
Journey to Heal and Love
Chapter 2
The Riverbend train station was smaller than I expected—a charming wooden structure with red-painted trim and garlands of evergreen wrapped around the posts. The air smelled of pine and salt, sharp and clean after hours inside the train.
Weston grabbed my suitcase before I could protest. "Let me help. You're traveling light—just the one bag?"
"I don't need much," I said, my voice quiet against the sound of the train pulling away behind us.
He smiled, that easy warmth I remembered from a thousand high school hallways. "Smart. I've learned that too. Less stuff, more freedom." He gestured toward the taxi stand. "I'm heading to the historic district. Share a ride?"
I should have said no. Should have created distance, protected myself. Instead, I nodded.
The taxi wound through narrow streets lined with Victorian houses, their facades decorated with wreaths and white lights. Weston sat beside me, close enough that I could smell his cologne—something woody and understated that made my chest tighten with memory and longing.
"So I'm reading this incredible book," he said suddenly, pulling a paperback from his jacket pocket. My book. The one that had launched my career. The one I'd written about him. "Have you heard of it? 'The Space Between Words' by Aurelia Hart?"
My heart stopped. I forced myself to breathe, to keep my expression neutral. "I've... heard of it."
"It's painfully real," he continued, flipping through pages marked with Post-it notes. "The way she writes about unrequited love—it's not romanticized or melodramatic. It's just... honest. The narrator watches this person from a distance, memorizes all these tiny details about them, and you can feel how much it hurts to care that deeply about someone who doesn't even know you exist."
I stared out the window, vision blurring slightly. He was describing my own heart back to me, dissecting emotions I'd poured onto the page without ever imagining he'd read them.
"The specificity is what gets me," Weston said, his voice thoughtful. "Like how she remembers the exact shade of blue he wore on the first day of junior year, or how he always left his coffee half-finished. Those aren't made-up details. Whoever wrote this lived it."
"Maybe she just has a good imagination," I managed.
"No." His certainty was gentle but absolute. "You can't fake that kind of longing. That level of attention to someone else—it only comes from real, unresolved feelings. From love that never got to be spoken or finished." He looked at the book cover, at my author photo I'd deliberately kept shadowy and artistic. "I wonder if the person she wrote about ever knew. If they ever got a second chance."
The taxi stopped in front of the Riverbend Inn. I fumbled with my wallet, desperate for air, for space to process hearing him analyze the story I'd written about loving him.
"I've got it," Weston said, paying the driver before I could argue. He carried my suitcase up the inn's front steps, his movements easy and confident. "This is where I'm staying too. Maybe I'll see you around?"
"Maybe," I whispered.
---
That evening, I'd barely finished unpacking when there was a knock at my door. I opened it to find Weston, changed into a navy sweater—of course it was navy—his expression hopeful.
"This is going to sound forward," he said, "but would you like to have dinner with me? Downstairs at the restaurant? I'd really like to continue our conversation about books. And storytelling."
Every instinct screamed at me to decline, to protect myself from the inevitable moment he'd recognize me as that forgettable girl from high school. But another part of me—the part that had loved him for twelve years, the part that had built an entire career on the ghost of him—couldn't resist.
"Okay," I heard myself say.
The inn's restaurant was intimate, all exposed brick and candlelight, Christmas garlands draped over the bar. We sat by the window overlooking the street, where soft snow had begun to fall.
"Tell me about your connection to storytelling," Weston said after we'd ordered. "Earlier you seemed really engaged when I was talking about that book."
I chose my words carefully. "I write. Not professionally, but... I understand what it means to pour real emotion into words. To try to make sense of feelings through stories."
"Do you write about real experiences too?"
"Always." The admission felt dangerous and freeing at once. "I think the best stories come from things we're still trying to understand. Unfinished business."
His eyes held mine across the table. "I believe that. I make documentaries—nature films, wildlife behavior—and the footage that resonates most is always the moments that feel unscripted. Real. When you capture something authentic, something the subject didn't know they were revealing, that's when it becomes art."
"You're looking for truth," I said softly.
"Aren't we all?" He leaned forward slightly. "I think that's what connects us to stories, to art. We're all searching for recognition. For someone to see us and understand what we couldn't say ourselves."
The snow fell heavier outside. The candle between us flickered. And I fell in love with him all over again, knowing he had no idea he was sitting across from the girl who'd loved him first, who'd been trying to say his name in every story she'd ever written.
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