MasukMara
Lily was six, which meant she noticed everything and pretended she didn’t. She knew which days I counted pennies at the counter before paying. She knew when my smile was for her and when it was borrowed. She knew the difference between being late because of traffic and being late because you sat in the car and tried to breathe through something that felt too tight in your chest. That afternoon, she buckled herself in without being asked and asked if we could stop for snacks on the way home. “Just one thing,” she said. “I promise.” I said yes because she’d already had enough no’s in her short life. The gas station sat on the corner of a road I didn’t usually take. I pulled in because the fuel light was on and because changing routines felt dangerous lately. Predictability was safer. Familiar. But the pump closest to the entrance was open, and I took it without thinking. The air smelled like gasoline and hot pavement. Lily leaned forward in her seat, pressing her hands against the window. “They have slushies,” she said. “The blue kind.” “Go pick one,” I said. “Stay where I can see you.” She hopped out and skipped toward the door, ponytail bouncing, crown long forgotten somewhere in her room. I slid my card into the pump and waited. That was when I heard the motorcycle. Low. Heavy. Not loud the way some were, but unmistakable. The sound vibrated in my chest before I even saw it. I glanced up without meaning to. The bike rolled in slow, controlled, like the man riding it wasn’t in a hurry and didn’t need to be. Black. Matte. Scarred in places like it had lived a life before I ever noticed it. The rider cut the engine and swung off with easy confidence. He was tall. Broad shoulders under a worn leather jacket. Dark hair pulled back at the nape of his neck. He moved like someone who knew exactly how much space he took up and wasn’t apologizing for it. I looked away immediately. Men like that didn’t belong anywhere near my life. I focused on the numbers ticking up on the pump, my mind drifting to the grocery list, to the bills waiting on the table, to whether Lily would remember to bring home her library book tomorrow. Then Lily’s voice cut through it all. “Mommy.” I turned. She was standing just inside the open door, her small body stiff, eyes fixed on something behind me. I followed her gaze before I could stop myself. The biker was watching her. Not in a way that made my skin crawl. Not openly. But he was aware of her in a way that felt deliberate. Like he’d noticed her presence and filed it somewhere important. I felt a sharp spike of protectiveness rise in my chest. I stepped between them without thinking. “Inside,” I said softly to Lily. “I’ll be right here.” She hesitated, then nodded and went back toward the slushie machine, casting one more look over her shoulder. The man didn’t move. He didn’t smile either. He walked toward the pump next to mine, boots heavy against the concrete, and reached for the nozzle. Up close, I noticed the scars on his hands. Old ones. Pale against tanned skin. The kind that didn’t come from accidents. I kept my eyes forward. The silence stretched. “You don’t usually take this exit,” he said. My spine stiffened. I looked at him then, really looked. His eyes were dark. Steady. Not hungry. Not amused. Just observant. “I didn’t realize exits came with ownership,” I said. A corner of his mouth twitched. “They don’t.” Then why comment at all. “I saw your light was on,” he added. “Didn’t mean anything by it.” I nodded once, not trusting myself to say more. The pump clicked off. I hung the nozzle and reached for the receipt, my movements precise, controlled. I could feel his attention like a weight, not pressing, just present. Lily came back out then, clutching a blue slushie and grinning. “They had sprinkles,” she announced. “Did you get a straw?” I asked. She nodded enthusiastically. The man’s gaze shifted to her again, and something in his posture changed. Not softer. More careful. “That’s a good color,” he said to her. “Blue suits you.” Lily beamed. “It’s my favorite.” I placed a hand on her shoulder, grounding both of us. “We’re done here,” I said. She nodded and took another sip, already turning toward the car. The man straightened, stepping back just enough to give us space. “You forgot your receipt.” I glanced down. It had fluttered to the ground near his boot. “I don’t need it,” I said. He bent and picked it up anyway, holding it out between two fingers. “In case you change your mind.” I took it because refusing would have required more interaction than I wanted. “Thanks,” I said. He nodded. “Drive safe.” I loaded Lily into the car, buckled her in, and got behind the wheel. My hands shook slightly as I started the engine. As I pulled away, I checked the mirror. The man was still standing there, helmet tucked under his arm, watching the road like he was waiting for something else to pass before moving. I told myself it meant nothing. At home, Lily chattered about sprinkles and how the blue one was better than the red one because it tasted like summer. I listened, responded when needed, let her voice fill the spaces Evan had left behind. After dinner, she colored while I sorted mail at the table. A bill slipped from the stack and fluttered to the floor. Lily scooped it up before I could stop her. “Mommy,” she said, frowning at the paper. “Is this why you look tired?” I took it from her gently. “It’s just grown-up stuff.” She nodded like that made sense, then went back to coloring. Later, after she was in bed, I stood at the sink washing dishes I didn’t remember dirtying. The image of the biker at the gas station kept surfacing in my mind uninvited. The way he’d noticed Lily. The way he’d stepped back without being told. The way he’d looked at me like he was cataloging something instead of judging it. I didn’t want to think about him. I wanted my life small. Quiet. Predictable. Outside, an engine rumbled past on the road. I didn’t look out the window. I dried my hands and turned off the light, moving down the hallway toward my bedroom, already planning tomorrow’s routine. The road I’d taken today had been a mistake. I wouldn’t take it again.Mara I told myself the reason my hands were shaking had nothing to do with him. It was the bills folded inside my purse. The daycare reminder. Evan’s name lighting up my phone twice that afternoon and me letting it ring both times. It was exhaustion layered over fear layered over the kind of loneliness that crept in when the apartment went quiet and stayed that way. That was all. It had nothing to do with the biker. So when I saw his bike outside The Iron Halo again, parked at the curb like it had always belonged there, my chest tightening was purely coincidence. Purely. I almost kept walking. I should have. Lily was asleep at a friend’s place down the block, sprawled across her couch with a cartoon still playing to an empty room. My friend had offered dinner and a sleepover, and I had said yes too quickly, relief making me careless. Careless enough to walk back toward the bar instead of away from it. The door swung open before I could c
Cole I noticed her because she didn’t flinch. Most people did. They saw the bike first.the tattoos then the leather. The weight of the thing I carried without meaning to. Men get scared. Women pretended not to look, then looked anyway. Fear had a smell to it. Curiosity did too. She had neither. She stood at the pump like she belonged there, one hand braced on the handle, the other resting loosely at her side. Not defensive. Not careless. Just… present. Like the world hadn’t trained her to shrink yet, even if it had tried. She looked tired. Not weak. That was the difference. I told myself to finish filling the tank and leave. I had no reason to be standing in a gas station ten minutes out of my way except that the road had gone quiet in my head and I didn’t like that feeling. Quiet made room for memories. Quiet made space for ghosts. She glanced at me then. Not startled. Just aware. Dark eyes. Sharp. The kind that had learned to read rooms fast and trust slowly.
Mara Lily was six, which meant she noticed everything and pretended she didn’t. She knew which days I counted pennies at the counter before paying. She knew when my smile was for her and when it was borrowed. She knew the difference between being late because of traffic and being late because you sat in the car and tried to breathe through something that felt too tight in your chest. That afternoon, she buckled herself in without being asked and asked if we could stop for snacks on the way home. “Just one thing,” she said. “I promise.” I said yes because she’d already had enough no’s in her short life. The gas station sat on the corner of a road I didn’t usually take. I pulled in because the fuel light was on and because changing routines felt dangerous lately. Predictability was safer. Familiar. But the pump closest to the entrance was open, and I took it without thinking. The air smelled like gasoline and hot pavement. Lily leaned forward in her seat, pressing
Lily Mommy thinks I’m asleep a lot. I don’t tell her when I’m not. The house makes different sounds at night. I know which ones mean nothing and which ones mean I should listen. The fridge makes noise, the pipes squeak The floor creaks when Mommy walks slower than usual. Last night, she walked slow. I was on my side with Mr. Bear tucked under my chin when I heard her stop in the hallway. She didn’t come in. She just stood there for a little while. I kept my eyes closed because when grown-ups think you’re sleeping, they don’t ask questions. I heard her breathe. In and out. Like she was counting. Then she went to her room. I waited until the house went quiet again before I opened my eyes. I don’t like when Mommy is inside quiet. That kind of quiet feels different. It makes the air heavy. Like when it’s about to rain but doesn’t. In the morning, Mommy woke me up like she always does. Soft voice. Gentle hands. Same routine. But her eyes looked tired, and th
Mara The next morning didn’t feel like a new day. It felt like a continuation of the same one, stretched thin and unforgiving. I woke before my alarm, my body already tense, my mind already busy cataloging what needed to be done. Lily’s door was closed, the soft glow of her nightlight visible beneath it. I stood in the hallway for a moment, listening. Her breathing was steady. That mattered. I showered quickly, letting the water run hotter than usual, trying to burn off the tightness clinging to my shoulders. When I looked at myself in the mirror afterward, my face seemed flatter, drained of something essential. I didn’t linger. There was no point in studying damage I already knew was there. Breakfast was quieter than the day before. Lily ate her cereal and asked if she could wear her favorite sneakers again. I said yes even though they didn’t match. Some battles weren’t worth fighting. On the drive to school, she talked about nothing important. A cartoon she liked. A
Mara I didn’t sleep. Not even for a few minutes. Every time my body tried to drift, my mind snapped awake again, sharp and alert, like it was waiting for something else to go wrong. The house felt different after they left. Too quiet. Like it was holding its breath. Lily slept curled against my side, her hair spread across the pillow, her crown tossed carelessly onto the nightstand. She hadn’t cried when Evan and Vanessa walked out. She hadn’t asked many questions either. That worried me more than if she’d screamed or thrown a fit. Kids processed things in pieces. Quiet ones. The kind that came back later. I lay there staring at the ceiling, replaying the scene over and over again. Evan in my kitchen. Vanessa leaning against my counter. The balloons bobbing by the window like they were celebrating something. I kept thinking about how comfortable Vanessa looked. Not nervous. Not apologetic. Comfortable. Like she’d already decided where she fit in the story







