I donât remember getting to my car.
One second, Iâm in the bar, my heart being ripped straight out of my chest, and the next, Iâm gripping the steering wheel so tightly, my knuckles turn white. My breath comes in short, uneven gasps, and I canât tell if Iâm freezing or burning alive.
I can still see him, Jaxon, sitting there, relaxed, smirking at something she said, letting another girl lean in close.
I squeeze my eyes shut, shaking my head like I can erase the image, but itâs burned into the back of my eyelids, replaying on a cruel, endless loop.
I should have expected this.
He told me he wasnât going to chase me anymore.
I left. I let him go.
And now, heâs doing exactly what he should be doingâmoving on.
I gasp in a shaky breath, resting my forehead against the steering wheel as nausea rolls through me.
Why does it hurt so much?
I did this.
I made my choice.
I told myself I was protecting him, that I was doing the right thing by walking away before I could hurt him worse. But now, sitting here alone in this empty parking lot, my chest aching like something inside me has been irreversibly brokenâ â
I wonder if I was just protecting myself all along.
The what-ifs crash over me like a wave, relentless and suffocating.
What if Iâd just stayed that night at the hospital?
What if I hadnât pushed him away?
What if Iâd told him I loved him when I had the chance?
I squeeze my eyes shut, shaking my head. Itâs too late.
Isnât it?
I sit there for what feels like forever, my body locked, my mind spiraling, before I finally inhale sharply, straighten in my seat, and start the engine.
I donât know where Iâm going at first. I just drive.
The city lights blur past me, a dull smear of neon against the dark, but I barely register them. My hands shake against the wheel, my pulse pounding so hard, I can feel it in my throat.
I try not to think, but itâs impossible, because every mile I put between myself and that bar, every streetlight I pass, the more suffocating the truth becomes.
I want him.
I love him.
I donât know when it happened, or if it was always there, waiting for me to stop running long enough to see it.
But I do.
And now, I might have lost him.
The wind bites harder out here, sharp against my cheeks. It carries the scent of winterâthe kind that settles deep and doesnât let go.
I used to love this season. Now, it just feels empty.
I pull my coat tighter around me and step onto the gravel path, my boots crunching with each step. I donât know why I came here. I was halfway to the highway before I even realized where I was going. But now that Iâm here, I canât imagine being anywhere else.
The headstone hasnât changed.
Rebecca Blake
Beloved mother. Fierce heart. Endless light.
I stare at the words someone else chose, words that feel too small for her. My knees give out before I even notice, and suddenly, Iâm sitting in the brittle grass, fingers digging into the cold earth like Iâm trying to anchor myself to somethingâanything.
âI donât even know how to talk to you,â I whisper. âIsnât that sad? I spent my whole life wanting your attention, and now, I donât even know what to say.â
The silence feels heavy, like sheâs holding her breath with me.
âIâm a mess, Mom. IâI miss you so much, it physically hurts sometimes. I hate you for leaving. I know it wasnât your choice, but I still hate it. I hate that you didnât get to see me grow up, that you didnât get to see the man Jaxon grew up to be, either.â My throat catches on his name. âHeâsâ¦heâs kind, patient. And God, he looks at me like Iâm the whole damn world, his whole world, and it terrifies me.â
I swipe at my face with the sleeve of my coat, angry at myself for crying. Again. âI push people away. Thatâs what I do. I was doing fineâfine enough, anywayâuntil he showed up. Until he started loving me like I wasnât broken.â
A sharp sob slips out, catching me off guard. I bury my face in my hands.
âHe makes me want things I told myself I couldnât have. A future. A home. A version of me who doesnât flinch every time someone gets close. And Iâm so scared, Mom. Because every time I get close to someone, they leave.â
I glance up at the sky, gray and endless above the trees.
âYou left.â Thereâs no bitterness in it nowâjust truth.
I sit there for what feels like forever, letting myself break open but not fall apart. The way I used to. The way I always do.
After a while, I speak again, quieter this time. âI think I want to stop surviving. I think I want to try living. Even if it hurts.â
The wind rustles the bare branches above me like an answer, or maybe thatâs just what I want to believe.
I place my hand against the headstone, fingers brushing cool stone. âHelp me be brave, okay?â
I stay like that for a while, just breathing.
Not breaking. Not unraveling. Justâ¦breathing.
Itâs new. To sit in the sadness without drowning in it. To miss her and be angry and feel guilty and still want more for myself.
Maybe healing isnât some huge moment. Maybe itâs this.
Choosing not to run.
Choosing to sit still.
Choosing to stay, even when it hurts.
A breeze cuts across the back of my neck, and for a second, it almost feels like a hand. Like her hand. Like sheâs here. Or maybe, I just need her to be.
Either way, I whisper, âThank you,â and press my palm flat to the stone one last time.
When I stand, my legs are stiff, but thereâs something steadier in my chest. Not peace. Not yet. But maybe the beginning of it.
I turn toward the path, the weight still there but not dragging me under.
This time, Iâm walking awayânot because Iâm avoiding the pain, but because Iâm finally ready to face it.
Back behind the wheel of my car, I start to head back towards campus. I blink rapidly against the burning in my eyes as I take a turn without thinking, my body leading me to the only place thatâs ever given me peace.
The beach.
I park the car and just sit there, my fingers still curled around the steering wheel, my body locked tight. The rhythmic crash of the waves against the shore is muted through the closed windows, but I can still feel it.
Was it ever the ocean that made me feel safe?
Or was it the boy who used to stand beside me, holding my hand in the sand, telling me stories about all the places weâd go one day?
My throat tightens.
I lean my head back against the seat, staring up through the windshield at the stars scattered across the black sky.
If I close my eyes, I can still hear him.
âCome on, Mads. You really think weâre gonna stay in this town forever?â
âI donât know. Maybe.â
âNah.â He had grinned, nudging my shoulder. âWeâre gonna see the world. Weâll go to Italy first. You can eat all the pasta you want. Then, Greece, because youâre obsessed with the white houses on the cliffs. Then, maybe somewhere totally random. Likeâ¦Iceland.â
âIceland?â I had laughed.
âWhy not? We can see the northern lights, just you and me.â
âJust us.â
My eyes snap open.
My chest heaves with every shallow breath, my mind racing with a hundred different emotions, a thousand regrets.
I should go home.
I should let this go.
But instead, I reach for the door handle with trembling fingers, stepping out into the cold night air.
The wind is sharp against my skin as I make my way down the familiar path, the sand cool beneath my bare feet when I slip off my shoes.
The ocean stretches out before me, vast and endless, the moonlight dancing on its surface like liquid silver.
I sink onto the rocks near the shore, pulling my knees to my chest, and stare at the waves, letting the sound fill the silence in my head.
This is the place that always made me feel calm, but tonight?
Tonight, it only makes me feel empty.
I think about my future.
What I want. Where I see myself in five years. Ten.
And all I see is him.
Jaxon, with his steady hands and easy smile. Jaxon, rolling his eyes at me when I steal his fries but never actually stopping me. Jaxon, who held me even when I tried to push him away, who always came backâuntil I made it impossible for him to.
I let out a ragged breath, the weight of everything crashing down on me all at once.
I donât want to live in this cycle anymore.
I donât want to keep running.
For the first time in a long time, I want to fight.
My hands tremble as I pull my phone from my pocket. I hesitate for only a second before I press call.
The line rings.
Once.
Twice.
Then, a soft, familiar voice filters through the speaker.
The scent of fresh linen and lavender fills the office, familiar and steady, like nothing has changed since the last time I sat in this chair. Thereâs the same soft lighting, the same cozy throw blanket draped over the couch, the same small water bottles on the end table next to the tissue box.
Everything is the same.
Except me.
Iâm different.
I donât know if Iâm better or worse, but I know Iâm not the same girl who used to sit here, arms crossed, defenses high, refusing to let anyone dig too deep.
Dr. Martha, my therapist, watches me with patient eyes, her gaze steady, waiting.
She doesnât rush me. She never does.
But she also wonât let me run.
Not this time.
I pick at a loose thread on the sleeve of my hoodie, swallowing down the lump in my throat.
âI almost didnât come,â I admit quietly, my voice rough from lack of sleep.
She offers me a small smile. âBut you did.â
I nod slowly, still fidgeting with my sleeve.
âTell me why,â she says gently.
I inhale deeply, pressing my lips together before I force the words out. âBecause Iâm tired of living in a constant state of fear that everyone and everything I care about will be taken away or leave me.â
Saying it out loud hurts, as if Iâm yanking the bandage off an open wound and exposing everything underneath.
Dr. Martha leans forward slightly, her expression unreadable but still warm. âAnd why are you are coming to that realization, Madison?â
I squeeze my eyes shut, like I can keep myself from breaking, but I already know the answer.
Him.
Jaxon Montgomery.
The boy who never stopped showing up, even when I shoved him away. My best friend. The boy who loved me, even when I didnât know how to love myself.
The boy I hurt.
I blink rapidly, staring down at my lap. âI left him,â I whisper. âI ran, just like I always do.â
Dr. Martha is quiet for a beat, then, âWhy?â
I let out a hollow laugh, shaking my head. âBecause itâs what I do. Itâs what Iâve always done. I push people away before they can hurt me.â
âBefore they can leave you.â
I flinch, my stomach twisting painfully.
Dr. Martha exhales, her tone softer now. âYouâve been surviving for so long, Madison. Youâve always been looking for the exit, always keeping yourself one step ahead of the heartbreak. But tell meâ¦has that ever worked and protected you?â
I stare at her, my throat tight.
Because the answer is no.
It hasnât.
It didnât keep me from losing my mother.
It didnât stop my father from hurting me.
And it sure as hell didnât keep me from falling in love with Jaxon Montgomery.
I drop my head into my hands, exhaling shakily. âI donât know how to stop.â
Dr. Martha doesnât flinch at my broken confession. She simply nods, like she expected this. âThatâs why youâre here.â
I clench my jaw, rubbing at my temples.
âTell me what youâre afraid of,â she prompts, her voice unwavering.
My chest tightens. I open my mouth, then close it. I know the answer, but admitting it feels impossible. Still, when she doesnât push, when she just lets me sit in silence, something in me finally cracks.
âIâm afraidâ¦â I pause, my pulse hammering. âIâm afraid if I let him love me, if I let myself have this, something will take him away from me, just like everything else.â
There it is. The truth. Raw and bloody and sitting between us like an open wound.
Dr. Martha doesnât look surprised.
She never does.
Instead, she leans forward just a little, her voice gentle but firm. âMadison, youâve built your life around protecting yourself from loss, but the reality is, youâre still losing. You lost Jaxon when you walked away, and now, youâre here, hurting, because leaving didnât save you from the pain. It just gave you a different kind of heartbreak, one you controlled because you caused it yourself.â
I shift in the chair, the leather cool against the backs of my thighs despite the warmth of the office. My nails dig into the sleeves of my hoodie, my fingers twisting the fabric like itâs the only thing anchoring me to reality.
Dr. Martha watches me with that calm, knowing expression, the one that makes it impossible to hideâeven from myself. She asks the question again, her voice soft, steady. âWhat do you want, Madison?â
My throat tightens.
This is it.
This is the moment I have to stop lyingâto her, to myself, to everyone.
I drop my gaze to my lap, where my hands grip my own sleeves so hard, my knuckles are white. I try to unclench, to breathe, but my chest feels like itâs caving in, like the weight of my own truth is pressing down on me too hard, too fast.
What do I want?
I want him.
I want Jaxon Montgomery in every way a person can want someone else.
I want his stupid smirk when he catches me staring at him. I want his dimple popping out when he teases me. I want the way his voice gets all low and serious when he tells me heâs not going anywhere, even when I keep pushing him away.
I want the way he kisses me like Iâm something precious, like Iâm hisâeven when Iâve never given him a single good reason to believe that.
I want the way he looks at meâlike I matter, like I could be more than the shattered pieces of my past.
Tears burn at the back of my eyes, but I blink hard, forcing them away.
Because the truth is, I donât deserve him.
He gave me everything, every part of himselfâhis time, his love, his future. He risked things for me, transferred schools for me, put his own goddamn dreams on the line because of me.
And I left.
I destroyed him, the way I destroy everything.
So what right do I have to want him?
I suck in a slow, unsteady breath, my chest aching with the weight of it all.
Finally, I force the words out, the ones Iâve been burying, the ones that feel like they might kill me.
âI want him,â I whisper, my voice breaking. âI want Jaxon. But more than that, I want to be comfortable where I am, with who I am. I want to stop staying closed off. I want to have real friendships and relationships with others without always feeling so full of anxiety and always jumping to the worst possible scenario in my mind.â
Dr. Martha doesnât react right away. She just waits, giving me space to sit in my own words, to let them settle like something permanent.
And maybe thatâs the thing.
Maybe it is permanent.
Maybe it always has been.
When she finally speaks, her voice is gentle. âThen we need to figure out how you can stop that from happening.â
I let out a ragged breath, pressing my palms against my thighs. How do I stop running? Itâs all Iâve ever known.
But I know this tooâI ran from him, and I still ended up here, aching for him.
So maybe running isnât the answer.
Maybe it never was.
Dr. Martha shifts slightly, her chair creaking. âYou said something earlier, Madison. You said you left him because you thought it would protect you.â
I nod slowly, my throat too tight to speak. Now? Now, I donât know if I can ever fix it.
Tears slip down my cheeks before I can stop them, hot and unforgiving.
Dr. Martha hands me a tissue, her expression patient.
I take it with shaking fingers, dabbing at my face. âI donât know how to fix it,â I admit, my voice raw. âI donât know how to stop ruining everything good in my life.â
She tilts her head slightly, her expression thoughtful. âLet me ask you something, Madison. When you walked away from Jaxon, did it make you feel safe?â
The question punches straight through me, and I shake my head, my fingers curling around the tissue. âNo,â I whisper. âIt made me feel empty.â
Dr. Martha leans forward just slightly, her tone soft but firm. âThen maybe itâs time to try something new.â
A sharp breath shudders through me.
Something new.
Something terrifying.
Something like staying.
Something like fighting.
I wipe at my face, sniffling softly. âWhat if I already ruined it?â
âWhat if you didnât?â she counters. âWhat if heâs waiting for you to figure it out?â
My chest tightensâI donât know.
But maybeâ¦
Maybe, I owe it to myself to find out.