She Held Him Like She Knew


He didn’t remember the first kiss as much as the third—pressed against the small of his back when he turned to look at the stars. That one stayed. There was salt on her breath and rain in her hair. He never asked where the scent came from—jasmine maybe, or lavender burned low—but when he caught it on a passing stranger years later, he nearly wept. Memory lives in the lungs sometimes, not the mind.

She held him like she knew what storms had passed through him. Her touch was delicate. It was sure. Anchoring. She ran her hands down his spine like reading braille, and he found himself breathing slower. The warmth between them didn’t ask for explanation. It only asked for presence. Their embrace was the only prayer he’d ever believed in.

After she left the room, he lay still, the sheets still carrying the echo of her skin. He thought of nothing profound. Only her name. Only the curve of her neck where the morning light had rested. Sometimes love wasn’t lightning or poetry. Sometimes it was the way skin remembered skin.

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