Chapter 6
Rain and Confessions
The sky had been gray all afternoon, threatening rain, and by the time Eleanor left the café, the first drops were already falling. She hurried down the street, tugging her coat tighter, wishing she had brought an umbrella.
“Need some help?” a familiar voice called out.
Eleanor looked up to see Caleb jogging toward her, holding his large black umbrella. “You don’t have to—” she began, but he shook his head.
“I insist,” he said with that calm, steady smile she had begun to crave. He held the umbrella over her and himself, their shoulders brushing as they walked together.
The rain fell harder, and Eleanor realized how easily she was letting herself lean closer, letting the warmth of his presence seep in.
“You really do appear at all the right times,” she said, half-teasing, half-serious.
“Only by accident,” he replied, though the twinkle in his eyes suggested otherwise.
At a crosswalk, a car splashed through a puddle, soaking Eleanor’s shoes. She gasped, glancing down at the mess. Caleb immediately offered his coat to shield her from the rain.
“Thank you,” she said, her voice quieter than usual, tinged with something she couldn’t name.
“No need to thank me,” he said softly. “I… I like being around you. Even when you’re a little wet.”
Eleanor’s heart skipped. She laughed nervously, not knowing what to say. “I… like being around you too,” she admitted, her words barely audible over the rain.
Caleb’s eyes softened, and for a moment, the world seemed to shrink until it was just the two of them, the rain, and the quiet hum of the city around them.
As they reached her building, he hesitated, then said, “Maybe… we could do something like this again. Minus the soaking part.”
Eleanor smiled, warmth flooding through her despite the damp. “I’d like that.”
And as Caleb disappeared back into his apartment, Eleanor realized that these chance encounters—moments of laughter, help, and quiet confession—were slowly but surely unraveling the careful walls she had built around her heart.