The rain in Seattle didn’t just fall; it felt like it was trying to wash the glitter and the sweat of the stadium tour right off Zach’s skin. For months, he had been the face of a million posters, the voice in a billion earbuds, and the center of a gravity that pulled everyone toward him. But sitting in the back of a black SUV, watching the neon lights of the city blur into streaks of artificial color, Zach felt like a hollow shell of the man the world thought they knew.
"This is it," Zach whispered, more to himself than anyone else. "The final bow."
"I'm done being the person they want," Zach said, his voice raw. "I just want to be the person you see." Encore by Eden Finley
The encore wasn't a song. It was a beginning. It was the moment the music stopped, and the real life started. Together, they turned away from the stage and walked toward the exit, leaving the lights behind for a future that was finally, beautifully, their own.
On the final night of the tour, the air in the arena was electric, thick with the scent of pyrotechnics and anticipation. Zach stood behind the curtain, the roar of the crowd vibrating in his chest. He looked at Maddox, standing post near the stage entrance, his expression unreadable but his eyes focused entirely on Zach. The rain in Seattle didn’t just fall; it
Maddox stepped closer, his voice a low rumble that cut through the chaos of the stagehands. "It's only the end if you let it be, Zach. Some songs deserve an encore."
He had spent years building a career on the foundation of a lie—not a malicious one, but the kind that slowly erodes your soul. He was the heartthrob, the bachelor, the untouchable rock god. He wasn't the man who wanted to trade the screaming fans for a quiet kitchen and a hand to hold that didn't belong to a publicist. Then there was Maddox. "This is it," Zach whispered, more to himself
In the dim light of the wings, away from the prying eyes of the industry and the flashbulbs of the paparazzi, Zach reached out. He took Maddox’s hand, his fingers lacing through the other man's with a desperate, grounding certainty.
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