It had been years since he'd had to sneak in somewhere. Riven's position as captain in the Magix Elite Force granted him easy access to just about anywhere he needed or wanted so long as he could justify his reason for being there. But this, he had no valid reason. It would result in his suspension, if not complete dismissal, from the force. He didn't think he'd get caught – you couldn't teach an old dog new tricks, but that doesn't mean they forgot old ones – but even if he did, he knew he had to take the risk.

Nabu had been the one to tell him. About the relationship; the engagement; and the – in Riven's opinion – far too rushed wedding. He wanted her to be happy, even if it wasn't with him. He did. He also knew he should just let her go, let her marry whatever the fuck his name was, but he couldn't not try. She needed to know how he felt even if he was years too late.

Musa had been the one to break it off. It had nearly broken him; he'd refused to leave his room in his and Timmy's apartment for weeks afterwards. Ultimately, she'd been right, though. They were becoming different people – growing apart – and it was better to break up now than wait until their different paths became too much and they grew to resent each other.

Musa had released her first album a year before they'd broken up. Her tour had been hard, with him having to stay in Magix for work and her being everywhere, but he'd thought they could survive it. Their relationship had already survived so much. Musa's star, though, had only begun to shine. Over the years after the breakup, she only became more and more successful. Every bit of which she deserved, and every bit of which Riven had followed from afar.

She'd offered for them to stay friends once the wounds had healed but Riven had declined. All the news he got of her was from the guys or magazines. His therapist – he'd gone to see a therapist; Musa would have been so proud – agreed that it was best to cut her off entirely. Beyond the whole listening to her music thing, Riven thought he'd done pretty well at that. It had only taken him a year to stop looking her up borderline obsessively, he'd dated other people, he'd even had a serious relationship or two. His only problem was that none of the others were Musa. No matter how hard he tried, he always seemed to come back to her.

So here he was, the day of her wedding, climbing a tree on the side of the hotel she was getting married at, praying that he'd be able to find the room she was getting ready in before the ceremony started. And that she'd be willing to hear him out.

Riven managed to find an open window that led into the end of a hallway. He made his way through the navy halls, stopping to listen for her voice behind every single oversized door. Nabu, after some bribery and threats, had told him that Musa and the girls would be getting ready on the fourth floor. He'd begged Riven to think through his actions and not do anything stupid, but Riven was also certain that Nabu was on board with whatever his plan was. From his description of Musa's fiancé, he hadn't sounded too fond of the guy.

The sound of footsteps put Riven on high alert. He managed to duck into a broom closet just in time to see Stella turn the corner. Jackpot. The blonde swung her long, gently curled hair over her shoulder and punched in a code on the door pad opposite his hiding spot. From the door, he heard a sound he would recognise anywhere: Musa's voice. Double jackpot. Now he just had to pray that the girls would leave Musa alone for at least a minute at some point before the ceremony started.

He stood in that closet, watching her door for close to half an hour when his saving grace arrived in the form of an older woman with greying brown hair piled high on her head and a clipboard in her hand. She punched in the code to the door – which Riven paid much closer attention to this time – and exited three minutes later with the five bridesmaids in tow.

And no bride. This was turning out to be much easier than he'd anticipated.

Riven seized his opportunity the minute the woman he assumed was the wedding planner and Musa's friends were out of sight. The light on the lock turned green on the first try and he slunk into the room as quietly as possible. Musa was turned away from him, staring at herself in mirror. Lucky too because it wouldn't have made for a very good winning-her-back moment for her to see his jaw drop and his mind go entirely blank.

Musa wore a minimalistic, figure-flattering white dress with spaghetti straps, a deep V and a low back. She wore very little jewelry: a pair of diamond earrings, her engagement ring and her mother's necklace – the one she never took off that he'd recovered in Black Mud Swamp the year they first met. Her long, dark hair was curled softly, like she was a movie star right out of the 1950s. He missed her hair; missed running his hands through it; missed the way he could bury his face in it when they hugged so that the smell of her shampoo could envelop him entirely; missed the way she would play with her pigtails when she was nervous; missed the way her hair would fall into his face when she leaned over to kiss him before they went to bed every night. More than anything, he missed her.

"Riven?" He stumbled out of his memories and into present day at the sound of her voice. She'd turned to face him, the train of her dress bunching at her feet as she spun. It had been so long since he'd heard her say his name. He'd forgotten how nice it sounded. "What are you doing here?"

"You look beautiful" he whispered thoughtlessly. Musa lowered her eyes, her face flushing like it had whenever he'd looked at her in the early days of their relationship. She ran her hands along the sides of her wedding dress – the dress she should be wearing for him – smoothing out non-existent creases in the fabric. It made him smile to know he could still make her blush like that.

"What are you doing here?" she asked again, bringing her hands together to fiddle with her engagement ring.

"I..." Fuck. How did he do this? "...Should have written something down." Yes, that would've been a good idea. He wasn't Helia; words didn't come naturally to him. The old Riven would have turned around and walked away, wouldn't have even given it a shot. He wasn't the old Riven anymore, and he wasn't leaving this room without Musa knowing how he felt. He'd have to wing it. "Don't marry him."

"Riven, I-"

"Please. Just hear me out." Her objections ceased, and she lowered the hand she'd put out in a stop motion. "I love you. I have never stopped loving you. I have thought about you every single day for the last seven years, four months and twenty-one days. Since the day you left. And every single one of those days, I have kicked myself for letting you go; for not fighting harder for you. For us."

Riven approached her. With every step, he felt his heart beat harder, coming to a brutal halt when he stepped in front of her. Her eyes, for the first time since he'd complimented her, met his. She was inches from him; so close that the smallest movement would bring them together. The heels she was wearing made her taller – brought the top of her head to his lip instead of his shoulder. Had his mind been anywhere other than desperately wanting her to come back to him, he would have commented that she hated heels with a passion, and he'd always thought she'd wear sneakers with her wedding dress even if Stella gave her a headache about it.

He caressed her cheek with the back of his fingers, not missing the way she leaned into his touch. Her heart longed for his just as much as his did for hers. "You belong with me, Muse. You know you do. We belong together." His hand cupped her chin, pulling her into a kiss. Never had anything felt more right than his lips on hers. The second they connected; he knew everything would work out. He could beat the worst monsters, defeat his darkest demons, save the most helpless and conquer the universe as long as he had Musa by his side.

Musa's hands came to rest on his chest, balling her manicured fingers into his thin white t-shirt and dragging him into her as they lost themselves in the kiss. The longer it went, the more certain he was that she would leave with him right then if he asked her to. He would have too, if the planner hadn't punched in the door code and announced her presence through the heavy door.

"Gimme a second" Musa managed to shout, mere inches from Riven's face, before the woman had entered the room. The planner shut the door, informing Musa that she would be right outside and that the ceremony was ready to begin.

Musa stepped back and Riven had to wrap his arms around her to keep her near him. "I have to go" she whispered.

"Please, please don't marry him." Teenage Riven would be mortified to hear his voice crack as he begged Musa not to choose someone else, but adult Riven couldn't care less. He would beg and plead and grovel if it meant that she'd stay with him.

"It's too late. I'm sorry." She laid her hands on his chest and pushed their bodies apart. He watched, heart shattering, as she stepped away from him. Her voice broke, tears pooled in the corners of her eyes and her lower lip quivered, but ever his fierce Musa, she stayed strong. He wished, just this once, that she would break. Musa stepped away from him and turned towards the door, gathering the train of her dress in her hand as she walked away. She wiped her eyes quickly before grabbing the door handle.

"Musa," he heard himself say before she had the chance to turn the knob. A deep sigh and she turned to him. He'd never been good at reading people, but Musa he knew. She wanted him to fight for her, she always had, and, for the most part, he always had. He always would. He'd just fucked up that one time when it mattered most. "I'll be out front. If you change your mind."

She didn't answer, merely shook her head and then she was gone, whisked away through the door and down the hall by the planner. Riven sat himself onto the nearest piece of furniture – a fancy-looking emerald green couch in the corner of the hotel suite sitting room – and dropped his head in the palms of his hands trying to stop himself from crying and shaking.

He hadn't felt pain like this in years, hadn't felt anything like this in years. He hadn't been numb – he'd known numb before and that wasn't what the last few years had been – but life had been significantly less vivid. Everything always felt so much more with her. The lows could be soul-crushing agony, but the highs were pure ecstasy and worth every second of pain. He would willingly suffer through millennia of agony for just one hour of ecstasy with her again.

Musa's mind buzzed as she followed Christina, the planner, through the hall and into the elevator, down to the main floor. The woman – an absolute godsend in the madness that was planning a wedding and a tour in the same four months – babbled on about how adorably nervous Liam – her fiancé – was.

She'd met Liam three years ago on a talk show. He was an actor – had started off as a child on a sitcom and managed to make the incredibly difficult transition from child star to serious adult actor. He'd been sweet and charming during the pre-interview and through the whole taping. They'd run into each other again a year later at a movie premiere – she'd sung the main theme and he was close friends with the star. He'd asked her out at the end of the night. He was cute – tall with broad shoulders and sharp features, just her type – so she'd said yes. It turned out that he was also funny and incredibly witty.

She loved him.

Christina led her out of the elevator and into one of the back hallways. At the end of the hall, Musa knew she'd find her friends and father waiting patiently for the ceremony to start. Musa knew what would happen: Christina would put them in order, then cue her assistant to tell the violinist to start playing – Riven had always loved hearing her play the violin, they'd talked about having one if ever they got married. Musa couldn't let that detail go. Once the music started, the double doors would open onto the ceremony room. Hundreds of guests would be seated in the room, surrounded by thousands of dollars' worth of flowers and floating candles.

Much sooner than she'd anticipated, it was Tecna's turn. The purple-haired fairy – her maid of honour – turned out of the waiting area and moved up to the double doors at exactly the speed Christina had indicated; not too fast like Flora had or too slow like Stella – who, realistically, had been enjoying the moment of spotlight – had. Musa's father turned to her, a genuine smile on his face, to ask if she was ready. Musa smiled and nodded.

Her arm looped through her father's and Christina handed her the bouquet of exquisite flowers – arranged by Flora, of course. The woman moved behind her to spread out her train. As she neared the door, the guests stood for her. Her father nodded to a few at the back that he recognised, but Musa's focus was at the front.

Liam stood with his arms folded behind him. Riven would always stand with his hands in his pockets or his arms crossed. Liam's smile widened when he saw her. Riven only smiled when he saw her. Liam mouthed the words I love you and Musa felt a pang. She'd just heard those words in a different voice, and they'd had so much more impact. Musa smiled at him, repeating the mantra in her head.

She loved him.

She loved him.

She loved him.

She was at the altar. Her father was hugging her and whispering that he loved her and wished her nothing but happiness. Musa was stepping up to the altar. Liam was shaking her father's hand. The photographer's assistant was adjusting her train for the photos. Liam was smiling at her. Tecna was taking the bouquet out of her hands. Liam was reaching out for her hands.

Musa snapped out of her haze. Her hands were in Liam's and the officiant was welcoming the guests. Please turn your phones off. Don't take any pictures. It's not every day you meet someone that touches your soul. All the cheesy shit people said at weddings. Musa ignored the man they'd hired as she played the scene with Riven over in her mind.

He still loves her.

And she'd be lying if she said she hadn't compared every boyfriend to him. Including Liam. She'd also be lying if she said that she didn't think about him when she was alone. When she was lonely. When she wanted someone to hold her. When she touched herself. When she cried. When she laughed. When she had news to share. When she wrote a song she really loved.

It was always him.

Pressure on her hand brought her back to present day. Liam was saying his I do. He was giving her that smile that, up until fifteen minutes ago, she thought she'd be happy enough to see every day.

Happy enough.

Was that really enough?

"...Take Liam Lukas Caffrey, here present, to be your lawfully wedded husband, to have and to hold from this day forward, for better, for worse, for richer, for poorer, in sickness and health, until death do you part?"

"I..." Hundreds of eyes stared at her expectantly. She had two words to say. I do. It wasn't that fucking hard. Musa looked up at Liam. At those pretty dark green eyes of his watching her with all the love in the world. "I..."

It wasn't enough.

No one would ever be enough if they weren't Riven. She'd tried to deny it, but it was true. And he was right. She belonged with him.

"No" she sighed. The love in Liam's eyes turned to confusion. Behind her, Stella mumbled out a what. "I can't... I'm sorry."

Musa picked up the skirt of her dress as much as she could and walked away. She picked up speed with every step, desperate to get away from the prying eyes. Desperate to get to Riven. I'll be out front. If you change your mind. Had he meant it? She rushed through the double doors, past Christina and through the lobby. In the corner of her vision, she saw the doorman standing to open the front doors for her, but she got there before him.

Lights flashed in her eyes as she pushed through the doors and onto the front steps. Her name was being shouted and paparazzi cameras popped at every angle, but she registered none of it. Musa searched the sidewalk for that telltale flash of magenta, trying to control her already heavy breathing and not appear as panicked as she felt.

He wasn't sure why he'd even waited. It's too late. That should be an obvious clue that she didn't want to be with him. Still, he waited. He'd sat in her suite for two minutes trying to compose himself before sneaking out of the room and down to the lobby. He'd gotten there just in time to hear the music start. Part of him contemplated waiting, running into the ceremony when the officiant did the speak now or forever hold your peace thing (did they even do that in real life? It hadn't been done at Flora and Helia or Stella and Brandon's wedding). Ultimately, he decided not to. He'd told Musa what he had to say. All he could do now was wait.

Riven took a seat on a bench in the park across the street. He absentmindedly watched park-goers walk by, blissfully unaware that he was falling to pieces as the seconds ticked by. It took all his self-control not to think about Musa marrying someone else; to stop himself from physically and mentally falling apart. Old demons tried to claw their way to the forefront of his mind, to tell him that she wouldn't want him, that his efforts were futile, but Riven refused to listen to them. He wasn't that sixteen-year-old kid anymore, and he knew, he knew that he and Musa were meant to be.

Finally, after searching for what felt like an eternity, she spotted the telltale magenta hair forcing its way through the crowd. The joy that swelled in her was unlike any happiness she'd ever felt. He'd waited. Musa kicked off her heels and took off running towards him. He made it to the front of the crowd just in time for her to throw herself into his arms and pull him into a kiss.

It was heaven to feel his lips on hers, to feel his arms wrapped around her. Musa never wanted to lose this feeling. He laughed into the kiss and Musa swore it was the most beautiful sound she'd ever heard. Riven shuffled forward, lowering her onto one of the hotel steps as they finally pulled apart. The smile on his face could put the suns of Solaria to shame, but, as much as she loved his smile, Musa was only focused on his eyes. She loved his eyes; loved the way they shone every time he looked at her.

Riven rested his forehead against Musa's. Those magnificent blue eyes looked up at him so lovingly, just the way he'd longed for her to look at him for all those years. Riven swore then and there, he would move mountains to never lose that look. He was so happy he didn't even care that all the paparazzi were watching them. Let them watch.

"I'm so sorry. I was so stupid... I-" Musa started.

"It doesn't matter. You're here now."

"Now and forever. I love you, Riven." Musa pulled him into another kiss. Camera flashes went off around them but Riven only saw the stars that shone in his head every time she kissed him. He pulled away from her just enough to whisper I love you too, Musa before kissing her with all the love he could muster.