We-ll Always Have Summer -

He turned off the flame. The silence that followed was the loudest sound of the whole summer—louder than the Fourth of July fireworks over the inlet, louder than the gulls fighting over a crab shell. He set the pot aside and leaned against the sink, wiping his hands on a dishrag that used to be a towel.

Ten summers ago, we were nineteen and stupid, lying on this same dock with our ankles in the water. He’d said, What if we never tried to make this anything? What if we just… came back here? And I’d said, That’s the dumbest smart thing I’ve ever heard. And we’d shaken on it, like children sealing a pact with bloody thumbs. We-ll Always Have Summer

“No, listen.” He stepped closer, close enough that I could see the tiny scar above his eyebrow—bike accident, age eleven, he’d told me the first night we ever spent here. “Not forever. Just… through September. Through the equinox. Through the first storm that brings down the last of the plums.” He turned off the flame

We never said I love you . We said See you in June. We never fought about the future. We fought about who finished the good coffee, who left the screen door unlatched, whether the tide was high enough for swimming. We kept it small. We kept it safe. Ten summers ago, we were nineteen and stupid,

He smiled. It was the same crooked smile from the dock, from nineteen, from the first moment I ever saw him and thought, Oh. There you are.

And for the first time, I believed him—not because it was easy, but because we had finally stopped pretending that a thing worth having could be kept in a box marked July Only .