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I whip my face up at his quiet words.

Quiet but determined, and a repetition of what I said to him on the night it snowed and I told him my secret.

I try to wipe my tears from my eyes so I can see him clearly. But I only get to glance at him for a second or two and notice thathis face has whittled down to razor-like sharpness and his body is arranged in a battle stance, feet wide, chest broad, before my tears take over.

And I hear his voice again.

“Because I want.”

What?

I don’t know what that means and I don’t get to ask him because as soon as he’s said those three words, announced them almost, he turns around and leaves.

After that, all bets are off.

I can’t stop crying as I hear his last words over and over.

Because I want…

Hours later,I wake up in partial darkness.

My eyes are gritty and heavy and this time I know why. It’s because I couldn’t stop crying after he left. I cried the entire day until they gave me a mild sedative and put me to sleep.

But I’m awake now.

When my eyes fall on the rows and rows of shoeboxes, I even scramble up in my bed. I don’t feel dizzy or foggy at my sudden movements as I reach out and grab a box. I open the lid and there they are.

My little orange, sun-like envelopes.

My letters.

They’re here.

I’m holding them in my hands and I don’t understand…

Then my eyes fall on something else.

A lone envelope, sitting on top of one of the boxes.

It’s gray.

And it has a letter inside it.

A reply to the very first letter I wrote for him, eight years ago.

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Darling Arrow,

It’s weird writing you a letter because we sort of live in the same house.

But I guess this is the safer option. I don’t get why but it is.

Anyway, I wanted to answer your question from this morning. You know, when you asked me if I was cold?

I’m not.

I mean, I am right now because your house is really cold, dude. But I wasn’t, back in the kitchen. Because as soon as you came in, you took the cold away, which again I don’t get.