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You’d think he was deflecting because he didn’t want intimacy.

That’s not it.

I know him well enough now to know: he’s deflecting because he’s afraid ofhow much he cares.

And that scares him.

It should scare me too.

“Work,” I say, hoping to ground us both. “Board meeting this afternoon. Tidball is… hopeful.”

He snorts — quiet, but unmistakable.

“‘Hopeful,’” he mocks under his breath.

I glance at him, eyebrows raised.

“What?” he asks, as though I’ve caught him in something he didn’t mean to admit.

“You sound amused,” I say.

He shrugs — the barest movement — but it’s enough.

“Hope is for people with vacations,” he says. “And weekends.”

I almost laugh.

But then Tidball’s face flashes behind my eyelids.

And the humor dissipates.

“It’s not a joke,” I say, a little sharper than I intended.

He turns his face toward me then — not fully, just the angle that lets me see his profile, jaw tense, eyes thoughtful.

“Itisa joke,” he says, quiet but pointed. “A bad one.”

I don’t challenge him.

Not because I agree.

But because it’s true.

I feel the weariness in my bones.

The truth of how thin I’m holding everything together.

“Are you… okay?” I ask suddenly, surprising even myself.

He freezes — not like someone caught, but like someone who didn’texpectto be asked.

For a long moment he doesn’t answer.

Then he says, slowly, “I’m holding up.”

His voice is a carefully constructed fortress.

Sturdy.