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Alana moved the pen with quiet focus, every stroke clean and steady.When she finished, I stared at the lettering—familiar, way too familiar. It hit me like a punch.She tilted her head. "What?""Alana... did you know I saw you a long time ago?"I never really had a home. My dad was drunk more than he was sober, and for a while, I just shut down. There were days I seriously questioned if life was even worth it.One night, after he'd gone off on me again, I stumbled outside—bruised, numb, just drifting. I watched cars rush by and wondered if it'd even hurt to get hit.I wandered around till I ended up outside the community center. There was a kids' art exhibit going on.One canvas stopped me cold—ocean-blue brush lettering that said, [Ride the waves. Keep going.]The letters looked like actual waves, curling and crashing, speckled with white dots like sea foam.I didn't know the first thing about hand lettering, but those strokes hit different—like they sliced right through the
Aprons or not, we still ended up a mess.But once the past was out of the way, dinner felt easy—like two old friends catching up after forever.Alana's cheeks were stuffed, eyes lighting up every time something clicked.And right then, I knew—this was what I'd been chasing the whole time. Just quiet, simple happiness.Since I shut Daphne down outside the office, she'd gone quiet for a week.Meanwhile, the wedding crept closer.To stay ahead before taking leave, I'd been pulling late nights at work.One morning, as I left early, someone stepped in front of me.Daphne.She looked wrecked—no makeup, red eyes, not a trace of her old attitude.I was about to walk right past when she said, "Ethan, didn't you say you'd help with my mom's treatment? She's been coughing a lot... said she wants to see you."My fists tightened. I exhaled slow, turned, met her eyes."Got it. You can go.""You're... not coming with me?"I didn't say a word. Just walked past her and drove off.But I s
"Shut up." I stepped right up to her. "That's slander—you could get sued.""She knows if it's slander or not."Daphne shot daggers at Alana, then turned to me, voice suddenly all soft."Yeah, I screwed up, but we had ten years. You know I'm not some villain. But her? You barely know her. She comes back from living wild overseas and now wants you to be her last-stop good guy?""Daphne." My voice dropped. "Keep running your mouth about my fiancée and you'll be hearing from my lawyer."She blinked like I'd slapped her. Mouth hanging open."You can't treat me like this."I stepped past her, pulled Alana close, and we walked off.But after that, Alana wasn't herself. Quiet. Pale."Maybe we skip the visit," I said. "I'll take you home?"She shook her head. "I'm good. Let's still go."After a beat, she said quietly, "Ethan, I never saw you like that. Not some last-stop good guy. That's not who you are..."Her voice was small, unsure. I reached over and ruffled her hair."I believ
"Alana, I—"She smiled softly, then turned to Daphne. "Ethan was just a kid when he stepped up for your whole family. He worked himself to the bone, sometimes passed out on the way to shifts, and never said a word about it. So tell me—how does that make him less of a man?"I stared at her, floored. How did she even know all that?"Did you know he's got serious stomach issues? I've worked with some real grinders, but no one like him. He gave you a stable life at the cost of his own health. So when you come at him with all that blame, doesn't it eat at you even a little?"Daphne's mouth hung open. Her face flushed as she jabbed a finger at Alana."What does this have to do with you? Ethan's my boyfriend—he's supposed to take care of me! Who even are you to judge?"I stepped up, sliding in front of Alana."I haven't been your boyfriend in a long time. Don't cause drama in front of my fiancée.""Y-You two!" Daphne looked ready to blow. Her glare could've set something on fire. "Eth
I frowned. "I'm busy. Wedding stuff. Stop blowing up my phone.""You're still mad?""We broke up. You seriously still don't get that?"She gave me that wounded look and reached for my arm. I stepped back.She inhaled, trying to act composed, but her voice stayed smug. "I know you're dying to marry me. This whole charade? Just to get my attention, right? Fine. I'll let it slide. Come home, act right, and maybe I'll consider marrying you."Looking at her now, I couldn't even be mad—just tired. Maybe a little sad.We'd grown up next door. Ten years together. And somehow, she'd never really respected me.Even now, she talked like she was doing me a favor. Like I was some fool who'd always crawl back."Daphne, I'm not marrying you. I already have a fiancée—you met her.""Don't lie! That girl was clearly some actress you hired!""I'd never fake something like marriage just to prove a point." I shook my head. "Forget it. There's nothing left to say."I turned to leave.She yanked
Even after everything, Daphne and I were always headed for a bad ending.Alana must've read my mind—she gave my hand a gentle pat. "I'm just teasing. At least we've still got time."Funny thing? I had my boss, Mr. Cortez, to thank for Alana.Right after the breakup, I was a wreck. Tried to keep it outta work, but honestly, I was running on fumes.Mr. Cortez caught wind of it and was like, "You need a reset," then pushed to set me up. The guy's part mentor, part big bro—I couldn't say no.Turned out, that someone was Alana. She was leading a project we were already teaming up on.We didn't talk much at first, but her vibe? Chill. Solid. Like, just being near her made things feel less chaotic.She later said I left a good impression too. So we rolled with it—grabbed dinner here and there.With time, and more late nights at work, I saw it—she wasn't cold, just quiet. Soft, steady. Real.Everything changed at this one social event. I overdid it on the drinks, my stomach flipped, a







