Chapter 2: The Weight of No Turning Back
In Maple Heights, the air was so still you could hear a pin drop.
It was one of those late afternoons when the golden sun filtered in through the front windows, casting stripes on the hardwood. The vanilla-scented candle on the mantle was burning down to a stub, its smoke twirling lazily in the air, giving the room a hazy softness—but Grandma Carol's gaze cut through it sharp as ever.
She looked me up and down, her eyes narrowed as if she could size up every secret I ever tried to keep. The only sound was the faint ticking of the wall clock, punctuating her words:
“You’ve always been fond of Noah. Why aren’t you choosing him?”
I knelt on the hardwood floor for a long time, my voice low:
“Precisely because I’m fond of him, I can’t marry him.”
I could hear my own heartbeat in my ears. I swallowed, staring at the grain of the floor. "I don’t want to hurt myself, or waste away waiting with a broken heart for someone who’ll never come back. Please, Grandma, grant me this wish."
The floor was cold through my jeans, and I knelt there until my knees tingled, toes numb, feeling every second drag out.
At last, I heard Grandma Carol sigh, her tone softening:
“All right. Tomorrow, when I go to city hall, I’ll talk to the mayor and request your engagement.”
The tension melted a little, and I let out a breath I hadn't known I was holding. I bowed my head, hands pressed together in my lap—a Turner family way of saying thank you without words. The vanilla candle sputtered, as if in approval.
In this life, I will not marry Noah Carter again.
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