Twenty years after prom night, the girl who once changed my life appeared at my door in the rain.
She did not recognize me. I recognized her immediately. Before the next night ended, I did something she never saw coming.
The rain was falling so hard it sounded like the sky had dropped onto my roof. When the doorbell rang, I expected takeout and a quick thank-you. Instead, I opened the door and found the girl I had carried in my heart for two decades standing on my porch in a faded delivery jacket.
Same dimples. Same wide brown eyes. Same gentle mouth I had once watched smiling beneath the prom lights when I was seventeen and too broken to believe in miracles.
Charlotte held out the food with both hands, her fingers trembling from the cold, a damp baseball cap shadowing her face.
“Your order, sir.”
Sir.
Not Tyler.
Not even a flicker of recognition.
Back in high school, I had been the overweight grieving kid people only noticed when they wanted to laugh. Now I was thirty-seven, leaner, steadier, and shaped by years of building a life from nothing. Charlotte had no reason to connect me to the boy I used to be.
But it still hurt.