"I have come here hardly knowing the reason why…In my mind I've already imagined our bodies entwining..Defenseless and silent now I am here with you…No second thoughts, I've decided, …Past the point of no return, no going back now"-Andrew Lloyd Webber (Phantom of the Opera)


Joss slowly stepped off the elevator and stood still as the doors closed behind her. Joss took a deep breath and ran her hand through her hair and proceeded down the hallway. As she moved down the hallway the only sounds she could hear came from the echoing click of her four inch stilettos.

As she came to a halt in front of the door she stared at the apartment door, after a moment of hesitance she lifted her hand and knocked three times.

After a few seconds the door opened. She tilted her head up to look him in the eye, she almost let out a chuckle, even in four inch heels, and he was still taller than her.

She raised her eyebrow and waited for him to let her in or tell her to go home. When he finally stepped back and gestured for her to enter, their fates were sealed.

As she stepped over the threshold of his apartment she had a recollection of what she was taught in Drivers ED, during high teacher always emphasized the 'point of no return' when driving. The point when the traffic light turns yellow telling you to slow down and stop, he always did say that if you can't stop safely, you should just keep going.

As soon as John closed the door she decided. They were at the 'point of no return' that critical point on the road, where you can no longer stop safely at the speed you're traveling.

It was too late to stop now. They were past the point when they became more than friends, they were past the point when they decided to put their lives into each other's hands.

She knew it was too late to change her mind the second she walked out the house wearing nothing but a trench coat and heels, it was two late stop when the clothes he had been wearing were in pile on the floor and it was defiantly too late to stop when their bodies finally entwined.

They had already passed the point of no return and their was no going back.