Reminder:
In Chapter 3, I returned to the bus stop after reading Anaya's notebook. I learned she had been waiting for courage — not coincidence. She left a note asking if I would stay even after she walked away first. At 6:30 PM, I chose not to leave. And when I heard her voice behind me, everything that felt broken suddenly felt like a beginning.
For a few seconds after she asked, "Did you stay?"
neither of us moved.
The evening air carried the smell of dust and fading sunlight. Cars passed. People walked by. But the world didn't feel loud anymore.
It felt suspended.
She stepped around the bench slowly and sat beside me — not too close, not too far. The same careful distance she had always kept.
But this time, she wasn't holding the blue notebook.
She was holding her breath.
"I wasn't sure you would come back," she said quietly.
"I wasn't sure you wanted me to," I replied.
She looked down at her hands. "I wanted to see if staying was stronger than fear."
I let the words settle between us.
"You left," I said gently. "That didn't feel like staying."
She nodded once. "I know."
There was no defensiveness in her voice. Only honesty.
"I've spent a long time watching people promise things they couldn't keep," she continued. "They stayed when it was easy. They left when it wasn't."
"And you thought I would do the same."
"I thought," she corrected softly, "that if I mattered, you would come back."
The simplicity of it hurt.
Not because it was unfair.
But because it was true.
"I read everything," I said. "The notebook."
Her shoulders tensed slightly.
"You weren't supposed to."
"You wrote it like I would."
She didn't answer that.
A bus arrived, doors opening with a mechanical sigh. A few passengers got off. A few stepped on. Then it left again.
We stayed.
"I wasn't afraid of liking you," she said after a moment. "I was afraid of needing you."
The difference was small.
But it changed everything.
"I don't want to be something you're scared of," I told her.
"You're not," she said quickly. "That's the problem."
I turned to look at her fully then.
Her eyes weren't distant tonight. They weren't guarded.
They were tired.
"I don't know how to love without preparing for loss," she admitted. "So I leave first. Before it can hurt too much."
The confession sat heavy in the space between us.
"Does it hurt less?" I asked.
She gave a faint, almost embarrassed smile.
"No."
Silence returned.
But it wasn't the old silence.
This one was honest.
"I came back," I said carefully, "not to prove something."
She looked at me
.
"I came back because leaving felt worse."
Her breathing shifted.
"I don't know what happens next," I continued. "I don't know if this gets complicated. I don't know if we'll get scared again."
A small breeze moved a strand of her hair across her face.
"But I know I don't want to disappear when it does."
Her eyes searched mine, as if trying to find hesitation.
There wasn't any.
"Staying," I added, "is a choice. Not a test."
That was the first moment she looked like she might cry.
Not from sadness.
From relief.
"You make it sound simple," she whispered.
"It's not simple," I said. "It's just worth it."
The streetlights flickered on above us, casting soft gold over the cracked pavement.
She shifted slightly closer this time. Not enough for anyone else to notice.
But enough for me to feel.
"I don't promise that I won't get scared again," she said.
"I don't promise I won't either," I replied.
She let out a quiet breath that almost sounded like a laugh.
"For the first time," she said, "I don't feel like I have to run."
We sat there as the sky darkened — not as two people waiting for something to happen.
But as two people who had finally said what they were afraid to admit.
No grand declarations.
No dramatic confessions.
Just this:
"I like you," she said softly.
The words were small.
But they didn't tremble.
"I know," I replied.
And then, after a second —
"I like you too."
It wasn't fireworks.
It wasn't cinematic.
It was steady.
Real.
The kind of beginning that doesn't rush.
When her bus finally arrived, she stood up slowly.
"For the record," she said, looking down at me, "I was hoping you'd stay."
"I know," I answered.
She hesitated for half a second.
Then —
"Tomorrow?" she asked.
"Tomorrow," I said.
This time, when she walked toward the bus, she didn't feel like someone leaving.
She felt like someone coming back.
And as I sat there alone again, the bench didn't feel empty.
It felt chosen.
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To be continued….
