A long silence. Then the sound of his keys—the heavy jangle of the front door set. “You’re right,” he said quietly. “There isn’t. Not anymore.”
Then the whisper. Not real—she knew it wasn’t real. But it coiled through the dark like smoke. “He knows, Lena. He just doesn’t want to believe it.” ntr nightmare
He held up the phone. The photo was timestamped. Date, time, GPS coordinates. All wrong. All damning. And in the image, a man’s arm draped over her shoulder. She couldn’t see his face. Just a watch on his wrist—a stainless steel diver, same as Mark’s. A long silence
The dream always started the same way: with the front door clicking shut. “There isn’t
Same stainless steel.
Lena sat up in bed, the cold sheet beside her a dead weight. Mark’s side. Empty. Again. The digital clock on the nightstand bled red numbers: 3:17 AM. Through the thin apartment walls, she heard the muffled thud of the building’s stairwell door. Footsteps. Too light for Mark’s heavy tread.
Her, asleep. The timestamp from five minutes from now. And behind her in the frame, standing in the bedroom doorway, a figure wearing a watch that caught the moonlight.