
My Brother’s Best Friend Chose Me Over Him
Chapter 2
The parallel bars were supposed to hold me up.
They didn't.
Third session. Dr. Shen had said my legs would remember eventually—that the body keeps its own kind of memory even when the mind doesn't. But somewhere between the seventh step and the eighth, my left knee buckled, and then my right, and the floor came rushing up fast.
It didn't reach me.
Jaylen's arms were there first. One around my back, one under my knees, the whole thing so quick and automatic that for a second I thought I'd imagined falling at all. He carried me to the bench along the wall and set me down with a steadiness that felt rehearsed—like he'd carried fragile things before and knew exactly how not to break them.
Neither of us said anything.
He crouched and retrieved the water bottle from my bag. Handed it to me. Then he stood, turned slightly away, and looked at the window. His jaw was tight. A muscle jumped once beneath his cheekbone and then went still.
I unscrewed the cap and drank and watched him not watching me.
I wanted to say something—*I'm fine* or *don't worry* or one of those quick, reflexive phrases designed to make other people comfortable with your pain. But the words didn't come. And after a moment, I realized that Jaylen wasn't waiting for them. He wasn't looking at me with that specific expression people wore when they needed reassurance that they didn't have to feel bad anymore.
He was just standing there. Jaw loose again. Patient.
'Same time Thursday?' he said finally.
'Same time Thursday,' I said.
He picked up my bag and walked me out.
***
His apartment smelled like garlic and effort.
I sat at his kitchen island and watched him stir a pot of pasta sauce with the focused intensity of someone defusing something. His brow was furrowed. He'd adjusted the heat three times in four minutes. The spoon moved in slow, deliberate circles.
'You look very serious,' I said.
'I *am* very serious.'
'It's pasta, Jaylen.'
'It's a *process*.'
The sauce, when it arrived, tasted like something had gone wrong somewhere around the garlic stage and then continued going wrong through the tomato stage and arrived at the finish line still going wrong. The noodles were fine. The noodles were completely fine. Everything else was a project.
I ate every bite.
I wasn't sure why. Maybe because his kitchen was warm in the specific way that apartments are warm when someone has been living in them long enough to absorb the heat of their own routines. The overhead light was slightly yellow. There was a coffee mug on the counter that he'd clearly used this morning and not yet put away. His jacket was draped over the stool beside me.
Small things. Nothing things. But they added up to something.
'You don't have to finish it,' he said, watching me scrape the bowl.
'I know.'
'Seriously. There's actual food in the fridge.'
'Jaylen.' I set down my fork. 'I'm finishing it.'
Something shifted in his expression—just briefly, just a degree. He looked down at his own bowl.
'Still,' he said. 'Objectively. It's not good.'
'It's really not,' I agreed.
And then I laughed. A real one—the kind that comes up from somewhere you forgot existed. It surprised me, the sound of it. He looked up, and the corner of his mouth pulled, and that made it worse, and I pressed the back of my hand to my mouth and tried to pull it together while he sat there with the absolute, composed dignity of a man who had just served me terrible pasta and was choosing to find this funny rather than shameful.
I realized, sitting there with my knees almost touching his and sauce on my fork and laughter still warm in my chest, that I hadn't laughed like that in a month.
Maybe longer.
***
The movie was something with submarines that I'd picked specifically because I thought it would keep me awake.
It didn't.
I went under somewhere around the forty-minute mark—not fully, just into that soft, liquid half-sleep where you're still aware of sound and warmth but not enough to do anything about it. His shoulder was solid. His breathing was slow and even. Outside the apartment windows, Seattle did its quiet nighttime thing: distant traffic, rain on glass, the city holding itself together in the dark.
I woke up when the credits music started.
The blanket was around me. I hadn't put it there. Jaylen hadn't moved—he was still beside me, his phone tilted in one hand, the screen's light low and warm. He'd been reading. He'd just... stayed. Sat there in the dark while I slept against his shoulder and read on his phone and didn't move.
He looked up when I shifted.
'Good timing,' he said. 'Terrible ending.'
My voice came out rough. 'What happened?'
'The submarine sank.'
'That's not a spoiler. That's just—physics.'
'You'd think.' He reached over and set his phone on the coffee table. 'You want tea? Or I can drive you home.'
I looked at the window. Rain was tracking down the glass in long, slow lines. My apartment was twenty minutes away. My apartment had bare walls and a stack of physical therapy handouts on the kitchen table and nothing that smelled like garlic and effort.
'Tea,' I said.
He got up without comment. I heard him filling the kettle in the kitchen, the quiet sound of cabinet doors, the particular soft clink of mugs being set on a counter.
I pulled the blanket tighter and watched the rain.
My chest ached—that same unexplainable ache from the kitchen, the one with no clean name. It wasn't longing, exactly. It wasn't grief. It was something quieter and more disorienting: the feeling of being held without being held. Of being seen without being watched.
I didn't know what to do with that.
So I just sat there in Jaylen Hughes's apartment at eleven-thirty on a Tuesday, wrapped in a blanket I hadn't put on myself, waiting for tea I hadn't asked for, and didn't go home for another two hours.
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