
My Brother’s Best Friend Chose Me Over Him
Chapter 5
The buzzer went off at 7:14 in the evening.
I was at the kitchen table with my sketchbook, a half-eaten bowl of cereal pushed to one side, Clark on the couch behind me watching something with too many explosions. The buzzer sounded again before I could get up.
'I'll get it,' I said.
Clark muted the TV.
I pressed the intercom. 'Hello?'
'Madelynn.' The voice was male. Careful. Like he'd practiced saying my name to make sure it came out right. 'It's Zayn. Can I come up?'
I didn't recognize the name. I turned it over in my mind the way you turn over a word in a language you half-studied once—familiar in shape, empty of meaning.
'I'm sorry,' I said. 'Who?'
A pause. Long enough that I checked the intercom panel to make sure the connection was still live.
'Zayn Walker,' he said. 'We... we knew each other. Before your accident. Can I please come up? I just need five minutes.'
I stood there with my finger on the intercom button and felt nothing in particular. No recognition. No warning. Not even the vague unease I sometimes got from nowhere—the flinch in a rainstorm, the seized chest in a coffee shop. Just a blank, honest nothing.
'One second,' I said.
I turned around.
Clark was already off the couch. He was standing in the middle of the living room and his face had done something I'd never seen it do before. Not anger exactly—something beyond anger, something that had burned past anger into a place that was very quiet and very absolute. His jaw was set. His hands were open at his sides.
'Clark,' I said. 'Do you know him?'
He crossed the room in four steps and pressed the door release before I could ask anything else.
***
The man in the hallway was objectively handsome. Tall, well-dressed, the kind of composed that takes effort to maintain. He was holding roses—white ones, wrapped in paper, slightly crushed at the edges like he'd been gripping them too long. His eyes went to me first, and something in them cracked open and then shut again so fast I almost missed it.
Then he saw Clark.
His expression did a complicated thing.
Clark stepped in front of me. One step—smooth, deliberate, like a door closing. His shoulder came between Zayn and my line of sight.
'Walk away,' Clark said. His voice was stripped bare. No heat in it. That was the thing—there was no heat at all. Just absolute, distilled certainty. 'Right now. Don't come back here.'
'Clark—' Zayn started.
'She doesn't know you,' Clark said. 'And that's not something you get to fix by showing up at her door with flowers.' A beat. 'Walk away.'
I watched Zayn's face from behind Clark's shoulder. Something was moving through it—something large and slow, like a ship trying to turn in shallow water. His eyes found mine for just a second over Clark's arm.
I looked back at him. Politely. Honestly.
I had nothing to give him. Not recognition, not anger, not grief. Nothing.
He looked at me the way people look at a photograph of a stranger who resembles someone they loved. Like I was evidence of something that no longer existed.
Clark closed the door.
The lock clicked. We stood in the hallway of our own apartment, the TV still muted in the living room, the bowl of cereal getting soggier on the kitchen table.
'Who was that?' I said.
Clark looked at the closed door for a long moment. Then he looked at me.
'Nobody,' he said. 'Not anymore.'
I almost pressed him. The word sat on the edge of my tongue—*Clark*—in the tone I used when I knew he was managing me. But something about his face stopped me. Not the anger. The other thing underneath it. The thing that looked like old damage.
I let it go.
***
Three days later, I was at the coffee shop near campus with my sketchbook open, waiting on nothing in particular. Naomi had a class. Jaylen had a morning meeting. I'd walked over alone in the pale October light and ordered my latte and claimed the corner table and let myself just sit for a while.
I was working on hands. I'd been drawing hands obsessively for two weeks—different positions, different weights, different things they held. I wasn't sure why. My therapist would probably have thoughts.
I heard the chair across from me scrape.
I looked up.
It was the man from the hallway. Zayn Walker. He was standing beside my table with his hands in his coat pockets, his expression arranged into something that was trying to be casual and not quite getting there.
'Hi,' he said. 'I know this is... I know you don't know me. I just wanted to talk. Five minutes.' He gestured at the chair. 'Can I sit?'
I looked at him. Nothing fired—no alarm, no recognition. He was a handsome stranger with careful eyes, and my nature is open, and five minutes is five minutes.
'Okay,' I started.
Then the booth shifted.
Jaylen slid in beside me. Not hurried. Not performed. He moved like he'd been expected—like the space next to me had been his all morning and he was simply returning to it. His arm settled over my shoulder, easy and complete, his thumb grazing the curve of my collarbone in one slow, deliberate pass.
He looked at Zayn.
The look was not loud. It was the opposite of loud—calibrated and still, the kind of stillness that doesn't need to announce itself because it already fills the room.
'She doesn't remember you,' Jaylen said. His voice was level. Conversational. Each word placed exactly where he meant it. 'And I intend to keep it that way.'
The silence between them had weight.
Zayn stood very still. His hands were still in his pockets. A muscle in his jaw moved once and went quiet. He looked at Jaylen for a long moment—the kind of look that takes inventory, that measures distance—and then, slowly, he looked at me.
I looked back at him.
Same as before. Polite. Honest. Nothing.
Something went out of his face then. Not in a dramatic way. Just—a light behind glass, dimming. He nodded once at no one in particular, and turned, and walked back through the coffee shop and out the door into the grey October street.
I watched the door settle shut.
Jaylen's thumb had stilled against my collarbone. His arm was still there—warm, solid, not asking anything of me.
'He came to the apartment,' I said.
'I know.'
'Clark told you.'
'Clark tells me things.'
I looked down at my sketchbook. The half-finished hand on the page. Long fingers, loose around something that wasn't drawn yet.
'Who is he?' I asked.
Jaylen was quiet for a moment.
'Someone from before,' he said.
The rain started against the window. That sideways kind. The kind that found every gap.
I reached for my coffee. My hands were steady.
'Okay,' I said.
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