The house sat where the road gave up. Past the orchard. Beyond the creek. Wrapped in vines and rumor.
Julian had only been there a week—seven soft mornings and seven long, lonely nights. He came with a notebook full of blueprints and a heart like a cracked teacup, still warm from someone else’s lips.
Eliza had left in the spring, as abruptly as she came, with her white stilettos clicking down the marble hallway like punctuation marks in an unfinished argument. “You’re too romantic,” she’d said. “Too…earnest. It’s not attractive, Jules. Men like you make women feel guilty.”
And so he ran—to the country, to his father’s forgotten estate, to “clear his head,” as they put it. But really, he had come to disappear.
There, among the willows and winding stone walls, he found the cottage. It was a little broken, like him—sun-warped shutters, a sagging roof, wild roses devouring the windows. His father had said it needed work.
“She’s moving in next week. Some woman from the city. Widow, I think. Keep it tidy, will you?”
Julian hadn’t asked questions. He had paint to scrape, doors to sand, and no one to impress. Until she arrived.