LOGINKim’s POV
It’s strange how silence can be both a comfort and a curse. I lie on the couch in Erik’s apartment, wrapped in a soft grey blanket that still smells faintly of his cologne. Outside, the city hums — distant sirens, horns, a dog barking somewhere far below — but up here, it’s quiet. Too quiet, sometimes. I never realized how much noise trauma made until it was gone: the slammed doors, the raised voices, the creaking floorboards under heavy, angry footsteps. Now, when the silence stretches long, I can hear my own heartbeat. And it terrifies me. I turn over, clutching the blanket tighter to my chest. My casted arm rests awkwardly on a pillow, the plaster cold against my cheek. My body is healing, or at least pretending to. But my thoughts… they still wander too easily to places I don’t want to revisit. He’s dead. That should comfort me. But it doesn’t. I remember the sound the vase made when it cracked against his skull. I remember the way he looked at me—almost surprised—as if he never imagined I’d fight back. I remember the moment I realized he wasn’t going to get up again. The tears come again, slow and silent. I let them. There’s no one here to judge me. Erik’s still at the station, probably buried under a mountain of paperwork because of me. I don’t know why he offered to help. I don’t know what he sees when he looks at me, or why he’s so calm, so patient. Maybe he sees something worth saving. Maybe he’s wrong. A soft knock pulls me from the spiral. Not at the front door—at the window. I blink, confused, and sit up. Erik stands just outside on the balcony, holding two takeout bags and wearing a sheepish smile. I shuffle to my feet and slide open the glass door. —“You have a key,” I say, confused but amused. —“I do. But I thought knocking might be... politer. Also more dramatic.” He shrugs, grinning. I take the bags from his hands. Chinese food, by the smell of it. He steps inside and pulls off his coat, his eyes flicking briefly to my face. —“Rough day?” he asks gently. I nod. No use pretending otherwise. —“I just... I thought I’d feel lighter. After the verdict. After getting out. But it still feels like I’m locked inside something.” Erik places the coat over a chair and gestures toward the kitchen table. I follow him, setting the bags down and unpacking the food. —“It’s not just about freedom,” he says, pulling out chopsticks. “It’s about safety. And trust. Your body’s out of the cage, but your mind’s still pacing the bars.” His words hit harder than I expect. I look at him, surprised. —“How do you know that?” He shrugs, avoiding my gaze. —“You’re not the first victim I’ve worked with.” That word. Victim. It makes my skin crawl. —“Can you not call me that?” I murmur. He glances at me, then nods slowly. —“What would you prefer?” I think about it for a moment, then shrug helplessly. —“I don’t know. Just... not that.” We eat in silence for a while, the clinking of chopsticks the only sound between us. The food is hot, spicy, comforting. He even remembered my favorite dish—sweet and sour tofu. I didn’t even realize he’d noticed. —“You remember what I ordered that first day?” I ask quietly. —“I remember a lot of things,” he replies, not looking up. “You wore a blue hoodie. You had blood on the sleeve, but you kept tucking it into your palm so no one would notice. You didn’t speak unless spoken to. You wouldn’t look me in the eye.” I feel my breath catch. I want to disappear into the floor. But then he adds, softer this time— —“But now you look up. You speak first. You ask questions. That matters, Kim.” My chest tightens again. Not with fear this time. Something else. Something warmer. —“I’m scared,” I whisper. “I’m scared this will all disappear. That I’ll wake up and I’ll be back there. That maybe I don’t deserve this.” He sets down his chopsticks and leans forward, his arms on the table. His voice is firm, but kind. —“You do. You deserve peace. You deserve safety. And you didn’t steal that from anyone—you fought for it. You survived. That doesn’t make you broken. It makes you brave.” I don’t know how to respond. No one’s ever said something like that to me. Not and meant it. A silence settles between us again, but it’s different this time. Full, not empty. Like the quiet before the first breath after a long sob. I reach for my tea and take a sip. My hands still tremble, just a little, but I don’t try to hide it. Erik leans back in his chair, watching me with that same unreadable expression he always wears when he’s thinking too hard. —“Would you ever consider therapy?” he asks. The word makes my stomach clench, but I don’t flinch. —“I don’t know. I don’t trust people. Talking is... hard.” —“It doesn’t have to happen all at once,” he says. “Just think about it. You’ve already taken the hardest step.” —“Which is?” —“Letting someone help you.” I stare at him for a long time. The warmth of the tea, the flicker of the kitchen light, the safety of this space—all of it wraps around me like armor I never had before. —“Okay,” I whisper. “I’ll think about it.” He smiles—not wide, not showy, but real. The kind of smile you give someone when you know how much it costs them to say something small. That night, I lie in bed—his bed, technically—and stare at the ceiling. The pain in my arm is dull now, like an echo. I can hear the murmur of the TV in the living room. Erik hasn’t gone to sleep yet. Maybe he’s watching old crime dramas, or reviewing case files like he always does. Maybe he’s just trying to stay awake in case I need him. I think of all the nights I used to pray someone would come knock on my window and pull me from the dark. I used to think no one ever would. Now… someone has. I don’t know where this story is going. I don’t know if I’ll ever be whole, or if I even know what whole means anymore. But tonight, I feel something I haven’t felt in years. Safe. And for now, that’s enough.Erik Pov.I couldn’t stay still.Not on the couch, not in the chair by the window where I’d spent the last three days reading through case files and pretending my mind wasn’t elsewhere. Not in the bed we used to share, where every crease in the sheets still smelled like her shampoo.Last night had cracked something open inside me. Not a full repair—no. That would take time. But it was a step. Her in my arms, crying, clinging. Me, holding her like she was a part of me again.God, I’d missed her. I still did.The pain hadn’t vanished, but something had shifted. A tiny sliver of hope where there had only been jagged shards of betrayal. We were still fragile, still rebuilding. But I couldn’t just sit here and wait for her to come home anymore. I needed to see her. Not as the wounded man hiding behind walls. But as her man.I grabbed my keys off the counter. I didn’t even think twice about it.Maybe it was stupid, irrational. Maybe following her to college made me look like a man on the ed
Erik Pov.The hospital air still clings to me—the sharp sterility of antiseptic, the exhaustion of twelve hours spent trying to find out what happened with that person so I could catch rhe culprit. I should be used to it by now. But tonight, it weighs heavier than usual.I push open the door to the apartment quietly, expecting to see Kim curled on the couch with her laptop or maybe reading in that chair she loves. But the living room is empty.The silence feels thick. It used to be filled with her voice calling out, “You’re home!” followed by the sound of rushing feet and her arms thrown around my neck, grounding me back in something human after hours of clinical detachment.Now, all I hear is the sound of my own heartbeat. And something else.A sob.I freeze.It’s faint—barely there—but unmistakable. It comes from the bedroom.For a moment, I don’t move. My fingers twitch at my side, wanting to open the door and go to her, but my chest tightens in hesitation. We’re still in this frac
Erik Pov.She waited until the apartment was quiet again. No case files open, no coffee boiling, no distractions. Just the two of us, the late afternoon sun spilling across the floor like gold, and the thick, unspoken weight between us.I was sitting on the edge of the bed, going over a report for the precinct, when she walked in and just... stood there.I felt her before I looked up.There was something in the air when she entered a room—always had been. It used to be light. Warmth. Now it was tension laced with guilt, hope strangled by silence.I set the papers down slowly and finally lifted my gaze.Kim was standing near the doorway, in one of my old shirts. Her sleeves were rolled up—just like I’d asked her to keep them—and her fingers twisted around the hem.She cleared her throat. “I need to ask you something.”I didn’t speak.Didn’t move.Only nodded once.She stepped closer, slowly, like every inch mattered. “I know I hurt you,” she said softly, “and I’m not asking you to pret
Erik Pov.It happened in the kitchen.Not with fire, or heat, or some grand gesture. Just toast.I was making toast.Maja had dropped off a basket of fresh bread that morning, and for the first time in weeks, I woke up to the scent of it in the apartment. I knew Kim had already been up—her laptop was still glowing softly on the couch, and her favorite mug was in the sink, half-full with cold coffee.She didn’t say much these days, just padded around like a ghost in my periphery. Always quiet. Always careful not to step too close.I didn’t blame her. I was the one who couldn’t look at her without my chest twisting into knots. The one who couldn’t forget the way her body moved against his. The one who was still bleeding in silence.But that morning, for some reason, I didn’t feel like bleeding.I felt... restless.So I pulled out a slice of bread, dropped it into the toaster, and stood there, lost in thought. About the case. About Maja. About Kim. Always Kim.I didn’t hear her come up b
Kim Pov.It started with a sock.Erik was pacing the apartment on the phone with someone from the station, murmuring something about paperwork and a case file, when he tripped—just slightly—on a stray sock I’d left near the coffee table.He swore under his breath, catching himself before he could stumble entirely.“Dammit—why is this here?”I glanced up from the kitchen island, where I was trying to distract myself by stirring sugar into my tea. When I saw what he was holding—an old fuzzy sock with a pink cartoon owl on it—I choked on a laugh.He looked over at me sharply.“It’s not funny.”I shrugged, a grin tugging at my lips. “It kind of is.”He held it up between two fingers like it was radioactive. “Kim… seriously?”“That sock’s a legend,” I said, walking toward him without thinking. “I’ve had it since I was twelve.”“That’s disgusting.”“It’s adorable,” I corrected. “And also very lucky. I wore it during my psych final.”He rolled his eyes, but there was the barest twitch at the
Kim Pov.The bedroom feels colder than I remember.Not in temperature, exactly—but in something deeper. The way the light hits the walls. The way the shadows stretch in places I didn’t notice before. The bed is made, but not like Erik does it. He’s always been meticulous about corners and folds. I just tugged the blanket over the pillows this morning with a heavy sigh and trembling hands.And now we’re here.Together. But not.He walks in behind me, his steps quieter than usual. I wonder if his heart is racing the way mine is. If his skin feels too tight, if his thoughts are echoing loud and unbearable like mine.I stand at my side of the bed. He stands at his. We both look down at the same sheets, the same mattress where so many memories were born.“Do you want a pillow barrier?” I ask, my voice barely a whisper.He doesn’t answer for a moment. Then, “No.”I nod and climb in, curling on my side of the bed, facing the wall. I don’t dare look at him. Not yet. The weight of his presence
Kim Pov.Maja came again.With donuts.That’s how she always shows up—like a storm wrapped in sugar and teasing smiles. I heard her at the door before I even made it out of the bedroom. That knock-knock-knock rhythm, followed by her voice calling, “I brought reinforcements, open up!”I liked it. Th
Erik pov.Maybe Kim feels all those things just because I'm the only man who hasn't treated her wrong.The thought has been eating at me all day—quietly gnawing at the back of my mind as I try to focus at work, pretend everything is fine. But it’s not fine. Not when every time she looks at me like
Erik Pov.She said she wasn’t scared.Those words echoed in my mind like a bell tolling at the edge of restraint, tolling again and again until my nerves felt like they might snap. I can still feel her fingers curled around mine, small and delicate, like porcelain warmed in the sun. The moment she
His fingers moved, gently brushing against mine. Just that—skin against skin. But it stole all the air from my lungs.I stared at our joined hands. Our fingers had slowly, almost cautiously, intertwined, like even they were unsure of what this moment meant. And maybe they were right. Because I didn







