Chapter 2 Building a Shared Farce

999 Words
Ella's POV The hospital's harsh lights vanished the moment we stepped into my apartment. I switched on the small lamp and the room filled with a dim, amber glow. Noah stood in the center of my clutter, the white bandage still wrapped around his forehead. He looked at my bookshelves, the kitchen counter, the framed prints on the walls, scanning for anything that might reflect who he was. My small, messy space suddenly felt suffocating. I had turned it into a cage without meaning to. The hospital had discharged him into my care. I held a stack of papers and a prescription for mild painkillers. His wallet contained a single ID card and a cell phone with a cracked screen. The ID was a plain state issue, bearing a name and a photograph. The name was Noah. No surname. Just Noah. The phone was locked, a blank device refusing to yield its secrets. I slipped it into my bag, my heart racing. What calls would come through? What messages? Any one of them could shatter the story I'd told. He still wore the dark sweater and tailored trousers from the accident, now wrinkled and stained. I had nothing else to offer him. The absurdity of it hit me cold and hard. I had just brought a complete stranger home. "You should sit down," I said, and my voice sounded unnaturally bright. "I'll make some food. You must be hungry." He obeyed, lowering himself onto my secondhand sofa with careful, testing movements, like he didn't quite trust his own limbs. His eyes never stopped moving. I busied myself in the small kitchen and pulled a box of dried pasta from the cupboard and a jar of sauce from the fridge. My hands shook. I had walked past the supermarket on the way from the hospital and grabbed the first things I saw. My mind was too scrambled for anything more elaborate. I filled a pot with water and set it on the stove. While it heated, I rehearsed. The lie I had told the nurse was a panicked gamble. Now it needed detail. It needed roots that could hold. I carried two bowls of pasta to the small table. The steam curled upward between us. He joined me, still moving with that cautious deliberation. He picked up his fork and ate without complaint. His expression stayed unreadable. The silence stretched, broken only by the soft clink of cutlery against ceramic. "Tell me again," he said finally, his voice low and even. "What happened to me." I set down my fork. My appetite was gone. "You were in an accident. A car hit you." That part wasn't a full lie. "You hit your head. The doctors said you have amnesia. It might be temporary, or it might not. They don't know yet." "And you," he said, his gaze fixing on my face with an unnerving intensity. "You are my fiancée." The word landed between us, heavy and foreign. I forced myself to nod. "Yes." He continued, reciting the fragments I had given him at the hospital. "We grew up together in an orphanage." "That's right. We were kids. We were inseparable." The words tumbled out, gaining a false momentum that frightened me. "We looked out for each other. We always said we were each other's only real family." He absorbed this in silence and took another bite of pasta. His wariness was palpable, a coiled tension beneath the surface of his compliance. I recognized that look. He was cataloging details, searching for inconsistencies, waiting for the floor to give way. I was doing the exact same thing on the inside. When the meal ended, I showed him the bathroom and the small linen closet where I kept the towels. I handed him a spare toothbrush still in its plastic packaging. He accepted everything with a quiet, unnerving politeness. Night fell completely. City sounds filtered through the thin windows. I stood in the bedroom, staring at my bed. It was a double, modest and rumpled, with sheets I had bought on clearance the previous spring. I heard the bathroom door open, then the soft pad of his footsteps on the hardwood floor. He appeared in the doorway, silhouetted against the light from the living room. He didn't speak. He simply walked to the bed, his movements slow and deliberate, and lowered himself onto the mattress beside me. The bed dipped under his weight. Warmth radiated from his body, a foreign heat in my private space. He was close enough that I could smell the clean, clinical scent of hospital soap still clinging to his skin. He reached out and his fingers brushed my arm. Panic seized me. I flinched and scooted backward so abruptly I nearly fell off the edge of the mattress. "No." The word escaped sharper than I intended. His hand froze in midair. His expression shifted from confusion to something guarded and careful. "I can't," I stammered, scrambling for a plausible excuse. My eyes darted to the bedding. "The sheets. They're new. I'm allergic to the detergent they used. I forgot to wash them before I put them on." The lie was absurd, a tangled mess of nonsense, but it was all I had. "My skin gets really bad. It's terrible." He withdrew his hand. The silence in the room was crushing. For a long moment, he simply looked at me, his dark eyes unreadable in the dim light. Then, without a word, he turned onto his side, his back to me. His shoulders stayed rigid. I lay frozen, staring at the ceiling, my heart pounding in my ears. The man beside me was a stranger and I had no idea what would happen next. I had spun this disaster from thin air and now I was trapped inside it. As I listened to his breathing even out into sleep, I realized I had no clue how to find my way out. I didn't even know where to begin.
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