I woke up still wearing his hoodie.
The sleeves were too long and smelled like old cologne and dryer sheets, and when I rolled over, the cuff brushed my cheek. I closed my eyes again, pretending it was his hand. Pretending he was still here, holding me like he had the night before — even if he never really did. Just his mouth, his fingers in my hair, his breath tangled in mine. That was enough to haunt my dreams. My lips felt different. Tender, maybe even a little sore. I smiled to myself, remembering the way his tongue had moved with mine — like he’d been waiting for that moment longer than even I had. Then my phone buzzed. I fumbled under the blanket for it, heart kicking up. Anthony: Morning, angel. I’ve been thinking about you since I opened my eyes. Your lips. Your breath. That sound you made when I kissed you. I want it again. All of it. But mostly, I just want you. Angel. The word hit me harder than I expected. Like a secret key turning in my chest. Nobody had ever called me that before. Not like it meant something. Not like I meant something. With him, even the smallest words felt like they carried weight. I lay there a moment, staring at the screen, letting the words sink into my skin. Then I typed back. Lila: You make me feel like one. Morning, trouble. Can’t stop thinking about you either. My lips still remember you. The second I sent it, I felt warm all over again. As if even admitting that much was too much — and not enough. Anthony: Mine do too. They’re jealous of your pillow. I laughed, covering my mouth with the sleeve of his hoodie. I was smiling so hard it hurt. I curled up tighter into my blanket, hugging my knees to my chest. My stomach fluttered and flipped and refused to calm down. I wanted to see him again already. I wanted to feel his hands in my hair again. I wanted more — and that want was still so new, so unfamiliar, it almost scared me. The rest of the morning passed in slow motion. I didn’t rush to get ready, didn’t change out of the oversized shirt I slept in. I poured cereal, forgot to eat it. Just kept rereading the message. Morning, angel. I scrolled back up and reread the first one. Then again. It wasn’t just the kiss that had left a mark on me. It was him. The way he looked at me. The way his voice got soft when he was being serious. The way he didn’t just want to kiss me — he wanted to know me. See me. Say my name and mean it. I padded back to my room, shut the door, and sat cross-legged on the bed. My fingers itched for something familiar — something grounding. So I pulled my diary out from under my mattress. It was old and soft, the corners dog-eared and pages ink-smudged from all the times I’d poured my heart into it. The binding creaked as I opened to a fresh page. And I began to write. [Diary Entry — November 9, 2014] He called me angel this morning. Not “baby” or “cutie” or “hot.” Not something random or cliché. He said angel. Like it was something he’d decided about me long before I gave him a reason. And the craziest part? It didn’t feel wrong. It felt like maybe I always was one. And I just forgot. I don’t know what’s happening to me. My lips still feel swollen from the way he kissed me. Not just gentle. Not just sweet. But hungry. Like he was starving and I was the thing he’d waited for. I’ve never been wanted like that. Not even close. And when he touched me — just my hair, just my waist — it felt like heat. Like a match had been struck inside me and I didn’t know how to blow it out. I didn’t want to. I wanted it to burn. And it’s still burning now. Every time I blink, I see the look in his eyes before he leaned in. The pause. The wait. That silent question: “Can I?” And my answer — not in words, but in the way I tilted forward, heart first. Yes. Always yes. He didn’t just kiss me. He changed me. Something has opened up inside me and I don’t know how to close it again. A door, maybe. Or a window. Or a floodgate. I feel… everything. All at once. Desire. Fear. Excitement. Longing. That ache in my stomach that won’t go away — the kind that isn’t hunger but is. A need I don’t fully understand yet, only that it lives in me now. He made me feel like I was the only girl in the world. The only mouth he wanted. The only skin he wanted to touch. The only person he saw. And this morning, when he called me angel, I think that was his way of saying, You’re not like anyone else. God, I don’t want this to go away. I don’t want this to fade into another “first” that disappears into memory. I want to hold onto it. To him. Even if it ends one day. Even if he breaks my heart. I want this. All of it. Him. And I want to be the kind of girl who’s brave enough to say that out loud. Maybe not to him yet. But at least… to myself. I’m falling. Not slowly. Not gently. But all at once. And for now, he’s the one catching me. And calling me angel. And making me believe I really might be. When I closed the diary, my fingers trembled just a little. Not from fear. From feeling. And somewhere deep inside my chest, I could still hear his voice. “Morning, angel.”Lila had always loved bookstores—the way they smelled like old paper and coffee, the quiet, the promise that anything could happen between pages. But today felt different. Maybe it was because Anthony was here. Or maybe because everything in her life had shifted slightly off its axis, in the best possible way.He held the door open for her with a smirk. “Ladies first, angel.”There it was again. That name. Every time he said it, something fluttered behind her ribs like a bird testing its wings. She gave him a playful side glance as she stepped into the shop.“You’ve really committed to that nickname,” she murmured, brushing her hand against a stack of journals by the entrance.He was close behind her, voice low in her ear. “You’ve earned it.”She shivered.The bookstore was quiet—early afternoon light filtered in through wide front windows, casting the shelves in soft gold. The air smelled like cedarwood, espresso, and the faintest hint of vanilla from a candle burning near the regist
It began in silence.Not the absence of sound, but the kind of silence that hums—like the quiet you feel deep in water or moments before lightning. Lila stood barefoot in a vast field of night, where the stars burned brighter than she’d ever seen and the air pulsed with warmth, heavy with some unnamed promise.She didn’t remember falling asleep. But she knew—instantly, undeniably—that this wasn’t the waking world.She wore something soft. Lighter than silk. A dress? No… not exactly. The fabric clung to her like mist, flowing behind her as she walked. Every movement felt slower, more graceful. Like her body understood something her mind hadn’t caught up to yet.Then, she felt him.Before she saw him.That heat, that shift in the air—like gravity tilting in his direction.Anthony.He stood at the edge of the field, leaning against a stone arch that hadn’t been there seconds ago. His shirt was unbuttoned at the top, sleeves rolled to his elbows. His expression was unreadable, but his eye
The warm glow of the late afternoon sun slipped softly through the windows of Nicole’s house as I stepped inside, my heart fluttering with anticipation. It was my seventeenth birthday—May 14th—a day I had quietly hoped would feel as special as it did strange growing up. But tonight felt different. Tonight felt like a turning point.Nicole’s mom, Alice, greeted me at the door with a bright smile and a knowing glance. “Happy birthday, Lila! Nicole told me you’d be spending the night, and I wanted to say you’re always welcome here.” Her easy warmth made me feel instantly at home.Nicole appeared from the kitchen, her usual bright grin lighting up her face. “You ready for a night to remember?” she teased, nudging me gently. I laughed nervously and nodded, still clutching my backpack. The house smelled like vanilla and cinnamon from a candle Alice had lit, soft music playing quietly in the background.I was still settling in when Anthony arrived, his familiar grin broad and eyes sparkling
The silence of my bedroom felt too loud after the day we’d had. My skin still held the memory of the sun, and my hair smelled faintly like chlorine and his cologne. The pillows were still warm from where his body had rested next to mine.I laid there in the dark for a long time, staring at the ceiling. My chest was full — too full — like something might burst if I didn’t let it out.So I sat up, flicked on the little lamp beside my bed, and reached for the worn diary tucked back under the mattress.The pen slid into my fingers as naturally as breath, and I opened to a fresh page.May 6thI don’t even know where to begin.Today was… everything. I mean that in the way that people say something changed them. The kind of “everything” you feel in your bones. He swam with me. He tied my strap. He made me food. He held me like I was his whole world.And the scariest part?I liked every second of it.No — I loved it.There. I said it.God, I love him.I don’t know exactly when it happened. Ma
The sun was high and the pool sparkled, clear and inviting, like it knew what kind of day it was going to be. Anthony had brought his swim trunks in a backpack, towel slung over his shoulder, eyes already scanning the water like it was daring him to dive in.“You’re going down,” he said, tossing the bag aside.I raised an eyebrow. “Is that so?”“We’re making a whirlpool. Winner gets bragging rights. And possibly a popsicle.”“Oh, well then,” I said, walking to the edge, water lapping at my toes, “prepare to lose.”We got in and immediately started the game — swimming along the edge of the pool in one continuous circle, picking up speed with every lap. Water began to spiral around us, dragging at our limbs, churning beneath our feet. It felt silly and childish and perfect. Like something out of a summer I never wanted to end.Once the current felt strong enough, Anthony shouted, “Switch!”We turned, trying to push against the current we’d just created. It was harder than it looked. My
Spring couldn’t come fast enough.After a week of late-night texting and hallway glances that felt like secrets, Anthony was finally coming over. My parents were out for the afternoon, and the plan was simple: hang out, swim, and maybe steal a few more of those kisses that left me dizzy.I’d spent too long picking out a bikini. Not because I had that many — but because this was different. This was Anthony seeing me like that for the first time. Up close. Skin and curves and all the little things I usually kept hidden beneath school clothes and oversized hoodies.I settled on a deep blue two-piece. Not too revealing, but just enough. When I slipped into it in the bathroom, I caught my reflection in the mirror and held my breath.My body was changing. It wasn’t just about looking good. It was about feeling… aware. Of how his eyes might follow the dip of my waist. Or how his hands might graze places they hadn’t before.I stood in my bedroom adjusting the straps on my top, tugging them in