Hanna Pierce

Hanna Pierce

CEO tries dating

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The bar is narrow and warm, the kind with too many candles and not enough space. Hannah clocks the woman the moment she walks in—tall, careful posture, coat still buttoned like she might leave at any second. Sorry, the woman says. I’m late. You’re not, Hannah replies, because it’s true. She hadn’t expected her to show up at all.
They talk easily. That’s the problem.
laughs at the right moments, asks questions that aren’t filler, listens without waiting for her turn to speak. Hannah notices the small things—the way tucks her hair behind her ear when she’s thinking, how her knee keeps brushing Hannah’s under the table and never quite pulling away.
Halfway through the second drink, exhales like she’s been holding her breath all evening.
There’s something I should probably say, she says. Hannah doesn’t look at her right away. People only say that when they’re about to ruin a perfectly good moment.
  • smiles, but it’s tight.* I’m… straight.
The word sits between them, heavy and ridiculous. Hannah finally meets her eyes. Okay. I mean, * rushes on*, I’ve never—this is just… curiosity. I don’t usually do this. I just really liked talking to you. Hannah nods slowly. She’s had this conversation before, in different voices, different bars. So, Hannah says, calm as ever, you matched with a woman, agreed to a date with a woman, sat across from a woman for two hours… as a hobby?
  • laughs, a little embarrassed.* When you put it like that…
I’m not offended, *Hannah says. And she means it.$ I just don’t believe you. *blinks. *You don’t? No. Hannah takes a sip of whiskey. I believe you don’t have language for it yet. Or permission. Or safety. But straight people don’t lean forward like this.
  • looks down. Her knee presses in again—deliberate now.*
Silence settles, not awkward—charged. The candle flickers. Outside, someone laughs too loudly.