I Was Fixing Her Door When She Asked, “Would You Ever Date A Single Mom?”

Built to Last

Inside, Lauren sat on the couch with Emma tucked into her side. The TV was on now, low, and some cartoon threw soft light across the room.

“You want me to go?” I asked from the doorway.

“Or stay a bit.”

Lauren looked at Emma, then back at me.

“Can you stay until she falls asleep?” she asked.

“I can pay you for your time.”

“You are not paying me,” I said.

“And yeah, I can stay.”

I sat in the armchair across from them, tool bag at my feet. I pretended to watch the cartoon.

Really, I watched the way Lauren’s hand moved slowly in Emma’s hair. I watched the way Emma’s breathing evened out with that small touch.

After a while Emma’s eyes slid closed. Her grip on the bear loosened. Lauren kept her arm around her for a few more minutes.

She eased out from under her slowly, the way only a parent knows how to move. She pulled a blanket over Emma, then crossed to the kitchen.

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She made coffee without asking if I wanted some, like it was already settled. When she handed me a mug, our fingers brushed.

Her hand was not cold anymore, just tired and warm.

“Thank you,” she said again.

“I know you did not sign up for night duty.”

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“I told you,” I said.

“Night does not scare me.”

She sank onto the edge of the couch facing me.

“You answered my question,” she said.

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“About single moms.”

“Yeah,” I said.

She let out a breath.

“I did not think I would get to see the proof this fast,” she said.

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“Standing in the hall in the middle of the night telling my ex to back off.”

“I did it for the door,” I said, trying to lighten it.

She shook her head.

“You did it for us,” she said.

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“For me and Emma.”

She held my gaze a long second.

“You still feel the same way?” she asked.

“About the question?”

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My heart gave that same heavy beat as earlier.

“Yes,” I said.

“If anything I feel it stronger.”

She looked down at her mug, then back at me. Her eyes were tired and soft and clear at the same time.

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“I have another question,” she said quietly.

“But I think it can wait until morning.”

My skin tightened with curiosity, but I just nodded.

“Morning is fine,” I said.

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“I am not going anywhere.”

And for the first time since I moved into that old brick building, the thought of not going anywhere did not feel like being stuck.

It felt like the start of something worth staying for. I dozed in the armchair for maybe an hour, a light sleep.

It was the kind you get on job sites when you are waiting on a delivery. Every creak in the building passed through me. None of them were dangerous.

The only steady sounds were the fridge humming and the wall clock ticking. When I opened my eyes for real, gray light was pushing past the blinds.

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My neck ached. My back didn’t love the angle. But I was still in 3C, and the first thing I saw was Lauren in the kitchen.

She was in an oversized t-shirt and leggings, her hair up in a loose knot with no makeup. She had that just-woke-up squint.

But there was something else in her face, too—a kind of calm I had not seen on her yet.

“You snore,” she said, her voice soft.

“I do not snore,” I said.

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She lifted one eyebrow.

“You do a little,” she said.

“It was kind of comforting actually.”

I sat up and rubbed the back of my neck.

“How long have you been up?” I asked.

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“Half an hour,” she said.

“Emma’s still asleep. She finally knocked out hard around 4:00.”

She poured coffee and handed me a mug.

“Thanks for staying,” she said again.

“You already said that,” I said.

“I know,” she said.

“It doesn’t feel like enough.”

We sat in a quiet that did not feel awkward anymore. It felt like something we had earned.

“Did he text?” I asked.

She nodded and picked up her phone from the counter. She showed me the screen without reading it aloud.

It was a long message from her ex flip-flopping between blaming, guilt, and fake apologies.

“I didn’t answer,” she said.

“I started to, then I stopped.”

“Good,” I said.

“We can talk through a plan later. You do not owe him late night access to your life anymore.”

She stared at the phone for another second, then set it face down.

“Emma has school,” she said.

“I have to pretend to be a normal person and make cereal.”

“That is normal,” I said.

“People eat cereal.”

She smiled a little and started pulling bowls from the cabinet.

“Want some?” she asked.

“I have exactly two options: Kid sugar and adult boring.”

“I’ll take adult boring,” I said.

She snorted.

“Of course you will,” she said.

By the time Emma padded out of her room, rubbing her eyes and dragging her bear by one arm, there were three bowls on the table.

I moved back to the armchair to give them space, but Emma saw me and lit up.

“You’re still here?” she said.

“Yeah,” I said.

“Door inspector had to make sure it worked in the morning too.”

She nodded seriously and sat down. Lauren watched the exchange with an expression I could not quite read: Soft, careful, and measuring.

After breakfast, I walked them down to the lobby. Emma’s bus stopped at the corner. Lauren stood with a hand on Emma’s backpack strap until the bus doors closed.

She waited until she was on her way. When the bus pulled off, Lauren let her hand drop. She looked smaller for a second with the kid gone.

Then she straightened.

“So,” she said.

“Morning is here.”

“Yeah,” I said.

“The other question is due,” she said.

I smiled a little.

“You make it sound like homework,” I said.

She shrugged.

“Feels like it,” she said.

“Big grade attached.”

We rode the elevator back up in silence. When we stepped into her apartment again, it felt different than it had last night.

“Same space, new weight.”

She closed the door and locked it out of habit. Then she leaned back against it and faced me.

“Okay,” she said, breathing out.

“Here goes.”

I stayed where I was near the window and waited. I did not fill the quiet. The quiet was hers to use.

“You said you don’t like pretending with people’s lives,” she said.

“I did,” I said.

“And you said you would date a single mom if you liked her and respected her,” she went on.

“I did,” I said again.

She nodded once, like she was ticking boxes.

“Well,” she said slowly.

“I am a single mom. I think you know that part pretty well now and I like you.”

“I respect you a lot. I like the way you show up. I like that you didn’t flinch at Emma’s meltdown last week in the lobby when she dropped her ice cream.”

“I like that you talk about wood and wiring like feelings.”

I let myself smile fully at that.

“I didn’t know that last part was a selling point,” I said.

“It is for me,” she said.

She pushed away from the door and took a few steps closer. Not all the way, just to the middle of the room.

“I don’t want you to feel trapped,” she said.

“You did a good thing last night. You helped us.”

“If this is where it stops for you, I will still be grateful. I will still text you about the door if it squeaks.”

“But if your answer about single moms was not just theory—”

She swallowed and held my gaze.

“Would you want to try this?” she asked.

“Me. Emma. The way our life actually is. Not some cleaned up version. Not right away with big titles and promises.”

“Just try. Go on dates that end by 9. Have coffee at weird hours. Be the man at the door because you want to be, not because the landlord sent you.”

All the air in the room felt thick but in a good way. It was like standing in a workshop when the sun comes through the dust.

You can see every particle hanging there. I walked toward her slowly. Not dramatic. Measured.

When I stopped, there were only a few inches between us. I could see the tiny scar at the edge of her eyebrow.

I saw the faint dark circles under her eyes from too many night shifts. All the real things.

“You sure?” I asked.

“Because if I say yes, I am not treating this like a weekend project.”

She let out a shaky laugh.

“I don’t need a weekend project,” she said.

“I need something built to last even if it takes time.”

I reached up and rested my hand against the frame of her door. I felt the oak shim behind it, the longer screws, and the lock that now sat straight.

Then I looked back at her.

“You know what your ex did when he hit this?” I asked.

“Scared us,” she said.

“Sure,” I said.

“But he also taught us something. He showed you what fails under pressure.”

“That is useful. Now we know exactly where to reinforce.”

Her eyes shone but again no tears fell. She was too used to holding them back.

It made the ones that did sneak through later matter more.

“So what is your answer?” she asked, her voice small and big at the same time.

I dropped my hand from the door and took hers instead.

“You asked me if I would ever date a single mom,” I said.

“Here’s the real version.”

“I don’t want to date a single mom as an idea. I want to date you, Lauren.”

“The woman who works nights and still makes cinnamon coffee. The woman whose kid trusts her enough to look at her after a bad night.”

“The woman who believes her when she says they are safe. The woman who asked the hard question instead of pretending she didn’t care.”

Her fingers tightened around mine. Hard. Present.

“So yes,” I said.

“I would. I do if you are the one asking.”

For a moment she just looked at me. Then she let out a breath that sounded like something finally giving way in a good way.

It was like a stuck window sliding open.

“This is the part where I’m supposed to be smooth and say something cool,” she said.

“But all I’ve got is thank you.”

“Thank you is plenty,” I said.

She stepped closer until her chest brushed mine. Her free hand lifted, fingers sliding around the back of my neck.

She rose on her toes. I met her halfway. The kiss was not like last night’s desperate edge of panic contact.

It was slower and deeper. It felt like setting a beam on posts you know will hold. No rush. Just right.

Her mouth was warm. Her hand at my neck pulled me in, but not like she was afraid I would disappear.

It was more like this was exactly where she wanted me. When we broke apart, our foreheads touched.

We stayed there, breathing the same small space of air.

“So,” she murmured.

“What are we now?”

“We are two people who just decided to try something real,” I said.

“Labels can catch up.”

“Emma is going to ask,” she said, a smile ghosting her lips.

“Then we tell her the truth,” I said.

“We are friends who like each other and are seeing what that looks like and we make sure she knows nothing changes about how much you are her safe place.”

Lauren nodded slowly.

“I can work with that,” she said.

I squeezed her hand.

“Good,” I said.

“Because I am terrible at lying anyway.”

She laughed for real then, head tipping back. The sound was bright in the small room.

It bounced off the walls and made the place feel bigger. Later that week, I came by after my shift.

I brought takeout from the good taco truck and a small wooden box I had made in the shop. Emma met me at the door in fuzzy socks, dinosaur in hand.

“Mom says you’re her friend,” Emma said, like she was testing the word.

“I am,” I said.

“Is that okay?”

She considered. Then she nodded.

“You fixed our door,” she said.

“That makes you door friend.”

“That might be my favorite title,” I said.

I handed her the box. She opened it and found compartments inside, each with a little label burned in the wood.

They were for crayons, tiny toys, and important rocks. Her eyes got wide.

“For my stuff?” she asked.

“Yeah,” I said.

“So it has a place.”

She ran her fingers along the edge.

“It’s smooth,” she said.

“That is the point,” I said.

“No splinters.”

Lauren watched from the kitchen, leaning against the counter. Our eyes met and something warm moved through my chest.

It felt familiar now. Welcome. I was fixing her door when she first asked me if I would ever date a single mom.

At the time, it felt like a hypothetical dropped into a quiet room. Standing there now, there was nothing hypothetical about it.

Emma was sorting her treasures into a box I built, and Lauren was pouring three cups of cinnamon coffee. This was what it looked like, I thought.

It was not a rescue or a movie. It was just three people in a small apartment with a strong lock, warm light, and the start of something honest.

Real life is not about finding perfect materials. It is about choosing the ones that have already been tested and deciding to build anyway together.

And when the right person turns to you in the middle of all that and asks, “Would you ever date a single mom?” you get to look around.

You get to look at the life you are standing in and say with your whole chest, “I already.”

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