This fic was a masterpiece from start to finish. Wow!!!!
harry castillo x reader
series
word count: 18.k
warnings: no y/n, 28 year age gap, female reader, fluff, angst, emotional trauma, past interfamilial abuse and neglect, references to disordered eating, verbal harassment. not beta read, all mistakes are mine. didn’t reread, just needed to get it out.
It had been almost three months since Florence. Since the yacht. Since the article. Since Livia’s venom and the silent splash of a phone being tossed into dark water like penance.
It's the end of May now, almost June.
Sticky New York heat pressing against windows that refused to close all the way. Frances McDormand, the dark cat sprawled in front of a rotating fan like she paid rent. And Harry—Harry Castillo, once a name associated with corporate blood sport and too many $10,000 suits—now woke up in soft cotton shirts and made her coffee before speaking a word.
They lived in a loft now.
His penthouse had become unusable—paparazzi parked like permanent fixtures out front, cameras hidden in planters, strangers calling her name like it belonged to them. The final straw had come after a man—angry, middle-aged, face red with thirty years of grievance—broke into her and Maya’s apartment two days after they returned from Italy. He'd shouted about restitution, called her father a thief, and said she should pay the price.
He didn’t make it past the hallway. Danny handled the fallout. But that was it. She packed up everything that night. Maya too. The two of them sitting on the floor with takeout containers and three half-full boxes, looking at each other like the girls they’d been in that apartment didn’t exist anymore.
Now, Maya lived in a sunlit walkup with a balcony that faced a mural of Aretha Franklin and a bodega that sold homemade plantain chips in brown bags. Danny had found it. Helped her sign the lease. Pretended he didn’t care when she called him sweetheart and gave him a kiss on the cheek.
And her? She moved in with Harry. Into the loft. His loft. Exposed brick. Massive windows. Low leather furniture. A kitchen that smelled like citrus and wood and had knives sharper than her oldest fears. It was peaceful. In a way that felt rebellious. And more than that—more than safe, more than new—it felt private. There were no paparazzi. No late-night interviews. No articles. Just the creak of hardwood beneath bare feet and the click of Frances jumping onto the couch like she owned it.
The first morning, she woke up to the sound of birds outside the window and Harry brushing his teeth beside her. They shared the mirror now. She used the left side. He used the right.
She stood on her tiptoes to spit. He always offered her the water glass first. Sometimes they bumped elbows. Sometimes he kissed her cheek, mint on his breath, hand resting on the curve of her hip like it had always belonged there.
She wore his shirts to bed now. The soft ones. The ones with faint holes near the collar or sleeves stretched out from years of being rolled up. She didn’t wear shorts unless she had to. Just the shirts and her underwear and the faint scent of cedar that lingered in his drawer.
Harry Castillo, in his fifties, spent most mornings with one sock on, his glasses sliding down his nose, and a soft frown as he tried to navigate a French press while she sat on the kitchen counter eating a peach. Not just any peach. A perfect one. Heavy with juice. Skinned slightly from the pressure of her thumb.
“Don’t drip on the floor,” he’d mutter without looking.
She’d smirk. And let it run down her wrist.
“You’re a menace,” he said one morning.
“You love it.”
“I tolerate it.”
“You worship it.”
That got him to glance up. His salt-and-pepper hair was messy, his shirt half-buttoned, his expression one of a man who had fought empires and now couldn’t stop watching juice trail down the soft inside of her wrist.
He walked over. Took the peach from her. Bit it. Then kissed her sticky mouth. Frances meowed like an old woman disgusted by affection. They both ignored her.
Some days were slow. Painfully, beautifully slow. They’d read on opposite sides of the couch, legs tangled, her feet resting on his thigh while he absentmindedly ran a hand over her ankle. Frances slept on the back cushion behind their heads, occasionally shifting just to prove she still hated sharing attention.
She burned toast almost every morning. And he let her. She insisted on folding laundry while watching old ‘70s thrillers with subtitles she didn't speak the language of. And he let her.
They bickered about dishes but never raised their voices. Harry always said she stacked the cups wrong. She told him he was old and picky. He kissed her anyway. On the temple. On the shoulder. On the mouth if she let him catch her.
He still got up before her most mornings. Still made coffee before she asked. Still whispered baby when he thought she was still asleep. Sometimes she wasn’t. Sometimes she just wanted to hear it.
One night in late May, they hosted Maya and Danny for dinner. Well—hosted was a generous term. Harry grilled on their rooftop garden that hadn't had any safety measures since the 70s. She made a salad that was mostly just leaves with balsamic and too much cheese. Maya brought wine. Danny brought flowers and pretended they weren’t for Maya until she rolled her eyes and kissed his cheek.
It was hot that night. The windows were open. Harry had sweat at his temple and she wore a sundress with tiny buttons that kept slipping open near the chest. He noticed. Of course he did.
“You do that on purpose,” he muttered when they were alone in the kitchen.
“Do what?”
“Wear that thing and pretend it’s an accident when the buttons pop.”
She turned. Leaned against the counter. “You’re the one who keeps buying me these.”
He stepped closer. Slid a finger beneath the strap. “You wear them too well.”
She didn’t respond. Just tipped her chin up and let him kiss her again. Soft. Slow. Like there was nowhere else in the world to be. Frances stared from the counter like she was about to report them to the building manager.
At night, they lay tangled. Fan humming. Sheets kicked halfway down the bed. She slept in his arms most of the time. Leg over his hip. Fingers tracing the line of hair at the center of his chest like it meant something. It did. He never said it, but it did.
Sometimes she read in bed while he answered emails. Sometimes he fell asleep before her and she just stared at him. At the lines in his face. At the way his hair curled behind his ear. At the scar on his nose he never explained.
He’d said “I love you” a dozen times since Florence.
Once during breakfast when she spilled coffee on his lap and apologized like it mattered. Once after a fight that wasn’t really a fight—just silence that lasted too long and ended with him saying, “I’m not mad. I just don’t know how to be soft sometimes. But I’m trying. Because I love you.” And once at 2AM, in the dark, after a nightmare left her shaking so hard she cracked a glass trying to get water. He’d pulled her to his chest and whispered it again and again until she stopped flinching.
She said it back every time. But it didn’t have to be said. Not really. Not when he rubbed her back absentmindedly while she watched a documentary about octopuses. Not when he kept a bottle of her shampoo next to his own even though he used bar soap. Not when he cleaned Frances’s litter box without being asked. Not when he looked at her like she was sunrise and sanctuary and the first thing in decades he hadn’t already planned for.
She woke up one morning to the sound of Harry swearing under his breath.
“Shit.”
She blinked awake, groggy. “What?”
He was at the bathroom sink, glasses askew, toothbrush in hand.
“Cut myself shaving,” he muttered.
She padded over barefoot, hair messy, shirt hanging off one shoulder.
“Let me see.”
He turned, jaw tilted slightly. There was a nick under his chin. She dabbed it gently with a tissue. Then kissed it. Then stepped back and said, “You look like an expensive history professor who flirts with married women.”
He squinted at her. “You’re unwell.”
“You’re hot.”
He rolled his eyes. But he smiled. And when she leaned up on her toes to brush beside him, shoulder to shoulder, foam in her mouth and their arms bumping, Harry Castillo—king of quiet rage, legend of business and ruin—looked down at the girl beside him and thought, This. This is the whole damn point. Harry didn’t say it out loud. Didn’t need to.
Just watched her as she brushed beside him, their reflections overlapping in the fogging mirror, toothpaste smudged at the corner of her mouth like war paint. She was humming something—off-key, tuneless, maybe not even a song. Just sound. A sound that only existed here, in this room, in the morning, with his old toothbrush vibrating quietly between his molars and her pink one clutched like a dagger.
She spit. So did he. She rinsed, wiped the corner of her mouth with the back of her hand, and kissed his shoulder before walking barefoot back into the bedroom. Her shirt was slipping again. He let it.
He rinsed last. Adjusted his glasses. Then reached for the tiny towel she always insisted on hanging on the hook he never used before she moved in. He wiped down the sink. It was a recent development. A routine, of sorts.
He didn’t used to wipe the sink. Now he did. Because she noticed when he didn’t. Because she kissed him on the cheek when he did. Because somehow, the wipe of a towel and the scent of her mint toothpaste and the sound of her humming nothing in particular had become the holiest part of his day.
The morning rolled on. There was no work meeting. No call. No reason to check his email but he did anyway—just out of muscle memory. He grunted at something on the screen. Said Jesus Christ at another. Then closed the laptop and tossed it onto the couch like it had personally offended him.
She was curled up in the armchair across the room with a bowl of cereal and a spoon too large for the bowl, watching a rerun of a British cooking show where every contestant cried when their meringue collapsed.
Harry walked over, grabbed a throw blanket from the back of the chair, and tucked it around her legs without asking. She didn’t say anything. Just looked up and smiled. Then fed him a bite of her cereal.
He made a face. “Is that...almond milk?”
She nodded. “We ran out of your kind.”
“Jesus Christ.”
She grinned. “You’ll live.”
At noon, she left to pick up flowers. It wasn’t for anything in particular. Just because she’d seen some wild peonies at the corner bodega and thought they’d look good next to the coffee machine. She came home with two bundles—pink and blood orange—and a package of sticky notes she didn’t need.
Harry was sitting on the floor when she got back, rearranging the books on the bottom shelf of the built-in like it was a life-or-death situation. He had his glasses on and a pen tucked behind his ear, even though he wasn’t writing anything.
“What are you doing?” she asked, amused.
“Someone moved Letters from a Stoic next to Norwegian Wood.”
“So?”
“It’s thematically violent.”
She snorted.
He glanced over his shoulder. “Those flowers for me?”
“Yes.”
“Liar.”
“Partial truth.”
She set them in water while he made another espresso he didn’t need, and they stood in the kitchen for a while—not talking, just drinking, just existing. She looked over at him—socks, shirt half-tucked, a faint smear of pen on his hand from writing something earlier in his notebook—and thought, You’re so much softer than you know.
It was later—way later, when he was in the shower and Frances was curled up on his pillow like she’d claimed it—that she saw it. She was scrolling. Aimlessly. One of those early evening doomscrolls where the light was changing and the room smelled like lavender and Harry had just shouted something about how the shampoo was empty even though it was not. And there it was.
“Castillo Turns 55: A Look Back at the Billionaire’s Rise, Fall, and Silence.” —The New Yorker.
She blinked. Paused. Scrolled back up to the article. She didn’t click. She didn’t need to. The photo was recent. Harry in a dark coat. Expression unreadable. Hands in his pockets like always.
Her stomach fluttered. Fifty-five. He hadn’t said anything. Not once. And it was this week.
She glanced toward the bathroom. Steam fogged the crack beneath the door. His voice—low, raspy—was humming something old and terrible. Probably Elvis.
He hadn’t said a damn thing. Of course he hadn’t. Because Harry didn’t like attention. Didn’t like celebrations or singing or surprise parties or anything that made people look at him longer than they had to.
Which meant…she was absolutely planning something. The next morning, she started a list. She didn’t tell him.
Just opened a fresh page in her notes app and titled it: Operation: Old Man’s Birthday (Do Not Let Him See This)
Under it, she typed
Invite: Francesca, Luca (maybe), Maya, Danny
Location: Home (safe, intimate)
Cake? (He says he hates sweets but eats mine)
Gift?
Music?
Do I invite his sister?
She stared at that last line for a long time. Then added a space beneath it.
Pros:
She might be the only blood family he has
He’s mentioned her exactly three times, which is more than Lucy
Maybe he’d want her there, even if he doesn’t know it
Cons:
He hasn’t spoken to her in years
He might actually kill me
Might ruin the mood
Might make him shut down
Might make him remember something he doesn’t want to
She sighed. Backspaced the whole thing. Then re-typed it again.mShe didn’t delete the list. She didn’t move it. She just left it open in the background like a quiet question.
Over the next few days, she got sneaky. Not lying—not really. Just careful. She asked him things like “what kind of cake do you hate the least” while pretending to talk about a TV show. She bought candles but hid them in a drawer under her spare socks. She asked Maya to help distract him on the day-of, to make sure he didn’t randomly decide to cancel and go for a six-hour walk in Central Park like he did on bad press days.
Maya agreed with exactly three smiley faces and one grandpa emoji. Danny offered to buy a dozen chairs. She told him there would be six people total. He replied, Fine. I’ll still wear a suit.
That Thursday, Harry asked her why she kept rearranging the fridge magnets.
She blinked. “Just bored.”
“You spelled spleen.”
“I like the word.”
“You spelled it twice.”
She shrugged. “One for each of yours.”
He squinted. “Are you okay?”
“I’m excellent.”
Harry narrowed his eyes. Then leaned in, kissed her forehead, and mumbled, “You’re a weirdo.”
She googled his sister that night. Didn’t tell anyone. Just lay in bed beside Harry—his arm around her waist, his breathing deep and even—and searched her name in the dark.
Isidora Castillo. Married. Two kids. Lived upstate. Social media set to private. One blurry photo from a fundraiser five years ago. Nothing else.
She stared at the screen for a long time. Harry had only mentioned a few times. He hadn’t spoken her name. But he had smiled. And then stopped. And then changed the subject. She closed the screen. Stared at the ceiling. Didn’t sleep much that night.
The next day, he brought her coffee in bed. She was already half-awake, cheek pressed to his pillow, dreaming of something too warm to remember. He set the mug on the nightstand. Sat down beside her. Ran a hand down her back in slow, sleepy strokes.
“Baby,” he whispered.
She cracked one eye open. He was shirtless. Hair wild. A smear of toothpaste near his temple like battle paint. She laughed. He leaned down. Kissed her shoulder.
“You were twitching,” he murmured. “Thought you were dying.”
She groaned. “Just fighting my enemies in REM.”
He smiled. Then pulled her closer. And just like that—everything settled again.
She still hadn’t decided about Isidora. The party was only a few days away. The cake was ordered. The drinks planned. The music soft and curated and free of anything too happy. Francesca had offered to make a toast. Luca swore he wouldn’t. Maya said she’d bring flowers, and Danny promised to behave. But still—his sister. A name that lived in silence. A woman he hadn’t seen in over a decade.
That night, as they sat on the couch—her feet in his lap, Frances purring like judgment behind them—she asked quietly, “Do you think people can change without reaching out to the ones they hurt?”
Harry looked up from his book. “Why?”
She shrugged. “Just thinking.”
He stared at her for a moment. Then said, softly, “Sometimes reaching out feels like opening a wound you spent years trying to stitch shut.”
She nodded.
“Sometimes the people you hurt…don’t want to hear from you.”
She swallowed. He set the book down. Touched her ankle.
“I haven’t spoken to my sister in fifteen years.”
She looked at him. He wasn’t angry. Just tired.
“She didn’t do anything wrong,” he said. “She just...didn’t understand. And I didn’t want to explain.”
She reached for his hand. Held it. Harry leaned in. Kissed her wrist. And whispered, “I should’ve told her I missed her.”
Her heart cracked. Not loudly. But deep. That night, she typed one final addition to the list: Invite Isidora? She didn’t decide. Not yet. But the fact that she was even asking? That was a beginning. And Harry—who held her closer that night, who whispered you twitch in your sleep like you’re fighting for us—
Well. He didn’t know it yet. But he was about to have a birthday. And for once in his life—
He wouldn’t have to fake the smile. Not this year. Not with her. Not with the days falling into each other like warm laundry, one after the next, quiet and domestic and full of small, glittering moments that didn’t make headlines but meant everything.
It was two days before his birthday. He didn’t know it. Of course he didn’t. He knew the date, technically. Knew it in the way Harry knew all things—gruffly, quietly, with a sigh. He didn’t care for birthdays. Didn’t want gifts. Didn’t want fuss. He said he’d already had too many. Said he’d rather ignore the number and drink his coffee in peace.
So she let him. Pretended right along with him. And secretly, she planned the whole thing anyway. The morning started the same as most. Frances yowled like a Victorian ghost outside the bedroom door because Harry forgot to feed her on time.
“I have to breathe before I serve you,” he muttered, half-asleep, dragging himself out of bed in boxer briefs and one sock.
She stayed curled beneath the covers, watching him shuffle down the hallway like a man twice his age and three times as dramatic. She heard the rustle of the treat drawer. The clang of her metal bowl. Harry’s voice, exasperated, already talking to the cat like she paid rent.
“You eat better than I do. You live better than I do. You’re not even grateful.”
Frances meowed in agreement.
He shuffled back five minutes later, hair sticking up, glasses crooked, coffee already in hand. She sat up, smiling.
“Your fanbase grows stronger every day.”
“I’m held hostage in my own home.”
“By a ten-pound feline.”
“She's fifteen pounds and fully demonic.”
She leaned over and kissed his temple.
“You like her.”
He didn’t respond. But he scratched behind Frances’s ear later when he thought she wasn’t looking.
Later that afternoon, she did it. Sent the email. An email she stole from Harry's list of contacts. Just a few short lines. Nothing fancy. No emojis. Just enough to say I'm planning something for Harry. I think he'd want you there, even if he doesn't know it yet.
To: isidora.castillo@email.com
Subject: Harry
Hi. I know this might be unexpected. I’m planning something for Harry's birthday. He doesn’t know. I thought maybe...if you were able to come. Quietly. No pressure. Just thought you should know.
She sat with it for a moment. Hovered. Then hit send. Then closed the laptop before she could regret it.
She didn’t tell Harry. Instead, she made pasta. The simple kind. Garlic. Olive oil. Too much chili flake. Harry walked in from the laundry room, where he was grumbling about mismatched socks like it was a moral failing, and stopped short at the smell.
“Are you seducing me with carbs?”
“Would it work?”
He paused. Then walked over. Looped his arms around her waist from behind. “I’d sell state secrets for a good penne.”
She smiled. He kissed her shoulder. And that was that.
The day after, she bought string lights. Also a lemon tree in a pot too big to carry by herself. She had to bribe the delivery guy with a twenty to lug it up to the rooftop. She texted Maya a photo of it from the stairs,
You: This might kill me but it’s cute
Maya: If you die under a lemon tree for this man I’m telling everyone it was on purpose
That afternoon, Harry spent three hours reorganizing his bookshelf because he was tired of seeing all the spines like a lineup of failures. She watched from the couch, flipping through a magazine, as he sat cross-legged on the rug muttering things like, “This belongs in this section,” and “Why do we have three copies of The Unbearable Lightness of Being?”
“You bought them.”
“Then I clearly have problems.”
She slid off the couch and crawled across the floor to him. Wrapped her arms around his waist from behind. “You’re turning into a weird old man.”
He leaned back into her.
“I’m already there.”
That night, she got an email back. From Isidora. It was short. Tentative. But warm.
I’d like to come. If you’re sure he’d want that. I can be in the city Saturday afternoon. I’ll stay nearby. I don’t want to intrude.
She stared at it for a long time. Then whispered with a smile, “Fuck.”
Harry looked up from the couch, where he was frowning at a puzzle she didn’t know he’d started.
“What?”
“Nothing.”
“You said something.”
“Talking to Frances.”
Frances, on the windowsill, flicked her tail in betrayal. Harry narrowed his eyes. “You’re scheming.”
She crawled over, kissed him once, and said, “I’m always scheming.”
He grunted. But let it go.
Saturday morning came with soft rain. It drizzled over the windows in thin, quiet streaks. Harry was still in bed, shirtless, arm flung across her waist, one leg tangled between hers like gravity had a personal stake in her staying put. She checked the time. 7:48. Checked her phone.
Maya: I’m on snack duty right? I’m bringing the lemon chips.
Danny: Frances is banned from the cheese board. I will not be taking notes.
Francesca: Do we dress up or pretend it’s casual? Because you know me.
She smiled, tucked the phone away, and went back to pretending to be asleep. Harry shifted behind her. Grumbled, “Stop moving.”
She stayed still. By noon, the rain had passed. Harry was in his office, door open, on the phone with someone he referred to only as a vampire in Zurich. His voice was low, tight, full of clipped sarcasm and verbal knives.
She watched him from the hallway for a moment—glasses perched low, sleeves rolled up, brow furrowed in that don’t test me way that made most men wilt. He noticed her. Mouthed, Come here. She walked over. He pulled her down onto his lap, still on the call, and let his hand rest on her thigh while he said something about international compliance laws. She leaned her head against his.
And whispered, “You’re very sexy when you’re threatening people legally.”
He squeezed her knee. Didn’t miss a beat on the call. That evening, Harry went to the corner store for wine and oranges because he ate the fruit like it was going out of style.She used the time to sneak up to the rooftop.
The lemon tree was already there, still in its comically large pot, looking smug. She brought the string lights up next, one long loop at a time. Hung them from the rusted metal trellis with zip ties and silent prayers. The breeze smelled like fresh concrete and whatever plant was blooming down on the sidewalk.
She stood in the middle of the rooftop for a moment. Hands on hips. The sky was a soft purple now. The city buzzing beneath. She thought of Harry. Of the way he rubbed his eyes when he read for too long. The way he touched the small of her back when they crossed streets. The way he leaned into her hand when she brushed his hair back. Like a cat. Like a man who hadn’t let himself be held in years.
She thought of the cake downstairs in the fridge. Of the candles hidden in the sock drawer. Of Isidora, arriving tonight. Of how much Harry had changed—and hadn’t. Of how he loved her. Quietly. Deeply. In every wordless way.
She pressed her fingers to her lips. And whispered, “Happy almost birthday, old man.”
Then got to work. She finished stringing the last loop of lights just as the sky dipped fully into that soft, summery dusk—blue bleeding into lavender, the kind of light that forgave everything. Their rooftop garden had never looked better. The lemon tree sat proudly in the corner like it had always belonged, the string lights casting a honey glow over the mismatched chairs and the long wooden table she and Maya had thrifted last month.
There were little details everywhere. A bowl of clementines. Tiny gold place cards she wrote out in her best almost-cursive. Cloth napkins folded like someone who’d once watched a YouTube tutorial and mostly remembered it. The cake was downstairs in the fridge. Lemon again.
Because Harry had once said, in passing, “I'm a citrus man.”
It was almost seven when she heard Danny’s feet on the stairs.
Maya trailed behind him, both of them slightly breathless, carrying a case of wine, two bouquets, and a tiny tin of anchovies because Harry’s a freak and likes them on crackers. There's things that remind her that the man she's with is really decades older than her.
“Go!” she hissed from the rooftop entrance, waving them up. “He’s in his office. He doesn’t suspect anything.”
Danny grinned. “I’m honestly shocked. He usually suspects everything.”
“Because usually you act suspicious.”
“Rude.”
Maya stepped forward and kissed her cheek. “You look like a someone about to propose.”
She laughed. “I feel like one.”
“Where is he?”
“In his office. Still thinks it’s just dinner for the two of us.”
Danny was already uncorking a bottle. “You are not emotionally prepared for how smug he’ll be when he finds out you pulled this off.”
“Shut up and light the candles.”
About an hour later downstairs, Harry was finishing up an email with his glasses perched on the end of his nose and his mouth doing that thing it did when he was technically not grumpy, but close.
She leaned against the doorway. “Come upstairs. Five minutes.”
“Can't.”
“I'm finishing up an ema—”
“It’s warm out. The sky’s nice. Come on.”
He grunted. But got up anyway. Muttered something about “damn good weather and you not taking no for an answer” while following her up the stairs in socked feet and a soft navy button-down she’d ironed that morning.
“You look nice,” she said, glancing back.
He adjusted his glasses. “You ironed my shirt. I feel like I’m going to prom.”
“You kind of are.”
“Prom didn’t have wine.”
“Depends where you went.”
He stepped onto the roof. And stopped.
Danny was lighting the last of the tealights, Maya holding the lighter steady while balancing a glass of wine in her other hand. The table was glowing, the light pooling in soft circles, and the people waiting all looked up at once. Francesca, barefoot in a white linen dress, raised her glass. Luca smiled, already slightly flushed from wine. James—Harry’s driver—stood near the lemon tree, arm slung around his wife’s waist.
And at the far end of the table stood Isidora. She looked older than the last time he’d seen her. But only a little. Still the same eyes. Still the same posture. Still his sister.
Harry didn’t say anything. Just stood there. Silent. The kind of silence that sat heavy in the chest.
Then she stepped forward. Just two paces. Enough.
“Happy birthday, big brother.”
His jaw moved like he was going to say something sharp. But it never came. He walked over in three strides. And hugged her. One arm. Then both. Tight. The kind of hug you don’t realize you’ve been needing until your knees feel soft. He buried his face in her shoulder for a second.
She whispered something only he could hear. He nodded. Whispered something back. And the world, for a moment, shrank to just that.
Dinner was slow. Perfectly slow. Warm plates passed hand to hand. Cheese and anchovies and roasted vegetables. Pasta with lemon zest and basil. Slices of bread too crunchy and a little burnt because she got distracted talking to James’s wife about hummingbirds.
Luca told a story about someone falling off a boat in California. Francesca corrected every detail and still managed to make it funnier. Danny made a toast about Harry being “halfway to death and somehow still only at the start of being tolerable.” Harry flipped him off without looking. Everyone laughed.
Isidora slid her card across the table near the end of the meal. Didn’t make a big deal of it. Just a plain envelope. Harry opened it lazily. Then paused. Read it again. It just said,
YOU ARE STILL THE BEST THING I EVER SHARED A ROOF WITH. He folded it back up carefully. Slipped it into his breast pocket. Didn’t say anything. But she saw his eyes. Saw the way they shone.
Later, after dessert but before people started drifting to the edge of goodbye, Harry stood behind her while she refilled a pitcher of water. His hand slipped to the back of her waist.
He said it softly. “You did this?”
She smiled without turning. “I had help.”
“I don’t mean the candles and the food.”
She looked back at him. He was watching her the way he did sometimes—quietly, like it hurt.
“I mean the part where I forgot to hate my birthday.”
She reached for his hand. Laced their fingers. “You’re allowed to be loved.”
He didn’t answer. Just leaned down. Kissed her hair. And stood there with her a while longer.
Isidora found her a little later, down by the lemon tree, folding napkins that didn’t need folding.
“She really would’ve liked you,” Isidora said, unprompted.
“Who?”
“Our mom.”
She blinked. “You think?”
“I know.”
They stood in silence for a minute. Isidora handed her a piece of folded napkin that she’d somehow made worse. “I’ve missed him,” she said. “For years.”
She didn’t reply. Just set the napkin down and looked up at the sky. The stars were out. A few. Not enough. But more than none.
By the end of the night, Harry was barefoot from slipping off his socks and giving it to the girl beside him. Glass of something golden in hand. Frances asleep in a patch of moonlight. Maya and Danny curled on one of the couches in an argument about tax loopholes and types of toast. Luca singing something under his breath. Francesca singing with him, laughing.
Harry leaned against the railing, one hand braced, watching his people. Watching her. She walked over. Tucked her arm under his. He didn’t look at her. Just murmured, “Fifty-five isn’t so bad.”
She smiled. “Not when you look like this.”
He grunted. Then looked at her.
“You’re the best part.”
“What?”
“Of all of it.”
She pressed her cheek to his shoulder. “You’re drunk.”
“Maybe.”
“Say it again in the morning.”
“I will.”
And he did.
The morning after his birthday began the same way most mornings did now—soft light spilling through the loft’s massive windows, the ceiling fan creaking faintly overhead, and the weight of Harry’s arm draped over her waist like it had been there forever.
He smelled like linen and something faintly sweet—probably wine and citrus from the cake, or maybe just him. She stirred first. Only barely. Shifted enough to nudge her nose against his shoulder, already half-tangled in the sheets. One of his feet had kicked out during the night and was now hanging halfway off the bed like gravity didn’t apply to men over fifty.
She smiled. Didn’t open her eyes yet. Harry grumbled something unintelligible against her temple. Then, “M’not fifty-five.”
She laughed softly, eyes still closed. “Yes, you are.”
“Not until the cake’s gone.”
“That’s not how birthdays work.”
“Legal loophole.”
“You made that up.”
Harry groaned dramatically, then pulled her closer. His mouth found her shoulder. Kissed it once. “So when does the government come for me?”
“Probably today.”
“Bastards.”
She rolled over slowly. Faced him. He looked wrecked in the best way—hair flattened on one side, pillow creases on his cheek, stubble more salt than pepper this morning. His glasses were on the nightstand, next to the folded note from Isidora he hadn’t stopped rereading.
She brushed her thumb across his jaw. “How do you feel?”
Harry blinked, slow and thoughtful. “Full.”
“Of wine or emotion?”
“Both. But mostly you.”
She smiled. Leaned in. Kissed the corner of his mouth. They didn’t get out of bed until almost ten. Mostly because he refused to move. And partly because she let him bury his face between her shoulder blades and mumble things like you’re the reason I believe in retirement and if I die here it’ll be your fault and I’m okay with that.
When they did get up, she wore his boxers and the tee she’d slept in—black, worn thin, with the collar stretched just enough to show her collarbone. Harry padded into the kitchen shirtless, glasses on now, hair wild. He made coffee the way he always did, slow, methodical, complaining the whole time.
“You should throw out the beans when they’re this old,” he muttered.
“You bought them.”
“Didn't bring my glasses when I went to the store so got the wrong beans.”
He scooped two spoons of sugar into her mug without asking. Added cream. Stirred it with the butter knife because the spoons were in the dishwasher and he wasn’t unloading that damn thing today.
She perched on the counter. Watched him move around like the kitchen owed him money. He poured her coffee. Passed it over without a word. She smiled at him. He scowled at the butter knife. There was still lemon cake in the fridge. She took it out wordlessly. Set it on the table in its original cardboard box. Harry looked at it like it held secrets.
“We didn’t even do candles.”
“Didn't feel like doing candles.”
“I would’ve for you.”
She blinked. Heart stuttering a little.
“You kissed me instead,” she said.
He nodded. “Better wish.”
She cut two slices. Big ones. Put one in front of him. One for herself. Harry took a bite and let out the biggest sigh ever.
“You really did all that.”
She glanced up. “What?”
“The dinner. The lights. The lemon tree.”
She shrugged.
“Isidora,” he said quietly.
She looked at him now. Harry was staring at his plate. Then, slowly, he set his fork down. Sat back. “I hadn’t seen her in over a decade.”
“I know.”
“I didn’t know I needed to.”
She didn’t speak. Harry leaned forward again, elbows on the table, hands wrapped around his mug. He looked older today. Not in a bad way. Just in that very real, very human way that came after seeing someone who knew you when you were still becoming.
He looked at her. Really looked. “Thank you,” he said.
She nodded once. And because it was him—and because she knew—she didn’t say you’re welcome.Just reached across the table and brushed a crumb from the corner of his mouth. Harry caught her hand. Kissed her knuckles. Held them there for a second too long. They finished the cake in silence.
Listened to Frances thump her way down the hallway and leap onto the windowsill like she’d done it ten thousand times and would do it ten thousand more. The loft felt full. Not loud. Just full. Like home. She was halfway through her second cup of coffee when she remembered.
Paused. Set the mug down slowly. Harry noticed immediately “What?”
She blinked.
“Lucy’s wedding.”
Harry’s face didn’t change. But something behind his eyes shifted. She saw it. She always saw it.
“It's very soon,” she added. “We forgot.”
He took a breath. Leaned back. Ran a hand over his mouth. Then said, flatly, “I didn’t.”
She tilted her head.
“I ignored it,” he clarified. “That’s different.”
She nodded. Neither of them spoke for a beat. She stared down at the cake box. He looked out the window. She was the first to break.
“I only found out because Lorenzo mentioned it in Florence.”
Harry’s jaw ticked. “I know.”
“Wasn’t even subtle. Said he assumed we were going. That our names were on the list.”
Harry snorted. “We never RSVP’d.”
“Still invited us though.”
His eyes cut to hers. Sharp. Protective. “Of course she did.”
“She probably didn’t think we'd come.”
“She probably hoped you would.”
She paused. Sipped her coffee. Let the taste ground her. Harry was still staring at her. Still unreadable. Still too still. She said it quietly.
“I think we should go.”
He blinked. Then, slowly, “Why?”
She looked up. Met his eyes. And said, simply, “Because I want her to see I’m real. Not just a quote she gave.”
His expression didn’t change. But something broke open anyway, “You don’t owe her anything.”
“I know.”
“She doesn’t deserve to know you.”
“I know.”
Harry set his fork down. Hard. “She’s not kind,” he said. “She’s not even curious. She just wants to catalog you. Reduce you. Turn you into a moment she can outgrow.”
Her lips parted. But she didn’t interrupt.
“And I can’t—” he shook his head once, jaw tight, “—I can’t stomach the idea of you in a room full of people who look at you and only see me.”
His voice cracked a little. Just at the edges. “She doesn’t get to do that.”
“I know.”
She reached for him. Slow. Took his hand. He let her. She squeezed once.
“I just want to go,” she said, “because what we have won’t be erased.”
He looked at her. Breathed through his nose.And said, low and tired and still full of love, “You are the only real thing I’ve got.”
She leaned forward. Kissed his hand. Then his cheek. Then sat beside him and rested her head on his shoulder. They sat there like that for a long time. Letting the morning settle. Letting the idea of it take root. Letting the tension dissolve into the quiet.
Later, he folded laundry while she organized the kitchen drawer he kept calling “the Bermuda Triangle of expired coupons and batteries that don’t work.”
She found a receipt from 2020. They argued over whether or not to keep a set of napkin rings shaped like tiny gold monkeys. He made her tea without asking. She massaged his shoulder when it started to cramp.
He laid down for a ten-minute nap that turned into forty-five. She tucked a pillow under his head. Frances laid on his chest like a judgmental paperweight. When he woke up, she was watching a documentary about a tree that had survived four natural disasters.
He sat beside her. Didn’t say anything. Just took her hand. Held it. Pressed a kiss to her wrist. They didn’t talk about the wedding again that day. But it lived in the background—like a suitcase by the door. Not packed yet. Not opened. Just there. Waiting.
Harry kissed her twice before bed. Once on the mouth, like always. And once, more softly, on the scar behind her ear. She didn’t ask how he knew it was there. He didn’t offer. But he pulled her into his chest that night tighter than usual. Held her longer. Breathed slower.
And when she murmured, “We don’t have to go,” he just said, quietly,
“I’ll go anywhere with you.”
And he meant it. Which is why, two mornings later, Harry stood in the doorway of their bedroom with his reading glasses perched low on his nose, holding up a pair of his own socks like they had personally betrayed him.
“Tell me again why we’re flying commercial.”
She was cross-legged on the bed, hair still damp from the shower, folding her underwear with a kind of chaotic focus that could only come from mild packing stress. Frances sat beside her, very much in the way, laying directly on top of one of Harry’s folded sweaters like she paid taxes.
“Because,” she said, without looking up, “it’s an adventure.”
“I have a jet.”
“I know.”
“It’s not an ego thing.”
She looked up. “I didn’t say it was.”
“It’s for convenience. Comfort. Logistics.”
“You mean silent boarding, your own espresso machine, and no middle seat panic attacks?”
Harry narrowed his eyes, then tossed the socks dramatically into the suitcase, not answering. She grinned. He scowled. Frances yawned and stretched across his dress shirt like she, too, was choosing chaos.
Danny found out two hours later. Harry had him on speakerphone in the office, the call mostly about a trade negotiation that had gone south until Harry muttered something like “we’ll circle back after I’m back from the Cape.”
The pause was long enough to echo. Danny’s voice cracked through the speaker like it was personally offended.
“Back from where?”
Harry sighed. “Cape Cod.”
Danny’s voice shot up an octave. “You’re going?”
“Yes.”
“To Lucy's wedding?”
“Apparently.”
“You told me you were ignoring it.”
“She changed my mind.”
“Who?”
Harry tilted his head toward the bedroom where she was currently trying to Tetris three kinds of travel sized serums and a jade roller into a toiletry bag like it was a survival kit.
“My girlfriend,” he said dryly.
Danny groaned. “Oh my God, Harry. You’re going to be on the cover of People magazine before the weekend ends. They’ll call it ‘Revenge Romance’ or something equally disgusting.”
Harry didn’t flinch. She, however, popped her head into the office, holding up two dresses. “Which one?”
Harry pointed at the darker one without hesitation.
Danny kept talking. “Lucy's going to lose her mind when she sees you two together.”
“She’ll survive.”
“You’re underestimating her.”
Harry turned the speaker off with one tap. Not out of rudeness. Just out of peace. Then looked up at her. “I like the neckline on that one.”
She smiled. “Then it’s going in.”
Packing took longer than expected. Mostly because she kept second-guessing everything she pulled from her closet.
“This looks too…serious.”
“That’s a black turtleneck.”
“Exactly. I look like I’m coming to audit the vows.”
Harry was stretched out on the bed by this point, one arm behind his head, watching her in the same quiet way he read long articles about economic policy—with slow, deliberate attention and the occasional smirk.
“Just wear something you feel good in.”
She pulled another hanger out. “I don’t feel good in anything. Or look good in anything.”
“That’s not true.”
She paused. Looked at him. He was staring at her in that way he always did when she wasn’t looking.
“You always look good in my shirts,” he said.
She smiled. “Not wearing your shirt to the wedding.”
He stood. Crossed the room. Stopped behind her and rested his chin on her shoulder. “You’d look better than every bride in history.”
She scoffed. “Okay, now you’re just lying.”
Harry kissed the back of her neck. “You’re the only truth I’ve got.”
She rolled her eyes. But the blush gave her away. He took her shopping the next afternoon.
She hadn’t planned on it—had told him not to worry, that she’d figure something out—but Harry, in his infinite stubbornness, had watched her spiral for two straight nights and finally said, “Get dressed. You need air and options.”
So they went. Not to anywhere flashy. Just a boutique a few blocks away, one she’d only ever walked past, the kind of place that didn’t have mannequins, just racks of linen and silk and things that looked better in candlelight.
Harry held the door for her. Didn’t hover. Just sat in the corner with his reading glasses on, answering emails with a phone in one hand and holding her tea in the other, occasionally looking up just to see how she moved in something.
“Too tight?” he asked once.
She twisted in the mirror. “Too Catholic school.”
“Too short?”
“Too prom.”
He looked up from his phone, slid the glasses off, and said, “Show me.”
She stepped out from behind the curtain in a dark green slip dress, simple and soft with a low back and thin straps. Harry blinked. Slowly set his phone down. Didn’t speak.
“Too much?” she asked, fingers brushing the fabric.
He stood. Walked over. Circled her once. Ran a hand lightly over her waist.
Then whispered, “Too perfect.”
She blushed so hard the dressing room mirror fogged.
Harry chose an old suit. He told her this over toast.
“I’m not buying anything new.”
“You sure?”
“I’m not giving that woman another dollar’s worth of silk.”
She laughed. Harry didn’t.
“I wore this suit when I negotiated my first billion-dollar deal,” he said.
She raised a brow. “That supposed to impress me?”
“It was.”
She shook her head, smiling into her coffee. The night before the flight, Harry did a full “old man prep sweep” of the apartment. Locked every window. Checked the oven three times. Told Frances he loved her like she was about to join the Marines. Then folded their passports and tucked them in a leather envelope she didn’t even know he owned.
“You’ve done this before,” she said, watching him zip her suitcase with more care than he gave quarterly earnings.
Harry looked up. “Many times.”
She blinked.
“Which means I do it right.”
“You think I’m going to forget my ID or something?”
“I think if someone tries to mess with you at security, I’m going to flip a table.”
She laughed. “Harry—”
“I’m serious. I know you said it’s supposed to be an adventure, but if some twelve-year-old TSA agent pulls you aside for a random check, I will make headlines.”
She crossed the room. Wrapped her arms around his waist. Looked up. “You’re going to be fine.”
“I’m not worried about me.”
“I know.”
She kissed him. Slow. Soft. He kissed her back like it was the only thing he’d packed. Their flight left the next morning.
Frances was left in the care of Maya, who came by at 6am with two bags full of bagels and two books Harry had recommended a month ago.
“Take care of her,” Harry said, petting the cat like he was going off to war.
Maya rolled her eyes. “She’s not dying.”
“She’s sensitive.”
“I'll take good care of her.”
“Good luck.”
Then he hugged Maya—quickly, like he still wasn’t quite sure how to handle being fond of people under thirty. They took a car to the airport. It was quiet.
Harry kept one hand on her thigh the entire time. Not possessive. Just present. At the gate, he watched people board like they were enemies. Thank god this flight was less than two hours.
She nudged him gently. “You’re doing that thing.”
“What thing?”
“The people-hating thing.”
“I’m observing.”
“You’re scowling.”
He didn’t deny it. She slipped her hand into his.
“Just think,” she said. “In two hours, we’ll be in Cape Cod, probably eating something we can’t pronounce.”
Harry smiled. Then kissed her temple.
“God, I love you.”
She smiled too. “Good.”
They boarded together. Found their first-class seats. Harry adjusted her blanket before his own. She fell asleep on his shoulder before the plane even left the runway. Stating she needs to rest her eyes.
He stayed awake. Not because he was nervous anymore. But because he wanted to be the first thing she saw when she woke up. And when she did—about twenty minutes into the flight, eyes bleary, smile soft—he handed her a warm towel from the tray and said,
“Adventure’s going well so far.”
She laughed. Pressed a kiss to his jaw. And settled in again. Still flying. Still with him. Still in love. Frances would’ve been horrified. But they didn’t care. The plane landed just after noon. A short flight. Barely long enough for a second nap. Still, Harry stood first, shielding her with one arm and retrieving her bag with the other like turbulence had personally offended him.
“You didn’t even sleep,” she said, watching him shove his own carry-on down from the overhead bin.
Harry shrugged. “Didn’t need to.”
“You just stared at me the whole flight?”
“I stare at you all the time.”
“You’re such a creep.”
He handed her the bag with one hand and kissed the side of her head with the other. “You like it.”
She did. Of course she did. He grabbed everything. Obviously. Her tote, his own bag, the two rolling suitcases. The air outside the plane was crisp. Clean. Different from Manhattan’s density. Cape Cod smelled like salt, pine, and money that had been washed a few times to look like old summer charm.
The airport was small—tiny, really. More like a lobby with a landing strip. No crowd, no paparazzi, just a few other travelers and one girl standing near the restroom sign, jaw halfway to the floor.
She didn’t notice the girl staring right away. Too distracted by the way Harry adjusted her tote on his shoulder, muttering something about the straps being cheap as hell and you need a new one, I’ll get it. But when she did glance up—only for a second—she clocked the girl staring. Wide-eyed. Frozen.
And for a brief moment, she wondered if it was a Harry Castillo thing. It happened sometimes. Especially in Manhattan. Especially when he wore those jeans that sat a little too well on his hips. Once, a woman in Whole Foods dropped an entire rotisserie chicken when Harry bent over to grab organic lentils. So she just smiled politely. Turned away. Let it go.
She didn’t know that the girl was one of Lucy’s bridesmaids. Didn’t know that she’d just recognized him—the man Lucy used to cry about after wine, the one she said ruined her for love, the one they never thought would actually show. And she definitely didn’t know that as they walked toward the exit, Harry’s suit bag trailing behind him and her hand casually resting at the base of his back, the girl raised her phone.
Snapped a photo. And sent it. To Lucy.
Lucy was in a robe. Feet in warm water.
One hand holding a mimosa. The other extended for a manicure. Her bridesmaids were buzzing around the spa suite—some taking selfies, others coordinating the evening's rehearsal schedule.
She hadn’t looked at her phone in twenty minutes. Then it buzzed. One photo. One message.
He’s here. With her.
Lucy stared at the screen. Didn’t blink. Didn’t speak.
Her nail tech paused, mid-polish. “Everything okay?”
Lucy forced a smile. “Yeah. Just…a surprise.”
Back at the airport, her and Harry were standing on the curb, waiting for the car James had sent.
Harry had his sunglasses on. The soft, rounded pair he only wore on vacations. She had tucked herself into his side like a vine curling around a stone column.
She reached into her bag. “I have gum.”
Harry raised a brow. “You think I want gum?”
“You keep grinding your teeth.”
Harry didn’t flinch. “So do most billionaires.”
“Not like you.”
He plucked the gum from her hand. “Still taking it.”
“Uh huh.”
The breeze picked up. She tucked a piece of hair behind her ear. Harry did the other side for her, knuckles brushing her cheek.
“You cold?” he asked.
“No.”
“You will be.”
“I’m not—”
He slipped off his coat and wrapped it around her shoulders anyway. It was soft. Black. Worn to hell. It smelled like him. She rolled her eyes but didn’t protest.
Harry leaned close. “Always cold when you travel.”
“Not true.”
“Your hands were freezing on the plane.”
“Oh were they?”
“Exactly.”
He smirked. Then leaned in. Kissed her temple once. Soft. Solid. Like he wasn’t thinking about anyone else. And he wasn’t. The car arrived ten minutes later. It wasn’t James—just a driver he’d trained, sent out from New York two days earlier. The man greeted them with a nervous smile, took Harry’s bag with shaking hands, and said, “It’s an honor, sir. Big fan of your—um—your…”
“Don’t,” Harry said, sliding into the backseat with her already curled beside him.
“Right,” the driver nodded, closing the door carefully. “Just driving. Got it.”
Harry didn’t talk on the ride. Didn’t look at his phone. Just stared out the window, one hand resting on her thigh, thumb brushing absent-minded circles. She watched the coastline pass. Noticed the clapboard houses. The white fences. The kids on bikes. It was all too calm. Too perfect. Harry noticed it too.
“This place is fake,” he muttered.
She laughed. “It’s summer money, Harry. It’s supposed to look like a magazine ad.”
He scoffed. “I see a single distressed wooden sign that says ‘live laugh love’ and I’m burning it down.”
Their rental was a cottage on a quiet street, chosen by her and Harry. They found it scrolling late one night.
“You have taste,” Harry admitted as he walked through the door, setting the bags down and immediately checking the locks.
“I know.”
“Where do you think the wine is?”
“Fridge. Hopefully .”
“Your taste just improved.”
She wandered toward the kitchen while Harry made a full perimeter sweep, checking windows and blinds and muttering under his breath about open-concept homes being unsafe.
She poured him a glass. He accepted it with a kiss to her temple. They didn’t unpack. Just left everything where it was, kicked off their shoes, and collapsed onto the too-soft couch in the living room with her legs thrown over his lap and Frances’s absence suddenly very noticeable.
“I miss her,” she said, scrolling through the photo Maya had sent earlier of the cat watching Jeopardy like she understood it.
“She doesn’t miss us.”
“She misses me.”
“She’s probably napping on my shirts.”
“You left one out for her on purpose.”
Harry didn’t reply. Just sipped his wine. Pulled her closer. They didn’t mention Lucy. Not yet. Not on the first night. Not when the air smelled like sea salt and the windows were open and Harry’s hand stayed on her hip like a reassurance.
He kissed her shoulder when she brushed her teeth. Folded her pajamas before she wore them. Let her fall asleep first. Then laid there for a long time. Staring at the ceiling. Thinking. But not about Lucy. About her. And how much he hated the thought of anyone like Lucy looking at someone like her with even a fraction of judgment.
The wedding was tomorrow. But for now—
She was in his arms. The air was clean. And he was still hers. Disgustingly, completely, hers. Even in Cape Cod. Even in enemy territory. And he wouldn’t trade it for anything.
They woke slowly the next day. The kind of morning where time didn’t press. Where the sunlight came in gentle and golden through gauzy curtains, brushing across the hardwood like a whisper. The breeze smelled like sea salt. Somewhere outside, a bird was having a very loud opinion. Harry’s arm was draped across her waist, his face still tucked into the curve of her neck, breath warm and steady. She shifted slightly.
And without opening his eyes, he said, “Stay.”
She smiled. “I have to pee.”
“Pee fast. Come back.”
She slid out from beneath the covers, padded barefoot to the bathroom. When she returned, Harry was lying on his back now, eyes open, hair a complete mess. One arm behind his head. The other reaching for her without looking.
She climbed back in, curled beside him. They laid there like that for a while. Neither of them speaking.
Until—
“I’ve been thinking,” he said, voice still low and raspy with sleep.
“That’s always dangerous.”
He ignored her. His thumb was tracing a slow, idle line along the inside of her forearm.
“If I asked you to marry me,” he murmured, “would you say yes?”
She turned her head. Blinking. Heart doing a small, ridiculous stutter. He wasn’t even looking at her. Just watching the ceiling like it might hold the answer for him.
“Harry.”
“Hmm?”
“You’re asking me that on the morning we’re going to your ex’s wedding?”
“Timing’s terrible, yeah.”
“But?”
“But I need to know.”
She stared at him. Tried to read whatever storm was happening behind his eyes. He was always like this—softest when he was trying not to be. Asking the hardest questions like they were offhand comments. She reached for his hand. Laced their fingers. Squeezed once.
“Yeah,” she said softly. “I’d say yes.”
Harry turned his head. Looked at her. Not surprised. Just…relieved. And stupidly, disgustingly in love. He leaned in. Kissed her once, just barely.
“I wouldn’t make you wear white,” he murmured. “Unless you wanted to.”
She laughed. “You think I’d let you have a say in what I wear?”
He grunted. “True.”
She laid her head on his chest. “Maybe I’ll wear red,” she said.
“Whatever you wear, I’ll fucking pass out.”
“Oh you're into it.”
“I’m into you.” That earned a grin. And then—
The shower. Which, to be clear, had not been intended to be that kind of shower. But Harry was a menace. He turned on the water first. Made sure it wasn’t scalding. Set her towel on the warmer like a man who had been raised to expect nothing and now gave everything. When she stepped in—already flushed from the warmth and still a little dazed from what he’d asked in bed—he pulled her close under the spray, arms sliding around her waist.
“I’m nervous,” she whispered.
Harry kissed her temple. “I know.”
“I don’t want to see her.”
“You don’t have to.”
“But I will.”
Harry didn’t reply. Just reached for the shampoo and started massaging it into her hair like it was the most natural thing in the world. She relaxed under his touch.
“You’ll stay with me the whole time?”
His fingers moved down the back of her neck. “I’ll be glued to your hip.”
“I mean it, Harry.”
“So do I.”
They washed slowly. Towels traded. Water beading down his back. Her fingers brushing the scar on his nose, the one he still refused to explain. She sat on the bathroom counter in a robe while he shaved.
He grumbled when he nicked himself. Again. She offered a Hello Kitty bandaid from her travel pouch. He said no. She stuck it on him anyway.
“You’re impossible,” he muttered.
“You’re bleeding.”
“It’s a scratch.”
“It’s dignity loss.”
Harry glared. But he didn’t take it off.
She got dressed first. Dark green silk. Simple. Clean. Slit at the side that hit just high enough to feel daring, low enough to stay elegant. Thin straps. Slightly open back. Harry just stared when she stepped out of the bedroom. Didn’t say anything at first. Just let his eyes move over her like prayer. Then—
“You’re not real.”
She adjusted one of the straps. “It’s just a dress.”
“It’s a crime.”
“You’ve seen it before.”
“Not like this.”
She turned.
“Zipper?”
He stepped forward. Pulled it up slowly. Then leaned down. Kissed the back of her neck.
“You sure about this?” he murmured.
She met his eyes in the mirror.
“As long as you’re next to me.”
Harry changed next. Black suit. Old. Worn in the elbows. A little snug across the shoulders now. He buttoned it slowly. Pulled on the white silk tie she’d picked out. She watched from the armchair, chin on her hand.
“You look handsome.”
“I look like a man going to an ex’s wedding.”
“You look like a man with the best girl in the room.”
That got a twitch at his mouth. He checked his watch. “Car should be here soon.”
She stood. Smoothed the front of his jacket. “Do I need to bring anything?”
“You’re enough.”
She rolled her eyes. “You’re being sappy.”
“I’m allowed to be.”
“Since when?”
“Since you said yes.”
She didn’t reply. Just pressed her forehead to his chest. And for a minute, they stayed like that. No wedding. No Lucy. No noise. Just them. And the quiet. At exactly 3:55, the car pulled up. Harry held the door open for her. She slipped in. Then he followed. Settled beside her. Took her hand. Laced their fingers. Neither of them spoke.
But in that silence— In that breathless, careful quiet— There was everything. Even the parts they hadn’t said yet. Even the storm that might wait ahead. Because it didn’t matter. They were already here. Together. And nothing—absolutely nothing—was going to take that away. Not even today.
The car rolled to a stop at the edge of a manicured gravel drive. It was a backyard venue—tasteful, coastal, charming in that I have generational wealth kind of way. Harry stepped out first. Buttoned his old dark coat. Reached back in for her hand.
“You ready?” he asked.
“Sure,” she said. “But let’s go.”
He held her hand tightly. And together, they stepped into enemy territory. The first thing she noticed was the breeze. Soft. Warm. Salt-laced. It danced along the hem of her dark green dress and tugged at the edges of Harry’s collar.
The second thing she noticed was how quiet it got the second they walked in. Conversation dulled. Laughter paused. Like someone had pressed mute.Harry didn’t flinch. Didn’t hesitate. Didn’t even glance at the people who were suddenly pretending not to stare. He simply tucked her hand tighter into the crook of his arm and walked like he owned the place. She matched his stride. Head high. Shoulders back. Even if her stomach was buzzing like a hornet’s nest.
The rows of white folding chairs were slowly filling. There was an open bar tucked under a pergola and floral arrangements shaped like they cost someone’s salary. A small quartet played something indistinct and romantic in the distance.
Her heels sank slightly into the grass as they crossed toward the seating area, passing a man who looked like he recognized Harry but wasn’t sure whether to say it out loud.
Then—
“Holy shit,” someone whispered.
She didn’t look. Harry did. Just once. Just enough for whoever said it to shrink back into their seat. They settled into the third row. Close enough to make a point. Far enough to keep some distance. Harry sat beside her like a bodyguard in a suit that didn’t quite fit anymore, jaw tight, sunglasses still on.
“Do I need to start punching groomsmen?” he murmured.
She shook her head. Then leaned in and whispered, “This might’ve been a mistake.”
Harry turned. Brushed a thumb against her wrist. “It wasn’t.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I’d rather be here—with you—than wondering what would’ve happened if we’d stayed home.”
She stared at him. Let the words settle. Then nodded once. Still unsure. But less alone.
Then— She saw her. Livia. Hair too shiny. Dress too pink. Expression flickering from smug to what the actual fuck the second her eyes landed on them. She nudged Paolo. Paolo blinked like he’d seen a ghost.
Harry’s hand slid across her lap. Rested firmly on her thigh.
“Ignore them,” he said.
“They’re annoying.”
“They’re pathetic.”
She smiled faintly. Noticed Livia turning sharply away when Harry finally glanced in her direction like a man debating whether to call in an airstrike. They looked absurd. The kind of rich people who got caught cheating and just threw more parties to distract from it. Paolo looked like he’d aged five years. Livia’s smile didn’t reach her eyes. Good.
“Harry?”
A familiar voice. She turned. Francesca. In a light blue dress, hair piled up messily, holding a program and blinking like she couldn’t believe it. Beside her, Luca looked equally stunned.
“I thought you weren’t coming,” Francesca whispered.
Harry stood. Kissed her cheek. “Changed my mind.”
Francesca glanced at her. Then at Harry. Then back again. Her face softened.
“You both look incredible,” Francesca said.
She smiled. “We’re trying to survive.”
Luca snorted. “Welcome to the party.”
They all took their seats together. Four in a row.
Harry kept his hand on her leg the entire time. Not possessively. Just…there. Like a grounding wire. Then—
Lucy’s father walked past. Tall. Lean. Hair slicked back. He gave Harry a long, pointed glare. She caught it. So did Harry. But he didn’t blink. Didn’t rise. Didn’t acknowledge him. Just stared back until the man looked away. Lucy’s mother followed seconds later. And—surprisingly—smiled.
“Harry,” she said softly, stopping beside their row. “I didn’t think we’d see you.”
“You have,” Harry said flatly.
She waited. Braced. But Lucy’s mother turned to her. Offered a hand.
“You must be her.”
She blinked.
“Welcome.”
Then she leaned in slightly, her voice low. “You’ve given him softness. I can see it from here.”
Then she walked away. Harry blinked once.
“You okay?” she asked.
“I need a drink,” he muttered.
The ceremony was starting. People quieted. The quartet shifted to something sweet and slow. A woman stepped up to the front with a microphone.
“Please rise.”
Everyone stood. She adjusted her dress. Held her breath. The groomsmen started to file out. One by one. She watched with vague interest until—
Her heart stopped. The groom. Tall. Dark hair. Blue eyes. A jaw she hadn’t seen in almost ten years. And she knew him. Every part. It was John. Her John. Not hers, obviously. Not now. Not ever.
But—
The same John who used to carry trays at her father's charity events. The same John who slipped cupcakes into her room after dinner when her mother said she was “getting pudgy.” The same John who once found her crying in the garden after a party and told her that “some people survive by being cruel—and some survive by hiding.”
The same John who had looked at her like she was breakable. Now— He was walking down the aisle. Looking confident. Looking happy. Looking like he’d been reborn. She didn’t breathe. Harry leaned down.
“You okay?”
She nodded too fast. Too tight. “Yeah.”
She didn’t say anything else. Didn’t say I know the groom. Didn’t say he used to know every version of me I’ve tried to forget. Because she didn’t know what it meant yet. Didn’t know what it changed. But her hands were shaking.
And Harry noticed. Of course he did. He reached for them. Covered hers with both of his. Held them. Didn’t ask again. Then came the bridesmaids. Tall. Polished. Looking like Instagram filters. She recognized one. Maybe from the airport. Didn’t matter.
Then— Lucy. On her father’s arm. In a dress that looked like it had a publicist. Chin high. Smile soft. Confident. Like she knew what she was walking toward. Like this was the ending she’d always wanted.
The guests all turned. Photos snapped. The moment paused. Lucy’s eyes swept the rows. And landed on Harry. And her.
Lucy faltered. Just slightly. One step. But it was enough. She caught it. So did Harry next to her. His grip on her hand tightened. She squeezed back.
Lucy recovered. Kept walking. They all sat. The officiant cleared their throat. And the ceremony began.
But she— She couldn’t stop staring at John. Couldn’t stop remembering. Couldn’t stop thinking—
This is the man who saw me before I had to become someone else. And he’s marrying Lucy. And I am sitting here beside Harry fucking Castillo. And none of this feels real.
She didn’t say anything during the ceremony. Didn’t speak. Didn’t whisper. Just sat still. Silent. Thinking. And Harry didn’t press. He just kept holding her hand. Steady. Warm. Like a vow.
And when she leaned into him slightly— When she let her head rest on his shoulder for just a moment— He pressed a kiss to her temple. Didn’t speak. Didn’t need to. He didn’t know the whole story. Not yet. But he could feel it. Something had shifted.
And whatever it was— He would protect her from it. Even if he had to do it without knowing the name. Because she was his. And that was the only thing that mattered. Even here. Even now. Even at his ex’s wedding. With the past walking down the aisle. And still— He wouldn’t have traded it. Not for anything.
The officiant cleared his throat with the kind of authority that suggested he’d been officiating weddings for thirty years and had a story about every one of them.
“Dearly beloved,” he began, the sun catching on his glasses as the wind shifted just slightly, rustling the linen of Lucy’s dress and the program in everyone's laps. “We are gathered here today to witness the union of two souls.”
She exhaled slowly through her nose. Harry still had one hand over both of hers. Thumb brushing the side of her palm absentmindedly, like he wasn’t really thinking about it. Like it was just… instinct now. Natural.
She didn’t dare look at Lucy yet. She was still reeling from John. From the wave of old memory that had crashed like a slap across the front of her brain.
John. The man who used to pass her cookies wrapped in napkins when she wasn’t allowed dessert. The man who once lent her a sweater when her mother made her wear a dress two sizes too small. The man who had seen her at her loneliest, at her skinniest, at her most afraid—and never once judged her for it.
And now— He was holding Lucy’s hands. She tried to focus on the priest.
“In love, we find not perfection,” the man was saying, “but acceptance. Grace. Patience. A partner not to complete us—but to recognize what is already complete.”
Harry shifted beside her. Not uncomfortably. Not restlessly. Just enough to slide his arm across the back of her chair. His thumb brushed the bare skin of her shoulder. He didn’t look at Lucy. Not once.
But Lucy…
Lucy kept looking at him. It wasn’t obvious. Not overt. But she saw it.
The way Lucy's eyes flicked past the guests while the priest talked. The way her fingers tightened around John’s just slightly, like she’d remembered something. Like Lucy remembered him.
It made her stomach coil. Not with jealousy. Not even with anger. Just that old, sinking ache of being seen—but not seen back. Like Lucy still didn’t quite register that Harry wasn’t hers anymore. That he hadn’t been for a long time. That even when he had been, he’d never been hers like this.
Because now—he was sitting beside someone who knew what kind of coffee he liked when he was stressed. Who knew he rubbed his temples when he was thinking about old memories. Who knew he talked in his sleep when he was dreaming about his mother.
Lucy had known a version of Harry. The polished one. The corporate myth. The one with cufflinks and PR statements and a tongue sharp enough to bankrupt cities.
But her? The woman sitting next to him knew the one who forgot his towel after a shower. The one who sang along to Sinatra when he thought no one was listening. The one who made her lemon toast at midnight and read novels over her shoulder just to be close.
The priest continued. “Now, Lucy and John have chosen to write their own vows,” he said. “Lucy?”
Lucy smiled. A soft, composed smile. Took the mic from him with a little thank you and turned to face John. She braced. Lucy began.
“I don’t know if I believe in soulmates,” she said, voice clear, echoing faintly beneath the pergola strung with white roses. “I don’t know if I believe in fate. But I do believe in timing. In second chances. In the way people can walk into your life twice—and the second time, you’re ready.”
Lucy paused. Smiled again. She felt Harry’s hand twitch slightly. Not much. Just… enough.
“I’ve known a lot of versions of myself,” Lucy continued. “Some I loved. Some I didn’t. But you, John… you saw all of them. And you didn’t flinch. You waited for me. You held space. You didn’t rush me toward who you wanted me to be. You just let me arrive.”
She blinked slowly. She felt it before she saw it. That glance. Quick. Surgical. Right in their direction. Lucy didn’t say Harry’s name. Of course not. But her eyes found him. Mid-sentence. And stayed there for a second too long.
“I used to think love was a game of leverage,” Lucy said, still looking straight through the crowd. “Power. Strategy. But it’s not. It’s knowing that even when someone sees your ugliest, they’ll stay.”
John squeezed her hand. Lucy looked back at him. And she didn’t miss the way John followed Lucy's gaze. How his brow furrowed. Just barely. How his eyes flicked—quick, sharp—to the third row. Where Harry sat like a statue, expression unreadable, lips pressed into a single line.
Harry hadn’t looked at Lucy once. John noticed. She could see him noticing.
Lucy finished her vows with a smile, her voice gentler now. “You make me feel like I don’t have to perform anymore. And that’s the greatest gift I’ve ever received.”
Polite applause followed. A few sniffles. The priest smiled.
Then—“John?”
He took the mic with a nod. Looked at Lucy. And for a second—Just a second—She saw it. The calculation. The question.
Like John was still replaying that glance she’d made. Like he was realizing that maybe—just maybe—his bride was still haunted and not his. He recovered quickly.
“Lucy,” he said. “You are—chaos.”
The crowd laughed. Lucy rolled her eyes. But John smiled warmly.
“You are also order. You are too many thoughts at once. You are late-night texts about documentaries. You are Sunday walks that last six hours. You are questions no one else asks, and the woman who taught me that love isn’t about feeling safe—it’s about choosing to stay.”
She exhaled. Because this was real. John loved her. You could tell. Even if Lucy hadn’t looked at him the whole time. Even if Lucy still hadn’t quite let go.
The girl next to Harry turned slightly. Looked at him. And there he was. Watching her. Not the vows. Not the bride. Just—her. His eyes met hers. And she smiled. Tired. Amused. Something darker beneath it.
Harry leaned down. Brushed his lips over her ear.
“She could be marrying God,” he whispered, “and I’d still want you.”
Her chest stuttered. She turned to him.
“Harry—”
“No,” he said. “I mean it. There’s no version of this where I look back.”
She swallowed. Then nodded. And faced forward again.
Just in time for the rings. The rest of the ceremony passed in soft waves. The officiant blessed the union. The wind picked up. A bridesmaid’s dress blew sideways and someone’s baby started crying. But the couple didn’t notice.
They kissed. Everyone clapped. And the music started. But she—she didn’t feel relieved. She felt like a door had just opened somewhere behind her. And whatever was waiting on the other side? Was walking toward her now. Quiet. Patient. Familiar. And wearing a tux. The moment the music began, the spell broke.
Chairs scraped against the deck. Shoes shifted. People stood, stretched, whispered. The sky overhead was soft and gold, the kind of sunset only coastal towns could pull off, and yet no one seemed to notice it.
They were too busy watching them. Too busy pretending not to watch them. Harry and the girl he came with. The woman who wasn’t Lucy.
Francesca leaned over as she rose, adjusting the straps of her pale green dress and whispering, “Well, that was subtle.”
She blinked. “What?”
Francesca nodded in Lucy’s direction. “The longing gazes. The not-so-covert micromanaging of your proximity to her ex. Classic wedding pettiness.”
She sighed softly.
Luca, straightening his suit jacket on Francesca's other side, added, “At least you got a front-row seat to the performance of the year. She almost had me with the ‘I don’t believe in soulmates’ bit.”
Harry didn’t comment. He stood up slowly, buttoned his suit jacket, and then—without looking at Lucy—offered his hand to his girl. She took it without hesitation.
“Let’s go,” he murmured, low and quiet, for her ears only.
She nodded. “Yeah. Let’s.”
Francesca and Luca exchanged glances, already reading the room, “We’ll see you at the reception?” Francesca asked, her tone laced with something knowing, something gentle.
Harry gave a single, quiet nod. “Of course.”
They parted ways at the edge of the deck, Harry guiding her toward the small gravel lot where their sleek black car waited—a rental, but decent. The driver, ever thoughtful, had made sure the air conditioning was already on.
Harry opened the door for her first. As always. She slid in quietly. Waited until he joined her and closed the door before letting herself breathe. The car pulled away slowly. Soft jazz played through the speakers.
She stared at her lap. Harry watched her for a second. Then said, “You were quiet back there.”
She nodded once. Still didn’t look at him. His hand found hers. Thumb brushing the top of it. Steady. Warm. Present.
“Wanna talk about it?” he asked, voice quiet. Patient.
She nodded again. Then—finally—turned to him.
“I know John.”
Harry didn’t react. Didn’t flinch. Just kept holding her hand.
“I mean—” she continued, voice soft, a little hoarse, “I knew him. When I was a kid. He used to work the events at our house. Before everything... before my dad got caught. Before the headlines. The bankruptcy. Teddy—”
She stopped. Swallowed. Harry shifted toward her slightly, his body angled, eyes locked on hers. She exhaled, steadying herself.
“I was, like, fifteen? Sixteen? My mom… she didn’t let me eat. Not really. Not carbs. Not sugar. Not anything that would make me ‘pudgy.’ She was obsessed with how I looked, how we looked as a family. And John—he worked the kitchen during these fundraisers. He’d sneak me food. Muffins. Sandwiches. Once, a piece of birthday cake.
Harry said nothing. But his hand tightened around hers. She didn’t cry. She didn’t need to. She’d done all her crying years ago.
“He was kind,” she whispered. “I didn’t think about him for years. Not until I saw him. In that tux. Walking down the aisle. Holding Lucy’s hand like he’d never done anything else.”
Harry was still watching her. Unmoving. So she continued.
“I didn’t want to tell you before,” she said, “because it didn’t feel important. But now... I don’t know. I think maybe it is. Not because I feel anything for him. I don’t. But because it felt... full circle, in a way. Like I’d walked into someone else’s story by accident.”
Harry reached for her other hand. Held both now. His gaze was steady.
“Can I tell you something?” he said, his voice low and slow in the dim car light.
She nodded. Harry took a breath. “I love you.”
She blinked.
“I know that’s not an answer,” he said. “But it’s the root of every one I could give you. I love you. Not in the convenient way. Not in the performative way. I love you in the you-could-set-this-car-on-fire-and-I’d-still-crawl-through-glass-to-get-to-you way.”
Her chest stuttered.
“I don’t care who he is,” Harry said. “I don’t care what he did for you back then. I’m grateful someone was kind to you when you needed it. But that’s all it is. That’s all it’ll ever be. A footnote.”
She swallowed. “You’re not mad?”
His brows lifted. “Why the fuck would I be mad? Because the man marrying my ex was decent to the woman I love when she was a child?”
Her lips curved, just slightly. “I don’t know. You get a little murdery sometimes.”
Harry smirked.
“That’s true.”
He leaned forward. Kissed the top of her hand.
Then added, “But not this time.”
She looked at him. Really looked.
He was in an old suit. The one he wore when they first met, she realized. The one with the faint thread pulled near the seam and the button that was slightly chipped. He hadn’t bought anything new. He wouldn’t have—not for this. Not for Lucy. But somehow, the suit looked better now. Softer. Lived-in. He looked better now. Because he was hers.
“Thank you,” she said quietly.
“For what?”
“For listening.”
Harry brushed his thumb across the inside of her wrist. “For always.”
They drove in silence after that. Not heavy silence. Just the kind that lingered gently between people who understood each other without needing to fill the air with more than presence.
When they reached the venue—an ocean-side estate with gauze-draped tents and a horizon that looked painted—they sat in the car for another moment before getting out.
“You okay?” he asked.
She nodded. Then opened the door. And stepped out into the kind of dusk that felt biblical. Harry followed. Buttoned his jacket. Then looked at her.
“You’re the only good thing in my life” he said softly.
She smiled. Took his hand. And together, they walked up the steps toward the reception. Ready. Unshaken. Untouchable. Even here. Especially here.
The reception was tucked behind the main house—string lights draped between trees, linen-covered tables arranged in soft curves around a makeshift dance floor that had clearly been installed just for the event. The ocean was just visible over the ridge, the breeze warm and salt-sweet, the kind of night someone might dream up just to pretend their life had always been beautiful.
Francesca and Luca were already there, Francesca barefoot with her heels hanging from two fingers, her curls pinned back but barely, sipping something white and cold. Luca stood beside her in a linen suit that looked like it had been stolen off the set of The Talented Mr. Ripley, sunglasses still tucked into the neck of his shirt like it was midday.
When they spotted her and Harry, Francesca lit up and waved them over like she’d been waiting for this moment all night.
“There you are,” she said, looping an arm around her waist and kissing her cheek. “You survived. You both survived. I’m honestly impressed.”
Harry offered Luca a nod and the two did the customary handshake-hug combo, the kind men used when they liked each other more than they admitted.
“Drinks?” Luca asked.
Harry nodded once. “Yeah. Let’s go.”
He touched her hip briefly, murmured, “Be right back,” before following Luca toward the bar. He didn’t look back, but his hand lingered on her waist just a second longer than necessary before he let go. He didn't want to let go.
Francesca sighed, looping her arm through her's as they made their way to their assigned table near the center, not too far from the dance floor but tucked enough to keep a little distance.
“Everyone’s talking about you,” Francesca said breezily, not cruelly, just as fact. “But only because you look better than anyone else here.”
She snorted softly. “They’re talking because I’m here with him.”
“Well,” Francesca said, settling into her chair and crossing her legs with a dramatic flourish, “that too. But honestly? They should be so lucky.”
She looked around subtly. And sure enough—eyes. Not a lot. Not direct. But there. Women in pastel. Men with thinning hair and sharp shoes. Bridesmaids whispering like they hadn’t been caught red-handed giving side-eyes during the ceremony.
Francesca sipped her drink. “You’re making them all spiral. You know that, right?”
“I don’t want to make anyone spiral.”
“Of course you don’t. But that’s why it’s working.”
Before she could respond, Luca and Harry returned, each with two glasses balanced between their fingers like it was a routine. Harry handed her one without a word. Cold. Pale. Sparkling. Probably something expensive he already clocked on the menu.
He sat beside her, suit jacket already open, tie a little looser than earlier. “Sauvignon Blanc. You’ll like it.”
She took a sip. He was right. Francesca and Luca fell into a quiet conversation on the other side of the table, their chairs angled toward each other in that familiar, unhurried way of people who’ve known each other through too many different lives.
Harry leaned close. “You good?”
She nodded. “You?”
His eyes flicked over her face, cataloging.
“I will be,” he said, then added softly, “as long as you’re here.”
It didn’t matter that people were watching. It didn’t matter that they were at the wedding of his ex. He only looked at her.
The party truly began when Lucy and John made their official entrance. The music shifted. The lights dimmed just slightly. People stood. Glasses raised. And through the wide garden doors, Lucy appeared again—no longer in her formal wedding gown, but now in a slinkier, champagne-colored dress that shimmered as she walked. Her hair had been let down. Her shoes were different too—lower, simpler, probably because her feet were blistered. John followed behind her, suit jacket off, shirt open at the collar, hand casually resting on her lower back.
She felt Harry’s body go subtly still beside her. He didn’t say anything. He didn’t tense. But he watched her. Only her. Barley glanced at Lucy. And Lucy? Well, Lucy had clearly been waiting for the moment to see who was watching her walk in as someone’s wife. Her gaze swept the room. Too casually. And then it landed on Harry. And it stuck.
Long enough that Francesca muttered under her breath, “Jesus Christ, this is gonna be messy.”
But her? She didn’t flinch. Because Harry—her Harry, only hers—wasn’t looking back. Not the way Lucy wanted. He saw her. Of course he did. But his hand stayed on her thigh, thumb rubbing slow, grounding circles through the silk of her dress. And when Lucy’s stare lingered too long, he turned slightly—to her, only to her—and asked, low and dry,
“You want the steak or the sea bass?”
She smiled. “Bass.”
“Good,” he said. “I’m not letting you eat beef at a wedding where she’s in charge of the menu.”
Lucy and John made their rounds. Toasts were offered. Champagne was refilled. The DJ—clearly someone’s cousin—announced the first dance and couples began to drift toward the open floor.
She stayed in her seat, eyes following the soft blur of movement and fabric. Harry didn’t press her to dance. He never would unless she asked. He just sat close, hand on her leg, his other curled around his glass, leaning slightly so no one else could see him looking at her.
“You know,” he murmured, lips barely brushing the edge of her ear, “if I didn’t love you already, I’d fall in love with you just for surviving this.”
She laughed softly. “And if I wasn’t already obsessed with you, I’d be falling in love with you for bringing me to your ex’s wedding and still managing to make me feel like I’m the only one here.”
“You are the only one here.”
“You say that like you mean it.”
“I do.”
He tilted her chin gently, just enough so she had to look him in the eye.
“You have no idea,” he said, “how much I mean it.”
And maybe it was the wine. Or the ocean breeze. Or the way his voice dropped an octave when he got sincere. But something in her heart did a little flutter. A quiet, private flutter no one else could see. Because even now—even here—he made her feel untouched. Untouchable.
Luca nudged them a few minutes later, grinning. “Dance with us. Come on. Francesca says she refuses to be the only woman out there with a man who steps on her feet.” Francesca shot him a glare but offered her hand anyway.
Harry raised an eyebrow. “You want to?”
She looked at him. Then nodded. “Only if you don’t step on mine.”
“I’m old, not uncoordinated.”
He stood and helped her up, hand firm in hers, his other settling instinctively at the small of her back like it always did. They moved together easily. Naturally. Even without music, she’d follow him anywhere. Especially here. And Harry? Harry held her close on that dance floor, surrounded by whispers and stares and the ghosts of relationships that never made it. Because in the end, none of it mattered. She was in his arms. And the rest of the world could burn.
The reception had bled into its second hour like it had somewhere better to be. The string lights overhead twinkled in warm gold as dusk finally gave up and slipped into night. The air was thick with salt and champagne, every table crowded with plates half-finished and stories half-true. Someone's cousin had already kicked off her heels and was dancing barefoot near the bar, and the playlist had shifted from jazz to something that sounded suspiciously like early-2000s pop.
She was seated again with Harry at the far end of the garden reception, their table nestled into a curve of candles and wildflowers. Francesca and Luca were next to them, Luca now with his jacket off, sleeves rolled up, talking animatedly with Harry about the logistics of moving a vineyard from Italy to upstate New York.
Francesca was on her second glass of white and already giving her looks that said “are you good?” every time someone at another table shot them a glance too long.
Because they were being watched. Of course they were. Soft, covert glances. Half-turns. Murmured questions behind manicured hands. Not loud enough to call attention, but clear enough to send a chill up her spine. Harry noticed too. He always did.
So he shifted slightly in his seat, his arm sliding along the back of her chair until his fingers hooked over her shoulder, thumb rubbing slow circles at the edge of her collarbone. A quiet kind of claim.
“You good, baby?” he murmured, head angled just enough so only she could hear it.
She nodded once, giving him a smile. “Yeah. Just thinking I should've worn something more intimidating.”
Harry leaned in, brushing his lips to the side of her head. “You’re terrifying as is.”
She huffed a quiet laugh. “Yeah?”
“I’ve got billionaires afraid of me, but you—” He smirked faintly. “You’re what keeps me up at night.”
Francesca, pretending not to eavesdrop, muttered, “Jesus, you two need a chaperone.”
“Then don’t sit next to us,” Harry said dryly, sipping his scotch.
Luca snorted into his drink. “He’s a romantic, but he hides it behind insults.”
“I don’t hide shit,” Harry said, glancing at her. “She knows.”
And she did. Because even when he was sitting at his ex’s wedding reception surrounded by people who’d once tried to bury him in PR hell, Harry only looked at her. Only leaned in when she whispered. Only refilled her wine glass before she noticed it was empty.
He didn’t smile at anyone else. Didn’t even pretend. Which made the next moment all the more unfortunate. Because she had to pee.
“Be right back,” she whispered, touching his knee beneath the table.
Harry looked up immediately. “Want me to come with you?”
“To the bathroom?” She arched a brow. “You trying to babysit me or make a scene?”
He smirked, leaned over, kissed the inside of her wrist. “Call if you need me.”
“I’m not gonna get jumped between here and the Porta Potties, Castillo.”
But he didn’t laugh. He just watched her walk away like he always did. Like she was gravity and orbit and every soft thing he thought he’d lost.
The bathroom was set up along the edge of the venue, tucked behind hedges and a string of fairy lights, near the catering trucks and a makeshift hand-washing station someone had tried to dress up with eucalyptus.
She moved quick. In and out. Washed her hands. Smoothed her dress. And when she stepped back out, she nearly ran straight into him. John. Standing just outside. Waiting. In his suit. His tie loosened. A look on his face she recognized immediately. Contrition.
“Hey,” he said quietly.
She froze. Of course. Of fucking course.
“Hi.”
John exhaled slowly. “I wasn’t sure if you’d let me say anything.”
“I didn’t expect to see you again at all.”
He looked down. “Yeah.” A beat. “I didn’t know—when I saw you were here, I didn’t believe it.”
She tilted her head slightly. “And now?”
John met her eyes. “I still can’t believe it.”
She crossed her arms. The silk of her dress whispered with the movement. “You waited outside the bathroom to talk to me?”
“You were gonna disappear again.”
“I didn’t disappear, John. I left.”
He swallowed. “I remember.”
Of course he did. He was there. He saw it.
The chaos. The headlines. The funeral. The trial. The nights she sat curled on the kitchen floor of that too-big house with nothing but canned peaches and a grief she didn’t know how to name.
“You were a kid,” he said quietly. “And they put the world on your shoulders.”
She didn’t answer. Didn’t know how.
John took a step closer. “I never forgot what your dad did. What he let happen. I thought about reaching out when I saw your name again, but…”
“But you didn’t.”
He nodded. “Didn’t know if you’d want to hear from anyone who knew the before.”
She breathed in through her nose. Held it. Then let it go. “I didn’t need rescuing. I needed people to believe me when I said I wasn’t my father.”
“I know.”
“Do you?”
He looked at her for a long moment. “You’re not him.”
The words landed. Quiet.
She nodded once. “You’re married now.”
“Yeah.” He glanced back toward the venue. “She’s a good person.”
“Oh I’m sure.”
Another beat.
Then, “You look happy.”
She didn’t respond. Didn’t need to. Because just then—
A figure appeared near the hedges. Black suit. Rolled sleeves. Silver at the temples.
Harry. Eyes locked on her like a sniper.
Her breath caught. John noticed.
“Is that—”
She nodded. “Yeah.”
John blinked. “Holy shit.”
Harry didn’t say anything when he reached them. Just stepped between them slightly, hand finding the small of her back, anchoring her.
John cleared his throat. “You’re—Harry Castillo.”
“Mm.”
“I’ve followed your career for years—”
Harry cut him off with a slow blink. “And now you marry women you used to serve shrimp to.”
John’s face paled.
She touched Harry’s arm. “Harry.”
He tilted his head. “Just saying.”
John took a step back. “Right. I should—yeah.”
He turned. Walked off. The silence that followed wasn’t heavy. Just firm.
She looked up at Harry. “You were eavesdropping?”
“I was waiting outside like a husband.”
“You’re not my husband.”
“Yet.”
She snorted.
Harry’s thumb brushed the bare skin of her back, right at the base of her spine. “You okay?”
She nodded. “Yeah.”
He tilted his head. Studied her. “Want me to get you out of here?”
She smiled faintly. “Not yet. Francesca still needs to send me a link to a lingerie set.”
Harry’s eyes darkened slightly.
“Oh. Okay.”
She leaned in. Kissed the underside of his jaw. “For you. Of course..”
“You're a menace,” he murmured.
She laughed.
He kissed her temple. “Come on. Let’s go finish this. Then I’m taking you home. Or the goddamn moon. Anywhere you want.”
“Your bed in New York has better pillows.”
“Then we’re going home.”
Hand in hand, they walked back toward the party. Not looking back. Not needing to. Because some ghosts didn’t need confrontation. They just needed to see you thriving. And Harry Castillo made damn sure she would. The grass was damp beneath her heels when they stepped back into the light. The reception had shifted again—music pulsing a little louder now, bodies dancing with the looser grace of people full of wine and relieved of ceremony. Tables sparkled under strings of warm light, their surfaces littered with plates scraped clean and wineglasses clinked a little too often. Francesca caught her eye from across the garden, waving a hand with the flourish of someone halfway through her third drink.
“There she is,” Francesca said as she approached. “The woman of the fucking hour.”
She smirked, tucking herself into the chair beside her again, Harry’s coat still resting lightly across her shoulders. “Don’t think I’m that important.”
“You walked into this party like it owed you an apology. You’re a legend.”
Harry sat down beside her again, brushing the edge of her shoulder with his hand before settling. Luca rejoined them moments later with a small plate of olives and cheese.
Francesca didn’t even wait. She leaned close, voice low. “So. You going to tell me what happened?”
She blinked. “What?”
“Saw the groom follow you.”
She paused. Then sighed. “I used to know him. When I was a teenager. He worked for my family. He was... kind. At a time when I didn’t really know what that meant.”
Francesca’s gaze softened. “And now he’s married to Lucy.”
She nodded. “Yeah. Full circle. Or something.”
Francesca touched her hand. “You doing okay?”
She smiled faintly. “Now I am.”
Harry was watching them. Eyes soft. Hands steady. He didn’t speak. Didn’t interrupt. Just existed in a bubble of silent attention around her, like if he looked away for even a moment, the world might try to take her.
Francesca clocked it too. Leaning in closer, she smirked. “God, he’s disgusting when he looks at you.”
She turned slightly. “Who?”
“That man. Your man. The one who’s staring like you’re his religion.”
Harry, without missing a beat, said, “I’m right here.”
Francesca sipped her wine. “We know. You’re always right there.”
The two women shared a look. Something old and female and funny.
“I’m gonna need another,” Francesca said, lifting her empty glass. “You?”
She raised hers. Empty. Francesca grinned and then pointed at their respective men. “Alright, gentlemen. Fetch and return.”
Harry arched a brow. “Are we dogs now?”
“Yes,” Francesca said, already rising. “But expensive ones. Go.”
Harry stood, eyes flicking over to her with a smirk. “You good?”
She nodded. “I’m fine. Go.”
He leaned down. Kissed the top of her head. “Stay in the light.”
She laughed. “What am I, Frodo?”
But he lingered. Brushed her cheek once with the back of his hand before turning. She watched them go—Harry and Luca disappearing toward the bar—and then turned back to Francesca, who had sat back down and was now untying her shoes.
“So,” Francesca said. “Having a good time?”
She hesitated. Then said softly, “I think this is what having a good time looks like.”
Francesca looked over. “You in love?”
Her smile curled slowly. “Worse.”
Francesca raised her brow. “How worse?”
“He’s in love with me. And it’s... it’s not performative. Or casual. It’s like he loves me with his whole life. Like I’m the first quiet he’s ever known.”
Francesca stared at her. “That’s not worse. Thats luck.”
They laughed. The soft, shared laugh of women who knew too much and still leaned into it anyway.
“I’ve never had anything like this,” she said, voice lower now. “Not with someone who listens. Not with someone who doesn’t want to own me.”
Francesca tapped her glass gently. “Then keep it. At all costs.”
She nodded. “I plan to.”
But the cost, it turned out, was about to show up. Because just then—
A voice cut through the music. Sharp. Feminine. Familiar in the way rot is familiar once you’ve known it long enough.
“Well,” the woman said. “I guess if you stick around long enough, the trash takes itself out of hiding.”
She turned. Standing just behind her, drink sloshing, dress too tight around the arms, was one of Lucy’s cousins. Tall. Blonde. The kind of cruel that came with too much money and too little self-awareness.
She straightened. “Excuse me?”
The woman took a slow sip. “You heard me.”
Francesca turned too, already rising slightly in her seat. But the woman wasn’t looking at Francesca. Just at her.
“Everyone here is pretending like this is normal,” the cousin sneered. “Like it makes sense that you’d show up here, parade around in that fucking dress, and pretend you belong. But you don’t. You never did.”
She blinked. “I’m sorry—”
“No, you’re not.” The woman stepped closer, voice low and hot with something old. “You’re not sorry for seducing someone old enough to be your father. You’re not sorry for ruining a perfectly good man. You’re not sorry for making Lucy cry for months.”
Francesca stood. “Alright. That’s enough.”
But she didn’t stop.
“You think this makes you powerful?” she hissed. “Being the woman who dragged Harry Castillo out of hiding? You’re a phase. A fucking consolation prize for a man who got burned by a real woman.”
Her throat closed.
“I’ve seen girls like you,” the cousin spat. “Choke on your own ambition. Hide behind soft eyes and soft hands and then cry when someone calls you what you really are. You’re not real. You’re not permanent. You’re a fucking intermission.”
Francesca was already stepping between them. “Say one more word—”
But it was too late. Harry was back. And he had heard everything. He stepped forward. No hesitation. Voice like thunder on glass.
“Shut. The fuck. Up.”
The cousin blinked. Turned. And froze. Harry Castillo, furious in a black suit and tie loose around his collar, stood like a man who had made his fortune destroying people who spoke out of turn. And now he was looking at her like she wasn’t even worth the breath it would take to really dismantle her.
“You don’t speak to her,” Harry said, voice low. Lethal. “You don’t look at her. You don’t think about her. She’s worth more than everything on this property combined.”
The cousin flushed red. “You think just because you’re—”
“Back off,” Harry said, stepping closer. “Now.”
But then—
Another man stepped in. Older. Broader. Her husband, probably.
“Hey,” he said, stepping between them. “Back off. You don’t talk to my wife like that.”
Harry turned his gaze slowly. And smiled. It wasn’t kind. It was the smile he used to wear in boardrooms before ruin.
“I just did,” Harry said. “Want to make it a conversation?”
“Harry—” she said softly, touching his arm.
He didn’t look at her. Not yet.
The cousin’s husband stepped closer. “You think you’re untouchable?”
Harry stepped right into his space.
“I know I am.”
“Harry,” she said again, firmer.
This time, he looked at her. And just as quickly—softened. Because she looked shaken. Small. And he hated that.
He touched her cheek. “Did she hurt you?”
“I’m okay.”
“Did she hurt you?”
She shook her head. “Just words.”
Harry looked back at the woman. “Then be grateful they were only words. Because if she’d touched you—”
But he didn’t finish it. Because Lucy had arrived. And John, trailing behind her, wide-eyed and unsure. Lucy’s heels clicked against the stone. Her dress shimmered. Her expression already lined with practiced grace.
“Harry,” she said, exasperated. “What the hell is going on?”
He didn’t move. Just kept one hand on her waist. The other clenched at his side.
“This woman insulted her.”
Lucy glanced at her cousin. Then at Harry. Then at her. And instead of apology—
She snapped.
“You shouldn’t have come.”
Her breath caught.
Lucy stepped forward. “You shouldn’t have brought her here. You knew it would cause a scene.”
Harry’s eyes narrowed. “She didn’t cause anything.”
“You brought a child to my wedding.”
She froze. The words were sharp. And Harry? Harry looked like he could kill.
“She’s not a child,” he said. “She’s my girlfriend.”
Lucy scoffed. “Oh please. Don’t turn this into some noble love story.”
Harry straightened. “She is my girlfriend.”
Even though it hurt Lucy to hear that, it was true. Lucy’s lips curled. “She’s twenty years younger than you.”
“Exactly,” Harry said, without missing a beat. “Which means she knows how to grow. Something you’ve never learned.”
Lucy flinched. The air went cold.
John stepped up, hand on Lucy’s arm. “Let’s calm down—”
“Don’t,” Harry said. “Don’t try to smooth this over. She started it.”
“She didn’t mean—”
“I don’t care what she meant,” Harry snapped. “She insulted her. And I don’t care if it’s your fucking wedding, you let anyone talk to her like that again and I’ll make sure they never get invited anywhere again.”
Silence. Thick. Sharp. Awful. And then—
The cousin muttered something. But Harry didn’t react. Because she touched his hand. And that—that was what grounded him. He looked at her. Really looked. Eyes soft. Wrath dissolving. She was pale. Shaken. But still standing.
“Let’s go,” she whispered.
“Yeah,” he said. “Let’s get out of here.”
Francesca was already packing up her purse. Luca was watching everything like a man taking notes on who to blacklist next. Harry didn’t say goodbye. Didn’t wait. Just wrapped his coat around her shoulders, held her close, and walked away.
The cousin said something again. Harry didn’t hear it. Didn’t need to. Because she had his hand. And Harry Castillo would rather burn the world down than let her think for one more second that she was anything less than holy.
And as their driver drove away—his hand in hers, his jaw tight, her head resting against the seat—he finally spoke. Voice low. Rough.
“I'm so sorry.”
She looked up. “You didn’t do anything.”
“I let them hurt you.”
She shook her head. “No. You were right there.”
He looked at her. Eyes burning. “I love you,” he said. “So much it makes me ugly.”
She leaned over. Kissed his knuckles.
“You’re not ugly.”
He pulled her close. Held her to his chest. Whispered into her hair “You’re the only thing I’ve ever done right.”
And outside the car window, Cape Cod disappeared. But inside—
Inside there was only the sound of her breathing. And the feeling of being held. And the sharp, tender truth that no matter how cruel the world got—
Harry Castillo would always stand in front of it. If it meant protecting her.
TAGLIST @foxfollowedmehome @glitterspark @sukivenue @hhallefuckinglujahh @wholesomeloneliness @bebop36 @maryfanson @aysilee2018 @msjarvis @snoopyreadstoday @woodxtock @lasocia69 @jakecockley @just-a-harmless-patato @romancherry @southernbe @canyoufallinlove @aomi-recs @ivoryandflame @peelieblue @mstubbs21 @eleganthottubfun @justgonewild @awqwhat @xoprettiestkat @prose-before-hoes @indiegirlunited @catnip987 @thottiewinemom @rainbowsock4 @weareonlygettingolderbabe @hotforpedro @petertingless @lemon-world1 @jasminedragoon @algressman16 @la-120 @totallynotshine @joelmillerpascal @inesbethari @peedrow @escapefromrealitylol @mrsbilicablog @lunpycatavenue @ennvsco @vickie5446 @stormseyer
robby after you smack his ass: hopefully he’s not drinking anything, or else he’ll choke. he’s a little stunned but laughs it off after a few seconds with a red face and shake of his head. man, you’re trouble… but he loves it
abbot after you smack his ass: stops whatever he’s doing to compute what’s just happened. thinks for a total of ten seconds before turning to you with an expression you can’t read. a few minutes later, you’re bent over his knee. ass bare and sore even though he rubs it before and after each smack. you jolt every time he cracks his palm to one of your cheeks but he shrugs it off with an unbothered shrug and “what, baby? you’re the one that wanted to play...”
he’s the trouble now. and he loves it.
Okay so this is what I have in mind for fics in the next few weeks:
- 5 moments with Jack Abbot: the one where he knew he was going to like you, the three where he gets to know you, and the one that seals the deal for him (let’s be real this man is down bad so they’re all seals the deal moments but ykwim) Jack Abbot x Dottoressa!reader
- fake boyfriend! Michael Robinavitch: trying to avoid a weirdo at the bar, you insert yourself at Michael’s booth with the rest of his colleagues, glued to his side as if you belonged there the whole time, an interesting arrangement ensues. (Fwb/fake dating)
- maybe a (n)sfw alphabet for each? is there a template to follow that y’all know of?
That’s all I have for now I’m afraid. But I’d love to Drabble and talk some brain rot in between :)
PEDRO PASCAL Materialists | 2025
Well fucks? Get to it!
I need this man in a way that is concerning to feminism.
What is he DOING I JUST SAW THIS VIDEO ON TWITTER
The fucking bedroom eyes THE SLUTTY OPEN COLLAR WHAT IS HE DOING WHAAAATTtatatat
You want to call your House rep now and tell them Trump needs to be impeached immediately for defying a Supreme Court order (re: Kilmar Abrego Garcia), which functionally voids our constitution and means no one in America has rights anymore.
I am not exaggerating.
As of now, anybody can be disappeared, no due process, no recourse. Trump is openly disregarding a Supreme Court order and says he’ll send US citizens to El Salvador.
This is not a drill.
Call your House rep and tell them they must impeach. Tell them if they cannot bring themselves to impeach, they must resign. A more open and shut case to impeach is not possible. Trump and his administration are saying openly, in public, that anybody can be kidnapped by ICE, even in error, and disappeared permanently.
Call your senators, too, and tell them to support impeachment (it goes to them once it passes a majority House vote).