“Are you asking me out?”
He grinned, a glimpse of that seventeen-year-old boy still there.
“Took me thirty years last time,” he said. “Figured I’d try sooner now.”
“Then yes,” I said. “I’d like that.”
The weeks that followed didn’t feel like a whirlwind.
They felt… steady.
Morning coffees that turned into long conversations.
Workdays that blended into shared purpose.
Quiet evenings where silence wasn’t empty—it was comfortable.
We talked about everything we hadn’t said back then.
The almosts.
The missed timing.
The lives we had built separately.
“I used to think I missed my chance,” Marcus admitted one evening.
“With what?”
He looked at me.
“With you.”
I shook my head gently.
“No,” I said. “We just weren’t ready yet.”
Because the truth was—
at seventeen, we had given each other a moment.
Now, we were choosing something bigger.
Months later, we stood together at another opening.
Another space.
Another group of people walking through doors that had once been closed to them.
Marcus leaned toward me.
“You realize,” he said, “this all started because you spilled coffee.”
I laughed.
“No,” I said. “It started because you asked a girl to dance.”
He squeezed my hand.
“And she said yes.”