The Smirk

273 Words
Three days of rain had left the streets of London smeared and gray. Drea's flat smelled faintly of coffee and old paper; her laptop's glow painted her face in pale blue light. She was alone, as always, yet the loneliness wasn't new-it was routine, a constant companion she had learned to ignore. The photograph haunted her. She had saved it to a folder named Veritas, though the name didn't explain the pull. She studied the angle, the light, the way his hand hovered just above the phone, casual yet deliberate. The smirk. The way his eyes seemed to meet hers. She wanted to know him. Not just what he looked like-but everything. Her imagination began filling in the spaces the picture left empty. What did he laugh at? What did he hide behind that calm, almost arrogant smirk? She followed him. Then scrolled through the cryptic, poetic account. His posts were sparse, calculated-shadows and corners of the world, fragments of phrases in Latin or Italian. A street lamp glowing like a halo. Hands covered in paint, frozen mid-motion. Each post felt intentional, a message that teased but never explained. Hours passed. She forgot the rain. She forgot her work. Even her own name felt distant, dissolved into the obsession with the stranger in Rome she had never met. And then a notification lit her screen: a single like on her comment. From him. Her pulse spiked. The stranger she had never met had seen her. A faint acknowledgment, yet enough to make her entire body hum with something dangerous and thrilling. It was the first thread of connection, and she was already entangled.
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