“DO YOU WANT TO KISS ME?” SHE SAID IT IN THE GARAGE. I WASN’T READY FOR THAT QUESTION.

I Helped My Friend’s Mom in the Garage, Then She Said, ‘Do You Want to Kiss Me?’.

 

 

 

 

It was one of those gray, slow burning afternoons that hung over New Jersey like a damp sweater. The kind of day that smelled like rust and wet pavement, where everything felt like it was running 10 seconds behind reality. The air was thick with moisture that never quite became rain, just hung there, making everything feel heavy and close. I was supposed to meet up with Derek at his family’s garage to help sort through some old equipment his mom wanted cleared out before the next shipment.

Nothing major, just a couple of dusty tool boxes, a broken floor jack that hadn’t worked since the Clinton administration, maybe a shelf or two that looked like they’d collapse if you breathed on them wrong. I wasn’t expecting much, just another way to kill time during a summer that already felt halfway wasted. 20 years old and still living at home, still working part-time at the hardware store, still telling myself I’d figure out what came next when the time was right, whatever that meant.

Dererick had texted me that morning, the message popping up while I was still in bed, staring at the ceiling fan that wobbled just enough to be annoying, but not enough to fix. “Mom wants to reorganize the back room. You down to help?” “She’ll pay cash,” I said. Sure, without thinking. I didn’t have anywhere better to be, and Julia’s garage paid better than sitting on my ass, scrolling through social media, watching everyone else’s lives move forward, while mine stayed perfectly, maddeningly still.

By the time I got there, the rain had just started. Not hard, but steady enough to soak your hoodie in 5 minutes if you stood still. The kind of rain that made everything smell like earthworms and old metal. The air was thick with the scent of motor oil and pine cleaner. That particular combination that only exists in old garages, places where work gets done with hands instead of computers. The garage was one of those old corner shops that had probably been there since the 80s, maybe longer.

cracked concrete floors that had seen decades of oil stains and tire marks, corrugated tin walls that sang when the wind hit them right, and a flickering strip of overhead lights that buzzed louder than the ancient radio that was always tuned to. Classic rock. The place had character, Derek always said, though what he really meant was it was falling apart in a way that felt comfortable, familiar. Derek was already inside when I arrived. halfway buried in a pile of cardboard boxes that looked like they hadn’t been touched since Y2K.

He looked up and waved, grinning that easy smile he’d had since we were kids. “Thought you’d ditch?” he said, pushing his hair out of his eyes. “It was getting long, almost to his shoulders, and his mom kept threatening to cut it while he slept.” I shrugged, water dripping from my hood onto the concrete. didn’t have an excuse good enough. We worked in the back half of the shop where the shelving was older than either of us and sagged under the weight of junk no one had touched in years.

Boxes of bolts that had rusted together. Air filters for cars that hadn’t been made in decades. Instruction manuals for tools that had long since broken and been thrown away. The space smelled like damp rags and forgotten rubber. like time itself had gotten stuck in the corners and started to decay. It was quiet except for the rain tapping on the roof. That metallic percussion that made you feel both cozy and isolated and the occasional hum of passing cars out on the road, their tires making that wet whisper sound against the asphalt.

That’s when Julia walked in. She wasn’t dressed up or anything. Never was when she was working. just a faded blue button-up that was too big on her. Probably her late husband’s sleeves rolled up past her elbows, revealing forearms that were stronger than they looked, marked with tiny scars from years of work. A pair of old jeans that had grease stains around the knees, the kind of stains that never come out no matter how many times you wash them.

Her hair was tied back in a lazy bun, a few damp strands sticking to her neck from the humidity. She looked tired. Not the kind of tired that comes from lack of sleep, but the kind that settles into your shoulders and stays there. The kind that comes from carrying too much for too long. Her eyes had that slightly unfocused quality of someone who was thinking about three things at once and trying not to show it. Still, she carried herself like someone who knew where every tool in the room belonged, who could diagnose an engine problem by sound alone, who had learned to be competent because being anything less wasn’t an option.

Morning, Evan, she said, tossing a pair of work gloves my way. They were worn soft, the leather shaped by years of use. Appreciate you helping out. No problem, I replied, slipping them on. Beats sitting at home watching Netflix for the eighth hour straight. She gave a half smile at that, the kind that suggested she understood the feeling more than she’d admit, and moved past me to lift a heavy metal shelf with both hands, grunting slightly as she shifted its position.

The movement pulled her shirt tight across her back for a moment, and I found myself noticing the way her shoulders moved, the determination in the set of her spine. I’d known Julia since I was 12. She was always kind in a reserved way, polite, but firm, focused, never one for unnecessary conversation. She’d laugh at Dererick’s jokes, make sure we had food when we hung around the garage, but there was always a distance there, a boundary she maintained.

After her husband passed 3 years ago, heart attack at 45. One of those things that happens to other people until it happens to you. She took over running the garage full-time. Never missed a beat, Derek said. Though I wondered what that cost her, that relentless forward motion. I’d never thought of her as anything other than Dererick’s mom until that day. She was just Julia, part of the landscape of my life. No more notable than the stop sign at the end of my street or the way the library always smelled like old paper and lemon pledge.

She existed in that safe category of people you know but don’t really see. We were clearing out a corner rack when it happened. She leaned over to grab a box of wrenches, the heavy kind that could break your toe if you dropped them. And the edge of the shelving caught her shirt. a sharp little corner where the metal had bent, probably from someone backing into it with a car. It tore the fabric just above her shoulder. Not a big tear, maybe 2 in, but enough to matter.

She didn’t flinch, just looked down at the damage and laughed. This quiet sound that was more breath than voice. Well, that’s what I get for wearing this old thing,” she said, brushing dust off her arm like the tear didn’t matter, like nothing really mattered that much. I chuckled, too, not really thinking, just responding to the moment. But when I looked up from the box I was holding, I saw the tear and then her bare shoulder beneath it.

Smooth skin, a little freckled, like someone who used to spend summers outdoors but hadn’t in a while. There was something vulnerable about it. That unexpected glimpse of skin in a place that was all metal and grease and hard edges. Julia caught me looking. Not long, a second, maybe less, but enough. Something in her expression shifted, softened. Not embarrassed, not surprised, just aware. Like she’d noticed me noticing, and she was noticing me back. Then she laughed again, different this time, lower, and moved past it like nothing had happened, pulling the torn edges of her shirt together absently.

 

 

 

“Hand me that socket set, would you?” she asked. And just like that, we were back to normal. Except we weren’t. Not really. I went to lift another box, something heavier this time, one of those old tool collections that someone had probably inherited and never used. Halfway up, my grip slipped. The gloves were too big, or the box was too smooth. Or maybe my hands were shaking for reasons I didn’t want to think about. I stumbled back, landing awkwardly on one knee, the box thudding to the floor and spilling its contents in a cascade of metal that rang through the garage.

“You good?” she asked, already walking toward me, concerned, but not panicked. She’d seen enough actual injuries to know this wasn’t one. “Yeah,” I said, brushing off my jeans, trying to laugh it off, just being dramatic. Thought the floor needed more decoration. She extended a hand to help me up. It should have been nothing, just a reflex, a polite gesture. The same hand she’d probably extended to dozens of customers, to Derek, to anyone who needed it. But the second her hand closed around mine, something shifted.

The air in the garage seemed to pause, like even the rain on the roof held its breath. Her grip was warm despite the dampness in the air, strong but gentle, calloused in places that spoke of real work. She pulled, but not right away. For a moment, maybe two seconds, maybe three, we just stood there, her hand in mine, connected by something more than the gesture itself. And the weird thing was, she didn’t meet my eyes. She kept looking off to the side toward the door like the moment wasn’t really happening or like she was trying not to let it happen.

When she finally pulled, I stood up slowly, maybe slower than necessary. Our hands stayed connected for a beat longer than they needed to. And when our fingers finally separated, sliding apart with a friction that felt deliberate, my palm felt like it still remembered the shape of hers. “Julia smoothed her shirt down, glancing once at the tear near her shoulder, then back at me. Let’s not tell Derek about this,” she said, her voice light, but quieter than before, like she was talking about more than just my graceless stumble.

“Which part?” I asked, and immediately wanted to take it back, too forward, too knowing. But she just looked at me, really looked at me for the first time, and I saw something in her eyes I couldn’t name. Any of it, she said softly. Then louder, more normal. He’ll think I can’t handle the shop myself anymore if he knows I’m tearing clothes and letting people fall all over the place. I gave a small nod, trying to smile, trying to make it casual.

Don’t worry. Secret safe. She looked at me again just for a breath, and the weight of that look made my chest tight. Then she turned away, back to the endless task of organizing things that would just get disorganized again. We worked for another hour, but the rhythm was off. Everything felt charged now, like the air before a thunderstorm. I kept catching myself watching her, not in an obvious way I hoped, but noticing things I hadn’t before or hadn’t let myself notice.

The way she tucked loose strands of hair behind her ear with the back of her wrist when her hands were dirty. the curve of her neck when she bent over the workbench, how it created this elegant line from her ear to her shoulder, the way her voice dropped just a little when she talked to herself, muttering about bolts or inventory or where the hell Dererick had put the good Phillips head. The small scar on her left hand, white against her tanned skin that moved when she flexed her fingers.

She had this habit of biting her lower lip when she was concentrating, just the slightest pressure. And I found myself staring at her mouth, wondering what those lips would feel like against. I shook my head, tried to focus on the work. This was Julia, Dererick’s mom, my friend’s mother, the widow who was just trying to keep her business running, and her son on track. She wasn’t. She couldn’t be. But then she’d move past me to reach something and her hip would brush against mine and the contact would send electricity through my entire body.

Or she’d hand me a tool and our fingers would touch and she’d pause just for a microssecond like she felt it too. I hated that I noticed and I hated how natural it felt to notice. How right it felt to be aware of her in this new way. Derek didn’t seem to pick up on anything. He spent most of the time arguing with a rusted socket set that refused to come apart, swearing at it creatively, while Julia occasionally called out, “Language!” without any real heat behind it.

When we finally wrapped up, the rain had gotten heavier, hammering on the tin roof like it was trying to break through. Julia handed me a towel to dry off, one of those industrial blue ones that could probably absorb a swimming pool. Thank you, she said, and her hand touched mine as she passed it over. Really? I know this isn’t exactly exciting work. It’s fine, I said, and meant it. I like it here. Something flickered across her face at that.

Yeah, yeah, it’s quiet, real, you know? She nodded slowly. I do know. Then she disappeared into the office, leaving Dererick and me to lock up. As I left the garage, I realized I hadn’t said much the whole afternoon, but my chest was tight, like I’d been holding my breath for the last hour without knowing it. The rain soaked through my hoodie on the walk to my car, but I barely noticed. All I could think about was that moment.

Her hand in mine, the tear in her shirt, the way she’d said any of it, like she was talking about so much more than just the afternoon’s minor incidents. That night, I lay in bed with my eyes open, staring at the ceiling, replaying everything. The sound of fabric tearing, her laugh surprised and genuine. The way her hand had closed around mine, firm and warm and real. And then her voice, quiet and close. Let’s not tell Derek about this.

Just that, just a simple request for discretion, but it stuck in my chest like a fish hook, pulling at something I didn’t want to name. For the next seven nights, I didn’t sleep right once. I’d close my eyes and see her shoulder, pale and freckled. I’d drift off and dream about her hands, strong and capable, dream about them touching me again. I’d wake up at 3:00 in the morning with her voice in my head. That lower register she used when she thought no one was listening.

After that afternoon in the garage, the laugh, the torn shirt, the way her hand closed around mine, things didn’t go back to normal, but they didn’t exactly change either. Not in any loud obvious way that someone watching from the outside would notice. But underneath, in the quiet spaces between words and the pauses between movements, everything was different. Dererick had picked up more shifts at the auto parts store downtown, saving money for a motorcycle his mom didn’t know about yet.

So, it was usually just Julia and me during the late afternoons, working in companionable quiet that felt heavier than it used to. We’d clean out drawers full of receipts from the ‘9s, rearrange shelving that had been in the same place for a decade, try to figure out what tools still worked and what belonged in the dumpster. Sometimes we talked about the weather, about Derek, about difficult customers who wanted their cars fixed yesterday for the price of a sandwich.

Sometimes we didn’t say anything at all, just worked side by side while the radio played classic rock that neither of us really listened to. But the silence wasn’t empty. It was full of things we weren’t saying, couldn’t say, shouldn’t even be thinking. She started letting me unlock the front gate. One day, she just handed me a key, said, “Here, save me the trouble.” And that was that. She left it for me, tucked behind the breaker box in a little magnetic box that looked like it had been there forever.

A small thing maybe, but I felt the weight of it. That shift, that quiet trust, that acknowledgment that I belonged here in some way that went beyond just helping out. And she started bringing me coffee, always the same. One sugar, no cream. She never asked how I took it, just handed me the cup as if she’d known all along, like she’d been paying attention in ways I hadn’t noticed. The first time I’d said, “How did you know?” And she just shrugged, said, “Lucky guess.” But there was something in her eyes that suggested it wasn’t luck at all.

Once on a particularly hot Thursday, she left a powdered donut on top of my toolbox. No note, no explanation, just the donut still warm from the bakery down the street. The good one that usually had a line out the door. I found it when I came back from loading the truck. And when I looked up, she was across the garage, bent over an engine, but I could see the slight smile playing at the corner of her mouth.

“Thanks,” I called out, holding up the donut. She didn’t turn around, just raised one hand in acknowledgement, but I saw her shoulders relax slightly, like she’d been waiting to see if I’d notice, if I’d understand that this small gesture meant something. There were moments, small stray ones that probably meant nothing but felt like everything, where something pulled tight between us. Like when she reached over me to grab a wrench from the high shelf and her body pressed against my back for just a second, warm and solid and real.

She could have asked me to get it. I was taller. But she didn’t. and when she pulled back, she did it slowly like she was reluctant to break the contact. Or the time I handed her a rag and our fingers touched and instead of just taking it, she let her fingers rest against mine for half a second longer than necessary. Just half a second. But in that moment, it felt like the world stopped spinning. When I looked at her face, she was studying the rag like it was the most interesting thing she’d ever seen.

But there was color in her cheeks that hadn’t been there before. They were little things, things that could be explained away, dismissed, forgotten. But they stuck to me like oil stains, impossible to wash off. One afternoon, while wiping grease off an old vice that probably hadn’t been used since the Bush administration, the first one, she asked, “Evan, do you ever feel like you’re just floating through?” I looked up from the bench, confused. floating like you’re living but not really building anything.

Just passing through the days waiting for something that doesn’t come. Like you’re watching your life happen instead of actually living it. She didn’t look at me when she said it. Just kept folding the rag in her hands over and over like it was a meditation or maybe a nervous habit she hadn’t kicked. Her voice was quiet, almost like she was talking to herself, like she’d forgotten I was there. I hesitated, not sure how honest to be then.

Yeah. Yeah, I do. Sometimes it feels like everyone else got a map, and I’m just wandering around hoping I’ll recognize the right place when I get there. She nodded slow and thoughtful. That’s it exactly. the waiting, the hoping something will change, but not knowing what that something is or how to make it happen. She paused, looked down at her hands. I used to have a plan, you know, meet someone, get married, have kids, run a business, check, check, check, check.

But then she gestured vaguely at the garage, at her life, at everything that had gone differently than expected. But then your husband, I started then stopped, not sure if I should finish. Yeah, she said simply. But even before that, if I’m honest, even when everything was going according to plan, I felt like I was floating, like I was playing a part in someone else’s life. She finally looked at me and her eyes were so vulnerable I had to resist the urge to reach out, to touch her hand, to offer some kind of comfort.

Is that terrible to say? That even when I had everything I was supposed to want, I still felt empty. No, I said firmly. It’s honest. Most people won’t admit it, but I think a lot of us feel that way. Like we’re following a script someone else wrote. She studied my face for a long moment. You’re very young to understand that. Or maybe I’m just the right age, I said. old enough to see the pattern, young enough to still think I can avoid it.

Can you? She asked, and there was something in her voice. Hope maybe or challenge. I don’t know. Can you? She smiled then. Sad and beautiful. I’m 38 years old, Evan. Single mom, running a garage that barely breaks even. I think my pattern is pretty well set. You’re 38, I said. not dead. And you’re here talking to me about floating and patterns and emptiness. That doesn’t sound like someone who’s given up. She blinked, surprised, and then something shifted in her expression.

She looked at me like she was seeing me for the first time, like I’d just become three-dimensional instead of part of the background. “When did you become so wise?” she asked softly. “Tuesday,” I said, trying to lighten the moment. There was a sale on wisdom at Target. Buy one existential crisis. Get enlightenment half off. She laughed real and sudden, and the sound filled the garage, bounced off the walls, and settled into my chest, where I knew I’d keep it forever.

After that, she walked to the back without saying another word. But the question she’d asked lived in my head for days, bouncing around like a pinball. It was the first time she’d opened a door I hadn’t even known was there. Shown me a piece of herself that wasn’t just Derek’s mom or the competent garage owner or the widow making it work. One Thursday, the rain came down hard, so loud on the tin roof that it sounded like a thousand small fists trying to break through.

Derek had called in sick, hung over, actually, but Julia didn’t need to know that. We were supposed to reorganize the supply wall. One of those tasks that seemed important, but really just involved moving things from one place to another so they could gather dust more efficiently. She showed up in an old hoodie that had ruters across the front in faded letters, her hair tied up in a messy bun that looked like she’d done it without a mirror, her face bare of the minimal makeup she usually wore.

She looked tired, but not in a bad way. Just soft around the edges, like she hadn’t fully assembled her public face yet. “I made extra,” she said, handing me a thermos. “Coffee stronger than usual.” “Figured we’d need it with this weather. The coffee was perfect. Strong enough to wake the dead, sweet enough to not be bitter.” We sat in the back corner of the garage, surrounded by halfopen boxes and tangled extension cords that probably violated several fire codes.

The rain created a wall of white noise that made the rest of the world feel very far away. She pulled a cinnamon muffin from her coat pocket, still wrapped in a napkin from the bakery, and split it with me without asking if I wanted half. There was something intimate about the assumption, the easy sharing, the way she knew I wouldn’t say no. At some point, she sat down on the floor, cross-legged like a kid, her back against the wall.

I sat next to her, close enough that our knees almost touched. The concrete was cold through my jeans, but I didn’t care. She looked younger like this, relaxed in a way I’d never seen her. You know the first time I ever changed a spark plug? She said suddenly looking at her coffee instead of me. I cried. Actually cried. Thought I’d broken the whole car. I laughed surprised. Seriously? She nodded smiling at the memory. Your age? Maybe younger.

21. My husband boyfriend then showed me how. I got my fingers all cut up. Oil on my jeans. grease under my nails. I swore I’d never touch another engine. She held up her hands, permanently stained with grease that had worked its way into the tiny lines and creases. “Look at me now. What changed?” I asked. “Life,” she said simply. “Necessity. You learn to do things you never thought you could when you don’t have a choice.” She paused, took a sip of coffee.

I used to be scared of getting dirty, scared of doing things wrong, scared of not being, I don’t know, perfect, pretty, whatever I thought I was supposed to be. And now she looked at me then, really looked at me, and there was something raw in her expression. Now I’m more afraid of feeling too much or maybe not feeling enough. I can’t decide which is worse. The words hung in the air like the smell of rain and motor oil.

I wanted to say something to tell her that I understood that I felt it too. That fear of numbness, that terror of awakening, but I couldn’t make the words come out. Eventually, I managed. Is that why you stopped painting? Her eyes widened slightly, surprised I knew about that. Derek told you. He mentioned it once. Said you were really good. She was quiet for a long moment. I was okay. Not good, just okay. But I loved it. The feeling of creating something from nothing.

Putting color where there was just blank space. She smiled sadly. I haven’t touched a brush in 3 years. Since your husband died? Since before that, actually. Since I realized that painting was just another thing I did alone in a room while life happened somewhere else. She looked down at her hands. Maybe that’s why I like the garage now. It’s real, immediate. You fix something, it works. You don’t fix it, it doesn’t. There’s no ambiguity. But no beauty either, I said without thinking.

She looked at me sharply. You think there’s no beauty in this? She gestured around the garage, the tools hanging in precise rows, the afternoon light filtering through the dirty windows, the rain creating patterns on the concrete where it leaked through tiny holes in the roof. That’s not what I meant. I know what you meant, she said softer. And you’re not wrong. But sometimes beauty is dangerous. It makes you want things you can’t have. Makes you see possibilities that aren’t really there.

Our knees were touching now. I wasn’t sure when that had happened, who had moved closer, but neither of us pulled away. “What kind of things?” I asked, my voice lower than I intended. She looked at me for a long moment, and I could see her deciding something, weighing options, calculating risks. “Dangerous things,” she said finally. impossible things, things that would change everything and fix nothing. I wanted to ask her to be specific. I wanted to tell her that maybe dangerous and impossible weren’t always bad.

I wanted to lean forward and close the space between us that suddenly felt both infinite and insignificant. But I didn’t. I just sat there, my knee pressed against hers, feeling the heat of her body through two layers of denim, and let the moment be what it was. A few days later, she asked me to help her lift an old compressor that had been sitting in the corner for months. It was heavier than we expected. Those old ones were solid metal, built to last forever, even if no one wanted them to.

We both bent down at the same time, reaching for the same side, and our hands collided. She paused, looked at me. Her face was close, closer than it should have been, close enough that I could see the flexcks of gold in her brown eyes, could smell the vanilla lotion she used mixed with the perpetual scent of motor oil that clung to both of us. “Now “Go ahead,” she said quietly, pulling back half an inch, but not more.

you’ve got it. But her voice was softer than usual, less sure, like she was talking about more than just the compressor. We lifted together, her counting 1 2 3, and then we were carrying it across the floor. The weight required us to move in sync, to anticipate each other’s movements, and I became hyper aware of her body, the way she breathed, the flex of her arms, the slight grunt she made when we turned the corner. Her arm brushed mine with every step, and she didn’t pull away.

Neither did I. It was such a small thing, that incidental contact, but it felt monumental, like we were agreeing to something without words. When we finally set it down, we both exhaled at the same time. And then we laughed, not because it was funny, but because the tension had to go somewhere, had to transform into something safer than what it wanted to be. She wiped her hands on her jeans, a gesture I’d seen her do a hundred times.

But now I noticed the way her fingers moved, the shape of her hands, the wedding ring she still wore catching the light. Then she looked at me again, something unreadable in her expression. “Thanks,” she said, and her voice was almost a whisper like speaking any louder might break whatever spell we were under. Anytime, I said, and meant it more than I should have. After that, everything felt louder in the silence. Every moment became significant in its presence or absence.

Every time she walked past me and didn’t touch my arm, I noticed. Every time she did, just a light graze. Her fingers on my shoulder as she reached for something, her palm on my back as she moved behind me in the narrow space between shelves. I noticed even more. We never talked about it. This thing building between us like pressure in a cylinder. We didn’t need to. But I could feel it in the way she started standing closer to me when we talked.

The way she’d find excuses to work on projects that required both of us. The way her eyes would linger on my face when she thought I wasn’t looking. I started waking up thinking about her. Not in the way I used to think about girls my age. Not in flashes of fantasy or possibility, but just her, Julia. The way she moved through space like she owned it but didn’t want to. The way she stood with one hand on her hip and the other holding a wrench, hair in that perpetual messy knot, grease on her cheek that she’d unconsciously smear when she was thinking hard about something.

I started memorizing things without meaning to. The pattern of freckles on her forearm. The way she hummed along to songs on the radio but only knew half the words. How she’d bite her thumbnail when she was doing math in her head. The exact shade of her eyes in different lights. Dark brown in the shadows, almost amber when the afternoon sun hit them just right. And I started remembering the sound of her laugh when no one else was around to hear it.

how it dropped lower, became less performed, more real, like she was letting me hear who she actually was beneath the role she played. Mother, widow, business owner, survivor. One evening, I came in early to grab a tool I’d forgotten, and found her sitting alone on the edge of the workbench, legs swinging slightly like a kid’s, staring out the open garage door. The sun was setting, painting everything in shades of orange and pink that made even the oil stains on the concrete look beautiful.

The air was warm and still, that perfect temperature where you can’t tell where your skin ends and the world begins. She didn’t look at me right away, but she knew I was there. We developed that awareness of each other, that sixth sense that let us know when the other entered a room. I used to hate this place, she said, voice barely above the hum of the box fan in the corner. Felt like it stole time from everything else.

Every hour here was an hour not painting, not traveling, not living the life I thought I wanted. And now, I asked, moving closer, leaning against the bench beside her. She turned to me then, eyes steady and vulnerable at the same time. Now it’s the only place I don’t feel watched. The only place where I can just be without performing for anyone. You don’t perform for me? She studied my face like she was trying to memorize it. No, that’s the strangest part.

I don’t feel like I need to. Her gaze held mine for a moment that stretched like taffy, sweet and almost painful in its intensity. I wanted to say something to tell her that she didn’t need to perform for me because I already saw her. Had been seeing her for weeks now in ways that made my chest ache. But the words tangled in my throat. Evan, she started, then stopped, shook her head slightly. Never mind. What? I moved closer.

Close enough that I could feel the heat radiating from her body. What were you going to say? Nothing that should be said, she answered, but she didn’t move away. Nothing that would make any sense. Try me. She laughed, but it was sad. You’re 20. I’m 38. You’re my son’s best friend. I’m a widow who can barely keep her life together. What could I possibly say that would make any sense? You could say what you’re thinking, I suggested.

What you’re actually thinking, not what you think you should think. She was quiet for a long moment. Then I’m thinking that you make me feel like I’m 20 again, but also like I’m actually 38 for the first time. Like all the years before were just rehearsal, and now suddenly I’m awake. She paused, took a shaky breath. I’m thinking that when you look at me, I don’t feel like Dererick’s mom or Tom’s widow or the woman trying to keep a failing garage running.

I just feel like Julia. You are just Julia, I said. That’s all I see. That’s the problem, she whispered. Later that night, as we locked up, our hands met on the door handle. Neither of us had reached for it at the same moment by accident. I knew that. She knew that. We stood there, her fingers resting on mine, the metal of the handle cold beneath our joined hands. Drive safely,” she said, her voice quiet, but waited with something heavier than concern for my commute.

I nodded, but I didn’t move my hand. Neither did she. We stood there for what felt like forever, but was probably only seconds, connected by this small touch that somehow felt more intimate than if we’d kissed. When she finally pulled her hand away, she did it slowly, deliberately, her fingers trailing across mine in a way that made my whole arm tingle. She looked at me one more time, and in her eyes, I saw the same conflict I felt, want and shouldn’t, need and can’t, now and never.

I walked to my car with my pulse thrumming in my ears and her name sitting on my tongue like a secret I was dying to tell but never could. It was one of those warm Saturdays in early August when the air feels like it’s been sitting still for hours, thick and sweet like honey. The kind of day where everything moves slower, even thoughts. Derek had plans with his girlfriend Melissa. something about her cousin’s barbecue in Princeton. He’d been talking about it all week, mostly complaining about having to meet more of her family, but I could tell he was actually looking forward to it.

3 hours of small talk about my career goals. He’d groaned the night before, like working at AutoZone is my life’s ambition. So, it was just Julia and me at the shop. She’d texted me the night before, asked if I could help her reorganize the overhead lighting in the back bay. A few of the fixtures were flickering, she said, and she wanted to swap them out before the new mechanic started on Monday. Her text had been all business, but there was a second one that came through a minute later.

Only if you’re free. No pressure. I’d stared at that second text for a long time. the way she’d added it, like an afterthought, like she was giving me an out. Like she was nervous I might say no. Or maybe nervous I might say yes. I’d texted back, “I’ll be there.” Three words, but I’d typed and deleted a dozen variations. Adding happy to help seemed too eager. Sure, felt too casual. Of course, was too intimate somehow. In the end, simple felt safest.

I’d barely slept that night. and when I did, I dreamed about her hands. The garage was quiet when I arrived at 9:00, that particular weekend, quiet, where the usual urgency of broken cars and impatient customers was absent. The metal door was rolled halfway up to let in the morning light, creating a bright line across the concrete floor. Julia was already there, standing on a step stool, examining one of the fluorescent fixtures with a frown. She wore faded jeans that hugged her hips and a white tank top that revealed the elegant line of her shoulders.

Her hair was in a high ponytail today, different from the usual bun, and it swayed when she moved. When she saw me, she smiled and something in my chest expanded like a balloon. “Hey,” she said, stepping down from the stool. “You still up for climbing ladders and pretending not to fall? Long as you promise not to laugh when I inevitably eat it,” I said, trying to match her light tone, trying to pretend that being alone with her didn’t make my skin feel electric.

She smirked, but there was something else in her expression, a nervousness that matched my own. No promises. “You’re pretty funny when you’re trying to act coordinated.” We spent the first half hour gathering tools and dragging the old aluminum ladder across the concrete. It scraped against the floor with a sound like fingernails, leaving silver streaks on the already scarred surface. She handed me a headlamp, one of those elastic ones that made everyone look ridiculous. Her fingers brushed my wrist as she adjusted the strap, and I had to focus on breathing normally.

“Looks good on you,” she said, stepping back to admire her handiwork. But the way she was looking at me wasn’t really about the headlamp. Her eyes traveled across my face down to my chest, then back up like she was allowing herself to really look for the first time. Stylish, right? I said, my voice coming out rougher than intended. Very coal miner chic, she laughed, but it was breathy, distracted. Something like that. The ladder wasn’t particularly high, maybe 8 ft, but the ceiling fixtures were awkward to reach, and the heat that had accumulated near the roof made the air thick and hard to breathe.

“Or maybe that was just her proximity, the way she stood below me, one hand on the ladder’s base, the other resting lightly on my ankle. “You steady?” she called up. “Yeah,” I lied. My hands were shaking, but not from the height. Her thumb moved slightly against my ankle, just the smallest motion. Maybe unconscious, maybe not, but it sent heat shooting up my leg, through my body, settling low in my stomach. I nearly dropped the fixture. “Careful,” she said, and her voice was different now, lower, more intimate.

“I’ve got you.” I worked on the fixture, trying to concentrate on the task, but I was hyper aware of every point of contact between us. Her hand on my ankle felt like a brand. I could feel her breathing, see the rise and fall of her chest in my peripheral vision. When I glanced down, she was looking up at me, and the expression on her face made me forget what I was doing. “Julia,” I said, not sure what I was going to say next.

“Just focus,” she said softly, but her hand tightened slightly on my ankle, and I knew she felt it, too. This thing between us that was getting harder to ignore. I finished with the fixture and started down the ladder, moving slowly, carefully. When my feet hit the floor, I turned toward her and we were standing closer than we should be, closer than we would be if this was just about work. We were standing close enough that I could see the pulse point in her throat, quick and unsteady.

Her face was flushed from the heat or something else. A strand of hair had escaped her ponytail and was stuck to her neck with perspiration. There was a smudge of dust across her left cheekbone, and without thinking, I reached up to brush it away with my thumb. She didn’t move, didn’t step back, didn’t tell me to stop. Her lips parted slightly, and I heard her intake of breath, sharp and surprised. you had. I started to explain, but my voice died as her hand came up to cover mine, pressing it against her cheek.

I know, she whispered. We stood there, my hand on her face, her hand on mine, the world shrinking down to just this moment, just this connection. Her eyes searched mine, looking for something. Permission maybe, or absolution, or just understanding. I haven’t stopped thinking about that day, I admitted, the words tumbling out before I could stop them. The torn shirt, your hand and mine. I can’t stop thinking about it. Her expression didn’t change right away, but something in her shoulders softened like she’d been holding her breath for weeks and could finally exhale.

I know, she said again, even softer. Then I haven’t either. It was like the air shifted around us, became charged with possibility. Neither of us moved at first, both waiting for the other to make the choice that would change everything or nothing. Then she reached up slowly and adjusted the collar of my t-shirt, her fingers brushing the side of my neck. The touch was light but deliberate, and it sent shivers down my spine. Her hand stayed there, resting against the place where my pulse was hammering.

Your heart is racing, she observed almost clinically, but her voice was rough. Yeah, I agreed. It is mine, too. Our eyes locked, and I leaned in slowly, giving her time to stop me, to step back, to remember all the reasons this was a bad idea. But she didn’t. Instead, she tilted her face up slightly and our foreheads touched first. A moment of gentle contact that somehow felt more intimate than a kiss. My hands found her waist, not pulling her closer, just resting there, feeling the heat of her body through the thin fabric of her tank top.

She breathed out almost like a sigh of relief, and I felt it against my lips. “This is probably a mistake,” she whispered. But she didn’t sound convinced. Probably, I agreed. But neither of us moved away. Her lips were so close. I could feel the warmth of her breath. And then finally, inevitably, we kissed. It was quiet and uncertain at first, like we were both surprised it was actually happening. Her lips were softer than I’d imagined, and she tasted like coffee and mint gum.

The kiss was careful, tentative, a question more than a statement. But then her hand slid from my neck to the back of my head, fingers tangling in my hair, and the kiss deepened. It wasn’t the kind of kiss you see in movies. All passion and desperation. It was slower, more deliberate, waited with everything we weren’t saying. It was the kind of kiss you give when you’ve been thinking about it for too long. when you know it might be the only one you get.

When you want to memorize every second. My hands tightened on her waist, pulling her slightly closer, and she made a small sound in the back of her throat that nearly undid me. We kissed like we were trying to communicate everything we couldn’t say out loud. The weeks of tension, the careful distances we’d maintained, the growing awareness that had made every casual touch feel monumental. When we finally broke apart, we were both breathing hard. She looked at me, eyes wide and vulnerable in a way I’d never seen before, like kissing me had stripped away all her carefully maintained defenses.

“We can’t,” she started, but it sounded more like a question than a statement. “I know,” I said, though I wasn’t sure I did know. Wasn’t sure I cared about whatever reasons we couldn’t. Derek, I know the age. I know. We stood there, forehead still touching, sharing the same air, neither willing to be the first to step away. I should feel worse about this, she said after a moment. I should feel guilty or ashamed or something, but I don’t.

I just feel. She paused, searching for words. Alive. For the first time in years, I feel alive. Is that bad? She pulled back enough to look at me properly. I don’t know. Maybe. Probably. Does it matter? Not to me. She studied my face like she was trying to memorize it. You’re so young, Evan. You don’t understand what you’re risking. I’m risking a friendship. I said you’re risking more. your relationship with your son, your reputation, your business maybe.

So why? Because when I’m with you, I don’t feel 20. I don’t feel like I’m drifting. I feel grounded, real, like I finally understand what everyone’s been looking for. I paused, gathered courage, because when you look at me, I feel seen. Not just looked at, but seen. She blinked and I saw tears gathering in her eyes. That’s exactly how you make me feel. We sat down on the floor then, backs against the wall, the concrete cool through our clothes.

We didn’t touch, but we sat close enough that I could feel the heat from her body. The garage was quiet, except for the distant sound of traffic and the tick of the metal roof expanding in the heat. I don’t regret it, she said after a while, not looking at me. The kiss. I should, but I don’t. Me neither. But I don’t know what it means. What we do now? We don’t have to know, I said. We don’t have to have a plan or a future or anything figured out.

We can just be for now. She turned to look at me. Can we Can we really just be or will this eat us alive? I didn’t have an answer for that. Instead, I reached over and took her hand, interlacing our fingers. She squeezed back and we sat there in the quiet garage, holding hands like teenagers, letting the moment exist without trying to define it. When we finally got up, the sun was lower, casting long shadows across the floor.

She looked rumpled, hair messed, lips slightly swollen, dust on her knees from the floor. I probably looked the same. We stood facing each other, and I could see her rebuilding her walls, putting herself back together. This stays here, she said quietly. Whatever this is, it doesn’t leave this garage. Okay, I mean it, Evan. Derek can’t know. No one can know. I understand. She looked like she wanted to say more, but instead she just nodded, and turned toward the office.

At the door, she paused, looked back at me. Next Saturday, she said. Derek has another thing with Melissa. If you wanted to help with inventory, I’ll be here. She smiled then, small and private, just for me. Good. Then she was gone and I was alone in the garage with the ghost of her kiss still on my lips and the certainty that everything had changed even if nothing could. The week that followed was torture. 7 days of pretending everything was normal while my entire world had tilted on its axis.

I went through the motions. Work at the hardware store, dinner with my parents, hanging out with Derek like nothing had changed. But everything had changed. I could still feel Julia’s lips on mine. Still feel her hand in my hair. Still hear the way she’d said my name like it was a confession. Derek didn’t notice anything different. Too caught up in his own drama with Melissa, who was apparently pressuring him to meet her parents officially. like a real dinner, he complained Wednesday night while we played video games in my basement with her dad asking about my intentions and [ __ ] What are your intentions?

I asked, trying to focus on the game and not think about his mother. Hell, if I know, I just want to date her, not marry her. We’re 20 for [ __ ] sake. 20. The number sat heavy in the room. I was 20. Julia was 38. 18 years between us, more than half my lifetime. When I was born, she was already in high school, probably worried about prom dates and college applications while I was learning to exist.

“You okay, man?” Derek asked, pausing the game. “You’ve been weird lately.” “Just tired?” I lied. “Work’s been crazy. You should quit that place. Come work at the garage full-time. Mom’s always saying she needs more help, especially someone she trusts. My chest tightened. Maybe I’m serious. She likes you. Says you’re the only one of my friends who actually works instead of just talking about working. He unpaused the game. Plus, you’d get to see her horrible morning mood every day.

Lucky you. I forced a laugh. But inside, I was thinking about Julia in the mornings, wondering what she looked like when she first woke up. If her hair was messy, if she was one of those people who needed coffee before they could form complete sentences. Saturday came slowly, then all at once. I showed up at the garage at 10:00, later than usual, trying not to seem too eager. Julia was already there, wearing jean shorts that showed off her legs and a black t-shirt that was soft with age.

Her hair was down for once, falling past her shoulders in waves that made her look younger, less guarded. “Hey,” she said when she saw me, and there was shyness in her voice that hadn’t been there before. “Hey.” We stood there for a moment, awkward, like we’d forgotten how to be around each other. The kiss had changed things, made everything feel charged and uncertain. “So, inventory?” I asked. right inventory. But she didn’t move toward the supply room. Instead, she fidgeted with her keys, spinning them around her finger in a nervous gesture I’d never seen from her before.

Evan, about last week. We don’t have to talk about it, I interrupted, not sure I could handle her telling me it was a mistake. No, we do. Or I do. I need to say this. She took a breath, looked me in the eyes. I haven’t kissed anyone since my husband died. 3 years. And you’re the first person I’ve wanted to kiss. The first person I’ve let myself want anything with. Julia, let me finish. Please. She moved closer and I caught her scent.

That mix of vanilla and motor oil that I’d started dreaming about. I told myself it was just attraction. You’re young and handsome and kind and I’m lonely. I told myself it would pass, but it hasn’t. It’s gotten worse or better. I can’t decide. What are you saying? She reached out, touched my hand briefly, then pulled back like the contact burned. I’m saying I can’t promise you anything. I can’t offer you a future or a relationship or even acknowledgement outside these walls.

All I can give you is now here. Whatever this is, and I need to know if that’s enough. I thought about it. Really thought about it. Was it enough? These stolen moments in a garage that smelled like rubber and rust. This secret that could destroy everything if it got out. this woman who made me feel more alive than anyone my own age ever had. It’s enough. I said, “You’re enough.” She kissed me then, different from the first time.

This kiss was decisive, certain. She pressed her body against mine, and I could feel her heart racing through her shirt. My hands found her waist, pulled her closer, and she made that sound again, that small sigh that drove me crazy. We kissed against the wall, her back pressed to the concrete, my body caging hers in. She was so much smaller than me like this. Had to tilt her head back to meet my lips. And something about that height difference, that physical reminder of how we fit together, made everything feel more real.

Her hands roamed my back, slipped under my shirt to touch bare skin, and I gasped at the contact. “Is this okay?” she whispered against my mouth. “More than okay.” We stayed like that for who knows how long, kissing like teenagers, hands exploring, but not going too far. Both of us aware that we were in a place where anyone could walk in. The danger of it, the possibility of being caught, made everything feel more intense. When we finally separated, we were both disheveled and breathing hard.

She looked at me with dark eyes, pupils dilated, lips swollen from kissing. “We should actually do inventory,” she said, but her voice was rough, unconvincing. “We should.” Neither of us moved. or she said slowly, we could go for a drive, get coffee somewhere, talk talk. She smiled and there was mischief in it, among other things. We took her truck, leaving my car at the garage so it wouldn’t look suspicious if someone drove by. She drove us out of town, past the suburbs, and into the countryside where New Jersey turned rural and beautiful.

We stopped at a diner 30 mi away, far enough that we wouldn’t run into anyone we knew. Over coffee and pancakes, we talked about everything and nothing. She told me about meeting her husband in college, how he’d been studying business while she was studying art. “Opposites attract,” she said with a sad smile. “Until they don’t.” I told her about feeling stuck, about watching everyone else seem to know exactly where they were going while I felt like I was standing still.

Sometimes I think there’s something wrong with me, I admitted like everyone else got instructions for how to be an adult and I’m just pretending. There’s nothing wrong with you, she said firmly. You’re just honest about what everyone else feels but won’t admit. We’re all pretending, Evan. Some of us are just better at it. Her foot found mine under the table and we played footsie like kids while discussing philosophy and loss and the way coffee tastes better when you’re with someone who matters.

“Tell me about your paintings,” I said. She looked surprised. “What do you want to know?” “Everything. What you painted, why you stopped, what it felt like when you were creating.” She was quiet for a moment, stirring her coffee. I painted landscapes mostly, but not pretty ones. I was interested in abandoned places, old factories, empty houses, dead malls, places where life used to be but wasn’t anymore. She looked up at me. I suppose that says something about my mental state, doesn’t it?

Or maybe you just saw beauty in things other people overlooked. She studied me like you do. What do you mean? You see beauty in this? She gestured between us. In something everyone else would say is wrong or inappropriate or doomed. Isn’t there beauty in it? I asked. In finding each other against the odds. In feeling something real, even if it can’t last. She reached across the table and took my hand. You’re going to break my heart, aren’t you?

I think we’re going to break each other’s. And you’re okay with that? I’d rather have my heart broken by something real than live safely with nothing. After that day, we found reasons to see each other. Always at the garage, always with plausible deniability, but the pretense got thinner each time. Derek started joking about how often I was there, calling me employee of the month, even though I wasn’t actually employed. Julia and I developed a rhythm. We’d work on legitimate projects, maintaining enough distance to seem normal if anyone walked in.

But the moment we were sure we were alone, the magnetic pull between us would take over. We kissed in the supply closet, in the office with the blinds drawn, in her truck parked behind the building. Each kiss felt like theft, like we were stealing something from the universe that wasn’t meant to be ours. But that made it sweeter somehow, more precious. We never went further than kissing and touching over clothes. Though the want was there, burning under every interaction, it was like we both knew that crossing that final line would make it impossible to go back, impossible to pretend this was just a passing attraction.

One evening in late August, just before I was supposed to go back to school, she asked me to stay after closing. Dererick was at Melissa’s and we had the place to ourselves. She’d been quiet all day, distracted, and I could feel something building, some decision being made. After we locked up, she took my hand and led me to the roof. There was a ladder in the back that led up to a flat section where Tom used to go smoke when he was alive.

She’d mentioned it once, but never taken me there. The roof was nothing special. tar paper and gravel, a few old lawn chairs that had seen better days, cigarette butts that had been there so long they’d bleached white in the sun. But the view was beautiful. “You could see the whole town spread out, the lights just starting to come on as dusk fell. “Tom used to bring me up here when we were dating,” she said, settling into one of the chairs.

He’d stolen the key to his dad’s garage, and we’d sneak up here to be alone. You miss him? I said it wasn’t a question. I miss who we were then, she corrected. I miss being young and thinking love was enough. I miss believing that if you just worked hard and followed the rules, everything would turn out okay. But it didn’t. No, he died at 45. Evan, massive heart attack at his desk going over invoices. He died doing paperwork for a garage he didn’t even want to run.

She looked at me. That’s what following the rules gets you. A heart attack at your desk and a widow who doesn’t know how to mourn you properly because she’s not sure she really knew you anymore. Julia, I’m going to tell you something I’ve never told anyone. She interrupted. Not even Derek. Especially not Derek. I waited. Tom and I hadn’t had sex in 2 years when he died. 2 years. We slept in the same bed, ate dinner together, raised our son, ran our business, and we were strangers.

Polite strangers who’d forgotten how to touch each other. Why are you telling me this? Because I need you to understand that what’s happening between us, it’s not just loneliness or rebellion or a midlife crisis. It’s the first time in years I’ve felt like myself. The first time I’ve wanted someone because I want them, not because I’m supposed to. She stood up, moved to the edge of the roof where a small wall prevented anyone from falling. When I’m with you, I remember who I was before I became who I am.

Does that make sense? I joined her at the wall, stood close enough that our arms touched. It makes perfect sense. She turned to face me and in the dying light she looked impossibly beautiful. I think I’m falling in love with you, she said quietly. And that terrifies me more than anything. Why? Because you’re going to leave. Because you should leave. Because you’re 20 years old and you have your whole life ahead of you and I’m just a chapter in it, not the whole story.

You don’t know that, don’t I? She touched my face, traced my jawline with her thumb. Tell me honestly, can you see a future where this works? Where we’re together publicly? Where Dererick accepts it? Where the town doesn’t gossip? Where the age difference doesn’t matter? I wanted to lie, to tell her, “Yes, of course, we’d figure it out.” But she deserved honesty. “No, I can’t see that.” She nodded unsurprised but still hurt. So what are we doing? We’re living.

I said we’re feeling something real. We’re refusing to be numb. Isn’t that enough? For now, she said. But what about when now ends? I didn’t have an answer for that. Instead, I kissed her as the sun set behind us. kissed her like I could pour all my feelings into that one perfect moment and make it last forever. Summer ended like it always does, quietly without permission while you’re not paying attention. One week we were still sweating through our shirts in the garage and the next the breeze started to shift.

The air felt cooler in the mornings, sharper, like it was warning us that change was coming whether we wanted it or not. I had to pack for school. Junior year at Rutgers, studying business because I had to study something and it seemed practical. The thought of leaving Julia, of going back to dorm life and parties and people my own age felt like preparing for exile. The last week was agony. We both knew it was ending, but neither of us acknowledged it directly.

We worked in the garage, stealing moments when we could. But there was a desperation to our kisses now. A finality that made everything hurt. On my last day, a Thursday, I came to say goodbye. Derek was there, which made everything harder and easier at the same time. Harder because I couldn’t touch her. Couldn’t say what I wanted to say. Easier because it prevented us from making promises we couldn’t keep. See you at Thanksgiving, man. Derek said, clapping me on the back.

Try not to fail out. I’ll do my best. Julia was reorganizing the socket wrenches, not looking at me. Drive safe, Evan. Good luck with your classes. Her voice was steady, professional, giving nothing away. But when Derek went to the bathroom, she finally looked at me, and her eyes were full of everything she couldn’t say. Julia, I started. Don’t, she said softly. Please, just don’t. I wanted to tell her I loved her. I wanted to tell her I’d wait, that I’d come back, that this didn’t have to end.

But Derek was coming back, and the moment was gone. I drove away without looking back, but I could feel her watching from the garage door. Fall came and went in a blur of classes I didn’t care about and parties that felt hollow. I buried myself in school work, not because I was interested, but because it was better than thinking about Julia. I saw Derek a couple of times, quick visits, a Halloween party, but he never mentioned his mom except in passing, and I never asked.

But I thought about her constantly. I thought about her hands, the way they moved when she worked. I thought about the freckle under her jaw, the one I’d kissed that last day when Derek wasn’t looking. I thought about the way she laughed low and surprised like joy was something that caught her off guard. Sometimes late at night, I’d write her texts I’d never send. long messages about missing her, about the way cafeteria coffee tasted like disappointment compared to what she used to bring me, about how every woman I met seemed insubstantial compared to her.

I’d write them all out, then delete them, leaving no trace except the ache in my chest. Then winter came, cold and brutal, the kind that made everything brittle. Dead leaves crunched underfoot and the sky was the color of old steel. I was home for winter break, staying with my parents, avoiding the places I might run into anyone from that summer. It was late one night, just after 1:00 in the morning. I was sitting at my desk, half-heartedly working on a paper about market economics that wasn’t due for weeks when my phone lit up.

Unknown number, one message. Garage still has the light on in case you’re nearby. Jay. I stared at it for so long, the screen dimmed. My heart was racing, my mouth dry. Julia had never texted me before, not directly. We’d been so careful, so conscious of leaving no digital trail. But here it was, proof that she was thinking of me, that she was sitting somewhere in the dark, taking this risk. I didn’t respond, didn’t type anything, didn’t even open the message officially so she’d see the read receipt.

I just stared at it, my thumb hovering over the screen, paralyzed between want and shouldn’t. Part of me wanted to go immediately, to get in my car and drive through the frozen night to see her, to hold her, to tell her that months of distance hadn’t changed anything, that I still woke up thinking about her, still fell asleep, replaying our moments together. But I didn’t move. I sat there frozen in that space between desire and reality. And slowly, inevitably, the screen dimmed again.

That night, I didn’t sleep. I lay in bed thinking about the garage, about whether she was really there, or if it was just a wish, a hope that I might be nearby. I thought about the rain on the roof that first day, how it had created a private world for us. I thought about her lips, how they’d tasted like possibility and ending all at once. I remembered everything in vivid detail. The exact shade of her eyes in the afternoon light.

The way she bit her lip when concentrating. The sound of her breath catching when I kissed her neck that one time when we thought we had more time than we did. We never named what we had. It wasn’t a relationship too hidden for that. It wasn’t an affair. We hadn’t gone far enough. It wasn’t even a mistake. We’d been too deliberate. too aware of what we were choosing. It was just something that happened between two people who recognized each other’s loneliness, who saw past the roles they were supposed to play to the humans underneath.

Something that lived in the quiet spaces we didn’t talk about, in the moments between heartbeats, in the silence after a kiss. Sometimes that’s all something can be. a perfect impossible moment that you carry with you forever. Even as life moves on around it, even now, years later, back in my adult life with an adult job and adult responsibilities, I catch myself thinking about that summer. I’ll walk past a garage and smell motor oil and rain, and suddenly I’m 20 again, watching Julia laugh at something I said, feeling like the luckiest person alive just to make her smile.

Sometimes I drive past the old garage when I’m in town. It’s under new ownership now. Dererick sold it after Julia remarried and moved to Colorado. Yeah, she remarried. A good man, Derek says. Someone age appropriate who treats her well. I’m happy for her. I am. She deserves someone who can give her a real life, not just stolen moments in a run-down garage. But sometimes late at night when I can’t sleep, I think about that text I never answered.

I wonder what would have happened if I’d driven to the garage that night. If I’d found her there waiting in the dark, would we have talked, kissed, finally crossed that last line we’d been so careful not to cross? Or would we have just sat in silence, two people who loved each other in a way that could never quite work, saying goodbye without words? I’ll never know. And maybe that’s better. Some stories are more beautiful unfinished. Some questions more perfect unanswered.

What we had exists now only in memory, preserved like an insect in amber. Forever perfect, forever impossible, forever mine. And that’s the part that stays, the part you don’t forget. Not the ending or the beginning, but the middle. When everything was possible and nothing was certain. When a torn shirt and a helping hand could change your whole world. When Julia looked at me and saw not who I was supposed to be, but who I actually was. When I looked at her and saw not Dererick’s mom or Tom’s widow, but Julia, just Julia, beautiful and broken and absolutely impossibly perfect.

That’s what I carry with me. Not regret, not whatifs, but gratitude. Gratitude that for one summer in a garage that smelled like oil and possibility, I was truly completely alive. And sometimes, even now, that’s enough.