“The Pretend Boyfriend”

My name’s Mason, and I live in a small Oregon town where the nights smell like rain on pine bark and the crickets start their concert just after sunset.

I’ve never left this place. My grandfather’s old house—painted white, roof a little crooked—still creaks every time I cross the hallway. I fix bikes for a living at Gear & Grind, a repair shop wedged between a thrift store and a laundromat. Life is quiet, predictable, clean.

And then she moved in across the fence.

Her name’s Julia. Early forties, brown hair that escapes every bun, gray-green eyes that look like they’ve seen too much and refuse to tell. A journalist once, or so Mrs. Larson, the neighborhood gossip, told me. Divorced. Chicago. A husband who traded her in for someone “flexible enough to do yoga and keep secrets.”

For three years we existed like weather vanes across the street—aware of each other, never touching. Until the Thursday I saw her standing on her porch, gripping a flyer as if it were a verdict.

1. The Proposal

“Everything okay?” I asked over the fence.

She startled, then held up the crumpled paper. “Neighborhood block party. Saturday.”

I shrugged. “Free burgers, bad karaoke. Sounds like paradise.”

Her laugh was brittle. “My ex will be there. With her.”

The silence stretched, filled only by sprinklers hissing on someone’s lawn. I should’ve told her not to go. Instead, my mouth betrayed me.

“What if I came with you—as your boyfriend? Fake, obviously.”

She blinked. Then, unexpectedly, laughed for real—deep and startled. “You’re kidding.”

“Completely serious. I’m good at pretending. Ask my tax guy.”

Her smile wavered. “You’d do that?”

“Why not? You shouldn’t face a circus alone.”

She studied me for a moment, weighing sincerity against foolishness. “All right,” she said finally. “But we’ll need practice. No one will buy it otherwise.”

“When do rehearsals start?”

“Tomorrow. My porch. Bring coffee.”

I nodded, pretending to be casual while every cell in my body buzzed.

2. Rehearsal Nights

Friday evening arrived sweet with lilac. I showed up at seven sharp, carrying two diner cups. “Black, no sugar for me. Oat-milk latte, no foam for you.”

Her eyebrow lifted. “You’ve been spying on my caffeine habits.”

“Call it research.”

We sat on the porch steps, knees almost touching.

“So, fake boyfriend,” she said, crossing her legs. “Where do we begin?”

“Handholding level one.” I offered my palm.

She hesitated, then placed hers in it. Warm. Firm.

“How’s it feel?” she asked.

“Like middle-school dance flashbacks.”

She laughed—an honest sound that shook loose the awkwardness.

From there we practiced smiles, pet names, and the art of looking comfortable together. Every attempt dissolved into laughter. By the end of the night, she was wiping tears from her eyes. “We’re hopeless.”

“Hopelessly convincing,” I corrected.

The next evening she invited me inside. Her living room smelled like cedar and coffee. We shared wine, talked about bikes and deadlines, about the things we both fixed to keep from thinking too hard.

She told me about Chicago—investigative nights, dog-fighting exposés, adrenaline replacing sleep. “I thought that was living,” she murmured. “Turns out it was just running.”

I told her about my grandpa teaching me to rebuild a chain when I was ten, about staying because leaving never felt urgent.

For a woman used to interrogations, she listened quietly. And I found myself talking more than I ever had.

By the third night, she fell asleep mid-sentence on the couch. I covered her with a blanket, switched off the lamp, and sat on the floor listening to her steady breathing. For the first time in years, my house across the street felt like the lonelier one.

3. The Eve of the Show

Friday brought a storm of nerves disguised as excitement. She texted: “Come over. Made pasta. Out of fake excuses.”

Her kitchen glowed golden from a single hanging bulb. Garlic, basil, the sound of jazz on a crackling radio. She moved barefoot, hair pinned up with a pencil, apron streaked with tomato sauce.

“Don’t just stand there,” she said. “Open the wine.”

We ate slowly. The pasta was imperfect, noodles a bit overdone, but neither of us cared.

When I reached out to wipe a dot of sauce from her cheek, she froze—then smiled.

“Thanks.”

“No problem.”

After dinner we washed dishes side by side, hips brushing in the narrow space. The air between us thickened with something unspoken.

She broke it first. “After tomorrow… when this is over… what then?”

I dried my hands, heartbeat uneven. “Then we decide if we keep pretending.”

Her gaze held mine for a long time. “Okay.”

When I left that night, the smell of rain and possibility followed me home.

4. The Party

Saturday evening painted the sky peach-orange. I crossed the street wearing the only decent shirt I owned.

Julia was waiting on her porch, radiant in a pale green dress that made her eyes brighter. For a heartbeat, she looked twenty years younger.

“You clean up nice,” I said.

“So do you,” she replied, slipping her hand into the crook of my arm.

We walked to the park where string lights crisscrossed above picnic tables, and every neighbor seemed to be shouting over the same country song.

People noticed. They always do when stories rewrite themselves.

Julia’s smile tightened as whispers trailed behind us. I squeezed her hand. “Relax. We’ve got this.”

Then I saw him—Mark, the ex. Broad shoulders, expensive watch, ego polished to a shine. The blonde beside him looked barely old enough to rent a car.

“Julia!” he called, grinning like a shark. “Didn’t expect to see you.”

She stiffened. “Mark.”

He gestured to the blonde. “This is Tiffany. Tiffany, my ex-wife.”

Then his gaze landed on me. “And you are…?”

“Her boyfriend,” I said, sliding an arm around Julia’s waist. “Mason.”

Tiffany snickered. “Didn’t know you liked mechanics, Jules.”

“Careful,” I said softly. “That’s my girlfriend you’re insulting.”

The girl’s laugh faltered. Mark’s smirk wavered. Julia straightened, voice steady. “Enjoy the party.”

But before he could reply, the speaker switched to a slow song—Can’t Help Falling in Love. Without thinking, I said, “Dance with me.”

Her eyes widened. Then she nodded.

We stepped onto the grass. My hand found the small of her back. Her head rested against my shoulder.

“You okay?” I whispered.

“No,” she breathed. “But keep going.”

We swayed under the string lights while the town melted around us. I could feel Mark watching, fury in the set of his jaw.

“He doesn’t win anything,” I murmured.

She looked up. “Prove it.”

So I did.

I kissed her.

Not for the audience. Not for revenge. For her. For the quiet nights, the laughter over coffee, the way she looked when she thought no one saw.

The world stilled. When she finally pulled back, breath trembling, her eyes searched mine. “That wasn’t part of the plan.”

“Guess we’re off-script.”

5. Silence

She left the party with her head high, fingers twined in mine. On her porch, she stopped. “That kiss… it wasn’t fake.”

“No,” I said. “It wasn’t.”

“I need time to figure out what this is.”

“Take all the time you need.”

The porch light flickered as she went inside. I stood there until it dimmed.

Days passed. I kept leaving coffee at her door each morning. Sometimes she drank it; sometimes it sat untouched until nightfall. The distance between our houses felt wider than ever.

I saw her once, typing on her porch, sunlight in her hair. Our eyes met through my truck window. She gave a small nod, not quite a smile. Then she was gone.

Neighbors whispered about the “show we put on.” I let them. Mark and Tiffany stopped showing up to community events. The quiet returned—but emptier somehow.

6. Rain on the Porch

Late August. The first thunder rolled in like a drum. When I pulled into my driveway, my porch light was on. I never leave it on.

A note waited on the door:

Meet me on my porch. Bring your appetite. — J

I barely remembered to breathe as I crossed the street through humid air smelling of rain.

Julia sat at a small table, two mugs steaming, sandwiches wrapped in foil. She looked tired but peaceful, like someone who’d finally dropped a weight.

“Turkey and Swiss,” she said. “You like mustard, right?”

I grinned. “You remembered.”

“I pay attention.”

We ate in quiet comfort. Crickets chirped. Somewhere down the street, a wind chime trembled.

When we finished, she pulled a thin folder from under the table and slid it toward me.

“I sent it,” she said.

I opened it. Her essay—The Day I Found Myself Again—printed in black on heavy paper. At the top corner: Pacific Northwest Quarterly — Accepted.

I read the first line aloud:

I used to think love was a deadline. Turns out it’s a porch light left on.

My throat closed. “Julia…”

She shrugged, eyes glistening. “It’s small. But they want more—a series maybe.”

At the bottom margin was a handwritten note:

For the boy who left coffee and never asked for anything back.

I looked up, speechless.

“You didn’t have to thank me,” I managed.

“I wanted to,” she said. “I was scared, Mason—of what people would think, of needing someone again. But I’m tired of being scared.”

She reached across the table, covering my hand with hers. “I don’t know what this is yet. But I don’t want to figure it out alone.”

I turned my palm, fingers lacing with hers. “Then don’t.”

Rain began to fall—soft, steady, drumming on the porch roof.

Neither of us moved. The world smelled like wet cedar and fresh starts.

Finally she stood, holding out her hand. “Come inside. It’s getting cold.”

I followed, leaving the mugs, the empty foil, and her published dream on the table.

Behind us, the porch light burned bright through the downpour.

7. After

People like to think stories end neatly—with kisses, with thunder, with fade-outs. But real endings are quieter. They hum beneath everyday life.

Julia kept writing. Her series ran monthly—stories of loss, resilience, and rediscovery. The final piece mentioned a “mechanic who taught her that some things aren’t broken, just paused.”

I opened Haven Cycles that winter—a bike-and-coffee shop downtown. She wrote the feature article that got us our first customers.

Most mornings she still sits by the window with her laptop, coffee in one hand, eyes occasionally finding mine over the counter. No pretending now.

When the sun dips behind the Cascades, we lock up together, walk home side by side. Sometimes we stop at the fence where it all began, her hand brushing mine like punctuation.

“Remember when this was fake?” she teases.

“Best rehearsal ever,” I tell her.

And somewhere between the laughter and the smell of pine, the quiet little town finally feels like home for both of us.

Because what started as pretending became the most real thing either of us ever dared to believe in.