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I'd been in love with Caleb Park for four years.
Four years of sitting in hockey stands screaming his name. Four years of making him playlists, remembering his allergies, dropping everything when he called. Four years of being the girl who was always there – steady, reliable, waiting for him to turn around and finally see me.
The scrapbook took me three weeks. Hand-trimmed photos. Captions in my best handwriting. Ticket stubs from his first collegiate goal. A pressed carnation from the gas station bouquet he bought me for my birthday. Every inside joke, every memory, every moment I thought meant something – bound together and organized chronologically because that's what I did. I turned my feelings into something pretty and hoped it would be enough to make someone want them.
The love letter was in the back sleeve. Two pages. Nine drafts. Sienna – my roommate – had approved it with a nod: "If he doesn't kiss you after this, I'll kiss you myself."
Zara had read it over FaceTime with her jaw tight. "Don't give him this."
"Why?"
"Because Caleb Park has been eating your devotion like a free buffet for four years and the only tip he's ever left is you're like a sister to me. Don't hand him your heart on paper so he can set it next to his protein shake."
I didn't listen to Zara. I never listened to Zara about Caleb.
But that was about to change.
The Valentine's party was at the hockey house as usual. I'd gone every year since freshman year – always beside Caleb, always in jeans and his spare hoodie, always pretending the ache in my chest was just nerves.
This year I wore a dress. Black. Short. Sienna flat-ironed my hair. I put on red lipstick – the shade Caleb once said was "a bit much" on another girl, which I'd filed away the way I filed away everything he said, sorting his opinions into a map of who I should be.
I walked in at 9:17 PM.
Found him in three seconds. I always found him in three seconds or less.
He was leaning against the kitchen island, red cup in hand.
His other arm was around Jade – my cousin. Head cheerleader. Blonde, long-legged, laughing at something he'd said with her hand flat on his chest. His hand was on her hip. Thumb hooked in her waistband like it belonged there.
The room didn't stop. The music didn't cut. Nobody gasped. There was just me, holding a gift bag full of four years of devotion, staring at the boy I loved with his hand on my cousin's body.
I should have turned around. But I was loyal. I was committed. I'd spent three weeks on that scrapbook and four years on this boy, and I was going to see it through.
Loyalty. That's the word I used. The real word was something sadder.
I walked up to them.
"Hey."
"Nomes! You came." He glanced at Jade. "You know Jade, right?"
He was asking if I knew the girl I grew up with and introduced him to.
"Hey, Jade."
Jade smiled. Glossy and precise. "Love the dress. That's so brave for you."
I ignored her and held out the gift bag. "Happy Valentine's Day."
He pulled out the scrapbook and flipped it open.
I watched his face – watched three of his teammates lean in, watched the dawning realization that this wasn't a card. It was a confession.
He laughed. Short. Tight. Just air escaping.
"Naomi, this is... wow. This is a lot."
A lot. Not beautiful. Not thoughtful. A lot. Like I'd handed him a suitcase and asked him to carry it.
Jade leaned over his shoulder. Flipped to the page with the pressed flower. Raised one eyebrow.
"That's, like... middle school sweet."
Teammates snorted. Caleb's mouth twitched – not quite a smile, but not even close to a defense. He closed the scrapbook. Set it on the counter next to a half-empty bottle of Fireball and someone's vape.
"Thanks, Nomes. This is really… yeah. Thank you." He squeezed my shoulder. One-handed. The way you'd pat a dog. "I'll look at it more later, yeah?"
He turned back to Jade.
I stood there for four seconds that lasted a century. Then I picked up what was left of my dignity – there wasn't much, but it was mine – and walked toward the door. Didn't run. Didn't stumble. Kept my shoulders back and my chin level and my eyes dry until I made it outside and the February air hit me like a wall of ice.
I sat on the front steps of the hockey house in a dress that was too short for winter and heels that were already cutting into my ankles. The cold concrete bit through the thin fabric. I could hear the party thumping through the door behind me – bass and laughter and the muffled roar of people having the time of their lives while mine quietly imploded.
The tears came. I let them. Mascara running down my cheeks in dark rivers, lipstick probably smeared where I'd bitten my lip too hard. I pressed the heels of my hands against my eyes and breathed.
Four years. You spent four years on someone, and this is how it ends. Not with a conversation. Not even with a proper rejection. Just this is a lot and a pat on the shoulder and your scrapbook next to a bottle of Fireball.
Then I heard them.
The window above me was cracked open – the kitchen window, letting out the heat from sixty bodies packed into a living room. Voices floated down, clear and unmistakable over the music.
"Bro, look at this page. She pressed a flower." Laughter. Pages turning. "Dear Caleb, from the first moment–" More laughter. They were reading it. The letter. My letter. The nine-draft, two-page, every-honest-thing-I'd-ever-felt letter was being passed around the hockey team's kitchen island like a joke.
"She actually wrote 'you make the world feel less loud.' What does that even mean?"
"It means she's down bad, bro. Catastrophically."
I stopped breathing.
Caleb didn't stop them. Didn't say that's enough or give it back. He just let them read, let them laugh, let them hold every private thing I'd ever felt up to the light and turn it into entertainment.
Then his voice. Not laughing – but not defending either. Tired. Almost annoyed. Like I was a problem he'd been tolerating.
"She's suffocating. I've tried to give her space to grow up but she doesn't get the message. She's too soft for real life."
Suffocating. Too soft.
The words landed on my chest and pressed down.
A teammate – I couldn't tell which one, they all sounded the same when they were drunk and cruel – said something crude. Something about my body. Something that made the rest of them laugh in that low, ugly way.
Caleb's response came fast. Casual. Like he'd thought about it before and already had the answer loaded.
"Nah. I'd break her."
I sat there on the steps and let every word sink in like stones into water.
Suffocating. Too soft. I'd break her.
Four years. Four years of sitting in stands screaming his name. Four years of making him playlists and remembering his allergies and dropping everything when he called. Four years of being the girl who was always there, always steady, always waiting for him to turn around and see me.
And he saw me. He'd always seen me. He just didn't want what he saw.
Something inside me shifted. Not broke – I'd expected breaking. This was different. Quieter. Harder. Like a door I didn't know I had, closing. A lock I didn't know existed, clicking shut.
I stopped crying.
I wiped my face with the back of my hand, smearing mascara across my knuckles. I looked at it for a second. Then I stood up.
I didn't go back inside. Didn't collect the scrapbook. Didn't text Sienna or call Zara or do any of the things the old Naomi would have done.
I walked.
Heels clicking on cold pavement. Arms bare. February wind cutting through the dress like it wasn't there. I didn't know where I was going until I was already there – a bar three blocks off campus that I'd never been to, with a neon sign buzzing in the window and a door that was heavier than it looked.
I sat down at the bar. Ordered a vodka cranberry because it was the only cocktail I knew by name. The bartender didn't card me. I looked old enough tonight. Grief aged you.
The drink came. I wrapped both hands around the glass and stared at it like it had the answers. The bar was half-empty – a Tuesday night, Valentine's Day, the kind of place where people came to avoid exactly the holiday I'd just been destroyed by.
I took a sip. It was too sweet and too strong and I didn't care.
I was halfway through the glass when a hand slid another drink in front of me. Darker. Amber. Something that smelled like it could strip paint.
"You look like you're about to either cry or kill someone."
The voice was low. Unhurried. The kind of voice that didn't ask for your attention – it just took it.
"Either way, you need something stronger than that."
I looked up.
Steel grey eyes. The kind of grey that wasn't soft – wasn't misty or gentle or any of the words people used to make grey sound pretty. This grey was a knife edge. A frozen lake. The color of something that could cut you if you touched it wrong.
A scar split through his left eyebrow – thin, pale, deliberate-looking, like someone had tried to mark him and he'd worn it like a dare ever since. Dark hair falling over his forehead. A bruise on his cheekbone, fresh, turning purple at the edges. His knuckles on the bar top were split and swollen.
He was the most dangerously beautiful person I had ever seen in my life.
And he was looking at me like he already knew exactly what had happened tonight – not the details, but the shape of it. The wreckage. Like he recognized it.
I should have looked away. Should have said no thanks and gone back to my sad vodka cranberry and my shattered pride and my mascara-streaked face.
But the old Naomi – the soft one, the suffocating one, the one who was too much and never enough – she was sitting on the steps of a hockey house three blocks away. And whoever was left in this chair had nothing to lose.
I looked at the drink he'd set in front of me. Looked back at those steel grey eyes.
"Which one do you think?" I asked. "Crying or killing?"
He didn't smile. But something in his expression shifted – a flicker of interest, sharp and immediate, like I'd said the first interesting thing he'd heard all night.
"Guess I'll stay and find out."
The practice facility smells like industrial cleaner and whatever mix is created when thirty professional athletes share a building with inadequate ventilation.Rhys’s private office is a converted supply closet with a desk that was clearly built for a man half his size and a door that locks from the inside, which is the only feature I care about.I walk into the room and lock it immediately.He’s sitting in the desk chair with game film running on his laptop, still in his practice jersey with tape residue on his knuckles. His hair is also damp from the shower he probably took four minutes ago since his skin is still flushed and the cedar is fresh and the towel he used is hanging off the filing cabinet like a flag of surrender.He looks up when the lock clicks and his eyes do the thing where they track from my face to my hands to the bag I’m carrying and back to my face. He's reading me.“Brought lunch,” I say, and set the bag on his desk beside the laptop where two defencemen are runn
I’m already wet before I see the billboard, which is inconvenient because I’m in traffic on Morrison and Third with cold coffee in the cupholder and my thighs have no business pressing together in a Honda Civic at eleven in the morning on a Tuesday.But there he is.Sixty feet of jaw towering above the intersection. The scar through his eyebrow smoothed by whatever digital tool Nike’s production team uses to turn damage into aspiration. MADDOX stamped across the bottom in block letters like a warning label for a product that ruins lives.They airbrushed him into something clean and sellable, a version of my husband that could move running shoes and protein powder and luxury watches. But I know the real version is currently at the practice facility swallowing a protein bar without chewing it because he treats food that way.My body doesn’t care about the airbrushing.My body sees that jaw at that scale and responds with the same dumb, animal loyalty it’s had since we met, and the fact
The hotel room door clicked shut and the sound swallowed every other noise – the reception music still thumping two floors below, the distant clink of glasses being collected by staff who’d be cleaning confetti out of the garden for a week.Gone. All of it. Just the dark room and the amber glow from the river bridges painting stripes across the ceiling.I was still in the dress. The silk heavy against my ribs, the bodice warm from hours of dancing, the hem dragging behind me with the weight of a train I’d stepped on twice during the father-daughter spot where Richard had stood in.Rhys stepped behind me. His warmth arriving before his hands – the heat of his chest hitting my bare shoulders through the gap where the fabric scooped low.His fingers found the nape of my neck first, unhooking the veil clasp with a precision that told me he’d been thinking about this since the aisle. The tulle hit the carpet without sound.Then his thumbs found the zipper.He held the tab between his finge
The next morning, Miles extended his arm.Fifteen years old. Charcoal suit that Richard had specified in the logistics spreadsheet down to the thread count. Dark eyes clear and as present as the man he was becoming – steady, honest, true, brave in the way that only people who’d been broken young and healed properly could be.“Ready, sis?”“Ready.”We walked with him walking BESIDE me. The way we’d always walked. Through the worst and the best and the ordinary middle where most of life actually happened. His arm under my hand. The brick path lined with my mom's candles.As we cleared the threshold, he leaned close. His mouth near my ear. The words small enough that only I could hear them.“I’m glad he kept coming back.”My throat closed and my eyes blurred as I squeezed his arm because my voice wasn’t available, and he squeezed back because he understood that language.Rhys was at the altar in his black tuxedo and his hair pushed back but still refusing to be tamed. His face was comple
The bar hadn’t changed. Same sticky walnut. Same neon beer signs casting amber across the brick. Same corner stool where a girl with ruined mascara sat two years ago and ordered something she couldn’t taste because the boy she’d loved for years had chosen someone else on Valentine’s Day.Same stool. Different girl.Rhys slid a drink across the bar deliberately. The motion identical to the first time. He’d perfected this move. Practised it, probably. A current annual recreation of the night that started everything.“You look like you’re having the kind of night that needs more than one.”I took the glass. The drink was different now – not the cheap whiskey from Valentine’s Day but something better, something he’d asked the bartender to prepare that tasted like he’d been paying attention to what I actually liked for two years instead of guessing.“I’m having the best night of my life,” I said.“You said that last year.”“I’ll say it next year too.”The bartender – same guy, thick beard
Mom saw the ring before I said a word. FaceTime connected and her eyes went straight to my left hand on the counter like she already knew what was happening.She dropped her dish towel and cried quietly. It felt like it was the healing kind that meant the walls of the last three years had finally finished coming down and what was left was a woman watching her daughter wear a gold band on a video call and knowing it was right.Richard’s response arrived six hours later in the form of a text.Congratulations. He chose well.Four words. I read them three times. In Richard Maddox’s vocabulary, that was a concession speech. An admission that the architecture his son built with the girl he’d tried to remove from the blueprint was stronger than the concrete fortress Richard spent twenty years maintaining. It meant I was wrong and I know it and I’m not going to say those words because I’m Richard, but these four words carry the same weight if you know how to read me and by now you should.I k







