can we have more harry castillo! maybe how they first met?
Unexpected honesty Harry Castillo
warnings: slow burn romance, emotional and sexual tension, flirting, and implied sexual content (no explicit smut), wealth imbalance and class-based assumptions (briefly, in the luxury store scene), discussions of sex therapy and emotional vulnerability, power dynamics are present but portrayed gently and consensually.
You're not supposed to linger. That’s the rule you give yourself the moment you step into places like this—soft lighting, glass cases, sales associates dressed better than most people at weddings. You’re only here for one thing: earrings. Classic. Timeless. The kind your best friend will wear for decades and think of you every time someone compliments them.
A bridesmaid’s gift. A marriage gift. Something that says I see you without screaming money.
You lean over the display, hands clasped behind your back, studying a pair of delicate diamond studs set in gold. Understated. Elegant. Perfect.
“Those are… quite expensive,” the sales associate says, hovering too close. His smile is tight, professional in a way that isn’t warm. Assessing. “We do have similar options that are more accessible.”
You blink once. Then twice.
“I didn’t ask for similar,” you say calmly.
He chuckles, like you’ve made a joke. “Of course. I just meant—well, sometimes people are surprised at the price point.”
Sometimes people like you, he means. Flare jeans, fitted dress-shirt (with the sleeves rolled up), hair in a messy bun, your heels were usual pumps, toeless and ankle strap, not something like Jimmy Choo or D'Orsay. No visible labels. No performance.
You meet his eyes. “I’m not surprised.”
He tilts his head, unconvinced. “If you’d like, I can show you something a bit more—” he gestures vaguely “—reasonable.”
Before you can respond—before you can decide whether today is the day you let yourself be sharp—
“Sorry,” a voice cuts in smoothly. Male. Warm. Unhurried. “She’s with me.”
The associate straightens immediately, apology already loading. “Oh—sir, I didn’t realize—”
You turn.
And there he is.
Tall. Broad-shouldered without being imposing. Dressed immaculately in that effortless way men only manage when they don’t try to impress anyone—dark trousers, crisp shirt, sleeves rolled just enough to show forearms dusted with dark hair. A watch glints at his wrist, clearly expensive, clearly chosen with intention.
His hair is short to medium—soft curls at the crown that look like they resist control. His nose is big in a way that gives his face character, not arrogance. There’s trimmed stubble along his jaw, a mustache that should look pretentious but somehow doesn’t. His mouth curves easily, like smiling is a habit, not a tactic.
And his eyes—focused. On you.
Not scanning. Not claiming. Just… present.
The associate turns to you now with a different tone entirely. “Of course. My apologies. Shall I wrap the earrings?”
You nod, slowly. “Yes. Thank you.”
The man beside you steps back as if he’s done his job and has no intention of taking up space he didn’t earn. He doesn’t touch you. Doesn’t linger. Just waits.
When the associate disappears with the box, you finally look at him fully.
“You didn’t need to do that,” you say.
He smiles, softer now. “I know, miss.”
There’s no defensiveness in it. No savior complex. Just honesty.
“I just wanted to do it... Sounded like it was about to be something stressing.”
That should irritate you.
Instead, it disarms you.
You exhale. “I had it handled.”
“I figured,” he says. “You looked like someone who does... I would have given up the earrings already.”
The associate returns, deferential now, explaining warranties and care instructions like you aren’t suddenly invisible. You pay without comment.
Outside the store, the air feels different—less curated, more real.
“You didn’t have to pretend you knew me,” you say, adjusting the bag in your hand, you still felt a bit stressed, not at him, but at the fact the associate only respected you after the man stood up for you, pretending he was with you.
“I didn’t pretend,” he replies easily. “We kinda look alike even.”
You laugh despite yourself. “That’s dangerously vague.”
He grins. It’s charming in a way that feels unfair. “I’ve been told.”
You walk together for a few steps before realizing neither of you has actually suggested it.
“I’m getting coffee,” he says, nodding toward the café across the street. “No obligation, but i'll be paying.”
You arch a brow. “You’re assuming I’d say yes.”
“I am,” he admits. “But I’d survive being wrong, maybe not, because you seem like you're very endearing.”
You study him for a moment. The confidence isn’t loud. It’s settled. Like he knows who he is and doesn’t need confirmation.
“Fine,” you say. “But I’m not thanking you again.”
“Deal.”
Over coffee, you learn his name is Harry. That he’s recently single, delivered casually but with the careful neutrality of someone who’s done processing and doesn’t want to relive it. He listens when you mention you’re a therapist—really listens—and raises his eyebrows when you clarify.
“Couples,” you say. Then, with a small smile, “And sex therapy.”
That earns a genuine laugh. “That's... Unusual, to say at least.”
“What’s that supposed to mean?”
“It means,” he says, stirring his coffee, “I would have never even consider you were a sex therapist.”
You notice the watch then—the one he’d been buying for himself. Ridiculous. Beautiful. Unnecessary.
He doesn’t ask you out.
Not then.
Not even when you stand to leave.
He just says, “It was nice meeting you,” like he means it in a way that doesn’t expire after today.
Three days later, your phone lights up with an unfamiliar number.
This is Harry—from the store. I was wondering if you’d like to get dinner. No pressure. Thought I’d ask properly.
You stare at the screen longer than you should.
And somewhere, quietly, something begins.
The date night
Harry is already there when you arrive.
You notice him before he notices you—not because he’s flashy, but because he looks settled. Like he belongs in the low amber light of Nobu Downtown, like the clean lines and quiet luxury were designed to orbit him rather than impress him.
Black sweater. Soft, fitted, deceptively simple. Dark trousers. No jacket. No tie. Nothing trying too hard. He looks… comfortable. Confident in a way that doesn’t need proof.
And then he looks up.
The smile that spreads across his face isn’t restrained. It’s not calculated. It’s open, immediate, almost relieved.
“Hey,” he says, standing.
You step closer, aware—uncomfortably aware—of the way his eyes track you, not greedily, not crudely, but with the unmistakable focus of a man registering something beautiful and trying not to make it obvious.
He leans in, a casual hug that lasts exactly the right amount of time, his cheek brushing yours as he kisses the air beside it. His hand rests briefly at your upper back—warm, grounding—before he pulls away.
“You look…” He stops, then chuckles quietly. “You look really nice.”
Not stunning. Not wow. Just really nice.
It somehow lands harder.
You smile, composed. “You clean up well yourself.”
“I didn’t even try,” he says, mock-serious. “That’s my whole brand.”
He pulls your chair out for you, smooth and unhurried, and waits until you’re settled before sitting across from you. You clock it all automatically—the manners, the attention, the ease.
Careful, you remind yourself.
You’ve seen this movie before. Eighty percent of the couples you work with start with a man like this. Polished. Attentive. Performative kindness that later curdles into control.
Still… something about Harry feels different. Not softer. Just… quieter. Like he’s not acting for an audience.
The menu conversation is easy. Playful. He explains why he likes Nobu—not because it’s exclusive, but because no one bothers you, because the food speaks for itself, because he doesn’t have to be “on” here.
“I like places that let you disappear a little,” he says.
You nod. “That’s rare for you, I imagine.”
He shrugs. “I’m not as interesting as people think.”
That earns a skeptical look.
Dinner unfolds in that rare, delicious way where conversation doesn’t feel like a series of questions. You talk about books—discover you both love the same obscure author, the kind people either adore or abandon halfway through.
“Museums?” he says. “Yes. Absolutely.”
You raise an eyebrow. “You don’t strike me as a museum guy.”
“I didn’t strike myself as one either,” he admits. “Turns out I just hated history class. Worst grades I ever got.”
You laugh. “Because it was taught badly, or because you were bored?”
“Because they tried to make it about memorizing dates instead of people,” he says. “I care about why things happened.”
That… interests you more than it should.
Wine loosens the edges of the night. The light catches the embroidery of your dress, gold and shadow shifting as you move. You feel him noticing, not staring—tracking the line of your waist, the structured confidence of the silhouette.
At some point, inevitably, he circles back.
“So,” he says, resting his forearms on the table. “Sex therapist.”
You smile, already bracing. “Here it comes.”
“I’m trying to be respectful,” he says, clearly amused. “But I’m also human.”
“Dangerous combination.”
He grins. “Occupational hazard.”
He hesitates—just a beat too long for the question to be purely academic. “Does knowing everyone’s problems make you better in bed? Or does it just ruin sex forever?”
You choke on a laugh. “Wow.”
“Too much?”
“Bold,” you correct. “But not too much.”
His ears pink slightly, betraying the confidence. “I’m genuinely curious.”
You tilt your head, considering him. “It makes you… aware. Of patterns. Of communication. Of what people think they want versus what they actually respond to.”
He hums. “That sounds… dangerous.”
“For whom?”
“For anyone who underestimates you, and for myself... I mean- It’s not every day you find out your date knows more about orgasms than you do.”
You feel the heat then—not between your legs, not yet, but higher. In your chest. In the space between restraint and curiosity.
“Ah yeah?” you ask. “Why the interest for my job?”
He shrugs, casual again, but his eyes stay locked on yours. “I like knowing how things work.”
“Even sex?”
“Especially sex,” he says. Then, softer, “Especially with someone who knows what they’re doing.”
There it is. The flirt. Clean. Controlled. Intimate.
You should shut it down.
Instead, you smile slowly. “You’re very comfortable talking about this for someone who claims to be shy.”
He laughs. “I’m only shy when I care about the answer.”
That lands.
Hard.
The rest of the night hums with that tension—legs brushing under the table, shared glances, the awareness of how close his knee is to yours. He doesn’t touch you again. Not really. And somehow that makes it worse.
When he walks you out, the city feels louder by contrast.
“I had a really good time,” he says simply.
“So did I.”
He doesn’t ask to come up. Doesn’t kiss you. Just another light hug, another kiss to your cheek that feels far too intimate for how innocent it is.
“I’ll text you,” he says.
“I know,” you reply.
You watch him walk away, heart annoyingly unsettled.
Careful, you remind yourself again.
But even as you unlock your door, you already know—
Harry Castillo isn’t like the others.
And that might be the most dangerous part.











