The high of the Georgia Tech victory had finally started to llow as evening crept in. The golden hue of the sunset spilled across Sarah’s living room, where scattered cushions and half-empty soda cans marked the territory of a day well spent.
Inside, everyone was doing their own thing now - the chaos giving way to little dostic rituals. Camila was painting her toenails on the floor, her Discman headphones plugged in and her head nodding to so deep house mix. Marisol was cleaning up in the kitchen with Sarah trailing behind her, the two of them occasionally giggling like co-conspirators. Jorge had taken over the stereo, gently flipping through tapes looking for sothing not overly romantic but still vibe-worthy. The room pulsed with soft bass and safe familiarity.
“I’m starving,” Tyrel groaned from the couch, arms splayed out like he’d just finished running drills. “Didn’t realize football could make a man hungry from watching.”
“We should grab dinner,” Ravi said, standing up and stretching with a loud pop. “And I’m not talking about Sarah’s leftover hummus.”
Jorge grabbed his jacket. “Rocky Mountain Pizza?”
“Obviously,” Tyrel said. “It’s practically illegal to live near Tech and not go at least once a week.”
Bharath stood slowly, already reaching for his shoes. “I’ll co. Let just grab my wallet.”
“Leave it,” Ravi grinned. “You’re a war hero and a romantic legend now. This one’s on us.”
Tyrel clapped a hand on Bharath’s shoulder with exaggerated solemnity. “This is how it begins. First he gets the girl. Then he gets free pizza. Next thing you know, he’s George P. Burdell, and then the president of the university.”
“I still don’t understand how it happened,” Ravi muttered as they stepped outside. “You just… snatched Sarah from the jaws of destiny.”
“The jaws of destiny?” Bharath laughed.
“I was working on a long-term strategy, man!” Ravi said. “I had jokes. I had playlists. I was gonna let her win at Scrabble next week.”
“You’ve never let anyone win at Scrabble,” Jorge said, impressed.
“Exactly! That’s how serious I was!”
The air outside was cool and crisp, that perfect early-fall Atlanta evening. The city buzzed faintly in the distance, but their corner of it felt like a secret. They walked in a loose line down the sidewalk, their shadows long under the amber glow of the streetlights.
“Ravi’s not wrong,” Tyrel added, sticking his hands in his pockets. “I an, I had a playlist too. It had Aaliyah, Tracy Chapman, and one Babyface song. That’s how you know it was real.”
“You know she doesn’t like any of those artists right?” opined Bharath knowledgeably.
“Oh my God,” Jorge groaned. “You two actually thought you had a shot?”
“O bhai, she let carry her chem lab kit once,” Ravi said, dead serious. “That’s girlfriend behavior.”
“She laughed at my Tupac impersonation,” Tyrel countered. “That’s soul mate territory.”
Bharath snorted. “Guys…”
“No, no,” Ravi interrupted dramatically. “Let us grieve. A goddess walked among us, and one man-one humble man-got chosen instead.”
Jorge rolled his eyes. “You’re acting like Sarah’s dating Shiva.”
“He might as well be!” Tyrel threw his hands up. “The man’s got abs now. He’s got curls. He saved her from muggers. Has a scar. And he cooks. You want to compete with that?”
Bharath rubbed the back of his neck, grinning sheepishly. “I figured this was coming.”
“You think?” Jorge said. “You dropped a bomb on us and then handed us pancakes like that made it normal.”
They all laughed, but it wasn’t bitter. The mock drama faded into sothing softer-an undercurrent of affection, curiosity, and the kind of honesty boys only allow under stars and streetlights.
“Alright,” Tyrel said, nudging him. “Real talk. What did happen?”
Bharath exhaled. “Okay. So... that night at the MARTA station-the mugging? You know most of it. But what you don’t know is that Sarah wasn’t just being mugged. She was running from sothing. Or rather, soone.”
They stopped talking.
“She’d just escaped a... really bad situation,” Bharath continued. “Abusive ex. Manipulative. Controlling. She had no one left. No ride, no wallet, no friends. She was ready to give up-and I an really give up. If we hadn’t shown up... I don’t know what would’ve happened.”
Tyrel let out a long, low whistle.
Ravi’s jaw tightened. “Damn.”
“We stayed with her that night,” Bharath went on. “We didn’t know her. But sothing just... clicked. Marisol could see it. She knew Sarah didn’t need soone to swoop in and fix her. She needed soone to just… see her. Not take. Not pity. Just see.”
“And you were that soone?” Jorge asked.
“I guess we both were,” Bharath said. “Marisol saw her pain. I felt it too. We weren’t trying to start sothing. We took it slow. She needed ti. Space. A real foundation.”
Tyrel nodded slowly. “And now it’s the three of you.”
“It just happened,” Bharath said. “We stayed over more in the last couple of months. We talked. We healed. And sowhere in that ss… we realized we weren’t just helping her. We were falling for her. And she was falling right back.”
There was a beat of silence.
Then Ravi muttered with comic despair, “I curse the day I didn’t drop Marisol at the MARTA station.”
Jorge burst out laughing.
Tyrel smacked Ravi lightly on the back of the head in acknowledgent. “Sa. That could’ve been us, bro. We were right there.”
“You two would’ve scared her off,” Jorge said, shaking his head. “Ravi would’ve opened with a chess joke. Tyrel would’ve played his gangster rap mixtape on a boombox. And would either of you have have tried to stop the mugging unard?”
“Yea… probably not,” mumbled Tyrel as Ravi shook his head regretfully.
“Well there you go. You dropping Marisol would have only left us with no Sarah. At least this way Sarah lives thanks to Atlanta Batman,” claid Jorge confidently.
They were all laughing now, walking again, the easy rhythm of camaraderie taking over. There was no resentnt. Only awe. And the slight sting of watching soone else get there first.
“But for real,” Ravi said, softer now. “You guys look good together. All three of you. It’s weird. But it works.”
Bharath smiled, grateful. “Thanks. It’s weird for us too sotis. But yeah… it works.”
They reached the warm neon glow of Rocky Mountain Pizza, the familiar scent of oregano, garlic, and lted cheese already curling out to et them.
Inside, they ordered two giant pies-one loaded with pepperoni, mushrooms, and sausage, the other piled high with olives, bell peppers, onions, and spinach. Tyrel asked for extra ranch. Jorge got nostalgic about garlic knots. Ravi demanded a liter of Coke and a side of peace for his broken heart.
By the ti they left, the warmth of the pizza boxes seeped through their jackets, and the weight in the air had lifted.
They walked back in full camaraderie-four boys bound not just by shared classes or dorm walls anymore, but by sothing deeper.
By the strange, stupid, beautiful luck of being young and alive and exactly where they needed to be.
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