LOGINHe entered the room, which was in a frighteningly cozy semi-darkness. It was a silence that, for Hector, at that moment, was just another point of comfort and serenity, the perfect refuge for a soul in conflict.
Hector walked towards his solid leather chair. He sat down, his body sinking slightly into the leather, and assumed an imposing posture that was a pure facade. His elbows rested on the arms of the chair, his fingertips joining under his chin. His eyes, normally so focused and alert, stared into emptiness; the framed portrait of his favorite baseball team on the opposite wall was nothing more than a formless blur. "What the hell am I going to do with my life?" The question was a hoarse whisper, laden with an anguish that the room's silence seemed to absorb and amplify. How to deal with this desire that grew like an uncontrolled fire? How to honor the decades-long friendship with Johan while his mind was filled with the image of his daughter with lewd and sinful thoughts? He closed his eyes, and there she was: Theresa, with her smile that was both sweet and challenging, her eyes that seemed to see through all his defenses. It was a torment, a temptation, a personal hell he himself had fed. Theresa Michaels walked in a hurry. The clock on top of a commercial building confirmed her worst fears: she was late for her Brazilian Literature class, the only subject whose professor was a stickler for punctuality. "Who told you to stay up late last night, agonizing over an idiot?" she thought, cursing herself mentally as she dodged a group of tourists. "Dammit!" Frustration was a bitter taste in her mouth. She quickened her pace, her backpack hitting her back with each movement. As soon as the brick facade of the university building appeared before her, her heart leaped, but not because of the lateness. There, standing on the sidewalk, was Ryan. He was holding a bouquet of red roses so huge and artificially perfect it looked more like a stage prop than a genuine gesture. Theresa rolled her eyes with a mixture of anger and weariness. "No. Not today." She determined internally, adjusting the strap of her backpack on her shoulder and fixing her gaze on the top of the steps leading to the main entrance. She continued on her way, determined to completely ignore the presence of the man she once thought she loved, and who, at the first opportunity, had stabbed her in the back with the most cliché betrayal possible. "My love..." Ryan's voice, smooth, cut through the air just as she passed him. She stopped. Then, she turned to face him. Her eyes, normally full of warmth, were as cold as ice. "Never call me that again." Her voice was icy and sharp. "I am not and never was that to you. Forget that word." Ryan maintained his fake smile, but a flicker of discomfort passed through his eyes. He extended the bouquet. "Theresa, please. They're for you. You are my love, you know that. You always have been." "I am not." She stared him down, refusing to look at the roses. "And you know why I'm not? Because you don't know what love is. Love doesn't disappear at the first opportunity, it doesn't jump into the first available skirt." Ryan's face lost a bit of its color. "But... Theresa, it was a mistake. A stupid mistake, I was drunk, she meant nothing..." "No, Ryan." She interrupted, raising her hand to silence him. Her patience was already worn thin. "There is no 'but'. That is exactly what you did. And that, for me, is unforgivable. There is no excuse that erases the disrespect. There is no amount of alcohol that justifies the breach of trust." He opened his mouth to protest again, but Theresa had already turned away. She climbed the steps with renewed determination, feeling the weight of his gaze on her back, but also a strange lightness. She had spoken her truth. She had put a definitive end to that story. "Forget it, Ryan!" She threw the words over her shoulder without even looking back. "Go offer your roses to the next one. I'm sure you'll find another fool willing to believe your smooth talk. I am no longer one of them." The glass door of the university closed behind her, definitively cutting off the awkward scene. Ryan was left alone on the sidewalk, the grotesque bouquet now seeming like an object of ridicule. He let his arms fall, the roses symbolically wilting under the relentless sun. Inside the cool lobby, Theresa stopped for a moment, leaning against a cold wall. She took a deep breath, trying to calm her heart which was beating rapidly in her chest. The anger gave way to a profound weariness. The conversation with Ryan had drained her, but it had also freed her from a burden she had been carrying for weeks. A chapter was truly closed. As she headed to the classroom, already mentally preparing the excuse she would give the professor, her mind, treacherously, wandered from the superficial ex-boyfriend to the complex and intense man who had taken her home the night before. Hector. The memory of his presence, the charged silence between them, the way his eyes watched her, was a memory that disturbed her in a completely different way. In a way that, she suspected, was far more dangerous.Chapter 56Albia fled that night.She drove to her apartment with trembling hands on the wheel. When she arrived, she locked the door, leaned against it, and slid to the floor, hugging her knees to her chest.“No…” she whispered into the emptiness of the apartment. “This can’t be happening. He’s Theresa’s father. He’s… Johan.”But Johan’s words echoed in her mind like a bell: I’m not your uncle. And you know very well that I no longer see you as a girl.She felt a treacherous heat settle between her legs. She squeezed her thighs together tightly, trying to ignore the wetness beginning to form. She stood up with difficulty, went to the bathroom, and turned on the cold shower. She stood under the icy water for nearly twenty minutes, but the heat inside her didn’t fade.When she finally lay down in bed, wrapped in a towel, the desire had already been planted.And it was growing.In the following days, Albia tried to avoid Johan.She canceled two dinners with flimsy excuses. She said she
Chapter 55It was during a simple dinner at Johan’s house on a Tuesday night, three weeks after Theresa’s pregnancy revelation. Autumn was already settling over the city, bringing a cool breeze that entered through the open veranda windows. Johan had prepared a roast beef with vegetables — one of his few culinary specialties — and Albia had brought a bottle of red wine and a fancy arugula, pear, and walnut salad.They were dining alone. It wasn’t unusual now. Ever since Theresa got pregnant, Albia had become an almost constant presence in Johan’s life. She brought company documents, organized his schedule, prepared meals, and, above all, talked. They talked about everything: about the college she had finished, about Theresa’s fears regarding motherhood, about the silence Johan still carried regarding his daughter’s marriage.That night, however, something was different.Albia was telling a funny story about a college professor who insisted on calling her “Miss Michaels” even though he
Chapter 54Albia, who was present at dinner, cried as much as Theresa. She hugged her friend tightly, then hugged Johan, who returned the gesture with a naturalness that surprised everyone.“I’m going to be an aunt!” Albia exclaimed, laughing through her tears. “Aunt Albia. That sounds good, doesn’t it?”That night marked a real turning point for the family. For the first time in almost a year, the dinner didn’t end in tension or uncomfortable silences. It ended with laughter, plans for the baby’s room, discussions about names, and Johan promising to teach his grandchild to play chess as soon as he was old enough.Albia, who had become almost like a daughter to Johan throughout the reconciliation process, began visiting his house more frequently.At first, it was just to help. She brought homemade meals because she knew Johan had been living on takeout since Theresa got married. Then she started helping with the company paperwork — Johan had a small construction company that had been
Chapter 53Beginning of the Second CoupleThree months after the wedding.Life finally seemed to have found a calmer rhythm for Theresa and Hector. The new apartment they had bought together — a spacious loft with a view of the river — was gradually turning into a real home. Boxes still cluttered the corners, pictures waited to be hung, but the smell of fresh paint and new happiness filled every room.That Sunday morning, Theresa woke up with a strong, familiar nausea. She ran to the bathroom, knelt in front of the toilet, and vomited what little she had eaten the night before. When she finished, she sat on the cold floor, leaning against the wall, her heart racing.Hector appeared at the bathroom door within seconds, wearing only sweatpants, his hair messy from sleep. His dark eyes filled with concern when he saw her pale face.“Angel… again?” he asked, kneeling beside her and carefully holding her hair. “This is the third day in a row. You need to see a doctor.”Theresa wiped her mo
Chapter 52Six months later.The sea was calm that spring afternoon, as if the ocean itself had decided to respect the moment. The waves broke gently against the rocks of the small, private cove, producing a constant and soothing sound that seemed to cradle the entire world. The sky displayed a deep, almost unreal blue, sprinkled with white clouds that glided lazily.Hector Silva was kneeling on the same balcony of the beach house where it had all truly begun.Six months had passed since the night Johan confronted them. Six months of difficult conversations, heavy silences, tense dinners where no one knew exactly what to say. Six months in which Johan had learned, little by little and with pain, to look at his daughter and the man who had been his best friend without feeling the stab of betrayal in his chest. Everything wasn't alright. Not yet. But it was better. It was healing.And now, there they were.Theresa Michaels stood before him, wearing a simple white linen dress that draped
Chapter 51Three weeks of absolute silence from Johan.Twenty-one days without a message, without a call, without any sign of life beyond a short "I'm fine" sent to Theresa on the fourth day. Three weeks in which the Michaels' house seemed to have been swallowed by a cold, heavy emptiness. Three weeks in which Theresa lost almost four kilos, her clothes beginning to feel loose on her body, her eyes permanently swollen and with deep dark circles. She could barely eat. She slept little. She spent the nights curled up in Hector's arms, crying until she had no more tears.Hector, in turn, barely slept. He spent the early hours staring at the ceiling, one hand always on Theresa's body as if he feared she might disappear. He had also lost weight. The lines of tension around his eyes were deeper. The man who had always been synonymous with control now carried a guilt that consumed him from within like acid.Albia appeared every day.Sometimes in the morning, with coffee and croissants. Somet
Hector set the suitcases down on the floor of the entrance hall and turned to Theresa, who still seemed a little lost, absorbing the silent grandeur of the place."Welcome home," he said, his voice a little hoarse from the journey, but soft.She gave him a small smile."It's... incredible, Hector.
Theresa was sitting on the sofa, wrapped in a robe, as Hector watched her from the kitchen where he was preparing tea. Seeing her so quiet, so distant, even though she was only a few meters away, was torture. Her eyes, usually so lively, were fixed on the city view, lost in intrusive thoughts.He a
He looked at her, and all hesitation vanished. His lips found hers in a kiss that wasn't of tenderness, but of absolute possession. It was lustful, devouring, full of all the anger, fear, and desire they both felt. Their tongues met in a fierce dance, their hands clutching each other as if fearing
They laughed together, and for a few precious minutes, the heavy mood seemed to lift. They gossiped about other college friends, about Albia's plans for the weekend, about anything that wasn't pain, fear, or guilt.It was then that the doorbell rang, a brief and decisive sound."That must be him,"







