On this particular afternoon, Viktor arrived not with blueprints, but with a bottle of wine and a look that made Marina’s heart skip. They sat in the half-finished studio, the scent of fresh cedar filling the air.
The air between them crackled. When he finally reached out to brush a stray hair from her face, the touch felt like an electric shock. The guilt she expected to feel was drowned out by a sudden, overwhelming wave of being seen . On this particular afternoon, Viktor arrived not with
Everything changed when she met Viktor, a local architect she had hired to renovate the garden studio. What started as professional sketches soon turned into lingering glances over coffee. Viktor was everything Alex wasn’t—impulsive, observant, and intensely present. When he finally reached out to brush a
In that hidden corner of her home, far from the eyes of the neighborhood and the ghost of her routine, Marina rediscovered a version of herself she thought had died. It was a dangerous game, played in the shadows of her domestic life, but for the first time in a decade, the silence of the house didn't feel heavy—it felt like a secret. What started as professional sketches soon turned into
"You look like you're miles away," Viktor said, his voice low.
In the quiet of a Tuesday afternoon, Marina found herself staring at the dust motes dancing in the sunlight of her living room. The house was too still, a silence that had grown heavy over ten years of a predictable marriage to Alex. They were a "perfect" couple on paper, but the passion had long ago evaporated into a routine of shared calendars and polite dinner conversations.
"I think I've been away for a long time," Marina admitted, surprised by her own honesty.