TWO
This isnt a story about happily ever after; its about lets give it another go.
James and Alice orbited each other like planetsthey were sometimes drawn together by a force neither could resist, then spun out to opposite corners of the universe.
The first time they parted, they were twenty-two. It felt earth-shatteringhe left his plate in the sink, she didnt laugh at his friends jokes.
They slammed doors so hard the paint cracked, swearing, This is truly it.
They didnt see each other for a year. James adopted a tabby, Alice cut her hair short.
One day, sheltering from the rain in a café in Brighton, their shoulders brushed as if by accident and fate both.
Still on the double espresso, no sugar? said James instead of hello.
And youre still sporting that ghastly grey scarf? Alice replied.
An hour later, they were in stitches. A week, and their toothbrushes were in the same glass again.
The second parting was quiet. No dramajust, over a supper of beans on toast, realising they spoke foreign languages. He talked of careers and moving to London; she dreamed of roses in the garden and dawn silence.
They parted like grown-ups. Split the books, the tabby (who stayed with Alice), and their joint circle of friends.
James flew up to London, Alice took up yoga.
Three years passed and neither called.
But love is a cunning thing. At a mutual friends wedding in Bath, fate sat them side by side.
James was steadier now.
Alice glowed with some new, gentle wisdom.
All evening, they spoke not of the past, but of who theyd becomewithout blame, without old wounds. By the time the sticky toffee pudding was served, theyd migrated to the edge of the dance floor, and James realised: of all the faces hed seen in those years, not one resonated as deeply as hers.
Life in London wasnt so golden, after all. Perhaps what he missed most was Alice.
They came together a third time, not in a fevered scramble to capture youth, but in the steady recognition of two people who understood the cracks in each others walls.
They learned: love isnt the absence of quarrels, but the will to press on together, even if youve lost your way a time or two.
Now, they sip tea on the porch. The tabby purrs peacefully between them. They know that life might yet rustle up fresh reasons to quarrel, but also: theres no shame in returning, if someones still waiting at home.
Five more years passed. This third time became a long, ordinary and surprisingly sturdy chapter.
They lost count of how many times theyd left forever. Counting, instead, all the times they chose to stay.
James snapped his laptop shut. Alice sat curled in her armchair, leafing through a dog-eared novel. The hush between them was the lovely quiet once mistaken, in youth, for boredom.
You know, said James, breaking the silence, I found that note you left in my old overcoat before the second break-up. The one that said Dont look for me.
Alice looked up and smiled slightly.
And what did you do with it?
I threw it away. I realised, its not about whether I look. Its about always knowing where you areeven if youre just in the next room. Or across the world.
They stopped chasing perfection.
Once, every quarrel was an omen of doom; now, its just static on the linea bit of white noise until the signal clears.
James gazed out the window. Snow painted the street, thick as the day they first parted ways.
Alice, he called.
Mmm?
How about we dont go anywhere tomorrow? Lets just stay here.
She stood, wrapped her arms around him from behind, pressing her cheek between his shoulder blades. In that quiet embrace was more certainty than all those loud vows made in their youth.
They no longer came together or drifted apart. They simply were. And that, it turned out, was the hardest, most beautiful thing.
They had finally learned: love isnt a fire that always needs stoking, but a house whose windows are lit, even if youve just nipped out for a loaf.
Once, every falling-out was a Richter-10 quake; now, its just weather moving across the fields outside.
In the kitchen, Alice asked,
James, why didnt we break up last October? Our row was bigger than those silly plates ten years ago.
James paused a moment.
Back then, they believed if there werent tears, shouting, or storming out at midnight, it wasnt loveit was just habit. Now they saw: true depth lies in silence.
They stopped seeking perfect reflections of their own fantasies in one another.
James accepted Alices maddening slowness; Alice grew fond of his habit to retreat inward when things ached.
In youth, neither wanted to apologise first, thinking it weakness. Now they knew: the first to say sorry is the wisest, not the loser.
They learned to make space. Once, they tried to fuse into one, suffocating themselves. Now, they were distincttwo individuals who happened to walk together.
Bad didnt feel forever anymore; it passed, a phase, like rain.
Where once there was sharp sarcasm, now there was gentle teasing.
Do you know whats changed? James covered her hand in his.
Once, every row left me wanting to runfind someone easier. Now, when we spar, I think, Here we go again. Ill put the kettle on before shes had a chance to cool off.
Alice smiled.
So, weve just grown old?
No, James shook his head, We finally metreally. Not the glossy ideas, but the true selves, scars and all.
It turned out, love wasnt all is perfect, but knowing every crack in the foundations and still wanting to live there, beneath the roof you made together.





