The Lie Comes to Light
The night air was thick with August heat, but the house was cool--almost too cool. Zariah sat on the couch in one of Malik's tees, bare legs folded under her, hair wrapped, eyes closed. Her body still hummed from the way he touched her that morning. Soft. Unhurried. Like he was sculpting something sacred from skin and memory.
But Malik wasn't beside her now.
He was in the garage.
Too long.
She should've gone to him.
Instead, she waited--until the screen door creaked, and the weight of his steps hit different.
Slower.
He didn't say a word when he walked in. Just dropped his phone onto the table with a quiet thud.
Zariah looked up. "Everything okay?"
Malik nodded once. Then turned the phone around so she could see the screen.
Her stomach dropped.
It was the photo.
The one Jared sent. The one she'd deleted.
The one she never told Malik about.
"Found it in your deleted folder," he said, voice even. Too even. "You forgot to empty the trash."
She sat up straighter. Heart pounding. "Malik--"
"Don't lie to me now."
Her mouth went dry.
"I was going to tell you," she said.
"When?"
She swallowed. "That night. But then you were already so angry. And I didn't want to make it worse."
"You didn't want
me
to be worse," he said. "You didn't want me to blow up. Scare you."
Zariah looked away.
Malik let out a dry laugh. "So you decided for both of us. Again."
"It's not like that."
"It's
exactly
like that."
He stepped back. His hands were on his hips now, head down like he was trying to breathe through it.
"I thought we were building something," he said quietly. "But maybe we're just dressing up the same old fear in new clothes."
Zariah stood, the room spinning a little. "Don't do that."
"Don't do
what
?"
"Don't act like this is one-sided. Like I'm the only one who's scared. You never said you loved me either."
His head snapped up. "Is that what you're waiting for? A three-word spell to make you feel safe?"
"I'm waiting for you to be
honest.
About what you want. About what this is."
He stared at her for a long, heavy beat.
"I want you," he said. "That's never changed. But I also want to know I'm not putting my life on the line for someone who's still got one foot out the door."
Zariah stepped closer, voice tight. "I'm not going anywhere."
"You say that," Malik said. "But every time it gets real, you shut down. You hide things. You don't let me protect you, Z. That's not strength. That's survival. And I don't want to be someone you survive."
Her breath caught.
"I'm not trying to survive you," she whispered. "I'm trying not to lose myself in you."
They stood there in the tension, hearts exposed and bleeding, words like knives too dull to cut, too sharp to hold.
Then she said, "I'm sorry."
Malik looked at her--really looked. And the hurt in his eyes was deeper than anger.
"I know," he said.
But he didn't step closer.
He just walked past her. Down the hall. Into the bedroom.
The sound of the door closing behind him felt like a verdict.
Simone's Final Strike - "It Wasn't Just Sex"
Zariah wasn't trying to see Simone again.
Not today. Not after the night she just had--Malik sleeping on one side of the bed like she wasn't there, like the space between them wasn't filled with everything they hadn't said.
She'd spent the morning pacing the porch, sipping lukewarm coffee and telling herself she didn't care. That it was fine. That not every wound needed a Band-Aid.
But her reflection in the window didn't buy it.
So she went to the cafΓ©. For caffeine. For silence. For air that didn't smell like guilt and unsaid things.
She was halfway through the line when the bell over the door jingled and in walked a storm.
Simone.
Different outfit, same energy. Denim romper hugging her curves, nose ring sparkling, locs in a pineapple bun that said
unbothered
even as her eyes zeroed in like a sniper.
Zariah stiffened. Too late.
Simone's voice slid down her spine like a blade dipped in sugar.
"Well, if it ain't Malik's new beginning."
Zariah turned, slow. Gave her the flattest face she could muster. "Girl. Not today."
Simone offered a crooked smile. "I just came for a latte. You're the one looking like you lost something."
Zariah snorted. "What would I have lost?"
Simone leaned on the counter. "Confidence. Sanity. Dick on demand." She grinned. "Take your pick."
Zariah faced front. Ordered her drink with a calm she didn't feel.
Simone stepped closer. "You know, it's funny. Y'all act like Malik's some prize. But that man? He's got a way of breaking people in ways they don't realize until they're bleeding."
Zariah's hand tightened around the strap of her purse. "If you came to play therapist, book a session."
"Nah. I'm just saying." Simone's voice dropped lower. "It wasn't just sex between me and Malik."
Zariah turned her head slowly. "Oh?"
"He stayed the night. Made me tea when I was on my period. Held me when my sister died." Her eyes narrowed. "You think what you have is special just 'cause he puts it down good and kisses your forehead after?"
Zariah didn't blink. "I think what we have ain't your business."
"That's cute," Simone said. "But you should know--he told me something once. Something I don't think you've heard yet."
Zariah hated how her stomach twisted.
Simone smiled like she could see it. "He said forever was just a long way to spell inevitable heartbreak. Said people cling to the idea because it sounds prettier than the crash."
Zariah felt the blood drain from her face.
Simone stepped back like she'd fired her last shot. "So while you're there playing house, you might want to ask him if he even believes in the story you're writing."
The barista slid Zariah's drink across the counter. She didn't reach for it.
Simone walked past her, pausing just long enough to murmur, "Good luck, pretty girl. You're gonna need it."
Zariah sat in her car for twenty-three minutes.
Drink untouched.
Face numb.
She replayed Simone's words like a skipping record.
Inevitable heartbreak. Forever don't mean shit.
The worst part?
Zariah could hear Malik saying it. Clear as day. That lazy baritone, casual and cruel in the same breath.
He'd never said those words to her. Not directly. But he hadn't said the other ones either.
Not "I love you."
Not "I want to build something that lasts."
Not "Forever."
She'd filled in the blanks because the sex was good, because he held her close, because he looked at her like maybe--just maybe--she was the only storm he'd ever wanted to chase.
But now...