People began to fill the gallery. Verena could feel the excitement from everyone, it gave her a genuine buzz of happiness. “You got this.” She told herself as she looked herself over in a nearby mirror. Her hair was luscious, her waves were defined and neat. Her make was light yet neatly done and her lips were tinted pink. She felt confident and ready to begin her night.
Verena exited from the back room and began making her way down the hallway. She'd seen AJ the moment she stepped out from the back hallway, though she didn't let it show right away. There was a rhythm to these nights—people to greet, quiet notes to check, the subtle choreography of hosting an opening. But as she moved through the gallery, her pulse betrayed her. A shift. A tug in her chest she couldn't name until her eyes landed on him.
AJ.
She noticed the way he stood—not stiff, but grounded, like he was holding space instead of just taking it. A few people brushed past her to offer congratulations, and she smiled, nodded, said thank you—but her attention stayed on the man by the far wall, gazing at the piece she'd poured herself into when everything felt like it was splitting open.
She didn't think he'd come just to impress her. That wasn't his way. And yet… he looked like someone who knew why he was here. Who chose to be here.
As she moved through the crowd, her dress catching the light just so, she felt that subtle gravity between them grow. He hadn't come over right away. Hadn't demanded space or time or spotlight. That mattered more than he probably realized. By the time she reached him, the noise of the room had dulled—blurred behind the low hum in her ears, the one she always heard before a moment that mattered.
She stopped just in front of him, letting a breath linger before she spoke. Her eyes lifted to meet his, steady and lit with something between challenge and curiosity. "You came," she said, a smile curling at the edges of her mouth, not surprised—but maybe a little undone. “Your tie looks good.” She added with a playful smile. "You look good, by the way. Even with the tie. " A glint in her eye. "Though I am curious about how long it might of took you to tie it.” She teased. She was able to play around with AJ and be herself. It was all in good fun.
"So… what do you think? Pretty nice turnout, right?" Verena asked with a soft chuckle, her voice dancing with equal parts disbelief and pride. She glanced around the glowing gallery, the warmth of the evening settling in her chest. "It just feels so alive in here. I can't believe I actually pulled this off."
Her smile stretched wider, lit from somewhere far deeper than her lips. "People are happy. They're drinking, eating, donating… and some are even buying art. Not just mine. The guest artists too." Her eyes shimmered beneath the overhead lights, reflecting the vibrant pulse of the night. "It's great."
She didn't wait for an answer—not yet. Instead, Verena turned and led AJ across the hardwood, her heels echoing in rhythmic confidence. She didn't reach for his hand. She didn't need to. Something in the way he followed her—steady, present—felt just as intimate.
"Come on," she said over her shoulder, her tone laced with the kind of quiet excitement that only came when she was talking about art. "Let me show you the work from my guest artist. It's… actually quite impressive."
In the adjoining room, the light shifted slightly—softer, more golden, as though the space itself had inhaled and quieted for the art. She reached for a glass of champagne off a silver tray, then turned back to him, lifting it slightly before taking a slow sip. "Ten pieces total," she said, gesturing around them, "all curated to speak to each other. A mix of mediums—some oil, some sculpture, even a few mixed media installations.”
She moved alongside AJ now, pausing in front of a large textile piece—stunning in its texture and rawness—and gave him a bit of background on the artist: a young woman from Oaxaca, just starting to break into international circles. Verena spoke with reverence, weaving the story behind the piece as though it were inseparable from the threads and dye.
She didn't have to stay near AJ. There were so many people to see, so many small fires to tend to as the host. But there was something about his presence—quiet but rooted—that made her want to keep him close. When she broke away to greet friends, to exchange hugs with patrons or answer questions from donors, she never drifted too far. And AJ never made her feel like she had to apologize for it. He was just… there. Constant. Supportive. Watching her in her element.
It had been nearly an hour, and Verena felt the rhythm of the evening settling. The conversations became richer, the art glowing under softened light, the gallery a hum of celebration.
And then the air shifted.
The front doors opened again, and in stepped James. He was impossible to miss—tall, sharply dressed, polished to an almost clinical shine. A fitted navy suit clung perfectly to his frame, the fabric catching the light just enough to suggest money and taste. His face was freshly shaved, his jawline clean and unyielding, his smile a practiced, photogenic thing. And in his hand, a bouquet of deep red roses—opulent, dramatic, unmistakably performative.
As he entered, heads turned. He nodded like a politician, greeting people he recognized from Verena's circle. He was charming. Well-trained. And completely out of place in a room built on authenticity.
Verena had just been asked for the tenth time, "Where's your fiancé tonight?" and, once again, she'd offered a polished excuse: "He's tied up with a meeting, but he might swing by later." She never believed he actually would. He purposely avoiding her event.
"Oh Verena, he made it," someone murmured with cheerful surprise. That's when she turned—eyes drawn to the entrance. Her stomach dropped. There he was. Flowers. Smile. Purposeful stride. And she… froze. Why is he here? The thought barreled into her mind, loud and unwanted. Her mouth went dry.
James approached like he was stepping onto a stage. Without hesitation, he placed his hand on the small of her back—possessive, practiced—and leaned in. "Sorry I'm late, love," he said, voice smooth, polished. And before she could recoil, he leaned in and kissed her—lightly, but enough. Enough to be seen. Enough to reclaim. Verena didn't kiss him back. Her body went still, her mind spinning in silence behind her eyes.
"These are for you," he said, offering the roses like they were some sort of peace treaty. Then, as if that wasn't enough, he reached into his pocket and pulled out something small, glinting—her engagement ring. "You forgot this," he added, slipping it onto her finger with deliberate ease. "Can't have you losing it." Verena stared down at the ring now hugging her finger again—its weight suddenly unbearable. He's performing. He's staging this. The way his eyes locked with hers, instructing her to smile, to play along, made her skin crawl.
"Thank you…" she said, the words brittle, lifeless.
"Damn, you look beautiful," he continued louder now, to the crowd, taking her hand and spinning her in place like they were at a gala. Verena flushed. Heat spread to her cheeks—not from flattery, but embarrassment. Discomfort. People clapped. Someone laughed. A small chorus of “Awe's” rippled through the crowd.
Verena smiled. Thin. Hollow. Mask on.
And then—instinctually—she stepped back. Just enough. Just far enough to feel space again. Her retreat landed her closer to AJ, and something in her body exhaled for the first time in minutes. James noticed immediately. His eyes sharpened.
"A friend?" he asked, tilting his head slightly as he stared directly at AJ. The words were casual, but the tone wasn't. There was scrutiny in his gaze—coated in civility, but unmistakably sharp. James scanned AJ from head to toe with subtle calculation. Sizing him up. Dismissing him. Verena didn't answer right away. She was too focused on the contrast between the two men—one who showed up late with roses and theatrics, and one who'd shown up early, simply to be there. No expectations. No performance.
Just presence.
And that difference was suddenly so loud, it was deafening.