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But there were moments — quiet ones — where something shifted.

He’d reach for my hand.

Our fingers laced together like it was the most natural thing in the world.

I knew it was different.

I just didn’t have a word for it yet.

• • •

Eventually, around nine, when it started getting too dark, my parents would walk him home.

Cassian didn’t talk much about his family.

I knew his mom was home during the day. His dad worked a lot.

That was it.

He kept everything else locked up tight.

Their house was the same model as ours.

But somehow it never felt the same. Even from outside.

• • •

I was the opposite.

Every thought, every feeling, every piece of me — I gave it freely, openly.

I didn’t know how to hold anything back.

I just wanted to know everything about him.

So I gave him all of myself.

And in return he gave me nothing.

Except I didn’t notice that for a long time.

• • •

There was this one afternoon.

One of the older kids from the end of the street had pushed me off my bike — shoved me from behind for no reason, called me and Cassian names I didn’t fully understand.

I came home with gravel in my knee trying not to cry because I didn’t want my mom to find out what happened.

Cassian saw.

He didn’t say anything.

Didn’t make it into a thing.

He just sat down on the curb next to me and took my hand and waited while I got it together.

Didn’t leave until I was ready to go inside.