People thought Noah Reed and I were dating.
They said it casually, like it was obvious. Like it was something everyone could see except us.
People thought Noah Reed and I were dating.
They said it casually, like it was obvious. Like it was something everyone could see except us.
Every time it came up during lunch breaks, after meetings, whispered in passing I laughed. I laughed easily, lightly, as if the idea amused me instead of unsettling me.
Because laughter was easier than explaining the truth.
We weren't lovers. We weren't even close to that.
We were just two people who worked together too well, talked too much, and knew each other too deeply. We shared thoughts before finishing sentences, traded glances that said more than words, and understood each other in ways that made everyone else feel like outsiders
That didn't mean love.
It meant comfort.
And comfort was safe.
Love wasn't.
"Aira."
I didn't look up right away. My eyes stayed glued to my laptop screen, even though the numbers had stopped making sense at least ten minutes ago. The spreadsheet blurred together, columns bleeding into each other as my thoughts drifted somewhere they didn't belong.
"Aira," Noah repeated, louder this time. "If you stare at that spreadsheet any harder, it might confess its sins."
I sighed, pinching the bridge of my nose before finally turning toward him. "Do you ever take work seriously?"
He leaned back in his chair, arms folded, lips tugging into that familiar half-smile-the one that felt too intimate for someone who was supposed to be just a colleague.
"Only when you're not around to make it bearable."
There it was again.
That thing he did.
The casual words that sounded like nothing and everything all at once. The effortless way he slipped into my space without asking. The warmth that followed him wherever he went.
I rolled my eyes, forcing myself not to think too hard about it. "You're distracting."
"And yet," he said, rolling his chair closer to my desk, "you never tell me to leave."
Because I didn't want him to.
The thought slid through my mind uninvited, unwelcome-and dangerous.
Instead of answering, I closed my laptop and handed it to him. Noah took it without hesitation, our fingers brushing briefly in a way that sent an unwanted jolt up my arm. He didn't react. Or maybe he did, and hid it better than I did.
He always hid things better.
We had been like this for over a year.
Same department. Same deadlines. Same quiet understanding that made collaboration feel effortless. Same late nights when the office emptied out and it was just the hum of fluorescent lights, the distant sound of traffic below, and Noah's presence beside me-steady and familiar.
Too familiar.
"You're overcomplicating this," Noah said after a moment, fingers flying across the keyboard.
"I'm not," I replied automatically.
"You are," he said calmly. "You always do this when you're afraid of failing."
I stiffened. "I'm not afraid."
He glanced at me, eyes sharp but gentle. "You reorganized your bag three times today."
"That means nothing."
"It means everything."
I looked away.
I hated how easily he read me. How he noticed things no one else did. How he remembered the smallest details-my coffee order, my stress habits, the way I went quiet when I was overwhelmed.
Most people wanted something from me.
Noah never did.
And that made him dangerous.
At lunch, the rumors followed us like they always did.
"If you two don't stop pretending, HR is going to assume you're married," Maya joked as she passed our table, grinning.
I laughed too quickly. Too loudly. "We're not dating."
Across from me, Noah paused mid-bite.
He didn't laugh.
He just smiled faintly and said, "Just friends."
Something about the way he said it made my chest tighten.
Not relief.
Something closer to loss.
After lunch, Noah grew quieter. Still helpful. Still present. But the easy banter softened into something restrained, like he was holding himself back. The air between us felt heavier, charged in a way I didn't want to acknowledge.
By the time evening came, the office was nearly empty. I packed my bag faster than usual, suddenly eager to escape the strange tension curling in my chest.
"Aira."
The way he said my name stopped me.
I turned slowly.
Noah was standing, hands shoved into his pockets, shoulders tense. His posture was different-less relaxed, more deliberate. He looked... nervous.
I'd never seen Noah nervous
"Yeah?" I asked, forcing casual into my voice.
"Can we talk?"
"We've been talking all day."
He shook his head. "Not like this."
Something inside me warned me to leave. To make an excuse. To protect whatever fragile balance we had built.
But I stayed.
"Okay," I said carefully. "What's wrong?"
He hesitated, then exhaled sharply, like he'd been holding his breath for far too long.
"Do you ever feel," he began slowly, "like we're standing on the edge of something we refuse to name?"
My heart skipped.
"I don't know what you mean."
"Yes, you do."
I folded my arms, suddenly cold. "Noah"
"Just answer me," he said quietly. "Do you think we're really just friends?"
There it was.
The question I had been avoiding for months.
I laughed nervously. "Of course we are."
He studied my face, his gaze searching-like he was looking for cracks I desperately tried to hide. "Are you sure?"
"Yes," I said too fast. "Why wouldn't we be?"
He took a step closer. Not invading my space, just enough to make his presence impossible to ignore.
"Because friends don't look at each other the way you look at me when you think I'm not watching."
My breath caught.
"That's not true."
"Then tell me," he said softly, "why it hurts when you talk about dating other people."
I opened my mouth.
Nothing came out.
"I'm not asking you to choose me," he continued, voice low, steady, vulnerable in a way that terrified me. "I just need to know if I'm alone in this."
In what?
The feeling.
The pull.
The terrifying possibility that what we had wasn't harmless at all.
"Noah," I whispered, "I can't lose you."
His jaw tightened. "You already are."
Fear surged through me sharp, overwhelming, undeniable.
"We're friends," I insisted. "That's enough. Isn't it?"
He looked at me for a long moment. Something unreadable passed through his eyes. Then he nodded once.
"Yeah," he said, but his voice was hollow. "It has to be."
He turned away, grabbing his jacket.
"Noah"
He paused at the door, back still facing me.
"One day," he said quietly, "you're going to realize that playing it safe still costs you something."
Then he left.
The door closed softly behind him, the sound echoing far louder than it should have.
I stood there long after, my heart pounding, my chest aching with something I refused to name.
I told myself I'd done the right thing.
I told myself I had protected us.
I didn't know then that I had just drawn the first line
And that every line after this would only push us.
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