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“What about Tokyo?”

“I left a note.” He throws up a hand. “There was an origami swan involved!”

I stare at him, deadpan. “What?”

“Yeah. A swan. Very poetic. I even googled how to fold that shit. And then I waited for your call. A fucking text. Smoke signal. Anything. But nada.”

“You left,” I say, my voice quieter. “You just left. And you’re asking why I didn’t call?”

“Yes, I left. And I left a note.”

“Well, I never saw it.”

He looks genuinely offended. “You’re telling me you missed the swan?”

I want to laugh, but something tugs at the memory. An image, long buried—crease lines on a crumpled piece of paper tucked into the nightstand, forgotten in the flurry of checkouts and hurt feelings. Did I toss it? Did I even open it?

Back then, I would’ve bet my gold medal that he’d just vanished. No explanation. No care. But now . . .

Now he’s handing me a worn-out T-shirt like it’s stitched from apology. Or hope. Or whatever emotion makes a guy offer you his favorite thing and joke about getting his heart broken afterward.

I take it.

Slide it over my head without breaking eye contact.

It hits mid-thigh, clinging to my damp skin. The sleeves skim my elbows.

His eyes drag over me. Slowly.

“Maybe there was a swan but I was on my way out and I never saw a note.”

“So what you’re saying you shunned my gift of origami and poetry and then blamed me for it?”

“That’s not what I’m saying.”

“Oh but I think that’s exactly what you’re saying. I think you owe me, Scottie.”

“What?”

“You. In my shirt. You look like you belong here.”

I snort. “I’m going home after this.”

He raises a brow. “Sure. Right after I make you tea and force you to pretend cuddling isn’t your love language.”

“I will riot.”

“You’ll sigh and nuzzle into my armpit like a koala on Ambien.”

I gape. “Jason?—”

“You came, Scottie. That makes this legally binding.”

“Multiple times,” I admit grudgingly.

He grins. “Exactly. You’ve officially signed up for full-service post-fuck hospitality.”

I shake my head, but the smile’s already breaking through. Then I’m laughing—really laughing.