
After My Ex Punched the Man I’m Falling For
Chapter 3
The theater was the kind of place that smelled like old velvet and someone's grandmother's attic — in a good way, mostly. Worn red seats, a screen with a slight tilt to the left, a chandelier that flickered every twenty minutes like it was making a point. The kind of place that had survived every decade by being stubbornly, deliberately itself.
Julian had picked it.
I filed that away without attaching meaning to it.
We sat toward the middle. Not together-together — there was a seat between us, occupied by Julian's coat, which felt like a deliberate statement about professional boundaries. I had my notebook. He had nothing. He sat with his arms crossed and his eyes on the screen as the pre-show titles rolled, looking like a man who was absolutely here for work and not even slightly somewhere else in his head.
I wrote: *setting — old theater, light bad, seats close, shared armrest situation, note texture of discomfort.*
Julian glanced over. "You're taking notes."
"One of us has to."
"I have a memory."
"Your memory writes romance like a tax return."
He faced forward again. But the corner of his mouth moved.
The lights went down. The movie started — something from the eighties, practical effects, the kind of horror that built slow and quiet before it went for the throat. I knew the genre. I was fine with the genre. I watched horror movies regularly. I was a competent adult woman who was here for professional reasons and was completely in control of her—
The screen went dark.
Then the face appeared.
I grabbed his arm.
It wasn't a decision. My hand found the sleeve of his jacket before the sound fully registered in my ears, and I turned my face into his shoulder, and for approximately three seconds I was just there — heart going, fingers locked around his forearm, cheek pressed against the fabric of his jacket, which smelled like coffee and something else I didn't take long enough to identify.
Then the scare resolved. The music shifted. The audience exhaled.
I straightened up.
I did not let go immediately. That was the problem.
A full beat passed — maybe two — before my hand remembered it was my hand and came back to my lap. I looked at the screen. My face was warm. The theater was dark, which helped.
Julian had not moved. Not even a little. His arm was still at exactly the angle I'd grabbed it, like he'd made the conscious decision to remain a stable surface. I could see, in the low light, that his jaw was set and his gaze was fixed on the screen with the focused intensity of someone who was absolutely, deliberately thinking about the film.
The tips of his ears were red.
Not pink. Red.
I looked back at the screen. I wrote nothing in my notebook for the rest of the movie.
When the credits rolled and the chandelier flickered back to life, Julian stood, shrugged on his coat, and said, without looking at me:
"Useful data."
His ears were still red.
---
Back at the loft, Mr. Whiskers gave me the same look he always gave me — the one that said he hadn't decided yet whether my existence was an insult or merely an inconvenience — and then sat down on top of my coat, which he did exclusively to me.
I left him to it. I took the chapter notes Julian had printed before we left and settled at the kitchen counter while he disappeared into his study. This was the arrangement: he went to write, I went to review, and we reconvened when one of us had something to say. It worked because it required nothing from either of us that felt like admitting anything.
I opened the binder.
The new pages were clipped at the back — fresh draft, still smelling faintly like printer ink. I read through the chapter notes first: character positioning, scene pacing, a margin note in Julian's cramped handwriting that said *less furniture description, more physical awareness.* Good. Right direction. I turned to the draft itself.
The scene was set in a theater.
I stopped.
I read it again, slower.
He'd written it as a small moment — the female character startled by something on screen, her hand closing around the male lead's arm without thinking, her face turned briefly against his shoulder. Three short paragraphs. Nothing announced, nothing explained. Just the specific weight of a hand on fabric. Just a man going completely still because if he moved, something would end.
*His arm held the shape of her grip long after she'd let go. He didn't move it. He told himself it was because the film was still running. He did not examine this claim.*
I read that sentence twice.
The paper didn't move. I didn't move. Somewhere behind the study door, I could hear the faint irregular rhythm of Julian typing — fast, then pausing, then fast again.
This was not research. Or it was, but not the kind either of us had agreed to out loud.
Something small and warm shifted in my chest. Not loud. Not dramatic. The way a window latch gives when you've been pushing a door that wasn't locked.
I closed the binder.
I sat with it for a moment — the lamp on, the city hum coming through the glass, Mr. Whiskers now asleep on my coat with the contentment of someone who had won.
Then I pulled my notebook toward me and uncapped my pen.
I wasn't thinking. My hand just moved. It drew a figure — rumpled hair, glasses perched sideways above one ear, a coffee mug dangling from two fingers. The lines came fast and certain, the way they did when I wasn't deciding anything, when my hand knew something my brain hadn't gotten around to processing yet.
I looked at what I'd drawn.
I closed the notebook.
In the study, the typing had stopped. A pause, then the soft sound of a chair shifting.
I stood up, stacked the binder, and said toward the study door, at a completely normal volume: "The new pages are good. The theater scene works. You should keep going."
A beat of silence.
Then Julian's voice, even and dry, came back through the door: "I know."
I picked up my bag. I looked at Mr. Whiskers, still occupying my coat with the moral authority of a small gray dictator.
"I need that back."
He opened one eye. He did not move.
I reached over, slid the coat out from under him with the precision of someone who had learned his patterns, and he let me, which was either tolerance or a trap. I chose to believe tolerance.
I let myself out.
In the elevator going down, I kept my hand very still at my side, in the exact position it had held when I'd grabbed his arm in the dark.
I thought about three short paragraphs.
I thought about: *He did not move it.*
The elevator opened onto the lobby. I walked out into the cold Manhattan night, turned left toward the subway, and did not look back at the building.
But I was thinking about it. About all of it.
And I hadn't, I realized, thought about Jayden once all evening.
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