Zane had never liked birthdays.
Not because they reminded him of ti passing, but because they carried expectations he had never learned how to hold. As a child, they were marked politely and without excess. As an adult, they beca acknowledgnts made out of habit rather than aning. He learned to accept them with composure and move on.
This year was different.
He felt it the mont they turned onto his mother’s street.
The house stood quietly at the end of the block, lights warm behind the windows, the porch glowing softly against the winter dark. It did not announce itself or perform welco. It never had. It existed as a constant rather than a destination, unchanged in a way that felt intentional rather than stagnant.
Willow reached over and took his hand as he parked.
"You okay?" she asked, gently but directly.
He glanced at her, surprised by the question, then nodded. "Yes."
She studied him for a mont, then smiled and squeezed his hand once before letting go, trusting the answer without pressing for more.
Inside, the house slled the way it always had. Wood polish. Old books. Sothing slow-cooked and familiar. His mother stood in the doorway as if she had been waiting there for a while, her smile imdiate and unguarded.
"Happy birthday," she said simply, pulling him into a hug that was firm and unhesitating.
He closed his eyes for a brief mont and returned it fully. "Thank you."
She stepped back and turned to Willow, her expression softening even further.
"I am very glad you are here."
Willow understood the weight of the sentence.
"So am I," she replied, without hesitation.
Dinner unfolded without urgency.
The table was set with care rather than formality. The food was familiar, prepared the sa way it always had been, rich with mory rather than presentation. Conversation moved easily between shared recollections and new stories, laughter surfacing naturally, never forced.
Zane found himself watching Willow as she spoke with his mother. The way she listened. The way she answered without trying to impress or perform. It struck him, not for the first ti, that Willow never tried to earn space. She simply occupied it honestly.
After dessert, his mother excused herself and returned carrying a long, narrow box wrapped in simple paper.
"This is for you," she said, placing it carefully in front of him. "It belonged to your grandfather."
Zane went still.
He did not reach for it imdiately.
She watched him with quiet patience. "He kept it with him wherever he went," she said. "He said it reminded him that ti was sothing you respected, not sothing you chased. And that to respect it, you had to notice it."
Zane opened the box slowly.
Inside lay a leather-bound journal, worn smooth with age, its edges softened by decades of use. Zane ran his fingers lightly over the cover, recognition settling in his chest before mory fully surfaced.
"He wrote in it every night," his mother continued. "Not events. Decisions. Regrets he did not want to repeat. Promises he intended to keep."
Zane swallowed, emotion pressing close to the surface without quite breaking through.
"He wanted you to have it when you were ready," she said. "I think you are."
Zane closed the journal carefully and nodded once. "Thank you."
It was not a loud mont. It did not need to be. The weight of it settled exactly where it belonged.
Later, when they stepped back into the cold night, Willow walked beside him in silence, letting the mont breathe.
"You okay?" she asked again once they were in the car.
"Yes," he said, and this ti the word carried certainty.
At ho, the house greeted them with familiar warmth.
Willow disappeared briefly into the bedroom and returned holding a small, elegant box.
"This one is from ," she said, placing it in his hands. "And before you say anything, please open it."
He did.
Inside lay the skeleton watch. Clean lines. Exposed movent. Precision visible rather than hidden. The craftsmanship spoke for itself.
Zane looked up at her slowly.
"I bought it," Willow said quietly. "With my own money."
He said nothing.
"I missed your birthday last year," she continued. "Not because I forgot. Because I did not know how to stand where I am standing now. I did not trust you then. Or myself."
Her voice remained steady.
"This is not to make up for that," Willow said softly. "It is to mark what is different now. This year, I am choosing you without fear."
Zane closed the box carefully, as though the act itself mattered, then set it aside. When he pulled her into his arms, the force of it surprised her, not rough, but imdiate, instinctive, as if sothing in him had finally given way.
"You do not owe anything," he said into her hair. "Not for then. Not for now."
She rested her forehead against his chest, steadying herself in the familiar rise and fall of his breath.
"I know," she replied. "This isn’t about debt. It’s about ti."
He stilled slightly.
"With this watch," she continued, her voice calm and certain, "I want to mark this mont. Not what we survived. What we chose. This ti is ours."
His arms tightened around her, protective without being possessive, grounding without restraint.
"Then I will wear it for that," he said quietly. "For us."
"I know," she replied. "This is not debt. It is acknowledgnt."
He pulled back just enough to look at her, his expression steady and unguarded.
"Then I will never take it off," he said.
The words were not dramatic. They did not need to be. They carried the quiet certainty of a promise already kept.
After a few monts, he spoke again, quieter now.
"You said two gifts," he murmured.
She smiled, the kind that carried both warmth and intention. "Yes."
They stood facing each other, the house settled around them, the mont unhurried and unobserved.
"You can unwrap the other one now," she said lightly.
His mouth curved into a familiar, dangerous smile. "Should I be concerned."
"Possibly," she replied, already stepping back, eyes bright with mischief.
He made a low, exaggerated sound in his throat, entirely theatrical, and she laughed, turning and bolting toward the bedroom.
"You are not allowed to chase ," she called over her shoulder, already knowing it was a lie.
"I absolutely am," he replied, catching her easily, laughter breaking through his usual restraint as he lifted her off the floor like she weighed nothing at all.
She squealed, half protesting, half delighted, hands gripping his shoulders as he carried her the rest of the way, both of them laughing too hard to pretend this was anything but joy.
They landed on the bed together, breathless and tangled, the laughter fading naturally into sothing softer, warr, charged with affection rather than urgency. His hands settled at her waist, steady and sure, as though grounding himself in the undeniable reality of her being there.
He kissed her slowly, deliberately, not chasing montum, just claiming the mont as it was.
"This," he said quietly, forehead resting against hers, a smile still lingering at the corner of his mouth, "is a very good gift."
She smiled back, brushing her thumb along his jaw. "Happy birthday."
He kissed her again, unhurried and certain, like a man who knew exactly where he belonged.
And for the first ti in a long ti, Zane did not feel like a year had passed unnoticed.
He felt seen.
Chosen.
Held.
And quietly, unmistakably happy.
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