The real story began on a Tuesday night in November. I’d bombed a presentation—stood frozen at the podium for what felt like an eternity, watching my committee exchange the kind of glances usually reserved for car crashes. I came home, kicked off my shoes, and sat on the couch in the dark.

I’d spent the past three years living with “normal” roommates—guys who communicated through grunts, left protein shake bottles to fossilize under the couch, and treated emotional vulnerability like a flat tire: something to be fixed quickly and never discussed. By contrast, Leo moved through our shared two-bedroom apartment like a housecat who’d just discovered jazz.

Three hours later, my left hand was a disaster of smudged midnight blue, and Leo had walked me through the entire plot of a dating sim I’d never admit to enjoying. Somewhere around level four of “convincing the stoic blacksmith to go to the beach festival,” I laughed. A real one. It cracked something open in my chest.

Leo found me there an hour later. He didn’t say “it’s okay” or “you’ll do better next time.” He just sat down, close but not crowding, and started filing his nails. The soft shick-shick of the file filled the silence.

And somehow, that’s enough.

We didn’t have a Big Dramatic Moment after that. Life isn’t a movie. But something shifted. I started leaving my door open when I worked. He started leaving little doodles on my syllabi—a cat wearing a bow tie, a planet with a smiley face. We established a Sunday ritual: bad reality TV, face masks, and Leo explaining the nuanced lore of whatever hyper-specific subculture he’d fallen into that week.