dancing
๐๐ซ๐ฏ๐ข๐ฅ๐ข๐๐ฏ๐ฐ๐ข๐ก๐ฉฐ

1
I hadnโt meant to be in that studio, yet there I was, leaning against the doorframe, heart caught between fear and disbelief. The room was dimly lit, the wooden floor gleaming under the soft glow of hanging lights. Music thrummed through the air, raw and alive, unlike the rehearsed perfection I was used to. And there he was.
He moved like the world had been waiting for him, every motion fluid yet charged with strengthโthe way his muscles flexed under skin inked with swirling tattoos. Brown curls fell into his face, and I felt the pull of those gray-brown eyes, stormy yet gentle, piercing me even without direct gaze. He was taller, broader than I remembered, but there was a grace that no height could overshadow. He was alive in a way I had forgotten to be.
I stayed frozen, memories of that summer washing over meโthe summer he had taught me to dance barefoot in a sunlit clearing, steadying me, whispering, โCome on, Honey, feel it.โ I had never forgotten that name, or the way the world had seemed to hold its breath for us. That freedom, that joy, returned simply by watching him move.
But now, he hesitated. When I asked for guidance, he shook his head. โBallet isnโt my thing,โ he murmured, arms crossed, a wall that hadnโt existed in the sunlight of my memory. I wanted to step forward, to remind him the boy I had danced with wasnโt goneโthat laughter, freedom, and stolen moments could still exist even in a world of rules.
I remembered how he had made me feel seen when no one else did, how the clearing and the sun had been ours alone. I realized I had carried that moment alwaysโthrough pirouettes, forced smiles, nights of dancing without joy. And as our paths entwined again, I feared finding him might also mean losing him all over. Sometimes, love doesnโt stayโit comes to remind you of everything you once were before it breaks your heart.