The crisp morning air bites at my skin as I tuck my hands deeper into the sleeves of my sweatshirt. Itâs oversized, like most of my clothes, hanging loose over my frame, swallowing me whole. Paired with black leggings and my worn-in Birkenstocks, itâs the perfect outfit to blend in, to shrink into the background, to avoid attention.
But no matter how much fabric I hide behind, thereâs one person I can never seem to disappear from.
The thought of him sends a ripple through my chest, tightening something I donât want to acknowledge. Itâs been four days since the party, four days since I let myself feel something I shouldnât have. Itâs been four days since my body betrayed me, pressing into him, moving against him like I belonged there.
Because the truthâthe ugly, undeniable truthâis that I did belong there, before.
Before I became who I am now, the leftover pieces that once were put together. Back when I had a heart capable of accepting the risk of loving something, someone, that could be taken away. Or worseâpushed away.
And thatâs the problem.
I stare down at the pavement as Lyla and I walk toward the coffee shop for our standing Wednesday morning coffee date. I should be focused on the day ahead. On class. On the work I need to catch up on after skipping a single class in my very least favorite subject to avoid seeing Jaxon, even though Iâm already behind.
But all I can think about is the way my body lit up against hisâthe way his breath burned hot against my ear, the way his hands fit so perfectly over my hips, the way my heart nearly cracked open when he murmured, You sure you donât want me to stop?
I should have pulled away, just like I did one night before our senior year of high school.
Weâre sitting in the back of his truck, legs swinging, shoulders just barely brushing. Itâs stupid hot outâhumid in that sticky, late-summer way that makes everything feel closer than it should. The kind of night that makes you say things you shouldnât.
âI canât believe itâs almost over,â I say, staring up at the stars like they might give me answers. âSenior year. Everythingâs gonna change.â
What I donât say is: Iâm scared. Of leaving. Of staying. Of losing this.
Him.
Jaxon doesnât say anything right away. I wonder if I sound dumb.
Then, quietly, he says, âI donât want things to change.â
Something in my chest tightens.
âYou donât?â I ask, not looking at him. Iâm not sure I can.
âNot with you.â
My heart stops.
I glance at himâslow, careful, like maybe if I move too fast, Iâll ruin the moment. But heâs already looking at me, and itâs different this time. Thereâs something in his eyes I havenât seen before. Or maybe I have, and Iâve just been pretending I donât.
Heâs closer than I thought. Or maybe I leaned in. I donât even know.
My knee brushes his. I donât move.
âJax,â I say, and his name comes out like a secret.
My heartâs racing. My palms are sweaty. I can feel his breath on my skin, and all I want to do is close the distance.
But I donât.
I canât.
âI should go,â I blurt.
His face doesnât change, but his eyesâGod, his eyes.
âYeah. Yeah, okay,â he says.
I jump down from the truck bed before he can say anything else. I donât look back at him over my shoulder. I donât trust myself to.
The whole way to my front door, I can feel his eyes on me. And the worst part? I want to run back. I want to kiss him. But I donât.
If we do this and then he leavesâ¦I wonât survive it.
The thoughts in my head get louder with every step. Youâll ruin him. Youâll run when things get hard. You always do. You ran from him once, youâll do it again.
Because if I give inâif I let myself believe, even for a second, that someone like Jaxon Montgomery could be safe for someone like meâthen Iâll only end up hurting him.
And I refuse to do that.
âOkay, what the hell is going on with you?â
Lylaâs voice snaps me out of my thoughts. I glance over to find her watching me like sheâs been waiting for me to crack.
I school my expression into something neutral. âNothing.â
She scoffs. âBullshit. Youâve been weird all morning, and donât think I didnât notice youâve been avoiding all the places where you might run into Jaxon.â
I roll my eyes. âI have notâ ââ
She raises a hand. âDonât even try it. Iâm not Carter, okay? You canât just deflect and pretend like youâre not actively dodging him.â
I sigh, tugging the sleeves of my sweatshirt over my hands as we step inside the coffee shop. The smell of espresso and fresh pastries fills the air, warm and inviting, but it does nothing to ease the knot in my stomach.
âIâm not avoiding him,â I say, even though we both know I am. âI justâ ââ
âJust what?â Lyla presses, arms crossing.
I bite my lip, my throat tight. âI canât let this happen, Lyla.â My voice is quieter now, edged with something raw. âI canâtââ I exhale sharply. âHe doesnât get it. He thinks Iâm someone Iâm not.â
Her expression softens. âMaddyâ¦â
âHeâll leave,â I whisper. âI always lose the ones I care about. They all leave.â
Lyla shakes her head. âThatâs not true.â
I let out a humorless laugh. âIsnât it?â
âNo, itâs not. I havenât left you, and I donât plan to,â she says, grabbing a seat at our usual table. âYouâve made my life a lot more fun, if Iâm being honest. I quite enjoy your company.â
âThatâs different, Ly.â The words feel hollow even as I say them. The truth is, Iâm terrified. Terrified of how Jaxon makes me feel. Terrified of how easily he slips past my defenses. Terrified of wanting somethingâsomeoneâso badly, losing them would break me all over again.
I sit down across from her, but before she can respond, someone slides into the seat beside me, their presence pressing close enough to make me jump.
âMorning, Blakey baby.â
I turn, groaning when I see a very perky blond grinning at me like he knows every single thought running through my head. Carter, my irritating but ultimately well-meaning friend, whoâs been trying to play matchmaker since the moment he realized there was history between Jaxon and me.
âSeriously?â I mutter, grabbing my coffee from the counter as I sink further into my sweatshirt.
Carter chuckles, his grin widening. âRelax. Just keeping you company while you stress about my boy.â
I shoot him a glare. âIâm not stressing about Jaxon.â
âSure you arenât. Firstly, I never said his name, but you just did.â He smirks, leaning back in his seat, arms crossed over his chest in that casual way only platonic friends can pull off. âYou do realize heâs not gonna let you avoid him forever, right?â
I open my mouth to argue, but before I can, the air shifts.
A familiar presence steps into the coffee shop, and I feel it before I even look.
But I do look.
There he is.
The man who stars in every one of my happy dreams, standing in the doorway, the morning light catching on his sharp jawline, his dark hair still damp from a shower, his hoodie stretched over his broad frame. His gaze sweeps the shop, scanning the crowd, searchingâ â
Until he finds me.
The second our eyes lock, the world slows.
My stomach clenches, something tight and aching curling low in my chest. His jaw ticks, his broad shoulders stiffenâ â
And then, just as quickly, his expression smooths into something unreadable. His posture goes rigid.
I swallow hard, gripping my coffee like itâs about to run away. He sees me sitting with Carter, sees Carter lounging in the chair beside me, his arm casually draped across the back of my chairânot touching me, just his usual relaxed posture, the way he sits with all his friends.
Something that looks a lot like hurt flashes in Jaxonâs eyes before he nods, simply acknowledging my presence. He gives a quick, curt dip of his chin, his mouth pressed into a flat line.
My heart stumbles over itself. Why? Iâm not so sure. No, thatâs a lie. I know exactly why. Because despite every wall Iâve built, every excuse Iâve made, every reason Iâve given myself for why we canât be together, I still want him. I still crave the way he looks at me, the way he says my name, the way he makes me feel like maybe, just maybe, Iâm not as broken as I think I am.
Before I can say anything, Carter calls out, âYo, Jax! Come sit with us.â
âNah man, gotta get going. Changed my mind on the coffee.â Jaxon turns around on the spot and is back out the door before I can blink.
Carter gives me a look. Itâs not a smug one, not teasingâjust⦠knowing. Like he saw the way Jaxonâs whole body went stiff the second he saw me sitting with him. Like heâs daring me to pretend I didnât feel that moment shift.
I grip my coffee tighter, my stomach twisting, my pulse still rattling in my chest. The voice in my head is at war now. Let him go. Itâs better this way. Youâll only hurt him. But beneath that, quieter but persistent: Go after him. Donât let him walk away again. Donât make the same mistake twice.
Lyla leans in, voice low but sharp. âWhy are you still sitting here?â
I blink. âWhat?â
She jerks her chin toward the door where Jaxon is already walking away, broad shoulders tense beneath his hoodie. âYou need to go after him. Catch up. Explain.â
âLyla, Iâ ââ
She cuts me off. âMads. You can keep pretending you donât care, but we both know thatâs bullshit.â
Carter snorts. âFor once, I agree with her.â
Lyla cuts him a glare before flipping him off. âLook, Iâve watched you dance around this for weeks. Youâre my friend, not my project, so I wonât tell you what to do. But I will tell you whatever you think youâre protecting yourself from? Itâs not working. Youâre just making yourself more miserable.â
My breath catches. The weight in my chestâthe one Iâve been trying to shove down since the partyâpresses harder. Jaxon just walked away. He gave me a nod and then left. Because of me.
Go after him, the voice whispers. Before itâs too late.
But what if it already is? the other one counters. What if youâre just going to make it worse?
What if you donât and regret it forever?
Shit.
I push back my chair, ignoring the way Lyla and Carter exchange knowing glances, and rush toward the door. The cool air slaps me in the face the second I step outside, but I barely feel it.
âJaxon!â
He doesnât stop.
âJaxon!â I try again, louder this time, my voice cracking. My shoes hit the pavement hard as I break into a run.
Heâs still walking, hands shoved deep in his pockets, shoulders hunched against the wind. Or maybe against me. The distance between us feels like miles, even though itâs only a few yards.
âMontgomery!â I yell, desperation clawing up my throat. âWould you justâ ââ
He stops so abruptly, I nearly crash into him. When he turns, his expression is locked down tight, jaw clenched, eyes carefully blank. Iâve never seen him look at me like this, and it hurts more than I thought possible.
âWhat, Madison?â His voice is flat, emotionless.
I open my mouth, but nothing comes out. What am I supposed to say? Sorry I freaked out when you almost kissed me? Sorry Iâve been avoiding you for days? Sorry Iâm terrified of how you make me feel?
Tell him the truth, one voice urges. Tell him youâre scared but you want him.
Donât do it, the other warns. Youâll ruin everything. Again.
I swallow hard. âI just⦠I donât want things to be weird between us.â My voice is quieter than I mean for it to be. âI donât want anything to ruin our friendship.â
His jaw tightens, the muscle feathering like heâs barely holding something back. âThatâs what you think is happening?â
I exhale, shifting on my feet. âJax, what happened at the party was a mistake.â
The moment the words leave my mouth, I know theyâre a lie, a pathetic attempt to protect myself from the avalanche of feelings threatening to bury me. But I canât take them back now.
His nostrils flare. âA mistake.â He says it slowly, deliberately, like heâs testing how the words taste in his mouth.
I nod, but my throat feels tight. âI had too much to drink. It got out of hand.â
Another lie. I wasnât that drunk. I knew exactly what I was doing when I pressed against him, when I challenged him, when I let myself get lost in the feel of his hands on my hips.
Jaxon steps closer, and suddenly, all the space I thought I had disappears.
The air between us shifts, crackles like a live wire, and my body reacts before my brain does. My breath hitches. My skin prickles. My fingers curl into the hem of my sweatshirt like thatâll somehow ground me.
He watches me closely, his voice lower now. âTell me something, Madison.â
I swallow hard. I can count on one hand how many times in the last five years heâs called me by my full name, none of them a fond memory. âWhat?â
His eyes are dark, unwavering. âDoes your body react the same way with all the other guys youâve been with?â
My stomach plummets. The answer is no. Itâs always been no. No one has ever made me feel the way Jaxon doesânot Carter, not any of the guys Iâve dated, not anyone. But admitting that means admitting what I feel for him is real. That itâs always been real.
I take a shaky breath, my throat dry. âJaxâ ââ
âDo you feel safe with them the way you feel safe with me?â
My eyes snap up to meet his stormy ones. I never told him I felt safe. I never had to. Heâs always known me better than I know myself. The realization sends a fresh wave of panic through me. He sees through you. He always has.
I shake my head, chest tightening. âDonât do this.â
He takes another step closer, his scent wrapping around me, like fresh citrus and amber, his voice dropping even lower. âDo what?â
âMake this into something itâs not.â
Liar, the voice in my head accuses. You know exactly what this is.
His brows pull together, and something flickers in his expressionâhurt, maybe, but itâs gone as quickly as it came, masked by something steely, unreadable.
I suck in a breath and step back. âI just⦠I donât want to lose you again.â At least that much is true. The thought of Jaxon disappearing from my life again makes it hard to breathe, even though the first time was my own doing.
Jaxon studies me, his hands flexing at his sides. For a second, I think heâs going to argue. Push. Tell me time doesnât change what we both felt in that moment. But he doesnât.
Instead, he nods once, sharp and clipped. âOkay.â
Something about the way he says itâcold, distantâmakes my stomach twist. I donât stop him when he turns and starts walking again, and I hate myself for it as I start walking the opposite way to the mathematics building.
Youâre making a mistake, the voice whispers. Youâre pushing him away again.
Itâs for the best, the other counters. Youâll only hurt him in the end.
But what if youâre wrong? What if this time could be different?
By the time I get to class, my hands are still shaking. I slide into my usual seat, my mind a tangled mess of Jaxonâs words, his voice, the weight of his gaze when he asked me if I felt safe with them the way I feel safe with him.
I donât. I never have. And thatâs exactly why this terrifies me even more.
I keep my head down as students trickle in, my fingers gripping my pen like itâs the only thing keeping me tethered to reality.
The seat next to me stays empty.
I glance toward the door, my heart hammering. Please come. Please donât let me push you away again.
But Jaxon doesnât come in.
Minutes pass. The professor starts the lecture. Still no Jaxon.
Frowning, I pull out my phone and shoot him a quick text.
Three dots appear, then disappear.
Then, his response comes through.
I stare at the message, something uneasy curling in my gut.
Because I know him.
Jaxon doesnât forget things.
He never shows, and I canât shake the feeling that maybe this time, Iâve pushed him too far. That maybe this time, he wonât come back. The thought sends a cold chill through me, settling deep in my bones.
This is what you wanted, one voice reminds me. Distance. Space. Safety.
Is it? the other challenges. Or are you just running scared again?
I donât know the answer, but as I stare at the empty seat beside me, at the space where Jaxon should be, I canât help but wonder if Iâve made the biggest mistake of all.