Lena blocked the doorway with her shoulder, folded her arms, and watched Vadim hustle around the bedroom. He crammed a phone charger into a leather briefcase, then added a fresh shirt as if he were packing for a sudden trip.
“Do you honestly expect me to buy the ‘urgent meeting’ story on a Saturday night, Vadim?” she asked, keeping her voice steady even though her patience had clearly thinned.
He didn’t even look up. “Lena, please—don’t start. We’ve got a contract burning with the Chinese partners. Time zones, calls, approvals—everything’s happening at once. If we don’t lock down the shipment details tonight, the company loses a fortune. You want us to miss our New Year bonus?”
“So it’s China,” Lena repeated, not with playful sarcasm, but with the kind of tired disbelief that comes from hearing the same explanation too many times. “Then tell me why negotiations require you to drown yourself in brand-new cologne. Does Zoom have smell-o-vision now?”
“Funny how ‘work’ always needs a perfect outfit, a perfect scent, and a perfect excuse.”
For a brief moment, Vadim froze. His shoulders tightened, and then he quickly replaced that reaction with an offended expression—like a man determined to look innocent.
“It’s basic hygiene, Lena. And it’s respect. We’re meeting at a restaurant, in a private room. I should look—and smell—presentable.”
“A restaurant…” she echoed slowly. “Interesting. Because I could’ve sworn you said the meeting was at the office.”
Vadim clicked the briefcase shut with a sharp, irritated snap. “We start at the office and then go to dinner. Enough with the interrogation. I’m doing this for us. For the family.”
He glanced at his phone, thumb flying across the screen, then added casually, “Oh—and I ordered a courier for you. Something small. Just so you don’t sulk all evening.”
Lena’s eyebrows lifted. Random gifts weren’t his style anymore. For the past five years, “romance” had meant standard tulips on March 8 and a cosmetic-store gift card on her birthday.
- He rarely surprised her.
- He avoided details when she asked questions.
- And lately, his “work meetings” had multiplied.
“What did you order?” Lena asked.
“A surprise,” Vadim muttered, still focused on the screen. “A bath set, your favorite gel, something like that. You can relax while I’m working.”
He stepped past her as if the conversation were finished, already moving faster, already mentally elsewhere.
Lena stayed in the doorway for a second longer, listening to the fading sounds of him leaving—keys, a hurried step, the front door—while one thought settled in her chest: the gift wasn’t meant to fix anything. It was meant to distract her.
In the end, what bothered her most wasn’t the “meeting,” the cologne, or even the flimsy story—it was how practiced he sounded saying it, as if he’d rehearsed every line for someone else.
Conclusion: That evening began with an ordinary excuse and a “nice” gesture, but for Lena it felt like a turning point—the moment small inconsistencies stopped looking like coincidences and started feeling like a pattern she could no longer ignore.