The sound was quiet, but in Nora’s room, it seemed louder than it should have been.
A laptop glowed on her desk, cold and pale in the dark. The rest of the room had faded into shadow—the wall, the shelves, the chair in the corner. It was late enough that everything felt slightly unreal.
At this hour, the room always changed a little. The silence got heavier. The edges of things softened.
On the screen, a blank page waited.
A cursor blinked near the top-left corner.
Nora placed her fingers on the keyboard and started typing.
Her movements were steady and precise. She didn’t stop to think. She didn’t search for words. The rhythm came too easily, as if the scene already existed and she was only giving it shape.
The screen light fell across her face in a cold blue-white glow. She looked focused, but distant. Calm in a way that made emotion feel unnecessary.
There was no struggle in her expression.
Only control.
She typed a line, read it once, and let the familiar thought pass through her mind.
Every scene behaves when you know where to press.
Then she continued.
Zayn stands in the kitchen, pretending he isn’t annoyed.
The sentence appeared on the screen.
And somewhere else, the kitchen came into focus.
Warm light spread across clean counters and quiet walls. A mug sat in Zayn’s hand, half-empty. He stood near the counter with the tired frustration of someone who had already lost a small argument and knew it.
Across from him, Lina opened the fridge, looked inside, and turned toward him.
“You drank the last of it?”
Zayn took another sip, giving himself a second before answering.
Back in the dark room, Nora typed again.
Lina closes the fridge harder than necessary.
In the kitchen, Lina shut it with a sharper sound than the moment needed.
THUNK.
Zayn glanced at her.
“That felt personal.”
A faint smile touched Nora’s mouth.
Not warmth.
Not quite amusement.
Something closer to satisfaction.
She typed again.
Timing always did more than words.
Then:
Zayn tries to lighten the mood.
Zayn leaned back against the counter, casual enough to seem harmless.
“Okay. So...” He tipped his head slightly. “Are we fighting, or is this one of those silent emotional episodes?”
Lina looked at him without blinking.
“You say that like there are non-emotional episodes.”
The exchange came out exactly the way Nora expected. Dry. Familiar. Easy.
She looked at the screen with quiet approval. Nothing had slipped. Nothing had gone off track. Every beat had landed where it was supposed to.
She lowered her hands to the keyboard.
He laughs.
Zayn laughed.
At first, it sounded normal.
A short breath of amusement. Light. Forgettable.
“Ha—”
But it didn’t stop.
The laugh went on a second too long.
Then another.
Lina looked up.
Something was wrong.
Not obvious. Not enough to explain. Just wrong.
Back in Nora’s room, her fingers stopped above the keys.
In the kitchen, Zayn was still smiling—but now the smile looked strange, like it had stayed on his face after the feeling behind it was gone. He lowered the mug a little and seemed to listen to himself with growing confusion.
The laugh broke awkwardly and finally ended.
He blinked.
“...Wait.”
Lina frowned. “What?”
Zayn looked at her, then at the floor, then somewhere past both.
He didn’t look scared.
Not yet.
He looked honestly confused, like his own body had done something without asking him first.
“Why am I laughing?”
For the first time that night, Nora’s expression changed.
Only a little.
But enough.
She leaned forward and typed quickly.
Zayn stops laughing.
And he did.
The silence that followed came down hard.
But the moment didn’t go back to normal.
That was the problem.
Zayn stared at his hand, then looked at Lina again. There was something unsettled in his face now, something that didn’t belong in a small argument about an empty fridge.
“No, seriously.”
His voice was quieter this time. The joke was gone.
“I wasn’t going to laugh.”
Lina stared at him.
Her irritation had disappeared.
“Then why did you?”
Zayn opened his mouth.
Nothing came out.
Because he didn’t know.
The silence changed the room. The hum of the refrigerator seemed louder now. The warm kitchen light no longer felt completely safe.
Back in Nora’s room, the cursor blinked at the end of the page.
Once.
Twice.
Nora stared at the screen without moving.
Then a new line appeared beneath the last sentence.
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