
After My Lover Forgot Me, I Let Him Go
Chapter 2
He was awake before I opened my eyes.
I knew because the apartment had that particular quality of stillness that only happens when someone is trying very hard not to make noise. I lifted my head from where I'd fallen asleep in the kitchen chair, my neck stiff, my knees still pulled to my chest, and found him sitting on the edge of the couch with his elbows on his knees, looking at the room.
Not looking. Cataloguing.
His eyes moved slowly, methodically, the way you'd read a document you needed to memorize. The two toothbrushes in the cup by the sink. The men's shoes by the door — his shoes, though he didn't know that. The gray hoodie draped over the back of the chair, the one I'd given him last night, the one he'd folded and set there instead of leaving on the floor the way he always used to.
I stayed still and watched him work.
He stood up. Moved to the kitchen counter and ran his fingers along the edge of the tile, the chipped corner near the stove. Opened the cabinet above the coffee maker. Closed it. Opened the one beside it. His hand found the vanilla syrup on the second shelf, and he held it for a moment, turning it over, then set it back exactly where it had been.
Then he turned and saw the photo strip.
I'd moved it. I'd meant to take it down last night, but I hadn't been able to make myself do it. It was still there, pinned to the refrigerator with a magnet shaped like a cactus we'd bought at a gas station in Arizona three years ago. Four frames. Two people with nothing, completely happy.
Holden went very still.
He reached out and unpinned it. Held it up to the gray morning light coming through the window. His jaw tightened. I watched his throat move as he swallowed.
The woman in the photos was the woman standing in the kitchen doorway.
He turned around.
Our eyes met. Neither of us said anything for a long moment. The refrigerator hummed. Outside, the rain had stopped, and the street was quiet in that washed-clean way it gets after a long storm.
"Were we together?" he asked.
His voice was steady. His eyes were not. They had that searching, unguarded quality I'd seen last night in the doorway — the look of someone reaching for something just out of reach, desperate not to spook it.
I could have deflected. I'd had all night to build the deflection, to construct something careful and protective that would keep us both at a safe distance. I'd told myself I would. I'd made a whole plan.
But he was looking at me like that, and I was so tired.
"Yes," I said.
He didn't react the way I expected. No shock. No disbelief. He just looked back down at the photo strip, at the frame where he was looking at me like I was the only thing in the picture, and something in his face went very quiet.
"How long?"
"Six years."
He nodded slowly. Set the photo strip down on the counter with the same careful precision he'd used with the vanilla syrup. Then he looked up at me again.
"I believe you," he said. "I want you to know that. I'm not — I'm not saying it to be kind." He paused. "Everything in this apartment. Everything in my own body. It all confirms it." His eyes moved to the hoodie on the chair, then back to me. "I knew those were my clothes before I touched them. I knew which side of the bed was mine. I sat down on it without thinking." A beat. "I knew the soup was going to be good before I tasted it."
My chest hurt. I pressed my hand flat against the counter.
"Holden —"
"Let me fall in love with you again."
The words landed quietly. No performance in them. Just a man saying the only thing that made sense to him.
I looked at him for a long time. At the cut above his eyebrow, still healing. At the bruise along his jaw, fading to yellow at the edges. At his hands, loose at his sides, not reaching, just waiting.
"Okay," I said. It came out barely above a whisper.
He nodded once. Like we'd agreed on something real.
---
The days that followed had a quality I don't have a good word for. Suspended, maybe. Like the apartment existed slightly outside of time, and the rest of the world — the headlines, the search, Nash's unanswered calls piling up on Holden's phone — was happening to someone else, somewhere far away.
Holden relearned me the way you learn a city by walking it. Not through information. Through proximity.
He noticed that I took my coffee black in the morning but that on the third day, when I burned the toast and couldn't find my keys and spilled half the coffee on the counter, I reached for the vanilla syrup without thinking. He didn't say anything. He just watched me pour it, and something in his expression shifted — recognition without memory, like a word he knew the feeling of but couldn't quite pronounce.
He noticed that I tucked my feet under myself on the couch when I read. That I went quiet instead of sharp when something hurt me. That I hummed while I cooked, always the same half-remembered melody, and stopped the moment I realized I was doing it.
"Don't," he said the second time I stopped.
"Don't what?"
"Stop humming." He was sitting at the kitchen table with a cup of coffee, watching me stir something on the stove. "You do it and then you catch yourself and you stop, and the room feels different after."
I turned back to the stove. After a moment, I started again, quietly.
He reached for my hand without thinking on the fourth day. We were sitting on the couch, close but not touching, watching rain streak down the window again, and his hand just moved across the cushion and found mine. His fingers closed around it. He didn't look at me. I didn't look at him.
I let him.
That was the word for it, I realized. Not suspended. Fragile. The whole thing was made of glass — the mornings, the soup, the humming, his hand in mine — and I was so careful not to breathe too hard. Because I knew, in the part of me that never stopped knowing, that this couldn't last.
But his thumb moved slowly across my knuckles, back and forth, the way it always used to.
And for now, that was enough.
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