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“Start at page one,” she said. “The dog’s fine for a while.”

Leo’s instinct was to pull out his phone. To scroll. To disappear. But the laundromat’s Wi-Fi was down (a mercy, he’d later think). So he said the only thing that came to mind.

“Always. Three blocks. The crack in the sidewalk by the bodega? I count it as my front step.” “Start at page one,” she said

And in the washed-blue light of a laundromat at 2:47 AM, two people who were tired of being alone—but more tired of performing loneliness—sat side by side in silence. Reading. Waiting for cycles to end. Learning, slowly, that some love stories don’t begin with a spark. They begin with a spin cycle and someone brave enough to stay for the rinse.

She sat two machines down, barefoot, reading a battered paperback by the light of her phone. Her sneakers were tied together by their laces and slung over the machine’s handle. Every few seconds, she’d look up at her own churning load—a sea of dark denim and one startling red scarf—as if checking that it was still there. As if the machine might run off with it. To disappear

He watched his socks tumble in the dryer—a slow, pointless dance. Then he noticed her.

“Claire’s. She left in a hurry. Said her cat was having a ‘situational crisis.’ I don’t think she has a cat.” “Always

She didn’t flinch. Didn’t even look up. “Page one-forty-two. But the dog comes back as a ghost on page two-oh-one. So maybe don’t spoil the wrong thing.”