Chapter 10
Category:
Romance
Author:
AlizaWords:871Update time:25/05/26 20:01:18
I was reflecting on these three years when I looked up to see Ismael gazing at me with a melancholic look.
[Why hasn't she said, 'I love you' too?!]
[Twisted!]
[Screaming!]
[Crawling!]
He added to his previous words, "I don't like you. I love you."
A confession I had never heard in three years left me momentarily silent.
Ismael noticed my lack of response and grew flustered.
"I'm serious."
I took out the report again and handed it to Ismael, pointing to a line on it.
[Patient describes hearing the thoughts of others.]
Ismael looked at me, confused, and inwardly called my name again.
[Honey?]
I calmly accepted his mental address: "I can hear them, but Ismael..."
There was a long, long pause in between.
So long that Ismael's thoughts stopped altogether.
"I'm not your wife."
"First of all, we're not married. And secondly, we're over."
Ismael froze. "But..."
I interrupted him: "There's no but."
Ismael had always treated me well.
But it was just that—well.
He respected my opinions, never forced me.
But that was the most basic form of human interaction, not love.
I looked him in the eyes and said, "You love me, but I can't feel your love."
What was Ismael to me?
He was the hero who saved me from disaster.
He was the first party in the contract we signed.
But he was not my lover.
"Ismael, if my ability to read minds is real, the gap between your outward appearance and inner thoughts is too wide."
"But I can't feel your love."
"This isn't love."
The lover I needed should at least make me feel loved.
Not rely on the vague, half-real, half-fake feelings conveyed by mind reading.
I gazed intently at Ismael's face: "Let's leave it here. I'm getting out of the car."
The heavy atmosphere hung still in the small car.
He couldn't take it any longer and turned his head, signaling the driver to open the door.
I stepped out of the car and stood by the roadside.
The evening sunset hung low on the horizon, and the faint burn of exhaust fumes lingered in the air.
I watched as Ismael's car disappeared around the corner of the street.
Just then, through the glass window across the street, I saw him stopped there.
I looked away and stretched my arms wide.
The evening breeze was incredibly gentle.
It brushed my face inch by inch.
I suddenly felt that all the beauty in the world was just like this.
Without the restrictive three-year contract, I was free.