She'd been staring at the submission page for over an hour. "Send manuscript," it read in bold blue letters. Her manuscript-"Beneath the Willow"-had taken her two years and four heartbreaks to complete. It was raw, unpolished in places, but honest. Still, the fear of rejection sat heavy on her chest.
She rubbed her eyes and thought about her father's words the last time she brought up her writing. "You need a real job, Juliet. Not these... pipe dreams." His voice, dry and clipped, still echoed in her head. She hadn't spoken to him in over a year.
A gust of winter wind rattled her apartment windows. She pulled her oversized cardigan tighter around her and leaned forward.
"Just do it," she whispered to herself. Her fingers hovered, then pressed the trackpad. The submission portal spun, then flashed a cheerful confirmation: Your manuscript has been submitted to Cross & Associates Literary Agency.
Juliet stared. Her heart thumped like she'd just leapt off a cliff. And then the familiar voice in her head: They won't even read it.
She exhaled and shut the laptop.
"Whatever. At least I tried."
She crawled into bed, wrapping herself around a pillow, a mix of hope and dread clinging to her like perfume. Tomorrow, she'd get up, put on her apron, and return to her shift at the cafe. But tonight, she could dream. Just a little.
The morning hit her with the screech of her phone alarm and the faint ache of too little sleep. She rolled out of bed, fed her orange tabby, Ezra, and threw on jeans and a sweater that smelled faintly of cinnamon from the bakery she worked at. The subway ride was a haze of unreadable faces and earbud silence.
At Perk & Crumb, Juliet tied her apron and smiled through customer orders, but her mind kept drifting. Had they opened the email yet? Was it sitting in someone's inbox, forgotten, or worse-deleted? She shook her head and focused on steaming milk.
"Juliet, heads up!" Her co-worker, Drea, nudged her with a grin. "Guy at table four is totally checking you out."
Juliet glanced toward a man in a business suit, but he was just staring at his laptop. She smiled politely and shrugged.
"Doubt it. Probably just waiting for Wi-Fi."
By the time her shift ended, her back ached and her shoes were soaked from a puddle that snuck past the front mat. She walked home slowly, clutching her coat tighter, the wind biting through her sleeves. The city buzzed around her-honking cars, chattering couples, food carts letting out trails of steam-but she felt oddly separate from it all.
At home, she made instant ramen and opened her email out of habit. Nothing new. No response. She wasn't expecting one yet, but her heart still sank a little.
Instead of working on her next piece, she reread old feedback from online writing forums. Most comments were supportive, some were sharp but useful. One stuck out: "Your writing has a strange intimacy. It feels like the words are whispering in my ear."
She smiled faintly. That comment had kept her going more than once.
Before bed, she scrolled through Cross & Associates' website again. Their lead agent, Nathaniel Crane, was a former novelist turned industry heavyweight. Early forties, no-nonsense, with a reputation for launching breakout careers. Juliet had only submitted because a friend said he sometimes took chances on unknown voices.
As she brushed her teeth, Juliet looked at herself in the mirror. Brown hair in a messy bun, circles under her eyes, oversized hoodie-nothing remarkable. But there was something in her gaze tonight. A flicker of daring.
She left her laptop open, the email tab still blinking gently in the dark.
Elsewhere in the city, Nathaniel Crane sat in his high-rise office, sipping a glass of scotch and scrolling through submissions. Most were uninspired, predictable, trying too hard. He had just about shut his laptop when something caught his eye.
"Beneath the Willow" – by Juliet Hartley
The excerpt preview was short. Just five lines. But it was enough to make him pause.
"It wasn't the silence that hurt. It was the echo of what should've been said."
Nathaniel exhaled slowly.
He clicked "Open."