The sound of the rain hitting the windows was the only noise filling the house, and I hated it. I hated the silence that came after the chaos. Before, when my mother was alive, this house was full of laughter, voices, and sometimes arguments. Now, there was only an empty echo, reflected by an even greater emptiness inside me.
"Bella, dinner is ready," Clara called from the kitchen, her calm and controlled voice echoing down the hallway. She always spoke as if she didn’t want to disturb me, as if she was afraid of upsetting me.
I reluctantly got up from the couch. My steps were slow, almost dragging, as I walked down the hallway to the table. Clara had her back to me, serving what looked like soup. "You didn’t have to worry about me," I murmured as I sat down.
She turned around and gave me a look I couldn’t decipher. Clara had a way of hiding everything behind a calm facade. She wasn’t exactly cold, but she wasn’t warm either. Since my mother’s death, Clara had been kind in a distant way, as if she was walking on eggshells around me.
"You need to eat," she simply replied, placing the plate in front of me before sitting on the other side of the table.
I picked up the spoon but didn’t eat immediately. The smell of the soup reminded me of my mother. Clara knew how to cook well, almost as well as my mother. It was strange how something so simple could make me feel both longing and pain at the same time.
"I know things are hard for you right now," Clara began, her soft voice interrupting my thoughts. I looked up at her. Her blonde hair was tied in a simple bun, and her dark brown eyes watched me with a mix of concern and something else I couldn’t identify. "But you can talk to me if you need to."
I almost laughed. Talk? About what? About how my mother died suddenly and left me alone with a woman I barely knew? About how I was filled with anger and sadness and had no idea how to deal with it? Instead, I just nodded and murmured, "I’m fine."
Clara sighed but didn’t insist. She never insisted. And somehow, that annoyed me even more.
After dinner, I went back to my room. Or at least what was supposed to be my room. It used to be the guest room, but now it was mine because I couldn’t stand sleeping in my mother’s old room. Clara had tried to make it cozy for me—added some colorful pillows, bought a new desk—but none of it made it feel like home. I threw myself onto the bed and stared at the ceiling, listening to the rain outside.
My bedroom door was slightly open, and I could hear Clara’s footsteps down the hallway. She always walked slowly, almost silently. That annoyed me too. It was as if she was trying to disappear, as if she was trying to be invisible so she wouldn’t bother me.
But then she stopped. I could feel her presence outside my room, even though she didn’t say anything. I almost got up to ask what she wanted, but before I could, she turned around and walked away.
I lay there, wondering what she had wanted to say. Clara always seemed like she wanted to say something but never did. It was frustrating. I wanted to hate her. I wanted to blame her for all of this, but I couldn’t. She hadn’t done anything wrong. In fact, she was doing the best she could. But maybe that was what irritated me the most. She was too good, too perfect, and I didn’t want her to be.
The next morning, I woke up to the smell of coffee. Clara was already in the kitchen, as always, drinking her coffee while reading the newspaper. It was almost comical how cliché she looked. An elegant woman in her white shirt, with her hair tied up and a calm expression. She saw me walk in and gave a small smile.
"Good morning," she said, placing a cup of coffee in front of me. I muttered something in response and sat down. As I drank my coffee, I couldn’t help but watch her. Clara was beautiful, I had always known that, but there was something about her posture, about her graceful movements, that I had never noticed before. Or maybe I had noticed and just refused to admit it.
She looked up from the newspaper and caught me staring. I quickly looked away, feeling my cheeks heat up. What is wrong with me?, I thought. Clara is… Clara. My stepmother. Nothing more.
The rest of the day followed a routine. I stayed home most of the time, not really knowing what to do with my life. Clara worked in her home office but always took breaks to check on me. It was both irritating and comforting at the same time.
It was in the late afternoon that everything changed. Later, Clara suggested opening a bottle of wine. "One glass won’t hurt you," she said with a soft smile, pouring some into my glass before filling hers.
I hesitated but eventually took a sip. The warmth of the wine spread through me, easing some of the tension I had been holding. We talked about mundane things at first, but then the conversation shifted to memories of my mother. Clara’s voice softened as she shared stories about their life together, her gaze distant but full of emotion.
After finishing my glass, I got up. "I think I’ll take a shower," I said, stepping away. Clara nodded, her eyes lingering a moment longer than usual on me.
In the bathroom, the hot water ran over me, washing away the stress of the day. I closed my eyes, letting the steam surround me. It was one of the few places where I truly felt alone, where I didn’t have to think about Clara or the confusing emotions inside me.
I turned off the water and grabbed a towel, wrapping it around my body. As I stepped out of the bathroom, I was surprised to see Clara standing in the hallway, her hand raised as if she was about to knock on the door.
"Oh, I..." she stammered, her eyes widening as they swept over me. Only then did I realize the towel barely covered me, water droplets sliding down my skin.
"Sorry," I murmured, clutching the towel tighter. My face burned, and I couldn’t look at her.
"No, it’s… my fault," Clara said quickly, taking a step back. Her cheeks were flushed, her usual composure momentarily broken. "I didn’t mean to... I just wanted to ask if you needed anything."
I hesitated, but something in the way her eyes avoided mine made me uneasy. It wasn’t just embarrassment. It was something deeper, something that made the air between us feel heavy. Finally, I managed to murmur, "I’m fine."
I walked past her quickly, catching her scent mixed with the steam from my shower. When I entered my room and closed the door, I realized my hands were trembling. I leaned against the door, trying to steady my breathing.
But the image of Clara—her eyes lingering on me for just a second too long, the flush on her cheeks—was burned into my mind. I should have felt ashamed, but the heat in my face wasn’t just embarrassment. It was something else, something I wasn’t sure I was ready to admit.
On the other side of the door, I heard Clara’s footsteps slowly moving away, each sound echoing in the heavy silence of the house. My thoughts were in chaos, and my heart was beating too fast. Whatever was happening between us, I knew it was dangerous.
And yet, I couldn’t push away the growing desire burning inside me.