The conversation did not begin as an argunt.
That, Willow would later realize, was part of what unsettled her most, because there was no raised voice or sharp turn to warn her that they were stepping onto unstable ground. There was no visible tension that might have allowed her to brace herself before the shift occurred. It began the way the most consequential conflicts always did, quietly, wrapped inside practicality, where intention surfaced before emotion had ti to gather its defenses.
They were in the kitchen when it happened.
Late afternoon light rested across the counter, softened by the windows, while the house held the hour with its usual calm. Zana was down for her nap, the monitor silent, the quiet uninterrupted. Zane stood near the counter scrolling through sothing on his phone, his attention divided but present in the way it always was when he sensed sothing approaching. Willow was at the island, sorting through a small stack of papers she had taken from a drawer earlier that morning, items she had never quite brought herself to discard.
"I need to go to LA," she said, keeping her tone casual, as though she were naming an errand rather than stating a decision that had already settled inside her.
Zane looked up imdiately, his focus sharpening without effort.
"When," he asked, not defensively and not with surprise, but with the alertness of soone who understood that timing mattered.
"Soon," she replied. "A few days. I need to finish packing what’s left and return Victor’s keys."
The na landed softly, yet it carried weight all the sa.
Zane set his phone down with controlled precision, the motion deliberate enough to signal restraint. "You don’t need to do that yourself," he said. "Everything can be handled without you going back."
Willow nodded once, acknowledging the logic without accepting it. "I know it can," she replied. "But I don’t want it handled that way."
He studied her carefully, not as though searching for a weakness, but as if assessing terrain he had not expected to cross. "Why," he asked.
"Because it isn’t finished," she said. "I resigned months ago, Zane, when I moved to Atlanta. I gave notice. I wrapped things up by email and phone. But there are still things there, my things, my office, the apartnt itself. That Chapter needs to be closed properly, and I need to be the one to do it."
"I can have soone pack it," he said evenly. "We can send everything here, and you won’t have to step foot back in that space."
"That isn’t the point," she said quietly, and this ti there was no uncertainty beneath the words.
Zane exhaled through his nose, the sound controlled but restrained. "Then help understand what the point is."
She set the papers down and rested her palms on the counter, grounding herself before answering. "I don’t want my life erased by proxy," she said. "I lived there. I worked there. I survived there. I don’t want soone else deciding what gets boxed and what gets left behind, as though it never mattered."
He nodded once, absorbing her words without interruption. "I’m not asking you to pretend it didn’t exist," he said. "I’m asking you not to put yourself back inside it."
"You’re not worried about packing," Willow said. "You’re worried about exposure."
"Yes," Zane replied imdiately, without hesitation or deflection.
The word settled between them, precise and weighted.
"You think going back makes vulnerable," she said.
"I think it reopens variables," he answered. "Variables we closed for reasons that were not casual."
"I’m not going back to him," she said. "Victor isn’t even in LA."
"That doesn’t change my concern," he replied.
She felt sothing tighten in her chest, not anger, but recognition. "You don’t want visible in that version of my life at all."
Zane folded his arms, not defensively, but with care, as though containing sothing he did not yet want to release. "I don’t want anyone thinking they still have access."
"This isn’t about access," Willow said. "It’s about respect, for myself, for the work I did, and for the fact that I didn’t disappear. I moved forward."
His jaw tightened slightly. "And I’m saying you don’t have to do it alone."
"I’m not asking to be alone," she replied. "I’m asking to do it myself."
She paused before adding the part she knew mattered most.
"I’ll take Zana with ."
The air in the room shifted perceptibly.
Zane’s expression changed in a way that was subtle but unmistakable, the first visible fracture in his composure.
"No," he said at once.
She t his gaze without flinching. "She’ll be with . It’s only a few days."
"I don’t want her there," he said, the control in his voice thinning just enough to reveal strain. "I don’t want either of you in that environnt."
"She lived part of her life there," Willow replied gently. "And I won’t leave her behind simply so you can feel more comfortable."
"This isn’t about comfort," Zane said. "It’s about protection."
"And this isn’t recklessness," Willow replied. "It’s autonomy, the sa autonomy you taught to claim."
Silence followed, heavy but not hostile, weighted with care rather than threat.
Zane turned toward the window, resting his hands on the sill, while the city beyond remained distant and indifferent. When he spoke again, his voice was careful, asured in a way that made it clear how much this mattered to him.
"I don’t want you pulled back into a version of yourself you fought to leave," he said. "I don’t want reminders that soone else once had proximity to you."
She stepped closer, though she did not touch him. "You don’t get to curate my past so the present feels cleaner," she said softly.
He turned then and t her gaze fully. "I don’t want anything touching you that ever made you smaller."
Her voice remained calm and steady. "You can’t protect by limiting ."
The monitor upstairs stirred faintly, a soft sound that broke the mont without resolving it. Willow glanced toward the stairs before looking back at Zane.
"I’m going," she said. "For a few days, and then I’ll be back."
"I don’t like it," he replied.
"I know."
"That doesn’t change my concern."
"It doesn’t change my decision."
They did not move toward each other, and neither of them stepped away.
Eventually, Zane nodded once, offering acceptance without agreent. "We’ll talk about timing," he said.
"Yes," Willow replied.
The conversation ended the way it began, without escalation, without apology, and without victory. Sothing had shifted beneath the calm, however, and a line now existed where before there had only been alignnt, not a crack, but a boundary that would require care.
That night, the house felt quieter, not tense, but acutely aware.
Willow lay awake later, listening to Zane’s breathing beside her, steady but not fully surrendered. She did not regret what she had said, and she did not doubt her choice.
She understood now that love, even the steady kind, carried edges, and that learning how to hold those edges would matter just as much as learning how to protect each other.
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