The morning after

3724 Words
Snow woke up at 11 AM to seventeen missed calls from his mom, twelve texts from his best friend Derek, and a notification that his ex-girlfriend had posted an i********: story. He ignored the first two and, like an i***t, checked the third. It was a photo of a sunset with the caption "New beginnings ✨" and a song attached—"Good Days" by SZA. "Are you KIDDING me right now?" Snow said to his empty room. New beginnings. She'd broken up with him twelve hours ago and was already posting about new beginnings like she was some kind of self-help influencer. Meanwhile, Snow had spent half the night talking to a stranger in a café and the other half lying awake replaying every moment of his relationship, trying to figure out where it went wrong. His phone rang. Derek. Again. Snow answered. "I'm alive." "DUDE." Derek's voice was loud enough to cause physical pain. "Your mom called me at 7 AM asking if you were okay. She said Jane's mom called her and—" "Can we not do this right now?" "Not do what? Check on my best friend after his girlfriend of four years dumped him via text like she was canceling a dentist appointment?" "It was eight words." "What?" "Her text. Eight words. 'I'm sorry, Snow. I can't do this anymore.' Eight words to end four years." Silence on the other end. Then: "Bro." "I know." "That's cold." "I know." "Like, ice-cold. Like, Antarctica cold. Like—" "Derek, I get it." More silence. Then, gentler: "You okay?" "No." "Stupid question. Sorry." Derek paused. "You want me to come over? We can play video games, order pizza, talk about what a—" "I'm good, actually." "You're—what?" "I'm good. I mean, I'm not good good. I'm devastated. But I'm okay. For now." "Did you hit your head?" "No, I just..." Snow hesitated. How did he explain last night? The rain, the stranger, the café, the weird sense of connection that made everything slightly less unbearable? "I met someone." "YOU WHAT?" "Not like that. Just—someone to talk to. A girl. Her name's Nelly." "Wait, wait, wait. You got dumped last night and met a girl last night?" "When you say it like that, it sounds bad." "Because it IS bad! Snow, you can't just—" "I'm not doing anything. We just talked. She's leaving for college in three days anyway. It's not a thing." "Then why are you telling me about her?" Good question. Why was he telling Derek about her? "Because she helped," Snow said finally. "And I'm seeing her again today." "Seeing her? Like a date?" "Like... I don't know. We're meeting for coffee. Or maybe lunch. We didn't specify." "Snow—" "I know what you're going to say." "I don't think you do." "You're going to say it's too soon, I'm not thinking clearly, I'm using this girl as a distraction from my pain—" "Actually, I was going to say good for you." Snow stopped. "What?" "Good for you," Derek repeated. "Jane destroyed you. And instead of sitting in your room spiraling—which, let's be honest, is what I expected—you went out and connected with another human. That's healthy. Ish. Probably. I'm not a therapist." "You're not mad?" "Why would I be mad?" "I don't know. It feels wrong. Jane and I just—" "Jane ended it. She doesn't get to dictate your healing process." Derek's voice softened. "Look, man. I don't know if this Nelly girl is a rebound or a distraction or what. But if she's helping you not spiral, that's good. Just... be careful, okay?" "Careful of what?" "Of hurting her. Of hurting yourself. Of thinking a new person can fix what an old person broke." Snow was quiet. Because Derek was right. That was exactly what he was doing, wasn't it? Trying to fill the Jane-shaped hole in his chest with someone—anyone—else. "I'll be careful," Snow said finally. "Good. Now, for real. You want me to come over?" "Maybe later. I'm supposed to text Nelly when I wake up." "Look at you, making plans." "Shut up." "I'm proud of you." "You're annoying." "Love you too, man." They hung up. Snow stared at his phone, at Nelly's contact—"Coffee Girl (Duck Umbrella)"—and typed out a message. "Just woke up. The sadness hit. You were right. Want to meet up?" Her response came almost immediately. "Told you. Mornings are the worst. Meet me at Harbor Park in an hour? There's a taco truck." "Tacos for lunch?" "Tacos for every meal. See you there." Snow smiled despite himself. Then he got up, showered for the first time in 24 hours, and tried very hard not to think about the fact that Jane was having "new beginnings" while he was having tacos with a stranger. He stood in the shower longer than necessary, letting the hot water run over him, trying to wash away the heaviness that had settled into his bones. The bathroom mirror was fogged when he got out, which meant he didn't have to look at himself. Small mercies. Getting dressed felt like an accomplishment. He picked a clean t-shirt—his favorite one, the faded black one with a small tear near the hem that Jane had always said he should throw away. Well, Jane didn't get a vote anymore. The drive to Harbor Park took fifteen minutes, but Snow spent most of it gripping the steering wheel and trying not to think. Not thinking was harder than it sounded. His brain kept wanting to replay moments—Jane laughing at something he said, Jane falling asleep on his shoulder during movie nights, Jane telling him she loved him in that soft voice she reserved for just him. Stop it, he told himself. Stop. He turned up the radio. Some pop song he didn't know the words to. Better than silence. Harbor Park was one of those places the city pretended was nice but was actually just okay. There were some benches, a sad fountain that only worked half the time, a few trees that tried their best. But it had a great view of the water and, more importantly, it had Jose's Taco Truck—the best tacos in the city, hands down. Nelly was already there when Snow arrived, sitting on a bench with two brown paper bags and two drinks. She'd changed clothes since last night—now wearing jean shorts and a yellow t-shirt that matched her ridiculous umbrella. Her hair was down, catching the sunlight in a way that made Snow's chest do something complicated. "I ordered for you," she said as he sat down. "Three al pastor tacos, extra lime, and horchata. If I'm wrong about any of that, we can't be friends." Snow opened the bag. Three al pastor tacos, extra lime, and horchata stared back at him. "How did you—" "Lucky guess. You have al pastor energy." "I have what energy?" "Al pastor. You know—looks basic, actually has depth and complexity, best with a little lime to balance the sweetness." "Did you just psychoanalyze me through tacos?" "I'm multi-talented." Nelly bit into her own taco—carnitas, Snow noticed. "So. Morning after the worst night of your life. How are we feeling?" "Like I got hit by a truck made of feelings." "Poetic." "I'm a musician. We're contractually obligated to be dramatic." "Fair." She handed him a lime wedge. "Did you look at her social media?" "How did you—" "Everyone looks at their ex's social media the morning after. It's like Newton's Law of Heartbreak." "That's not a real law." "Should be." Nelly studied his face with those dark, knowing eyes. "What did she post?" "Sunset photo. 'New beginnings.' SZA song." "Oh, that's brutal." "Right?!" "No, I mean that's psychologically brutal. She's already narrativizing the breakup for her audience. You're still bleeding and she's already writing the epilogue. That's some next-level emotional compartmentalization." Snow stared at her. "That's... exactly what it feels like." "I know. It sucks. But here's the thing—her moving fast doesn't mean your pain isn't valid. Some people process by running forward. Others need to sit in it. Neither is wrong." Nelly squeezed more lime on her taco. "Though between you and me, running forward that fast usually means she's running from something. But that's her therapist's problem, not yours." "You sound like a therapist." "I've been to a lot of therapy." Nelly said it casually, but there was weight behind it. "Depression. Anxiety. The whole starter pack. Been medicated, unmedicated, over-medicated. I've done the work, as they say. Therapy taught me that healing isn't linear and everyone does it differently." "How long did it take you? To heal?" "From what?" "From... whatever you were healing from." Nelly was quiet for a moment, taking a bite of her taco, chewing thoughtfully. A seagull landed near their bench, eyeing their food with predatory interest. She tossed it a small piece of tortilla. "Honestly? I'm not sure I'm done. I think some things you don't heal from completely. You just learn to live with them better. Like—" She paused, searching for the right words. "Like a broken bone that heals but aches when it rains. It's not broken anymore, but you remember it was. And that's okay." "That's depressing." "Or realistic." She shrugged. "I spent years thinking something was wrong with me because I wasn't getting better fast enough. I'd read these stories about people who had one breakthrough therapy session and suddenly everything clicked, and I'd think—why not me? Why am I still sad? But then I realized—maybe better doesn't mean fixed. Maybe it just means functional. Maybe it means having more good days than bad ones." Snow considered this while he ate. The taco was incredible—perfectly seasoned, the pork tender, the pineapple adding just the right amount of sweetness. Jose knew what he was doing. "So I'm just going to be functionally heartbroken forever?" "Probably not forever. But for a while? Yeah. And that's okay." Nelly finished her first taco, crumpled the wrapper. "The trick is not to make decisions from that place. Don't text Jane at 2 AM. Don't write sad songs and post them online—well, actually, do write sad songs, but maybe sit on them for a month before sharing. Don't make any grand gestures. Just... exist. Feel it. Let it be terrible." "That doesn't sound fun." "It's not. But it's honest." They ate in silence for a moment, watching people walk by—couples holding hands, families with strollers, joggers who looked way too happy for midday exercise. A small child ran past, chasing bubbles that an older woman was blowing. The simple joy of it made Snow's chest ache. "I keep replaying moments," Snow said suddenly. "Trying to figure out when it changed. When she stopped loving me. Was it something I said? Something I didn't say? Did I not pay enough attention? Pay too much attention? I'm driving myself crazy." "Maybe she didn't stop." "She ended it." "Doesn't mean she stopped loving you. Maybe she just started loving something else more. Or needed something you couldn't give her. Or got scared of how much she loved you and ran. People are complicated. That's not a reflection on you." "Feels like it." "I know." Nelly finished her second taco, wiped her hands on a napkin. "Can I tell you about Marcus? Prom guy?" "The one who dumped you for his ex?" "That's the one. For months after, I replayed every conversation we had. Every text. Every moment. Trying to figure out what I did wrong. Why I wasn't enough. I analyzed everything—was I too available? Not available enough? Did I laugh too loud? Not laugh enough? Was my hair wrong? My clothes? Did I smell weird?" She laughed, but it was hollow. "I made myself crazy." "What did you realize?" "Nothing. I didn't do anything wrong. I was just... there. Available. Convenient. And when something better came along—someone he had history with, someone who felt familiar—he took it. Not because I wasn't good enough, but because I was never what he actually wanted in the first place. I was a placeholder. A comfortable distraction until the real thing came back." "That's somehow worse." "I know. But it's also freeing. Because it meant I could stop torturing myself trying to figure out how to be better. The problem wasn't me. It was that he never really saw me. And you can't make someone see you if they're determined to look past you." Snow looked at her—really looked at her. The way she talked about painful things like they were just facts, not weapons. The way she could be hurt but not bitter. The way she seemed to understand exactly what he was feeling without making him explain it. "Did that actually help? Realizing that?" "Eventually. First it made me angry. Then sad. Then angrier. Then sad again. I went through like seven stages of grief for a relationship that never really existed." She smiled wryly. "Healing is messy. It's not a straight line from broken to fixed. It's more like... a spiral. You think you're past something, and then you're back in it. But each time you come back around, you're a little higher up. A little further from the bottom." "How long did the okay part take?" "About a year. But prom was small compared to four years." Nelly looked at him sympathetically. "I won't lie to you, Snow. This is going to hurt for a while. Maybe a long while. But one day you'll wake up and it'll hurt less. And then less. And then one day you'll realize you went a whole day without thinking about her. And that day will feel like winning." "I can't imagine that right now." "I know. But trust me. It'll happen." Snow finished his tacos. They were, objectively, the best tacos he'd had in months. Weird how food could still taste good when everything else felt like garbage. Weird how sitting in the sun with someone who understood could make the crushing weight on his chest feel slightly lighter. "Thanks for this," he said. "For the tacos?" "For all of it. The café last night. The tacos today. The therapy session disguised as lunch. For not telling me to get over it or move on or any of that bullshit people say when they don't know what else to say." "That's what friends are for." "We're friends?" "We've shared midnight pie and midday tacos. That's legally binding friendship according to... me. Right now. I just made that rule." "I don't think that's how it works." "Do you have a better definition?" Snow thought about it. "No, actually. That's pretty solid." His phone buzzed in his pocket. He almost didn't check it, but some masochistic part of him couldn't help it. A text from Jane. "Hey. I know this is fresh. But I need to get my stuff from your apartment. Is Saturday okay?" Snow's stomach dropped. The tacos suddenly felt heavy. Nelly noticed immediately—apparently reading emotional distress was her superpower. "Her?" "Yeah. She wants to get her stuff." "Already? It's been like a day." "Apparently Saturday works for her." Snow typed back: "Fine." Then, because he had some pride left: "Morning or afternoon?" "Morning works. 10am?" "Sure." He put his phone down with more force than necessary. Nelly waited, giving him space to process. "She's coming Saturday," Snow said finally. "To get her things. Like this is just logistics now. Like we're just coordinating a furniture pickup." "How do you feel about that?" "I don't know. Sick? Angry? Sad? Like I want to throw my phone in the fountain?" He gestured at the sad fountain that was currently not working. "All of the above?" "All of the above is valid." "I don't want to see her. Is that bad? Should I want to see her? To talk it out or get closure or whatever?" "Do you want closure?" "I don't even know what that means. What's closure? Her explaining why she doesn't love me anymore? That sounds terrible." "Then don't be there." "It's my apartment." "So? Leave for a few hours. Let her get her stuff and go. You don't owe her a final conversation. She ended things over text—she doesn't get to demand an in-person epilogue on her terms." Snow hadn't thought of it that way. He'd been so focused on being mature about this, on handling it well, on being the bigger person, that he hadn't considered he was allowed to protect himself. That being the bigger person didn't mean letting people hurt you repeatedly. "What would you do?" he asked. "Me? I'd leave a note saying where her stuff is, peace out for the entire day, and let her figure it out. Maybe I'd rearrange her things slightly so she'd have to search a little. You know, petty but defensible." Nelly grinned. "But I'm petty and you're probably a better person than me." "I'm really not." "Then be petty with me. It's way more fun than being mature." Despite everything—despite the heartbreak and the text and the looming Saturday—Snow laughed. Actually laughed. "You're a terrible influence." "The best people usually are." They finished their food, tossed their trash in the nearby bin, and walked along the park's waterfront. The water sparkled in the afternoon sun, sailboats drifting lazily in the distance. The day was clear and beautiful—yesterday's rain had washed everything clean. It felt wrong, somehow, that the world could be this beautiful when Snow's life was falling apart. Like the universe should have the decency to match his mood with storms and darkness. But maybe that was the point. The world kept turning. Life kept happening. And he had to figure out how to keep living in it. "What are you doing tonight?" Nelly asked as they walked. "Probably lying in bed, listening to sad music, staring at the ceiling, questioning every life choice I've ever made." "Wrong. You're coming to dinner with me and my best friend Mia." "I am?" "You are. She's dying to meet you. I've been texting her about you and she's convinced you're either secretly amazing or secretly a serial killer, and she wants to make a final determination." "You told her about me?" "I told her I met a sad musician at midnight who fixed my umbrella and made me laugh. She said, and I quote, 'That's either the start of a beautiful friendship or a true crime podcast. I need to vet him immediately.'" "Which did you say it was?" "I said TBD pending further investigation." Snow smiled despite himself. "I don't want to intrude on your time with your best friend." "You're not intruding. Mia's boyfriend Connor is in town from college and I'm third-wheeling so hard I might as well be a tricycle. You'd actually be doing me a favor. Make it a double... friend thing. Not a date. A friend thing." "So I'm a buffer?" "You're a friend who happens to serve a strategic purpose. It's called efficiency." "How practical." "I'm nothing if not practical." Nelly pulled out her phone. "7 PM. Luigi's Pizza on Main Street. The pizza is absolutely terrible but the vibes are immaculate. Wear something that doesn't scream 'my life is ending.'" "All my clothes scream that now." "Then wear it ironically. Lean into it. Make it a statement." Snow found himself agreeing before he fully processed what he was doing. Dinner with Nelly's friends. Less than twenty-four hours after his girlfriend of four years dumped him. This was objectively insane. But also, the alternative was going home to his empty apartment filled with Jane's ghost and spiraling into an anxiety attack while listening to their playlist and wondering where it all went wrong. So maybe insane was better. "I'll be there," he said. "Good." Nelly checked her watch—a chunky digital one that looked like it came from the '90s. "I have to go—promised my mom I'd help her pack some of my stuff for the move. But text me if you need anything. Or if you start spiraling. Or if you just want to complain about Jane some more. Or if you want to send me pictures of dogs you see. I'm very versatile in my emotional support offerings." "I'm definitely going to take you up on that." "Good. That's literally what I'm here for." They parted ways again—Nelly heading toward the bus stop with a wave, Snow toward his car in the parking lot. Before she left, she turned back one more time. "Hey, Snow?" "Yeah?" "You're going to be okay. It doesn't feel like it now—it probably feels like the world is ending and you'll never be happy again. But you will be. I promise." "How do you know?" "Because you got out of bed today. You showered. You met me for tacos. You laughed. Those are all really hard things to do when you're heartbroken, and you did them. That's not nothing. That's everything, actually." Snow felt something loosen in his chest—just a little, just enough to let him breathe slightly easier. "Thanks, Nelly." "That's what friends are for." She grinned. "Now go home, take a nap, and I'll see you tonight. Prepare yourself for terrible pizza and my best friend's aggressive vetting process." "Should I be worried?" "Extremely. But in a fun way." Then she was really gone, bouncing off with her ridiculous yellow umbrella tucked under her arm like a weapon of sunshine, leaving Snow standing in a parking lot feeling something he hadn't felt since Jane's text arrived: Hope. Just a little. Just enough. But it was something. He got in his car, started the engine, and drove home. And for the first time in 24 hours, he turned on music—not their playlist, but his own. Songs he'd liked before Jane. Songs that were just his. It felt like a beginning. Small, uncertain, terrifying. But a beginning nonetheless.
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