too long, and wait until things are bad before admitting just how bad they’ve gotten.I looked down at the table instead of at him.“I don’t know.”Paul gave a short, humorless laugh.“You don’t know?”“No.”“Lela.”I sighed and rubbed both hands over my face.“I don’t know what you want me to say.”“The truth would be a good place to start.”Jack stayed quiet beside me, but I could feel him listening. Not in a nosy way. Just there. Present. Waiting to understand the pieces I hadn’t given him yet.I folded my arms over my chest and leaned back in the chair.“It didn’t happen all
Paul didn’t wait for anyone to answer him.The second he stepped away from the table with his phone to his ear, the entire kitchen seemed to change.The room got colder.Quieter.Like the text message had sucked all the air out of it.I stayed frozen in my chair, staring at nothing while Jack stood beside me with my phone still in his hand.**I know you’re home. We need to talk.**I could still see the words in my head.Over and over.I know you’re home.Not *Can we talk?*Not *Please call me.*Not *I miss you.*Just that.A statement.A warning.A way of letting me know he was still there, still pushing, still trying to get inside my life no matter how many times I shut the door.My hands were shaking again.Not as badly as before.Worse.Because the adrenaline from the break-in had nowhere to go now. It had settled into somet
For a second, nobody said anything.The silence was so complete I could hear the kitchen clock ticking over the refrigerator.Jack stayed perfectly still beside me.Not stiff.Not panicked.Just very, very still.I looked at Paul.“What do you mean he was asking about Jack?”Paul leaned back in the chair, exhaustion and irritation written all over his face.“I mean exactly what I said. Chris has been asking around about the guy you’ve been seeing.”My stomach dropped.“How does he even know I’m seeing someone?”Paul gave me a flat look.“Lela.”I stared back at him.“No. Seriously. How?”He folded his arms across his chest.“You think you’ve been hiding this?”I blinked.“Yes?”Jack actually laughed under his breath.I turned to glare at
I cried harder than I meant to.Not dramatic sobbing.Not the kind where you collapse onto the floor and can’t breathe.Just that awful, quiet kind of crying where the tears won’t stop and your chest hurts and you’re trying so hard to pull yourself together that it almost makes it worse.Jack didn’t say much.Thank God.He just held me.One arm around my shoulders, the other resting at the back of my head, keeping me tucked against his chest while I stood there in the middle of my parents’ kitchen crying in an oversized t-shirt and pajama shorts at three in the morning.Belle stayed pressed against my legs like she was personally offended that I was upset.After a minute, Jack guided me toward one of the kitchen chairs and sat me down.Then he disappeared for all of thirty seconds and came back with a wet paper towel and the box of tissues from the powder room.I laughed through my tears the second I saw the paper towel.He looked at me carefully.“What?”“That is the most dad thing I
For a second, nobody moved.Nobody spoke.The name just hung there in the middle of the foyer like smoke.Dugan.Uncle Carmen’s right-hand man.Not some random drunk.Not a burglar looking for jewelry.Not a kid trying door handles in the neighborhood.Dugan.I stared at Paul, waiting for him to laugh and say he was kidding.He didn’t.My mouth went dry.“What do you mean it’s Dugan?” I asked, even though I had heard him perfectly the first time.Paul’s jaw tightened.“I mean it’s Dugan.”“No,” I said, shaking my head. “Why would Dugan be here?”“That,” Paul said flatly, “is exactly what I’d like to know.”Belle was still pacing in circles around my legs, whining now instead of barking, like even she could feel the tension in the room. I bent down automatically and ran my hand over her head just to give myself something to do besides panic.Jack’s hand stayed at the small of my back.Quiet.Steady.Grounding.I looked up at my brother again.“Did he say anything?”Paul laughed once, b
The closer we got to my parents' house, the quieter I became.Not because anything was wrong.Quite the opposite.I was happy.Genuinely happy.And after everything that had happened over the previous week, that feeling almost seemed foreign.Jack pulled into the driveway and put the car in park.T
I carefully set the tray of drinks down on the table.The second I did, Diane looked up."Did you put it on my tab?"I smiled."Of course not."Her eyes narrowed."What do you mean, of course not?""I paid for it."The entire table went quiet.Wayne immediately laughed.Diane looked horrified."Lel
The karaoke bar was exactly what I expected.Loud.Crowded.Chaotic.And somehow, completely entertaining.Jack's mother, Diane, immediately adopted me.Within ten minutes she had introduced me to half the bar, explained who could and couldn't sing, and informed me which karaoke performances were l
Dinner at Houlihan's was exactly what both of us needed.Simple.Relaxed.Comfortable.The potato skins lived up to Jack's expectations.The potato soup apparently changed his life.At least according to him.I laughed so hard at his dramatic review that people at the next table started looking ove







