Page 41 of Stitch & Steel

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“Yeah,” I whispered. “Exactly like that.”

Kasey sighed dramatically. “Well, I don’t know whether to be jealous or worried. Are you safe? I mean, I’m happy for you, but this isn’t exactly your usual guy. He doesn’t sound like Brendan.”

“No,” I said, voice going hard. “He’s nothing like Brendan.”

She paused. “Have you heard from him?”

“No. Thank God. And even if I did, I wouldn’t answer. That chapter’s closed.”

Brendan. My clean-cut finance boyfriend. The one with a five-year plan and a second girlfriend. The one who “had business in Atlanta” on Valentine’s Day, but somehow ended up on a date at Luca’s Wine Bar with a redhead who wasn’t me.

Kasey and I had been there.

That’s how I found out.

Everything after that felt like ash in my mouth.

“I didn’t even tink about him anymore,” I told her. “I just feel normal here. Like I can finally breathe. I don’t miss Charlotte one bit. I even might try goat yoga next week.”

“So, you escaped to the mountains to find yourself this summer?” she teased gently.

“Maybe. Or to find Gran. Or to escape. I don’t know. But now…”

“Now you’ve got a smokeshow of a biker with a leather vest and emotional depth flirting with your grandmother and fixing your life with power tools?”

I smiled.

“Yeah. That.”

“Well, damn,” Kasey said. “You better shave your legs and kiss him with tongue. That’s all I’m saying.”

I laughed so hard I nearly knocked my curling iron off the counter.

“I gotta go,” I said, standing. “He’ll be here any second.”

“Wear something pretty. And Bella?”

“Yeah?”

“Don’t run this time. You deserve a man who shows up.”

The screen went dark. I stared at myself in the mirror.

Hair curled. Dress on. Heart racing.

And when I heard the knock at the door moments later, it wasn’t just Logan standing on the other side.

It was possibility.

And maybe, just maybe… something that looked a whole lot like fate.

I opened the door, bracing myself for awkward first-date tension or maybe just the sight of Logan leaning on the frame like he owned the place.

What I didn’t expect waswildflowers.

Not the store-bought kind. No plastic wrap or glossy bow. These were early and true—stems slightly uneven, petals still damp from dew, colors bursting like a handful of sunshine and summer.

“Hey,” he said, holding them out in one big, calloused hand.