The L Word Official

So when he looked at her across the dinner table one Tuesday—their Tuesday, pasta and red wine and the same jazz station—and said, “I think I’m falling in love with you,” she felt the stone shift.

It sat in her throat like a stone—small, smooth, impossible to swallow. She’d feel it rise during quiet mornings when he poured her coffee without asking, or late nights when his hand found hers under the blanket without a word. The L word. Not love , exactly—that one she could manage, eventually, after enough wine or distance. No, the other L word.

Not upward this time. Downward.

She never said it first. Not to him, not to anyone.

She didn’t say the L word. Not that night. But for the first time, she let herself believe that maybe leaving wasn’t the only L word that mattered. the l word

Leaving.

Maybe learning was one too. Learning to stay. So when he looked at her across the

Here’s a short piece developed from the prompt The L Word