
My Brother’s Best Friend Chose Me Over Him
Chapter 3
Clark forgot to pick me up from physical therapy on a Wednesday.
I stood outside the clinic for twenty minutes in the cold, my bag over one shoulder, watching cars pull in and out of the parking lot. I texted him twice. He responded with a string of apologies and an excuse involving a meeting that had run long and a parking situation he described as 'genuinely catastrophic,' which was so specific it was almost convincing.
Jaylen pulled up eight minutes later.
He didn't explain how he knew. He just leaned across and pushed the passenger door open, and I got in, and we drove to the waterfront diner where I always ordered the grilled cheese and he always ordered the same thing and pretended he'd considered other options.
The following Friday, Clark invited us both to dinner at the Italian place on Pike. I borrowed a jacket from the back of my closet and spent longer than I needed to picking earrings. Then Clark sent a text eleven minutes before our reservation: *Something came up. You two go. Already paid for the table. Don't waste the reservation.*
I stared at my phone.
Jaylen was already outside in the car.
I went anyway.
The table was a corner booth, small and candlelit, the kind of table that made no sense for three people but made very specific sense for two. We sat across from each other and ordered without looking at the menus too long. Jaylen kept his face neutral. I kept mine neutral. We didn't talk about Clark.
We talked about everything else for two hours.
On Sunday, I found out that Clark had told Jaylen I needed someone to drive me to my MRI, and told me that Jaylen had offered. Neither version was exactly true. Jaylen picked me up anyway. I sat in the waiting room afterward while he got coffee from the machine down the hall—terrible coffee, the kind that came out beige—and he handed it to me without comment, and I drank it, and I thought about the kind of person who shows up to an MRI waiting room with beige machine coffee for someone who isn't technically his anything.
That evening, I called Clark.
'You're being extremely obvious,' I said.
'I have no idea what you're talking about,' he said.
'Clark.'
'Maddie.' A pause. 'Is it working?'
I hung up.
***
It happened on a Thursday, two weeks after the MRI.
The coffee shop near the hospital was crowded in the specific mid-morning way—people between appointments, laptops open, the particular ambient noise of a room full of people trying to be productive. I was at a corner table with my sketchbook open, waiting for Naomi, when a man walked past on his way to the counter.
He was wearing a cedar-forward cologne. Sharp. Clean. Something beneath it that was warmer, woodsier.
My chest closed.
Not gradually—immediately, like a fist had reached in and squeezed. I set down my pencil and pressed my palm flat against the table and focused on the grain of the wood. My lungs still worked. The air was fine. The man was already gone, already at the counter, already ordering something, already nothing to do with me.
But my hands were trembling.
Naomi arrived four minutes later and found me with both palms around my coffee cup, staring at the middle distance.
'You okay?' she said, sliding in across from me.
'Yeah,' I said. Then: 'I don't know. Someone walked past. The smell—' I stopped. 'It sounds strange.'
'What kind of smell?'
'Cologne. Cedar, mostly. Something under it.' I shook my head. 'My chest just—seized. Like a warning. But I don't know what it was warning me about.'
Naomi was quiet for a moment. She looked at me carefully, the way she sometimes did—like she was choosing which version of honesty to offer. Then she reached across and squeezed my hand and said, 'Have you told Jaylen?'
I hadn't. But that evening, I did.
We were in his kitchen. He was making tea—actual tea this time, no culinary ambitions involved—and I was sitting at the island with my sketchbook closed in front of me, watching the kettle.
'Something happened today,' I said.
He turned slightly. Not fully. Just enough to show he was listening.
I told him about the coffee shop. The cologne. The way my chest had shut down without asking my permission. The trembling. The feeling of a warning delivered in a language I didn't speak.
He didn't move while I talked. Didn't nod or make the small, encouraging sounds people make when they want to signal active listening. He just stood there, one hand on the counter, and let me finish.
Then he said: 'Your body remembers things your mind decided to let go of. That doesn't mean you need to chase them.'
I looked at him.
'Okay,' I said.
'Okay,' he said.
He poured the tea.
***
The rain started on the walk home from dinner the following week. Not the soft kind—the kind that came sideways, that found the gap between your collar and your neck, that made the whole city sound like static.
We were near the waterfront, on the stretch of path that ran along the railing above the water. I'd insisted on walking. Jaylen had not argued, which I was beginning to understand was its own form of argument.
The rain hit the metal railing at a particular angle.
The sound of it—that specific percussion, the sharp irregular beat of heavy drops on metal—moved through me like a current. I stopped walking. My hand came up to my sternum without my deciding to move it, pressing flat against my chest, my body bracing for something it expected and I didn't.
Impact. That was the word that surfaced. My body was bracing for impact.
I stood there, hand pressed to my chest, rain soaking through my jacket, and for a long terrible second I couldn't fully breathe.
Jaylen stepped beside me.
Not in front. Not behind. Beside—close enough that his shoulder blocked the angle of the wind, close enough that the rain stopped finding my collar. He didn't touch me. Didn't ask what was wrong. Didn't offer me any of the careful, well-meaning words that would have required me to reassemble myself quickly enough to receive them.
He just stood there.
The railing kept making its sound. The rain kept falling. Somewhere below us the water was moving, dark and certain, doing what it always did.
Slowly—slowly—my breathing steadied.
My hand dropped from my sternum.
I looked at him. He was looking straight ahead, his jaw relaxed, his profile rain-dark and steady.
'Okay,' I said.
He nodded once.
We walked.
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