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Chapter 3 - CHAPTER 3 :The Question He Didn't Ask

Forty-eight hours felt like forty-eight years.

Aria tried to focus on work. She had deadlines, meetings, a presentation on sustainable

housing that she'd been preparing for weeks. But her mind kept drifting back to the bookstore,

to Ethan, to the way he'd looked at her like she was something worth understanding.

She checked her phone too often. No messages. He hadn't texted, and she hadn't either, both

of them caught in that strange dance of new connection where every gesture feels weighted

with meaning.

"You seem distracted," her colleague Marcus said during lunch. They were sitting in the break

room, surrounded by half-eaten sandwiches and architectural journals. "Something going

on?"

"No," Aria lied. "Just tired."

"You're always tired." Marcus studied her with the careful attention of someone who'd known

her for five years. "But this is different. You seem... I don't know. Less tired? Or differently

tired?"

She wanted to tell him. Wanted to say, I met someone. In a bookstore at midnight. We talked

until dawn and now I can't stop thinking about him. But saying it out loud would make it real,

and making it real meant it could break her.

"I'm fine," she said instead.

Marcus didn't look convinced, but he let it go.

That night, Aria stood in front of her closet for twenty minutes trying to decide what to wear. It

was ridiculous. They were just meeting at a bookstore again. It wasn't a date. It was two

insomniacs sharing terrible coffee and conversation.

So why did it feel like everything depended on this?

She settled on jeans and a sweater—casual, unremarkable, safe. Then changed into a dress.

Then back to jeans. Then added a scarf. Took off the scarf. Stared at herself in the mirror and

tried to remember who she used to be before grief hollowed her out.

The Aria before Lily died had been confident. Vibrant. She'd laughed easily and loved

fearlessly and believed the world was full of beautiful possibilities.

The Aria staring back at her now was a shadow. Careful. Guarded. Afraid of her own

heartbeat.

She left early, anxiety pushing her out the door before she could change her mind. The walk

to the bookstore felt longer than it had two nights ago, every step heavy with anticipation and

dread.

What if he didn't show up? What if he'd changed his mind? What if this whole thing had been

a moment of temporary insanity for both of them, and now in the harsh light of reality, it meant

nothing?

But when she rounded the corner, she saw him.

Ethan was standing outside the bookstore, hands in his pockets, looking up at the sky. Even

from a distance, Aria could see the tension in his shoulders, the way he shifted his weight

from foot to foot. He was nervous too.

Somehow, that made her feel better.

"Hey," she said as she approached.

He turned, and his face did something complicated when he saw her. Relief and worry and

something else she couldn't quite name.

"Hey." His voice was rougher than she remembered. "I wasn't sure you'd come."

"I wasn't sure you'd be here."

They stood there for a moment, two people who barely knew each other but understood each

other completely, neither sure what to do next.

"The bookstore's locked tonight," Ethan said finally. "Owner's visiting family upstate. I should

have checked. I'm sorry."

Disappointment crashed through Aria. "Oh."

"But there's a diner a few blocks from here. 24-hour place. Terrible coffee, but probably better

than what we had last time." He paused, uncertain. "If you want."

She should go home. Should cut this off before it became something she couldn't control. But

looking at him—really looking at him—she saw the same loneliness she carried, the same

desperate need for connection that made sleep impossible and silence unbearable.

"Okay," she said. "Let's go."

The diner was exactly what she expected: bright fluorescent lights, cracked vinyl booths, a

waitress who looked like she'd seen everything and was unimpressed by all of it. They slid

into a booth near the window, and Aria realized this was different from the bookstore. More

exposed. More deliberate.

More like a date.

They ordered coffee. Pie. Neither of them was particularly hungry, but ordering gave them

something to do with their hands.

"I've been thinking about what you said," Ethan began. "About feeling like you're living life on

low volume."

"Yeah?"

"I think I've been doing the same thing. For three years, I've just been... existing. Going

through the motions. Pretending I'm okay when I'm not."

Aria knew that feeling intimately. "It's easier than the alternative."

"What's the alternative?"

"Admitting that we're not okay. That we might never be okay again. That the people we were

before everything fell apart are gone, and we have to figure out how to be these new versions

of ourselves." She stared at her coffee. "I'm not ready for that yet."

"Me neither."

The waitress brought their pie—apple, with ice cream slowly melting into golden pools. They

ate in silence for a while, comfortable in the way only people who've shared their damage can

be.

"Can I tell you something?" Aria said suddenly.

"Of course."

"I haven't told anyone about Lily in months. Not really told them, I mean. People know she

died, but they don't know her. They don't want to know her. They want me to be over it

already." She felt tears threatening and blinked them back. "But when you asked me about

her, when you actually wanted to hear about who she was... it felt like she existed again. Just

for a moment."

Ethan reached across the table, hesitated, then gently covered her hand with his. The touch

was electric and terrifying and perfect.

"She did exist," he said quietly. "She still does, in you. In your memories. In the way you carry

her with you."

A tear escaped, rolling down Aria's cheek. She didn't wipe it away.

"I'm afraid," she whispered.

"Of what?"

"Of forgetting her. Of moving on. Of being happy again and it meaning she didn't matter."

"Being happy doesn't mean she didn't matter." Ethan's thumb traced gentle circles on the

back of her hand. "It means you're still alive. Still here. Still capable of feeling something other

than pain."

"Is that why you're here?" she asked. "With me? Because you want to feel something other

than pain?"

He was quiet for a long moment, his eyes searching hers. When he spoke, his voice was

barely audible over the diner's ambient noise.

"I'm here because for the first time in three years, I met someone who understands what it's

like to be drowning. And I thought... maybe we could drown a little less together."

It wasn't a declaration of love. It wasn't a promise. It was honest and broken and real.

And it was exactly what Aria needed to hear.

They talked until the diner started filling with early morning workers. Talked about everything

and nothing. Their childhoods. Favorite books. Worst jobs. Dreams they'd given up on and

dreams they still carried despite knowing better.

Ethan told her about his photography, how he'd wanted to be an artist but ended up taking

corporate headshots to pay the bills. How his camera used to feel like an extension of himself

but now felt like a stranger's tool.

Aria told him about her architecture, how she'd wanted to design homes that felt like

sanctuaries but instead she revised floor plans to maximize profit.

They were both living lives they'd settled for rather than chosen.

"Do you ever think about starting over?" Aria asked. "Just... leaving everything behind and

becoming someone new?"

"Every day," Ethan admitted. "But I'm too afraid."

"Of what?"

"That even if I started over, I'd still be me. Still carrying all of this." He gestured vaguely at

himself, at the invisible weight they both carried. "You can't outrun yourself."

"No," Aria agreed softly. "You can't."

When they finally left the diner, dawn was breaking properly, painting the sky in shades of

pink and gold. They stood on the sidewalk, neither wanting to say goodbye.

"Same time tomorrow?" Ethan asked, and there was hope in his voice. Fragile and desperate

hope.

Aria wanted to say yes. Wanted to keep meeting him, keep talking, keep pretending that two

broken people could somehow make each other whole.

But she also knew how this story ended. She'd learned it with Lily. Nothing good lasts.

Everyone leaves. Love is just another way to guarantee future pain.

"I don't know if this is a good idea," she said carefully.

Ethan's face fell, but he nodded. "I understand."

"I just... I can't lose someone else. I can't do it again."

"I'm not asking you to lose me." His voice was gentle but firm. "I'm asking you to take a

chance. To see where this goes. No expectations. No promises. Just... this."

"And what is this?"

It was the question he didn't ask. The question hanging between them, unspoken and

terrifying.

"I don't know," Ethan said honestly. "But I know I haven't felt this alive in three years. And I

think you feel it too."

He was right. She did feel it. That dangerous spark of possibility. That terrifying whisper of

maybe.

"Okay," she heard herself say. "Tomorrow. Same time."

Ethan smiled—that small, genuine smile that made her heart do impossible things.

They parted ways at the corner, walking in opposite directions. But Aria looked back once,

and found him looking back too.

And she knew, with certainty and terror, that something had already started.

Something that would change everything.

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