Six months sober. Six months free. Six months of 5:47 alarms and Thursday meetings and a red chip in her wallet that proves she's someone new.
Darcy Aames has done the work. She teaches Poe to eighth graders in Fishtown, runs the river trail before dawn, and keeps her apartment so clean it could pass a forensic sweep. She doesn't walk through Northern Liberties. She doesn't say his name. She doesn't think about the night her back hit the wall of their apartment and the man she loved whispered the one sentence designed to destroy her.
Then she sees Noah Vickers in a grocery store - leaner, sober, building houses instead of pouring drinks - and every wall she's built dissolves in four seconds flat.
He has a therapist. A sponsor. Eight months clean. He speaks the language of accountability with the fluency of a man who has studied his own wreckage and rebuilt from the foundation up. He asks permission before he texts. He keeps two feet of distance. He builds a reading nook in a Victorian he's restoring and says he thought of her.
Darcy knows the playbook. She wrote the rules - public places only, no sleepovers, no pretending the past didn't happen. She can diagram a trauma bond on a napkin and explain to a classroom of teenagers why the woman in the story stays.
She goes back anyway.
Because Noah doesn't feel like a relapse. He feels like renovation - the same bones, better materials, a man who has stripped himself to the studs and rebuilt. And Darcy, who lost her mother to a blue suitcase at eleven and her father to cancer at twenty-nine, has never been able to walk away from someone who needs her. Staying is the only skill she's never unlearned.
But the careful texts have a pattern. The phone calls end when she enters the room. And the night he claims he can't remember - the night that sent her to her best friend's door at four in the morning with a sprained wrist and a gym bag - left a mark that no amount of restored woodwork can sand away.
When the truth finally surfaces, it doesn't come from Noah. It comes from the two women who know him best. And what they reveal will force Darcy to answer the question she's been teaching all year without ever applying it to herself:
What is the difference between a room and a cage?
THE LAST TIME YOU TOUCHED ME is a searing, literary psychological thriller about the architecture of control, the neuroscience of staying, and the brutal courage it takes to open a door from the inside.
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Etat : New. N° de réf. du vendeur I-9798233571992
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Six months sober. Six months free. Six months of 5:47 alarms and Thursday meetings and a red chip in her wallet that proves she's someone new.Darcy Aames has done the work. She teaches Poe to eighth graders in Fishtown, runs the river trail before dawn, and keeps her apartment so clean it could pass a forensic sweep. She doesn't walk through Northern Liberties. She doesn't say his name. She doesn't think about the night her back hit the wall of their apartment and the man she loved whispered the one sentence designed to destroy her.Then she sees Noah Vickers in a grocery store - leaner, sober, building houses instead of pouring drinks - and every wall she's built dissolves in four seconds flat.He has a therapist. A sponsor. Eight months clean. He speaks the language of accountability with the fluency of a man who has studied his own wreckage and rebuilt from the foundation up. He asks permission before he texts. He keeps two feet of distance. He builds a reading nook in a Victorian he's restoring and says he thought of her.Darcy knows the playbook. She wrote the rules - public places only, no sleepovers, no pretending the past didn't happen. She can diagram a trauma bond on a napkin and explain to a classroom of teenagers why the woman in the story stays.She goes back anyway.Because Noah doesn't feel like a relapse. He feels like renovation - the same bones, better materials, a man who has stripped himself to the studs and rebuilt. And Darcy, who lost her mother to a blue suitcase at eleven and her father to cancer at twenty-nine, has never been able to walk away from someone who needs her. Staying is the only skill she's never unlearned.But the careful texts have a pattern. The phone calls end when she enters the room. And the night he claims he can't remember - the night that sent her to her best friend's door at four in the morning with a sprained wrist and a gym bag - left a mark that no amount of restored woodwork can sand away.When the truth finally surfaces, it doesn't come from Noah. It comes from the two women who know him best. And what they reveal will force Darcy to answer the question she's been teaching all year without ever applying it to herself: What is the difference between a room and a cage?THE LAST TIME YOU TOUCHED ME is a searing, literary psychological thriller about the architecture of control, the neuroscience of staying, and the brutal courage it takes to open a door from the inside. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798233571992
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Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Six months sober. Six months free. Six months of 5:47 alarms and Thursday meetings and a red chip in her wallet that proves she's someone new.Darcy Aames has done the work. She teaches Poe to eighth graders in Fishtown, runs the river trail before dawn, and keeps her apartment so clean it could pass a forensic sweep. She doesn't walk through Northern Liberties. She doesn't say his name. She doesn't think about the night her back hit the wall of their apartment and the man she loved whispered the one sentence designed to destroy her.Then she sees Noah Vickers in a grocery store - leaner, sober, building houses instead of pouring drinks - and every wall she's built dissolves in four seconds flat.He has a therapist. A sponsor. Eight months clean. He speaks the language of accountability with the fluency of a man who has studied his own wreckage and rebuilt from the foundation up. He asks permission before he texts. He keeps two feet of distance. He builds a reading nook in a Victorian he's restoring and says he thought of her.Darcy knows the playbook. She wrote the rules - public places only, no sleepovers, no pretending the past didn't happen. She can diagram a trauma bond on a napkin and explain to a classroom of teenagers why the woman in the story stays.She goes back anyway.Because Noah doesn't feel like a relapse. He feels like renovation - the same bones, better materials, a man who has stripped himself to the studs and rebuilt. And Darcy, who lost her mother to a blue suitcase at eleven and her father to cancer at twenty-nine, has never been able to walk away from someone who needs her. Staying is the only skill she's never unlearned.But the careful texts have a pattern. The phone calls end when she enters the room. And the night he claims he can't remember - the night that sent her to her best friend's door at four in the morning with a sprained wrist and a gym bag - left a mark that no amount of restored woodwork can sand away.When the truth finally surfaces, it doesn't come from Noah. It comes from the two women who know him best. And what they reveal will force Darcy to answer the question she's been teaching all year without ever applying it to herself: What is the difference between a room and a cage?THE LAST TIME YOU TOUCHED ME is a searing, literary psychological thriller about the architecture of control, the neuroscience of staying, and the brutal courage it takes to open a door from the inside. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798233571992
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Vendeur : CitiRetail, Stevenage, Royaume-Uni
Paperback. Etat : new. Paperback. Six months sober. Six months free. Six months of 5:47 alarms and Thursday meetings and a red chip in her wallet that proves she's someone new.Darcy Aames has done the work. She teaches Poe to eighth graders in Fishtown, runs the river trail before dawn, and keeps her apartment so clean it could pass a forensic sweep. She doesn't walk through Northern Liberties. She doesn't say his name. She doesn't think about the night her back hit the wall of their apartment and the man she loved whispered the one sentence designed to destroy her.Then she sees Noah Vickers in a grocery store - leaner, sober, building houses instead of pouring drinks - and every wall she's built dissolves in four seconds flat.He has a therapist. A sponsor. Eight months clean. He speaks the language of accountability with the fluency of a man who has studied his own wreckage and rebuilt from the foundation up. He asks permission before he texts. He keeps two feet of distance. He builds a reading nook in a Victorian he's restoring and says he thought of her.Darcy knows the playbook. She wrote the rules - public places only, no sleepovers, no pretending the past didn't happen. She can diagram a trauma bond on a napkin and explain to a classroom of teenagers why the woman in the story stays.She goes back anyway.Because Noah doesn't feel like a relapse. He feels like renovation - the same bones, better materials, a man who has stripped himself to the studs and rebuilt. And Darcy, who lost her mother to a blue suitcase at eleven and her father to cancer at twenty-nine, has never been able to walk away from someone who needs her. Staying is the only skill she's never unlearned.But the careful texts have a pattern. The phone calls end when she enters the room. And the night he claims he can't remember - the night that sent her to her best friend's door at four in the morning with a sprained wrist and a gym bag - left a mark that no amount of restored woodwork can sand away.When the truth finally surfaces, it doesn't come from Noah. It comes from the two women who know him best. And what they reveal will force Darcy to answer the question she's been teaching all year without ever applying it to herself: What is the difference between a room and a cage?THE LAST TIME YOU TOUCHED ME is a searing, literary psychological thriller about the architecture of control, the neuroscience of staying, and the brutal courage it takes to open a door from the inside. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798233571992
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Vendeur : AHA-BUCH GmbH, Einbeck, Allemagne
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. nach der Bestellung gedruckt Neuware - Printed after ordering - Six months sober. Six months free. Six months of 5:47 alarms and Thursday meetings and a red chip in her wallet that proves she's someone new.Darcy Aames has done the work. She teaches Poe to eighth graders in Fishtown, runs the river trail before dawn, and keeps her apartment so clean it could pass a forensic sweep. She doesn't walk through Northern Liberties. She doesn't say his name. She doesn't think about the night her back hit the wall of their apartment and the man she loved whispered the one sentence designed to destroy her.Then she sees Noah Vickers in a grocery store - leaner, sober, building houses instead of pouring drinks - and every wall she's built dissolves in four seconds flat.He has a therapist. A sponsor. Eight months clean. He speaks the language of accountability with the fluency of a man who has studied his own wreckage and rebuilt from the foundation up. He asks permission before he texts. He keeps two feet of distance. He builds a reading nook in a Victorian he's restoring and says he thought of her.Darcy knows the playbook. She wrote the rules - public places only, no sleepovers, no pretending the past didn't happen. She can diagram a trauma bond on a napkin and explain to a classroom of teenagers why the woman in the story stays.She goes back anyway.Because Noah doesn't feel like a relapse. He feels like renovation - the same bones, better materials, a man who has stripped himself to the studs and rebuilt. And Darcy, who lost her mother to a blue suitcase at eleven and her father to cancer at twenty-nine, has never been able to walk away from someone who needs her. Staying is the only skill she's never unlearned.But the careful texts have a pattern. The phone calls end when she enters the room. And the night he claims he can't remember - the night that sent her to her best friend's door at four in the morning with a sprained wrist and a gym bag - left a mark that no amount of restored woodwork can sand away.When the truth finally surfaces, it doesn't come from Noah. It comes from the two women who know him best. And what they reveal will force Darcy to answer the question she's been teaching all year without ever applying it to herself:What is the difference between a room and a cage THE LAST TIME YOU TOUCHED ME is a searing, literary psychological thriller about the architecture of control, the neuroscience of staying, and the brutal courage it takes to open a door from the inside. N° de réf. du vendeur 9798233571992
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Vendeur : preigu, Osnabrück, Allemagne
Taschenbuch. Etat : Neu. The Last Time You Touched Me | Sadie Cross | Taschenbuch | An After Midnight Novel | Englisch | 2026 | Sadie Cross | EAN 9798233571992 | Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Libri GmbH, Europaallee 1, 36244 Bad Hersfeld, gpsr[at]libri[dot]de | Anbieter: preigu Print on Demand. N° de réf. du vendeur 135523358
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