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Monthly Archives: October 2025

I was deep in the college party and bar scene when Sabrina came front and center. Everyone knew everyone, or pretended to. Sabrina had been an ancillary figure in our group, always there at the edges, bumming cigarettes on the porch, but suddenly she was throwing herself at me with an intensity that felt both flattering and overwhelming.

We’d end up on barstools that wobbled, her knee pressed against mine while she leaned in close enough that I could smell her perfume mixing with whiskey. The way she looked at me felt like I was being selected, pulled from the crowd into some private frequency. In retrospect, she was attracted to my social role and image in that world. I was part of her extended friend group, had the same habits, and moved in the same circles.

It escalated to official dating status in a matter of days. We were socially aligned, attractive to each other, sexually compatible. It felt good, or at least it felt like it should feel good.

But I suffered from depression and anxiety that would come in unpredictable waves. One evening we were sitting on the stoop smoking cigarettes; the air was thick and still. I don’t remember what led to it, but I admitted I sometimes had crippling anxiety.

The moment I said it, her face changed. Not gradually, instant – like a door slamming. Her mouth twisted into something between disgust and confusion. “Okay…” she said, drawing out the word with such contempt that I can still hear the exact pitch of it. Then she stood up, dropped her cigarette, and left.

I don’t remember the exact breakup conversation, but that was functionally it.

She was still around constantly, though, and the reality of the bomb I’d dodged quickly surfaced. I watched her throw herself at every guy in our group with the same aggressive focus she’d used on me. The same lean-in at the bar, the same intensity that had felt flattering when it was aimed at me. Everyone saw it. Everybody resisted.

One time she was over when some guy approached the front stoop. He didn’t knock, didn’t hesitate, just walked up and punched someone in our group square in the face. No words, no warning. We all lost our shit. At some point during the chaos, he dropped a screwdriver on the ground, a weapon he’d been carrying. I watched Sabrina quietly pick it up and slip it into her purse, like she was collecting something that belonged to her.

I realized then she’d had him come over to meet her. He wasn’t random, he was hers. It revealed everything about her taste in men.

It was the same agency I had walked into a decade earlier and stumbled out of just over two months later. Back then I was drinking too much to keep my footing. This time I came in sober, lucid, desperate, and hungry.

The pitch had not changed: we are an elite boutique, we work only high-fee searches. I saw only dollar signs. Commission only did not matter. It was all anyone was offering me, and this place carried a different weight. I had failed here once. This was my shot at redemption.

The invitation back felt like recognition, like someone had noticed the distance I had traveled and decided I had earned another chance.

For a while I believed it. I found the rhythm fast, calls, pitches, the slow burn of turning strangers into clients. Every small win was proof I was not the same person who had left years ago. I could see the arc taking shape, the clean ending I had been chasing.

Then the floor shifted. I was working on niche, impossible job orders, and I had already contacted every single viable candidate there was. Everything that had made the agency appealing – high fee, niche searches – was in reality reasons you could not succeed there. I just did not see it that way at first.

I had told myself I would not walk away again. This time I would be successful here. Earn the respect of the owner, a god tier recruiter who billed one million dollars running his own desk while also managing the company.

But there is a difference between proving you can win and proving you will not quit. The first is victory. The second is erosion.

When I left, it was not because I could not do it. It was because I could, and that was no longer the point.

The day after I quit they posted an ad for a salaried position. They had the budget all along. The truth was simple and ugly. They had been betting against me from the start. This was never a redemption arc. It was a rigged game, and I had played it to the end.

When I call for Roy and Luna, Lily comes too. She’s never been excluded, not once, but I’ve also never called her name. Just “Roy and Luna.” That’s the phrase.

And still, she comes.

I don’t know when it started. Maybe she noticed the pattern. Maybe she watched what happened next – the pets, the attention, the group cuddle on the floor – and decided that “Roy and Luna” must mean everyone I love. That’s not what I meant, but I don’t correct her.

Because she’s right.

Roy was first to steal my heart. He was bold in a way that never needed to prove itself. He simply belonged.

Luna came with him, a bonded pair, but she hid under the couch for days. She emerged slowly, the kind of cat who negotiates her trust piece by piece. When she finally curled up against me with Roy, I felt the balance click into place. Roy and Luna were always a matched set, opposites stitched into the same fabric. And now I was included.

So when I say their names together, Roy and Luna, it isn’t just a call. It’s shorthand for the whole history of the house. Their names are the spine of my domestic life.

And now Lily knows this too.

She wasn’t there for the beginning. She arrived in a world already inscribed with their names, a third verse to a song that had always been a duet. But cats are pattern-readers. She studied what happened when I said the words. She noticed the sequence: the sound of their names, the rush of paws, and the warmth that followed.

So when I call for Roy and Luna, she comes too. Tail high, eyes bright, no hesitation.

It moves me more than I can explain. Because she isn’t technically right, but she is emotionally right. She reads the signal correctly. The quiet certainty that she belongs. She wasn’t there when the words were coined, but she comes anyway.

I don’t correct her. The truth is, she has redefined the meaning. It no longer means just Roy and Luna. It means come home. And she always does.