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After He Saved Her, I Walked Away Forever Novel Cover

After He Saved Her, I Walked Away Forever

The ceiling cracked first. Not a sound you forget. Not a groan or a creak — a snap, like a bone breaking inside the building itself. I looked up from my music stand and saw the fracture race across the plaster above the rehearsal hall, fast and jagged, like lightning drawn in reverse. Then the floor moved. It rolled under my feet, and my bow skidded across the strings in a shriek that didn't sound human. Music stands toppled. Someone screamed near the back of the hall. The overhead lights swung in wide, sickening arcs, throwing shadows that lurched across the walls like living things. I reached for Gregory.
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Chapter 5

The tow truck took forty minutes.

Dante spent all forty of them leaning against the hood of his car in the faculty lot, hands in his jacket pockets, watching the street like he had nowhere else to be. Which he probably did. He was a junior with a full course load and a practice schedule I had accidentally memorized. He had places to be.

He didn't go to any of them.

When the truck finally pulled away with my car on the flatbed, he opened the passenger door without asking. I got in. I told myself it was practical. It was raining. It was late. These were facts.

"You don't have to do this," I said.

"I know," he said, and pulled out of the lot.

I gave him my address. He didn't put it in his phone. He just drove, easy and unhurried, like he already knew the way. I watched the city slide past the window and told myself that meant nothing.

At my building, I said I'd pay for the tow.

"You won't," he said.

"Dante."

"Alaya." He said it the same way he always did. Quiet. Like my name was a complete sentence.

I let it go. I was getting better at knowing which arguments I wasn't going to win.

---

I cooked for him on a Saturday.

I hadn't planned it. He had walked me up because I'd left a stack of his cohort's compositions in his car, and I'd said come in while I find them, and then I'd looked at the time and looked at my refrigerator and said I'm making pasta if you want to stay. The words came out before I could examine them.

He stayed.

My apartment was spare. I knew how it looked — no photographs, no clutter, nothing on the walls except a small print of a Hopper painting I'd bought at a museum shop the first month back in Seattle because I needed something and it was the least complicated thing I could find. I watched him take it in without comment, the way he took most things in. Not cataloguing. Just seeing.

I made cacio e pepe. Simple. The kind of thing you make when you need your hands to be busy and your mind to be quiet. He sat at my kitchen counter and watched me work, and we talked about a student composition he'd been helping me think through — a second-year who had real instincts but kept resolving too early, couldn't sit in the tension long enough to let it mean something.

"She's afraid of the dissonance," Dante said.

"Most people are."

"You're not."

I looked up from the pan. He was watching me with that steady, unhurried attention. Not a challenge. Just an observation.

"I've had practice," I said.

He ate two full helpings. He asked for the recipe with the kind of genuine, uncomplicated enthusiasm that I had stopped expecting from people — not performed, not angled toward anything, just real. I found myself explaining the pepper technique, the ratio of pasta water, the specific brand of pecorino I'd found at the Italian place on Capitol Hill, and somewhere in the middle of it I laughed. That same laugh. The one that started in the chest and didn't ask permission.

He smiled. Not with triumph. Just warmly.

I noticed, clearing the plates, that he had arrived at my building at exactly the time he said he would. Not five minutes after. Not two minutes after. Exactly. I thought about the café on Tuesdays. The practice room, always lit before I arrived. The umbrella, already open.

He was always early.

I filed it away without knowing what to do with it yet.

---

The announcement went up on a Monday.

Weston University's 70th Anniversary Gala — Headline Performers: Gregory Matthews, violin. Shelby Cox, violin.

It was on the department bulletin board, on the university website, in an email from the Dean's office with the subject line Celebrating Excellence. There was a photograph. Gregory in a tuxedo, his bow hand relaxed at his side, the particular ease of a man who had learned to perform confidence so thoroughly it had become indistinguishable from the real thing. Shelby beside him, composed and careful, the way she had always been.

I read the email in my office with the door closed.

I sat very still for a moment. Outside my window, the campus moved — students crossing the quad, a maintenance cart humming along the path, the ordinary machinery of a Tuesday afternoon. I pressed my thumb against the inside of my right wrist. The scar was there. The damage was still real.

I opened my laptop and went back to grading.

---

That evening I told Dante.

We were in the campus café, the late-lecture coffee that had stopped being accidental weeks ago. The staff were wiping down the counter. The chairs were half-stacked. I wrapped both hands around my cup and looked at the table and said: "Gregory Matthews is coming to the gala."

Dante was quiet.

"He's my ex," I said. "We were together for ten years. We were both at the Royal Academy." I paused. "During the earthquake, he — " I stopped. Started again. "There was a girl. Shelby. I'd given her a performance slot, helped her get more rehearsal time. They were practicing together a lot. When the ceiling came down, he moved toward her."

I said it plainly. No performance in it. Just the facts, in order, the way I had arranged them in my head over the past year until they were smooth and manageable, like stones worn flat by water.

"My wrist took the debris. The surgeons said the damage was permanent." I looked up. "I left the next day. I didn't look back."

Dante hadn't moved. He hadn't made a sound. He was just listening — fully, completely, the way very few people actually listen, without preparing their response while you're still talking.

When I finished, the café was almost empty. The rain had started again outside.

He said: "You didn't break. You just changed shape."

I looked at him.

The words landed somewhere deep and quiet, in a place I hadn't let anyone near in a long time. Not because they were poetic. Because they were precise. Because they named something I had been trying to name for twelve months without finding the right language for it.

"You're the first person who's said it like that," I said.

He held my gaze. Steady. Unhurried. Not asking for anything in return.

Outside, the rain came down on the city, and I sat with the warmth of those words in my chest, and I did not press my thumb against my wrist.

Not this time.

---

Gregory arrived on campus two days before the gala.

I heard about it before I saw him — the department assistant mentioned a faculty meet-and-greet, visiting performers, the usual pre-event formalities. I went because not going would have been its own kind of statement, and I had no interest in making statements. I had interest in getting through the next four days with my equilibrium intact.

The reception hall was warm and crowded, the kind of event where everyone holds a glass of something and talks about things that don't matter. I was mid-conversation with Iris Vance about a grant proposal when I felt it — that specific, prickling awareness of being looked at.

I turned.

Gregory was across the room. He had found me the way I knew he would find me, the way he had always been able to find me in a crowd, and his face was doing something complicated. Relief. Guilt. And underneath both of those, something rehearsed — the expression of a man who had been practicing this moment, who had decided in advance what it would look like when he finally saw me again.

His mouth started to open.

I turned back to Iris.

"Sorry," I said. "You were saying — the grant deadline?"

She looked at me with those sharp, quiet eyes of hers. She had seen. She said nothing about it.

"March fifteenth," she said. "I think you'd be a strong applicant."

"I'll look at the criteria," I said.

I finished my drink. I excused myself. I walked toward the far door — not fast, not slow, not in any direction that could be read as retreat. Just moving, the way I had learned to move after London: forward, deliberate, without looking back.

I did not look back.

But I felt him watching me all the way to the door.

And I felt, with a cold and absolute clarity, that the next four days were going to require everything I had.

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