Kelly looked... tired. Worn thin like paper. But her eyes-those soft, storm-colored eyes-were exactly the same.
Windmere hadn't changed. Same sleepy town. Same salt-heavy air that clung to your skin. But for Arthur Tom, everything had shifted in the silence she left behind. The town was a ghost of itself now-just like him.
Three years ago, she vanished.
No warning. No note. One night, she was in his arms, whispering promises beneath the stars. The next, gone-like the tide had swallowed her whole. The townspeople had moved on. But Arthur hadn't. Couldn't. He searched every street. Called every contact. He even drove five hours to a psychic once, desperate for a thread of her.
And when the searching turned to silence, something in him cracked.
The man who stood now at the edge of the sea wasn't the boy she'd once loved. That Arthur had drowned in whiskey, bar fights, and sleepless nights chasing shadows that refused to become answers.
He'd become a myth in Windmere-a man chasing ghosts. And suddenly, the ghost stood behind him.
He heard the footsteps first. Slow. Hesitant.
Then her voice: "Arthur."
The sound hit him like a punch to the ribs. He turned slowly, afraid he was imagining it again. He'd seen her before-in dreams, in the haze of drink, in strangers' faces on foggy nights.
But this was real.
Kelly Moore stood before him, the woman who broke him.
The woman who never looked back.
"I know how it sounds," she said, her voice trembling like the wind in the dunes. "But I had my reasons."
Arthur didn't speak. Couldn't. His hands were fists in his coat pockets, knuckles white with restraint. His heart was a drumbeat of rage and ache.
"You disappeared," he said at last, voice hoarse. "Like I meant nothing."
"I didn't mean to hurt you."
"But you did."
She looked down, her fingers curling around her bag like it might anchor her. "I'm not here to start trouble. I just... need time."
He laughed, sharp and bitter. "Time? I lost time. I lost my *self*."
She flinched.
"I tried to outrun you," he continued, voice low. "Bars. Roads. Women who weren't you. Nothing worked."
Kelly's lips parted, but no words came.
"I tore myself apart looking for a why," Arthur said. "You owe me more than this."
"I can't explain," she whispered. "Not now."
"Try."
"You wouldn't believe me."
"Don't give me that." His voice cracked under the weight of everything unsaid. "I *need* you to say something. Anything."
Her eyes glistened, but she blinked the tears away. "I came back for someone else. Not you."
He staggered back like she'd struck him. The air between them thickened.
"Then why show up at all?"
She turned, her silhouette swallowed by the rising fog.
"I'll explain," she said, without turning. "Just... not today."
And she was gone again.
But this time, Arthur didn't chase her.
He clenched his fists and stared out at the churning sea. The waves whispered secrets he still didn't understand.
This time, she wouldn't get away without answers.
This time, he'd unravel the truth-even if it destroyed them both.