Delilah could feel it—his energy had shifted. Not in some dramatic, sweeping way, but in the subtle adjustments: the longer pause before he picked up the ball, the way his gaze lingered just a beat longer on the pins, the slight tightening in his posture as if his body was unconsciously bracing for the outcome. She recognized it because she knew it in herself. That quiet, sharpened awareness that came when something—no matter how small—started to matter more than you expected it to.
Her third-throw strike had been satisfying, yes, but the real pleasure had come in watching his reaction. Not gloating, not smug, but that fleeting flash in his expression—half amusement, half acknowledgment—that told her he'd noticed. And cared. It was the kind of acknowledgment she thrived on, the kind that wasn't handed out freely but earned in small, precise ways. She had no intention of letting him take the night without working for it.
She wrapped her fingers around her own ball, feeling the smooth coolness under her palm, the faint oil-slick sheen of the lane lights catching in its surface. It was heavier than she remembered from her last throw, though she knew that was just the awareness of what was at stake. The scoreboard glared at her—one point. Just one. It was ridiculous how much that single digit could spark the same kind of pulse-quickening tension she felt in the early stages of a flirtation. Maybe because, in a way, that's exactly what this was. Adrian had that quiet determination now, the kind that made her want to match him not just pin for pin, but intention for intention. She knew the game had already stopped being about bowling for either of them. The pins were placeholders. What mattered was the unspoken dialogue between them—each frame a question, each result an answer.
She remembered their earlier throws, the near-silent exchanges: the way he'd glance at her just before stepping up, like he was checking whether she was watching (she always was), the little half-smiles they traded in the space between turns. It wasn't just competition—it was a dance. A step forward, a counterstep. Testing and teasing. And now here they were, down to this. The last throw. She could already picture the outcomes: the electric little rush of stealing the win from him in the final moment, or the almost equally intoxicating pull of letting him have it—not out of concession, but out of a deliberate choice to see how he handled victory. Either way, she wouldn't lose. Not really.
She rolled the ball between her palms, letting her mind linger on the way the weight grounded her. In that moment the music began to fade, becoming nothing more than background static. Her focus was narrowed to the length of polished wood ahead of her, the neat white geometry of the pins, and the awareness of him just a few feet behind her, watching. She could almost feel his gaze against the back of her neck, a warm, steady pressure that made her want to throw well for reasons that had nothing to do with points. It struck her that this—this blend of competition, attention, and tension—was the kind of thing that didn't happen by accident. You didn't find it with just anyone. The game might end in minutes, but the current between them wouldn't. If anything, she suspected it would only get sharper.
As she stepped up to the line, she allowed herself the smallest smile. Whether the pins fell clean or stubbornly refused, she knew one thing for certain: she'd already matched him. Not just in score, but in intent. And matching him, she suspected, was only the beginning.
The pins clattered in a satisfying, staggered cascade, the sound sharp and final. One stubborn pin at the far edge rocked in place, teetered as though it might stand its ground… then tipped. The final pin. The last frame. She didn't need to check the scoreboard to know what it meant, but of course, her eyes flicked there anyway, catching the satisfying glow of the numbers: her name above his, by exactly one point. The same narrow margin that had hovered between them, now inverted in her favor. She turned toward him slowly—not with the triumphant swagger of someone out for humiliation, but with the composed grace of someone savoring the quiet victory. There was a sparkle in her eyes, though, a glint that said I wanted this and I took it.
Adrian's smile was already there, tugging at the edges of his mouth before she'd even met his gaze. It wasn't the smile of a sore loser, nor was it entirely surrender—it was something else. Something that acknowledged the game they'd been playing wasn't over just because the scoreboard had stopped changing. Delilah let the moment stretch. She didn't rush toward him, didn't blurt out a gloating remark. Instead, she stepped closer with deliberate slowness, the faint scent of her perfume drifting forward before she did. When she was within arm's reach, she leaned in—not enough to touch, but enough to let the space between them feel charged again—and said, almost in a whisper,
"Guess I just discovered my hidden talent."
The words were light, but her gaze held steady, anchoring them with something more than teasing. She could see the flicker of thought in his eyes, the recalibration of whatever balance they'd been playing with all night. He'd wanted to win, she knew. Not in some chest-thumping way, but in that quiet, internal way that mattered more. And now she'd taken it. But it wasn't about proving herself better. Not really. It was about showing him—showing them—that she could meet him, match him, even surpass him when it mattered. That she wasn't going to stay in the safe shadow of his lead. And from the way his smile deepened, she suspected he didn't mind losing. Not to her. She picked up her drink, taking a slow sip, eyes never leaving his. "One point," she added, a faintly satisfied curve in her lips. "But that's all it takes."
The scoreboard still glowed above them, a frozen record of the night's outcome. And yet, she had the feeling they'd both remember it less for the numbers than for the moment it represented—the point where the game they'd been playing stopped being about pins entirely. Now that bowling was over it was up to her to pick the next game but up to Adrian to pick the prize for the winner of the next game.