Secrets | In Their Eyes
Some secrets aren't walls. They're rooms where the keeper lives alone, waiting for a knock that never comes.
Here’s a short piece built around the phrase “secrets in their eyes.” secrets in their eyes
She closed the box, placed it on the highest shelf, and for the first time, felt no need to ask. Because now she, too, had a secret in her eyes: the quiet truth that some loves don't end—they just turn into something you can't say out loud. Some secrets aren't walls
She had known him for twelve years, but never once had she seen the whole of him. Not because he hid—he was open, generous with his stories, his laughter, his silences. But every so often, late at night, when the fire had burned low and the wine had gone to that quiet place between truth and sleep, she would catch it: a flicker behind his gaze, like a door left ajar in a dark house. Because now she, too, had a secret in
One day, after he’d gone—because even gentle men leave—she found a box in his study. Inside: a child’s drawing of a house with no door, a pressed flower from a country he’d never named, and a letter in a language she couldn’t read. No explanation. No note.
Not lies. Just secrets . Old ones. The kind that don't ask to be kept, but are too heavy to give away.
He would look at her then—really look—and for a moment, she thought he might speak. But he only smiled, touched her hand, and turned back to the flames. And she would wonder: What walks through your memory when you think I'm not watching?