The ad had made it sound like paradise.
"Safe locality. Peaceful neighbors. Ideal for couples."
The pictures were bright—sunlit lanes, trimmed hedges, families walking hand-in-hand. We were tired of the noise, of the constant clamor of city life. This was supposed to be a new chapter.
When we arrived, though, the air felt… heavy.
The street was eerily quiet. Not the kind of quiet that comes with peace—this was a watching kind of quiet. Like the walls were waiting to breathe. Like someone was already looking.
She stepped out of the car first.
Tight jeans hugging her hips, a loose shirt tucked at the waist, her curves effortlessly seductive even when she wasn't trying. And she never did. That was just her. My wife had a body that turned heads—full hips, a narrow waist, and a softness that made her look both innocent and dangerous at once. I loved how she looked. But here, under these eyes… I wasn't so sure.
I climbed out with a box in hand. That's when I saw him.
Across the street—an old man slouched in a faded plastic chair, nothing but a thin vest barely clinging to his shoulders and sagging underwear. He was still. Too still. His gaze, low and unblinking, was fixed on her hips as she bent over to pick up a dropped bag.
There was no shame in his stare. Just hunger.
I stepped in his line of sight, glaring.
Nothing. He didn't even blink.
I turned back to her. She had noticed. Her jaw tightened. But she didn't say a word—just straightened up and walked inside, the sway of her hips slowing slightly, as if she wanted to make it less obvious.
Or maybe she knew it didn't matter anymore.
As we carried boxes in, the illusion unraveled. The house looked decent on the surface, but every step revealed something a little off—paint that peeled when touched, locks that clicked but didn't really lock, windows that wouldn't fully shut.
Outside, kids—barely in their teens—sat on the sidewalk with cigarettes in hand and filth in their mouths.
"Hey a**hole, get me one too!" one screamed to another, punching his friend's arm.
They were laughing, fighting, spitting.
And not a single adult in sight.
Two men passed by around noon. Mid-twenties, tank tops sticking to their sweaty torsos. They weren't talking. They were gazing.
At her.
She was adjusting the doormat at our entrance, the stretch of her leggings pressing against her thighs, shirt rising just slightly to reveal the small of her back.
I watched them watching her. They didn't look away.
She did glance at them—just once. Her eyes flicked toward theirs, caught the stare, and moved on. No confrontation. No expression. Just that practiced indifference women wear when they're used to being watched.
That was the worst part.
She was used to it.
But I wasn't used to her ignoring it.
I wanted to say something. Maybe I should've.
That evening, as the sun sank behind the dusty rooftops, we sat inside, eating takeout on the floor, still surrounded by unopened boxes. I kept watching the front window, half-expecting another figure to be peering in.
She leaned back, her chest rising under the soft cotton of her tee, legs folded comfortably, hair messy from the move. She looked like a woman in a magazine—unknowingly seductive, effortlessly magnetic.
And yet, something in her eyes felt distant.
"Do you feel it too?" I asked.
She looked at me, puzzled. "Feel what?"
"This place… it's different."
She was quiet for a second, then shrugged. "Maybe we just need to give it time."
But she didn't believe that. I could see it in the way she avoided my eyes. In the way she stayed close to me, but not with me.
That night, lying beside her in our barely-made bed, I kept my arm around her waist. Her skin was warm. Soft. Comforting.
But my mind kept going back to the old man's stare.
The way those men had looked at her.
The fact that she didn't say a word.
Something was off.
Not just with this place.
With her.
With us.
Or maybe I was just overthinking it.
Maybe it was the stress of the move, the unfamiliar streets, the eyes that felt more invasive because everything was new.
She was right.
We probably do need to give it some time.
So I closed my eyes, pulled her a little closer, and told myself to let it go.
Just for tonight.