LOGINThe world didn’t end with a bang, Eva thought—it ended with silence.
Daniel lay still on the hospital bed, his chest rising and falling only because of the machines. The rhythmic hiss of the ventilator was the only proof that he still existed in the space between life and death. His eyes were closed, lashes casting faint shadows on skin that looked paler every day. If she hadn’t known better, she might have thought he was simply sleeping. But sleep carried hope of waking; a coma felt like an endless corridor with no doors.
Eva sat beside him, her hand curled over his cold fingers, her body aching from days of sitting in the same chair. She whispered things—memories, pleas, even silly little stories about their neighbors—anything to keep the silence from consuming her.
But Daniel never stirred.
The first time Adrian walked in that day, she didn’t notice him until his voice broke the fog.
“Mrs. Mitchell.”
She startled, pulling her hand from Daniel’s as though she’d been caught doing something wrong. “Doctor Cole,” she breathed, her voice hoarse. “Is there… any change?”
He stepped closer, clipboard in hand, the faint scent of antiseptic and cedar clinging to him. “No significant progress,” he said evenly. “His vitals remain stable, but the coma may persist until the swelling in his heart decreases. Time is… unpredictable in cases like this.”
Her throat constricted. “So you’re saying he could stay like this for weeks? Months?”
His gaze softened—barely, but enough that she noticed. “Or longer. But he’s strong. The body often fights harder than the mind can understand.”
Eva blinked rapidly, trying to swallow the knot in her chest. She hated how his voice steadied her, hated how much she leaned into the reassurance.
Adrian lingered, longer than necessary. His eyes shifted from Daniel to her, resting on the dark circles under her eyes, the hollow of her cheeks. “Have you slept?”
She shook her head. “I can’t. What if he—what if something happens and I’m not here?”
“You’ll break down,” he said flatly. “And then you won’t be here for him at all.”
Something in his tone made her bristle. “I don’t need a lecture, Doctor. I need my husband back.”
The silence stretched, taut. Then his voice dropped, softer than she’d ever heard it. “I know.”
Her heart lurched, and for a terrifying second, she wanted to believe he meant more than he should.
---
Nights blurred together after that. Nurses came and went, but Adrian was the constant. He always appeared at odd hours—late evenings, even past midnight—checking vitals that others had already logged, adjusting machines that didn’t need adjusting. Eva told herself he was simply thorough, committed, the kind of doctor who gave everything to his patients. But deep down, she felt it—the way his gaze lingered more on her than on the monitors.
One night, the hospital was quiet in a way that felt sacred, the corridors hushed, the world outside dark. Eva sat with her head against the edge of Daniel’s bed, fighting tears that had finally won after days of restraint. She didn’t hear Adrian enter, but she felt him before she saw him—like the air shifted, charged.
“Eva.”
Her head snapped up at the sound of her first name on his lips. He’d never used it before. Not once.
Her tears made her vision swim, but she could still make out his face—etched with something sharp, something she couldn’t read. He crossed the room in three strides and crouched before her chair, just as he had days ago. But this time, there was no clipboard between them, no pretense of duty.
“You can’t do this to yourself,” he said, his voice low, almost fierce. “You’re fading. And I…” He stopped himself, exhaling slowly, his jaw tight.
Her lips parted, but no sound came. The sight of him up close, shadows carving his features, the faint furrow in his brow—it was too much, too intimate.
“I don’t know how to let go,” she whispered finally, broken. “He’s here, but he’s not. I sit here every day, waiting, praying, and I don’t even know if he can hear me.”
Adrian’s gaze flickered to Daniel, then back to her. “Then let me carry some of it,” he said. “At least for tonight.”
Her breath caught. The words were wrong—wrong because they soothed her more than anything had in weeks. Wrong because they felt like more than a doctor’s promise.
Silence wrapped around them, heavy and expectant. She should have stood, walked away, reminded him of the boundaries between them. But she didn’t move. Couldn’t.
And then it happened.
His hand lifted, hesitating only a fraction before his fingertips brushed her cheek, warm against the dampness of her tears. The touch was electric, startling her into stillness.
“Adrian…” she whispered, his name slipping out before she could stop it.
Something dark flickered in his eyes at the sound. And then, as though a tether snapped, he leaned forward and pressed his mouth to hers.
It wasn’t tentative. It wasn’t careful. It was searing—hungry, desperate, as though he’d been waiting for this moment far longer than she could imagine. The world dissolved—the machines, the sterile walls, even Daniel lying beside them. For one breathless instant, there was only the heat of his lips and the sharp ache of forbidden relief.
Eva’s heart pounded wildly, torn between resistance and surrender. She knew this was madness, betrayal carved into flesh and bone, right before her husband lying unconscious.
But her body betrayed her—leaning into him, her lips parting, answering the kiss with a need she hadn’t realized was buried inside her.
When he finally pulled back, his breath was ragged, his forehead resting against hers.
“Forgive me,” he whispered, though his eyes told her he wasn’t sorry at all.
Eva’s chest heaved as reality came rushing back. She jerked away, her palm flying to her lips, still burning from his touch. “This… this can’t happen,” she stammered, her voice shaking. "Ever!"
Adrian nodded and walked out quietly.
Eva stood before the full-length mirror in her hotel room, smoothing invisible wrinkles from the cream-colored dress she had chosen that morning.The room was silent.Too silent.For several seconds, she simply stared at her reflection.The woman looking back at her barely resembled the person she had been a few months ago.Her face had grown thinner.The brightness that once lived in her eyes had faded into quiet exhaustion.The shadows beneath them spoke of sleepless nights and endless tears.She reached up and tucked a loose strand of hair behind her ear."So this is it," she whispered.Today would officially bring an end to her marriage.Years of memories.Years of promises.Years of believing Daniel would be the man she grew old with.Reduced to signatures on legal documents.She let out a slow breath."It has to happen."She had repeated those words to herself countless times over the last few days.It had become a mantra.A shield against second thoughts.She walked toward the
The hotel room was quiet.Too quiet.It was a modest suite on the seventh floor, overlooking the busy streets below. Cars moved endlessly, people hurried from one destination to another, and life outside carried on as though nothing had happened.Inside the room, however...Time seemed to have stopped.Eva slowly unlocked the door and stepped inside.The silence greeted her like an old friend.No Daniel.No Adrian.No police officers.No lawyers.No courtrooms.Just...Silence.She gently placed her overnight bag beside the bed before walking toward the large window.The city lights were beginning to appear one after another as dusk settled over the skyline.Ordinarily, she would have admired the view.Today...She saw nothing.Her reflection in the glass caught her attention.Dark circles beneath her eyes.Pale skin.Shoulders that seemed permanently slumped beneath the weight of everything she had endured.She barely recognized herself anymore.Slowly, she turned away from the windo
The heavy wooden doors of the courthouse swung shut behind them.Outside, reporters had gathered in small groups, hoping to catch a glimpse of the people at the center of the sensational trial. Cameras flashed the moment Adrian emerged from another exit with his attorney, but Eva deliberately looked away.She couldn't bear to see his face again.Not today.Not after everything.Her lawyer walked beside her down the courthouse steps, carrying a thick file under one arm. The older woman looked almost as exhausted as Eva felt."I'm truly sorry," she said quietly once they reached the bottom of the staircase.Eva stopped walking.She stared absently at the busy street ahead, watching cars pass without really seeing them."It wasn't your fault."Her lawyer sighed."I still feel responsible."Eva finally looked at her."You fought for me.""I did.""But I lost."There was genuine regret in the lawyer's voice."I believed you from the very beginning."Eva managed a weak smile."I know."Her
The courthouse was silent.Painfully silent.It was the kind of silence that settled over a room just before lives changed forever.Eva sat beside her lawyer at the plaintiff's table, her hands clasped tightly together in her lap. They were trembling despite every effort to keep them still.She hadn't slept the previous night.Every minute had been spent praying.Praying that today would finally bring justice.That today someone would finally believe her.Across the courtroom, Adrian sat beside his attorney looking immaculate in a charcoal suit.He looked relaxed.Almost amused.Every now and then, he glanced toward Eva.Each glance carried the same infuriating confidence.As though he already knew how this would end.Daniel sat several rows behind Eva beside Lydia.Neither of them spoke.Neither dared.Lydia's fingers twisted anxiously together.Please... for Eva.Please let justice win.The courtroom doors opened."All rise."Everyone stood as the judge entered.The atmosphere immed
The courtroom was silent.Every eye remained fixed on Adrian's lawyer.The question hanging in the air felt enormous.Why did Adrian run?Why flee the hospital if he was innocent?Why disappear for days?Why avoid the police?Even Adrian himself seemed interested in hearing how his lawyer would answer.The defense attorney adjusted his jacket calmly before stepping forward."Your Honor," he began smoothly, "the answer is actually quite simple."Eva immediately hated the confidence in his voice.The man sounded like he had rehearsed this explanation a hundred times."My client did, in fact, lie to the police initially."A ripple spread through the courtroom.Daniel frowned.Officer David exchanged a glance with Officer Kareem from the gallery.Even Mrs. Reynolds seemed surprised by the admission.The lawyer continued."But the reason matters."He walked slowly before the jury."At that time, Dr. Cole and Mrs. Mitchell were involved in an affair."The words made Eva's stomach twist agai
The courtroom exploded into whispers.Shock rippled through the gallery as Adrian's lawyer began placing photographs onto the evidence screen one after another.Eva felt her stomach drop.No.No.No.The first photograph appeared.A crystal-clear image of her sitting across from Adrian in a restaurant.They were talking.From the angle, they even looked comfortable.Like two lovers enjoying dinner together.The next photograph appeared.Eva and Adrian leaving the restaurant.The next.Her entering Adrian's apartment.The next.Her seated comfortable, taking a drink.The next.Eva felt her blood run cold.A photograph taken inside the bedroom of the secluded property.She was sitting beside Adrian on the bed.His arm around her shoulders.To anyone viewing the image without context—It looked intimate.Consensual.Romantic.A collective murmur swept through the courtroom.Behind her, Daniel visibly stiffened.Lydia looked horrified.Eva wanted to scream."He planned this..." she whispe
The silence the next morning was unbearable.It pressed in from every corner of the house, thick and suffocating, like the walls themselves were holding their breath. Eva lay awake long before the sun rose, staring at the ceiling, her mind replaying the night before in merciless detail.Daniel’s vo
Eva stood in the bedroom staring at her reflection, barely recognizing the woman looking back at her.Her hands trembled as she smoothed them over the front of her dress—an unconscious, protective gesture that had become second nature lately. The mirror showed a composed woman. Calm. Decided.Insid
The place Daniel chose wasn’t on any map worth noticing.It was an old private lounge tucked behind a shuttered cigar shop on the outskirts of the city, very discreet, the kind of place men came to when they wanted answers without witnesses. No windows. No music. Just low amber lighting and thick l
Eva froze. “He’s… a friend.”Lydia gave a short, humorless laugh. “A friend who leaves you notes on your dining table?”“He’s… he’s Daniel’s doctor.”That only made Lydia’s expression twist further. “His doctor? Eva—what the hell does that mean?”“Lydia, please—”“No, you’re going to tell me,” her







