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Ch. 14 - The Pattern Chips

  Work felt like second nature now. Ariel moved through her days with a quiet, growing efficiency that never failed to surprise her team. One by one, Jira tickets fell away beneath her deft touch—each fix logged with the same thoughtfulness and clarity that had started to earn her a quiet reputation among the devs. She found herself settling into a rhythm, and the more she trusted herself, the more others seemed to trust her too.

  Mid-afternoon one day, Jim pinged her with a single-line message: “You’re on fire lately. Keep it up.” Ariel read it three times before replying with a grateful emoji. Her heart lifted, just a little. She was making a difference—and not just in her code.

  That evening, she met Holly at their favorite ramen place near the corner of 9th and Pine. Holly insisted they sit at the bar to watch the cooks work their magic. Between slurps of noodles and sips of yuzu soda, they joked about how they’d survive in a zombie apocalypse. Holly claimed she’d barricade herself in Ariel’s apartment—with the Junimo plush as their new god. Ariel nearly snorted broth, and Holly grinned at her across the counter, eyes alight with mischief.

  The next day, Ariel solved a lingering bug that had been plaguing a branching dialogue tree for weeks. Jim called it a “surgical fix” in the team channel, and she blushed through the rest of standup, her teammates tossing in celebratory gifs and jokes about her “speedrun strat.”

  That night, they stayed in. Ariel made curry from scratch while Holly arrived with a box of mochi for dessert. They curled up under a blanket on the couch, half-watching Spirited Away while quietly feeding each other bites. Neither of them mentioned it, but Ariel could feel something growing behind her ribs. Something steady. Something warm.

  Days flowed by in a gentle rhythm. Another round of feature updates passed through QA with glowing reviews, and Jim messaged her again: “You’re making the rest of us look bad ??” Ariel shook her head, smiling to herself as her fingers danced over the keyboard, moving with more confidence than ever. After work, she and Holly wandered the aisles of Foxglove & Fir, letting their shoulders bump as they browsed. They sat in the corner nook, a poetry book open across both their laps, reading softly to each other, Holly’s thumb gently stroking Ariel’s hand.

  One morning, Jim asked Ariel to run the weekly code review meeting. She was nervous, but she did it—her voice didn’t shake, her notes were thorough, the team listened. Afterward, a junior dev sent her a private message: “Thanks for explaining that bug. I finally get it now.” It made her whole day. That evening, she and Holly bundled up and walked down to the pier. Holly brought warm cider in thermoses, and they sat together on a bench, watching the ferries glide across the sound. Holly talked about Texas sunsets, and Ariel about the stars above her childhood roof. For a long moment, they just sat in silence, shoulders pressed together, the air sharp with sea salt and distant engine hums.

  Ariel turned slightly toward Holly. “Do you ever miss it? Texas?”

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  Holly shrugged, sipping her cider. “Sometimes. But I think… I was always meant to be here.”

  Ariel nodded slowly, heart thudding louder than usual. She didn’t reply. Instead, she reached out and gently took Holly’s hand. No words. Just warmth. When they hugged goodbye, Ariel didn’t want to let go.

  The week ended with another small triumph—a late-game lighting pass she volunteered to review turned out to be riddled with inconsistencies, and she fixed it all by noon. Jim sent her a final message before signing off: “Whatever you’re doing, keep doing it. You’re not just a rockstar—you’re the rock.”

  Ariel closed her laptop and leaned back in her chair, the soft hum of her PC dying down like a curtain falling on the week. The silence in her apartment felt deep and earned—almost sacred after a week spent pushing herself past old boundaries. For a while she just sat, letting her mind drift in the hush, listening to the city outside her window: the distant rush of a bus, the clatter of someone’s footsteps in the stairwell, the gentle whirr of her tower as it powered down.

  She didn’t go out that night. Holly had an early shift the next morning, so their plans were quiet. They texted back and forth—meme after meme, then a flurry of ridiculous puns, Holly’s humor as sharp and sweet as ever. The flirty banter grew lazier as the hour stretched, dissolving into sleepy confessions and small admissions—Holly saying she wished Ariel were there beside her, Ariel admitting she missed Holly’s hand in hers.

  Eventually, Ariel rolled onto her side, propped up on one arm, typing slower and slower. The last message she sent—half-dreaming—was a single heart emoji.

  Curled up in bed beneath her favorite quilt, Ariel stared at the ceiling, bathed in the soft light of her bedside lamp. She let her mind drift through the days behind her, piecing together every moment with the vivid, perfect recall that sometimes felt like both a blessing and a curse. She thought of the week—their dinners, the comfortable rhythm they’d built, the laughter that seemed to come more easily with every shared meal. She replayed the way Holly would look at her and smile, not with expectation or calculation, but with the quiet warmth of someone truly seeing her. She remembered every small, electric moment their hands found each other: in the aisles at Foxglove & Fir, across the couch, in the dark under a blanket. The memory of Holly’s thumb tracing little circles into her palm lingered like a pleasant ache.

  Mostly, she thought about how Holly listened—how she seemed to notice not just the words Ariel spoke, but everything she left unsaid. The silences, the small hesitations, the way Ariel’s gaze sometimes darted away. Holly listened with her eyes, with her laughter, with the steady weight of her presence. Ariel could feel herself being known in a way she hadn’t thought possible. And being seen—really, truly seen—made her want to believe the things Holly believed about her, too.

  I think I’m in…, Ariel started to think. But she couldn’t finish it. Her lingering self-doubt got in the way—the old belief that she wasn’t good enough, that she was too fat, too quiet, too strange. But she could feel something. Like the pattern of her life, the one that had held her prisoner for so long, was starting to become more brittle. She could sense it chipping as the thought began. She’d spent her whole life not believing she could ever feel loved, or have the chance to give love back. But in this moment, for the first time, the words had attempted to form in her mind.

  She smiled. And she fell asleep with that feeling wrapped around her heart like a blanket.

  Outside her window, the lights of the city blinked like a constellation. And beneath the surface of her world—quietly, subtly—the strange geometry of her life began to shift more than she realized.

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