The room was awash in the soft golden hue of gallery lights, each spotlight delicately grazing the canvases that bore Aira's name. Her debut exhibition, "Echoes of a Withered Heart," was a quiet triumph. Strangers marveled, critics whispered, and collectors in sleek suits hovered with interest. But Aira wasn’t watching them—her eyes kept drifting toward a man who stood far too still for comfort, his gaze fixed on one of her darkest pieces: a distorted self-portrait that bled into shadows.
He was dressed in black, from his tailored blazer to his polished shoes, with a silver ring glinting on his middle finger. He had that air—the kind that silences a room without a single word. When their eyes finally met, something cold yet electric danced down Aira’s spine.
He approached her not with the smoothness of a charmer, but with the silent confidence of someone who already knew he’d be unforgettable.
“Your paintings scream,” he said, voice low, almost conspiratorial. “But only a few know how to listen.”
Aira blinked. No one had ever said that. Not even she had thought of them that way. “And you… hear them?” she asked, half-mocking, half-curious.
He smiled faintly, lips barely curving. “I know what silence sounds like when it begs.”
Before she could reply, he handed her a card—jet black, embossed with only his name: Damien Vale. No title. No number.
He disappeared into the crowd as suddenly as he had come.
That night, alone in her loft, she stared at the card under dim light, unable to shake the gravity in his eyes.
It wasn’t love. Not yet.
But something had begun.
Something that wouldn’t let go.