I counted the days until I could see him. Every night, I stared at the calendar, marking off the weeks, the days, the hours. The idea of being near Ethan again, even for a short weekend, filled me with excitement I hadn’t felt in months.
When I finally arrived in his city, the bus ride had left me exhausted, but my heart raced with anticipation. I had imagined this reunion countless times—the smile on his face, the warmth of his hug, the comfort of being near him again. But nothing prepares you for reality.
I stepped off the bus, scanning the crowd for him. And there he was—Ethan, taller somehow than I remembered, more confident, moving with a calm that made my chest ache. He waved, a small smile on his lips. My heart leapt.
“Hey,” he said when I reached him. His arms were around me in a way that should have made me feel safe. And for a moment, it did.
But even in that embrace, I felt the distance that had grown between us. It wasn’t just physical anymore. It was in his distracted eyes, in the way he pulled back slightly, in the subtle tension I hadn’t noticed before.
The weekend started with laughter and small adventures—coffee in the mornings, walks through the park, quiet dinners. But underneath it all, I felt the weight of months spent apart. The ease we once shared had dulled.
He talked about his work, his new friends, the city. And I listened, nodding, smiling, feeling like I was visiting someone else’s life. My life felt smaller compared to his world, even though it was supposed to be ours together.
That night, I lay in his apartment, staring at the ceiling while he slept. I couldn’t shake the feeling of emptiness, the gnawing ache of all those weeks of missed calls, delayed messages, and half-hearted conversations.
Then my phone buzzed. Liam.
I stared at his name, my thumb hovering over the screen. A part of me wanted to ignore it, to be completely present with Ethan. But another part of me, the part that had grown dependent on Liam’s comfort, needed him.
I sent a quick message: “Can we talk later? I just… I need to clear my head.”
Within minutes, Liam’s reply came: “I’m here. Always.”
I sighed, leaning against the wall, letting his words wrap around me. I didn’t realize until that moment how much I had come to rely on him, how his presence had filled spaces that Ethan’s absence had carved into my heart.
The weekend ended with a quiet tension neither of us could name. We hugged at the bus station when I left, but it felt different. I tried to smile through the ache, tried to convince myself that love alone would carry us through.
But as the bus pulled away, I realized that I had changed during those months of long-distance. Ethan hadn’t. He had moved forward in ways I hadn’t been part of. And I had found solace in someone else, someone who listened when he couldn’t.
The cracks were no longer invisible.
And for the first time, I wondered if love—even five years of it—was enough.