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Tormented Spirit | 5
Part 1 2 3 4 5 6
"Is it such a sin to stand up for yourself?" you mutter as tears blur your vision. The way he reacted was visceral, instinctive even. "You never have to stand up for yourself ever again," says Daemon, reaching a hand to you, "come."
Daemon Targaryen x Hightower!Reader | 4k+ | cw: fem!reader, reader has brown hair, wife!reader, twin!Gwayne, arranged/forced marriage, canon divergence, alternate universe, slow burn, DD:DNE, panic/anxiety attacks, daddy issues/child abuse/family problems, mentions/depictions of mental/physical/psychosomatic illness, ye old misogyny, angst, typos, etc.
A/N: guys this not fully proofread as I am exhausted | cross posted on ao3
@arabellasleopardcoat
You cannot tear your eyes away from Daemon as you walk down the halls together. Though he already told you the blood on his armor was not his, you could not help but worry that perhaps he had a wound hidden away underneath his steel plate. Your stare is so heavy, he's unable to ignore it, thus why he huffs, "out with it."
You perk at his words and rub your hands together.
He raises a brow at you, "or do you merely think me so devastatingly handsome you cannot help but stare?"
You slowly shake your head, "are you certain you are unharmed?"
His eyes linger on you for a moment before he looks forward, "I am offended you did not agree."
You knit your brows, "you," you shake your head, "already know. You are comely husband."
He turns back to you.
You cannot name the expression he gives you.
"Did I not say I was unharmed?"
You stop in your tracks out of frustration, grabbing his arm, "Daemon."
He turns to you, face hardening at your look of concern.
"If you are hurt, then we should head for the maester's."
He chuckles under his breath and pulls away, "a funny thought coming from you."
Your brows furrow deeper as you tail after him, "I do not follow."
He looks over his shoulder, lips curling, "considering you are sick and yet nowhere near the maester's ward."
You only then recognize his smile was mocking. You feel a pinch in your chest. You shake your head, "we are not the same. If there was something to be done about my affliction, my father would have seen it done years ago."
Daemon laughs.
You wait for him to explain his laughter, but he does not. You take his arm again, "what amuses you?"
Your husband looks at you, then at the hand you had on his bicep, "through it all, you hold your father in such high regard."
You clench your jaw and release his him.
He enjoys your dejection, thus why he takes your hand, placing it back in its place with a chuckle, "say it isn't soâ I dare you."
You look back at him. His smile is like a needle through your heart. He must think you're stupid without even trying. You mutter, "I am merely stating facts."
He laughs again, "your frail heart keeps you naive."
The feel of his armor is suddenly scorching and you have to pull away. He stares at you after the fact, but does not take your hand again.
You do not speak until you reach the door to the meeting room. Once there, Daemon motions with his head, "wait for me. You like flowers don't you?"
You look over your shoulder and realize that he was motioning to the window that gave view to the gardens. You turn back to him and step forward, reaching out to retrieve the flower in his hair. It would not be appropriate for him to attend a council meeting like this.
Daemon mistakes your action for affection, and moves his head away so you cannot caress his cheek, "I said I am unharmed, woman. Now go sit down."
He walks off after this, leaving you standing in the middle of the hall alone. Just as he enters the room, you struggle with yourself if you should call out to him or simply run up to him and snatch the flower off his head. But then, the moment is gone and he's already inside.
You cannot find it in you to sit as you overthink what would become of your husband because of the flower in his hair.
Just as you begin to pace around, you are rendered frozen when you hear your name get called.
Viserys smiles at you, as he and his council members walk over, "good morrow."
You make eye contact with your father, who was walking just behind the king, and lower your gaze as you curtsy, "your grace. A pleasant morning to you."
Viserys stops in front of you, clapping his hands once, "why, you look fetching my dear," his eyes examine your hair, and you, yourself, are reminded by the presence of the blossoms on your head, "did you pick those from the garden?"
You rise and smile at your husband's brother, shaking your head, "my ward, ser Erryk, was kind enough to- ..." you catch yourself amidst your confession, eyes suddenly darting to your father.
Otto's jaw is set and his eyes are already angered.
You gulp and decide to continue nevertheless, "...accompany me flower picking in the meadow."
Otto huffs audibly, but the king's reaction is so stark in contrast, your father does not have the opportunity to butt in this moment. Viserys claps once again and smiles, "oh good. Some fresh air always did help me. Of course, when I say fresh air, I really mean going on dragon back, but strolling in the meadow picking flowers is a fine pastime."
You are touched by the king's amicable sentiment. You repay his smile with your own, "I completely agree."
"I do not," Otto says, "what if you get an attack in the middle of the nowhere? What if the pain is too great and you are not brought home in time?"
Viserys and you turn to the Lord Hand. The king responds, "she was accompanied by her ward. Is that not why you requested one for her?"
"I requested a ward to keep her in check to prevent her from doing things that would cause her affliction to worsen."
You tense under the harsh sound of Otto's voice.
Viserys recognizes your discomfort and waves him off, "you needn't be so hard on your daughter. It is good for the spirit to reserve time frolicking."
You gulp the next time the king smiles at you. You do not smile back and merely curtsy at him. With that, he and his council members go into their meeting room and you are left alone once more.
The council members' muttering comes to a halt when they see prince Daemon in his seat.
"Kind of you to join us today, brother," Viserys huffs, "we were just talking about you."
Daemon eyes Otto, "the topic being my bride, no doubt."
Otto has to fight the urge to roll his eyes as he walks to his chair. His throat constricts, as if he was about to retch, when he sees the flower by his ear. He thinks of you and the flowers in your hair and figures Daemon did this to spur him in. He releases a deep breath to calm himself, "the topic being your power tripping with the City Watch last night."
Daemon glares at him. The king sits at the head of the table. The prince links his hands together, "you would know to mind your tongue, Lord Hand. I care little for the tears my wife will shed once I sever your neck from your spine."
"Daemon," Viserys snaps.
"And what I did last night was clean the streets from the putrid scabs of the city in preparation for my birth of my brother's child."
"And you exacted a very public show of extreme violence while doing so," Viserys leans on the table, "you maimed and mutilated peopl-"
"Criminals," Daemon whips his head. He raises his brows, "would you rather they strut free and continue stealing, raping, and killing in your city?"
"I would have them see justice."
Daemon chuckles dryly.
Viserys raises a finger, "your blade is not the writ of justice."
"Do you mean to tell me it's yours?" the younger Targaryen narrows his eyes.
"I AM THE KING," the elder Targaryen snaps.
The prince does not flinch, "speaking loudly will not make it truer, brother."
Needless to say, the meeting is coarse and uncomfortable.
You start from where you were sat by the window upon witnessing Daemon shove the meeting doors open. He storms out of the room grumbling and you have to gather your skirts to run off after him.
"What's happened?" you mutter when you reach his side.
He ignores you, simply continuing to march away with a storm cloud overhead.
You are partially surprised to find that he was heading towards your shared chambers. He shoves the doors open then marches towards your private baths. There, your tub holds steaming water. You were grateful the servants thought to prepare the bath here and not Daemon's personal quarters.
Daemon begins to callously remove his armor and immediately ceases when you come towards him to do it yourself. You look between his hard expression and hard attire, thinking of something to say to calm his down.
You think of nothing.
The moment he is free of his steel, he removes the rest of his garbs himself and steps into the tub. You meant to remove the flower in his hair but then he wordlessly offers you his arm, expecting you to clean him, and so you do without fuss.
In the quiet of washing and splashing water, you feel Daemon slowly begin to relax. He leans back, releasing a sigh as he shuts his eyes. You stare at him for a long moment. He is beautiful.
"Your father is a fucking cunt."
You purse your lips as you release his arm. He opens his eyes when you pull away, then watches as you circle around the tub. You sigh as you take his other arm and begin scrubbing it, "he is... sometimes unkind."
He scoffs, turning to you, "sometimes?"
You focus on his arm, unwanting to meet his gaze, "he was kind to my mother... I think. And to my brother... sister... sometimes."
Daemon watches you, brows furrowing, "and you?"
You shrug, "sometimes?"
"Why do you defend him?" he tilts his head.
Finally, you look at him. The glint in his violet eyes make him appear as though he genuinely wanted to understand you. You shrug once more and shake your head, "he is my father."
"He is a cunt."
You tilt your head, scooping water onto his arm, "surely you've thought the same thing about your brother." You look between his arm and his face.
Daemon does not respond. He does, however, pull away from you.
You stare at him, trying to anticipate his next move.
He motions with his head then leans back in the tub once more, "strip. You should bathe with me."
You stiffen at his proposal, but do not object otherwise. You gather your hair and turn around, "will you undo my laces?"
Daemon, for some reason, is taken aback by the request. There is something that swirls in his gut. Still, he moves towards you and undoes your ties, pushing your dress down after. You shudder when he frees you of your shift and strokes your spine with the back of his hand.
"The king demands we have a family dinner before the tourney tomorrow," Daemon mindlessly mutters, "you must wear something pretty."
You gulp when he kisses your shoulder and scratches your sides until he's cupping your breasts. You gasp and turn when he tries to pull you in. Finally, the flower in his hair falls off when your nails dig into his scalp as he kisses you.
By the time the water goes cold and your bliss from love making wears off, you are faced with the fact your neck and collarbones are covered in glaring purple and red marks again.
Daemon does not relent as you both dress. He is adamant in covering your skin with bruises and bites. You are not surprised that he makes you wear something that showcases your decolletage, but you at least find solace in the fact he makes you keep your hair down in its natural state.
The air is tense as your families eat dinner. You sit next to each other, with him to your right, followed by Viserys and Aemma. In front of the queen was Rhaenyra, then Alicent by the left, Gwyane, and finally your father, who sat before you.
There was something serene in the sinister way Daemon strokes your arm and pushes your hair back. You knew he was doing this to rile your father up, yet you did not know why your body found comfort in his touch.
Then, in a flash, you were nothing but uncomfortable when your twin drops his silverware and blurts out, "you will not lose your hand if it does not grope my sister as we feast."
Daemon, who had been rubbing the your back all the way to the side of your breast, turned to your brother, who sat across him.
Gwayne clenches his jaw, expecting him to pull away.
Instead, Daemon moves your hair to one side of your shoulder and caresses your neck with the back of his hands, "oh, but you see, now that I've..." he smiles, "sampled your dear sister, I fear that it might."
Otto is next to drop his utensils. Your body burns at Daemon's words but you can do nothing but lower your head in mortification.
Viserys sniggers. Aemma glares and nudges him.
"You would not understand this, for you are unmarried," Daemon says turning his head, "but perhaps your father will."
Viserys nearly chokes on his meal, but then clears his throat, "brother-" he withholds his laughter, "-that is quite enough." The king looks at the faces across the table, none of them but him and Daemon finding this predicament amusing, "I'm sure everyone is... overjoyed that you and your bride have found marital bliss, but do keep your manners," he nods, "you are seated before the king."
Daemon turns to Viserys and straightens up. He nods, "my king."
Viserys clears his throat again and nods, "manners, brother."
"Hmm, like you with Aemma?"
Rhaenyra slams her hands on the table, pushes her chair back, and stands. All turns to her and her sour expression as she speaks, "I'm quite finished with my food. If I may be excused... my king."
Otto stands next, his chair skidding behind him, "I am quite finished with my food as well," he nods at Viserys, "I wish you a good meal."
Your belly rolls when he looks at you.
"Daughter, might you walk me out of the room, there is something I wish to discuss with you."
"She is quite busy with her food," Daemon immediately answers for you, "if you wish to speak something, speak it in front of us."
Your throat tightens.
"Tis a personal matter," Otto speaks firmly, "I would not put my child in an uncomfortable position."
Gwayne watches your expression, feeling restless because of your glaring discomfort.
"But you've already done so announcing your desire to speak to her so that she could not refuse," Daemon snaps.
Your chest begins to constrict. Gwyane picks up on how your breath quickens.
Otto clenches his jaw, "I wish to speak to my daughter."
"Yes, and I say fuck off."
"Daemon," Viserys finally snaps, turning to the said man. The king turns to you, peering past his brother, "you may speak to Otto if you wish, or you may simply continue with your meal."
You turn to your skirt and clench the fabric in your hand.
Daemon rubs your nape and your skin reacts with goosebumps. You gasp when his hand is snatched away by Viserys. You turn to them, struggling to breathe as you watch them bicker in High Valyrian.
Aemma tries to interject, but the brothers do not acknowledge her.
"Sister," Gwayne calls to you.
You want to turn to him, but you fear you will crumble in tears if you do.
The room is silenced when you stand. You feel everyone's gaze on your skin. "I wish-" you speak through a heavy breath, "-to retire."
You run out of the room before anyone can respond. Your heart drums in its cage but you tell yourself to run and to keep running.
Gwyane stands, ready to chase after you, but Daemon blocks him and their bodies violently collide. Daemon shoves him back and Gwyane is about to lunge at him but hears the voice of her baby sister calling his name in concern. His face twitches as he holds himself back.
"She is my wife," Daemon says.
"Then fucking go after her," Gwayne snaps, raising an arm, "she'll be heading to the temple, undoubtedly, which is outside the Keep, if you are not aware."
"Go on!" Otto snaps, pointing a finger, "chase after her."
Daemon seethes at the instruction. Dare he? He'll break the arm that fucking finger is connected to. He wants nothing less than to do what that cunt says.
"Go to her, Daemon," Viserys urges.
He glares at his brother, offended by his alliance with the fucker. Now he is really not going to do that. He's left with no other choice but to leave the damned dining room though. How lucky of him to run into the Cargyll twins on his way out.
"You," Daemon barks, calling the attention of the two men. He marches over to them, hands balled tightly into fists.
"My p-"
"The fucking Hand has upset the bitch again," the prince snaps, "she's run off in a fit to gods know where."
The two watch the prince have a hissy fit in High Valyrian before realizing he referring to his wife. Arryk says, "the princess has run off at this hour?"
"Her cunt twin said she'd go to the temple, but maybe she's fallen dead halfway through her sprint."
The twins turn to each other in horror.
"Ah, if only the gods were that kind," Daemon scoffs then looks between them, "find her. I do not wish to hear her pathetic sobbing."
Erryk's nostrils flare. Arryk clenches his jaw and nods. The latter begins to walk off and has to reel his brother by the arm to follow.
Daemon storms off to the dragon pit.
Arryk eyes his brother. Erryk's eyes remain on the prince, until his twin calls his attention.
You arrive at the temple of the Seven, forehead and nape sheened over with sweat. You nearly collapse before the Mother. The only reason you do not, is because two septas catch you before you collide with the shrine of candles. Upon recognizing you, they are quick to attend to you, saying they will get you water and a towel.
Running is a horrid activity that seems to only more horrid each time you do it. You find that your heart cannot keep up, and you are pushed into horrible breathlessness. Your father was strict to never let you run. You do not know if it is simply because you are not capable of running or because of your affliction that made it so.
You thank the gracious septas for their care and ask them if they would pray with you. Unable to deny you, a woman so devout and so... pitiful, they help you get on your knees and you recite The Mother's prayer together. At some point, you begin to weep, and once more it becomes increasingly harder for you to breathe. The septas have to stop praying and attend to you again.
"Princess!"
You are made to sit down on the floor. The two septas are replaced with two men, both dressed in steel, one as seemly as the other, albeit the mark of abject concern on their face. You frown as you look between Arryk and Erryk's worried features. Your scratch your eyes as they speak to you. The weight in your chest makes it hard to understand.
You hiccup as one of them scoops you into their arms. You do not realize you were being carried out of the temple until you are outside. "Wait," you sigh when you managed to catch a breath, "wait."
Whoever is carrying you does not hear it, but his brother does. He says, "wait, Erryk. What is it, princess?"
"I wish to pray," you mutter, eyes still wet with tears, "please."
Arryk looks at you. Erryk shakes his head, "we have to bring her inside."
"Erryk," Arrryk knits his brows, "she wishes to pray."
"She is in no condition toâ" Erryk's words falter when your hand comes to his cheek.
You feel your lips tremble and you barely manage to speak, "please."
A line forms between his brows at the sound of your weak voice, "my prin-"
"Erryk," you stroke his cheek, "I need this."
Arryk looks between you and his brother. He watches him sigh and turn back. He follows after Erryk as he goes up the stairs, back towards the shrine.
You are placed before the Mother once more. You sigh and allow yourself repose before shifting on your knees. The twins leave you to your prayers, standing by not too far off.
Erryk's eyes remain on you. Arryk's eyes remain on Erryk.
"You tread a dangerous path, brother."
Erryk does look away.
Arryk sighs, turning his gaze over to you.
You sit on your knees, one arm rested on the plinth as you take a stick and light it. You whisper, "mummy," then light a candle, "me," then light another. Your soft whispers flutter in the echo chamber.
Both twins feel fangs rip into their stomachs as they watch you. Erryk's features are more honest to it however, which is why Arryk catches it and speaks again, "you are sworn to her, you fool."
"And you are not?" Erryk snaps, turning to his twin.
The brothers stare at each other for a moment. Arryk purses his lips and tilts his head, "I am not in love with her."
"Then leave," Erryk motions with a nod. He shifts in his spot, linking his hands together as he turns back back to you.
Arryk snorts and clenches is hands. His ears perk at the sound of your hushed sobbing. His heart clogs his throat.
Erryk sighs through his nose, "you are still here."
"I cannot leave her."
Erryk turns to Arryk, "then you are just as foolish as I."
"I-" Arryk starts. He cannot look away from you, "... I am sworn to her."
"She is beautiful," Erryk says.
Arryk finally tears his gaze only to shoot his brother a warning look, but Erryk's eyes are back on you.
"She wove flowers into my hair mere hours ago," he knits his brows, "she laughed and beamed and glimmered," Erryk sighs, "now she crumbles and weeps and hurts."
Arryk knits his brows, just as deep as his twin's.
You wipe your tears as you soothe yourself. You voice goes low again as you continue to pray.
"I am not a fool," Arryk says
Erryk laughs dryly, turning to him, "very well. If y-"
"I know she is beautiful," Arryk cuts him off.
His lips flatten.
Arryk gulps, "outside and within."
"As I said," Erryk replies, "just as foolish."
"I do not understand what could posses someone to hurt such a creature."
"Perhaps there is no soul to posses."
Arryk shakes your head, "you cannot allow your anger to get ahead of yourself, fool. You are glad the prince did not notice."
"The prince is too caught up in himself to notice anything that does not directly a..." Erryk's words go dry.
Arryk knits his brows, finding his twin was staring at something behind him. He looks over, stiffening when he catches the very person they were speaking of walking over.
Daemon makes a beeline towards you. He stops just behind you, lips and brows tense at the sound of your evidently upset voice. "Should you be doing this?"
You perk at the sound of the voice and look over your shoulder. You stare at Daemon, unsure if you were imagining him or if he was really there. You find that you don't really care, "will you pray with me?"
He does not like that you do not answer his question. He shifts on his spot, "did you faint or fall out of breath?
You turn back to the candles, "you must not be real."
"What?"
"I do not think my husband would care," you mutter, clasping your hands together in prayer.
Daemon does not move.
"You would pray with me then," you add, "you are kind."
The prince's face contorts. He feels like he is choking. He comes to your side, slowly dropping to his knees. He clasps his hands together, propping his elbows in front of him. He is taken aback by how you rest your head on his shoulder with no hesitation. He stiffens and a part of his mind screams to shove you away. He does nothing of the sort however.
"I tire," you admit.
"Then we sh-"
"Tell him to grant me my prayer."
Daemon slowly turns his head to look at you. He sees the way the tears trickle down from the bridge of your nose, "tell who?"
"The Stranger."
Daemon turns to the statue of the Mother. He wants to be difficult and tell you to simply move to the other statue, but instead he asks, "what is your request?"
"Death."
He turns back to you, expecting you to name a name. You do not, so he asks again, "your father?"
Your brows furrow, "no."
He turns to his hands. An unnamable emotion seizes him, "so... your husband?"
You finally lift your head. You turn to him, a deep frown on your face, "I do not wish you harm, Daemon."
He turns to you.
New tears burn down your cheeks.
A new unnamable emotion seizes him at the sight of your wobbling lips.
The twins find themselves looking away when the prince wipes your cheek.
You lean into his touch, "I have prayed for the same thing every night since I was ten."
Daemon's forehead curls, "what do you pray for?"
"To die."
The hand he had on your face tenses.
"It is pointless," you push his hand away, retreating from his touch, "my pain does not subside. My heart and flesh grow weaker each day."
Daemon is uneasy as you turn back to the Mother. He shakes his head, "I do not think the gods listen to such sinful prayers."
"Sin?" you chuckle under your breath.
Somehow your laughter sounds sadder than your weeping.
"Is it such a sin to stand up for yourself?" you mutter as tears blur your vision.
The way he reacted was visceral, instinctive even. "You never have to stand up for yourself ever again," says Daemon, reaching a hand to you, "come."
You stare at his outstretched palm, then look up at him as he stands. You are loathe to move. You do not think you can, even if you wanted to, "I tire."
He leans over, draping your arm around his shoulders, "I'll bring you to bed."
You say nothing as Daemon pulls you in and carries you in his arms.
For the final time tonight, another unnamable emotions seizes him. It only further intensifies when you rest your head in the crook of his neck.
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nothing happened in the way i wanted part 2
author's note: okay so here's part 2! sorry for making you wait, i like the anticipation lololol
summary: a year has passed and you are no closer to understanding why matt ended things and you have every plan of avoiding that thought until he comes back in town for the offseason, then suddenly he's everywhere.
pairing: matthew tkachuk x reader
warnings: ANGST, friends to lovers to exes to lovers, mention of sexual assault, attempted sexual assault, drinking, depression, panic attacks, let me know if i missed something! (these include the trigger warnings from part 1)
before
a piece of plastic should not be that big of a deal.
but it is when there are two pink lines staring back at you.
werenât you and matt careful? he always wore condoms, you were on birth control, you two were so careful all the timeâ
wait.
shit.
except for a few weeks ago.
you were wearing a red bikini at a pool party and matt had tugged you into the guest bathroom. he didnât have any condoms and you assured him it was fine.
but maybe it wasnât fine.
because there were two fucking pink lines staring back at you. and the worst part? matt wouldnât be home for another two hours or so.
you were hyperventilating, surely. thatâs why you felt like you couldnât breathe?
oh god.
you were going to have to figure out how to raise a child while matt was on the road. oh god, what if he didnât want the baby? what if you didnât want the baby? what if he didnât want the baby or you?
you were pacing back and forth in your living room when matt came home, arms full of bags from his workout. they immediately dropped when he saw the look on your face.
âwhatâs wrong?â he asked. âwhat happened? did someone die?â
you shook your head and burst into more tears. it was a mere second before you were wrapped up in his arms, one of his hands stroked your hair while the other stayed firmly put around your waist.
âbaby, youâre scaring me.â at the sound of the pet name, you sobbed even harder. baby. there was a baby.
âiâm sorry, matty, iâm sorry,â you managed to get out between cries.
âwhatâre you sorry for, huh? you havenât done anything wrong, have you?â
your hands were shaking as you pulled back from him, opening your palm to show the piece of plastic in your hand.
âwhatââ but matt seemed to have lost his voice at the sight of the pink lines staring back at him. âoh,â was the only thing he found fit to say.
âiâm sorry, matty. i thought it would be fine, but i went to the dollar store because i didnât have any money and this was the only test available andââ
matt tugged you back into his chest. âitâs okay. weâll figure it out.â
âweâre too young!â you wailed. âbarely 20.â
âitâs one test, weâll take another and if itâs still positive, weâll go to the doctor,â he murmured against your hair. âwait,â he started. âwhere did you say you got the test?â
you pulled back, confused as to why his voice took a sudden turn from concern to something you couldnât quite place. âdollar store, why?â
matt laughed. he threw his head back and laughed. âbaby,â he started. âyou chose a cheap test, it could be a false positive.â
you blinked. âis that how that works? i didnât thinkââ
âletâs get another test, and weâll take it, together.â
matt drove you both to the pharmacy, his hand on your thigh the entire ride. he went in alone, grabbed a box of clear blue and a bag of sour patch kids before he came back out. you almost burst into tears at the sight. as you ripped into the bag, mattâs hand found its way back to your thigh, his thumb rubbing soothing patterns into your pants leg.
the sour patch kids had done the job of calming your nerves for the moments leading up to retaking a pregnancy test. matt held your hand while the two of you waited for the timer to go off.
âwhatever the result is, iâm with you,â he mumbled against the side of your head. and when the timer went off, matt was the one to check it, you were too overwrought with nerves. he didnât even check the test, wanting you to see the result first.
negative.
a sigh escaped your mouth. your shoulders sagged as tears came to your eyes. relief wasn't a strong enough word to describe how you were feeling in that moment. matt pressed a kiss against your temple and wrapped you in his arms.
âone day,â he said. âjust not today.â
after
maybe you were a bit of a coward, waiting for tuesday to come around before you texted matt a good time to meet. you waited until the last two minutes of your lunch break before you sent him a message. the second you heard the whoosh sound, you put your phone on do not disturb and shoved it in your bag so you could forget about it.
frankie popped his head into the studio while you were hunched over a canvas, carefully scraping away the back side of it to clean.
âyou busy?â he asked.
you looked up before glancing down at the giant canvas in front of you. âi can take a small break, my back is killing me. do you need me to clean up? how long do you need me?â
frankie shrugged. ânot long, so you donât have to put anything away. i just wanted to talk to you about your future.â
your stomach dropped. âis this a segue into firing me?â
âyouâre so dramatic,â frankie chuckled. âno, youâre not being fired. iâm more so trying to get you in a place where you can be compensated fairly one day.â
you blinked. âare you not compensating me fairly right now?â
frankie rolled his eyes. âyou have a lot of talent, and unfortunately, i canât pay you any more until you get a graduate degree in art conservation.â
confused, you nodded. âi know,â you said. âi started here for experience to use on grad school applications.â
âand have you applied anywhere yet?â
you opened your mouth and then promptly shut it again. no, no you had not.
frankie sighed and placed his hands on his hips. âlook, youâre talented, iâve said that plenty of times already and i want you to be successful, whether thatâs as a conservator or an independent freelance painter. what i donât want is you staying in st. louis forever in this job waiting around for something to happen.â
waiting for something to happen.
waiting.
what exactly were you waiting for?
frankie continued. âiâve emailed you some of the best conservation programs in the states if thatâs a route you wanna go. i honestly think you could do conservation or freelance painting, youâd be great at either, but thatâs a choice only you can make. if you want to go to grad school, i will gladly write as many letters of recommendations as youâd need, iâd even help you by asking clients for some if thatâs what you want, but the ball is in your court.â
for a moment, you were floored, truly astounded that someone would go through those lengths to help you figure out your life. for now, all you could manage to say was a âthank you.â
âanytime,â frankie replied.
he left the studio room shortly thereafter so you could continue the mindless scraping once more.
when the work day was finally done, your hand was sore from the constant repetitive motions and your back ached from hunching over. but at least the scraping was done.
you grabbed your bag and car keys and headed out the front door. the aux was the first thing you reached for after locking yourself in the car. it wasnât until you searched your bag to grab your phone that you remembered the text you sent matt earlier that day, the reason why your phone was on do not disturb.
you:
what does your week look like?
matt had responded two minutes after your initial text.
matty:
iâm free tonight, or any other time youâre free.
you rolled your eyes but couldn't stop the smile on your face.
you:
i just got off work, let me go home and change and we can find a place to meet.
you barely managed to get the music flowing through the aux when your phone buzzed with a text.
matty:
you can always stop by the house? mom, dad, and taryn would love to see you. we could go on a walk around the neighborhood...
your stomach churned at the thought, it felt a little too close, too familiar. but there were very few places in that city that wouldnât spark some sort of memory for you. you grew up there, you grew up there with matt. there were seldom spaces that werenât deeply intertwined in your co written story with him.
you:
thatâs fine.
neither of your parents were home when you got there, which was probably for the best, it meant you wouldnât get asked where you were going or why you agreed to talk to matt after all this time.
you made the drive to his parentsâ house. it felt as familiar as putting on the old t-shirt youâd stolen from your mom before you left for college. you didnât need the gps, even after the time had passed.
you parked in the same spot you always did when you finally got a car to drive to matthewâs. it wasnât like that spot on the street was used very often, not when you were dating at least. matt hated making you drive, especially when his car was newer and better and by all of his standards, safer than yours.
by the time you made it onto the front porch, taryn was opening the front door and smiling so wide, her eyes were squinting.
âyouâre here!â she shrieked. it was only a matter of seconds before you were wrapped in her arms. âwhat brings you here?â
your mouth opened to respond, but you were promptly cut off.
âsheâs with me.â
matt appeared over tarynâs shoulder looking every bit the man you fell in love with all those years ago.
taryn pulled back from the hug, her eyes wide. âwhat? sheâs withââ
ânot like that,â you smiled gently. âjust came to talk, figure some things out.â
âare you staying for dinner?â
you looked at matt, unsure if that was something heâd even want. âitâs up to you, i won't force you to stay,â he said.
you shrugged. âweâll play it by ear.â
matt nodded and moved past taryn. âyou good for a walk?â he asked, eyes never once leaving your face. and you couldnât help but stare back, getting lost in the pools of blue that once were your whole world. you felt yourself nod right before following him down the stairs and off the porch.
neither of you said anything until you were both sure his family couldnât see you from their house anymore.
âthank you,â you said. âi shouldâve said that the other night.â
matt shook his head and shoved his hands into his pockets. âyou don't need to thank me for that. iâm sorry that happened.â
âyou couldnât have done anything to prevent it.â
âi couldâve told the bartender to stop giving him drinks when i saw how drunk you were.â
your head whipped to the side to look at him, but matt wouldnât return your stare. his jaw was tightly clenched. âhowâd you even know i was there?â
mat shrugged and kicked a rock out of the way. âi always notice you, even when i donât mean to.â
there were no words coming to your mind, nothing you could say could add to the conversation. so you nodded and looked ahead of you.
âi wanted to apologizeââ
âmattââ
âfor everything.â
you stopped walking altogether. âdonât,â you said. âdonât say that. donât apologize.â
mattâs brows pulled together, the corners of his lips turned down. âwhy?â
âbecause i donât want it.â words you thought youâd never say.
did you mean them? it felt like you did. for months, youâd waited for a moment for him to apologize, to admit that he regretted it. but now that you were faced with this decision, you werenât sure it was an apology you wanted.
âwhat do you want, then?â he asked, earnestly this time.
you looked down at your beaten up hokas, the ones you bought after moving back to missouri, needing something that didnât used to stay in the apartment you shared with matthew. the shoes were only a few months old, but they were discolored and dirty. you wore them to work, and often got droplets of solvent or paint on them when you werenât paying attention.
mattâs foot nudged your own. âwhat do you want?â he repeated.
âdid you cheat on me?â your eyes were still trained on the ground, so you didnât see the look of hurt in mattâs eyes. you only saw the way he stepped back immediately.
âwhat?â he asked, pain clear in his voice. âwhy would you think that? i would never do that to you. you have to know that, please know that iâd never cheat on you.â
you shrugged, still not making eye contact. maybe you were scared if you did, youâd start crying, and heâd seen you cry enough times since heâd been back in town. âyou broke up with me over a five minute phone call, matt. it was out of the blue, didnât make any sense. the only reason i could think of was that you got tired of me and found someone better.â
matt scoffed. âi could never find someone better than you,â he said. âand never in my wildest dreams or thoughts did i ever even consider cheating on you.â
you finally met his eyes. the once bright blue irises were now darker, whether in pain or anger, you didnât know. you werenât sure how much had changed with him since the break up. âthen whyâd you end it? whyâd you wait until you were traded and nearly halfway into the season to tell me itâs over?â
âbecause i didnât want you to move to florida.â
you figured as much, but it still stung hearing it confirmed.
âwhy?â you asked.
âbecause you kept putting off your life for me! i hated it!â matt was pacing now, shoving his hands through his hair.
at the same time, your head tilted. you wanted answers. you wanted the reason why he'd ended things out of nowhere and the reason he just gave you wasnât enough. âwhatâre you talking about?â
matt stopped moving long enough to fix you with a look. âyou wanted to go to ucla until i committed to notre dame. and then when i signed with calgary, you transferred after a year.â
âso?â
matt scoffed. âso?â
âi wanted to do that!â
âand i wanted you to be yourself, i wanted you to chase your dreams without worrying about me, without altering your life just to stay with me!â
you stepped back. âso you didnât want me with you?â
âthatâs not what i said!â
âthen what are you trying to say, matt? weâre just not compatible? headed in two different directions?â
âiââ he groaned and ran a hand down his face before shoving that same hand through his disheveled curls. âi wanted to do right by you. you are so gifted, and you couldâve gone to any school you wanted, but you followed me. i didnât want to be the reason you never got to do what makes you happy.â
âso you took the one thing i wanted away from me?â
âyou werenât going to choose yourself! you were never going to choose yourself, so i did.â
âthat wasnât your choice to make, matt!â you couldnât help but want to rip your hair out. who was he to think he could make decisions for you?
he took a step closer to you before immediately stepping backwards and pacing. âi have known you my entire life,â he said. it was an exaggeration, you both knew it, but as you both got older, it was harder to remember the years before you were in each otherâs lives. âyou are the kindest person i know, the best person i know. you have made more than enough sacrifices for me, for this game i love. but i was tired of being the only one living out their dream. you love art, or at least you did. you loved it, you painted all the time growing up. but when you moved to calgary? you stopped. you went to my games, galas, team events, instead. i wanted you to have something that you loved just as much as i love hockey.â
âand what if that was you? what if i was okay just supporting you?â
he shook his head adamantly. âyou deserve more than that. i love you too much to let you live like that.â
you furrowed your brow. âlive like what? supporting the love of my life as he lives out his dreams?â you tentatively took a step closer to him, imploring matt to look at you. âwhy is that such a bad thing?â
âbecause what if itâs not enough?â he looked up. you were shocked to see tears brimming in his eyes. âwhat if one day, you wake up next to me and resent me for dragging you all over the continent for a stupid sport?â
âitâs not a stupid sportââ
âit is when iâve seen it ruin people, ruin their relationships.â
âbut you ruined ours when you broke up with me, matt. how does that make any sense?â his mouth opened and shut once, twice, three times before he avoided your eyes altogether. âmatt, how does that make sense?â you took a step towards him, slowly but moving. âmatt?â
âi could handle it if you hated me,â he said. âi could learn to live with it if it meant you got to be happy in the end.â
your heart broke, your face crumpled as you watched the man youâd loved for a decade shuffle shoe around what he was actually trying to say. âwhy couldnât i be happy with you, matt? why isnât that possible in your mind?â
you waited for him to say something. it felt like you waited forever. but you wouldâve waited for the cows to come home if it meant honesty from him.
âbecause iâm never gonna be enough for that.â
you thought the phone call from six months ago ripped your heart in half, you fully believed heâd done the most damage then. if your heart was going to be broken again, surely it would be when you would inevitably see another girl hanging off his arm at brady and emmaâs wedding.
but there you were, standing in front of the man you still loved, heart breaking even worse because he believed he wasnât enough. he wasnât enough.
âmattââ
âto me? youâre everything. youâre literally the smartest person i know and youâre so talented and kind and considerate.â he laughed a little under his breath. âi still remember you shaking in the goal while i practiced my shots. i was waiting for you to say you didnât want to do it, but you did it because you knew how much it meant to me.â
you smiled as you remembered the moment he was talking about. you were eleven and your crush on matt was just starting to form. you wouldâve done anything he asked even if it meant flinching every two seconds.
âbreaking up with you was the worst thing iâve ever done, but if it meant sparing you the life of forever being forced to follow me around, it would be worth it.â
you stepped closer to him, uncaring that the two of you had been having this conversation in the middle of the sidewalk of his neighborhood. âwho put this idea in your head, matt? was it me? was itââ
âyour parents.â
you barely even heard the âwhatâ leave your lips, so you were unsure how matt did. he looked as uncomfortable as you felt.
âi was gonna propose when you moved to florida. i bought the ring before the season ended and over the summer i had every intention of asking your dad for his blessing.â matt cleared his throat before finally looking up at the sky. the sun, thankfully, was beginning to set, golden hour was coming soon. âyouâd gone out with our moms, emma, and taryn, and i went over to your house to talk to your dad.â
you werenât liking where the story was going.
âhe asked if i would quit hockey for you.â
your stomach dropped to your feet.
âwhen i said i would in a heartbeat, he didnât believe me.â
your stomach was in the core of the earth.
âmatt...â
he swallowed and looked at you. âi would do it, you know. if youâd asked me, i wouldâve given hockey up in a heartbeat to keep you.â
âi know, matty, i know,â you said, the nickname slipping out before you could stop it. âwhat else did my dad say?â
matt shook his head.
âmatt,â you implored.
but he didn't relent.
âmatthew.â you took a step closer, finally, after months of little to no physical contact, your hand cupped his cheek. and like he had no control over his body, like he was acting on pure instinct, he leaned into your palm. âwhat did he say?â
he shook his head again. âi canât.â
âyou can.â you stroked your thumb along his cheekbone.
âhe asked if this was the life i wanted for you. the moving around, the fighting, the crazy schedules, the tweets, all of it. he asked verbatim if thatâs the kind of life i wanted you to live, if i wanted you under a microscope for the rest of our lives. he told me that he knew why i was there, and that if i thought youâd be happy to a life like that, then he'd give me his blessing.â
your hand shook a little, but mattâs hand steadied it against his face.
âitâs not that i thought you were weak,â he clarified. âitâs not that i didnât want you, because i did. i just didnât want you to be stuck with me for the rest of our lives.â
âis that what he said? that if we got married, iâd be shackled to you?â
matt shrugged, but in his silence, you found the answer.
âmatty,â again, the nickname slipping out before you could stop it. âiâm sorry, you shouldâve said somethingââ
âand cause problems between you and your dad?â he shook his head. âyou love him, i wasnât gonna come between that.â
you couldâve cried at that sentiment. after all this time, he was still looking out for you. âthank you, matt. thank you for being honest.â
he gave you a small smile, one that broke your heart as much as it mended it. âyou staying for dinner?â
the temptation was there, to go inside and sit in your old seat next to him, to feel your shoulders brush like they used to when the two of you were still together. maybe youâd laugh at something brady said, maybe youâd compliment chantal on her cooking.
but there were bigger fish to fry at home in the shape of your father.
so you shook your head no. âi think you know i have to go.â
matt nodded. âi get it.â
the two of you turned around and started walking back to your car. in the end, you didnât walk very far so you were standing next to your vehicle in a matter of minutes.
âthank you for agreeing to talk,â matt said, his hands shoved deep in his pocket.
âthanks for telling me the truth.â
matt opened your door and braced his forearm on the roof of your car while you got in. âiâll see you around?â he asked.
you smiled. âdonât be a stranger, tkachuk.â
he laughed and knocked on the roof of your car before shutting the door. you watched him in your rearview mirror as you drove away. all the years you were together, there were only a few times you could remember walking away from him.
the drive home was quiet, you were stewing on what you'd say to your dad when you got back. you were pissed, upset, angry.
but most importantly, you were in agony.
the man you loved your whole life let you hate him for six months so you wouldn't hate your dad. he let you make him into a villain so you had the support of your parents.
and maybe it was that thought process that had you throwing your car in park and storming up to your childhood home and all but slamming the front door wide open.
your mom and dad were sitting in the living room, neither of them interacting with the other in any meaningful way. no, this wasnât the tkachuk house. your parents werenât in love anymore, they were content with the idea of not having to find anyone else.
âmatt was gonna propose to me?â you asked, chest already heaving from the anger coursing through your body. your eyes were on fire, if looks could kill and such.
your dad, to his credit, managed to catch onto what you were talking about immediately and put his book down.
but your mom cut in. âsweetheart, what're youââ
âask him,â you interrupted, but didn't spare her a single glance, something you'd apologize for later. âgo ahead, ask him what iâm talking about. ask dad why matt broke up with me out of nowhere.â
âhoney....â your dad started. you waited for him to continue, to justify something, to say it was a huge misunderstanding, but he said nothing.
âalan, what is she talking about?â
you still wouldn't look at your mom. your eyes were fixed on the figure of your father who sat still in his recliner. âi went to talk to matt today, get some closure, figure out what went wrong with us. dad convinced matthew that i would feel shackled to him if he proposed, if we got married. he planted this idea in mattâs head that he wouldnât be enough to keep me happy.â
that seemed to be enough to get your dad speaking. âyou have so much potential, honey, i didnât want to see it wasted chasing him around.â
you rolled your eyes. âi was happy to do it. he was everything to me.â
âand you shouldâve been everything. you should want to be great, you should want to be a great painter, you should want to accomplish great things.â your dad gestured between himself and your mother. âyou think we want this for you? to choose a partner just based on love? what happens when that love runs out? what happens when you get married, have kids, and matthew get bored on the road? what then?â
your stomach twisted at the thought. âmatt would never.â
âmaybe not, honey. but you have to understand, i was looking out for you.â
you scoffed before you could stop yourself. âlooking out for me? you literally held me while i sobbed a few weeks ago and told me that maybe matt had changed when you knew damn well the reason things had ended.â you ran a hand down your face and laughed bitterly. âdo you wanna know the worst part about this? you let me believe the worst things about the man who has loved me most of my life.
âyou let me hate the man who wanted nothing more than to protect my happiness. and then you had me going on absolute bullshit pep talks to myself every morning where iâd tell myself iâm fine, that matthew brendan tkachuk was just a guy i dated for almost half my life and that there are plenty of fish in the sea to choose from. and that iâm a woman, a strong, intelligent, and capable woman that any man would be lucky to have! but i went on a date the other night and something really awful almost happened, but matt was there and he made sure i was okay. he took my vitriol in stride, he protected me without ruining my life, something you canât seem to do.â
your dad, to his credit took your spewing words with a straight face. he didnât interrupt you once.
your shoulders were heaving with the force of breaths you were taking to get all those words out. your heart was pounding in your chest. you were angry. angry. angry.
until it dissipated at the look on your parentsâ faces.
tears replaced the anger quite quickly.
âi get you were trying to protect me, but you shouldâve seen the look on his face when he told me. dad, i love you, but you damn near ruined my life.â
your father nodded, a shattered look on his face. âsweetheart iâif iâd knownââ he cleared his throat. âiâm sorry. i thought i was doing right by you, trying to keep you from making the same mistakes.â
âand what mistakes are those? falling in love? getting married to the person you loved? getting to live the rest of your life together?â
âfalling complacent,â your mother said. âgetting too comfortable, becoming roommates instead of lovers.â your mother was picking at her nail beds, refusing to look at either of you. âi was not a part of the conversation your dad had with matthew, but i will not lie and say that your behavior didnât concern me, because it did.â your mother held a hand up when you opened your mouth. âyou didnât have any ambition! you were sacrificing your dreams for him, aimlessly following him.â
âmomââ
âi have found myself lost before, lost in this marriage, lost in motherhood, lost in my job. i did not want that for you, neither of us did.â your mother stood from her seat on the couch and walked towards you. she placed her hand on your cheek. âi know you love him, and maybe heâs your person, but we did not,â she cleared her throat, âi did not want you to grow up regretting and resenting matt because you were too young to know what you wanted.â
your momâs thumb traced your cheekbone. she stared you down with the eyes that matched your own. âdo you remember when you were younger, you would draw these beautiful pieces with your colored pencils?â
you nodded.
âyou donât draw anymore, sweetheart. your art supplies are still in a box in the attic where they have been since you've moved back home. from my viewpoint, i see the little girl i raised chasing the man she loves and neglecting herself in the process. youâve spent most of your life following matthew, but what about you? when will it be your turn?â
your bottom lip wobbled.
you were nine years old again, showing matt the self portrait you did and watching his face light up.
âyou should draw me sometime!â he said.
and you did. all through middle school, high school, undergrad, all of it was matt matt matt matt matt. even if it wasnât his face, even if it wasnât hockey related, it was matt. the colors swirling together, the passion beneath the oils, all of it reflecting him.
you were so pissed at your dad, for telling matt what he did, but you were pissed at yourself as well, for neglecting who you were.
who were you anyway?
the fight left you pretty soon after your motherâs words were spoken. the hard truth of them still lingered in the air.
you went to bed that night and stared at the ceiling, trying to imagine what you would paint if the surface was a canvas instead.
before
you wouldâve never picked up your phone had you known what was waiting on the other side of it.
the day started off simple enough. your apartment was a mess, usually at that time of year, it would be covered in christmas decorations and presents would be wrapped under the tree you and matt picked out from a tree farm. this time, there were boxes strewn about the room in anticipation of the move youâd be making to florida in just a few weeks. the plan was youâd fly into st. louis and have all your belongings that you didnât need to survive, shipped to your new home in florida.
you were in the middle of packing up the last of your summer clothes into a box when matt called. it felt like a flip had been switched, because any exhaustion that was set deep in your bones from the work week disappeared the second you saw his contact photo on your lock screen.
âhey!â you said, smile so wide, your cheeks ached. âhowâre you doing?â
âhey,â he replied, but his voice sounded off.
âeverything okay?â you asked. âi saw the game last night, iâm sorry about the loss.â
âdonât worry about it.â
âoh,â you said. âwell i have most of the apartment packed up, just need to put the rest of my clothes in my suitcases. iâve already arranged the rest of our things to be shipped andââ
âi don't think you should move to florida.â
all the words in the world and all you could say was âwhat?â
matt sighed over the other end of the phone. âi didnât mean to say it like that.â
âbut you still meant to say it?â
âlook, this isnât easy for me to admit but, i donât think itâs a good idea for you to move to florida. i don't even think itâs a good idea to keep this going.â
âkeep what going?â
he sighed again. âthis, us, our relationship. i just donât think itâs working.â
well that was news to you.
you swallowed, your hands were shaking. it wasnât until you couldnât see straight that you realized you were crying.
âsince when? i thought we were fine! what did i miss? what can i do to fix this?â
the battle of alberta had nothing on mattâs silence ringing through the phone. with each passing second, you felt the hope of repairing and fixing your relationship dwindle.
âi donât think thereâs anything to fix.â
the world had stopped spinning, even as he continued on, talking about the next steps you'd need to take, how he would continue to pay the lease, heâd cover the moving expenses to switch destinations of your things.
it all made you want to vomit.
how could he speak about the logistics of your break up when you felt like you couldnât get past the actual reality of your breakup? your world was caving in and he seemed fine.
at the end of the call, he apologized. âiâm sorry,â he said.
all you could say was âokay.â
five minutes, your phone said when you looked at the call log.
matthew tkachuk had ruined your life in five fucking minutes.
after
frankie had to be the weirdest boss you ever had. when you called him and said you needed a few days off to sort things out in your personal life, he jumped at the chance to tell you to take a day or two off immediately.
âi canât pay you for those days, but if it means you feel better, go ahead and take off. weâll be fine.â
which is how you ended up sitting in your room for eight hours, staring at a blank canvas.
your hands shook anytime you reached for a paintbrush. what if it was the wrong brush? the wrong color? what if it was bad? ugly? what if you hated it?
you'd communicated those same thoughts to simone over the phone when you called on her lunch break, trying to keep yourself from crying over a blank canvas.
âitâs gonna be difficult at first,â she started. âbut you have to start somewhere, even if itâs just a dot in the middle of the canvas.â
and you'd repeated her words in your head, yet you couldnât force yourself to do anything about it. this was supposed to be about you, yet everything you were doing reminded you of him. it was the particular blue you used to mix together to represent his eyes. it was the red from calgary. it was the yellow that reminded you of the t-shirt you wore when matt first kissed you.
what would you even paint? the living room of your first shared apartment? saddledome? this was supposed to be about you, so why did you keep wanting to make it about matt? what was wrong with you? your parents were right, you lost yourself in trying to be the most supportive girlfriend around.
the second day didnât produce much results either and when you finally went back to work, you looked and felt like you hadnât rested at all.
âthat bad, huh?â frankie asked.
âi didn't think itâd be that hard to paint, itâs literally never been that hard before.â
âyou gotta just let it go.â when he didn't say anything else, you gestured for him to continue. âstop expecting it to be a masterpiece or to be meaningful, art is about you, not perfection.â
âbutââ
frankie held a hand up, just like your mother had. âwhen you're here, itâs about doing right by the painting, the art itself. when you create though, itâs about doing right by you.â
you floated through your workday, your fingers itched to do something more than scraping dirt and grime off the back of a canvas. they longed for the oil based paint to stick to them. they longed for the cramping in your hand that came from holding a brush too long.
but you started.
you turned on some classical music and started.
you werenât even sure what you were painting until you were staring back at the ice rink in front of you, empty, just like you were feeling. you shouldâve known it would've had something to do with ice.
maybe it was foolish to believe you could completely get rid of matt in one painting. you'd known him longer than you hadnât. but frankieâs words kept echoing in your head.
itâs about doing right by you.
so instead of painting matt or his number, or the curls on top of his head, you painted something else entirely. blurred figures raced past a lone frame standing completely still. the slumped shoulders of the person in stuck in one place, the lack of proper equipment, no ice skates, no sweater.
after days of painting and plotting and painting and waiting, it was finished. an ice rink with a person completely stationary while life moves around her.
it wasnât your best piece, but it was your most honest.
it was like a dam had been broken because you couldnât stop painting the silly little pieces of your feelings. you were losing space in your bedroom, and your phone had been neglected for two weeks.
now, you still responded to texts in the bridesmaid group chat, and you texted simone frequently. but your brain was taken up by this reawakened, once dormant, passion of yours. it was all you could think about.
your fingers were practically permanently stained with paint. you hadnât changed out of your paint clothes all weekend, living in the spandex and one of your dadâs old t-shirts. the past few days, youâd been a hermit, only leaving the house to go to work. and while you werenât completely anti social, you werenât going out of your way to get in contact with people.
your parents were out on a rare date night while you were up in your room adding little details to your painting. the music playing through your phoneâs speakers had lulled you into another world. you were all but lost to reality.
thump.
you paused, brush poised over the canvas. you listened again for the sound but heard nothing. so you continued.
thump thump.
you glanced at the window just in time to see a rock hit it. before you could stop yourself, you sighed and chuckled.
you felt like you were in high school again.
when you opened your window, sure enough matt was standing outside with a handful of stones in his hands. âyou busy?â he asked.
at the sight of his boyish smile, your heart leapt. âwhatâre you doing here?â
he shrugged. âjust wanted to see you.â
be careful, your head warned you. heâs not yours anymore.
but your heart didnât give a shit. try as hard as you might, you were almost positive youâd love matt the rest of your life. âyou couldnât knock on the door?â
he shrugged again. âi tried, you didnât hear me.â he shifted on his feet. âso are you busy?â
you glanced back at the painting you'd been obsessing over all day and decided you could leave it for a little while. âgimme a sec.â
very quickly, you cleaned up your art supplies before you ran down the stairs. you snagged your keys out of the basket by the door and locked the front door behind you.
matt had moved off your lawn and was now propped up against the passenger door of his car. âwanna go for a drive?â
how could you deny him anything when he looked so happy to see you?
âyouâve been busy,â he said as soon as he pulled out of the driveway. you did your best not to pay attention to how good his arm looked behind your head rest as he backed out into the street.
âhow do you figure?â
matt put the car in drive, but before he pulled away, he gestured to your forehead. âyou have paint, everywhere.â you could feel the heat crawl up your neck as you opened the sun visor to look in the mirror. sure enough, streaks of paint covered your cheeks. matt reached over and shut it with one hand. âstop it,â he said. âyou look great.â
âeven with the paint?â
âespecially with the paint. you look happy again.â a beat passed. âare you?â
you thought about it for a moment. a few weeks ago, you were in the trenches, suffocating in the unknown, drawing in questions that had no answers. and while you were still single, even as you sat in the passenger seat of the man that you still loved, you felt capable. you felt like you could handle life. no longer were you floating, waiting for a strong breeze to blow you away from your reality. you still might depend on having wind in your sails, but at least you were a boat with a steering wheel instead of a helium balloon.
âi think iâm getting there. iâm not as angry anymore, iâm painting again.â you gestured to your face. âthough you could probably tell.
âwhat have you been painting?â
how could you explain it? how could you possibly articulate that while you were still searching for what it meant to be you, you had somehow uncovered fragments of yourself that youâd lost along the way?
âmyself.â
matt smiled, his eyes crinkled in the corners. âthatâs what i like to hear. you enjoying it?â
âmore than i thought i would, once i got over the fear.â
âfear? what were you scared of?â
you picked at the dirt under your fingernails. ânot being good enough.â
matt made a sound between a scoff and a snicker, like the words coming out of your mouth were so incredibly stupid it was both alarming and hilarious. âare you fucking with me? youâre the most talented person i know!â
you rolled your eyes before you could stop yourself. âyou play with some of the best athletes in the worldââ
âand none of them could hold a candle to you.â he braked easily when you came up to a red light.
and you werenât sure why you said what you said next, maybe it was the intimacy of the environment or maybe, when it came down to it, you wanted matt to hear all your updates first.
âi think iâm gonna apply to more grad schools again. i talked to frankie, he gave me some information and said heâd write as many recommendations as i needed.â
you wanted to be brave and look at matthew, you wanted to see his reaction in real time. but you couldnât bring yourself to. whether that was because the moment felt too intimate for eye contact between exes or the you were afraid you'd see real time disappointment, you werenât sure.
âis that something you wanna do?â his voice was soft. you could feel his eyes on your profile.
that was a question you'd asked yourself over and over again. was it something you were legitimately interested in? or were you like every twenty-something who applies for grad school when they don't know what else to do?
âi think there's just as much beauty in restoring as there is in creating.â in a split second, you decided you could be brave, so you looked back at him. âi donât think i should have to choose between one of the other.
matt nodded, his hands white against the steering wheel. âdo you think everything deserves a chance at restoration?â he asked, his blue eyes filled with a sincerity only he could replicate.
âi think anything can be fixed if someone cares enough to try.â
feeling bold, you spared him a glance from the corner of your eye. matt had his head down for a brief moment, a small smile on his lips.
there were words that hung in the air like the car freshener on mattâs rearview mirror, yet neither of you spoke them. both of you were more than content to bask in the silence rather than answer unasked questions that you werenât ready to acknowledge.
before
matt wasnât at school that day, and you were the reason why. he hardly ever missed, even with his busy hockey schedule and his dadâs games, chantal always made sure to have her kids in school. if they werenât rich, youâd assume his parents had the same thought process your grandparents did: they werenât forking out all this money just for their kids to be absent all the time.
which brought you back to your original thought.
matt wasnât at school.
and you were the reason.
well. that wasnât entirely true. mattâs decisions were his own, even if the two of you were in fifth grade, you were both mature enough to own your mistakes.
and he made a big one.
it started at the beginning of the school year when jared, a new kid, started bothering you during class. you'd done what your parents had taught you and told the teacher. but mrs. wright just looked at you with a condescending smile and said:
âaw honey, he just has a crush on you!â
you were met with the same excuse each time you told her.
youâd tried to keep it to yourself, done your best to get over it, but he was too forward. on monday, he teased the way your uniform looked, which was a sore subject because your parents couldnât afford to buy you a new uniform and your grandparents were being stingy with money in an effort to manipulate your mother. you were old enough to start recognizing that now.
on tuesday, jared criticized your doodles on a sheet of scrap paper, saying they looked childish. wednesday was no better, he snickered and pointed at you when you messed up a note playing hot cross buns on your recorder. thursday was when things took a left turn.
jared hadn't been at school for long to fully understand the dynamic between you and matt, not like the other kids did. he was smart enough to approach you when matt wasnât around for the most part. maybe it was the confidence of the lack of punishment and accountability from your teacher and school administration that made him bold enough to tug on your hair and push you down during recess right in front of matthew.
you didnât have enough time to shed a tear before matt was on jared.
to put it simply, physically fighting someone was grounds for suspension. it probably shouldâve been a longer suspension had you and your parents not said jared had been harassing you for weeks now with no consequences.additionally, the amount of money the tkachuks sewed into the school probably helped lessen his punishment too.
âyou shouldnât have beat him up,â you said. the two of you were sitting on the back porch of mattâs house. originally, you expected matt to be grounded from seeing you as a punishment, but given the context, keith and chantal both said it would've been unfair.
matt shrugged. âhe shouldâve kept his hands to himself.â his words sounded similar to the ones you heard from his father earlier that day when you and matthew were sitting outside the principalâs office.Â
âmr. tkachuk, we do not condone violence at this school.â
âbut you do condone harassment? bullying? my son was doing what your administration failed to do, and thatâs protect his best friend.â
âi don't like it when you're in trouble.â
âand i donât like seeing some jerk hurt you.â matt nudged your knee with his own. âbesides, iâll be back on monday. âs not like i was expelled.â
âjust donât make it a habit.â
âno promises,â he said. âiâll always fight for you.â
after
the wedding approached faster than you thought it would. you spent the last seven months dreading emma and bradyâs big day, scared of what seeing matt in a tux would do to your heart. originally, you didn't think you could handle it, you never thought you'd actually get to the wedding day and not want to cancel last minute.
but now you were standing in the bridal suite adding finishing touches to your makeup in the vanity feeling every bit of happiness for emma that you were faking just months ago.
life was starting to turn around for you. just last week, frankie had helped you finish your applications to some grad programs in art restoration and conservation. you were holding out hope for nyu, but didnât want to get your hopes up.
âhowâre you feeling?â taryn came up behind you where you were lined up in preparation to walk .Â
âready for some wine and the reception,â you answered honestly. âiâm so excited.â and you were telling the truth for once. your smile felt genuine.
âmatt will be excited to see you,â she said. âyou look so pretty.â
you rolled your eyes but couldnât stop the smile from forming on your lips. âoh hush, this isnât about us, not even remotely close.â
taryn rolled her eyes and shrugged her shoulders. âmaybe...â she trailed off before the wedding planner was moving her into position.
your hands shook as you held the bouquet. lily, one of the other bridesmaids looked back at you and mouthed âare you okay?â when you nodded and gave her a shaky smile, she turned around.
you werenât nervous for a good reason, but walking in front of crowds always scared you. what if you tripped? what if the heel of your shoe broke? what if what if whatâ
but then it was your turn to walk down the aisle and every anxious thought went quiet the second you saw matthew.
it really wasnât fair, how he could put you at ease so easily, without even saying a single word. how his blue eyes would meet yours and the racing of your heart would beat for a different reason. sure, there were moments where you were anxious around him, around the feelings that came with dating for ten years, but the truth was you never felt more safe than you did in his arms.
you kept your eyes locked on his as you walked down the aisle. not once did you stumble or fall. though, you nearly laughed out loud when he winked at you. a flush creeped into your cheeks when he smirked. youâd known him most of your life and you were still reduced to a school girl whenever he looked at you. when you made it to the end, you took your spot next to lily, taryn eventually took the spot next to you.
personally, you loved weddings. you cried every time. so obviously you were wiping tears with brady when emma walked down the aisle. it was almost surreal, watching the boy you knew as when he was eight years old was now marrying the love of his life. when did you grow up? when did that happen?
you met mattâs eyes over bradyâs shoulder. in another life, it would've been you two getting married. the very thought sent an ache through your chest, but it didn't hurt the way it did a few months ago, hell, even a few weeks ago.
sure, you might not have ended up with matt, but you reconciled. he would still be in your life, even if it wasn't in the same capacity as before. that thought used to be debilitating, now you were just thankful he was around at all.
the crowd cheered as brady kissed emma. you could barely see them through the tears. you managed to wipe most of them away in time to walk back down the aisle. you were supposed to be linking arms and walking back down the aisle with quinn hughes. so when matt was standing there and holding his arm out, you almost stumbled back out of sheer confusion. in a haze, you took his arm.
âyou werenât supposed to walk me,â you said just loud enough for him to hear.
matt scoffed and pulled you a little closer. âlike i was letting hughes walk you back down the aisle. thatâs my job.â
âyou messed up the order.â
he shrugged like the idea didn't bother him in the slightest. âbrady will get over it, if he even notices.â the two of you had just walked down the aisle when you went to pull away, but his arm tightened around yours. âyou look beautiful,â he said before releasing your arm and walking off.
it felt like you were stuck, rooted where you were standing, until the wedding planner ushered you along to take photos.
you were floating through the pictures, only barely remembering to smile and look at the camera. mattâs words floated around in your head in an endless loop.Â
when it was time for dinner, you entered with quinn like you were supposed to (and to mattâs chagrin). brady and emma did not want to confuse the dj who was announcing everyone. quinn indulged your excitement and twirled you under his arm as the two of you walked out. there was a huge smile on your face at the sheer fun of it all, a smile that didn't dissipate until you were both seated with the rest of the wedding party.
you were happily chatting with quinn, asking him about how his girlfriend was, and eating your dinner when emmaâs maid of honor stood up and started her speech. to be quite frank, you knew it was a beautiful nod to her friendship with emma, but you werenât fully paying attention, too enraptured with the food and wine in front of you. though, you did clap where you were supposed to and laughed when everyone else did.
it wasnât until matt stood up to give his speech that you were dialed in. and maybe that made you a horrible person.
you knew matt well enough to know he didn't prepare a speech, not like the maid of honor did. he'd told you so once brady and emma got engaged.
âare you not gonna write your speech down?â
ânope,â he said, popping the p.
âbut he's your brother.â
âthe only one who is getting a planned and fleshed out speech is you, when i propose and when we get married. everyone else gets the improvised speech.â
so you weren't surprised when he didnât have a slip of paper in his hand like the maid of honor.
âthank you all for coming to celebrate the marriage of brady and emma with us. i know it means a lot to them, to see the support they have all around,â he began. âiâve known brady his whole life, obviously. so i know better than most that heâs a menace to society. both on and off the rink. but seeing him with you, emma, well youâve brought the little bit of good out in him.â the crowd chuckled at the slight, you even cracked a smile, especially when brady flipped him off.
âlove is the best thing this world has to offer,â he continues. âwho are we without it? what is life without it?â matt looked around the room until his eyes settled on you, locked in. âfalling in love is, dare i say, better than the game itself. once you experience it, there is no game that could hold a candle to the feeling. iâve found it, and iâm happy that you, brady and emma, found it too. just hold onto it, donât let it go. not when it gets hard, especially not when things look bad. itâs those times you hold on tighter.âÂ
maybe it was the lighting, but his eyes looked a little misty.
matt cleared his throat. âso hereâs to the bride and groom, may you have nothing but good years ahead.â
you swallowed the lump in your throat and clapped along with everyone else. but mattâs eyes never left yours. you could feel his gaze on your face even as you talked to quinn. but he was on the other side of the table closer to brady.
it wasnât until the dancing started that he even approached you.
outkastâs hey ya blasted over the speakers when matt found you. his hand immediately slid into yours as he tugged you closer.
âgreat speech!â you shouted over the music. âdid you prepare it beforehand?â
matt spun you around. âyou know i didnât. iâm saving prepared speeches for special occasions.â
you expected the answer but played dumb anyway. âyour brotherâs wedding not a big enough occasion?â
he scoffed, like the very idea was offensive. ânot even remotely close. only the love of my life deserves the written speeches.â he pulled you a little closer. your stomach twisted at the thought of him falling in love with someone else, but it didn't hurt the way it would've months ago. âbut considering i broke up with her before i could propose, thatâs not happening any time soon.â
your heart lurched in your chest, yet you felt yourself stepping back. âmatt....â
he sighed like he knew what you were going to say. âi know we need to talk, and that this isn't the time, but can i just dance with you tonight? like nothing changed?â
and in the end, you wouldnât be able to deny him anything.
you allowed him to spin you around and hold you close when the music slowed down. you allowed yourself to pretend all of it was real. you allowed yourself to live in this fictitious world where new jersey was the happiest place on earth simply because you had matt. the last seven months hadn't happened, you were still together, your future was certain, and maybe one of these days, he'd get down on one knee and ask for forever.
you played pretend even when the night was coming to a close. even when you were all waving goodbye to emma and brady. even when you gathering your things, matt was there, holding your bags for you and walking you to the car you rented.
âwhen do you fly back to st. louis?â he asked.
âtomorrow. i have work on monday.â
he grimaced. âfrankie wouldn't let you off?â
you rolled your eyes and smiled. âsome of us don't make millions of dollars and need to pay our bills, matt.â
âright,â he said. âforgot about that.â he cleared his throat and stepped closer to you. âdo you think we could get coffee when i get back in town? i really think we should talk.â
you reached out and took his hand in yours. âjust let me know when youâre back.â
and he did. days later when you were back at work on your lunch break, you got a text from him. before you could stop yourself, a smile lit up your face.
matty:
just landed, when are you free?
the two of you met at a park not too far from your homes, deciding that you two needed privacy to talk and sitting in a coffee shop where mattâs face was well known wasnât ideal. it felt like it used to, with the two of you walking side by side, matt walking a little slower to match your pace. your arms occasionally brushed.
âeverything okay?â you asked when the silence started to make you anxious.
matt looked at you and smiled. âyeah,â he said. âjust wanted to talk.â
âabout what?â
âus. what happens next.â when you didn't say anything, he continued. âi wanted to apologizeââ
âthereâs nothing to apologize for, matt. i understandââ
âbut i shouldâve just communicated with you instead of letting my insecurity and the pressure get to me. i shouldâve done better.â
you bumped your shoulder into his bicep. âyou did what you thought was best, i canât blame you for that.â
matt ran a hand down his face and sighed. âi wish you wouldnât be so understanding,â he said. âi wish you'd just say that what i did sucked.â
âbut i get itââ
âi get that you get it, but i need you to be honest with me.â
âokay,â you said. âiâll be honest. i hated every single rose you've ever gotten me, but i was too afraid to say anything because you looked so happy to give them to me. and i know itâs what your dad would bring home to your mother after roadies. i hated that you never remembered my coffee order, you changed it every single time, but i accepted it and tried it because i saw how proud of yourself you were and how much it meant to you that you got me a drink. and i hated that you ended things over a phone call with no explanation. i hated that i spent seven months agonizing over what i did wrong.â you swallowed the emotion bubbling up. âbut i understand why you did it, and in another life, i might have done the same.â
mattâs hand brushed yours. you thought he was going to leave it at that, a gentle touch, but he grabbed your hand and interlocked your fingers âi wish you would've told me you hated roses.â
you smiled and shrugged, squeezing his hand in yours. âseeing how happy you were outweighed the hatred for roses. it was the thought that counted.â
âso what is your favorite flower?â
âred anemones.â
matt pulled out his phone and typed something into his notes app. âwhatâs your coffee order?â when you told him, he typed something else into the note. âi do care about that stuff,â he said. âi didn't mean to seem dismissive.â
âyou remembered the important stuff like anniversaries and my birthday. you remembered that i hate driving in snow, you used to pick me up from school every time there was more than an inch on the ground.â you squeezed his hand again so he'd look at you. âyou werenât a shit boyfriend for forgetting the little things, matt. in fact, you were a really good boyfriend until you broke up with me.â
he didnât say anything for a moment, choosing to bask in the summer sounds of the park. âdo you think we could try again one day?â
it was a question you'd asked yourself multiple times since the conversation where you found out the truth behind the break up that nearly ruined you. could you two do it again? do it right this time? there was no way to know.
âi donât know.â
a beat passed. âwould you want to?â
would you? being with matt was all that you dreamed about but would you want to risk the heartbreak again? would you want to take the chance that it wouldnât work out a second time?
yes. it was an easy yes.
heartbreak was inevitable, but you wouldnât want your heart to be broken by anyone but matt.
but you could love him and also want to prioritize yourself and your wants and desires. you had a plan for your future that didnât involve him for once. maybe heâd be there years later, but there was no guarantee. if you got into grad school, you wouldnât be moving to florida. and while long distance had worked before, there was no assurance that things would again.
so you said âmaybe one day,â and gave him a smile.
âone day,â he replied. âin the meantime, can we be friends?â
one more time, you squeezed his hand, tugging him a little closer, his arm bumping into your shoulder. âiâll always be your friend at the very least, from here on out.â
after what looked like a moment of hesitation, matt pulled you closer and pressed a kiss to the side of your head.
after
when matt flew back to florida for the season, you fully expected him to stop talking to you. with distance being a factor, it was easy for you to assume he'd text whenever he wasn't tired or out partying.
but he texted you every waking and unoccupied minute of his day. in all honesty, you were worse at replying than he was. everything felt like high school again, in the days leading up to your first kiss.
you felt like you got your best friend back.
it started with him telling you about his day, asking about yours, and evolved into him telling you a joke he'd heard that day, a tiktok that reminded him of you, remembering your schedule.Â
god your heart leapt every time he texted you. it was pathetic, but you loved it.
you loved him.Â
it wasnât a scary thought, youâd never stopped loving him even after the breakup. to act like you ever stopped was crazy.
and when you got into grad school? he was the first person you called.
it was nearly a year after he ended things, and there you were, calling him on the phone. you waited for him to pick up, for a moment, you were scared he wouldnât answer. the phone kept ringing and your anxiety built up as the seconds went on. maybe he was busy or his phone was in the other room. or worst case scenario, he was ignoring your call, out with someone else. what if you annoyed him? what ifâ
âhey!â his cheery voice sounded over the phone. âeverything okay? you usually don't call at...â he trailed off. â...3pm?â
you couldâve cried at the sound of his voice, the relief hitting you all at once. âi got in,â you replied.
âwhatââ he choked. âyou got in? nyuâs program?â
you nodded before realizing he couldn't see you, stunned at the news and the fact that he immediately knew what you were talking about. âi did.â
he sighed over the phone. âgod, baby, iâm so proud of you.â your heart swooped at the pet name, no longer angering you like it did months ago. âwhat did your parents say?â
âi havenât told them yet,â you said. âi just found out.â
he paused. âand you called me.â he didnât bother asking.
âand i called you. maybe that makes me a horrible daughter for not telling my literal parents but i just wanted to tell you first.â
he paused again. âwhy?â
your stomach twisted with nerves, your hands felt sweaty. âyou know why.â
âi need to hear you say it. tell me thereâs still hope.â
âmattyââ you cut yourself off with a shaky inhale. âmatt, we shouldn't.â
âwhy not? i love you, iâm sorry but i love you. i fucked up and lost the best thing thatâs ever happened to me because i was scared.â
âmatt, we shouldnât be having this conversation over the phone...â
âthen iâll book a flight.â
you closed your eyes and smiled. this was a side of matt that you knew, someone whoâd drop anything for someone he loved or the game he adored.
âyou have games and practice,â you reminded him.
you could practically hear the scowl through the receiver. âwe play the blues in a week. can we talk about this then? iâll take you out to dinner.â
âyou usually get dinner with your parents.â
matt scoffed through the phone. âi see them enough, i want to be with you.â
you smiled because you just couldn't help yourself. âweâll talk about this in a week,â you agreed.
matt whooped over the phone, the glee evident in his tone. âiâm really proud of you,â he said, changing the subject back to the original point of the call. âgrad school is a big deal. you worked so hard to get here.â
âthank you, matty.â
âiâll talk to you soon, okay?â
the week leading up to the panthers vs. blues game was agonizing. you kept thinking of his confession over the phone:
i love you, iâm sorry. i love you, iâm sorry. i love you.
his words rattled around in your head like the cartoon birds that would fly over a concussed cartoon character.
five more days.
then four.
then three.
two.
tomorrow.
today.
matt bought you tickets to the game, one that you offered to simone, but she declined saying she âwouldn't want to be in the way.â when you told her she wouldn't, that you would like her company, she laughed.
âhoney,â she said. âthere is no one else in the room whenever you and matt are around each other.â
youâd flushed when she said that, but didn't deny it.
your mother and father were seated in the living room when you came bounding down the stands to head out to the game. âyou going to see him?â she asked. there was a fond look in her eye, one that only brightened when you smiled and nodded. âhave so much fun, honey.â
you looked to see if your dad would say something, but he just nodded and went back to reading his book. it was fine, you were past caring what other people thought of you. in a month, you'd be moving to new york for school and out this cycle of mediocrity and settling. you bid your parents goodbye and left.
there was no time to waste when you got to the arena. you immediately made your way to the seat matt paid for and waited. you were a bit outnumbered in your panthers jersey (again, courtesy of matt), but he was no stranger to the st. louis crowd.
you were sitting close enough to the glass to be spotted when matt came out for warm ups. he tossed a few pucks to the kids next to you, but his eyes never left yours. the smile on his face eased the anxiety about coming, the anxiety about the conversation you'd have afterwards.
seeing him beam at only you? the world could've stopped turning and you didn't think you'd even care.
the game, unfortunately, did not turn out in their favor. with a 4-1 loss, you were two seconds away from asking matt to reschedule. the conversation both of you needed to have shouldnât be done when he was coming off a loss.
nevertheless, your phone vibrated with a text.
matty:
whereâd you park?
you replied with the vague location of your vehicle and headed that direction. you werenât sure how he beat you out there, but he was propped against your driverâs side door like it was a luxury car and not the used vehicle youâd had since you were sixteen.
he held his hand out, and to anyone who didnât know any better, they might think he wanted to hold your hand. but you tossed him your keys and he caught them mid air.Â
matt unlocked the car and threw his bag in your backseat while you got in the passenger seat.
âwhere are we going?â
âwaffle house.â
suddenly, you were seventeen again, sitting shotgun in mattâs car at 2 am when neither of you could sleep. sometimes, you'd go to a 24 hour drive through and sit in the parking lot to eat. but your favorite moments were spent in a waffle house booth that had a half ass wipe down and food prepared by people whoâd rather be anywhere else.
it was the best food youâd ever had every single time.
the bonus was that no one asked any questions, no one batted an eye at the son of keith tkachuk sitting in a waffle house at 2 am.
matt knew the drive by heart and minutes later, you were entering the establishment, trying not to slip on the greasy floors.
both of you slid into a booth and picked up the menus.
âdidnât think you could eat this stuff, with your diet and what not.â
matt shrugged. âitâs the holiday season, iâm allowed a few cheat days?â
you quirked a brow, remembering a time in calgary where you fixed dinners based on the diet given to you by the team nutritionist once she realized matt didnât and couldn't cook. âi didnât think that was allowed.â
âwhat they don't know won't kill âem.â he gestured to the menu. âwhat do you want?â
âyou mean you donât remember?â you teased.
matt rolled his eyes and gestured to the waiter. he recited both of your orders with an alarming amount of accuracy, given the fact the two of you hadnât eaten at a waffle house in over a year.
âwhat?â he asked when he saw you looking after the server walked away.
âhow do you remember that but not my coffee order?â
he blushed a little. âi feel like your coffee order changed with the seasonsââ
âbecause they have seasonal drinks, matthew!â you exclaimed with a laugh.
âyour waffle house order is simpler, easier for me to remember.â
you rolled your eyes with a smile on your face but accepted his answer. you sipped at your water and stared at him. âso what did you want to talk about?â
matt flinched back, like the sudden change in topic slapped him in the face. âwhat? you didnât wanna wait until we got our food?â
you shrugged. âiâd feel less anxious if we just talked about it now.â
matt reached across the table and grabbed your hand in his own. it felt like being twenty-two again, living with matthew in calgary and holding hands under the table when you hung out with him teammates. his palm fit perfectly in your own.
âyou donât need to be anxious, iâm not gonna pressure you into anything.â
âi just wanna know what'sâs going on in your head.â
mattâs thumb stroked the back of your hand. âyou are all thatâs in my head right now,â he confessed. âi get it, i fucked up by breaking up with you a year ago. and if i could go back, i would in a heartbeat. i would tell you everything i told you a week ago. that i love you and iâm sorry. iâm sorry that my insecurities got in the way, that i made a decision for you and in doing so, made you doubt my love for you.â
he continued. âbut if you hear nothing else, hear me when i say i love you from the deepest part of my soul. if you asked me to give up the game and move with you to new york, if you asked me to request a trade to the fucking rangers, iâd do it in a heartbeat.â
âi would never ask you to do that,â you whispered.
âi know, but i would. because i love you, and if youâd let me, iâd like to be with you again. iâd like to marry you like i shouldâve years ago. iâd like to have babies with you, however many you want. i wanna grow old and live in a house big enough to fit all of our grandkids for holidays. i want all of that with you,â he said. âwhat do you want?â
there were so many things you could say, so many things you wanted to say. but with watery eyes, and a heart that raced faster than a treadmill at full speed, you couldnât vocalize any of it.
your mind raced with thoughts.
i wanna know the nicknames you gave your teammates. i want to use that specific combination of paints to make your eye color. i want to stick my cold feet between your legs and laugh when you pull away. i want my birthday to be your passcode again.
âi want youâ you said, unable to say anything more. it was a miracle you even got those words out, your voice cracked on every syllable.
âyeah?â he asked, eyes shining with hope.
you nodded. matt immediately leaned over the table and kissed you, you met him halfway. and it felt like every question you ever had was answered. it felt like the best possible ending of your favorite tv series.
he felt like home, more than st. louis ever could. more than calgary.
when you both pulled back, neither of you could keep the smiles off your faces. âwhat do you say to doing long distance again? just while iâm in school,â you proposed.
mattâs smile couldâve lit the entire city.Â
âbaby, for you? iâd do anything.â
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This was so incredible!! The back and forth between the before and after added such an interesting dynamic in their relationshipâšđđ„°
nothing happened in the way i wanted part 1
author's note: okay so let it be known that my FAV emily henry book is happy place (if you want a deep dive into my personality, if you want to know the inner workings of my mind, read the book) SO with that being said, this fic was inspired by that masterpiece. plus i've fallen down a matt rabbit hole as of late. just a warning, this is a LONG ass fic (74 pages and 30.3k words, not a brag, i kinda regret that it's this long bc my brain hurts) so pace yourselves okay? thank you for being the kindest people ever!! this is finished, but tumblr said what i wrote is too long. so i'm posting it in parts lolol.
summary: a year has passed and you are no closer to understanding why matt ended things and you have every plan of avoiding that thought until he comes back in town for the offseason, then suddenly he's everywhere.
pairing: matthew tkachuk x reader
warnings: ANGST, friends to lovers to exes to lovers, mention of sexual assault, attempted sexual assault, drinking, depression, panic attacks, let me know if i missed something!
after
despite being back in st. louis for six months, summer still felt like it came too fast. your thighs started sticking to the seats from sweat about three weeks ago. summer used to be your favorite season because it meant you had unlimited access to the love of your life, you werenât sharing him with his teammates or his crazy schedule.
but he wasnât yours anymore. matthew hadnât been yours in six months and some change.
the second you entered your parentsâ home, you tossed your keys into the bowl and slid your shoes off. itâd been six months since you moved home, and it still didnât feel like a space where you belonged. you walked into the living room without so much as a hello from either of your parents, both of whom were posted up on the couch. they werenât talking to each other, just letting the noise from the news fill the room instead of conversation.
âhey,â you greeted, plopping down in the recliner.
âhow was work?â your mom asked.
you shrugged, not quite having the words to convey how mundane it had been. you were working on restoring a piece for this rich couple who lived in the same neighborhood as the tkachuks. it wasnât in too bad of shape, given the fact that you were the one entrusted to work on it. if it was actually something incredibly complicated, your boss wouldâve found someone else more experienced to do it.
when you entered art restoration and conservation, you thought it would be mindless. art had always been an escape for you, a chance to remove yourself from your racing thoughts. you thought that by entering the art conservation field, you could add onto something, enhance the beauty that was lost over the years of damage, instead of creating something from your own experiences.
but no one told you how hard it would be after your breakup, that you would have to learn how to pour bottles of chemical solvent into a glass when your eyes were blurring with tears. no one said anything about how you would spend hours hunched over, fixing the problems in paintings that only served to remind you that while you could mend a masterpiece, you were unable to stop and patch up the problems in your relationship. no one spoke about how you would inevitably relate to the paintings that came to you in shambles, the only difference being that clients would pay thousands of dollars for their paintings to be restored to their former glory, your ex let you fall apart alone in a city where you had no friends outside of the ones youâd made through him.
but how could you communicate that to your mother? to your father? both of whom stayed in an unhappy marriage for the sake of optics? how could you tell them that itâs been months and you were still no more over your ex than the day it ended? how could they understand you? they stayed together out of convenience, out of a fear of ending their marriage only to never find someone else.
it had been six months since your relationship ended, and you were no closer to understanding why.
âjust a mundane day,â was all you said instead. ânothing to write home about.â
both of your parents hummed.
âdid you have dinner already?â you asked.
âwas gonna order pizza,â your dad said.
your mother scoffed and rolled her eyes. âno alan, we had plans to see chantal and keith tonight for dinner.â
you wanted to throw up.
you werenât sure what you were expecting, maybe some loyalty from your parents? though, they werenât fully privy to all the information about the demise of your relationship with matt, so maybe you couldnât expect them to stop hanging out with his parents, especially when said parents were such great people.
âoh,â was all you could say.
âyouâre more than welcome to order takeout and watch a movie,â your mom commented, like you needed permission to make yourself at home when you were actively living there. âiâm sure ronald would appreciate your company.â
you glanced at the tabby cat who was perched on his cat tree. personally, you had no issue with ronald, but he liked your mom and your mom only. though on occasion, he would allow your dad to pet him.Â
âiâll figure something out,â you said.
your mom hummed before she stood up to go get ready while your father stayed on the couch. it was only another ten minutes before he got up to change quickly, and another five before they left the house without so much as a goodbye.
before
you were incredibly aware that you didnât quite fit in. your mom drove you to school in a beat up 1997 toyota camry which looked incredibly out of place among the bmws and audis. your mom offered to walk you in, but she was wearing her scrubs from her night shift and her face looked tired, so you declined the offer and got out of the car yourself.
it shouldnât have been as daunting as it was, but your old school wasnât as prestigious as this one. your previous schools in cedar rapids had been public schools. no one was wearing a uniform, and most of the backpacks worn came from the same walmart in your old neighborhood.Â
but your parents had decided they wanted a better education for you, even if neither of them had the money to fork out thousands of dollars for a private school. your momâs parents, however, were loaded. they were more than willing to fork out a small fortune for your schooling under the conditions of your family uprooting your lives to missouri. you were too young to realize what a sacrifice that was, you didnât notice the snide comments your grandparents made about your fatherâs choice of career or your motherâs choice in husband.
you didnât see your grandparents any more than you usually did since youâd moved to missouri two weeks ago. theyâd been out of town on a trip to rome up until three days ago and hadnât reached out to have dinner or hang out at all.
not that you cared at the age of nine, you were more focused on unpacking your room. but now that you were standing in front of the giant school alone, you felt like you shouldâve been more concerned with how nice your school supplies were.
a kind woman greeted you at the entrance of the school. she smiled and introduced herself, though you couldnât hear her over the roaring in your ears. she stood next to a blond haired blue eyed boy who was your height.
âare your parents here?â you werenât sure how you heard her over the noise in your head.
you shook your head. âmy mom had to go home and my dad is at work.â
the woman blinked. âis today your first day?â
âmom, itâs everyoneâs first day of school,â the boy groaned.
âi wasnât talking to you, matthew,â she said, though her eyes never left your own.
âi just moved here,â was all you said, albeit a bit quietly.Â
âwell, you can walk in with us.â She placed a warm hand on your back and ushered you inside next to her son.
you took notice of her nicer clothing compared to your momâs scrubs or your dadâs tattered khakis, though the womanâs clothing wasnât as ostentatious as other parentsâ.
âdo you know your teacherâs name?â the woman asked.
you nodded and showed her the crumpled paper in your hand. the night before, you were wracked with nerves and wrote your teacherâs on a blank sheet of paper and doodled around it. even at nine years old, you were concerned that youâd somehow forget. you couldnât be more grateful for it now.
the womanâs face lit up. âoh how lucky! matthew look! youâre in the same class.â
matthew for his part, tried to look happy about it, but his eyes kept wandering to the hallways, like he was looking for people he knew. you felt bad for even being in this situation. you missed your friends from iowa and the light up shoes you used to wear before you were given a uniform.
matthewâs mom pointed out the classroom that was supposed to be yours and walked both you and matthew into the room. unlike her son, who immediately found his friends to do elaborate handshakes with, you stayed by her side. she was a stranger, sure, but she was more comforting that the classroom of fifteen other nine and ten year olds.
the woman sighed and bent down a little to look you in the eyes. âitâs gonna be a good day, sweetheart,â she said. âmr. terry is a great teacher, heâs really kind.â you werenât sure how she would know that, but you werenât going to call her a liar. âand if you need anything, ask matthew. heâs been going here since kindergarten, okay?â
you nodded.
mr. terry walked over and introduced himself. he had dark skin and a bright smile, showing you to your seat. your name was on a card with fun stickers on it. next to your seat, you saw matthewâs name. now it wasnât necessarily an unpopular name, there were three matthews in your third grade class, so you werenât holding out hope that it was going to be the matthew you walked into class with. but two minutes later, he was plopping down into the seat to your left.
matthew looked almost startled to see you sitting next to him, but when the shock wore off he gave you a crooked smile and stuck his hand out. âiâm matt,â he said, like you two didnât walk into class together.
you shook his hand anyway and gave him a shy smile and told him your name, just in case he didnât see it written on your desk.
if it was even possible, his smile widened. âpretty name,â he said.
after
youâd watched a movie and half of another one by the time your parents walked through the front door. ronald jumped off the couch to greet your mother while he ignored your father.
âoh,â your dad said. âyouâre still up.â
âiâm about to go to bed,â you replied, though you didnât move from the couch.
âdinner was great,â your mom commented. âchantal and keith said to tell you hello.â
your gut twisted at the mention of their names. you loved his family, you really did, but the mention of the family that was almost yours stung when you looked at how your parents acted like roommates on the best of days.
you remembered summer days spent in the tkachuksâ backyard, watching as matt and brady chased each other while taryn tried her best to keep up. you remembered your dad picking you up from their house, and how you begged the entire ride home for a little brother or sister. he looked at your through the rearview mirror and said âwe already achieved perfection, why mess that up?â
but you were grown now. you saw how their marriage barely survived raising you, and they were probably being smart by not risking your upbringing just to have another child.
you bid your parents goodnight and headed up the stairs to your childhood bedroom. it looked less like the office it was converted into when you moved out originally. you didnât fault your parents for taking advantage of your absence, you, like many people your age, had zero intentions of ever moving back in until an unfortunate set of circumstances happened to you.
and thatâs what life had felt like lately:
unfortunate.
unfortunate shit just happening to you.
it wasn't late by any means, but you were surprised when your phone vibrated with a text message. maybe it was the fact that you hadnât really befriended anyone since moving back that had you flinching at the shock of someone other than your parents (or grandparents) texting you.
you unlocked your phone and opened the message, sighing when you read its contents.
emma:
hey girl! just checking in to see if youâre still good for this weekend? no worries if you canât make it!
you dropped the phone on your stomach and groaned into your hands as soon as they made contact with your face.
years of dating matthew meant youâd grown closer to brady and taryn and by proxy, bradyâs fiancĂ©e, emma. youâd already committed to being a bridesmaid and bought the dress before your relationship with matt ended. when emma found out, she called immediately and gave you an out, said she wouldnât take it personal, that she understood if it would be too hard.
but you remembered the countless conversations had about planning your weddings while the both of you watched the loves of your lives try not to kill each other from your spots on the back porch. and you could hear it in her voice, how much it meant to her that you would be there even if she didnât want to push it on you. it didnât matter that only one of you was getting the wedding you planned. the bets made on whoâd get married first were obsolete now.
you wanted to text her back and say you were busy, but you hadnât seen her much since her and brady came back in town. when the senatorsâ season ended in april, he and emma spent some time with her family and attended the playoff games for the panthers. now that the panthersâ season ended two weeks ago, all of the tkachuks were back in town which used to excite you.
now it just filled you with dread.
no, itâs not like you lived in the same tax bracket as mattâs family. you didnât go to the same grocery stores unless you were tagging along. no, there was a comfortable distance between your neighborhoods and st. louis was filled with two million other people that the odds of running into him were slim.
but your anxiety preferred zero odds rather than a slight chance, and it made the logic that was once screaming at you sound like a small whisper.
you sucked it up anyway, though. seeing emma and the other bridesmaids was better than staying in your room and staring at the ceiling.
you:
iâll be there! canât wait!!!
and maybe you used too many exclamation points. maybe you were trying too hard to prove something no one would believe if they took longer than a split second glance at your face. you were a horrible liar, that hadnât changed. you were just hoping by the time the weekend came around, youâd be too busy to focus on any of the pain.
before
the summer after keith retired, the tkachuks took you and your family on vacation with them to turks and caicos. your parents were stressed initially about the trip, but you were filled with nothing but excitement at leaving the landlocked state you called home.
missouri had slowly wormed its way into your heart. when your family moved, there was never a thought in your mind that you would ever come to love it like you did with cedar rapids. there was no way youâd ever consider this place your home. but then you met the tkachuks.
itâd been nearly three years since youâd first sat in that seat next to your best friend in mr. terryâs fourth grade class. now, you were splashing around in the waves with matt and brady while your parents looked from the shore.
school had been different the past two years, with matthew going to an all boys school after fifth grade while you stayed. it took some adjusting to being without him the entire school day. you didnât want to think of yourself as codependent, or clingy, but mat was your best friend. it was an adjustment, having to make new friends in the same school.
now that wasnât to say that you never saw matt. after your initial introductions, chantal offered to take you to and from school if your mom or dad dropped you off at their house in the morning. both of your parents jumped at the idea. your mother, who worked as a night shift ICU nurse, reveled in being able to go home and go straight to sleep. your father, whose job as an electrician required him to be on job sites early in the morning, didnât mind it either, he had to be up early anyway.
and sure, you had to wake up earlier than you used to, but you got to eat breakfast and pretend like you were a tkachuk most days of the week (with the exception of the days your mom was off). keith would ruffle your hair as he passed you in the kitchen. taryn would race matthew for the seat next to yours.
the tkachuks felt more like your family than your own some days.
especially now when your parents went on a date that keith and chantal paid for while they stayed back at the beach house with you and their children.Â
all six of you were seated around the coffee table with the game of life laid out in front of you. the evening started out with a game of uno, but that game got out of hand quickly. it took brady reversing the order and hitting matt with a draw four before your best friend lunged over the table to tackle his brother. while keith broke up the boys, chantal cleaned up uno and instructed you and taryn to pick out the least competitive game you could find.
which is how you ended up playing the game of life.
even though life had to be the least competitive game you knew, matt and brady still managed to argue over it, even going as far to rant about how unfair it was that they had to pay for home insurance. keith and chantal had just chuckled and told them to enjoy childhood while it lasted.
you found yourself smiling and laughing along.
you werenât quite sure who won, or how anyone ever really wins the game of life, but the moment mattered more. taryn went upstairs with keith to get ready for bed while brady helped his mom in the kitchen pop a bag of popcorn. you and matthew were responsible for cleaning up the game.
âare you having fun?â he asked.
your smile was so wide, it hurt your cheeks. âiâm having the best time. this is by far the best vacation iâve been on.â
âreally?â he smiled.
you nodded emphatically. âmost of my family vacations have been spent with my grandparents.â
matt grimaced, already aware of the testy relationship your mom had with her own parents. âwhenâs the last time you saw them?â
you had to think for a moment, while your grandparents technically lived in st. louis, they were often out of town or ignoring your familyâs existence altogether. with the exception of the last saturday of every month, when you and your parents were practically obligated to eat dinner with them. you didnât notice their judgmental comments when you were younger and mesmerized by the giant dollhouse they bought for you.
but you were older now. you knew that there were terms and conditions attached to the cellphone they bought for you on your twelfth birthday. you heard the disdain in their voices when they talked down to your father and mother for their life choices. you werenât an idiot, you understood that every compliment they gave you was a way for them to make your parents feel inferior in comparison.
you werenât a child to them, you were a pawn in a game you never asked to play.
âwe saw them about a month ago?â you shrugged. âtheyâre on vacation until halfway through august.â
matt hummed. âi think weâre gonna visit momâs parents before school starts back again.â
to your credit, you did your best to look happy for him, even if it meant that you wouldnât see him for a week and a half. you had other friends in town! in fact, you befriended a girl named simone when you started middle school. maybe you could call her when you get back to st. louis?
evidently, your little act wasnât convincing enough. matt nudged your shoulder with his. âyouâll be fine,â he said. âyouâre probably annoyed from how much time weâve spent together this summer. you need a break.â
you couldnât help but smile. âi could never get tired of you, matty.â
he blinked, almost at a loss for words, it felt like. but you shouldâve known better, because he was holding up his pinky a beat later. âyou promise?â
you locked your fingers together. âpromise.â
after
itâs just emma and her friends and taryn, you thought. you already know all of these people. thereâs no reason to be stressed out.
which, to be fair, your inner monologue was right. you had absolutely no reason to be standing in front of your closet debating what to wear for as long as you had.Â
before you could stop yourself, you were hitting emmaâs contact and putting your phone on speaker. the dial tone rang out through the room while you waited for her to pick up. you were seconds away from ending the call when her phone sounded through the receiver.
âhey! whatâs up?â
you exhaled. âi donât know what to wear tonight.â
emma said your name through a laugh. âweâre not going anywhere fancy, i swear. itâs just dinner and then weâre going to a bar.â
you frowned. âso tarynâs not joining us after dinner?â
âno, she has other plans after dinner anyway. she said she was meeting up with some friends from high school.â as if she could see the hesitance on your face, emma spoke up again. âbut you know all the other girls, itâs not like youâll be hanging out with strangers.â
and she was right, you were in a groupchat with the other bridesmaids and found all of them to be quite pleasant.
âlook, if youâre still stressed about what to wear, just wear jeans.â
âokay, but how nice is this restaurant?â you were rummaging through your closet. âbecause iâve worn jeans to restaurants that werenât supposed to be fancy and i found myself criminally underdressed.â
âyeah well, iâm better at communicating than matt is.â a gasp sounded through the receiver, like emma had just realized what she said. âoh my god, iâm so sorryââ
âitâs fine, youâre not wrong,â you said, forcing out a laugh even as your heart painfully squeezed in your chest.
âi really didnât mean to,â she sighed. âiâm sorry, that was rude of me to bring up.â
you shook your head even though she couldnât see you. âitâs fine, emma, i swear,â you said even though there were tears pricking in your eyes. âiâll have to face the music eventually.â
âstill, it was insensitive of me to say that.â
you cleared your throat. âdonât worry about it, iâm a big girl.â you pulled the phone away from your face so you could sniffle for a second without drawing any unnecessary attention. âso jean shorts tonight?â you asked.
there was a brief silence before you heard emmaâs soft sigh over the phone. âthat sounds perfect.â
before
matthew kissed you for the first time when you were hanging out with mutual friends after school in eighth grade. youâd been dreaming about that moment for years ever since sixth grade when you realized matt was handsome and the flutters in your stomach werenât just from nerves anymore.
both of you were at your friend morganâs house sitting in her basement. she happened to live in the same neighborhood as matt. so after school, you rode home with the tkachuks like you always did and then walked to her house.
morgan was the first of your friends to get a boyfriend and she wasnât shy about telling everyone. it was easy to be jealous of her. while you hadnât known her as long, your other friends had made it clear sheâd garnered male attention since preschool. so there was no surprise that sheâd announced at school earlier that week that she was dating someone from mattâs school.
hence the party in the basement.
morgan was the one who suggested truth or dare. she had all ten of you circle up on the carpet and sit criss crossed. you were keenly aware of how mattâs knee was touching your own, you could feel the heat even through your jeans. he was leaning back on his hands, with his right hand directly behind your back,in your delusions, you let yourself pretend he was doing it to be closer to you.
âalright!â morgan cheered. âwho wants to start?â
no one said a word.
you made the mistake of looking around when you caught morganâs eye. at the sight of a growing smirk on her lips, you quickly diverted your gaze.
âc'mon, no one wants to go first?â she hummed. âfine, iâll go. babe,â she started calling thomas babe a week ago. âask me, truth or dare?â
the only word you could use to describe the look on thomasâ face was besotted. without hesitating, he asked her the question, smiling when she grinned back at him. morgan chose dare, because she wasnât âboring and lame.â
thomas dared her to kiss him. there was a collective groan when she leaned over and kissed her boyfriend. the second she pulled back, morganâs eyes flitted over the rest of the group, looking like a tiger about to pounce. the two of you made eye contact and the corner of her lips raised in a smirk that was gone as quick as it came.
you prepared yourself for the worst, recalling how you let it slip that you have a crush on matt. and morgan, while she wasnât intentionally cruel, had all but shrieked when you told her. so you didnât think sheâd out you to be mean, you wouldnât put it past her to attempt matchmaking.
but her eyes skipped right over you and focused on simone. âtruth or dare?â
âtruth,â simone replied.
morgan rolled her eyes. ânerd,â but she cracked a smile anyway.
the game went on pretty effortlessly, you even got brave enough to do a dare (thankfully morgan never got the opportunity to ask you). it ended with morgan asking matthew. the smirk she had earlier, appeared as she made eye contact with you before setting her sights on your best friend.
âtruth or dare?â she asked.
you immediately knew which option he was picking, matt never backed down from a challenge and had been choosing dare all night.
âmatthew, i dare you to kiss the hottest person in the room.â
your stomach dropped as did your gaze. you couldnât look anyone in the eye, you didnât want to see matt kiss another girl, you couldnât. you wouldnât do it.
a moment passed when you realized matt hadnât moved an inch. he was still leaning on his hands, with one stretched behind you. all it took was a quick glance at matt to see him already staring back at you.
âno,â he said, eyes still locked on your face.
morgan blinked. âwhat?â
it was only then that his eyes left your face to look morgan dead in the eye. ânope. i wonât do it.â
she guffawed. âbut you have to!â
matt shrugged. âi donât want to.â
âbut you lose if you donât!â
he shrugged yet again. âoh well.â
your head snapped up to look at him in confusion. âmatt,â you nudged him.
âwe gotta go anyway,â he said, before he stood up and reached out to you. you took his hand, albeit hesitantly before he dragged you up the stairs and out of the house onto the street.
a cool breeze was blowing which inadvertently caused you to shiver. matt, who still hadnât let go of your hand, tugged you further into his side. your heart sank when he dropped your hand, only for it to skyrocket when he threw his arm around you.
âwhy didnât you do the dare?â you asked. the curiosity was killing you, even if you believed the real answer would be even worse than not knowing.
matt shrugged like he had been all night. âi didnât feel like it.â
you blinked at him, staring at his profile while he guided the two of you back to his house. âyouâre literally the most competitive person i know. youâve never intentionally lost a game. last week brady dared you to drink that gallon of milk and run a mile, which, if i must remind you, you threw up not even halfway through.â
matt laughed. âthat was funny. but whatâs your point?â
âmy point is that kissing someone is way less work than running a mile and throwing up. so whatâs up?â
he wouldnât look at you, his gaze fell to the ground where he kicked a rock. âdidnât want it to happen like that.â
you blinked at him, refusing to move your gaze from his profile. âdidnât want what to happen like that? itâs just a kiss.â
he shook his head and stopped walking, grabbing your wrist when you kept moving. matt tugged your arm so youâd turn around and look at him. âit wouldnât be just a kiss,â he said.
âwould it mean more?â you asked, but he didnât say anything. âmatt?â your heart was beating against your chest. your hands shook at the idea of him wanting to kiss someone. you went through the list of people in that room. it wasnât morgan, heâd told you weeks ago that he didnât like her like that when you asked. could it be simone? she looked like a goddess on a bad day. her dark skin was flawless and free of blemishes and her faux locs were always perfectly styled. she didnât even wear makeup on a regular basis.
oh god. did he like simone?
your gut twisted at the idea, of him falling in love with the closest friend you had at school. you could learn to be happy for them, simone was great and matt would adore her if she agreed to go out with him.
you snapped back into it when you felt mattâs thumb rub across your pulse. âmatt, would it mean more?â
he shrugged again, still not looking at you, just the part where your hands were joined. âwould it be a problem if it did?â
now it was your turn to be confused. âwhy would my opinion matter? iâm not the one youâd be kissing.â
matt blinked at you once, then twice. âyou canât be serious,â he said.
âwhat do you mean?â
âyou canât be that blind. thereâs no way.â
âmatt, what are you talking about?â
he dropped your hand to run both of his over his face and groaned. âthere's no way you donât know.â
âknow what?â
matt fixed you with an intense look, one that had you squirming in your shoes a little. in all your years of friendship, you werenât sure he'd ever stared at you that way before. a hockey game? sure, but you?
âmatt whatââ
âi like you,â he said as plain as day, like he didnât just flip your world on its axis.
you blinked, you were pretty sure you stopped breathing. âwhat?â you whispered.
matt stepped closer to you, close enough that your shoes were touching. âi like you.â
âso why didnât you kiss me when morgan dared you to?â
âi didnât want it to happen like that,â he admitted. âdidnât wanna kiss you in front of everybody.â
you could feel the heat travel up your neck and to your cheeks. âand what about now? would you kiss me now?â
âwould you let me?â
words failed you, you could only nod. matt hesitated for a moment before pressing his lips to yours. it was clumsy and awkward, and in the middle of the sidewalk two blocks away from his house.
but it was perfect.
after
you ubered to the restaurant before emma could suggest meeting at the tkachuk house. every single one of the bridesmaids knew you and matt were no longer together, all of them banding around you and offering support from thousands of miles away. so you didnât think any of them would even hint at meeting at the tkachuk residence if they were as considerate as you believed them to be, but you wanted to avoid the sympathetic looks that would be thrown your way.
most of the bridesmaids were there by the time you arrived, the only exception being taryn. the entire table greeted you with bright white smiles, emma stood to give you a hug that you enthusiastically returned.
it felt great to be back in the company of people your age. despite being back in st. louis for quite some time, you still had yet to make any more friends outside of emma and taryn, both of whom you didnât see that often because of who they were relationally attached to.
unfortunately, youâd lost contact with many of your friends from high school because of the distance. if you could go back, youâd slap yourself in the face for thinking matt was going to stick around longer than simone or morgan.
but how were you to know he would leave and wouldnât want you to follow him?
you swallowed that question down and took a seat at the table. you sat next to a brunette named stacey, the other seat on your right was left for taryn, you assumed. there were already two bottles of wine sitting in a bucket of ice on the table. part of you considered pouring yourself a glass immediately, but you remembered the plans were dinner first, bar later. so you settled for water.
it was only a matter of maybe ten minutes before taryn was led to your table. you stood up with the rest of the girls and waited your turn to hug her. taryn saved you for last, smiling bright and wide when the two of you finally made eye contact. you squeezed each other tightly as you hugged, unspoken words being communicated.
ânow, before anyone looks at the menu, i just wanted to let you know, itâs on brady tonight.â emma held up her hand as mouths began to protest across the table. âhe insisted, and we wonât be taking no for an answer.â
and maybe you shouldâve protested a little harder to look more sincere, but your job wasnât paying you well enough to afford a 70 dollar steak and drinks.
the table breaks up into mini conversations while everyone was looking over the menu. you were doing the same when an elbow nudged you from the right. you glanced over at taryn who wasnât even trying to hide the fact that she wanted your attention, it was something youâd always admired about her.
âlong time, no see,â she said. but before you could respond, she spoke up again. âhow have you been?â
you shrugged and moved your eyes back to the menu to look busy. ânothing has been going on really, just working.â you cleared your throat and hesitantly made eye contact again. âand you? what have you been up to?â
taryn shifted in her seat, a tell you knew was coming. you werenât a stranger to where sheâd been the past few weeks, you still followed her on instagram, you followed all of the tkachuks on instagram, even matt. so you knew sheâd just gotten back after the panthers lost in game five of the finals.
you nudged her with your shoulder and gave her a small smile. âitâs okay, iâm not gonna burst into tears if you mention him.â
taryn smiled. âiâm exhausted, we were traveling everywhere for matt it felt like. it was cutting into my workouts.â
your jaw clenched at the mention of his name, mainly to distract you from feeling the ache in your chest, but you kept a pleasant look on your face anyway. âyou still have the rest of the summer for your workouts, though. summerâs barely started.â
taryn nodded but she didnât say anything for a moment. you started to shift in your seat when she reached a hand out and squeezed your own. âi miss you,â she said sincerely. âit hasnât been the same without you around.â
âtaryn...â
âyou know, youâre still in, like, most of our family photos hanging on the wall. mom and dad havenât taken them down.â
you werenât sure if that made you happy or brought you pain.
âi begged them not to, youâre in too many memories for us to just forget you.â she cleared her throat and looked back at her menu, giving you a break from the sincere staredown the two of you were having. âthey ask about you all the time, but they didnât want to impose, mom especially. said sheâd understand if you never wanted to see them again.â
you tried reading the menu through blurry eyes and pinched your lips together so no one would see them tremble. âiâve been meaning to get coffee with your mom,â you said, though you both knew it was a lie. youâd made yourself scarce for a reason.
âsheâd be happy to see you again, she just didnât want to overstep.â
you nodded, still not looking at the girl you fully believed would be your sister one day. âiâll text her.â
the waiter came by moments later to take your orders. thankfully, the tears had cleared up out of your eyes. as soon as youâd cleared your throat, you were telling the server your order without your voice shaking.
you bore the grief well, you thought. you laughed when everyone else did, smiled when appropriate, and asked follow up questions. socializing wasnât hard, years of galas and charity events as mattâs plus one had trained you well for moments like these, so long as you avoided the eyes of taryn and emma, both of whom knew you better than anyone else at the table.
emma paid with bradyâs card like sheâd promised earlier. unfortunately for you, thatâs when the anxiety started to come back. taryn was leaving after dinner, too young to go to the bars with the rest of you, and according to what emma had told you, she had plans with friends.
the group left together, with taryn waving goodbye as the rest of you headed to a bar three blocks away. your hands were shaking, so you shoved them in your pockets to hide the trembling.
itâd get better once you got a few drinks in you, you told yourself. youâd loosen up soon enough.
emma opened a tab with bradyâs card and you immediately started going in. the group started with a round of shots, but you were quickly ordering more than just tequila. it was only a matter of time before your vision started lagging and your brain began buffering to keep up with what was happening.
you were on the dance floor, grinding against a stranger, who thankfully, was keeping their hands to themselves, when emma tugged your arm, giggling. âeveryone else has left. and i think itâs time for us to go,â she slurred, a giant smile on her face.
you allowed yourself to be tugged away from the stranger. âhow do you know?â you asked, fumbling over your words like trying to catch a bar of soap with wet hands.
emma smiled and pointed at the bar where brady was, you assumed, closing out the tab. seeing him in the flesh had your heart stuttering. the anxiety was kicking back in, hitting harder than it did when you were sober. you hadnât seen brady since november, or was it december? the months had blurred together just like that one scene from new moon.
but now you were seeing him in the flesh, and he was getting closer as emma tugged you over to where he was. brady was just slipping his card back in his wallet when the two of you got to him. he looked up and smiled at his fianceĂ© before he even realized you were standing there. the lovesick smile dropped but it was quickly replaced with shock before it was transformed into a smile you couldâve painted from memory.
âhey!â he said just loud enough to be heard over the noise. âi didnât think you were coming tonight.â
if you were sober, youâd see that statement as a warning, preparation for what was to come. you wouldâve noticed the way his eyes kept darting to the entrance of the bar, but you didnât. you were just happy to see him for the first time in a while, feeling the semblance of home youâd been missing for months.
if you were sober, you wouldâve remembered that brady and his brother were a package deal. you wouldâve known that the nights brady wasnât spending with emma, he was spending with your ex, and when emma had inevitably texted (or brady offered) her fiancĂ© to pick her up, that he was more than likely already out with his brother celebrating his upcoming nuptials.
if you were sober, you wouldâve noticed him walk through the door because your eyes were always drawn to him. you wouldâve known it was him by the smell of his cologne, instead of waiting for him to slap his brother on the shoulder in greeting.
if you were sober, you wouldâve made a break for it the second he started approaching you, emma, and brady.
but you were drunk off your ass, and all you could do was stand there like a dumbfounded idiot while matthew brendan tkachuk glanced around the room.
brady shifted on his feet a little, bracing for the moment you both knew was coming. the moment where matt saw you for the first time since november 29, when he played calgary. youâd imagine to brady, it felt like watching a car accident happen in real time. to you though, you were the accident. you were the one getting hit by a bus going full speed. you were rooted to the spot, taking in every feature of mattâs face that youâd missed over the last six months, waiting for him to see you.
if you were sober, you wouldâve run away by now, knowing that being that close to him would do nothing for you.
but it was too late now.
matt finally glanced at emma, then brady, until his eyes landed on you. the smile on his lips from the song that was bumping through the speakers dropped almost immediately. he recoiled, took a small step back, almost as if he was shocked to see you there at all.
you felt like an idiot.
you werenât sure how long the two of you stared at each other before you took a deep breath and stared at your shoes.
your hands were shaking again.
you shoved them in your pockets again.
mattâs eyes darted to your shorts at the movement, his eyes scrunched together in what looked like concern, but you brushed that thought off before you could convince yourself he still cared. but you could feel his stare on you, even as you looked around and avoided eye contact. you felt like an ant, with mattâs gaze being the magnifying glass that was burning you with a beam of sunlight.
âdo you have a ride home?â brady asked. your head whipped back around to look at him and emma.
you shrugged, already feeling more sober than you were two minutes ago. âwas gonna uber.â
matt scoffed. ânot happening.â
out of nowhere anger bubbled out of your chest and out of your mouth. âexcuse me?â
matt fixed you with a hard stare, one you didnât shy away from. âyouâre not ubering home on a friday night drunk as hell. itâs not happening.â
âi think you lost the right to make my decisions six months ago.â you refused to say his name, refused to know what it felt like to have it back on your tongue even though your heart was crying out to utter those two syllables again.
brady interjected before the disagreement could escalate. âi just wanna make sure you get home safe,â he said. âcan i drive you home?â
you glanced at the man you used to know like a little brother. you saw the sincerity in his eyes, the concern.
and maybe it was the love for brady and emma that had you accepting. or maybe it was the alcohol. you nodded your head and let emma lock arms with you as you were led out by the tkachuk brothers.
you found yourself in the backseat where you used to hold hands with matt when you went on double dates with brady and emma. the two of you used to tease the younger couple when they did literally anything romantic. if brady so much as grabbed emmaâs hand, the two of you were gagging in the backseat âchoking on their pdaâ all while knowing brady and emma have caught you in more compromising positions before.
but it wasnât like that this time around.
you slid into your usual seat in the back before emma could offer up shotgun to you. maybe if you were more selfish, youâd accept, but you werenât going to let your friend sit away from her fiancĂ© when you could just suck it up.
the space between you and matt felt too suffocatingly small and yet it still felt like you were on two opposite sides of the globe. you thought about taking a risk and throwing yourself out of the moving vehicle, but there was still a wedding you were both in. you needed to figure out how to tolerate being around him if you didnât want to cause a scene later in the summer.
you just had to make it to the end of july, then you could go back and pretend like december 16th never happened, like the past nine years of your life never happened. like you never fell in love with your best friend, like you never met him and his mother in fourth grade, like your parents never moved you to st. louis. like there werenât traces of your failed relationship in every scrapbook in your parentsâ house, like he wasnât tied to every significant moment of your childhood.
you felt like the bundle of christmas lights that youâd sworn you put back in an orderly fashion the previous year, only to pull them out and realize you had an entire project on your hands to detangle them all.
except in the end, none of the lights worked anyway.
you could hardly remember a time where your life wasnât deeply intertwined with matthewâs. you thought itâd lead to something, to marriage, to raising kids together, to celebrating his retirement, buying a home close to his family, and growing fat and old together.
you hated the idea that you went down that road only for it to be a dead end.
brady pulled up outside your house. you were unbuckling your seat belt and throwing the door open before heâd even put the car in park. you were doing your best to get to the front porch before anything else happened, but as hard as you tried, you were still a little too drunk. you were stumbling up the driveway and to the front door, all the while trying to figure out which key was the key to your house.
a car door slammed in the distance before footsteps followed.
you knew the sound like you knew the sound of your motherâs sadness. you wouldâve recognized his footfalls anywhere.
in your haste and anxiety, you dropped your keys. you squatted down and nearly tipped over at the rush to your head. mattâs hand shot out before you could grab the keys while his other hand grabbed your elbow and pulled you into a standing position. he led you to the front door and with ease, found your house key. he unlocked the door but didnât move to open it. you could feel his stare on the side of your face, but you refused to look back.
his touch on your skin felt like it was burning, and part of you wanted to rip your arm out of his grasp, but you couldnât.
you justâ
couldn't.
matt said your name quietly, but you just shook your head, willing the tears to go away. he didnât get to see you cry, didnât get to know that his actions had absolutely wrecked you. he tried again, but you inhaled and jerked your arm out of his reach before you opened your front door, grabbed your keys, and shut it in his face.
you barely made it into your bathroom before you threw up.
before
you were bouncing on your toes at the airport. mattâs plane landed fifteen minutes ago, and you were anxiously waiting for him to round the corner.
mattâs first year with the ntdp made your relationship a little difficult, though, you thought it would be harder than it was. modern technology definitely made it easier on you. matt would call you just about every other night, and if he couldnât, matt was texting you whenever he had the freetime.
the last time you saw each other was when you and the tkachuks spent your spring break in ann arbor to visit, and that had been over a month ago. thankfully, youâd managed to convince your mom to let you check out of school early to wait for him.
âsomeoneâs excited,â taryn teased, bumping her shoulder into your side.Â
âhoney leave her alone,â chantal chided. âweâre all excited.â
âiâm not,â brady grumbled. not even a beat later, keith was slapping the back of his head.
moments later, matt walked around the corner with his bags in hand. you fought every urge to run to him, deciding he probably wanted to greet his family first. and he did, you watched as he hugged his mom and dad first, moving the taryn, before punching brady in the shoulder.
you were nervously playing with the hem of your school issued plaid skirt as you looked on, suddenly feeling out of place. but it didnât linger because in a blink of an eye, mattâs arms were wrapping around your waist and tugging you into his chest.
a sigh escaped your lips, one you didnât even know was held hostage in your chest. maybe you were being dramatic (you were almost 16, after all), but it felt like the part of you that was missing was just returned.
âmissed you,â he mumbled into your neck.
you couldnât help the smile that graced your lips.
matt didnât let go of you, even when everyone started walking towards the car where keith parked. your hand was tightly grasped in his own, forcing brady to carry the other bag matt couldnât. to make up for it, you offered to sit in the back of keithâs escalade so brady could have more leg room. matt ended up grumbling about it, but it was clear he wasnât going to let you sit in the back next to taryn when he hadnât seen you in weeks.
âi ruined my perfect attendance streak for you,â you said as you traced the veins of his hands.
matt smirked. âi messed up little miss perfectâs squeaky clean record? how will you ever get into college now?â
you ripped your hand from his and shoved his shoulder, barely restraining yourself from cussing him out. âshut up,â was what you settled for because while taryn and brady had most definitely heard their fair share of curse words, you didnât want to be the one on the receiving end of chantalâs disapproving look, even if it meant keith would be fighting for his life to hold back laughter.
all four of you, keith and chantal excluded, all but scrambled out of the car when it pulled into the garage. you and matt grabbed both of his bags before bum rushing into the house and up the stairs to his room.
âleave the door open!â chantal called from the first floor.
you didnât need to see his face to know matt was rolling his eyes.
âiâm tempted to ignore her and just slam and lock the door,â he grumbled.
you dropped the bag you were holding and guffawed. âyou wouldnât. you love your mom.â
matt dropped his bag and immediately took the opportunity to grab you by the waist. âand i love you.â
you almost giggled, but you didnât want to make a fool of yourself so you beamed instead. the first time he said those words was a few months ago over facetime and it still made you giddy as it did then.
matt pressed his forehead against yours. âyouâre not gonna say it back?â he asked.
you blinked, still smiling. âwhat?â
âyou're not gonna say you love me back?â
you shrugged, knowing it would get under his skin. you knew the consequences. âhm,â you hummed. âdo i need to?â
matt rolled his eyes so hard you thought they mightâve gotten stuck in the back of his head. âquit being smart.â
and maybe you shouldâve given up, maybe you shouldâve let it go and say those three little words youâd said countless times before. but teasing him was way too much fun to pass up when you hadnât seen him in months. so you pursed your lips and hummed again. âi seem to recall you saying you liked how smart i am. something about being the beauty and the brains?â
and out of nowhere, taryn popped her head in. âwell matt for sure wasnât going to be the beauty, and heâs never been the brains,â she smirked.
matt let go of you and marched over to the door, all but slamming it in her face.
âmatthew brendan tkachuk! that door better be open!â chantalâs voice carried up the stairs had you lunging across the room and whipping open the door in a hurry.
âsorry mrs. tkachuk!â you called out before turning around and glaring at your boyfriend. âyouâre a menace.â
matthew smirked and pulled you close enough that you were chest to chest. âbut you love me.â
âi love you so much.â
after
the hangover you had the next morning was probably the worst you ever remember having. well, until you remembered the night matt broke up with you, that was the worst one.
you turned over in bed, picked up your phone, and saw multiple texts from emma and brady alike, both ranging from âit was great to see youâ to âiâm so sorry about last night.â you groaned and dropped your phone back on the nightstand.
last night, when you thought about it, hurt more than it shouldâve. you saw him for the first time in the flesh and it looked like he was fine, like he didnât completely upend your life six months ago when he ended things. part of you wondered if he could see through you, through the illusion of your happiness and to the core where you were just as fractured as you were december 17th.Â
the rest of the weekend continued with you doing little to nothing but eating and binging trashy reality tv shows. when your alarm went off on monday morning, you contemplated calling off, but got dressed instead.
âyou look like hell,â was the first thing frankie, your mentor and boss, said to you. because of the nature of your relationship, you felt comfortable flipping him off, even as he passed you a cup of coffee. ârough night?â he asked after watching you take a hefty sip of the hot beverage.
ârough weekend,â you grumbled.
frankie gave you a small smile and patted you on the back as the two of you walked to the workspace. âwanna talk about it?â
you recognized performative kindness when you saw it. while you firmly believed frankie cared about you and your wellbeing, you also knew he didnât want to hear the sob story of how you ran into your ex drunk at a bar, at least, not at 8am. so you shook your head.
âi looked at some of your work on the bradshaw familyâs piece so far, and i was impressed. i do have some notes, but for the most part, youâve been doing a great job.â
you did your best to smile gratefully, but you werenât sure it translated. âi really appreciate your guidance on this, and the trust you have to let me work on some of these projects.â
âyouâre very talented,â he said. âyou ever thought about creating something for yourself or someone else?â
there wasnât a word to describe the noise that came out of your mouth. was it a nervous laugh? a squeak maybe? you didnât know, and neither did frankie.
âwhat?â he asked. âwhy is that so scary?â
you shrugged as the two of you made it to the workspace. normally, you would start by pulling out the supplies you needed to begin working on the bradshaw piece, but if frankie met you at the door, it was because he wanted to have an impromptu meeting first.
âi feel like iâm good at fixing things,â you said. âmaybe not creating something from thin air.â
âyou have so much talent,â frankie replied. âi hate to see it wasted on fixing and preserving someone elseâs work when you could be doing both. it could be your art that people hang in their houses and pay thousands of dollars to preserve.â
you nodded, but kept your eyes on the table, studying the wood grain and tracing the pattern with your finger.
âi donât think iâm capable of that anymore.â
frankie reached over and squeezed your shoulder. âjust think on it, okay? couldnât hurt to just think on it.â he walked out a moment later, giving you space and time to queue up music and get started on the day.
you opened spotify and pressed the play button on your liked songs without even thinking about it. not even two seconds later, you regretted your decision. the soft tones and beats of frank oceanâs thinkin bout you echoed through the room and slammed against your chest. you immediately switched the song and found a classical playlist to listen to instead.
but the tune wouldnât get out of your head.
not two minutes later.
not thirty minutes later.
not after your full eight hour shift spent hunched over your workstation.
not even on the drive home.
frank oceanâs voice permeated every fiber of your being.
it was simone who first showed you the song in high school. you remembered liking the melody enough, but you didnât get the lyrics. and why would you? you were in love with your best friend who loved you back. even though you were fourteen and too young to even think about marriage, you knew matthew was going to be the person you ended up with. it was him or no one.
and now it was no one.
now, you listened to the song play over and over in your head, the lyrics resonating with you deeper than ever before.
you pulled into your driveway, completely unaware of what cars were parked in the street. theyâd never mattered to you before. why would they now?
you sat in your car for a few minutes, taking a deep breath while you worked up the courage to go inside. when you finally got a grip on your emotions, you opened your door and grabbed your bag. you were too busy fumbling with your keys to notice anything amiss until you were on your porch and a pair of shoes came into sight.
âhey.â
it took everything in you not to scream. you dropped your keys and nearly dropped your bag. matthew stood on your front porch with his hands in the pockets in his shorts like he was innocent of any pain or suffering heâd caused you. he was in a pair of shorts and a t-shirt, and you hated yourself a little bit for thinking heâs attractive like that.
âwhatâre you doing here?â you hated how hoarse your voice sounded, like a low quality audio recording where things sounded muffled and broken.
âyour dad wouldnât let me in.â
âgood.â
matt sighed and ran a hand down his face. âcan we not do this?â
ânot do what?â you asked. ânot act like you ended things for no damn reason?â
âif youââ
âwe dated for nearly ten years and you decided to end it over a five minute phone call. and you still think youâre entitled to my time?â and maybe you shouldâve been kinder, maybe you shouldâve been more civil. but you hadnât seen or heard from him in months (until a few nights ago) and he just turned up out of the blue? expecting you to do what? forgive him? move on?
matthew said your name delicately, but not in the way he used to, like saying your name was a luxury he was honored to have. no, he said it like you were going to break, like you were fragile, like he wasnât the sole cause of your pain. âpleaseââ
the anger was draining out of you quicker. you were exhausted between work, and frank oceanâs stupid song, and the other night.Â
âwhat do you want?â your voice cracked on the last word. âwanna ruin my life a little bit more? put the final nail in the coffin?â
âno,â he shook his head fervently. matthew took a step towards you and looked something close to devastated when you stepped back. but it didnât make sense, he ended it, he had no right to look or feel that way. âi just wanna talk.â
âsix months,â you said, doing your best to keep your voice clear. âyou had six months to say something. what could you possibly have to say now that you couldnât then?â
âi know we didnât end on the best of termsââ he started, but it was cut off by your scoff. you turned your head away and used your palm to wipe at your eyes before you crossed your arms over your chest. ââbut i donât think we should let this ruin brady and emmaâs summer. weâre gonna see a lot of each other and i donât want things to be tense around them.â
you took a minute to really look at him. blonde frizzy curls, blue eyes that wouldnât leave your face. he hadnât changed one bit.
one summer, youâd attempted to count the number of freckles on his shoulders. you got up to 87 before you gave up.
and yet you felt like you were standing in front of a stranger.
there were so many things you wanted to say, so many things youâd dreamt of screaming at him, but now that he was here, in front of you, asking something of you, you felt drained, tired. you used to crave his presence, now it felt like a leech.
you loved him, but he was sucking the life out of you.
so you nodded. you nodded and said âokay,â before you walked inside your front door and left your heart on the porch.
you pressed your back against the door and slid to the ground, pulling your knees to your chest. there was no telling when you started crying, or when your dad joined you on the floor, hugging you as close to his chest as he could.
âwhy wasnât i enough?â you sobbed into your knees.
your dad petted your hair before he pressed a kiss there. âyouâre more than enough, honey. but you canât make anyone love you if theyâre not willing to.â
âhe used to!â you wailed. âhe used to love me!â then, in a smaller voice, âwhat changed?â
a beat of silence, then your fatherâs somber, quiet voice. âmaybe he did.â
before
âso what are your plans for after high school?â ms. meyer, your high school guidance counselor sat across from you at her desk. her stare was kind, but unwavering.
youâd already applied to notre dame, knowing thatâs where matt committed. so when you answered, it was confident. it had been your plan since matt said yes to the school. âiâm going to notre dame and majoring in art history.â
âdo you have any back up schools?â
you nodded. âucla and the art institute of chicago.â
ms. meyer pursed her lips. âyou know all of those places are highly competitive, right?â
âmy transcripts and resume are impressive and I did really well on the SAT and ACT. i think iâll be able to get in.â and you were, you were pretty confident as they come when it came to academics. any school wouldâve been lucky to have you, that much you believed.
ms. meyer nodded. âi understand ucla and the art institute, both of those schools have incredible arts programs, but why notre dame? it doesnât seem to fit with your aspirations.â
âoh,â you laughed under your breath. âthatâs where my boyfriend is going.â
your guidance counselor blinked. âyouâre incredibly smart and gifted, iâd hate to see that talent wasted when you could be developing it elsewhere. what do you want?â
âi want to be with matthew.â
ms. meyer sighed and gave you a sympathetic smile, you werenât sure why though. youâd never been more sure of anything. âhoney, can i be honest with you?â she didnât wait for your response. âyou have so much talent, so much to offer, iâve seen many girls come in here, putting off aspirations for their significant others only for that relationship not to last.â
âi know weâre young,â you started, already feeling the heat rise up in your chest. she didnât know anything about you personally, she didnât know about you and matt. âbut weâre gonna make it, i swear.â
ms. meyer nodded. âof course you are.â she cleared her throat and adjusted the papers in front of her. âso, notre dame...â
after
you weren't exactly sure what compelled you to do it, but at dinner a few nights ago, your mom had asked about what happened to simone, your friend from middle and high school. so you reached out, though it made you feel like you were contacting someone to join your mlm.
it legitimately surprised you when simone replied to your facebook message. the two of you made plans to get coffee on saturday.
and now it was saturday.
you werenât getting coffee until 9:30, but you were awake and staring at your ceiling at 7. youâd done the due diligence of stalking simoneâs profile, so you knew she was married with two kids who looked just like her. she worked as a data analyst for kroger and her husband was a public defender. she met her husband in college and they got married shortly after they graduated from grad and law school respectively.Â
if you were a better woman, youâd admit you were jealous. jealous that she got what she wanted in the end. but when you put that aside, you still felt overwhelming happiness at her station in life, regardless of how yours turned out.
you kept scrolling through her social media until it was eventually time for you to get up. you stayed to facebook, not even wanting to bother with going on instagram and accidentally stumbling across one of the tkachuksâ posts.
it was 9:10 when you finally finished getting dressed and ready. you came down the stairs and threw a goodbye over your shoulder before grabbing your crossbody bag and your keys and running out the door.
despite your sprinting and nearly running red lights, you were still five minutes late. you came into the coffee shop, gasping for air after sprinting down the sidewalk from your parking spot.
the second you entered the business, simoneâs hand lifted and she smiled brightly, calling you over almost immediately. she stood to greet you, and like no time had passed, pulled you in for a hug.
âitâs so good to see you,â she said. âwasnât sure if you still liked an iced chai latte, but i got one for you.â
âoh my god, yes,â you gasped before taking a seat and taking a sip of the beverage.
she kept smiling, which made you feel lighthearted for once. most people kept looking at you with pitying eyes, but simone saw you for more than the grief of the last six months. she had to know about it, she just had to, but you thanked her for not bringing it up in the first minute of your conversation.
âhowâs work going?â
you shrugged. âitâs mostly tedious, but itâs been fine. what about you? working for kroger? thatâs a huge deal.â
simone shook her head. âitâs just a means to an end, a way i can pay for my familyâs lifestyle.â
âbut are you passionate about what you do?â
she shrugged lightly. âitâs a job, itâs not my life. not everyone is going to work a job that fulfills them. my husband? he loves being a public defender, and heâs good at it. me though, as fun as analyzing data all day sounds and as helpful as it is, getting to have a job that doesnât come home with me is probably my favorite part of it.â
you nodded along like you understood. and maybe you didnât do a good enough job at being convincing because simone sighed.
âi wanted to wait to ask this, but i canât hold it in any longer. howâre you holding up?â
it took you several seconds to answer her question. your mouth open and closed multiple times. âiâ i don't know.â you sank back into your seat and picked at your cuticles. âitâs been a shitty few months,â you admitted. âyouâd think iâd be over it by now.
simone shook her head and leaned in, arms braced on the table. âyou two were together for a decade, whatâs a few months in comparison to that?â
you shrugged. âi saw him the other night, when i went out drinking with the other bridesmaids. it was like, i don't know, i got dunked in an ice bath or something. he looked completely unaffected and i couldnât breathe.â
simone whispered your name.
âbut iâm fine!â you asserted. âiâm trying to be.â
simone nodded. âso what do you do now?â
you couldâve kissed her feet for the change in topic. âiâm working in the art restoration and conservation field.â
simone blinked. âyouâre restoring art? do you like it?â
you shrugged. âmost days, it can get repetitive, but thatâs what i like.â
your friend sighed and fixed you with a soft, sympathetic look. âbut is that what you want to do for the rest of your life? restoring someone elseâs art? doing something repetitive? you are so talented, i hate to see you wasting that talent restoring someone elseâs work.â
âitâs not a waste! itâs incredibly difficult and some things deserve to be preserved.â
âbut some new things deserve to be created.â simone leaned in closer, her forearms braced on the table. âi think it would do you some good to start creating something again, even if itâs shitty. and you think you arenât ready, just try something new. a new bar, a new hobby, a new man, something new.â
your stomach twisted at the thought of going on a date with someone other than matt, but simone was right. it had been six months and he seemed to be doing fine, it was your turn to start moving on, to find yourself again.
so you nodded. âwe should do this more often,â you said. âiâve missed you.â
simone smiled. âiâve missed you too, iâm glad youâre home.â
you talked for another hour about everything the two of you had missed over the years of you being elsewhere before she had to leave and relieve the nanny at home. simone hugged you goodbye and texted you her new number before she left the coffee shop.Â
the drive home was quiet because you were pondering the things sheâd said. you werenât sure you were ready for making your own art, you sure as hell werenât ready to go on a date. but maybe you should try.
maybe you were ready to put yourself first for once.
before
the biggest argument youâd had with matt was after you found out he wasnât playing at notre dame at all, he was going to play for calgary.
you felt so stupid for committing to that school when you shouldâve known your boyfriend was talented enough to skip it altogether. maybe you shouldâve taken a gap year, then you wouldnât have to be doing even more long distance in two different countries.
the two of you never argued, or maybe never was too strong of a word. you hardly ever had a disagreement if you thought about it long enough. most of the time, you suppressed the disappointment and the anger, shoving it to the side because you were surely being dramatic.
but now you were standing off to the side, waiting for your name to be called to cross the stage at your high school graduation, and you wished youâd said something to convince matthew to delay settling into his new calgary apartment with one of his teammates.
but you swallowed your disappointment and pride and just dealt with the fact that he wouldnât be there.
it was fine.
just high school.
you were snapped out of your reverie when your name was called. you smiled and walked across the stage. when you dreamt of this exact moment, you always thought youâd walk with grace, that all noise would cease to exist as you honed in on the sheet of paper youâd spent the last 13 years working towards.
but it wasnât like that.
because you heard one specific voice above all the others. as your principal handed you the diploma, your eyes searched the crowd and saw him.
matthew standing up and yelling with his family next to him. he had a sign, the words you couldnât read because there were tears forming in your water line. he was pointing at you and kept yelling and clapping, hooting and hollering like it was his full time job. your parents were smiling, though they were seated, and your grandparents were stone faced clapping like they were at the masters tournament.
so you kept your eyes on him, even as you walked back to your seat. you might have stumbled, tripped even, but all you could see, all you could feel was him.
you were back in your seat by the time the person calling out the names spoke again.
âplease hold your applause until the end.â
you could hear his scoff, even from your seat.
your leg bounced for the rest of the graduation ceremony. you didnât even register the turning of your tassel. you just couldnât wait for it to be over so you could be in mattâs arms.
as soon as the ceremony concluded, matt was shoving his way past families, nearly taking out an elderly gentleman in his quest to get to you. on the other hand, you were being pushed to move farther away from him as the procession of students filed out of the gym. you kept looking over your shoulder to find him, but it looked like brady had caught up to him, wrangling his older brother to follow the crowds outside.
âoutside!â brady pointed.
you nodded.
as soon as you got through the gym doors, you were booking it outside into the sunlight. it blinded you momentarily, but you whipped your phone out seconds later to see if matt had texted you where heâd be. you pulled up his contact and were seconds away from calling him when arms wrapped around your waist and lifted you up into the air.
a squeal left your lips until he set you down a moment later. you spun around in his arms and before you could say anything, matthew was kissing you like no one else was around.
when the two of you finally needed air, you pulled away. âi thought you were in calgary!â
matthew scoffed though there was a large smile on his lips. âyou thought iâd miss my favorite girlâs graduation? calgary can wait, your high school graduation only happens once.â
âiâm glad youâre here,â you whispered.Â
âme too, baby.â
unfortunately, matt pulled away so you could hug your parents and even your grandparents who were standing off to the side. taryn and brady pulled you into a group hug afterwards, with taryn going on a tangent about all the fun things the two of you would have to do before you left for school.
but brady was taking your graduation cap off your head to ruffle your hair as matt grabbed your purse and took your car keys out. keith and chantal were offering to pay for a celebratory lunch while your grandparents gave an irish goodbye. your parents were smiling, you were tucked into mattâs side, and brady and taryn were bickering andâ
everything was perfect.
you wanted to freeze that moment, that sensation in your chest, take the saccharine feeling and bottle it up and store it on your bookshelf.Â
and if you couldâve, you wouldâve savored the sensation of mattâs lips pressed to your temple while both of your dads discussed the best route to get to the restaurant.
but you had no idea how the future would turn out.
you thought matt was forever.
after
you were on a double date, or at least, hyping yourself up to go into the bar and meet up with simone, her husband, and a friend of theirs. you didnât want to be a bitch, but you also didnât want to send yourself into a panic attack. simone had suggested just entertaining something with someone, didnât even have to be serious, it could just be sex.
you could do that, right?
just casual sex?
the thought was nauseating. youâd only slept with matthew, no one knew your body like he did andâ
you stopped yourself before you could go down that rabbit hole.
your hands shook as you stepped out of your car and locked it. maybe you shouldâve gotten an uber, but then again, you werenât really planning on drinking like that. you were hoping youâd still be sober enough to go home.
the music in the bar shockingly wasnât as loud as you expected. it wasnât the bass bumping, ass grinding bar like the ones matt used to take you to after games. even still, your palms started sweating as you looked around. you spotted simoneâs natural hair across the room and made your way towards her.Â
her husband, stephen, stood to greet you first, followed by simone, then lastly your date. a guy named andrew who was a partner at his firm, the youngest on his team.
his handshake was firm, but there were no calluses on his palm. his hair was slicked back with what you guessed was a pomade.
he was so unlike matthew it was alarming.
but maybe it was for the best.
you smiled and took your seat next to simone, you sipped on the water in front of you.
âwe didnât want to order drinks without you just yet.â
âthank you,â you mumbled just loud enough for everyone to hear.
âitâs nice to finally meet you,â andrew started. âsimone spoke highly of you. she said youâve been friends since middle school.â
you felt bad because simone didnât really say much to you about him. if you were a gambler, youâd assume it was because she didnât want you to back out. you barely even knew him and you were already comparing him to matt.
which wasnât fair, you knew that. andrew deserved to be a human without the baggage of your last and only relationship determining how you viewed him.
you would try, at the very least for simone. at the very most, youâd try for yourself.
ânice to meet you too. i heard youâre a partner at your law firm? how is that going?â
oh god. you were so bad at this. asking about work on a friday night?
but he smiled. his teeth were perfectly straight and white. you'd bet your last dollar that he'd never needed braces, not like you did.
you hated yourself for thinking of the gap between matthewâs teeth.
âitâs going well,â he said. âlot of work, but i managed to get enough done this week that my friday was free. i wanted to meet the âbest artist on planet earth,â according to simone.â
âoh i donât know about that,â you flushed.
simone scoffed. âdonât downplay yourself.â she turned to look at andrew. âyou should see the art she created in high school as a teenager. it was so impressive.â
âwhat medium do you like working with the most?â he asked.
âmostly acrylic.â
andrewâs eyes lit up. âdo you have any photos of your art? iâd love to see your work.â
you shook your head, feeling a little embarrassed at all the attention. âi donât really paint like that anymore. i work in art conservation now, not a whole lot of time to create something new.â
âthatâs such a unique career! what does your average day look like?â andrew leaned forward a little and took a sip of his water.
you told him a little bit about what you did. about how you spent hours hunched over a painting and fixing the smallest problems in hopes it would satisfy the client.
âyou mustâve gone to some prestigious art school for that. if you donât mind me asking, where did you go to college?â
your spine stiffened. âuniversity of calgary.â
and just like you anticipated, his face twisted in confusion. there was no logical reason you shouldâve gone out of the country for a regular school. it would be one thing if you went to an art institute, but you didnât.
âwhy calgary?â he asked. âseems a bit random, if you donât mind me asking.â
you shifted in your seat and wouldnât meet anyoneâs eyes. it wasnât until you cleared your throat in a sorry attempt to get the lump out, that you spoke. âitâs a long story,â you said. âthought i had a future in calgary.â
andrew, to his credit, knew when to not ask questions and changed the subject immediately.
the rest of the night passed in a blur. you were only halfway present, your mind reeling at how you wasted those years in calgary waiting for a man who would dump you as soon as he moved to a warmer state.
he, quite literally, left you in the cold.
andrew offered to walk you to your car, an offer you accepted because it was dark and st. louis.
âi had a great time tonight,â he said. âit was really nice to meet you. youâre even better than simone and stephen said.â
you gave him a small smile. âit was nice to meet you too.â
andrew shifted on his feet. for a moment, he didnât look the part of the youngest partner at his law firm, he looked like a boy. âi was hoping maybe youâd want to do this again? maybe get some dinner?â
your throat felt like someone had force fed you cotton balls. but then you thought about how pathetic your life had been the last six months, how pathetic it was going to be when you flew to new jersey to be in the same bridal party as your ex.
you refused to be pathetic any longer.
which is probably why you smiled (albeit shakily) and said yes.
before
you were bouncing on your toes in the hallway as you waited for matt. it was a brutal game, and he spent a good portion of it in the penalty box, mostly for minor things, but one incident was for fighting. which wasnât atypical, but youâd never seen him that keyed up before.
and given his reputation, there were any number of things that couldâve caused the fight itself. two weeks ago, matt had fought someone for being too forceful with one of his teammates, which after years of watching the game, was on par with the sport and your boyfriend.
because he fought so much, you werenât necessarily surprised whenever he did. sure, you flinched when he was punched, knowing how badly it would bruise, praying to whatever higher power existed that he would still have all his teeth. but usually, matt wasnât trying to fight everyone on the ice at all times.
tonight was different.
safe to say, you were a little anxious waiting for him to come out.
you werenât exactly sure about what was said on the ice to get him so riled up. the worst youâd seen was when someone on the other team said something about taryn. you used to think that was the angriest you ever saw him. and it was.
until tonight.
you could feel the energy rolling off of him in waves as he exited the locker room. usually, after a win, matt is relaxed and easy going, but despite the victory from tonight, he was tense and pent up, frustrated even.
âhey,â you said, meeting him halfway.
matthew didnât respond, just dropped his bag and wrapped you up in a hug, tucking his head into the space where your neck met your shoulder.
âyou okay?â you asked.
he nodded. he squeezed your waist once before letting go, taking your hand instead. âready to go?â
the car ride was silent minus the music matthew had playing through the aux. his hand rested on your thigh, though the grip was particularly tighter than normal, especially after a win. part of you wanted to ask, the other part not wanting to spoil the rest of the night with your curiosity.
but this was the man you loved. and it hurt you to see him this upset.
normally, you wouldâve left well enough alone, but you were going back to notre dame in two days and didnât want to spend the rest of your time walking on eggshells around him. you couldnât help him if you didnât know what was wrong.
âwhat happened?â you asked when the car came to a stop at a light.
ânothing,â he grunted.
âyour team won and youâre still grumpy, matthew. so tell me, what happened? i want to help you.â
âthereâs nothing to help.â
âmatthew,â you groaned. âiâm only here for two days, can you just be honest with me? i donât wanna waste the rest of my trip with you being upset when i can help youââ
âthen go back to indiana!â he all but yelled, ripping his hand off your thigh so he could shove it through his disheveled hair.
your jaw dropped. in all the years youâd known matt, he'd never talked to you that way. and you werenât starting a bad habit by letting him think he could ever do it again. you unbuckled your seat belt and grabbed your bag. you tugged on the handle of the door. âiâll see you at home,â you said.
matt scoffed. âdonât be dramatic.â
âiâm not being âdramatic,â matthew. youâre being an asshole.â you braced yourself for the cold as the door opened and let in a cold breeze.
matthew called your name, but you ignored him and slammed the car door shut. it was a little petty, considering how matt had berated his siblings over the same thing.
a car honked, probably because the light had turned green and matt was still sitting at the light, looking at you.
a cold wind blew and for a moment, you thought about hopping back in the car with matt, but he was pulling away and your pride wasnât ready to take a hit just yet.
his car sped away until, with an efficiency you only wish you had, he parallel parked in a spot just up the road.
âget in the car,â he called, slamming his car door shut. âitâs too cold for you to be proving a point.â
âand what point am i trying to prove, matthew?â you asked over your shoulder.
you kept walking.
âwould you please stop walking and just get back in the car?â
you kept walking.
a hand reached out and grabbed your wrist, you mightâve shrieked had it not been gentle, had you not recognized the scent of mattâs cologne.
gently, he turned you around.
âbaby, just get in the car. you donât even have to talk to me. don't even have to look at me if you donât want to. iâll sleep on the couch or something, but itâs not safe for you to be walking home alone.â he ran his thumb back and forth over your pulse point in a soothing manner.
you kept your eyes on his hand. âwhat happened during the game?
he sighed, shoulders sagging like they were tired from carrying the weight of the world. âthey were talking shit.â
you blinked. âand thatâs different....how?â
with the hand that wasnât holding your wrist, matthew pinched the bridge of his nose. âthey were talking shit about you. saying you deserved better and shit.â
âmatthew, you know thatâs not trueââ
âthey called you names.â his voice was dark, angrier than you'd ever heard before. âthings iâm not comfortable repeating.â
a shiver went down your spine, for matt to be that upset made you uncomfortable. you didnât want to think about what they said, you didnât want to dwell on it any longer.
âwell,â you said, voice feeling small and weak in your throat. âwell, we know itâs not true, so it doesnât matter.â you tried to make your way back to the car, but mattâs grip on your wrist stopped you.
âbut it does matter,â he insisted. âwhat they said, i get it wasn't true, you and i both know that. but iâm not gonna let anyone talk shit about you, i donât care who they are.â
your eyes finally met his own and in the blue you saw determination and conviction there. you started towards him and wrapped your arms around his waist.
âi love you, matty.â
he kissed the top of your head. âlove you more.â
after
âwhere are you going?â your mom asked from the couch.
your dad looked up from his james patterson book to squint at your outfit: a square neck black dress. âare you going out?â he chimed in.
you felt sheepish, like the fifteen year old girl going on her first solo date, no parents picking her up because matt just got his license. âremember that guy i went on a double date with?â
âwith simone and her husband?â you mom asked.
you nodded. âweâre going out again, just us tonight.â
your mother gave you a small smile while you dad kept staring. âhave fun, sweetheart.â
your dad, however, put his book down and looked at you above the rim of his glasses. âare you gonna be okay?â
âalan, this will be good for her!â
but your dadâs eyes never left your face. âyouâll call if you need something?â
âandrewâs a good guy, dad.â or at least, you were assuming so. youâd only met the guy one other time and he seemed alright.
but you could see the look in your fatherâs eyes, you could hear what he wasnât saying.
so was matthew.
you swallowed and nodded at your parents. your phone pinged with a notification that your uber was outside. âiâll be back.â
the drive to the bar was silent. usually, you wouldnât have taken an uber, but you were unsure how drunk you would get tonight. the date could go well, it could be everything you wanted, even if all you wanted was matthew.Â
but you were prepared for the worst. you were prepared to drink until you couldnât see straight just to get through the night.
andrew was a nice guy, but he wasnât who you wanted.
and you hated yourself for it.
the uber pulled up to the bar. and simply because he didnât kidnap or talk to you, you gave the driver five stars.
andrew was waiting at a high top table for you, a glass of water ready to go. you waved at him and carefully made your way across the room, avoiding people and drinks and people with drinks.
âhey,â he greeted.
you gave him a small smile. âhi.â
âwas traffic bad on your way here? i wasnât sure, given that itâs friday and what not.â
you shook your head. ânot too bad.âÂ
câmon, think of something. say something. anything.
âcrazy busy tonight, huh?â you wanted to facepalm. that was what you came up with? all the words in the world and that was what youâ
âyeah,â andrew cut off your mental tirade. âi think some famous guys are here tonight, heard murmurs of it.â
you nearly broke out into a cold sweat. âd-do you know who?â
andrew shrugged. âi didnât ask, i just heard someone talking about it when i was getting a drink.â then, like he finally realized, he snapped. âdo you want anything? i can grab it for you.â
you gave him your drink order with a smile. he tapped the table with his knuckles before promising he'd be right back.
you traced the grain of the table with your finger, allowing it to feel the grooves and water stains left from other customers. it felt awkward, sitting by yourself with no one to talk to. andrew said he'd be back, but the bar was busy, it could be ten, fifteen minutes before he'd come back.
your phone buzzed.
simone:Â
howâs it going?
you smiled despite yourself.Â
you:
heâs nice. he went to get me a drink.
you put your phone down to look around the bar. it was busier than normal, or at least, what you thought was normal.
you were scrolling through your social media feeds when andrew finally came back. he had your drink in hand with a smile on his face.
âsorry, the line took forever,â he said.
you glanced at the bar to see a small crowd of people. âdoesnât surprise me,â you said. âfridayâs are usually busy.â
âyeah especially when thereâs two hockey players in town. heard someone at the bar talking about it, thought you might wanna know. simone said you were a fan?â
your stomach dropped to your feet. you took a hefty sip of your drink to avoid andrew seeing a frown on your face. there was a chance that it was a blues player still in town, but your gut knew better. if you were a betting woman, you'd bet your last dollar on it being brady and matt.
you wanted to throw up.
instead, you chugged the drink.
âwhoa, you okay?â andrewâs eyes widened a little, maybe in concern, but there was something about the smirk on his face that said otherwise.
you gave him a shaky smile. âjust fine. can i get another drink?â
he smiled immediately and got up to get you another.
and another.
and another.
your vision was blurring a little when you tried to cut yourself off, even as andrew was sliding another glass in front of you. you threw the drink back again, not even blinking at it.
matt and brady could be here. it was too soon to see them again, you weren't prepared to see them again. maybe if you drank enough, youâd black out and forget all about tonight.
but then andrew was grabbing your elbow, he was leading you towards the door, encroaching upon your personal space. his lips were on your neck, whispers of what he had planned for you.
your skin crawled, you wanted him off of you, but your arms were sluggish, you were tripping over your feet and he was the only thing holding you up.
âno,â you slurred. âlemme go.â
but he either didnât hear you or was ignoring you because he kept dragging you to the door.
then the panic set in.
it felt like it came out of nowhere, but maybe the surmounting panic was always there like a loyal friend. you tried squirming out of his grip, shoving at his chest, but the panic was building the longer he held onto you. your head was shaking furiously, your mouth doing its best to protest, but it was like the alcohol made your tongue heavy.
âlemme goââ you tried shoving one more time before you heard a shout in the distance.Â
âhey!â you werenât aware of the people around you being shoved to the side, you were unaware of the rage surrounding you. you were unaware until andrew was ripped away and you were being shoved into another body.
âmatt heyââ
brady. you were right, brady was here.
god you loved brady.
âbrady?â you slurred, smiling lazily up at him. âyouâre here! whyâre you here?â
with one arm, brady kept you pressed to him, but he wasnât acknowledging you. his eyes were focused on his brother holding the collar of your date.
oh. your date.
there was no rhyme or reason for the feeling of horror that washed over you when you realized what almost happened before matt and brady showed up.
you were gonna throw up.
or pass out.
you werenât sure when you started hyperventilating, but it felt like the walls were closing in. was the music always this loud? was matt always that loud when yelling? you wouldnât know, he hardly ever yelled at youâ
âhey,â bradyâs gentle voice sounded it your ear, but it was like you were hearing it from underwater. âhey, breathe, itâs okay. youâre safe now.â
the funny thing about hyperventilating is no one wants to be hyperventilating. itâs similar to worrying in that telling someone to stop worrying is ineffective. brady telling you to breathe wasnât helping because it wasnât like you wanted to be light headed and struggling to get oxygen.
your mind was just racing with the thoughts of what almost happened.
were your hands shaking? or was the world just rocky? was it the alcohol? why did andrew give you so much? was he planning onâ
oh god.
oh god.
âmatt!â bradyâs voice again sounding like a deep echo in a cave, one you could barely hear. âmatt, i think he got the point, she needs you.â
did you?
but it didnât matter what you thought, because you were being gently pulled into a pair of arms you wouldâve recognized anywhere. you could be deaf, blind, and mute, you couldâve had your nose plugged so you couldnât smell his aftershave and you still wouldâve known it was matt. his arms were the only ones that felt like home.
maybe it was the way your head tucked under his chin perfectly, or the way you could hold your own hand when you wrapped your arms around his waist. maybe it was the way matt tried to fit you into his ribcage whenever he hugged you.
âhey,â his voice was quiet, hoarse from the yelling probably. âyouâre okay, iâve got you. nothingâs gonna hurt you, not while iâm here.â his lips were on the top of your head, mumbling the words into your hair.
âheâhe was gonnaââ
matt was shushing you, running a hand up and down your back. âdo you wanna go outside? get some fresh air?â you nodded against his chest, a place you used to lay your head on at night.
matt walked you outside, brady not far behind. he was supporting most of your weight. you were still incredibly drunk even if the event that just happened sobered you up a little.
your hands were still shaking, your knees a little weak, though you werenât sure what the original cause of that was. if it was from alcohol, the sleazy date, or just being held by your ex, you werenât sure.
what a year tonight has been.
your heartbeat slowed down as you listened to mattâs. his hand continued to rub your back in long lines.
âyouâre okay,â he continued to say. âiâm not gonna leave you. youâre safe right here, baby.â
your heart soared at the pet name until gravity kicked in and you were right back where you started.
rock bottom.
you pushed away from matt, now that your heart rate had decreased. you stumbled a bit from the lack of stability, but you managed to right yourself before matt could get his hands on you to help you balance.
âyou okay?â he asked.
âno,â you mumbled, shaking your head despite the world feeling like it was spinning too fast already. âno. iâm not okay.â
matt took a step towards you, it was like watching a film in slow motion, seeing his face fall as you immediately took a step back.
âbaby iââ
âstop! stop calling me that!â you yelled even as your words slurred, throwing your hands up in the air before pulling at your hair. âyouâyou donât get to call me that, not anymore. and you certainly donât get to ride in like some white knight coming to my rescue either!â
âwhatâre youââ he cut himself off before running a hand down his face. âhe was going to hurt you, i wasnât going to let that happen!â
maybe it was the alcohol that made you more honest than normal. âwhy? you donât seem to care what happens anyway?â
âwhat the hell are you talking about? i would never let someone hurt you, not if i can stop it.â
âbut you had no problem hurting me? leaving me in a country alone?â
mattâs jaw dropped. âyou canât seriously be comparing the two. heâhe almostâhe had every intention ofââ but he kept cutting himself off. and by the looks of his clenched fists, it was hurting him more just thinking about it.
and he was right, what almost happened with andrew and what actually happened at the hands of matt were two different things, but it hurt more from matt, the man who swore heâd be at your side, to love you through it all. heâd dropped you like a bad habit and was expecting everything to be normal again? like you hadnât spent over half your life completely in love with him?
you sighed, your shoulders sagged, all fight evaporating your body once more. âthanks for help, iâll see you around.â you turned on your heel and nearly ran into brady, whom you forgot was even there.
âlet me drive you home,â brady said. ââs the least i could do.â
brady at least let you sit shotgun this time, with matt in the back. and when he pulled up to your house, matt was the one to walk you to the door like he had many times before.
âcan we talk?â he asked. âsometime this week? or next? or whenever you're free?â
you looked at him, really looked at him. his hands shook at his sides and you longed to hold them in your own to steady them like he did for you earlier. âwhyâre you doing this to me? why canât you just leave me be?â
matt stared at you before he pressed his lips together. he looked off to the side almost like he was looking at brady waiting in the car or a scrap of self control, or maybe just the right words to say. âi donât think iâm capable of letting you go.â
your voice caught on the words in your throat. âi need you to try, matt. because i canât keep doing this. you canât call me baby when iâm not your baby anymore.â
he nodded. âjust one conversation, i promise.â
you should say no. you should just let it go, but you didnât think you could deny matt anything if he really asked for it. âokay,â you said. âjust one conversation.â
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The fact that you canât raise taxes on billionaires even slightly without them pouring money into fascist political movements is, of itself, evidence that billionaires as a class shouldnât be allowed to exist in the first place.
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thereâs men out here that would bark if you asked them to once and youâre over here asking a man for something twice? STOP IT
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Matthew Tkachuk pronouncing Finnish towns đ«đź
#âyeah thats enoughâ#lmao Barky#florida panthers#living it up in Finland#baby ratâ€ïž#rat king#aleksander barkov
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the trick for enjoying a new video game is avoiding the internetâs opinion on itÂ
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This is how the panthers talk about Matthew
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hockey? like, from the fanfics? you know that's not a real thing, right?
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iâm doing research reblog this and tell me if you want kids or not
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âWould you guys like another couchâ âNo we are goodâ
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my favourite defensive maneuver: the finnish congo line
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Rest in peace. Thank you for the memories. đđ
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you think youâre sisyphus but youâre actually the fuckass boulder
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i just ate a crepe so delicious juicy and good im about to forgive french people
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