The knock wasn’t loud at first—just a presence, a weight in the room that pulled me out of sleep. I remember thinking it was still night, that the world hadn’t restarted yet. Then a hand landed on my shoulder.“Hey.”I opened my eyes to a stranger’s ceiling fan spinning slowly, sunlight leaking through the blinds like it had something to prove. Her dad stood over me, tall, already dressed for the day, coffee in hand. He didn’t look angry. That somehow made it worse.
I sat up too fast, tangled in sheets that weren’t mine, my shoes still on. She stirred beside me, hair everywhere, still lost in sleep. For a second, I wished I could rewind twelve hours—to the neon lights of the theater, the laughter during the late show, the reckless confidence that came with being young and broke and awake at 2 a.m.We had walked the whole way back, talking about nothing and everything. The city was quiet, like it was letting us borrow it. We didn’t plan anything beyond getting home. We just collapsed, the kind of exhaustion that feels earned.Now the morning had found us.
Her dad cleared his throat. “Breakfast is ready.”That was it. No lecture. No threat. Just an invitation back to reality.As he left the room, she finally woke up, eyes widening when she saw the daylight, then me. We locked eyes and started laughing—quiet at first, then uncontrollably, faces buried in pillows to keep it in.Years later, I don’t remember the movie we saw. I don’t remember the jokes we told on the walk home.But I remember that morning—how adulthood tapped me on the shoulder, politely, and let me off easy.