Page List

Font Size:

I laugh, the sound rougher than I expected. “Effortless, beautiful, and completely worth it. Even when it’s chaos.” My eyes don’t leave hers, and I notice the subtle shift—how she pauses mid-step, caught in the moment too.

There’s a silence that stretches longer than it should. The shop feels smaller, warmer, as if every bloom and stem has leaned in to watch what I’m about to do next. I want to reach out, to close the space between us, but something tighter than nerves binds me—fear, stubbornness, the weight of mistakes I’ve already made.

I step closer anyway. My hand brushes against hers lightly as I move past, a touch tentative but deliberate. Her eyes flick to mine, questioning, searching, and I feel it—the pull I’ve denied for months. “Mia,” I say quietly, letting my voice drop so low it feels like I’m speaking only to her, “I’ve made mistakes. I’ve run, I’ve avoided what matters most, and I’ve left you when I shouldn’t have. But I’m done running. I’m done avoiding you. I… I choose you. I choose us.”

Her breath catches, soft and trembling, and for a second the entire room tilts. The scent of roses, rain, and that faint trace of coffee mingles with the sharp awareness of her presence. Her lips part slightly, but she doesn’t speak. She’s listening. Really listening.

I step closer, letting my hand hover near hers before I let it rest lightly on her wrist. “I’m not afraid anymore,” I add, voice firm, though the tremor of vulnerability leaks in. “Not of losing, not of failing, not of… this. Not of you.”

Her eyes soften, and a small smile breaks through the tension. “Finally,” she whispers, a mix of relief and humor. “I was starting to wonder if I had to do all the choosing alone.”

I grin, brushing a loose strand of hair behind her ear. “You never do it alone. Not when I’m around.”

The moment stretches, quiet but charged, full of unspoken promises, of years of history, of fear and hope tangled together. The weight of what we’ve survived—the sabotage, Titan’s threats, the sleepless nights—melts away, leaving just this: us, the shop, and the clarity of choice.

I take a breath, letting the words settle in the air. Victory isn’t just the town rallying or Titan backing down. It’s this—the acknowledgment of what I’ve felt for months but didn’t dare admit. It’s choosing her, finally, in a way that isn’t tentative or afraid. It’s allowing myself to let go of the walls I’ve built and step fully into what we could be.

And she’s here, right in front of me, with that quiet strength and warmth that has always pulled me in, and I know that whatever comes next, I’m not letting go. Not of the shop. Not of her.

The quiet hum of the cooler fills the shop, but it’s softer now, gentler, like the whole world is exhaling with us. Mia moves around the counter, arranging the last of the hydrangeas, and I watch her with a mix of relief and amusement. After everything—the festival, Titan’s threats, the sabotage—I hadn’t realized how tight the tension had been, how it had coiled around every shared glance, every late-night shift. Now it feels like it’s finally unspooling.

“You know,” I say, leaning casually against the edge of the counter, “for someone who hates relying on anyone, you make teamwork look easy.”

She glances at me over the top of a vase, one eyebrow raised, lips quirking. “Easy, huh? You mean mildly stressful, occasionally chaotic, and full of your terrible humming?”

I laugh, the sound low and rough, feeling it echo off the walls. “Terrible humming? That’s unfair. I happen to have a highly developed, if somewhat off-key, work soundtrack.”

She shakes her head, smiling, and I can’t help the warmth that spreads through my chest. “Highly developed? More like highly irritating.”

“Oh, come on,” I tease, stepping closer, letting my shoulder brush hers lightly. “You secretly love it. Admit it—you’d miss it if I stopped.”

Her eyes sparkle with mischief, and she gives a mock gasp. “Secretly? Luke, I would never stoop that low.”

I grin, letting the corners of my mouth lift, feeling the tension in my shoulders ease. “Sure, sure. Keep telling yourself that. But I saw you tapping your foot along to ‘humming in G minor’ earlier, didn’t I?”

She rolls her eyes but can’t hide the faint twitch of a smile. “You’re impossible.”

“Impossible?” I echo, shaking my head. “You’ve just been saving your words for dramatic effect. It’s all part of the charm.”

Her laugh spills out then, soft and natural, and it’s a relief in itself. We haven’t laughed like this in weeks—maybe months. The sound fills the shop, ricocheting off the walls and settling around us like sunlight through the windows. I can’t remember the last time something felt this light.

“You know,” I say, quieter now, letting the teasing fade into something gentler, “after all of this… it’s nice to finally have a moment where we’re not fighting fire after fire. Not everything feels like a battle for survival.”

She tilts her head, meeting my gaze. “It is nice. Even if the shop still looks like a minor tornado hit it.”

I chuckle again, stepping a bit closer, letting my hand hover near hers, almost grazing the back of her hand on the counter. “I’ll take tornadoes if it means this… right here. You, me, the shop standing.”

Her fingers brush against mine, light and teasing, but the touch is electric, charged with unspoken words. “Don’t get allsentimental on me, Luke. You’ll ruin my reputation for being unshakable.”

I grin, shaking my head, but there’s a softness in my voice that she can’t miss. “I wouldn’t dream of it. I’m just… appreciating what we’ve got. And maybe reminding you that it’s okay to enjoy it.”

Her lips twitch into a half-smile, eyes locked on mine, and the air between us hums with relief, tension, and something unspoken that neither of us has had the courage to name until now.

I take a deep breath, letting the warmth of her presence fill me, steadying me after months of fear and chaos. We joke, tease, and laugh, but beneath it is an undeniable current: acknowledgment, relief, and a mutual understanding that the walls we built around ourselves can finally soften.

The shop feels lighter now, almost buoyant. The flowers smell sweeter. The air seems brighter. And for the first time in a long while, I realize that the banter, the teasing, the subtle touches—it’s all a kind of intimacy. A way to say what we can’t always put into words.

And I wouldn’t trade it for anything.