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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.

In 2020 at a major tech company, I met someone who changed everything in the span of about six weeks.

We were both remote recruiters on the same team. The chemistry was instant and relentless. We would have two conversations running simultaneously, one over Slack for work and another over text for everything else. Hours would disappear into these layered discussions about recruiting, life, random observations, whatever. It was limitless.

I remember scrolling through her Instagram photos for the first time when I discovered she was a lesbian. I guess the math didn’t work out for me, after all. Or so I thought.

After several more weeks of constant texting, she asked me something unusual.

“Would you ever date me?”

“Yes.”

I didn’t even think about my reply. It was simply true, and I just said it. I felt no fear or vulnerability, no risk of rejection. She was unavailable to me; therefore, this must be some kind of hypothetical, intellectual exercise.

“I’m serious.”

“So am I.”

That’s approximately how it started.

We immediately went into planning & logistics. Eventually I would relocate to Austin. For now, I would come to visit in four weeks. If we could keep the intensity for that long, we’d have a strong foundation.

We maintained it with plenty to spare. The month flew by with the same dual-conversation energy. I booked the flight.

Austin exceeded every expectation. The chemistry translated perfectly to in-person interaction. We talked the same way face-to-face as we had through screens. The physical connection worked. We had sex and it was excellent. Everything about the weekend was clicking exactly as we’d hoped.

Then I did something incredibly dumb.

Before heading out the second day, I took a small hit from my weed vape. She took one too, in solidarity. It seemed harmless. I’ve done this thousands of times in my life. Here we had a tiny, shared moment before exploring the city.

Except, we both got ridiculously high.

I became weird and uncoordinated. She got paranoid and uncomfortable. What should have been a fun day out turned into an awkward nightmare where we were both trapped inside altered versions of ourselves.

When we got back to the hotel room, she quietly collected her things and left. I bought a ticket home that night.

It was over like that.

The smallest possible miscalculation at the worst possible moment. Everything that mattered had worked perfectly; the emotional connection, the physical compatibility, the practical logistics.

Six weeks of building something rare, a perfect weekend confirming it was real, then thirty minutes of being the wrong versions of ourselves when first impressions were everything.

Thirty minutes that undid everything we’d built and everything we could have been.