(Approx. 1,370 characters - well within limits)
Two strangers. One building. A thousand unspoken desires.
In the heart of a sleek, glass-clad commercial complex, their paths cross. He's quiet, deliberate, unknowable-a man who never rushes, never reveals. She's poised, magnetic, always one step ahead of curiosity. They don't speak. They don't need to.
Every glance is a paragraph. Every brush of fingers, a sentence. And in the hush between them, something fragile begins to smoulder.
Lucian notices the anklet she wears. The lace under her blouse. The scent that lingers in the elevator. Aria sees the way he watches without staring, listens without asking, waits without moving. Their smoke breaks become sacred. Their silences, intimate. But when the quiet is finally broken by one stolen kiss, their world tips.
Is it love, or is it the longing that silence allows?
As the city moves around them, their connection deepens-wordless, want-filled, dangerous. But with every step closer, old fears threaten to resurface. Because love like this doesn't come without consequences. And surrender, even in silence, is never simple.
In Silence She Comes is a slow-burn, emotionally charged romance about restraint, intimacy, and what it means to be chosen-not with words, but with presence. For readers who believe that the loudest confessions happen in whispers.
Autorentext
The author behind In Silence She Comes prefers the quiet corners of storytelling?where longing lives in glances, and silence speaks louder than touch. A creative by day and a romantic by instinct, they write for the reader who knows the weight of almost, the ache of what goes unspoken.
Drawn to the tension between control and surrender, their work explores intimacy not through fireworks, but through the slow burn of shared breath, unsent messages, and magnetic restraint.
When not writing, they're known to romanticise morning light, sip coffee that always goes cold, and imagine entire love stories that begin with eye contact and end with a choice.
In Silence She Comes, their debut in fiction?but not in emotional honesty.