Dear Ana: Chapter 29
Dear Ana: A Novel
I pulled into Bayanâs driveway and killed the engine, waiting for her to come out.
She texted me back a few nights after I got settled in at Noahâs apartment. Part of me wanted to be petty and not respond so she knew how it felt, but the bigger part of me knew that was immature. There was another part thoughââsmaller than the others but somehow more powerfulââthat wondered if she would even notice if I didnât text her back.
âHey,â she greeted. âDid you get a new car? Congrats!â
âUm, no I didnât,â I replied, backing out of her driveway. âItâs Noahâs car.â
âWhoâs Noah?â
For a moment I completely forgot our phone conversation all those months ago was pretend.
âHeâs . . . my boyfriend, I guess. I met him when I visited Anaâs grave back in December. Heâs her brother.â
âWhat?â
âYeah,â I nodded.
âDoes he know who you are?â
âHe does now. I kind of . . . lied to him about it.â
âHow did he take it?â
The memory of me screaming outside his door flickered in my mind. âHe was really, really mad.â
âWait, actually?â
âHe had every reason to be. I lied to him every single day we were together. But he forgave me,â I told her as we went through the Starbucks drive-through. âHeâs the one who hit me with his car that day. Thatâs how Ana died.â
âWhat?!â she screeched loudly. We were at the window now, so instead of responding I told the barista our orders and continued through the line. Once we got our drinks I parked in our usual spot and told her everything. Well, everything she needed to know.
âThatâs so crazy,â she said when I was done. âYour parents probably freaked out.â
âThatâs an understatement,â I muttered.
She regarded me seriously for a moment. âDo you love him?â
âI do, yeah,â I said with a chuckle. âItâs still so strange feeling like this, but Iâve never been more sure of anything before. I am so completely in love with that dude.â
âI knew there was something different about you when I came in the car,â she said, smiling. âI canât believe you never told me about any of this.â
You never asked, I thought, looking away. She stayed quiet, waiting for me to respond. Waiting for me to tell her why. I didnât want to lie, but I also didnât want to tell her the truth because I didnât know how she would react, and I didnât want to fight. We always talked about how we never argued, and how that made our friendship so special but maybe that was our problem. Maybe we should fight.
âYou never asked,â I said out loud this time.
âThatâs not fair,â she replied, surprise lacing her voice.
âI know itâs not fair of me to think like that, but . . .â I hesitated for a minute. âYou never really seem interested anymore. I always ask you about everything, and you used to always ask me about everything too until you just stopped. I know itâs not personalââor maybe it is personalââbut either way, I noticed. And as much as I wish that it didnât, it hurt my feelings.â
The car filled with a cloud of uncomfortable silence as she pondered my words. âIâm sorry,â she said finally.
âI donât want an apology from you, Bayan, I just . . .â I finally looked at her, but I couldnât read her expression. âWhat happened to us? We used to tell each other everything. We used to hang out every day. You were my person.â
âAnd now?â she asked, an edge to her voice.
âAnd now . . . I canât help but wonder that if I never reached out first, would we be hanging out right now? Would we ever speak again?â
âOf course we would. Where is this coming from?â
âDonât,â I said with chagrin. âDonât act like this is all in my head. Things between us have been different for a long time and we just keep ignoring it. But then again, maybe things have always been one-sided and Iâm only just now realizing it.â
âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âIâll be the first to admit that I came into this friendship pretty strong. I know that I can get a little . . . clingy,â I admitted, cringing slightly. âBut itâs only because I love you so much. Itâs only because I was excited. I was so fucking excited that I finally found my best friend, and I had so much love to give. I guess I just assumed that one day you would eventually be at the same level as me, but you never did, and now weâre just sitting awkwardly on this uneven see-saw.â
âMaya, I donât understand . . . is this because I didnât text you back?â she asked, genuinely mystified.
âItâs not weird to get offended when your best friend takes one to three business months to reply to your texts with a simple hello, if you even reply at all. But itâs not about that.â
âThen what is this about?â
âWhy didnât you ever ask?â
âAbout the Noah thing?â
âNo, why didnât you ever ask about me?â I snapped, harsher than I intended.
âI donât understand,â she repeated.
I sighed, instantly regretting saying anything in the first place. âHow is it that Noahââa total stranger at the timeââtook one look at me and knew I wasnât doing okay, but you never did?â
She averted her eyes away from mine and looked out the window instead of answering, but it didnât matter. I already knew the answer. I was almost positive that a part of me always knew, and I just never wanted to admit it to myself.
âThatâs not it though, is it? You did notice; you just didnât care.â
âItâs not that I didnât care,â she disagreed. âI knew you were going through stuff . . . I just didnât know how to be there for you.â
I closed my eyes against the sting of her words. âListening wouldâve sufficed. Merely asking wouldâve been enough. I always listened to you when you needed to vent. I was always there for you. It was a privilege for me to be a source of comfort to you. It wasnât something I had to think about, it was simply second nature.â
âIâm sorry,â she said again, and I knew she meant it.
âIâm sorry, too. Iâm sorry for taking what shouldâve been a simple and fun friendship and turning it into something bigger and more complicated in my head,â I told her quietly. âI guess I didnât realize I was subconsciously expecting things from you, and when you didnât deliver I would get hit with this extreme wave of disappointment, which quickly turned into guilt. I expected so much from you, Bayan, which was wrong of me, but . . . I never expected more than what I was willing to offer you. Which still isnât fair, but it doesnât make me a bad friend. It doesnât make you a bad friend either, and that just makes this so much harder.â
âMakes what so much harder?â
âI have a lot going on right now. My life recently blew up, and Iâm still trying to carve my way through all the destruction left behind. I donât want to have to keep putting up a charade of happiness to make people feel comfortable. I donât know, I guess I just need to be around people who want to be there for me.â
âMaya, itâs not that I didnât want to,â she started again.
âI know, and Iâm not mad. It was never your responsibility to be there for me, and that doesnât mean you didnât love me. It hurt, but if Iâm being honest with myself, I think the real reason it hurt so much was that it made me internalize my own insecurities, and then come up with all these reasons why you never . . .â
I finally looked at her, all our memories and happiest moments lingering in the air between us. âI forgive you. I forgive you for not being there for me when I needed someone. I forgive you for not knowing how to be there for me when I needed someone, and I will never regret being that someone for you.â
She gave me a small smile and clicked her seat belt into place as I started the car. Nothing more was said on the car ride back to her house, but I think we both knew what was happening anyway. What needed to happen. I stopped the car and waited, but she stayed put.
âSo . . . are we just not going to be friends anymore?â she asked after a moment.
I swallowed down the lump in my throat. âYouâll always be my best friend, but for the time being . . . I think we should stop forcing our paths to align and . . . go our separate ways.â
She still didnât make a move to leave the car, and I didnât want her to either. But this wasnât about what I wanted.
âI donât want to be thinking about you,â I whispered. âI donât want to be constantly wondering if youâre waiting for me to ask you to hang out, and I donât want to be constantly wondering why you arenât asking me to hang out. I love you so much and I would drop everything for you in a second . . . but right now thatâs not what I need. Right now I need to focus on loving myself, instead of being consumed with my love for other people.â She nodded before finally stepping out of my car and shutting the door behind her. I leaned back against my seat, waiting until she got inside before I left.
I loved her. God, I loved her so much and so hard that my love had grown into an extension of myself. A third arm, or a sixth toe. But that wasnât normal and it needed to get removed. Maybe not forever, but definitely for now.
She was my best friend. My twin flame, and unfortunately, over time, flames burned out. But sometimes they could get lit up again. If it was truly meant to be, sometimes the blackened end of the match can miraculously pick up a new spark and come back to life even brighter than before. But that wasnât important. I needed to stop running away and start dealing with all my shit. I needed to heal and figure out who I was outside of all my pain, and it wasnât fair for me to drag her along for the bumpy ride when that wasnât what she wanted. This didnât have to be goodbye. Maybe it could just be . . . a pause. Maybe we could meet again, once I was whole and new. Maybe we could make it work when I was finally in a place where I didnât need anything more than what she could offer.
âNoah?â I called out, looking around the empty café. I faintly saw some movement behind the white tarp and quickly walked toward the bookstore. I pushed it out of the way, and my eyes widened as I looked around the . . . finished bookstore? The last time we were here, weâd only completed about three-quarters of the paint job, but obviously, he had been working on it without me. The walls were done, and there were bookshelves stacked by each wall. There was a desk by the door, with a monitor and a register waiting to check out its first happy customer. And there, in the middle of the room, was Noah, smiling brightly. He was sitting on a blanket with a bunch of candles illuminating the room, and a covered dish with plates and utensils.
âWhatâs all this?â I asked, taking a seat beside him.
âWell, you didnât get a proper welcome home party so weâre celebrating today,â he said, taking my hand in his.
âWhen did you finish the store?â
âA few days ago,â he replied, tugging my glove off and placing his lips on the back of my hand. âRavi helped me. I left the organizing and decorating part for you, though.â
âThank you,â I said sincerely, lifting the top off of the steaming pan. âLasagna?â
âYour favorite,â he said, letting go of my hand and cutting me a piece. âHowâs Bayan? Did you have a nice time?â
I took my plate instead of answering him. It smelled delicious, almost as good as the one my mom used to always make for me. I wondered if I would ever get to taste it again, or if she was going to be out of my life forever too.
âMaya?â Noah said, noticing my shift in demeanor.
âIs it such a crime to want people to care about me just as much as I care about them?â I asked quietly. âEven if I care way too much?â
âNo,â he responded immediately. âBut . . . just because they canât care about you the way you want them to, doesnât mean they donât care about you at all.â
âSo then I shouldnât have been upset that she never reached out to me? That she never asked if I was okay?â
âOf course you can be upset. We canât control how our emotions choose to react to things, but . . . not everyone is capable of comforting you in the way you need them to. Itâs not always personal, though.â
I nodded slowly, the lump in my throat returning full force. âSo me . . . pushing her away wasnât the right thing to do.â
âIf you did it because you know itâll benefit you, then it was the right thing. Weâre allowed to have boundaries, even if not everyone can understand them.â
âI guess,â I sighed, his words relieving me slightly. âItâs just embarrassing; you know? I always felt like my love for her was almost . . . obsessive, or something. Like it wasnât normal to care about someone that much. In the end, itâs my fault. My fault for constantly loving people so intensely that it literally consumes me, and then getting butt hurt when they canât do the same.â
âLook at me,â he said, taking my hand again and pulling me closer to him. He ran his fingers along my jaw softly, waiting until I met his gaze. âDonât ever apologize for caring. Thereâs no such thing as caring too much, okay? The way you love is precious, and your heart is so pure. The selfless and unconditional way that you care about people is rare, baby. Never change.â
He pressed his lips on my forehead. âIs that it then? You guys arenât friends anymore?â
I glanced back down at my plate. âI donât know. We didnât fight or anything, which I appreciated. I was honest with her, and she was honest with me. But . . . despite knowing that this was the right thing to do, there was still a part of me hoping that she would fight for me. Fight for our friendship. Now Iâll never know if itâs because she was respecting my space, or because I finally gave her the out she was waiting for.â I took a deep breath and wiped away the solitary tear that appeared in the corner of my eye. âI never made this decision because I was starting to love her any less, but because I always loved myself less when she could never . . . anyway whatâs done is done. Iâll always want her to be a part of my future, but if not . . . sheâll still hold a permanent place in my heart,â I chuckled, my face warming up. âThatâs not even what I wanted to talk to her about.â
âWhat did you want to talk to her about?â
âYou.â He looked at me quizzically. âI was so excited to finally tell someone about you . . . to talk about how I felt about you . . . to talk about how you made me feel . . .â
Noah blushed, and my heart skipped several beats at the sight. âYou can always talk to me about me.â
âYou know how I feel about men and their egos.â
He nodded, my favorite dimpled smile on his pink face, and we began eating in comfortable silence. His lasagna was delicious, of course, and I completely inhaled my plate before immediately getting seconds.
âHow do you think youâre going to organize the books?â he asked between bites.
âWell, I donât want to do the typical genre or author pattern. I feel like most readers choose books based on their moods, so I was thinking one shelf could be: books that ripped my heart out and broke it into a million pieces.â He snorted. âAnother one could be: books that transported me into a different dimension, and took me on a supernatural journey filled with magic and fictional creatures. And then the classic: books that made me lay in bed and contemplate my whole existence for days. Those are my favorite.â
âThis will definitely be the most unique bookstore that anyone will ever walk into,â he concluded. âI have a big order of inventory coming in this week, so youâll be able to start soon.â
âI donât even know when Iâll have time,â I groaned. âThey scheduled me almost every night this week.â
He was silent for a moment. âSo quit.â
âI canât quit, Noah, Iâm still helping my parents out.â
âThe store should be ready within a few weeks, so you can just come work here. With me.â
I moved the last few bites of food around my plate. I figured we were going to have this conversation sooner or later, but that didnât make it any less awkward for me. I knew he was just trying to help and I didnât want to be difficult, but . . .
âIâm not comfortable with you paying me. Especially now that Iâm living here rent-free, and using your car that somehow always has a full tank of gas.â
âI pay all my employees,â he disputed calmly. âAnd there is no rent to pay when I own this property, so I donât understand what the issue is.â
I put my plate down, my appetite vanishing completely. He made a strong argument, almost like heâd prepared it beforehand. Heâd gotten so good at understanding my face and hearing my unspoken words. How could I accept what he was offering, though? This wasnât how I imagined things would pan out. When I pictured my life after my family, I was still doing everything for myself, just like I had always done.
âThis doesnât make you any less independent or capable, Maya,â Noah said softly, reading my mind. He placed his warm hand on mine, halting my movements. I looked down, not realizing that I had absently started picking away at the skin around my fingernails. âDonât do that. Donât get sucked back into that toxic cycle of self-sabotage. Itâs whispering things into your ear because it doesnât want to let you go. I know itâs hard, but you need to push it out. You need to tell it to get the fuck out.â
I let his words swirl around in my brain, but something was blocking them from sinking in. Something that had its talons planted deep into my core and didnât want to let go. I didnât mind its presence before because it took up so much space in my head that there was barely any room for the pain. But that meant there was also no room for the happiness, either. I couldnât pick and choose what to let in, it had to be all or nothing.
âI donât know how to get to where you are, Noah.â
âHow did we learn to walk and talk? One step and syllable at a time.â He leaned in closer and gently tilted my chin toward him, forcing me to meet his gaze. âItâs going to be really hard for a while, but one day youâll wake up and itâll suddenly be second nature. Do you remember what you said to me when we first met?â
âI said a lot of things, youâre going to have to be more specific,â I replied with a smirk.
He grinned. âYou told me that healing is messy. And you were right.â
âIâm pretty sure I stole that from somewhere.â
âThatâs okay,â he chuckled, before getting serious again. âYou donât need to figure everything out right now, but letâs settle on one thing, please? You can continue to take care of your family, but I am going to take care of you, with you. Weâll take care of each other. Youâre mine.â
I raised my eyebrows. âYours?â
âYes, mine,â he repeated firmly, narrowing his eyes. âAnd I am yours. Do you have a problem with that?â
âI donât know; Iâve never really belonged to anyone before.â
âThen Iâll just have to be your first.â
âAnd my last, Noah.â
He leaned down and brushed his mouth on mine. âYou have blessed me with the greatest honor, habibti.â
I sighed. âI guess Iâm quitting.â
He smiled against my lips. âWow, I didnât realize you were capable of being reasonable.â
âDonât let this win get to your head,â I warned him. âAnd Iâm still keeping my other job at the hospital.â
âThen Iâll just have to get injured more often,â he replied, kissing me again.
I laughed. âObsessed much?â
âObsession is an understatement,â he whispered, his warm breath tickling my face. âMy entire being aches for you in your absence. My heart beats your name against my chest with a heightened sense of desperation, and it can only be soothed by the tantalizing flavor of your presence in the air.â
âOkay, settle down,â I teased, but I was the one not settled. His words lit my frozen heart on fire, melting my entire existence into a pile of throbbing desire at his feet.
âWhat did I say about you telling me to settle down?â he asked, low and seductive. His lips were back on mine, all traces of gentle caresses disappearing. He pulled me into his lap, neither of us caring about the plates that clattered beside us, and demonstrated just how obsessed he was.
âI canât believe I fell for a skater . . . man,â I stated, looking down at the skateboard. It was warm out today and he suggested we skateboard to Tysons so I could officially quit. I assumed he was joking, but he was being completely serious.
Noah chuckled. âIs that disappointment I detect?â
âNo. The hair, the body, and now this? You are exactly my type.â
âThis is an electric oneââdoes that still count as your type?â
âOh, well, thatâs just cheating.â
âI have a normal one too, but youâd probably fall off.â
âIâm probably going to fall off this one.â
âYouâll be holding onto me the entire time,â he assured me, placing the bulky helmet over my head.
âYou seem a little too confident . . . have you done this before?â I asked, and then something occurred to me. âHow many other girls have you tried this with?â
He laughed. âNone, silly.â
âIâm curious now,â I started slowly. âHow many girls have you dated?â
He buckled the straps under my chin and tucked my hair behind my ears. âWhy do you want to know?â
âI donât know, but tell me anyway.â
He glanced down at me for a minute speculatively. âSix.â
âHuh,â I said surprised. âI never figured you to be a ladyâs man. How long was your longest relationship?â
âOurs,â he said, kissing my nose. âNo more stalling, Maya. I promise I wonât let you fall.â
âThis thing was designed for one person though, not two. Youâre fighting with the laws of gravity at this point.â
âTrue . . .â he agreed softly. âBut I am not whole without you, so you could say that together we still make one.â
âI just know that mister Newton is rolling around in his grave right now because someone is trying to dispute all his hard work with love.â I blushed, smiling cheekily. I would never get used to hearing him say stuff like that. âBut you did sway me,â I sighed and carefully stepped onto the board, holding his hand for support. He placed his feet on both sides, making sure I was balanced properly. I wrapped my arms around his torso gently and watched the world pass by us in a blur. I hated to admit it, but it was actually fun.
âAre you okay?â Noah yelled over the wind whipping past us.
I nodded, tightening my grip on him. Before I knew it we rolled into the Tysons parking lot, and he slowed down. I looked at the doors anxiously, already wishing that I had just sent her an email instead of quitting in person.
âDonât be nervous,â he assured me, taking my helmet off. âDo you know what youâre going to say?â
âYes. Iâm going to tell Michelle that I enjoyed working for her, but I got another job. Then Iâm going to walk into Sheilaâs office and Iâm going to call her a bitch, and that for someone who only made like twenty cents more than me, she really let the power get to her head.â
He laughed and smoothed my hair down. âGood luck. Iâll be out here when youâre done.â
I nodded and walked into the store before I could chicken out. I waved at some of my coworkers on my way to the break room, feeling a little sad that I would probably never see them again. Working here sucked, but despite a select few, the people here were all great and I was going to miss them.
I knocked on her door and stepped inside after she told me to come in. âHey, do you have a minute?â
âYeah of course,â she replied, pointing to the chair across from her. âWhatâs up?â
âUm, Iâm sorry to do this without any notice, but . . . Iâm quitting.â
Her face fell. âAwe, really? Did you get another job?â
âYeah,â I said smiling apologetically. âThereâs a new bookstore opening up downtown, and Iâm going to be running it.â
âYou always were reading on your break,â she said kindly. âI loved having you, Maya, so Iâm sad youâll be leaving us. But that sounds like a fun experience and Iâm proud of you. I hope you enjoy it.â
âThank you, Michelle. I enjoyed working with you.â
âHey Michelle,â Sheila interrupted. âOh, are you busy?â
Obviously, I thought. âItâs fine, I was done anyway.â
âMayaâs leaving us,â Michelle told Sheila before I could take another step.
âOh no, really?â she said. I repressed the urge to roll my eyes at her fake tone. We both knew that she wasnât going to miss me. Actually, scratch that. She would miss having someone to bully in her free time. Hopefully, she didnât find a replacement after I was gone. âWell, it was certainly a pleasure working with you.â
I looked at her and paused for a moment. My rehearsed statement was sitting on my tongue, eagerly waiting to slap her across the face. She was smiling at me and her expression reminded me of Mikhail. It was goading. She knew that I knew the way she treated me was unfair, and she wanted me to say something about it.
âIt was a pleasure working with you too, Sheila,â I said, smiling warmly back at her. âI wish you well.â I gave her one last smile before stepping around her and leaving Michelleâs office.
I knew she would think sheâd won, but honestly, I didnât care. I wasnât going to dignify her unprofessional behavior with a response. Not everything needed a reaction. Being the bigger person didnât mean I was weak and couldnât defend myself, it just meant I was selective with what and who deserved my energy. And some bored, middle-aged assistant manager with raccoon eyeliner definitely did not make that list.
Noah was leaning against the wall when I came out. I admired the view for a minuteââthe way the setting sun illuminated his flawless skin, and how his water-colored eyes glowed under the sharp golden rays beaming down on him as he absently rolled his skateboard back and forth. My deep affection for him hit me forcefully as I kept watching, but it wasnât because of his beauty. It wasnât because he was kind, or because he offered me this new and amazing opportunity, or even because he loved me. I loved him because not once since the moment we met did he ever try to change me. Even when I was a little mean, or sad, or secretive . . . he continued to accept me. I spent all my years modifying my image into what others wanted to see, but I never had to do that with Noah. I was already the person he wanted, simply by being myself.
I stepped onto the board and kissed him, taking him by surprise.
âIâm guessing it went well,â he whispered against my lips.
âI didnât do it.â
âDidnât quit?â he asked in disbelief.
âNo, IÂ quit. But I didnât, you know, tell Sheila off.â
âI knew you wouldnât,â he said softly. âI love that about you.â
âI donât know about love . . . but I think Iâm starting to like that about me too.â
âOne day youâre going to love every single part that makes you, you. But until then, Iâll happily love you enough for the both of us. Iâll love you enough to fill a billion hearts.â He kissed me gently. âThe parts you hate will always receive an infinite amount of love from me, Maya.â
âWhat book did you crawl out of, and why havenât I read it?â I said, looking away as my face blushed.
âProbably because it hasnât been written yet.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âIâve been thinking about what you told me at my parentsâ house. About how youâve always wanted to write a book.â
âYeah, I also talked about how I didnât have any ideas to turn into a book.â
âYou donât need to come up with an idea when your whole life is basically the plotline of an epic novel.â
It took a few minutes but eventually, his words sunk in and I was able to comprehend what he was saying. âYou want me to write a book about my life?â
âMaya,â he said seriously, taking my face in his hands. âDid you know that sibling abuse is a common type of abuse that occurs within families, yet itâs rarely ever talked about? They call it the silent pandemic.â
âNoah, Iâm trying to move on from my past. How am I supposed to write a book about my life without reliving the entire thing?â
âWell, youâve already written half of it . . . wouldnât you agree?â he said, referring to my journal. âLook, itâs completely up to you, but I think . . . I think this might be good for you. Tell your story, Maya. Tell the world your story, and raise awareness about the things you went through. Maybe it will help someone thatâs going through the same thing. Maybe it will help you put your past to rest, so you can finally create a new story for yourself.â
I didnât know what to say, so I just looked at the setting sun behind him, pondering his words.
âLike I said, itâs completely up to you. But I think you could create something beautiful.â
I leaned my head against his chest and wrapped my arms around his waist, his heart beating erratically in my ear as we skated back to the cafe. His words swirled around in my mind the whole way there . . . could I do that? Could I write a book about my life? It sounded crazy and way too embarrassing, especially if someone I knew read it. Why did IÂ care, though? Why was I still trying to hide away from my past, when I could just own it, accept it, and then hopefully move on?
I felt Noahâs lips brush my cheek, pulling me out of my thoughts. âIâm sorry if I overstepped, it was just a thought.â
âYou didnât overstep. I was just surprisedââthat idea never occurred to me before.â
âAlright, but thereâs no pressure here. You can do whatever you want, as long as youâre happy doing it.â
I smiled warmly at him as he unlocked the door. We walked through the café, but he stopped in the kitchen.
âI just have a few things left to do before we open tomorrow.â
âOkay, Iâll help.â
âIt will only take a minute,â he assured me. âGo get ready for bed.â
I nodded. âNoah?â
He looked back at me immediately. âYeah, baby?â
âI love you.â
His eyes widened slightly, surprised into momentary silence by the three little words spoken from my lips, despite him saying them to me at least a million times a day. It was no secret that expressing affection rendered on the side of awkward for me, given my past, but he never seemed to mind. The look on his face right nowââpink, dimpled, glowingââmade me want to change that forever.
âI love you too, pretty girl.â
I left him in the kitchen while he did what he needed to do and got changed for bed. My eyes landed on my journal after I finished brushing my teeth and I hesitated. Avoiding things had been my coping mechanism for so long that it became this essential habit I couldnât live without. I turned away from anything and everything I thought might make me anxious, in the hopes that it would just take care of itself and disappear. I was always so terrified the outcome of things I wanted would end up being negative, that I just never even bothered to try. But I couldnât avoid reading my letters forever. I owed it to myself to at least try. I knew that the only way to truly heal from my past was to rip off the bandages that covered all my wounds and properly treat them this time.
Before I could overthink it, I flipped it open to the last empty page and started writing . . .
Dear Ana, Hey, itâs been a minute. Based on the last letter I wrote five years ago, youâre probably surprised to be hearing from me again. Even though I could never actually kill myself, thinking about killing myself made things simpler. But it was a permanent solution to a temporary problem, and I know that now. I knew that then too, deep down, which was why I never did it.
I donât judge you, by the way, about the whole Noah thing. How could anyone not fall in love with him? I get that you didnât choose to fall in love with him because I didnât either. All I really wanted was to be his friend, I swear, but then I got to know him and that flutter of love started to creep up on me softly, until one day I thought I lost him forever, and that flutter transformed into an intense wave that completely consumed me. All I wanted was a drop of love, but he gave me an entire rainstorm. All I wanted was a single star to wish on, but he offered me the entire fucking galaxy and then helped me make each of them come true. Iâm sorry he couldnât give you what you wanted, but he did give you the one thing you needed, even though you didnât realize it at the time. The one thing I needed, but will never have. He gave you a brother, Ana.
I thought about writing to you for a while now, but today seemed like the perfect time. Noah suggested I use these letters and all the horrible things Iâve gone through to write a book. It sounds silly, but I think Iâm going to do it. Not because Iâve always dreamed of being an author, or because I think my life would make a good storyââquite the opposite, actually. Noah thinks I can create something beautiful, but my life isnât beautiful, Ana . . . which is exactly what made up my mind. I donât want to write a story filled with sunshine and rainbows. I donât want to write a story about a girl in pieces who falls in love and gets magically put back together. Yes, Noah helped me. He has helped me in ways I never thought possible, and thatâs okay, I think. Iâm still trying to wrap my head around the fact that Iâm not alone anymore. But his love didnât heal me. Only I can heal myself and after years of choosing to be numb, I have suddenly been overwhelmed with the wonderful urge to feel. Iâm finally going to give your heart the future it deserves, Ana.
I spent my entire life living quietly. I stayed pent up and repressed, always following the rules to avoid punishment and letting people down while keeping myself under the radar. Invisible. But maybe thatâs my problem, Ana. Maybe I need to shine light on my pain, so others donât have to suffer in the shadows.
My story is ugly and messy but itâs also real. It counts, Ana, and I want to create something for all the invisibly broken people who want their stories to count too. This is my truth, and Iâm finally ready to embrace it.
âLove, Maya Suffering is hard, but healing is much harder.
You donât realize when youâre living in it, but suffering is an addiction. The human body can only live in fight or flight mode for so long before that becomes your default mode. Our bodies are designed to keep us alive throughout any and all circumstances, so if youâre trapped in a toxic environment, eventually your body will learn to adapt. All the organs and systems that work hard to make us function every day get so attuned to the chaos, that theyâll ultimately start to use that pain as sustenance and ammunition to survive. So what happens when it all disappears? What happens when you take away your bodyâs main source of fuel and energy? The answer is simple: it will start to decompose and subsequently go into withdrawal.
During the first wave, I slept. I slept all day and night. I couldnât stop sleeping. Noah had to call the hospital and get me a medical leave of absence because I simply could not stay awake. He helped me to and from the bathroom when I needed it because my body was too exhausted to stand up straight. He made me three meals a day in bed so I wouldnât die of malnourishment. When I could barely keep my eyes open, or move my lips, he would gently nudge the spoon into my mouth. When I was too drowsy to remember how to work my jaw, he would patiently walk me through it. It was humiliating, and truly terrible . . .
Or so I thought because then the second wave hit, and my body completely shut down. Once it realized it wasnât getting what it craved, it decided to just stop working. The connection between my brain and the rest of my organs seemed to get deactivated and I couldnât operate anymore. I couldnât walk. I couldnât eat. My temperature was too high, but then sometimes it was too low. My muscles were shaking, my bones were quivering and it hurt. My digestive system could no longer figure out how to absorb my food, so everything that went in came hurtling out within seconds. My nervous system was on the fritzââconstantly sending my cells a whirlpool of contradicting signals. Everything hurt, everything ached, my essence was throbbing as it desperately tried to cling onto the fractured girl I was trying to let go ofââ
âMake it stop,â I begged. âPlease, make it stop. I need it to stop, Noah, I need everything to stop, please.â
âShh,â he soothed. I couldnât see him and I couldnât feel him, but I knew he was there. âYour body is just trying to resurface everything you spent your whole life repressing. I know it hurts, but this is the only way. You have to let yourself feel your pain. You have to let yourself acknowledge how much it affected you. You have to validate all your experiences so your body can feel safe being you, instead of this person you conditioned yourself into believing you needed to be. Let it out, Maya. Grieve. Cry. Scream.â
So I did. I opened up the latch and let the memories surge through my numbed mind, igniting all my senses on fire. I accepted each ripple with open arms and succumbed to every ounce of the wretched misery I was holding back.
Wave three was when the night terrors started. I kept having this recurring dream where I was tied to my bed, or glued to the floor of the shower, or trapped under the seatbelt in a car. I was always alone, but I could still feel him everywhere. He was mingled in the air surrounding me, trying to suffocate me with his invisible hands. But then I would have a moment where I knew I was dreaming, and I would feel relieved . . . until I remembered I had once lived through each of these nightmares, and I would wake up to the sound of my ear-splitting shrieks.
It was unbearable. The whole thing. Every second worse than the last. How could something that was supposed to be good for me, cause me so much distress? I was so, so tempted to call it on this attempt to heal . . . but I didnât, because throughout all the sleep, and pain, and terrorizing nightmares, there was one thing holding me back. There was one thing that I knew for sure was real, and it was the only thing keeping me together. It wasnât anything big or extravagantââstrong arms wrapping around me tightly, and enveloping me in a blanket of warmth and safety . . . soft lips brushing against my shoulder or my collarbone . . . smooth fingers stroking my face and my neck gently . . . or even just the constant whispered I love youâs in my ear . . . they were simple but so powerful.
Noah never tried to intervene. He never tried to tell me it was going to be okay. He was just there. He was always with meââgiving me enough space to mend, but still near enough so I could reach out to him if I wanted to. And every time he could see in my eyes that I was silently struggling to hold on, he would lean in close and ask me one simple question.
âWhat do you need, Maya?â
And I would tell him, and then that was the end of it.
Eventually, the final wave hit, but it just happened to be the worst one. It was the wave when I suddenly woke up and realized how much time had passed. How many years I had wasted stuck in a bubble of despair and self-hatred, and then the sharp acceptance that I could never get those years back. I could never reclaim that time and do something worthwhile with it. I wasnât just waking up; I was getting reborn. And along with that rebirth, I was forced to mourn the girl I used to know and try to figure out who I wanted to grow into. I did myself dirty by convincing myself that the key to my happiness was to just move out of my house . . . because no matter how far I ran, I could never escape from the chaos that would forever be engraved in my mind until I finally decided to do something about it. I used to think fight or flight were my only two options, but there was a third F people failed to mention. You could choose to fight, and you could choose to flee, but you could also choose to feel.
It may have been the final wave of the tsunami, but the ocean never stops crashing against the shore. The sand just has to learn how to live with it.
four months later âHey, how was the meeting?â Noah asks as soon as I step through the door.
âIt was fine.â He gives me a look. âIt was good. She liked my revisions, but sheâs still on me about the ending.â
âWhy doesnât she like it?â
âShe thinks itâs too . . . abrupt. Unfinished.â I sigh and shake my head. âShe wants it to be bigger and brighterââyou know, the typical happily ever after bullshit.â
âHow dare she suggest such a horrific thing.â
âI know, right? As if a girl falling for her heart donors brother isnât already a colossal fucking cliché in itself,â I say with a chuckle.
Heâs quiet, so I glance at him. âWhat?â
âThatâs not how I see it. I mean, itâs the truthââtechnicallyââbut thatâs not how I see it.â
âHow do you see it then?â
He stares at me with soft eyes. âI am just a boy, and you are just a girl, and we fell in love over several cups of free coffee.â
I laugh. âThe free coffee was the only reason I kept coming back.â
âReally? Because you never once left without fighting to pay.â
âYeah, but only because I like to be difficult.â
âMy favourite thing about you.â He walks up to me, stroking my cheek gently. âItâs your book, Maya. Your story. If you change something itâs only because you want to change it, okay?â I nod and kiss him chastely. âIâm going to go help with the evening rush. Let me know if you need anything.â
I take a look around for a moment and admire my handiwork over the last months. The second I came home from work or therapy or a book meeting, I would quickly change into sweats and spend the rest of my day in here. I didnât stress too much about having a huge selection of books and organizing them all into the perfect category. The most important thing for me is to create a comfortable and welcoming environment that feels like home. I donât want this to be a place where people just come in to pick out a book and leave. I have cozy chairs set up near the windows, and large pillows in the corner where people can lie down and read. I also put a hammock chair in the bookstore as well, swinging lightly from the ceiling, which is easily my favorite thing in here.
Anytime Iâm not working on the bookstore, Iâm writing. It was hard at first, getting sucked back into my past. I had pushed away so many terrible moments, and reading my letters was like getting dragged through hell. I forced myself to relive everything I fought so hard to forget, and somewhere between now and then, my heartache turned into ink on paper, my unspoken thoughts turned into chapters, and the girl I was always meant to become blossomed through the pages. When I look in the mirror these days, my perspective has shifted. Where I used to see weakness, I now see strength. Where I used to see damage, I now see resilience. Where I used to see cowardice, I now see bravery.
And whoever I used to be . . . that before girl I could never seem to remember . . . I know sheâs proud of who Iâm slowly turning into. Keeping everything inside gave it power over me, but when I finally let it all out . . . when I finally gave my pain purpose . . . I was free.
Because this is the thing about painââyou canât run away from it, and you canât hide from it either. It will get felt whether you want it to or not, and time doesnât make it hurt any less, so would you rather feel it now, or would you rather have already felt it then? It seems impossible when youâre in the middle of it, but if you just let it run its course, the pain will stop being the center of your universe and slowly fade into a distant memory.
Despite how it seems, my book deal isnât my consolation prize for everything I went through. I was so obsessed with this idea that in order to overcome my tribulations, I needed to get something out of it. I truly believed that success had to be loud, with some kind of physical trophy as proof of your triumph, and why would I have believed otherwise when thatâs what I was taught? When you succeeded at school, you were gifted a diploma and a graduation ceremony. When you succeeded at love, you were gifted a diamond ring and a wedding. When you succeeded at creating life, you were gifted a child and a family. And then, at the very end, when you succeeded at living a full existence, you were gifted a coffin and a funeral. But I think the successes that matter the most arenât celebrated with a medal or a roaring commemoration. I think the successes that are quiet and invisible to everyone but you are the most significant and one of a kind.
I spent my entire life wondering why Mikhail couldnât love me, but sometimes there is no reason why bad things happen to us. Sometimes things just happen without a heartfelt and meaningful lesson in the end to tie it all together. They canât be fixed or redeemed. They are terrible and heartbreaking and unfortunately, they are also life. I was so convinced that I needed closure to move on, but you donât get closure from the people who hurt you. You get closure from yourself when you finally realize and accept that you never deserved any of it. The last twenty-five years will always be a nightmare I will never forget, but a nightmare I eventually woke up from. And at the end of the day, it doesnât matter if he had a reason because there is no reason that can justify the way Mikhail treated me. I took that empty space in my heart waiting to be filled with his love and filled it with my own love instead.
Five years ago I was in so much pain that I decided to kill myself, but it wasnât because I wanted to die. If I truly wanted to die, then I wouldnât have waited for the anniversary of my accidentââI would have just done it. No, I wanted that feeling to die. That crushing feeling of hopelessness I carried with me at all times. An extra limb that no one else could see except for me. But you canât kill feelings. It wasnât something I could hold in my hand and squeeze to death. It didnât have an extension cord that I could unplug and watch as it slowly lost its life. So I decided to kill its host instead. I decided to kill the thing that was providing my unwanted parasite residence and nourishment, which was . . . me. But just like so many things, I had it all wrong. I didnât need to kill that feeling. I just needed to heal it until it transformed into a new feeling.
Hope.
Itâs funny, though. God said that He would never put me through more than what I could handle, and I was so determined to prove Him wrong. But here I am, setting up my bookstore with the love of my life and Iâm . . . fine. Not perfect. Not shiny, polished, or new. Just fine. Excellent, in fact. Maybe even top-notch and exceptionally fucking splendid.
The sound of the bell announcing someoneâs arrival pulls me out of my reverie, and I quickly turn to see who it is.
âHey,â a young girl greets me. âAre you open?â
âUm, not quite,â I say apologetically. âItâs okay, though. You can come in if you want. Iâm pretty much done.â
She hesitates for a moment before coming in. âWow, it looks great in here.â
âThank you,â I reply, my heart swelling. Until now, Iâd never really felt proud of anything I had ever done. âAre you looking for something in particular?â
She shrugs. âNot really. Iâm not a reader, but Iâm kind of looking for a new hobby.â
âReading is definitely a trend right now,â I chuckle. âI have a shelf dedicated to books that will hook you into reading by the very first line.â
âWhat are these for?â she asks, pointing to the baskets of sticky notes I placed all around the store.
âTheyâre for annotating. I couldnât always afford to buy new books, so I wanted to give people the option of checking them out instead of purchasing them. I was thinking each person that checked it out could leave some annotations before returning it, so everyone can read each otherâs thoughts and opinions. Kind of like a never-ending book club.â
âThat sound really cool,â she agrees, taking one of the packs.
âMy boyfriend inspired the idea,â I say, smiling. âI was never one to annotate, but he let me pick out a bunch of books for him to read on our first date. One day he handed me a stack of books that were filled with little notes, and scribbles.â
âThatâs so sweet.â
âHeâs so sweet,â I correct her.
âMaya?â Noah says from behind me.
âSpeak of the devil,â I say, turning to face him. âNoah, this is our very first customer.â
He smiles at her before meeting my gaze again. âThereâs someone here for you. In the café.â
âWho?â
âWhy donât you just go and see. Iâll finish up in here with her.â
I stare at him for a moment, the tone of his voice worrying me. I head through the door without another word but freeze in my tracks when I see who heâs talking about.
My mother.
We havenât spoken since the day I left. I keep wanting to text or call her, just to see how sheâs doing . . . but I assumed that sheâd disowned me, just like my father had declared. Despite everything that happened, I never stop wondering how she is, or if sheâs okay. I still get hit with guilt whenever she crosses my mindâânot because I made the wrong decision, but because the right decision for me hurt her. The only thing that gives me a sliver of reassurance is the money that gets withdrawn from my account every week. At least I know theyâre accepting my help, but . . . I still miss her. I always miss her.
I walk over to her table slowly and pull out a chair. I inspect her face carefully, checking for any signs of harm, but find nothing. She just looks tired. And sad.
âHow did you know where I was?â I ask quietly. I never told her the name of Noahâs café.
âHe called me.â
âNoah called you?â I ask, surprised.
She nods. âHe said you missed me. He said you couldnât be happy until you knew that I was okay.â
I look at the glass wall separating the café and the bookstore and see Noah staring at us, his expression unreadable. I never talked about my mom since leaving, but he still knew how I was feeling anyway.
âHowâs Baba?â
âHeâs good. He wanted to come butâââ I scoff, and she gives me a look. âHe didnât mean what he said. You know how he is, heâs ashamed. He feels bad that he couldnât do better for us. Do you think he likes that you had to put off school to help us pay the bills?â
âHe has an interesting way of showing it,â I mutter.
âHe loves you, Maya, and one day heâll learn to be okay with your decision.â
Her voice sounds broken, and her shoulders slump as she looks down at the table.
âIâm sorry, Mama,â I whisper.
âItâs okay,â she says, taking my hand into both of hers. âIâm not upset with you.â
Relief wells up in my eyes. âReally?â
She nods and stares at me regretfully. âEverything you said about Mikhail . . . was that true?â
I want to say no. I want to save her from the hurt I know will come with my answer.
âDonât lie to me.â
âYes. Itâs all true.â
The crack through her heart snaps sharply against my ear drums.
âIâm sorry,â I repeat, but she shakes her head.
âYou have nothing to apologize for. I always knew he could get irrationally angry sometimes, but I never . . .â
âYou saw what he did to me that day, before I called the police,â I remind her. âAnd then again in my bedroom before you kicked him out. Did you really think that was the first time he ever laid his hands on me?â
âI didnât want to think about it,â she says. âWhen I saw him strangling youâââ her voice breaksâââit was terrifying. But then after you ran downstairs, he stared at me and he looked so confused and scared. It was like he didnât know what he was doing.â
âHe always was a good actor. And even if he wasnât acting, itâs still not an excuse.â
âNot an excuse,â she agrees. âBut Maya, you have to understand, heâs my son. I didnât know what to do . . . of course I hated the way he treated you and the way he treated all of us, but it wasnât all the time. He wasnât bad all the time. It hurt me to see how much he affected you, but how could I send him away? How could I kick him onto the streets, when I knew he didnât have the means to take care of himself? Iâm his motherâââ
âYouâre my mother too,â I reply, slipping my hand out from under hers. âYouâre my mother too, yet you chose him. You chose him every single time.â
âAre you forgetting that I kicked him out anyway? I kicked out my own sonâââ
âAnd then you invited him back in. He has you guys wrapped around his finger, Mama. He hasnât changed at all, but you fell for it anyway.â
âIâm sorry. I know I didnât do a good job with you,â she admits. âYou were just so . . . quiet. You never spoke up, and you never complained. I guess it was easy for me to sweep things under the rug because you never put up a fight.â
âI only did that because I was trying to keep the peace. I saw how much you guys struggled with money and with him. I didnât want to add anything more on top of that.â
âI know,â she sighs. âBaba and I . . . we tried our best.â
And thatâs the end of it. Thereâs nothing more to discuss because it all comes down to this truth. When you spend your whole life thinking one way, it gets to a certain point where you canât un-think it anymore. She raised me with the same rules and values that her parents raised her with it, and the cycle just continues from there.
As a child, you look at your parents like the masters of the universe. The all-knowing. The very top of the pedestal. You assume they hold the universal key to knowledge and can do no wrong. But the older you get, the more you start to realize that was never the case. You start to notice their mistakesââbig and smallââand you start to notice the mistakes they passed on to you. I canât fight whatâs normal for my parents, but I can create my own normal.
And even if they had decided to get help all those years ago, the type of mental assistance Mikhail needed just wasnât affordable. It just wasnât accessible to everyone, including us. And, knowing Mikhail, he never would have gone through with it anyway. You canât help someone who doesnât believe they need help. So no, I donât blame my mother. I donât blame my parents. They did their best with the knowledge they were given and thatâs that.
âItâs okay, I forgive you. If not for you, then for myself. Holding all this inside was tearing me apart.â
She gives me a small smile and turns her head away from me. I follow her gaze and see her staring at Noah, who is still staring at us. âSo, tell me about him.â
I canât help the huge smile that lights up my face. âHeâs my favorite person in the entire world.â
âDo you love him?â
âI do,â I reply softly. âI love him a lot.â
âBut he . . . heâs the one who hit you. We realized as soon as you two leftâââ
âThat accident was not his fault,â I interrupt firmly.
She drops it. âYou look different, Maya. You look . . . happy.â
âItâs been hard, but Iâm going to be okay.â I hesitate for a moment. âDo you want to meet him? Officially, I mean.â
She nods, and I wave at him. He immediately stops what heâs doing and comes over to us.
âMama, this is Noah . . . my boyfriend,â I say when he takes a seat beside me. He smiles at her and shakes her hand gently. I know how he feels about my parents, but heâs willing to move past it, which I appreciate wholeheartedly. They spend the rest of the night getting to know each other, and I know things between us are going to be all right.
I hug my mother tightly in the doorway before she leaves, and hand her the plate of pastries Noah made for her.
âWeâre going on a trip this weekend, but maybe when I come back . . . we can have coffee again?â
She nods and smiles at me sadly. I know sheâs hoping I would have agreed to come home with her, but as much as Iâd do anything for my mother, the best thing for our relationship is to love her from a distance.
I always believed our lives were split into two parts. Your life with your first familyââthe one youâre born intoââand your life with your second familyââthe family you create for yourself. The universe would then take the burdens written for you and spread them out equally within the two, to keep a balance between the pain and the ease. It was silly, and I had no proof to back up this belief, but it made me feel better to think that my second life might be easier.
For my motherâs sake, I hope itâs true. I hope her life before us was amazing. I hope she had a childhood filled with laughter, smiles, and love. I hope she was able to fulfill all her dreams before she got entirely consumed by the family she created. I hope her first life was filled with so much joy and happiness that maybe, just maybe, it could level out all the pain Mikhail and I had brought into her soul. But more than that, I hope my absence brings her some solitude. As much as it hurts to admit, itâs clear that I was the source of all my brotherâs inexcusable anger. Now that Iâm gone, maybe she can have the family dynamic she always wished for. Maybe she can finally try to find some peace in all the chaos, just like I am.
I wait until she safely drives away before locking the door, and I feel Noah wrap his arms around me from behind.
âAre you sure youâre not mad?â he asks.
I turn around in his arms and look up at him. âIâm not,â I assure him. âBut why didnât you just ask me.â
âI didnât think you would be able to call her yourself, but I knew you needed to see her.â
I lean my head against his chest. âThank you.â
He nods and I feel his breath in my ear. âAnti qalbi, waruhi, wahayati.â
I usually laugh whenever Noah tries to speak Arabic, but Iâm not laughing right now. Right now Iâm trying to keep myself from trembling into pieces.
âWhat did you just say?â
âYou donât know?â he murmurs. I can feel the saliva from his lips wetting my skin.
âI know what you said,â I reply shakily. âBut do you know what you said?â
He chuckles and places a kiss on my temple. âYou are my heart,â he places a kiss on both of my closed eyelids, âsoul,â he places a kiss on the tip of my nose, âand life.â
I hesitate for a second before speaking. âThereâs something else she wants me to add to my book.â
âWhat?â He stares at me, waiting. âYouâre blushing, Maya. Why are you blushing?â He continues to stare before the realization hits. âOh.â
âYeah.â
âWell . . . are you? Going to add that?â
âIâm not sure yet. Iâve only ever written what IÂ know, Noah.â
His tongue is on my skin now and I canât feel my body anymore. All I can feel is heat as he continues to trail his lips along my jaw and down my neck.
âWhat are you doing?â I ask breathlessly, already getting intoxicated by his intimacy.
âFueling your imagination,â he whispers, biting my ear lobe gently.
I chuckle, my heartbeat erratic. âThatâs not the only reason. You know Iâm not the biggest fan of smut in books.â
âReally? Because . . . most of the ones you made me read were filledâââ
âI mean writing it,â I interrupt, my face heating up, and he laughs. âIâm not comfortable writing it.â
âItâs okay to get out of your comfort zone once in a while,â he reminds me, sliding his fingers under my shirt and stroking my lower back. âBesides, you donât have to give them the whole slice of cake . . .â he mumbles against my neck. âJust some sprinkles here and there, to keep them satisfied.â His lips are on my shoulder now, carefully grazing my skin with his teeth. âYou can just, you know, insert fades into black . . .â
I canât comprehend what heâs saying through the intense mush of lust thatâs overcome my brain. He continues to trail his lips lower, and my back arches into his body. I lift my fingers into his soft hair and scrape my nails against his scalp. He moans into my skin, and his lips move faster . . .
. . . insert fades into black.
âAre you ever going to tell me why you drove us to the middle of nowhere?â
âYouâll see soon enough,â he assures me.
âAre you sure you know where youâre going?â
âDo you trust me?â
âWith directions? No, not really.â
He laughs, poking me playfully in my side. âI got us lost one time, Maya.â
We continue down through the trees silently for a moment, our hands swinging between us. âI love the forest vibes. The only thing left is for a certain vampire to step out of the shadows, and then this will officially be the best day.â
âIf you told me ten months ago that I would be extremely jealous of a fictional character, I wouldnât have believed you.â
âIf you told me ten months ago that a real-life man would replace a fictional character for first place in my heart, I wouldnât have believed you.â
He chuckles. âI still canât believe you never dated anyone before me.â
âI wasnât looking,â I reply. âI never . . . I always wanted to be loved, but I was never going to go looking for it. If it was meant to happen, then it would just . . . happen. I wasnât going to agonize over it, you know? I watched my friends fixate on finding someone, and then get heartbroken a million times so I told myself that I would stay single until it felt easy and simple . . . like breathing. I never wanted to be put in a position where I had to teach someone how to treat me, especially after Mikhail.â I tighten my hand around his. âBut at the same time, I didnât really want anyone. Not yet, anyway. Not until I had completely moved on from my past, which seemed impossible, so I guess I kind of just accepted it.â
âSo . . . you never wanted to fall in love with me?â
âNot at first,â I answer truthfully. âFalling in love with you wasnât a choice I made. I didnât even notice it happening because it felt so soft, and safe, and real . . . just like you.â I look up at him affectionately. âSo no, I never wanted to fall in love with you, but I can never go back to a time without it. I donât want to go back. I canât imagine not knowing how it feels to be loved by you, Noah.â
âAnd I, you,â he whispers, letting go of my hand and wrapping his arm around my shoulders, pulling me against his body.
âWeâre here,â he announces after a few minutes, pushing back some branches and moss and leading me into an empty clearing. Itâs cloudy out today, the mountains and trees shielding me from the sun. The wind is blowing calmly through the fields of green grass weâve stepped into, and the trees thin out, leaving an opening at the very end that overlooks the water.
âThe view is so pretty,â I say quietly, not wanting my voice to disturb the calm bubble of serenity that encircles us.
âIâm glad you think so.â
âHow did you find this place?â
âI bought it.â
I look at him in shock. âYou . . . bought this land. Why?â
We reach the end of the clearing, so he stops and faces me, smiling tenderly. âI was thinking of building a house.â
âOh,â I reply in surprise. âThis would be a beautiful place for a house. Real estate is a great market to get into right now.â
âMaya,â he laughs. âI donât want to build a house so I can sell it.â
âOkay . . . ?â
âI was actually thinking that a farm would look perfect right over there,â he says, pointing to a spot in front of us.
A farm?
âAnd then over here,â he says, walking toward the place heâs referring to, âwould be a great place for a garden, donât you think?â
I nod slowly, still not sure what heâs getting at.
âMaybe you can start with planting strawberries,â he suggests after a moment. âItâs my favorite kind of jam.â
I freeze.
âNothing but reading, and making my own jam.â
âIs this how you always imagined your happy place, Maya?â he whispers.
I meet his gaze, and heâs staring at me intensely, waiting for me to understand. But he doesnât need to wait anymore because itâs all clear now. He wants to build me the future I described to him. He wants to give me my happily ever after, but what he doesnât realize is that I already got it. My happily ever after was never the house, and the farm, and the garden, and the beautiful boy to share it with. That wasnât what would give me clarity and freedom. It was choosing to move on.
People think healing comes naturally. A papercut that closes up on its own after a few daysââred, to white, to skinââwithout any effort from you. Emotions donât work like that. A wounded mind canât heal itself. Itâs a choice. You had to choose to heal. You had to choose to be better. You had to choose to be happy, and that choice, as difficult as it was, is my happily ever after that opened the doors to an infinite number of happily ever afters waiting to come.
âNot quite,â I reply, and his smile falls. âI was always alone in my happy place . . . but Iâd prefer this one, with you.â
His smile quickly comes back to life, and he pulls me into his arms in a bone-crushing hug. âThank you for saying yes. I thought I was going to have to beg on my knees for hours.â
I chuckle into his chest. âI wouldnât mind seeing you beg on your knees.â
He leans back slightly. âThis house wasnât the only reason I was going to be on my knees today.â
âWhat do you mean?â
He cradles my face in between his warm hands. âMaya?â he asks quietly.
âYes?â
âHabibti?â
âYes?â I laugh.
âWhat are you, right now? On a scale from one to ten?â
I think about his question for a second, vividly remembering the first time he asked me that. I snapped back at him instead of answering, but it was only because I was so extremely low. Now, though . . . itâs crazy how a glimpse of your future can make up for a lifetime of your past. Everything that I had gone through, everything that I had to overcome, it all led up to this moment. My life suddenly makes sense.
âTen, Noah. Iâve only ever felt true happiness when Iâm with you.â
âGood,â he replies, releasing my face, and nervously crouches down on one knee.
âNoah?â I ask breathlessly. âWhat are you doing?â
He doesnât respond. Instead, he slides his hand into his pocket and pulls out a small black box.
âMaya Ibrahim,â he starts, looking up at me, but then pauses. His lips are parted and the words are on his tongue, but he doesnât speak them. He just stares at me, pure love and devotion glistening tears in his eyes and IÂ know. I know what heâs saying even though he isnât talking and I hope my eyes are telling him the exact same things back.
âSorry,â he says, clearing his throat after many minutes. âI prepared a million different ways to express myself but it doesnât matter because they all mean the same thing . . . I love you, Maya. I sincerely and wholeheartedly love you, and I want to spend the rest of my life with you, right here, watching you read, write and make jam, in our peaceful and soft forever.â
He flips open the box, revealing a ring. Itâs a thin gold band, encrusted with small diamonds. In the center, thereâs an oval-shaped sapphire thatâs a radiant spring green, with a hint of mint and chartreuse. It isnât loud, vibrant or extravagant, but instead, itâs simple, dainty and exactly what I would have picked out for myself.
âNoah,â I whisper, my heart feeling like itâs about to burst with all of the overwhelming emotions building up inside me. âItâs so pretty.â
âNot prettier than you. Will you marry me, Maya?
I give him a watery smirk. âAre you sure youâre not just proposing so we can have sex?â
He shakes his head and laughs through his tears. âMaybe just a little bit.â
âOkay, settle down,â I tease, blushing.
âFor you?â he vows. âFor you, Iâll do anything.â
âPromise?â
âPinky promise, Maya.â
The flood of passion and sentiment is still crashing against my chest, leaving me speechless and breathless. I canât bring myself to open my mouth to speak, so I nod and extend my hand toward him with tears streaming down my face, and playfully tap his nose. He gives me that lopsided smile in response and slips off my glove before lifting the ring to my finger, but as soon as the cold gold touches my skin, something happens. Itâs like a bucket of ice water got dunked over me, and the explosive sensation in my heart suddenly turns into searing pain.
I gasp and yank my hand away, clutching at my chest. Iâm expecting to find a knife or a gunshot wound, but thereâs nothing there.
âMaya?â Noah stands up immediately, losing the ring in the grass beneath our feet. âWhatâs wrong?â
I meet his horrified gaze, but I still canât speak. All I can feel is painââ
âMaya.â
I can see it this time. Death. Its shadow is in front of me, arms wide and welcoming, and I can feel myself drifting to it effortlesslyââ
âMaya, wake up.â
I can hear Noah somewhere, his voice a million miles away, in another dimension.
âBaby, please. Please wake up. Please come back to me.â
He sounds completely shattered. I want to comfort him, but I canât see him. I canât move. A sob cracks through the tunnel separating us and hits me full force.
âPlease, Maya, I need more time. I need more time to love you. Please donât leave me, baby, please, please, please.â
They say your life flashes before your eyes when youâre dying, but the images Iâm suddenly seeing arenât from my past. The blurry glimpses are ones I have never seen beforeââNoah slipping the ring on my finger, and me, Maya, smiling and laughing. Heâs lifting me up in the air, twirling us in circles before dropping to his knees, laying us back in the grass, lips moving urgently with mine, happy tears mingling together on our tonguesââ
âJust give me one more minute. Just let me look into your eyes for one more minute. Just come back to life for one more minute.â
Iâm in a white dress, a makeshift flower bouquet of all my favorite book quotes in my hands, and Iâm walking toward Noah. There are other people there, but I canât tell for sure because all I can see is him, my favorite beautiful boy standing at the other end of the isle, one blue eye, one green eye, messy hair, black tux, high-top sneakers identical to the ones on my feetââ
âMaya, please.â
Weâre in a cabin. I donât know where, or how, or when. All I see is two moving bodies pressed together on a blanket in front of a roaring fire, surrounded by candles and light music that you canât hear over the sensual moans and heavy breaths of newlyweds making love for the first timeââ
âMaya.â
The vast field of land is back except this time thereâs a house with a green kitchen and a library with a reading nook and high windows. The sun is setting on the horizon, Noah is watering the plants, and Iâm feeding the chickens while holding hands with a little, curly-haired girl with different colored eyesââ
âItâs okay, Maya.â
Iâm in a bookstore. My bookstore. Noah and Iâs bookstore, signing copies of my book, people lined up in the store, outside the store, all the way down the streetââ
âYou can let go now.â
I try to fight it. I try to cling on to the future that couldâve been. The future that will never happen. It seems cruel that when I so desperately wanted to die last December I couldnât bring myself to do it, and now when I so desperately want to live I canât bring myself to do it. I canât bring myself to stop that thing tearing through my heart. My borrowed, fractured, and imperfect heart. But if I learned anything in life, itâs that itâs cruel. So you need to take those brief flashes, and glimpses, and blurry images of joy and cherish them because one day, youâll be in the middle of something amazing and out of the blue, without any warning and without making any sense, youâll be gone and everything will become a memory. You canât guarantee a life filled with happinessââthatâs something you have to work forââbut you can guarantee a life that will eventually come to an endââ
âI love you, Maya.â
This is my end.