Mag-log inThe days after that afternoon felt like a dream I could not wake up from. Mark did not leave. He did not demand answers or scream or throw me out. Instead he became someone I barely recognized, someone who seemed determined to prove he could fix everything with quiet persistence.
The very next evening he came home with flowers. Not the usual small bunch from the corner store, but a large bouquet of deep red roses wrapped in crisp paper. Their scent filled the kitchen as soon as he walked in. He handed them to me with a gentle smile that did not quite reach his eyes. “I thought you deserved these,” he said, voice soft. I took them with shaking hands, the stems cool against my palms. “Mark, you do not have to do this.” He leaned in and kissed my cheek, lingering just a second longer than usual. “I want to.” Inside my head the thoughts would not stop spinning. He saw me with another man. He saw everything. Why is he being so kind? Why is he not angry? Over the next week he kept surprising me in small ways that added up to something bigger. He cooked dinner twice, simple meals but made with care. He took Lily to the park so I could have time to rest, coming back with her cheeks flushed from running around. One night he ran me a warm bath, lit candles around the tub, and even added the lavender oil I liked. He sat on the edge while I soaked, talking about his day like nothing had changed. I tried to talk about what happened. I needed to. The guilt was eating me alive. “Mark, please. We need to discuss that day,” I said one evening while we sat on the couch after Lily went to bed. My voice came out small. He shook his head firmly. For just a second his eyes looked cold, flat. “It never happened. We are moving forward. I do not want to hear about it again.” His tone left no room for argument. I closed my mouth and nodded, swallowing hard. The way he said it made my stomach twist. Not angry, exactly. Just final. The sex changed too. That Friday night he came to bed and touched me like he had something to prove. His hands were rougher than usual, more demanding. He kissed me deeply, almost aggressively, his tongue exploring my mouth with a hunger I had not felt from him in years. When he entered me, he moved with purpose, thrusting harder, holding my hips in place. I gasped beneath him. Part of me felt guilty pleasure at the intensity. Another part felt scared. This is not the Mark I know. He looked into my eyes the whole time. His stare never wavered. Even when I closed my eyes I could feel him watching me, studying my face. When he finished he held me tight against his chest and whispered, “You are mine.” The next morning he left a small gift box on the kitchen table. Inside was a beautiful silver necklace with a delicate pendant. “For you,” he said simply when I opened it. I wore it every day after that. The cool metal against my skin felt like a reminder. Two weeks later he planned a surprise weekend getaway. He booked a nice cabin near the lake, not far from our house but private enough. Lily stayed with her grandparents. For two days it was just us. We walked along the water in the mornings, hand in hand. We made love in front of the fireplace, the flames casting flickering shadows on our bodies. He brought wine and cooked steak on the grill. Everything felt perfect on the surface. Too perfect. At night I would catch him staring at me while I tried to sleep. I woke up once in the dark and found him sitting up in bed, eyes open, watching my face. The moonlight coming through the window made his expression look almost strange. “Mark? Are you okay?” I whispered, heart beating faster. He smiled. “Just thinking how lucky I am to have you.” But his smile did not reach his eyes. It never did anymore. I started having trouble sleeping back at home. Every time I closed my eyes I saw him standing in the bedroom doorway again, calm and still. The image would not leave me. One afternoon while we folded laundry together I tried again to apologize. The words had been burning inside me for days. “I feel so guilty,” I told him, my hands busy with one of Lily’s small shirts. “What I did was unforgivable.” Mark stopped folding. His hands went completely still. He looked at me for a long moment, unblinking. “I said we are not talking about that,” he replied. His voice was quiet but sharp. “It is in the past. Stop bringing it up.” He stared at me until I looked away. Then he smiled again, soft and warm on the outside, and went back to folding clothes like nothing had happened. That night he was especially passionate. He pinned my wrists above my head on the mattress and took me hard. I came twice, my body responding even as fear mixed with the pleasure. In the middle of it a small voice in my head kept whispering the same thing over and over. Something is wrong. This is not normal. I pushed the thought away as best I could. Maybe this was his way of healing. Maybe he really did love me enough to forgive everything and move on stronger. People changed after big shocks. Maybe this was good. Yet deep down the fear grew anyway. Mark was becoming the perfect husband I had always wanted on my loneliest days. He helped more around the house. He played with Lily every evening, making her laugh until her sides hurt. He brought me small gifts and touched me with new intensity. On the outside we looked like the ideal family again. But the man who came home to me now felt like a stranger wearing my husband’s face. His calmness after what he saw. The way his eyes followed me. The way he shut down any conversation about that day. It all sat wrong in my chest. One evening after dinner I watched him from the kitchen as he read to Lily in the living room. His voice was gentle, patient. She leaned against him, completely trusting. My heart ached with love for both of them and terror at the same time. Later in bed he reached for me again. His hands moved over my body with confidence, almost like he knew exactly how to touch me now. He kissed my neck, then lower, taking his time until I was trembling. When he entered me he moved slowly at first, then harder, eyes locked on mine. “You are mine,” he whispered again as he thrust deep. “Only mine.” I came while looking into his eyes, but the pleasure mixed with something colder. He seemed to know things. Or maybe I was losing my mind from all the guilt and lack of sleep. After we finished he held me close, his arm heavy across my waist. I tried to sleep but kept waking up. Each time I opened my eyes I caught him watching me in the dark, that same calm expression on his face. The paranoia grew stronger with every passing day. Mark was becoming everything I once complained was missing. Attentive. Passionate. Present. But something behind those calm eyes felt off. Like a mask slipping just enough for me to glimpse what was underneath. And I had no idea what he was truly thinking. I told myself it would get better. We would find our way back. But in the quiet moments, when the house settled and the lake outside looked black under the night sky, I wondered if I had already lost more than I realized.The moving truck pulled into the driveway on a bright spring morning, breaking the long silence that had wrapped around the house like a shroud for so many years. I felt the disturbance immediately, the way the air shifted and the dust motes danced in new patterns through the sunlight streaming through the dirty windows. After decades of emptiness, after countless failed listings and withdrawn offers, someone was finally coming to live here again.I drifted to the upstairs window and watched as they arrived. A tall man in his late thirties stepped out of the car first. Ryan. He had kind eyes and tired shoulders, the look of someone who had worked hard to build a better life. He stretched his back and looked up at the house with a mixture of excitement and relief. Behind him, his wife Claire stepped out, shoulder-length brown hair catching the light. She had sharp, intuitive eyes that seemed to take in everything at once. She taught literature part time, I would learn later. She had ba
The house finally went up for sale again after what felt like an eternity of silence. I sensed the change before I saw it. The air inside the rooms grew slightly less heavy, as if the long stillness had been disturbed by something new. I drifted to the front window and watched as a real estate agent parked her car in the driveway and stepped out with a bright red “For Sale” sign. She hammered it into the ground with efficient movements, then stood back to admire her work. The sign looked fresh and hopeful against the weathered exterior of the house.I followed her inside as she unlocked the door and began her walkthrough. She was a woman in her forties with sharp eyes and a practiced smile, the kind of professional who had shown hundreds of properties and knew exactly how to spin their stories. She carried a clipboard and a small camera, talking to herself as she moved through the rooms.“Great bones,” she muttered, making notes. “Lake view is a major selling point. Needs some updatin
The years passed in fragments after Mark died, like pieces of a broken mirror that reflected the same empty scene over and over. The lake house stood vacant for what felt like an eternity, its silence so complete that even I began to lose myself inside it. I drifted through the rooms without purpose, my ghostly form growing thinner, more transparent, as if the lack of living eyes to witness me was slowly erasing what remained of my presence. Dust settled on every surface like a soft gray blanket. Cobwebs hung from the ceilings in delicate curtains. The air grew stale and heavy, carrying the faint scent of mold and forgotten time.No one lived here anymore. The house had become a tomb not just for my body, but for everything it once contained. I would spend what felt like months in the kitchen, staring at the counter where I used to make breakfast for Lily. The cabinets were empty now, the fridge long unplugged. Sometimes I tried to remember the smell of coffee or the sound of Lily’s s
The silence that followed Mark’s death was deeper than anything I had known in all my years of haunting. The care home faded from my limited glimpses, and the house pulled me back completely, slamming me into its empty rooms with a force that left me disoriented for what felt like days. No more weak old man whispering confessions in the dark. No more nurses checking vitals or Lily holding his hand. Just the lake house. Just me. Just the endless stillness. I drifted through the rooms like a shadow with no purpose. The dust had thickened on every surface. Cobwebs hung in the corners like forgotten memories. The furniture that the Patels had left behind sat covered in sheets, ghostly shapes in the dim light that filtered through dirty windows. The kitchen where I once made breakfast for my daughter was cold and silent. The living room where we had gathered as a family held only echoes. The bedroom upstairs still carried the faint stain of what Mark had done to me, even if no one else co
The end came on a cold, gray morning when the snow outside the care home had turned to slush and the world felt heavy and damp. I felt it before it happened. The pull toward Mark’s room grew stronger, the house’s grip on me loosening just enough to let me stay close. His breathing had changed in the night. It was shallower now, more labored, like each inhale took more effort than the last. The monitors beside his bed beeped with a steady, warning rhythm that the nurses had grown used to ignoring. I hovered near the ceiling, watching the man who had once been my husband. Mark lay completely still under the thin blankets, his face pale and sunken. The stroke had taken so much from him already. The right side of his body barely moved. His speech had become a series of slurred fragments. But his eyes, when they opened, still searched for me in the corners of the room. The nurse came in for her morning check. She took his vitals, frowned at the numbers, and called for the doctor. I watc
The winter came hard that year, blanketing the world outside the care home in thick layers of snow and ice. I watched it all from the edges of Mark’s room, my presence a constant chill that the nurses could never quite explain. The heating system worked fine, they said. Yet his room always felt colder than the others. They blamed drafts. Old windows. They never blamed me. Mark had grown even frailer since those long nights of confession. His body was failing faster now, as if speaking his guilt aloud had opened the final door for death to walk through. I hovered near the ceiling most days, looking down at the man who had once been my husband. The man who had squeezed the life from me while calling me honey. He looked so small under the thin blankets, his chest rising and falling in shallow, uneven rhythms. The stroke came on a Tuesday afternoon. I felt it before it happened. The air in the room grew heavier, thicker, like the house itself was holding its breath. Mark had been try
The weeks continued to blur together in a haze of forced normalcy. Mark’s new perfect behavior never slipped even once. He brought me flowers every few days, always with that same gentle smile. He helped with Lily’s bedtime routine without being asked, tucking her in and singing the silly songs she
A few weeks had passed since that terrible afternoon when Mark walked in on us. Life in the house had settled into a new rhythm, one that should have felt like healing but instead left me constantly on edge. Mark continued his transformation into the perfect husband. Gifts appeared without warning.
The next time came sooner than I wanted to admit. A few days later, on another ordinary Thursday, the pull returned stronger than before. Mark had left for work with his usual kiss on my forehead and a promise to pick up groceries on the way home. Lily was safely at daycare, her laughter still echo
I opened the door and Victor stepped inside without a word. He looked me up and down, his eyes darkening with that familiar hunger. A slow smile spread across his face as he took in the black lace hugging my body.“Damn, Diane,” he said, his voice low and rough. “You wore that just for me?”I close







