Home / Romance / letters that staved / Part 5: “Breakfast and Baggage”

Share

Part 5: “Breakfast and Baggage”

Author: jhumz
last update Last Updated: 2025-07-12 00:55:47

🌻 You’ve got it,  Let’s dive into Part 5—the next chapter in Yam and Franc’s magnetic, unexpected journey. This time, we’ll peel back more layers and explore the gentle chaos that comes with letting someone stay in your life a little longer than planned.

The first morning we woke up together felt unreal—not because something magical happened overnight, but because something didn’t. No explosions. No drama. Just the sound of a city waking up outside my window and Franc, already stirring beside me.

His hair was a mess. One eye half-open. He looked like someone who forgot he wasn’t in a luxury condo—but also didn’t care. Still, even sleep-dazed, he had that inexplicable magnetism. Like he could sell chaos just by blinking.

“You snore,” I said, breaking the silence.

He blinked. “You drool.”

Fair enough.

We sat in my kitchen like it was the most natural thing in the world—me boiling eggs, him playing with a spoon like it was a magic wand. And somehow, that spoon got him talking.

“I have three brothers,” he said, twirling the spoon. “But we haven’t spoken in years.”

The air shifted.

“You okay with that?” I asked.

He shrugged. “Some people grow up and out. We grew sideways.”

I nodded. I didn’t push. My past wasn’t exactly Disney-approved either.

“What about you?” he asked, tossing the spoon and catching it. “Big family?”

“Just me. And an aunt who believes I’m cursed.”

“Are you?”

“Still deciding.”

We laughed. But it felt like our ghosts were dancing near us—just enough to remind us we weren’t all sunshine and mint candies.

After breakfast, Franc wandered around my apartment like he was trying to memorize its corners. He opened my bookshelf, skimmed titles, nodded like he was judging my taste.

“You like weird stuff,” he said.

“So do you,” I replied. “Hence, you’re still here.”

He paused, looked back. That gaze again—half challenge, half confession.

“You say things that stick,” he said.

“Because I mean them.”

There was something forming between us. Not just tension. Not just attraction. It was the beginning of trust. Of choosing each other—even if the universe hadn’t handed us a manual.

Then came the knock.

Hard. Uninvited.

I froze.

Franc’s entire posture changed. He stood up straighter, eyes alert.

I walked to the door slowly. Peeked.

It was my neighbor, Ate Lorna. Nosy. Persistent. Wearing curlers and a robe like she was auditioning for “Desperate Titas of Kołobrzeg.”

“Good morning,” she said, peeking past me. “Do you have a visitor?”

“Nope. Just ghosts,” I replied.

She squinted. “Handsome ghosts?”

I nearly shut the door.

She leaned in. “If your guest gets hungry, I made pancit.”

“Thanks,” I muttered, closing the door before she could ask if he had a job or a criminal record.

Back inside, Franc was laughing.

“You get local auntie approval already?”

“Trust me, that’s not a good sign,” I said.

He plopped down on my couch again. Legs up. Hands behind his head.

“You ever think about leaving?” he asked suddenly.

“Where?”

“Anywhere. Just... leaving everything and starting over.”

I sat beside him. “I’ve thought about it. But I don’t want a reset. I want a remix.”

He turned to me. “That’s the most Yam answer I’ve ever heard.”

“Good. I’m consistent.”

We looked at each other. Too long. Long enough to make me shift awkwardly.

Then Franc reached out—slowly, like the world might object—but it didn’t.

His hand landed on mine.

Warm. Grounding.

“I want to stay,” he whispered. “Longer than just for the electric fan.”

I nodded.

“You can,” I said. “But staying means more than sleeping over.”

“I know.”

We sat like that. Between what was and what could be.

And for once, neither of us ran.

✨ Want to explore Part 6 next—maybe they go out together for the first time, meet someone from Franc’s past, or face a situation that tests their fragile bond? Or would you like a turning point with big emotion, like a conflict or reveal? You tell me where we’re heading next, and I’ll take the wheel 🚲

Continue to read this book for free
Scan code to download App

Latest chapter

  • letters that staved   Final Chapter: “The Studio That Learned to Listen”

    Absolutely,. Let’s bring this story to its final breath—not with closure, but with continuation. The studio doesn’t end. It transforms. And everyone who touched it leaves changed.The wall was full.Not crowded.Full.Every inch held a truth—painted, screamed, whispered, burned. Layers of color, fragments of pasted paper, and the faint scent of smoke all seemed to hum like a living thing. Each mark was a heartbeat, each scratch a memory. The studio air was heavy with that silent chorus.Jo stood before it one last time. The floorboards creaked under her weight, and for a moment, she imagined the wall inhaling and exhaling with her. She didn’t add anything. Her pockets were empty. Her brush, dry. She just placed her hand on the wall and said:“You held us.Now we let you rest.”Her voice trembled, not with fear, but with the weight of gratitude and release.Franc worked quietly in the corner, his hands white with dust. His final piece lay on the worktable: a hollow frame. No canvas str

  • letters that staved   Chapter 105: “The Archive of Unrefined Truths"

    🌧️ Chapter 105 opens with a shift in the studio’s gravity. The wall Jo and Franc painted has become more than art—it’s a mirror. And people are starting to see themselves in it. Ren added a new section to the studio’s archive:Unrefined TruthsIt wasn’t curated.It was collected.Visitors were invited to leave a sound, a sentence, a smear of color.No names.No edits.Just truth.The studio, once a haven for polished art and refined aesthetics, had transformed into a space where raw emotions and unfiltered expressions found a home. The walls, once pristine and white, now bore the marks of countless visitors who had come to share their truths. Each mark was a testament to the human experience, a glimpse into the depths of the soul that often remained hidden beneath layers of societal expectations and personal insecurities.Jo and Franc began a series of pieces—each one raw, unfinished, and deliberately unpolished. Their work was a reflection of the studio’s new ethos, a celebration

  • letters that staved   Chapter 104: “The Wall That Held What We Couldn’t Say Gently”

    🌒 Now unfolding Chapter 104—this one carries the weight of expression that’s no longer quiet. It’s not violent, but it’s raw. A chapter where Jo and Franc stop holding back—not to hurt, but to finally let the ache speak in full color. Jo stood in front of the studio’s west wall—blank, untouched, avoided. For months, even years perhaps, the wall had waited for something that never arrived, a promise of “later” thrown like an empty seed into the air. Today, she decided that later had run out. Her chest felt tight, the kind of weight that had lingered too long. Her palms itched as if the wall itself was calling her name.She didn’t reach for a pencil or a sketchbook. There was no plan, no outline, no composition. Plan had always been the shield, the polite mask. Instead, she dipped her hands into pigment and hurled it forward. Ochre hit the wood like a sun breaking open. Charcoal streaked down in jagged tears. Rust smeared like dried blood across the pale expanse.The first splatter e

  • letters that staved   Part 103: “The Breath That Didn’t Heal, But Kept Me Company”

    🌧️ Entering Part 103—this one doesn’t rise like hope. It sits like weariness. But even worn stories have a pulse, and we follow it, gently. This chapter doesn’t resolve; it remembers what it feels like to carry weight without applause.Jo didn’t reach for her sketchbook that day.Instead, she wrote on the studio’s wall with chalk—words that faded even as she traced them. Her hand trembled slightly, not from fear, but from the quiet exhaustion that had been building like sediment in her chest.“I’m tired of pretending softness always arrives gracefully.”The chalk squeaked against the wall when she finished the last letter. There was a pause, a hollow in the room that hummed with evening light. Dust motes hung in the air, catching the sparse sun slipping through the high windows.Franc entered the studio hours later. He always moved quietly, as if not to disturb the air. He stopped in front of the chalk words, his shadow stretching long across the concrete. He didn’t reply. He simply

  • letters that staved   Part 102: “The Studio Didn’t Fix Me. But It Let Me Keep Falling Slowly”

    🪵 Stepping quietly into Part 102—this one carries not answers, but weight. The kind that presses gently on a heart and asks, “Will you stay even when it’s heavy?” It’s about hardship, not as a chapter to escape, but one to sit beside until it softens.Jo hadn’t painted in three days.Her brushes stayed wrapped, the pigments untouched. Not out of anger. Out of sheer depletion. She woke each morning and stared at the ceiling, tracing the cracks along the plaster and following the shifting patterns of light as the sun inched across the windowpane. Her fingers twitched, as if remembering the rhythm of work, but the spark that usually followed never came. She wondered, as she did each day, if trying again would count as growth—or if it was just persistence without meaning.Franc noticed.But he didn’t ask.He brought bread and left it on the table, the scent warm and comforting, filling the room with the soft promise of care. Jo didn’t eat it. But she folded the cloth it was wrapped in—fo

  • letters that staved   Part 101: “Where the Paint Didn’t Cover Everything”

    🌧️Struggle and hardship don’t weaken this story—they give it grounding, a texture that makes every soft moment even more earned. It doesn't have to be dramatic or loud. It can show up in small ways: creative doubt, emotional exhaustion, the ache of misunderstanding, or the weight of choosing to remain after pain.Jo sat beside her linen canvas, fingers stained with pigment and memory. The painting she tried to finish refused to hold color the way it used to. Each stroke felt heavier, like her hands remembered more than they could release. The studio smelled of rain and turpentine, familiar scents that now pressed against her chest instead of comforting her. She watched the colors bleed into one another, failing to hold the sharp edges she once commanded, and for a moment, she wondered if the canvas itself was tired of being asked to hold her heart.Outside, rain drummed against the tall windows in uneven rhythms, echoing her own hesitations. The water trailed down in slow rivers, dis

More Chapters
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on GoodNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status