amber let out a sleepy, smug hum — the kind that always meant trouble — as she traced a lazy circle against his chest with her finger. “five minutes?” she echoed, tone draped in mock disbelief. “please. if you even think about bribing her with cookies, i’ll have to call it cheating. your record will be revoked, and the crown stays with me.” she tilted her chin up, flashing him a drowsy grin. “and i don’t constantly remind you. i just… enjoy being right... frequently... with passion.” a breathy laugh escaped her, warm and familiar — but the sound faltered when he caught her chin and his words wrapped around her in that quiet, steady way that always disarmed her. her smile wavered. she blinked at him like she was trying to process it, but something sharp flickered through her chest instead — that knee–jerk voice that never quite shut up. “yeah,” she said, too quickly. “sure. i built the world, and you just— what, waltzed in and made it better?” the words came out lighter than they felt, strained at the edges, and she hated how they sounded even as she said them. “guess that’s kind of your thing, huh?”
she wished she could take it back the second it left her mouth. because it wasn’t really about malik — it never was. it was about before. about every sleepless night in that one–bedroom apartment, sitting on the edge of abi’s tiny bed, trying to convince herself that the sound of sirens outside wasn’t about brendon. about all the times she’d stared at her phone until dawn, waiting for a call that never came. about the way abigail used to light up when the door opened, only to dim again when she realized he wasn’t staying. he’d been a good father when he was there — god, he’d been so good. gentle hands, easy laugh, the kind of warmth you couldn’t fake. but there was always something darker beneath it, a world he could never leave behind, one that always pulled him away. and when it finally swallowed him whole, amber had to teach herself how to smile like everything was fine. how to build a home out of scraps, out of routine and stubbornness and love that hurt to hold. and then malik had walked in — steady where the other man had been chaos, patient where she was all fire and noise — and suddenly the cracks she’d worked so hard to plaster over started to show again. he made things look easy. she was grateful, she really was, but sometimes she thought about how he’d shown up and just fixed everything she’d had to bleed to keep standing. she stared down at her hands, thumb worrying the hem of the blanket, her chest too tight, throat too full of things she’d never be brave enough to say.
“...sorry,” she muttered after a moment, quieter. “that came out wrong.” she exhaled shakily, eyes dropping to where her fingers were still clutching his shirt. “you just… you make it look easy. being good. being calm. and sometimes i—” she cut herself off, the confession dissolving into a low laugh that trembled with exhaustion. “never mind.” she shifted closer, pressing her face against the hollow of his throat, voice muffled and softer now. “you’re good for her, and for me. even when i don’t deserve it.” for a second, the weight of what she’d said before hung between them, too heavy and honest. so, she did what she always did when things got too real: she deflected. she leaned her head back just enough for her lips to find his jaw and placed a feather-like kiss against his stubble that tasted more like an apology than anything. “still doesn’t mean you’re beating my six–minute record, though,” she murmured against his skin. “but i can’t lie… it’s sexy when you try.”