#conor maynard imagine

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CM II

It’s down the street from the station. Next to the flower shop.

I glance at the text again and back to the building beside the flower shop but it looks empty. I walk up to the door and someone opens them, revealing the lit interior. I rush in, paranoid that somebody would tell me I didn’t belong and take the lift to where Conor said.

“Hey,” he spots me as soon as I enter the room. There’s two other guys in the room with him but he walks over to me before introducing me.

“Hey…” I say, slightly confused why I was getting such a big introduction.

“Alright,” one of the men looks from me to Conor and smiles. “We’ll check back in soon.”

“Did you want something to drink?” Conor asks, his voice a little higher than usual. “Or we could grab a bite later?”

“That sounds perfect,” I say. “Is somebody a little nervous?”

“Me?” Conor huffs. “No! No wa-okay maybe a little. It’s the first time I brought someone from the group here.”

“Hasn’t Sam been here?”

“Besides him. But it’s different with him. And you.”

“Right.” I shift as we make intense eye contact again. The energy in this room was going to make me crazy. “I saw the coffee on the way in-did you want anything.”

“Nope.” Conor picks up his guitar and sets it down again.

I give an awkward smile and rush out. Oh god I made the worst decision coming here!

I busy myself with the coffee but I keep thinking about the pain I was going to have to endure for the next few hours. I’ve only myself to blame.

When I get back to the room Conor’s back is to me and his headphones prevent him from noticing me. I take a seat on the couch and sip my coffee as I listen to him hum and press a few keys. I wonder how it sounded on headphones.

“Oh-you’re here.” Conor jumps when he spots me. “I’m working on the chorus wanna listen?”

“Yeah!” I grab the headphones he extends to me and the next few hours pass as he slowly builds the song and goofs off about lyrics in between. I have more fun than I thought and see a more focused and passionate Conor. It was really good to see.

“Was that a guitar or your stomach?” Conor asks later.

“Totally a guitar!” I joke.

“Let’s eat.” In a second he’s putting away his gear.

“But your song?” I ask.

“It’s basically done. Thanks to you.”

“I did nothing but make weird faces while you sang,” I laugh.

“Nah you helped the process. Helped with the flow.” Conor shrugs.

“The flow?” I snicker.

“Shut up,” he tugs my ponytail.

I tug my hair back and it falls silent between us as we enter the lift and down onto the street. It’s still oddly silent as we walk to a nearby cafe and still so as we order our food.

But it’s not uncomfortable. Just silent.

“So,” Conor begins when we sit. “You’re leaving on Sunday?”

“Yeah,” I reply. “I’ve got so many errands to run between now and the-“

“Do you think uh…can I drop you to the station? When does your train leave.”

The awkward interruption ripples between us and I feel a fuzzy feeling spreading from my stomach.

“Yeah! I leave at 8am so you might actually have to set an alarm this time.”

Conor groans, “Fine-I’ll wake up for you.”

I’m shocked for a moment. “Is this a prank? Where’s the real Conor?”

“No! I’ll set an alarm I swear on-on my next single!”

“That’s kind of sweet.” I smile at him.

“You’re just realising?” Conor bluffs.

“It took a long time to get past the sour exterior,” I wave my hand around him. “But who knew Conor Maynard could be sweet?”

“Hey um remember that text I sent you? About the last time we saw each other?”

I stare at Conor who’s ripping his napkin. Not this.

“Yeah,” I barely croak out.

“And what I said…I um…”

“It’s okay,” I rush in. “I forgot about it anyway.”

“You did?” Conor looks either surprised or annoyed but I wasn’t good at reading him.

“Oh yeah,” I lie. “All nonsense. We don’t need to talk it out.”

“Cool,” Conor nods. “Nonsense yeah, cool.”

It falls silent and I feel like someone’s punched me in the gut. We focus on our lunches but this time the silence feels heavier.

Conor and I only see each other when our friends went for drinks in the evening. We don’t hang alone or talk about the peculiar few days we had of getting along. Now, actually, he doesn’t even tease me and I wonder what I’d done.

So it’s due to that that I assume he’d forgotten about dropping me on Sunday yet at 7am I get a text from Conor to say he was parked in front of my complex.

It’s just a fifteen minute ride, I remind him.

I know, Conor responds.

When I make it down with my suitcase in tow he puts it in the back himself and we begin the ride in silence. I couldn’t take this.

“I thought you may have forgotten.” I start off. “With the complete radio silence on your end.”

“Just been busy,” Conor mumbles. “But I promised.”

“Yeah but I’m surprised you woke up this early.”

“I haven’t actually slept all night,” Conor glances at me and I notice the bags under his eyes.

“Aw,” I tease. “Too nervous seeing me?”

Conor chuckles. “I was finishing up that song we were working on. I wanted you to hear it before you left.”

“Oh wow yeah,” I’m at a loss for words. “I’d love that.”

“Good,” Conor glances at me again and we hold gazes before he breaks it to look at the road again. “It’s your song.”

We drive for a few minutes before he hands me his phone and instructs me on how to get to it, saying he might still make a few changes. It take a while as Conor’s organization was terrible but I find the file. “October Y/N” Before I play it he says he wants honest feedback and I agree, thinking I would be in a place to give any criticism but when it starts to play I don’t find a single flaw.

Even though I sat in on the chorus of the lyrics and caught a few lines as Conor tested it that day, nothing prepared me for the heartbreak of the song. It felt like Conor was revealing his underbelly, showing me his softer inside. It was a feeling of falling voluntarily to someone who’s arms were willing to catch me. When the last note sounds, I look at Conor and his eyes are challenging my own to say how I felt.

I look down at his hand and slip my own into it, giving it a squeeze. I catch him smiling, unable to reign in his happiness, and he brings my hand to his lips and kisses it.

We freeze.

“Shit I didn’t mean-“ Conor begins apologising as I let out a nervous laugh. “It was just the moment.”

“Was it?” I ask as Conor turns into the train station.

“Yeah the song was ending and I was hyped on excitement I-“

“Conor.” I stop him from rambling. “Did you mean what you said that night on my birthday.”

It’s always been hard to get Conor to stop talking but the simple question made him mute. He runs his fingers through his hair and avoids my gaze before staring at my collarbone.

“I meant it.”

He meets my eye and I smile to let him know I wasn’t upset about it. If anything I was relieved. It meant I wasn’t the only one and it meant that I might finally know what his felt like.

I lean forward an inch and Conor does too but he doesn’t stop there, he holds me by the neck and it happens. It finally happens.

I finally understood what girls meant when they were in love. There was a bounce to my step and a grin permanently plastered on my face. Conor and I texted always and Facetimed a few times a week. He even made the trip down to school a couple times and we’d gotten as close as we could get.

It was the first time he’d stayed over and we were getting dressed the next morning to go out for breakfast.

“When did you realise you liked me?” I asked Conor as he fussed with his hair.

“What?” He turns.

“We always had a hate relationship right? I didn’t realise until after my 20th. When did you realise?”

“Uh,” Conor doesn’t meet my eye. “I liked you for a while.”

“Yeah,” I grow a little frustrated. “But like, when? Why were you still so annoying after you realised?”

He shrugs. “I dunno. It was sort of our thing.”

“Okay.” I give up.

“What?” Conor senses my annoyance and walks towards me. “Do you want a specific time and date or something?”

“No! Don’t be ridiculous!” I turn away from him to put on my earrings. “I just wanted like, a vague time.”

“The day before I told you. I realised it’d been you all along.”

I pause, “What happened for you to realise that suddenly? Was it something I said?”

“Not exactly,” Conor wraps his arms around my waist and presses me to him. “Something someone else said made it click. That I loved you.”

My hands freeze on his around my waist. Although he’d said it that day he never used the L word after. Conor senses my discomfort as he removes his hands.

“Sorry is it too soon? I mean I’d already said it but-“

“No.” I face him. “I just didn’t expect to hear them.”

The shock of hearing my former frenemy turned lover saying that he loved me wears off by the time he had to leave Sunday night. Enough so that I said it to him back and he’d kissed me so intensely that someone waiting for his train had told us to get a room. I’d retreated, red faced and made sure to avoid eye contact as he left.

Call me Out (CM)

“Soo what are we doing again?” I ask for the fifth time, hugging my arms to my chest. It was an unusually cool evening in LA and although my bottom half was covered appropriately in a pair of jeans, I had on only a tube top leaving my bare arms covered in goosebumps.

“Well Rick forgot his ID and so did Omar and Anth’s still on the damn phone.” My friend sighs. “So I don’t know!”

“Just go to the club without us!” Rick says for the millionth time and I seriously wonder why we didn’t do just that. “We’ll come next time.”

“The whole point was to go together since we’ve all finally got fake IDs.” Omar pouts. “They can go if they want. But-”

“We could go to one of those all-age clubs-”

“No! No, those suck-”

“I have an idea.” My friends all pause at the new voice. It was Anth’s friend Conor who he introduced us to earlier that evening. We’d all said hello and included him in the group without a question even though he was obviously British and not from around here. Which we all secretly thought was really cool…but were just too LA to admit. But Conor hadn’t gone unnoticed for me-catching my eye and sending my heart racing. Not only because he had the same accent as my favourite movie ever made at the time (Bridget Jone’s Diary) but he was cute in a way that wasn’t intimidating. “Those of us with ID can get the beer and we can find some place to hang out.” Conor licks his lips. “We can still make the most of the night that way.”

All eyes are on the group newbie until Omar speaks up, obviously relieved from his fomo: “You’re genius. Let’s do that.”

“Okay, my basement’s empty we can head there. So how about Y/N goes and…” Malia stares at our newcomer for an uncomfortable second as she blanks on his name.

“Conor.” I cut in. “Conor and I will go.”

At the sound of his name, Conor looks up sharply at who said it. I feel myself blushing clumsily as I try not to look as excited as I felt but I couldn’t help it! I would finally get some time alone to get to know my sudden new crush.

Since the closest liquor store was right up the street, Conor and I head off and tell the gang we would meet them at Malia’s. As we walk, I’m nervous. I fold my arms into myself, and then unfold them, and fold them again before Conor offers his leather jacket.

“Oh I’m fine,” I say politely. Damn. I wasn’t fine in any way. But I couldn’t just accept his-

“No take it. I’m warm.” Conor begins stripping the jacket off before I could politely decline again. “I’ve got a jumper underneath anyway.”

“A jumper?” I ask, looking at the sweatshirt he wore underneath and back up at his face.

“Yeah,” he picks the fabric up to show me. “A jumper?”

I take the jacket from him and eagerly drape it over my shoulders; its leftover warmth blankets my body. “Is that like, a British thing?” I ask, intrigued and still staring at him, forgetting we should be continuing our walk instead of standing under the street lamp.

“I don’t know…I guess?” Conor seems just as nervous as me as he shoves his hands into his pocket. I tug the jacket closer around my body which catches his attention, his eyes roaming all over me. I sense a shift in him, almost unnoticeable except in the way that he finally meets my gaze.

“You’ve got really nice eyes,” he says and then immediately looks away.

“Thanks,” I laugh nervously. “You’ve got a really toasty jacket.”

He looks back up, his cheeks a slight pink under the sodium lights, and his tensed face melts into a smile that warms me up from the inside. He has a playful glint as he tugs at the jacket’s lapel, “I’m a hot guy-didn’t I already say?”

He was hot. But I don’t stroke his ego. I turn away instead, continuing again on our trek to the store, calling out behind me. “If I remember correctly the only thing you said was you were warm!”

He laug loudly into the night and the ice between us. We begin talking and asking about the other, greedily tearing up the rare time alone, wanting to know each other as well as we could before we had to return to our group. By the time we get into the liquor store I’ve told him about growing up in LA, how I hated school, and how my brother drove me crazy and he’s told me about the town he’s from, his younger brother and sister, and why he was in LA–to work on music. And I was impressed, he was only my age.

“So are you any good?” I ask him as we track down the aisle with the cheaper beer. We’re the only ones inside so we try not to draw too much attention.

“No. Not yet,” he laughs and his face does the squinty thing I’d started to find adorable. I stare at him as he leans down and picks up two cases.

“Well will you let me hear it? When it is good?” I ask seriously.

He straightens up and turns to me, nodding his head vigorously. “Yeah,” he answers, his voice suddenly serious. “I will.”

Two Years Later:“I’ve heard it then,” I’m on the phone with Conor as I look out the taxi window into the crowds of tourists. I was on my way to my boyfriend’s place and the radio surprised me with a familiar voice. “Your song just came on the radio and I’ve finally heard it!”

“I was on the radio?” Conor asks from the other side of the world. I wished he was here to hear it with me so I could see his reaction myself. “You heard me in LA?”

“I’m in a taxi,” I say. “And I’d recognise your stupid voice anywhere.”

“And?” Conor asks, not hiding his excitement at all.

“It’s still not good-I told you to only show me when-”

“Shut up!” Conor shouts and I have to move the phone away slightly as his belly-laugh emenates from the phone. “You’re a little shit!”

“No!” I insist. “You’re shit!”

“Don’t say that,” Conor’s humour is slowly leaking out of his voice and I decide I’d taken the joke far enough.

“It’s-as you would call it-bloody amazing! I was totally kidding. The song. Is. Amazing.”

“Really?” Conor asks, his excitement apparent again.

“Yes!” I shout. “You should be so proud of yourself! Soon you’ll be as big as Beiber!”

We go back and forth as he shies from the compliments and finally accepts them. We move onto the cliffnotes version of life updates before I reach my destination and tell him I had to go. This was the way it had been with Conor and I over the two years we’d known the other. After an intense first time hanging out, we’d eased up and stuck to the safe option of being good friends. The constant distance between us and the fact that we shared a mutual friend group, prevented us from hooking up-if things went south, it would be very awkward. Plus, we were both busy figuring out our own futures. Mine, currently, was going to school so I could get into acting.

But I still couldn’t control my erratic heartbeat whenever I spotted Conor in LA. There was an undeniable attraction, made stronger with the easy chemistry we had. He had a pull on me none of my other crushes or boyfriends ever had. But after a few weeks every time, I had to let Conor go back home to London and as painful as it was each time, it would be made more painful if we were anything more than friends. So I simply chalked it up to a juvenile crush and forced myself onwards.

One Year Later: “Y/N…” Conor pulls his pants onto his hips and secures it with a belt. “I don’t know what to-”

“It’s fine,” I laugh like I thought everything that had happened over the last 10 hours was all one big joke. But my hands shake under the covers and I have a hard time looking him in the eye.

I had turned 21 yesterday and my boyfriend dumped me the morning of because I was being too “clingy”. He was leaving in the afternoon, flying out across the country for some modelling jobs he’d landed and I was mildly upset he had to leave on my birthday. Meanwhile, Conor suprised me at my apartment, completely oblivious, with birthday champagne and a balloon he’d stuck a picture of his face on. It was his only free night because he had to fly out the next morning.

But he’d found me: mascara on my cheeks, crumpled pyjamas, and a fistful of tissues. He sat and listened so patiently before helping me clean up. Once I’d cried it out however, the inevitable happened. We popped the champagne, swore at my ex, drank the bottle between us, and then reached for each other. Because of loneliness or our long history, we ended up in bed. My bed. And I wish I hadn’t drank so much so I could remember even half of it but as soon as I woke up I knew I fucked up. I was simultaneously heartbroken over my ex and absolutely gutted that my first time with Conor was under circumstances like this.

"You were comforting me. We’re both adults now and we made an adult decision right? It’s fine.” I sit up, making sure the blankets were wrapped tight around my torso. Conor looks at me hesitantly, his hands dropping to the side and he looks just as gutted. We weren’t supposed to let this happen. Not like this. We knew eventually we would sleep together with all the sexual tension we had between us-but never ever like this. This felt cheap…we could barely even remember it.

“So you’re okay I have to go again?” Conor asks slowly.

“I’m fine. You have a life to go back to.” I say more confidently than I felt-I didn’t want to be clingy again. And what would I even say if I wasn’t okay? It was a stupid question to ask. “And my shift starts in a couple hours anyway-acting doesn’t pay the bills!”

Conor throws his shirt on before sitting beside me. He looks down at my hands clasped around the covers and then my collar where the pendant I always wore rests. He picks it up and rubs it like I usually did when I was nervous. It was hard to reconcile the person Conor put on in public to this gentler version of him in my bedroom. “Don’t be so hard on yourself. I’ll see you on the big screen soon enough.”

“You’ll only see me when I’m good enough,” I give him a wry smile, calling him out. He drops the necklace, his hand curving around the back of my neck. For a split second I think he was maybe going to kiss me again but he kisses my forehead instead. I close my eyes, stretching the brief millisecond into an hour, or two, or five. I create some alternate timeline where I can do this all over, so that when Conor kisses my forehead it doesn’t feel cheap with regret and stink of pity.

Fourteen Months Later: “It’s nothing!” I pull my hand out of Malia’s grip but she grabs my hand again.

“You call that a promise ring?” She asks skeptically of the diamond ring my boyfriend had gifted me yesterday evening.

“Promise ring?” Anth asks as he comes back with Conor who’d arrived late-a bad habit we’d all gotten used to. I try to stuff my hand back into my hoodie but Conor catches the light glinting off the diamond. I don’t want to see his expression but I can’t help but watch as it falls, a look of betrayal settling in. It wasn’t my fault-not really. Conor and I kept up a false pretense of being friendly after the last time we saw each other but we unravelled quickly the longer we went without addressing it. How could we be the same when we suddenly carried so much baggage?

Our relationship suffered. Meanwhile, my boyfriend came back to LA on his knees begging for forgiveness. He had been stressed out about his shoots and he regretted our breakup as soon as he’d landed at JFK. So I kept my own regret from that night to myself and taken him back. A month in and we’d moved to New York for the year where he modelled and I miraculously landed a very small Broadway part. When we moved back, he’d given me the promise ring. That was last night. Malia messaged me this morning to tell me the gang was in town and we were meeting up again. I didn’t realise Conor would be there too. Our conversations had fizzled out once he realised I’d moved to New York with my boyfriend.

“Y/N’s settling down,” Anth teases. “Y/B/N is making a wife out of you!”

“It’snot an engagement ring guys!” I insist but it sounds false even to me. It was supposed to be one. But the look of horror on my face when my boyfriend got on one knee at the beach had him stuttering and then insisting it was just a promise ring. So I had accepted like the coward I was because I was too scared to be on my own again. Three years of our relationship and Anth was right-I wassettling.

“That’s a big ass diamond,” Conor jokes but it has a sharp edge to it. “Good for you. So uh-I’m getting a drink.”

When I track Conor down, away from the group, he’s stony faced.

“It’s been a while.” I say, feeling like that first night we met when I didn’t know how to talk to him.

“Yeah,” his eyes flick down to my hand. “A lot’s happened it seems.”

“Con-” I try.

“I’m alright.” Conor cuts me off.

“No. You’re not.” I call him out.

He clenches his jaw, glancing at me and then sighing. “I know we fucked up Y/N but why did we just stop talking? You’re bloody engaged and why am I only finding out now? I’ve never even met your boyfriend!”

“It-I know-it’s complicated. We…complicated things!”

“It shouldn’t be complicated! It was just sex!” Conor shouts. “It wasn’t complicated! I’m still your friend!”

“Right…” I look down and try to blink away the sudden tears. That all it was to him? “Right. Yeah of course…obviously-duh! It was! I just got…I was unsure! I didn’t know what you thought about it. But I’m cool if you are. We’re still friends?”

“Yes we’re still fucking friends!” Conor is instantly a ball of sunshine as we slip off our past like an oversized, stuffy jacket. I grab his hand and intertwine our fingers, trying to toss out the confused emotions I was feeling. Conor squeezes my hand and I snap out of my thoughts to his smiling face and when he looks at me it feels like that night, I first saw him smiling under sodium lights. When we wouldn’t even know this was how we would turn out. I wish I could go back then. Maybe tell Y/N to keep things simple.

As his mouth moves to tell me something, I can’t focus as my head buzzes with the words he’d said earlier. But maybe it’s better this way, I think. I didn’t want to end up hating Conor, or be hurt by him, when I cared for him this much. I would just have to see it his way, I decide. Just sex. Only friends. “-always your friend.”

One Year Later: “Happy birthday!” I shout at Conor. He was in LA for his 24th and the party was massive. Like this-many-people-could-never-fit-in-my-house massive. “Look at you! You’re so spoiled now!”

Conor crushes me against him-it had been a good six months since I’d seen him. I was travelling all over for a movie I’d gotten a small role in and barely had time to see friends let alone Conor. I missed his energy. And he was super famous now too. Somewhere between seeing him last on New Year’s, breaking up with my boyfriend and moving out, auditioning like crazy, and finding a role-Conor had blown up online and my heart swelled every time I saw his ad or his music somewhere. Despite our messy mishap, I’d realigned myself to realise Conor and I could only ever befriends.

“I love your jumper,” I say-the term an inside joke by now.

“This is actually a hoodie.” Conor teases.

“Fuck I can never get the terminology right!” I laugh and wrap my arms around him again, his “hoodie” a snug fabric to rest my head on.

“Y/N.” Conor says seriously so I look at him again, concerned. “Y/N I-I think I’m finally good!” Conor shouts in my ear and when I give him a questioning look he explains. “My music! I think it’s finally good enough!”

“Oh Conor,” I can’t help but grab his face between my hands and squish his cheeks. “It was always good enough!”

Conor laughs causing his face between my hands to morph oddly so I let go. “You’re not as much of a bitch as you used to be!”

“Watch your mouth!” I pull his hood over his head and continue tugging it over his face until he apologizes between laughter. When I let go, he takes off the hood and wraps his arm around my shoulder. We stay that way for the rest of the night as he introduces me to everyone we meet. They all assume I’m his girlfriend, joking with me that I should watch out. And I didn’t blame them with the way Conor’s hand was always on my shoulder or my waist, my hips, touching my hair, leaning in to say something in my ear. I crave his touch every time I don’t have it and by the end of the night, I feel drunk on desire more than any of the cocktails I’d had. So when Conor looks at me with a question in his eyes at the end of the night, I don’t call him out. I simply take his hand and go back home with him. Just sex. Only friends. Always friends.

Eighteen Months Later: Since Conor’s 24th, we’d made a routine. Unless one of us were in a relationship, every time Conor was in LA, he would stop by. We’d catch up on life and then end up in bed for however long he was here for.

“I’m only in LA for two week.” He would say. Or “I go to New York next week.” Or “I have a flight on Thursday for Dubai.”

It wasn’t permanent, he meant to remind me. It wasn’t a relationship. It was just sex. And we were just friends. And this was just a bad habit. Or a good habit-was there such a thing? I always looked forward to it. It felt like we were each other’s safe space, a secret the other held close to their chest. Minus the emotional attachments of course. It happened so often like this that I’d forgotten I ever wanted more. Being like this actually gave us more time to catch up on every detail of each other’s lives. We opened up about our insecurities, our goals, and all our shared memories. When Conor was staying longer he would work on things in the same room I was in or he would help me practice lines and we created small bubbles in time where everything was blissful between us as long as we were together. It was harder some days than others like when I wanted to kiss him in public or gush to my friends about him-but it was worth it to be close again.

Months Later: I had my first anxiety attack that morning. I didn’t even realise I was having it until my knees hit the carpet and I tried to look up at the time.

I had a big audition that afternoon for a children’s movie. My agent was so sure I was going to get it-she’d talked me up to every friend she had in high places and knew the company hiring so I knew I had it in the bag yet a movie on such a scale was terrifying. Conor had told me he was coming over after auditions to see how it went and I was oddly nervous to see him too-I’d gotten out of a short relationship so it had been a while since Conor and I got together. And then my mom called me worried about my brother who’d been making all the wrong choices in life as of of late which kept running through my mind. So when my agent called to tell me they wanted a Skype interview now,I knewthat usually meant it was a courtesy interview and they didn’t actually want me. I did the interview with a really bad connection, my anxiety heightening with every scene looking at their impassive expressions. As soon as it ended, I ignored my agen’t phone call and suddenly found it hard to breath, my vision narrowing as everything looked off, and the room tilted around me. I fell to my knees and located my phone, calling the only person I knew who’d understand: Conor.

By the time he arrived, I had managed to calm down but I still couldn’t take a deep breath nor could I talk in full sentences. Conor squeezed my hands and helped ground me until I could focus and then he’d gathered me in his arms so carefully, so lovingly, that it scared me enough to start crying. He mistook this for being sad about not getting the part and helped me to bed, setting up his laptop beside me. I didn’t correct him, falling asleep as I felt exhausted, and awakening to a vibrating hum.

I don’t open my eyes, anxiety clutching my chest as I remembered where I was and what had happened. But the humming beside me helped, the dread slowly unravelling it’s hold on me. When I do open my eyes Conor’s concentrated on the screen as he hums the same few lines again and again. And the tenderness with which I felt towards him sends me tipping into the panic zone so I get up and yank the covers off. I couldn’t do this. We said we wouldn’t.

“Hey you’re up,” Conor looks at me. “I’m gonna hum something does it sound like something you’ve already heard or is it-”

“You have to go.” I say abruptly and he stops talking immediately. “I need to be alone Conor please go. Now.”

He stays for a heartbeat before closing his screen and getting out of bed. His mouth opens to say something but he looks at me and closes it, bowing his head and moving out the door. I listen as he leaves and take a deep ragged breath. I felt wild, like a frantic ball of confused energy was buzzing within me like a pinball machine. Like a panic attack hangover and as soon as Conor goes I want him back. I make it so far to the front door when I retreat until my back hits the wall. What was I doing? But I craved the comfort of his touch and it urged me to call him back. I couldn’t though. He wasn’t my boyfriend, I couldn’t keep doing this. But the sudden sound of a knock at the door echos my pounding heartbeat.

I carefully open it to Conor, running his fingers through his hair. I barely register what he says; opening the door wider, just wanting him back in. He drops his bag to the floor as he closes the door behind him. In an instant, his hand finds my waist, our foreheads touch, our eyes locked. It felt like we were the center of a volcano of passion and desire, boiling as his hand tightens on my waist, bubbling as my hand slips around the the base of his neck, simmering and leaking as I close my eyes and he crashes his lips into mine.

I can’t remember what happens next-not chronologically. We’re bumping into walls and shedding the day, as well as our clothes, and as we ease into the sheets the volcano bursts with hot molten lava, destroying anything that was ever left of us before.

I must have nodded off again right after because I wake to Conor in bed facing me. Behind him, my window shows streaks of pinks in the sky as day goes down to dusk. Conor’s eyes are watching me carefully, his expression unreadable as he watches me watch him. I trace the bridge of his nose to distract him but he continues staring, something budding in the way he looks at me. It was scaring me and I tell him so.

Yet Conor doesn’t take his eyes off of me, his thumb brushing my cheek and my breath catches as I realise why I was so scared. His eyes hold no trace of its usual playful spark. Instead they’re unguarded and clear as day with what he was thinking. Shit. This was it. This was the end. We’d both fallen. Made this something important.

“When are you leaving LA?” I ask, almost begging him to reply with a deadline to our romance for some sort of normalcy. The only way this worked was when he put a time stamp for us to stop waking up in each other’s arms. Even if it was one month or one week we would have the most fun as the end date was our safety net.

But when he shrugs and continues to gaze at me, my heart feels like it would burst from my chest. And it practically does as all the hopes I ever ignored of Conor and I as something more than friends, all the fantasies I ever had of Conor wanting more with me, the thoughts I suppressed before they could even manifest-shoving them into a dark corner of my mind-roll forward and flash before me. This was Conor-the first person I think I ever fell in love with. And I can admit it to myself now, looking at him-at us, like this. This was Conor-how could I have ever thought we could be anything but in love in the end? So I remove Conor’s hand from my face and hold it to my chest, willingly showing him how much I was feeling in the moment. “I feel it now, can you feel it too?” Conor takes my other hand with his free hand and places it against his own palpitations. My own races faster; was this our demise?

“I feel it too.” Conor answers slowly.

But this is exactly what we said we wouldn’t do.” I remind him. What he said we wouldn’t do. What we weren’t.

“What was that exactly?” Conor asks me and his mouth flicks up in a slow smile as the playfulness returns in the blink of an eye. He’s weightless as he rolls over me and brings his lips down in a kiss so tender, I never realised he had it in him. When he moves away, he rests his forehead against mine, his lips a hair’s breadth away from my own. The look he gives me is a challenge, a dare like we would give when we were younger. His brown eyes looking into mine are daring me just one simple thing:

Call me out.

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