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(Yvette POV)

By the ti I stepped out of the institute, the sky had already begun to dim.

Paris wore twilight differently than the city I had left behind. The light didn’t disappear all at once—it softened, thinned, lingered as if reluctant to go. Streetlamps blinked on one by one, casting long reflections across wet stone from an earlier rain.

My hands hurt.

Not sharply. Not enough to make stop using them.

The ache was dull and persistent, the kind that settled into the bones and reminded you that you had pushed yourself past comfort and into necessity. I flexed my fingers absently as I walked, my bag heavy against my shoulder, the sll of stock and tal still clinging faintly to my clothes no matter how many tis I washed them.

The institute had a way of draining you without spectacle.

No dramatic failures. No shouting matches.

Just repetition, correction, and the quiet weight of expectations.

Camille’s voice echoed faintly in my mory—not the words themselves, but the tone. That polished disdain that didn’t need volu to cut.

I exhaled slowly, letting the tension slide off my shoulders inch by inch.

This is what you wanted, I reminded myself.

Not approval.

Not recognition.

Progress.

I reached the steps outside the building and paused, tilting my face slightly upward. The air was cool, brushing against my skin like a reminder that the world extended beyond stainless steel counters and asured precision.

That was when I heard it.

"Yvette."

The sound of my na—in English—hit differently here.

I froze for half a second before turning.

He stood across the street, hands tucked casually into the pockets of a dark coat, posture relaxed in a way I had rarely seen before.

Brent.

Not in a suit.

Not carrying a briefcase.

Not surrounded by the invisible weight of responsibility he usually wore so well.

Just... him.

For a mont, my brain struggled to reconcile the image with the context.

Paris.

The institute.

This version of my life.

And yet there he was, as if he belonged in the fra all along.

"You’re early," I said when I crossed the street, my voice steadier than I felt.

"Or you’re late," he replied lightly.

I smiled despite myself.

Up close, I noticed the subtle signs of travel—faint fatigue around his eyes, the kind that ca from long flights and little rest. But there was sothing else there too.

He looked settled.

"Since when are you in Paris?" I asked.

"Since yesterday," he said. "I didn’t want to interrupt your first day."

The words landed softly—but the intention behind them was unmistakable.

I studied him for a mont longer than necessary.

"You could have told ," I said.

"I wanted to see how you were doing first," he replied. "Without influencing it."

There it was.

That quiet restraint that had always defined him.

We fell into step together, walking without direction at first. The street buzzed around us—conversations, footsteps, distant laughter—but none of it pressed in.

"I have so loose ends to tie up," Brent continued, tone casual but precise. "Your parents’ estate. A few international compliance matters that couldn’t be handled remotely. It made sense to be here."

It all made sense.

That was the problem.

"And how long will that take?" I asked.

He glanced sideways at .

"Long enough," he said.

Sothing in my chest shifted—not sharply, but noticeably.

We stopped at a small café near the corner. He gestured toward the empty table outside, silently asking permission.

I nodded.

As we sat, a waiter approached without hesitation, speaking rapid French. Brent answered fluently, ordering without consulting —but when the drinks arrived, they were exactly what I would have chosen.

I raised an eyebrow.

"I rember," he said simply.

The romantic weight of that shouldn’t have been as heavy as it was.

The warmth of the cup seeped into my palms as I listened to the rhythm of Brent’s breathing across the table.

He didn’t ask how my day had been right away.

He waited.

"How was it?" he asked eventually.

"It was hard," I admitted. "But in a good way."

He nodded, unsurprised.

"I expected as much." he smiled.

"I made a mistake," I added. "Small. But visible."

"And?" he asked.

"I fixed it, of course." I smiled.

A faint smile touched his lips—not proud, not relieved.

Just... appreciative.

"That tracks," he said.

I laughed softly. "What does that an?"

"It ans you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be."

The words ward sothing in that had been cold all day.

I was about to respond when my phone vibrated against the table.

I glanced down.

Joseph

How was your first day?

The timing made my breath hitch.

Brent noticed the change imdiately—not the screen, but . The slight pause. The shift in focus.

I didn’t hide the phone. I never had to with him.

"Joseph," I said quietly.

He nodded once. No comnt. No question.

Just acknowledgnt.

I typed back.

:

Exhausting. But good.

The reply ca almost instantly.

Joseph:

I’m glad. Make sure you eat sothing decent.

I smiled despite myself.

Across the table, Brent watched—not with jealousy, but with awareness.

The waiter returned, breaking the mont, and conversation resud naturally—but sothing subtle had been added to the air between us.

Not tension.

Balance.

Two presences in my life.

Two different weights.

As the evening deepened around us, I realized sothing quietly profound.

Brent wasn’t trying to replace anything.

He was simply here.

And sohow, that made all the difference.

We left the café without deciding where to go.

It happened naturally—Brent settling the bill with a nod, slipping my bag back over my shoulder, our steps falling into sync as we moved down the street. Paris had shifted fully into evening now, the sidewalks busier, the lights warr, conversations spilling from open windows and café doors.

We walked without urgency.

The city seed to sense it, adjusting its pace around us. Cyclists glided past. A couple laughed loudly nearby, hands intertwined. Sowhere, music drifted—soft, indistinct, woven into the hum of traffic.

"You’re quieter than usual," Brent observed.

"I’m tired," I admitted. "But not the kind that makes you want to sleep."

He nodded, understanding imdiately.

"The kind that makes you think." he said.

"Yes." I nodded.

We crossed a bridge, the river below reflecting the lights in broken lines that shimred and disappeared with the current. I leaned lightly against the railing for a mont, watching the water move steadily forward.

"It’s strange," I said after a pause. "I used to think exhaustion ant I was doing sothing wrong. Now it feels like proof that I’m exactly where I should be."

Brent rested his forearms on the railing beside , not crowding my space.

"That’s because this exhaustion is yours," he said. "No one that is assigned it to you."

The words settled deep.

I hadn’t realized how much of my past fatigue had been borrowed—expectations, responsibilities, roles I hadn’t chosen but had carried anyway.

We stood there a while longer, not speaking, the silence between us easy and unforced.

When we resud walking, he adjusted his pace subtly to match mine. It was such a small thing—barely noticeable—but it struck how often he did that. Adapted without announcing it. Made room without demanding it.

I felt my shoulders relax again, the tension from the day loosening its grip.

"You don’t have to walk all the way," I said eventually, more out of habit than insistence.

"I know," he replied.

And kept walking.

The street narrowed as we moved closer to my apartnt, the buildings older here, their facades softened by ti and ivy. The rhythm of my steps slowed, not because I wanted the night to end—but because I didn’t want to rush through it.

"I ran into... resistance today," I said carefully.

Brent didn’t interrupt.

"Nothing dramatic," I added. "Just... people who decided they didn’t like before they knew ."

"Did they give a reason?" he asked.

I smiled faintly. "No. They didn’t need one."

He humd softly. "That usually ans you’re perceived as a threat."

I laughed quietly. "I don’t feel threatening."

"You don’t have to," he said. "Presence does that on its own."

The simplicity of the statent made my chest tighten unexpectedly.

"I didn’t tell you this to complain," I said. "I just—needed to say it out loud."

"I know," he replied. "That’s why I’m listening and not fixing."

I glanced at him then, really looked at his profile under the streetlight—the calm set of his features, the way his attention never wavered when he gave it.

"You’re very good at this," I murmured.

"At what?" he asked.

"Letting people be." I replied.

A corner of his mouth lifted. "I’ve learned that people grow better when they’re not being pushed."

The words echoed sowhere inside , aligning with sothing I had been feeling but hadn’t nad.

This—this was why he felt like an anchor.

Not because he held in place.

But because he didn’t.

We stopped in front of my building.

The entrance was modest, the kind you might miss if you weren’t looking for it. A soft glow spilled from the windows above, warm against the night.

"This is ," I said.

"Yes, I figured," he replied lightly.

Neither of us moved right away.

The mont stretched—not awkward, not tense. Just... full.

"You’ve been busy today," Brent said. "You still have assignnts to work on, don’t you?"

"Yes," I admitted. "And readings."

"And you’ll push yourself harder than you should," he added.

"Probably." I replied.

He smiled knowingly.

"Would you like to co up?" I asked.

The words surprised as much as they seed to surprise him.

Not because they were impulsive.

But because they were honest.

For a mont, I saw sothing flicker in his eyes—consideration, warmth, restraint.

Then he shook his head gently.

"I should head back," he said. "I still have so things to handle tonight."

I opened my mouth to protest—but he wasn’t finished.

"And," he continued softly, "I don’t want to intrude on your night. You need your focus. And your space."

The refusal didn’t sting.

If anything, it made my chest ache in a way that felt... respectful.

"You’re sure?" I asked.

He t my gaze fully now.

"I’m very sure." he smiled genuinely.

I nodded, understanding settling between us without explanation.

"Thank you," I said quietly.

"For walking you ho?" he asked.

"For everything," I replied.

We stood there a mont longer.

Not close enough to touch. Not far enough to feel distant.

"I’ll see you soon," Brent said.

It wasn’t a question.

It wasn’t a promise.

Just a statent of fact.

"I know," I replied.

He stepped back then, giving space without withdrawing warmth.

As he turned to leave, I watched the steady confidence in his stride—the sa confidence that never tried to pull toward him, only walked alongside when I needed it.

When the door closed behind , the apartnt felt different than it had earlier.

Not fuller.

Just... steadier.

I leaned back against the door for a mont, phone still in my hand, the city’s sounds muffled now.

Two n.

Two kinds of presence.

And sowhere between them, I was learning how to stand on my own again—without losing the comfort of being seen.

I turned toward my desk, opened my laptop, and got to work.

But this ti, the night didn’t feel so heavy.

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