My lungs burn, my ponytail sticking to the back of my neck as I slow to a stop outside our apartment. My hands brace against my knees, my heart hammering in my chest.
Itâs been weeks since I started running again. At first, it was just something to do, a way to get out of my own head, to channel all the restless energy with nowhere to go. But now?
Now, itâs something more.
Itâs control.
A way to remind myself Iâm still here. Iâm still trying.
I wipe the sweat from my forehead, my breathing still uneven as I unlock the door and step inside. The apartment is quietâtoo quiet.
âLyla?â I call, kicking off my sneakers near the door.
No answer.
I frown slightly, checking my phone to see if she left a message, but thereâs nothing. Weird. She almost always texts if sheâs going somewhere.
Shrugging it off, I grab a water from the fridge and take a long sip before heading toward the bathroom. The moment I step under the warm spray of the shower, my muscles loosen, the tension in my shoulders easing.
This is another thing Dr. Martha and I have been working onârecognizing when I need something. Slowing down. Letting myself feel instead of burying everything so deep, I canât reach it again.
Itâsâ¦helping.
Baby steps.
At first, talking to her again was hard. Every session felt like peeling back layers of my skin, exposing wounds Iâd left untreated for too long. But, little by little, Iâve been learning how to sit with the discomfort. How to take what I feel and let it exist instead of running from it.
Iâve started journaling againânothing big, just small entries when my thoughts get too heavy. Iâve been eating better, actually putting effort into taking care of myself instead of just going through the motions. Iâve even let Lyla drag me out for the occasional coffee date, something that felt impossible a few weeks ago.
For the first time in a long time, I donât feel like Iâm suffocating in my own skin.
I rinse off quickly, wringing the water from my hair before shutting off the shower.
I step out, wrapping myself in a towel and wiping the steam from the mirror.
The scars on my shoulder are still there, faint reminders of a past I canât change, but I donât flinch at them anymore.
Theyâre part of me, but they arenât all of me.
I exhale, grabbing a t-shirt and shorts from my dresser before pulling them on. My hair is still damp, dripping slightly onto my shoulders as I step back into the living roomâjust in time to hear the front door open.
Lyla steps inside, her keys jingling as she tosses them onto the counter.
I cross my arms, raising a brow. âWhere have you been?â
She hesitates for half a second, though sheâs not quick enough to cover it.
Her eyes flick to me, then away. âNowhere.â
I narrow my gaze. âLyla.â
Lyla hesitates, just for a fraction of a second, before she sighs and rubs the back of her neck. âI was, uhâ¦saying goodbye to the guys.â
My stomach drops.
I blink at her, my heart suddenly hammering for a completely different reason. âWhat?â
She winces, and thatâs when I know.
Panic claws its way up my throat as my mind scrambles, trying to piece together what she just said, what it means.
Saying goodbye.
Goodbye.
No.
No, no, noâ â
âWhatââ My voice shakes. âWhat day is it?â
Lylaâs eyes flick to mine, and she swallows hard.
âLyla,â I snap, my pulse pounding in my ears. âWhat day is it?â
She exhales, her face softening. âMadsâ ââ
I donât wait for her to finish.
I bolt. Barefoot, hair still damp, wearing nothing but a t-shirt and shortsâI donât care.
I rip open the door and sprint down the stairs, my feet slapping against the pavement as I take off down the street.
Jaxonâs leaving.
Heâs leaving and I didnât say anything.
Didnât fight.
Didnât tell him I love him, that I want him, that Iâm done running.
I canât be too late.
I wonât.
The wind whips against my skin as I push harder, my lungs burning, my legs screamingâbut I donât slow down. I canât.
His house comes into view, and my chest tightens.
His truck isnât in the driveway.
My breath catches in my throat as I come to a stumbling stop in front of the house, my heart hammering against my ribs.
No. No, no, noâ â
I sprint up the steps anyway, my hands shaking as I bang on the door.
Nothing.
I knock again, harder this time, my pulse roaring in my ears.
Please. Please.
Footsteps shuffle on the other side. A second later, the door swings openâ â
And itâs not Jaxon standing there.
Itâs Logan.
His expression falters the second he sees me, his grip tightening on the doorknob. He blinks once, like heâs surprised to see me. And then, just like thatâhis face falls.
My stomach clenches. âThey already left, didnât they?â I whisper, my voice barely audible.
Logan exhales, nodding once. âYeah. About twenty minutes ago.â
A sharp, painful weight slams into my chest, knocking the air from my lungs.
Iâm too late.
I missed him.
Jaxon is gone.
I swallow past the lump in my throat, pressing my lips together to keep from completely falling apart.
Logan shifts, rubbing the back of his neck. âMadison, Iââ He stops, hesitating before he sighs. âLook, before you go, I just⦠I need to say something.â
I donât move.
I canât.
My whole body feels locked in place, frozen in this momentâthis horrible, gut-wrenching moment.
Logan takes another step forward, guilt written all over his face. âI was a dick that night, at the party. The things I saidâ¦â He shakes his head. âI never shouldâve run my mouth like that. I didnât know anything about you, and I had no right to judge.â
I just stare at him, barely able to process his words past the dull, pounding ache in my skull.
Logan exhales, his shoulders sagging slightly. âI know I caused a lot of the shit that happened between you and Jaxon, and I donât expect you to forgive me for it. But, for what itâs worthâ¦I am sorry.â
I close my eyes, inhaling a shaky breath. I swallow hard, nodding slightly. âOkay.â
Logan shifts his feet, his brows pulling together. âOkay?â
I exhale slowly, forcing myself to meet his gaze. âI accept your apology.â My voice is quiet, even, but I mean it. Thereâs no anger leftânot for him, not for what happened that night. The only thing inside me now is regret.
He nods, like maybe he wasnât expecting me to actually say it, to accept it.
âDo you mind if I justâ¦sit here for a bit?â I ask, my throat tight.
Logan studies me for a moment before stepping back. âYeah. Yeah, of course. Take your time.â
He hesitates, like he wants to say something else, but instead, he gives me a small nod and closes the door behind him, leaving me alone on the porch.
I sink down on the top step, wrapping my arms around my knees as the weight of everything crashes down around me.
Jaxon is gone. I had one shot to make things right, and I blew it.
The first drops of rain fall softly against the pavement, the scent thick in the air. I tilt my head back, letting the cool droplets kiss my skin as I try to breathe past the tightness in my chest.
But it only gets heavier.
The sky opens, the rain falling harder, soaking through my t-shirt, my shorts, my hair.
And I let it.
I sit there, drenched, my heart pounding as panic threatens to consume me whole. I feel like Iâm suffocating, like Iâm trapped in my own body, stuck in this horrible, awful reality I created.
No. I canât let it end like this.
My hands shake as I yank my phone from my pocket, my fingers trembling as I scroll through my contacts.
I press Jaxonâs name.
The phone rings once.
Twice.
Thenâvoicemail.
My stomach drops, but I donât hang up. I press the phone to my ear, sucking in a ragged breath before the beep sounds.
And then, I spill everything.
âJaxâ¦â My voice cracks, the rain pounding against the pavement. âIâI donât even know if youâll listen to this. I donât know if itâll even matter after everything, butâ¦I have to say it anyway.â
I stand abruptly, pacing the porch, my wet sneakers squeaking against the wood.
âIâm sorry,â I whisper. âFor all of it. For hurting you. For leaving when all you ever did was stay. I was so goddamn scared, Jax. Scared of losing you, of ruining you, of how much I love you.â
The words slip out before I can stop them, and I freeze, my breath hitching. I wipe the rain from my face with the back of my hand, even though itâs pointless.
âI love you,â I say again, stronger this time. âAnd I donât want to run anymore. I choose you. I choose us. I donât care what happens. I donât care about the risks. I just want you.â
My voice cracks, my chest heaving.
âI know I donât deserve another chance, but if thereâs even one part of you that still wants this, still wants meâ¦â My voice breaks, and I have to press a hand to my stomach to keep from falling apart completely. âCall me back.â
A heavy silence stretches before I whisper one last thing.
âPlease.â
And then, with my heart completely in his hands, I hang up.
I stand there, still gripping my phone until it might shatter in my hands, my chest rising and falling in uneven breaths. The rain hasnât let up. It soaks through my clothes, clings to my skin, drips from my hair in cold rivulets, but still, I donât move.
I canât. Iâve just put everything out there. No walls, no defenses, no escape plan, just meâraw, exposed, standing in the middle of a storm I created.
I squeeze my eyes shut, trying to steady myself, but my whole body trembles. I donât know if itâs from the rain or the weight of what I just admitted.
I donât even hear the truck pull up. Iâm so lost in my own swirling thoughts, in the pounding of my pulse, I donât realize Iâm not alone anymore, not until a voiceâhis voiceâcuts through the storm.
âWell, that was quite the declaration.â
I jump, my whole body jerking as I whip around.
And there he is.
Jaxon Montgomery, standing at the bottom of the porch steps, soaked from the rain, his shirt clinging to every defined muscle, his dark hair sticking to his forehead. His hands are tucked into his pockets, his head tilted slightly, amusement flickering in his deep brown eyes as he watches me, fighting a grin.
Like he heard everything.
My breath catches in my throat, my mind racing to catch up, but I canât process anything except for the fact that heâs here.
I take a step back, my pulse hammering. âYouââ My voice falters. âI thought you left.â
His eyes flicker, something unreadable passing through them. âI almost did.â He exhales, glancing at the phone still clenched in my shaking hand. âGood thing I forgot my phone, huh?â
I blink, my stomach flipping.
He was coming back anyway. He wouldâve been here even if I hadnât called.
I swallow hard, shifting my weight, my voice barely above a whisper. âYou heard all of that?â
He takes a step closer, rain dripping from his jaw, his gaze locked onto mine like heâs seeing straight through me. âYeah,â he murmurs. âI did.â
I press a trembling hand to my lips, my heart pounding against my ribs.
I canât breathe.
I canât think.
Jaxon watches me, still fighting that damn grin, still standing there like he isnât the reason I just spilled my entire heart out like a fool into a voicemail I thought heâd listen to miles away from me.
Iâm completely unmoored.
I chose him.