Note: This is a ntr themed novel divided into several chapters and please do not read this if you are weak to cheating. Thank you and enjoy.
CHAPTER 1: THE NEW NEIGHBORHOOD
The ad had made it sound like paradise.
"Safe locality. Peaceful neighbors. Ideal for couples."
The pictures were bright--sunlit lanes, trimmed hedges, families walking hand-in-hand. We were tired of the noise, of the constant clamor of city life. This was supposed to be a new chapter.
When we arrived, though, the air felt... heavy.
The street was eerily quiet. Not the kind of quiet that comes with peace--this was a watching kind of quiet. Like the walls were waiting to breathe. Like someone was already looking.
She stepped out of the car first.
Tight jeans hugging her hips, a loose shirt tucked at the waist, her curves effortlessly seductive even when she wasn't trying. And she never did. That was just her. My wife had a body that turned heads--full hips, a narrow waist, and a softness that made her look both innocent and dangerous at once. I loved how she looked. But here, under these eyes... I wasn't so sure.
I climbed out with a box in hand. That's when I saw him.
Across the street--an old man slouched in a faded plastic chair, nothing but a thin vest barely clinging to his shoulders and sagging underwear. He was still. Too still. His gaze, low and unblinking, was fixed on her hips as she bent over to pick up a dropped bag.
There was no shame in his stare. Just hunger.
I stepped in his line of sight, glaring.
Nothing. He didn't even blink.
I turned back to her. She had noticed. Her jaw tightened. But she didn't say a word--just straightened up and walked inside, the sway of her hips slowing slightly, as if she wanted to make it less obvious.
Or maybe she knew it didn't matter anymore.
As we carried boxes in, the illusion unraveled. The house looked decent on the surface, but every step revealed something a little off--paint that peeled when touched, locks that clicked but didn't really lock, windows that wouldn't fully shut.
Outside, kids--barely in their teens--sat on the sidewalk with cigarettes in hand and filth in their mouths.
"Hey a**hole, get me one too!" one screamed to another, punching his friend's arm.
They were laughing, fighting, spitting.
And not a single adult in sight.
Two men passed by around noon. Mid-twenties, tank tops sticking to their sweaty torsos. They weren't talking. They were gazing.
At her.
She was adjusting the doormat at our entrance, the stretch of her leggings pressing against her thighs, shirt rising just slightly to reveal the small of her back.
I watched them watching her. They didn't look away.
She did glance at them--just once. Her eyes flicked toward theirs, caught the stare, and moved on. No confrontation. No expression. Just that practiced indifference women wear when they're used to being watched.
That was the worst part.
She was used to it.
But I wasn't used to her ignoring it.
I wanted to say something. Maybe I should've.
That evening, as the sun sank behind the dusty rooftops, we sat inside, eating takeout on the floor, still surrounded by unopened boxes. I kept watching the front window, half-expecting another figure to be peering in.
She leaned back, her chest rising under the soft cotton of her tee, legs folded comfortably, hair messy from the move. She looked like a woman in a magazine--unknowingly seductive, effortlessly magnetic.
And yet, something in her eyes felt distant.
"Do you feel it too?" I asked.
She looked at me, puzzled. "Feel what?"
"This place... it's different."
She was quiet for a second, then shrugged. "Maybe we just need to give it time."
But she didn't believe that. I could see it in the way she avoided my eyes. In the way she stayed close to me, but not with me.
That night, lying beside her in our barely-made bed, I kept my arm around her waist. Her skin was warm. Soft. Comforting.
But my mind kept going back to the old man's stare.
The way those men had looked at her.
The fact that she didn't say a word.
Something was off.
Not just with this place. With her. With us.
Or maybe I was just overthinking it.
Maybe it was the stress of the move, the unfamiliar streets, the eyes that felt more invasive because everything was new.
She was right.
We probably do need to give it some time.
So I closed my eyes, pulled her a little closer, and told myself to let it go.
Just for tonight.
CHAPTER 2: THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR
By morning, I had almost convinced myself I'd overreacted. The neighborhood couldn't be that bad, right? We'd probably just caught a few weird moments yesterday. Moving stress, unfamiliar faces -- maybe it was clouding my judgment.
"Let's visit the neighbors," I said, pouring her tea. "Would be a nice gesture."
She agreed with a small nod, tying her apron over a fitted cream t-shirt and a navy skirt that hugged her ass too naturally. Her style was simple, typical -- soft tones, neatly tied hair, not a hint of makeup yet she radiated something magnetic without trying.
As she stepped ahead of me with the fruit basket in hand, the movements of her ass made me want to grab them but I looked away. This was not the time.
We rang the doorbell next door. After a few seconds and some rustling sounds from inside, the door creaked open. And there he was -- an old man in a stained shirt and sagging boxers, the smell of mildew and something stronger drifting out from behind him.
His smile stretched unnaturally as his eyes landed on my wife, pausing there, soaking her in with zero effort to hide it.
"We're from next door," I said, a little awkwardly, "Just wanted to say hello. We brought some fruit."
"Come in, come in," he said immediately, waving us inside with a little too much enthusiasm.
I glanced at her, unsure. She gave a polite, almost hesitant smile, and we stepped inside.
The house was a disaster -- cluttered furniture, the lingering scent of something rotting in the air, walls stained from years of being ignored. My regret was instant.
We sat across from him in the small, dimly lit living room while he asked us strange, shallow questions and shared long-winded stories about people neither of us knew. I pretended to listen, but I was distracted. He wasn't talking to me. Not really.
Every time she moved -- adjusting her t-shirt, smoothing her skirt -- his gaze followed, always slipping back to her legs, her chest, the curve of her ass when she shifted. He didn't even blink when he stared. Just watched, as if enjoying every inch with the hunger of a man who no longer cared about hiding it.
She noticed it too. I could tell by the way her posture stiffened. But she said nothing. Maybe out of politeness. Or discomfort.
After nearly twenty minutes, I stood. "We should get going. Still settling in."
The old man rose with us, moving slower, but with a strange anticipation on his face. "Ah... before you go. Here, we have a custom. A parting hug for guests -- makes good fortune stick around."
I forced a smile and stepped forward. His embrace was quick, his arms surprisingly firm for someone his age, but I pulled back almost instantly. I turned toward the door, assuming she would follow right behind.
But instead, he stepped closer to her, his eyes half-lidded. "And from the lady of the house," he murmured, voice lower now, "a proper one."
She hesitated for just a second too long.
Then, softly, she stepped forward.
His arms wrapped around her slowly, his hands resting on her back -- one of them pressing a little too low. His face leaned near her neck, the grab was too strong for her to even make a movement. She stood frozen, her arms half-raised, unsure of where to place them.
Then I saw it -- the subtle flex of his hand, fingers pressed just above the curve of her rear, not quite touching indecently... but close. Too close. His cheek brushed against her hair, and for a second, he simply held her, breathing her in.
Her face was unreadable. She didn't pull away, but she didn't lean in either.
I cleared my throat loudly.
The old man smiled as he released her, letting his hand trail off her waist just a fraction slower than necessary.
She was breathing heavily -- hair soaked, face flushed. The smell of the old man lingered on her -- uninviting and unforgettable.
"Lovely to meet you both," he said, as if nothing strange had happened.
We stepped out in silence. Her hands adjusted her skirt. Mine curled into fists.
I didn't say anything on the way back.
But something about that hug -- how long he held her, the way his hand lingered -- played again and again in my mind.
She hadn't said a word.
And that silence was starting to feel louder than anything else.
CHAPTER 3: SEEDS OF DOUBTS
The door shut behind us with a click that sounded louder than it should've. We walked back in silence, the chill in the afternoon air doing little to cool the strange warmth still lingering in my chest -- not the kind of warmth that comes from comfort, but from unease.
I wanted to say something. Just a line -- Did that feel... off to you? -- but every time I opened my mouth, her calm face told me not to. She was walking beside me like nothing had happened. As if that stinking, too-tight hug from the old man hadn't happened. As if his hand hadn't hovered near her ass longer than any polite gesture should allow.
Back inside our home, she slipped off her slippers and walked into the kitchen.
"Next time," she said casually, pulling her hair back into a bun, "we take candles. That place needs them more than fruits." She giggled, almost too perfectly.
I chuckled back, forcing it.
The air in our home was warm and inviting, just the way we'd wanted it. Still, I couldn't help but feel like we had dragged in something... unpleasant from outside. I tried to shake it off. Maybe I was overthinking. Maybe she was right -- first impressions aren't everything. Maybe the hug was just... cultural? Maybe?
That evening, we went out to catch a film -- a soft romantic drama, one of those "moving to a new life" types. Fitting. She laughed at all the right moments, leaned into me during the slow ones. Her fingers occasionally found mine in the dark. For a while, it felt like nothing had changed. For a while, I let go.
The walk back was quiet, hand in hand. The moonlight hung low over the neighborhood, and most houses were already dark -- curtains drawn, lights dimmed.
But one house, the third one from the corner was very much awake.
As we passed it, the night was broken by something strange. A rhythmic, primal sound. Then a sharp gasp. Then moans -- unmistakably a woman's -- spilling through the thin walls, raw and unfiltered. The kind that aren't just loud... but intentional. Like they wanted someone to hear.
My wife froze mid-step, her fingers stiffening around mine. Her eyes darted forward -- not toward the house, but ahead, like she was pretending not to notice. Her cheeks flushed pink, and without saying a word, she quickened her pace, almost pulling me along.
I looked back at the window. A dim light glowed behind the curtain, swaying gently as if something was rocking inside.
"Shameless people," I muttered.
She didn't respond.
Back home, she moved about normally. Took off her cardigan. Poured water into a glass. Made some light conversation. She was calm -- a little quieter than usual -- but nothing out of the ordinary.
We brushed, changed, and slipped into bed. I thought the day was done.
But then, just as I turned off the light -- it came again.
The same house. The same moans. Louder this time. Fiercer. The woman was screaming now. Not in pain -- no. In abandon. As if she had nothing to hide. As if the world outside those walls didn't exist.
I turned to my wife. Her head was angled slightly toward the sound. Her eyes were half-open. Not closed in sleep. Not in discomfort. But in attention.
She didn't say anything.Her breath was even, her body still.And for a moment, something inside me stirred -- something between jealousy and confusion. I didn't want to ask what she was thinking. I didn't want to know.
So instead, I reached out -- my hand sliding over her waist. Her body shifted toward me almost immediately.
There was no resistance. No hesitation. She kissed me back -- deeply, hungrily -- as if something had been lit inside her.We made love.
She responded eagerly. Moved like she meant every motion. Moaned softly in ways that were both familiar and slightly different. I told myself it was passion. I told myself it was just the excitement of a new place, a new chapter.
When it was over, we lay there in the dark.She turned over, facing away from the window.I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, listening to the last echoes from that house still bouncing off the walls.
I told myself: Our sex life is great. She's happy. We're happy.
I told myself that again and again.
But a whisper in my mind -- slow, cold, persistent kept asking me:
WHAT IF I'M WRONG?
CHAPTER 4: THE CRACK IN THE WALL
The next morning was brighter than any so far, but my head still felt heavy -- like I was carrying the weight of everything that had happened in the past two days. Still, I forced a smile. I didn't want my thoughts to ruin what could be a fresh start.
I turned to my wife, who was standing near the kitchen counter, half-distracted by her thoughts. "Good morning," I said with a cheerful tone, trying to push away the unease.
She looked back at me, a little puzzled by my sudden energy, but smiled politely. "Good morning," she replied.
"I'll need my lunch early today," I reminded her gently. "I'm heading to the office."
"Oh! Right," she said, quickly gathering her focus. "I'll start preparing it now."
As she moved around in her simple housewife clothes -- a fitted blouse and flowing skirt -- she looked effortlessly beautiful. Her neat bun and soft presence made our messy reality seem a little more bearable.
I went to take a bath. The bathroom still smelled a bit musty, probably from the age of the building. As I washed my face, my eyes caught something unusual. It caught my eye as the sun hit the right spot. A hole, not too big, not too small,right at the center of the wall, facing probably the bathroom of the other house.
I leaned closer. It wasn't a regular crack. It was round -- as if someone had made it intentionally. But from this side, it was dark -- covered by something, maybe a board or cloth.
"Hmm," I murmured to myself. "Looks like they've already blocked it from the other side."
Still, a strange discomfort sat with me as I ran the towel over my shoulders. Something about that hole made me uneasy, but I shrugged it off. "I'll patch it up later," I thought. "No rush."
After drying off, I told my wife about the hole. "There's a small one in the bathroom wall. Looks like it's covered from the other side, but I'll fix it when I'm back."
She raised an eyebrow. "A hole?"
"Yeah, maybe from an old pipe or something. It's covered. Don't worry."
She nodded slowly. "Alright."
I got dressed and took one last look at her before leaving. "Take care today. Stay inside. If anything feels off, call me, okay?"
She smiled. "I will."
I kissed her forehead gently. But even as I walked out the door, a weight pressed on my chest -- a quiet whisper that something wasn't right. My gut had never been so uneasy in my life.
I spent the day trying to push the strange feelings aside, focusing on work and hoping everything would be normal when I got back. But when I finally stepped inside our home around 8 p.m., a chill ran down my spine.
The first thing I noticed was a slipper by the door -- a man's slipper. My heart suddenly hammered in my chest. I tried to tell myself it was nothing, maybe a neighbor dropping by, but the knot in my stomach tightened.
As I walked deeper inside, I saw her -- my wife, standing close to a man who looked like he was just about to leave. She seemed tense, her cheeks flushed softly, and she avoided his eyes.
I cleared my throat. "Hello," I said, my voice steady but cautious.
The man turned with a slow grin. "Hey there," he said casually. "I just came by to help your little wife. She was having some trouble with the tap."
My wife's cheeks colored deeper, and she kept looking down, almost like she was hiding something. A cold sting hit my chest.
The man gave me a chuckle as he brushed past, almost mocking me with his confidence. The whole scene felt like a silent challenge, and I felt like an outsider in my own home.
My wife finally spoke softly, "Go wash up. I'll get dinner ready."
I nodded silently, my mind racing. I wanted to ask her what really happened, why she seemed so different, but I swallowed the questions. I told myself to trust her.
Later, as I washed up and we ate dinner, she tried to explain. She said she didn't know anyone here yet, and when the tap broke, the man just happened to be nearby and helped her.
Her words were calm, but my eyes caught something else -- the dress she wore now was different from the one she had on when I left for work. The soft fabric hugged her curves perfectly, and I noticed how the skirt swayed gently as she moved. That dress... it wasn't the one I saw earlier.
I froze. Was she hiding something? Or had the day taken a turn I didn't know about?
But as she smiled at me, warm and familiar, I wanted to believe her. I kissed her good night, holding her close for a moment, though my mind still spun with questions.
That dress lingered in my thoughts -- a secret hanging between us, unseen but heavy.
CHAPTER 1: THE NEW NEIGHBORHOOD
The ad had made it sound like paradise.
"Safe locality. Peaceful neighbors. Ideal for couples."
The pictures were bright--sunlit lanes, trimmed hedges, families walking hand-in-hand. We were tired of the noise, of the constant clamor of city life. This was supposed to be a new chapter.
When we arrived, though, the air felt... heavy.
The street was eerily quiet. Not the kind of quiet that comes with peace--this was a watching kind of quiet. Like the walls were waiting to breathe. Like someone was already looking.
She stepped out of the car first.
Tight jeans hugging her hips, a loose shirt tucked at the waist, her curves effortlessly seductive even when she wasn't trying. And she never did. That was just her. My wife had a body that turned heads--full hips, a narrow waist, and a softness that made her look both innocent and dangerous at once. I loved how she looked. But here, under these eyes... I wasn't so sure.
I climbed out with a box in hand. That's when I saw him.
Across the street--an old man slouched in a faded plastic chair, nothing but a thin vest barely clinging to his shoulders and sagging underwear. He was still. Too still. His gaze, low and unblinking, was fixed on her hips as she bent over to pick up a dropped bag.
There was no shame in his stare. Just hunger.
I stepped in his line of sight, glaring.
Nothing. He didn't even blink.
I turned back to her. She had noticed. Her jaw tightened. But she didn't say a word--just straightened up and walked inside, the sway of her hips slowing slightly, as if she wanted to make it less obvious.
Or maybe she knew it didn't matter anymore.
As we carried boxes in, the illusion unraveled. The house looked decent on the surface, but every step revealed something a little off--paint that peeled when touched, locks that clicked but didn't really lock, windows that wouldn't fully shut.
Outside, kids--barely in their teens--sat on the sidewalk with cigarettes in hand and filth in their mouths.
"Hey a**hole, get me one too!" one screamed to another, punching his friend's arm.
They were laughing, fighting, spitting.
And not a single adult in sight.
Two men passed by around noon. Mid-twenties, tank tops sticking to their sweaty torsos. They weren't talking. They were gazing.
At her.
She was adjusting the doormat at our entrance, the stretch of her leggings pressing against her thighs, shirt rising just slightly to reveal the small of her back.
I watched them watching her. They didn't look away.
She did glance at them--just once. Her eyes flicked toward theirs, caught the stare, and moved on. No confrontation. No expression. Just that practiced indifference women wear when they're used to being watched.
That was the worst part.
She was used to it.
But I wasn't used to her ignoring it.
I wanted to say something. Maybe I should've.
That evening, as the sun sank behind the dusty rooftops, we sat inside, eating takeout on the floor, still surrounded by unopened boxes. I kept watching the front window, half-expecting another figure to be peering in.
She leaned back, her chest rising under the soft cotton of her tee, legs folded comfortably, hair messy from the move. She looked like a woman in a magazine--unknowingly seductive, effortlessly magnetic.
And yet, something in her eyes felt distant.
"Do you feel it too?" I asked.
She looked at me, puzzled. "Feel what?"
"This place... it's different."
She was quiet for a second, then shrugged. "Maybe we just need to give it time."
But she didn't believe that. I could see it in the way she avoided my eyes. In the way she stayed close to me, but not with me.
That night, lying beside her in our barely-made bed, I kept my arm around her waist. Her skin was warm. Soft. Comforting.
But my mind kept going back to the old man's stare.
The way those men had looked at her.
The fact that she didn't say a word.
Something was off.
Not just with this place. With her. With us.
Or maybe I was just overthinking it.
Maybe it was the stress of the move, the unfamiliar streets, the eyes that felt more invasive because everything was new.
She was right.
We probably do need to give it some time.
So I closed my eyes, pulled her a little closer, and told myself to let it go.
Just for tonight.
CHAPTER 2: THE HOUSE NEXT DOOR
By morning, I had almost convinced myself I'd overreacted. The neighborhood couldn't be that bad, right? We'd probably just caught a few weird moments yesterday. Moving stress, unfamiliar faces -- maybe it was clouding my judgment.
"Let's visit the neighbors," I said, pouring her tea. "Would be a nice gesture."
She agreed with a small nod, tying her apron over a fitted cream t-shirt and a navy skirt that hugged her ass too naturally. Her style was simple, typical -- soft tones, neatly tied hair, not a hint of makeup yet she radiated something magnetic without trying.
As she stepped ahead of me with the fruit basket in hand, the movements of her ass made me want to grab them but I looked away. This was not the time.
We rang the doorbell next door. After a few seconds and some rustling sounds from inside, the door creaked open. And there he was -- an old man in a stained shirt and sagging boxers, the smell of mildew and something stronger drifting out from behind him.
His smile stretched unnaturally as his eyes landed on my wife, pausing there, soaking her in with zero effort to hide it.
"We're from next door," I said, a little awkwardly, "Just wanted to say hello. We brought some fruit."
"Come in, come in," he said immediately, waving us inside with a little too much enthusiasm.
I glanced at her, unsure. She gave a polite, almost hesitant smile, and we stepped inside.
The house was a disaster -- cluttered furniture, the lingering scent of something rotting in the air, walls stained from years of being ignored. My regret was instant.
We sat across from him in the small, dimly lit living room while he asked us strange, shallow questions and shared long-winded stories about people neither of us knew. I pretended to listen, but I was distracted. He wasn't talking to me. Not really.
Every time she moved -- adjusting her t-shirt, smoothing her skirt -- his gaze followed, always slipping back to her legs, her chest, the curve of her ass when she shifted. He didn't even blink when he stared. Just watched, as if enjoying every inch with the hunger of a man who no longer cared about hiding it.
She noticed it too. I could tell by the way her posture stiffened. But she said nothing. Maybe out of politeness. Or discomfort.
After nearly twenty minutes, I stood. "We should get going. Still settling in."
The old man rose with us, moving slower, but with a strange anticipation on his face. "Ah... before you go. Here, we have a custom. A parting hug for guests -- makes good fortune stick around."
I forced a smile and stepped forward. His embrace was quick, his arms surprisingly firm for someone his age, but I pulled back almost instantly. I turned toward the door, assuming she would follow right behind.
But instead, he stepped closer to her, his eyes half-lidded. "And from the lady of the house," he murmured, voice lower now, "a proper one."
She hesitated for just a second too long.
Then, softly, she stepped forward.
His arms wrapped around her slowly, his hands resting on her back -- one of them pressing a little too low. His face leaned near her neck, the grab was too strong for her to even make a movement. She stood frozen, her arms half-raised, unsure of where to place them.
Then I saw it -- the subtle flex of his hand, fingers pressed just above the curve of her rear, not quite touching indecently... but close. Too close. His cheek brushed against her hair, and for a second, he simply held her, breathing her in.
Her face was unreadable. She didn't pull away, but she didn't lean in either.
I cleared my throat loudly.
The old man smiled as he released her, letting his hand trail off her waist just a fraction slower than necessary.
She was breathing heavily -- hair soaked, face flushed. The smell of the old man lingered on her -- uninviting and unforgettable.
"Lovely to meet you both," he said, as if nothing strange had happened.
We stepped out in silence. Her hands adjusted her skirt. Mine curled into fists.
I didn't say anything on the way back.
But something about that hug -- how long he held her, the way his hand lingered -- played again and again in my mind.
She hadn't said a word.
And that silence was starting to feel louder than anything else.
CHAPTER 3: SEEDS OF DOUBTS
The door shut behind us with a click that sounded louder than it should've. We walked back in silence, the chill in the afternoon air doing little to cool the strange warmth still lingering in my chest -- not the kind of warmth that comes from comfort, but from unease.
I wanted to say something. Just a line -- Did that feel... off to you? -- but every time I opened my mouth, her calm face told me not to. She was walking beside me like nothing had happened. As if that stinking, too-tight hug from the old man hadn't happened. As if his hand hadn't hovered near her ass longer than any polite gesture should allow.
Back inside our home, she slipped off her slippers and walked into the kitchen.
"Next time," she said casually, pulling her hair back into a bun, "we take candles. That place needs them more than fruits." She giggled, almost too perfectly.
I chuckled back, forcing it.
The air in our home was warm and inviting, just the way we'd wanted it. Still, I couldn't help but feel like we had dragged in something... unpleasant from outside. I tried to shake it off. Maybe I was overthinking. Maybe she was right -- first impressions aren't everything. Maybe the hug was just... cultural? Maybe?
That evening, we went out to catch a film -- a soft romantic drama, one of those "moving to a new life" types. Fitting. She laughed at all the right moments, leaned into me during the slow ones. Her fingers occasionally found mine in the dark. For a while, it felt like nothing had changed. For a while, I let go.
The walk back was quiet, hand in hand. The moonlight hung low over the neighborhood, and most houses were already dark -- curtains drawn, lights dimmed.
But one house, the third one from the corner was very much awake.
As we passed it, the night was broken by something strange. A rhythmic, primal sound. Then a sharp gasp. Then moans -- unmistakably a woman's -- spilling through the thin walls, raw and unfiltered. The kind that aren't just loud... but intentional. Like they wanted someone to hear.
My wife froze mid-step, her fingers stiffening around mine. Her eyes darted forward -- not toward the house, but ahead, like she was pretending not to notice. Her cheeks flushed pink, and without saying a word, she quickened her pace, almost pulling me along.
I looked back at the window. A dim light glowed behind the curtain, swaying gently as if something was rocking inside.
"Shameless people," I muttered.
She didn't respond.
Back home, she moved about normally. Took off her cardigan. Poured water into a glass. Made some light conversation. She was calm -- a little quieter than usual -- but nothing out of the ordinary.
We brushed, changed, and slipped into bed. I thought the day was done.
But then, just as I turned off the light -- it came again.
The same house. The same moans. Louder this time. Fiercer. The woman was screaming now. Not in pain -- no. In abandon. As if she had nothing to hide. As if the world outside those walls didn't exist.
I turned to my wife. Her head was angled slightly toward the sound. Her eyes were half-open. Not closed in sleep. Not in discomfort. But in attention.
She didn't say anything.Her breath was even, her body still.And for a moment, something inside me stirred -- something between jealousy and confusion. I didn't want to ask what she was thinking. I didn't want to know.
So instead, I reached out -- my hand sliding over her waist. Her body shifted toward me almost immediately.
There was no resistance. No hesitation. She kissed me back -- deeply, hungrily -- as if something had been lit inside her.We made love.
She responded eagerly. Moved like she meant every motion. Moaned softly in ways that were both familiar and slightly different. I told myself it was passion. I told myself it was just the excitement of a new place, a new chapter.
When it was over, we lay there in the dark.She turned over, facing away from the window.I lay awake, staring at the ceiling, listening to the last echoes from that house still bouncing off the walls.
I told myself: Our sex life is great. She's happy. We're happy.
I told myself that again and again.
But a whisper in my mind -- slow, cold, persistent kept asking me:
WHAT IF I'M WRONG?
CHAPTER 4: THE CRACK IN THE WALL
The next morning was brighter than any so far, but my head still felt heavy -- like I was carrying the weight of everything that had happened in the past two days. Still, I forced a smile. I didn't want my thoughts to ruin what could be a fresh start.
I turned to my wife, who was standing near the kitchen counter, half-distracted by her thoughts. "Good morning," I said with a cheerful tone, trying to push away the unease.
She looked back at me, a little puzzled by my sudden energy, but smiled politely. "Good morning," she replied.
"I'll need my lunch early today," I reminded her gently. "I'm heading to the office."
"Oh! Right," she said, quickly gathering her focus. "I'll start preparing it now."
As she moved around in her simple housewife clothes -- a fitted blouse and flowing skirt -- she looked effortlessly beautiful. Her neat bun and soft presence made our messy reality seem a little more bearable.
I went to take a bath. The bathroom still smelled a bit musty, probably from the age of the building. As I washed my face, my eyes caught something unusual. It caught my eye as the sun hit the right spot. A hole, not too big, not too small,right at the center of the wall, facing probably the bathroom of the other house.
I leaned closer. It wasn't a regular crack. It was round -- as if someone had made it intentionally. But from this side, it was dark -- covered by something, maybe a board or cloth.
"Hmm," I murmured to myself. "Looks like they've already blocked it from the other side."
Still, a strange discomfort sat with me as I ran the towel over my shoulders. Something about that hole made me uneasy, but I shrugged it off. "I'll patch it up later," I thought. "No rush."
After drying off, I told my wife about the hole. "There's a small one in the bathroom wall. Looks like it's covered from the other side, but I'll fix it when I'm back."
She raised an eyebrow. "A hole?"
"Yeah, maybe from an old pipe or something. It's covered. Don't worry."
She nodded slowly. "Alright."
I got dressed and took one last look at her before leaving. "Take care today. Stay inside. If anything feels off, call me, okay?"
She smiled. "I will."
I kissed her forehead gently. But even as I walked out the door, a weight pressed on my chest -- a quiet whisper that something wasn't right. My gut had never been so uneasy in my life.
I spent the day trying to push the strange feelings aside, focusing on work and hoping everything would be normal when I got back. But when I finally stepped inside our home around 8 p.m., a chill ran down my spine.
The first thing I noticed was a slipper by the door -- a man's slipper. My heart suddenly hammered in my chest. I tried to tell myself it was nothing, maybe a neighbor dropping by, but the knot in my stomach tightened.
As I walked deeper inside, I saw her -- my wife, standing close to a man who looked like he was just about to leave. She seemed tense, her cheeks flushed softly, and she avoided his eyes.
I cleared my throat. "Hello," I said, my voice steady but cautious.
The man turned with a slow grin. "Hey there," he said casually. "I just came by to help your little wife. She was having some trouble with the tap."
My wife's cheeks colored deeper, and she kept looking down, almost like she was hiding something. A cold sting hit my chest.
The man gave me a chuckle as he brushed past, almost mocking me with his confidence. The whole scene felt like a silent challenge, and I felt like an outsider in my own home.
My wife finally spoke softly, "Go wash up. I'll get dinner ready."
I nodded silently, my mind racing. I wanted to ask her what really happened, why she seemed so different, but I swallowed the questions. I told myself to trust her.
Later, as I washed up and we ate dinner, she tried to explain. She said she didn't know anyone here yet, and when the tap broke, the man just happened to be nearby and helped her.
Her words were calm, but my eyes caught something else -- the dress she wore now was different from the one she had on when I left for work. The soft fabric hugged her curves perfectly, and I noticed how the skirt swayed gently as she moved. That dress... it wasn't the one I saw earlier.
I froze. Was she hiding something? Or had the day taken a turn I didn't know about?
But as she smiled at me, warm and familiar, I wanted to believe her. I kissed her good night, holding her close for a moment, though my mind still spun with questions.
That dress lingered in my thoughts -- a secret hanging between us, unseen but heavy.