November 19, 2020—Tel-Aviv, Israel—Two Days Later #5
The ache to reach him burned in his palms. But instead, he stood still and let the ache speak. Let it seep into the silence between them. Let it say: I came back. I never stopped loving you. I broke everything and carried the pieces here.
Adrian’s profile was etched in gold by the dying sun.
Logan watched the wind stir the hem of his shirt, saw his fingers clench faintly in the fabric resting on his knees.
He was right there, the man Logan had never truly left, not even for a breath.
And for the first time in years, they were in the same orbit again.
Not in memory. Not in dreams. Here. Now.
Adrian didn’t move. Not a single muscle.
But Logan could feel it, the way his name had struck him.
The air between them was thick with something unspoken, a tension that neither of them could name but both could feel.
Adrian’s body was rigid, his shoulders drawn tight, and Logan’s chest ached at the thought that his voice—the voice that once made Adrian smile—was now a source of pain.
Adrian closed his eyes tightly, as though willing himself to breathe.
He knew that voice. He would always know that voice.
It was etched into his very being, a melody he had tried so hard to forget but couldn’t.
It haunted him, followed him in the quiet hours, in the crashing waves, in the echoes of the life he used to have.
It was raspy and soft, strong and light, all at once.
It was the sound of happiness.
It was Logan.
That single word—Ad—had unraveled something deep inside him, a thread he’d tried so desperately to keep knotted.
Tears burned behind his closed lids, and Adrian saw him in his mind, as vividly as if he were standing there in front of him.
The memory was sharp, aching: Logan’s piercing eyes, his disarming smile, the way the sun seemed to love him, always dancing on his skin.
Logan had lived in the depths of Adrian’s mind for two years, and no amount of effort had ever been enough to let him go.
But now, reality was pressing in, and with it came the undeniable truth. That voice wasn’t a dream. It wasn’t a memory.
It was here.
Logan was here.
Logan is here.
Logan is here.
Logan is here.
Logan is here.
Logan is here.
A warmth spread through Adrian’s chest, bittersweet and impossible to ignore, striking him to his very core.
For a brief moment, he let himself feel it—the yearning, the pull, the piece of him that had always belonged to Logan.
But with it came the pain, the hurt, the undeniable knowledge of what had been lost.
The waves continued their quiet rhythm, the wind whispering through the air, but neither of them moved. Logan stood behind him, his tears threatening to fall, while Adrian sat rooted in place, his heart pounding with every passing second.
Logan took a hesitant step forward, his chest tightening as he debated whether to sit beside Adrian. The idea of closing the distance between them felt both terrifying and necessary, but before he could move further, he saw Adrian shift.
Adrian pushed himself upright, each movement deliberate, fragile, as though rising cost him more than he could spare.
Logan’s gaze locked on him, unable to stray: the fists curling at his sides, bloodless knuckles pressed against sun-browned skin, the fabric of his shirt caught and twisted by the wind until it snapped and billowed like a sail fighting the storm.
His hair whipped free, strands flaring gold in the dying light, wild and untamed.
The sight cleaved the breath from Logan’s chest. Adrian’s body was a battlefield of contradictions: rigid with restraint, yet trembling beneath the pressure of all he carried.
The shock rippled through him in waves, invisible but violent, threatening to buckle his knees and drag him down into the sand.
Still, he held his ground, eyes sealed shut, shoulders locked, bracing as though sheer will could keep him from collapsing.
He didn’t want to turn. Logan felt it in the tautness of his frame, the desperate stillness of a man bargaining with himself: if he refused the moment, if he walked away blind, perhaps he could survive it.
Perhaps he could keep the fragile pieces from shattering.
But Logan knew the truth—that the instant Adrian turned, everything would break open, and neither of them would ever be the same.
Slowly, unbearably, Adrian turned, and in that instant, Logan’s universe cracked down the middle.
Logan’s world stopped as their eyes met.
Adrian’s face crumpled almost immediately, tears welling and spilling over before he could stop them.
His whiskey-colored eyes glistened with pain, with anger, with a rawness that pierced him like ice splintering inside his chest. Adrian stood there, staring at him, his chest rising and falling unevenly as he struggled to breathe through the emotions surging in him.
Logan’s pain plunged to depths he hadn’t known existed as their eyes locked.
It wasn’t the tears that gutted him, tearing through flesh and setting fire to what lay exposed, but Adrian’s gaze itself.
Familiar, yet emptied, as if another soul looked out through the same whiskey shade, drained of its life.
In the sunlight, his eyes glowed, fractured like citrine glass—still radiant, but shattered, altered forever, beautiful in a way that could never be whole again.
Logan had done this. He was the hand that had let the glass slip, the shatterer of what could never be mended.
The knowledge seared through him, molten, merciless.
Adrian’s gaze was no longer the mischievous spark that once set Logan’s veins alight; it was a ruin, a smoldering wreck, heavy with sorrow that clung to him like ash after a firestorm.
Adrian trembled, yet refused to retreat.
Tears coursed in fragile, unstoppable lines, but his eyes did not falter.
They were void of any light, burning only with the fractured brilliance of something crushed and reforged, jagged edges glinting, those citrine shards, beneath the sun.
Fury flickered there, and grief, and a raw vacancy so profound it hollowed the air between them.
Logan felt it carve through him, ruthless as crystal dragged across skin, each look a cut, each second an incision.
His breath came ragged, chest rising unevenly, every inhale like a body dragging chains across stone. The suffering of the beloved, Logan realized, is not thunder but silence; a silence so sharp it flays you open.
Adrian’s lips quivered, his fists clamped tight as if he feared gravity might abandon him.
For a single heartbeat, he allowed Logan to see the wreckage entire: the ruins still smoking, the raw fault-lines of a heart left to bleed for years.
It struck with a violence that stole the ground from under him.
His beautiful, broken Adrian stood there—scarred, trembling, yet unyielding, his body balanced on that unbearable edge between collapse and defiance.
And Logan’s heart splintered again, each fragment sharper than the last, cutting him from the inside out.
Adrian took him in, and it was like being thrown back in time.
Those eyes, the ones that had once looked at him with so much love, now pursued him like ghosts.
That face, which had filled his dreams and haunted his waking moments, was more vivid, more real, than anything he had dared to imagine.
And those lips—soft, sweet, familiar—stung like a phantom touch, a memory that hadn’t dulled despite the years.
Adrian could feel the wounds inside him opening again, tearing through him as if they’d never healed.
Every scar he’d painstakingly worked to stitch together over the last two years burned anew, raw and bleeding.
Logan’s presence slashed through him like a rip current, dragging him back to the very moment his heart had broken.
The pain was unbearable, scorching him from the inside out.
He thought he’d moved on. He thought he’d learned how to live with the ache.
But seeing Logan standing there, his hands shoved into his pockets, his eyes filled with regret—it brought it all back.
The anguish, the betrayal, the longing. It was as if time had collapsed, and the wounds had never been tended to at all.
In the blink of an eye, Adrian found himself alone once more in that secluded cabin in Australia. It was as if time itself had woven its threads around him, igniting a searing pain within his veins that danced like flames, pulling him back into the depths of memory.
Adrian’s voice caught in his throat, his tears falling freely now, and all he could do was stare at Logan, the man who had once been his everything, and wonder how he was supposed to survive this.
The air between them was sharp and electric, the kind of tension that mirrors a storm at sea—beautiful, terrible, and ready to shatter.
Adrian’s eyes were burning embers, hot with anger and unshed tears as he faced Logan.
But Logan could see it, beneath the surface.
That flicker of something broken and betrayed, a light snuffed out but still glowing faintly beneath the waves.
When Adrian spoke, his voice was hard. “What are you doing here!?” he demanded, his words cutting through the air.
Logan flinched at the tone, but more than that, he yearned for the sound itself. Even in anger, Adrian’s voice stirred something deep in him, a longing that clung to every word, as if it were a lifeline. “Ad, I—” Logan took a tentative step forward, the sand shifting under his weight.
“Who told you I’m here?!” Adrian’s voice rose, almost a scream, but his tears betrayed him. They shone in his eyes, shimmering like the surface of the ocean before it breaks, turning his fury into something fragile, something heartbreakingly human.