Chapter 27
PAT’s POV:
People always say that loving someone means wanting them to be happy.
They never tell you what happens when that happiness might not include you.
—
After that night in the living room, I made a decision.
A stupid one.
A painful one.
But a decision nonetheless.
—
If I couldn’t be the person Kat deserved…
Then I should stop standing in the way of someone who could.
—
And in my head, that person was Mat.
—
Because the more I thought about it, the more the comparison felt unfair.
—
Mat was everything life seemed to reward.
Handsome.
Confident.
Patient.
Rich.
The kind of person who could decide he wanted something and actually go after it.
—
And Kat deserved someone like that.
Didn’t she?
—
Someone who wouldn’t hesitate.
Someone who could openly tell her how he felt.
Someone who didn’t spend ten years hiding.
—
Someone better.
—
The thought hurt.
But I convinced myself it was the right thing to do.
—
So I started pulling away.
Slowly.
Carefully.
Just enough that nobody would notice.
—
At least…
That’s what I thought.
—
The first thing I stopped doing was waiting outside St. Aurelia.
—
The first night, I messaged Mat.
—
**Pat: Training ends at 10. Kat gets off around 11.**
—
Three dots appeared.
—
**Mat: Why are you telling me this?**
—
I stared at the screen.
Then typed:
—
**Pat: Sunduin mo.**
—
The reply came almost immediately.
—
**Mat: …What?**
—
**Pat: Just do it.**
—
A few seconds passed.
—
**Mat: Are you sure?**
—
I looked away from my phone.
—
No.
—
Not even a little.
—
**Pat: Yes.**
—
Lie.
—
The next night, Kat walked out of St. Aurelia and found Mat waiting instead of me.
—
I wasn’t there to see her reaction.
—
But somehow…
That hurt more.
—
When she got home, I was pretending to study at the dining table.
—
The condo door opened.
—
I immediately recognized her footsteps.
—
Then silence.
—
“Pat.”
—
“Hm?”
—
“Where were you?”
—
I kept my eyes on my notebook.
—
“Training.”
—
“You always wait.”
—
Not anymore.
—
“Got busy.”
—
The answer sounded cold.
Even to me.
—
The silence that followed was worse.
—
“Oh.”
—
Just one word.
—
But somehow…
It felt like a knife.
—
I hated myself.
—
But I kept going.
—
Because if I stopped now, all of this would’ve been for nothing.
—
The days passed.
—
And slowly…
Mat became the one waiting outside the hospital.
—
Mat became the one walking Kat home.
—
Mat became the one bringing her coffee.
—
Mat became the one asking about her day.
—
And every single time I saw it happen…
It felt like someone was pressing on a bruise that never healed.
—
The worst part?
—
Mat listened.
—
Really listened.
—
Because whenever I accidentally mentioned something Kat liked…
He remembered.
—
Her favorite snacks.
Her favorite coffee.
The movies she loved.
The flowers she liked.
—
Everything.
—
And he used that information.
—
Not maliciously.
—
Not intentionally.
—
He just genuinely wanted to make her happy.
—
Which somehow made it harder to hate him.
—
One evening, I found him carrying a paper bag.
—
“What is that?”
—
He smiled.
—
“Kat mentioned she missed these.”
—
Inside were pastries from a bakery nearly an hour away.
—
I stared.
—
Then laughed quietly.
—
Because of course he would.
—
And of course she deserved that.
—
Someone willing to make that effort.
—
Someone willing to choose her openly.
—
The way I never could.
—
Meanwhile…
Kat was changing too.
—
Not toward Mat.
—
Toward me.
—
Because she stopped laughing as much around me.
—
Stopped telling me stories first.
—
Stopped waiting for me during dinner.
—
And every time I noticed…
I told myself it was working.
—
This is what you wanted.
—
So why did it feel so awful?
—
One Friday night, I came home late.
—
The condo was quiet.
—
Kat was sitting alone on the couch.
—
The television was on.
But she wasn’t watching it.
—
She looked up when I entered.
—
“You’re late.”
—
“Sorry.”
—
The answer came automatically.
—
Just like every other conversation lately.
—
Short.
—
Distant.
—
Safe.
—
Kat looked at me for a long moment.
—
Then asked:
—
“Did I do something wrong?”
—
My chest immediately tightened.
—
“No.”
—
“Then why are you avoiding me?”
—
The question hit harder than I expected.
—
Because I didn’t have an answer I could give her.
—
Not the real one.
—
Not:
*”Because every time I look at you, I remember I love you.”*
—
Not:
*”Because I think you deserve someone better.”*
—
Not:
*”Because watching Mat like you hurts more than I can explain.”*
—
So instead I lied.
—
Again.
—
“I’m not avoiding you.”
—
Kat laughed.
—
A sad laugh.
—
The kind I’d never heard from her before.
—
“Okay.”
—
Then she stood up.
—
And walked toward her room.
—
Without another word.
—
The sound of the door closing echoed through the condo.
—
And suddenly…
The place felt emptier than it had before she moved in.
—
I sat down on the couch she had just left.
—
Staring at the closed hallway door.
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Wondering why doing the “right thing” felt so much like ruining everything.
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What I didn’t know was that Kat was crying too.
—
Not because of Mat.
—
Not because of nursing school.
—
Not because of duty.
—
But because the person she missed most was living in the same condo.
—
And somehow…
Felt farther away than ever.
—
And while I kept convincing myself that I was doing this for her happiness…
I failed to realize one thing.
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Nobody had ever asked Kat what would make her happy.
—
Not Mat.
Not me.
Not anyone.
—
And that mistake…
Was about to break all three of us.
—
## Author’s Note
WELCOME TO THE MISCOMMUNICATION ARC. 😭
Pat: “I’m doing this for Kat.”
Kat: “Why is the person I care about avoiding me?”
Mat: “Wait… why do I feel like something is wrong?”
Reader:
🧍
🧍♀️
🧍♂️
“JUST TALK.”
Unfortunately…
If they talked, this story would be five chapters long.
And I need emotional damage.
See you next chapter. 💔🏀🩺😭
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