
Journey to Heal and Love
Chapter 3
The morning air carried a crisp bite as I stood outside the Riverbend Inn, watching Weston load camera equipment into a weathered Jeep. He moved with practiced efficiency, each motion deliberate yet relaxed, and I found myself cataloging details the way I had in high school—the way his jacket pulled across his shoulders, how he checked each lens cap twice before packing it away.
"You ready for this?" he asked, glancing up with that warm smile that still made my chest constrict. "The overlook is about forty minutes into the mountains. Fair warning—it's beautiful, but the hike can be tricky."
Before I could respond, a man in his thirties emerged from the inn, camera bag slung over his shoulder, grinning broadly. "You must be Aurelia. I'm Marcus Chen, Weston's partner in crime and the guy who makes him look good on film."
His handshake was firm, his eyes sharp with the kind of observant intelligence that made me slightly nervous. Writers noticed things, but so did good cinematographers.
The drive wound through redwood forests, morning light filtering through ancient trees in golden shafts. Weston drove with one hand on the wheel, occasionally pointing out landmarks—a creek where salmon spawned in winter, a meadow where elk gathered at dawn. Marcus asked about my writing, and I gave careful, vague answers, hyperaware of Weston listening, of how my words might reveal too much.
The overlook took my breath away. Mountains rolled toward the distant ocean in layers of blue and grey, mist clinging to valleys like something out of a dream. In the meadow below, a small herd of deer grazed, their movements graceful and unhurried.
"What do you think?" Weston asked, standing beside me at the edge. "Worth the drive?"
"It's perfect," I whispered, meaning the view but also this—being here, with him, in a moment that felt suspended outside normal time.
Marcus set up his camera, and I watched Weston transform into someone both familiar and new. The easy warmth remained, but underneath was sharp focus, a commanding presence that directed without demanding. He explained shots to Marcus with technical precision, discussed angles and lighting, his hands gesturing to frame imaginary compositions.
This was the boy I'd loved in high school, grown into the fullness of himself. Brilliant, magnetic, completely at ease in his competence.
"Aurelia, come here a second," Weston called, adjusting the camera's position. "Tell me what you see in this frame."
I moved beside him, looking through the viewfinder. The deer were perfectly positioned against the mountain backdrop, but something felt off. "The composition is beautiful, but... it's too symmetrical. Too perfect. It doesn't feel like a stolen moment—it feels staged."
Weston's eyes lit up. "Exactly. Marcus, shift left about two feet. Let's break that center line."
The adjustment was subtle but transformed everything. Now the scene felt alive, accidental, real.
"You've got a good eye," Marcus said, giving me an appraising look that lingered a beat too long, his gaze flicking between Weston and me with barely concealed amusement.
Weston met my eyes, something warm and appreciative in his expression. "She understands storytelling. Visual, written—it's all the same instinct, isn't it? Knowing what details matter, what makes something feel true."
My throat tightened. He saw me. Not as that invisible girl from high school, but as someone whose perspective mattered, whose insights had value.
---
The second location required a hike deeper into the forest, following a narrow trail that wound alongside a creek. The morning had warmed, but the shade kept everything cool and damp. Moss covered fallen logs, and the sound of rushing water provided a constant backdrop.
I was so focused on Weston ahead of me—watching the confident way he navigated roots and rocks—that I didn't notice the wet stones until my foot slipped.
The world tilted. My arms windmilled uselessly, gravity pulling me toward the creek's rocky edge. Then Weston's hands were on me, catching my waist, pulling me hard against his chest. His other arm wrapped around my back, steadying me completely.
For a moment, we were frozen. His heart beat against my shoulder blade. His breath warmed my temple. I could feel every point of contact—his fingers splayed across my ribcage, the solid wall of his chest, the way his arms held me with careful strength.
Slowly, he turned me to face him, hands still at my waist. Our faces were inches apart. His eyes searched mine with an intensity that made everything else disappear—the forest, Marcus somewhere behind us, the sound of water. There was only this: his hands on me, the catch in his breathing, the way his gaze dropped briefly to my mouth before returning to my eyes.
"You okay?" His voice was rough, lower than normal.
I couldn't speak. Could only nod slightly, my hands pressed flat against his jacket, feeling the rapid beat of his heart that matched my own.
The moment stretched, electric and terrifying and perfect. I saw something flicker in his expression—recognition, maybe, or realization. As if he were seeing not just who I was now, but who I'd been, fragments of memory assembling themselves into meaning.
"Well, that was dramatic," Marcus called out, breaking the spell with deliberate cheerfulness. "You two make a perfect couple—him playing hero, you playing damsel. Very cinematic."
Weston's hands dropped immediately. Heat flooded my face as we stepped apart, but I caught his expression before he turned away—flustered, almost bashful, the confident documentarian replaced by someone suddenly uncertain.
"Watch your step," he said quietly, offering his hand. "The rocks are treacherous here."
I took it, his fingers warm and sure around mine. He didn't let go, even after we'd crossed the wet stones, even when the path widened enough that we no longer needed the contact. We walked hand in hand through the forest, neither of us acknowledging it, neither of us willing to break the connection.
---
Lunch was sandwiches from a local deli, eaten on flat rocks overlooking another vista. Marcus regaled us with stories from previous shoots—near-disasters with equipment, wildlife encounters gone wrong, the time Weston fell into a beaver pond trying to get the perfect shot.
"He emerged covered in mud and pond scum," Marcus said, grinning, "but he had the footage. That's Weston—he'll sacrifice everything for the story."
Weston shook his head, laughing. "You're making me sound obsessive."
"You are obsessive. Fortunately, it makes for great documentaries."
I watched them banter, saw the easy friendship, the respect underlying the teasing. Weston had built a life I knew nothing about—friendships, adventures, a career that clearly fulfilled him. The golden boy from high school had chosen this: meaningful work over flashy success, authentic storytelling over conventional achievement.
"Why documentaries?" I asked during a lull. "You could have done anything."
Weston was quiet for a moment, looking out at the mountains. "In high school, I felt like I was performing all the time. Being what everyone expected—the good student, the reliable one, the guy with all the answers. It was exhausting, honestly. I wanted to tell stories about things that didn't need performance. Things that were real without trying."
My breath caught. He'd felt trapped by everyone's expectations, just as I'd felt invisible beneath them.
"Stories about overlooked things," he continued softly, his gaze finding mine. "Things people don't notice because they're not looking in the right places. Things that have been there all along, waiting to be seen."
The words hung between us, layered with meaning I was afraid to interpret.
"Some stories are worth waiting for," I said, echoing his words from last night, my voice barely above a whisper. "Sometimes things need time to be told right. Even if it takes years."
Weston's expression shifted, something vulnerable and hopeful breaking through. "Yeah," he said. "Sometimes the best stories are the ones we're finally ready to tell. The ones we've been carrying, waiting for the right moment, the right person to hear them."
Marcus cleared his throat loudly, making a show of packing up lunch. "Right, well, this has been delightfully charged with subtext. Should we get more footage before the light changes, or would you two like to continue your very intense conversation about storytelling metaphors?"
But neither Weston nor I looked away from each other, and I wondered if he could see it in my eyes—all those years of loving him, of writing him into stories, of carrying him like a secret I'd never been brave enough to speak.
And I wondered what story he was trying to tell me, what he'd been waiting years to say.
You may also like





