She stepped out of the shower bare, relaxed, and unguarded, trusting the moment and the man in front of her.
Then came the joke—about the open curtains, the neighbors, her body—and the air shifted. She laughed, but it was the kind of laugh that smooths over a bruise before it shows.
He hadn’t meant to hurt her. The truth slipped out wrapped in humor, chosen too quickly, carelessly. In that split second, he picked wit over tenderness, honesty without protection. Attraction, aging, insecurity—all of it stood exposed between them.
Her laughter saved the moment, but not without leaving a mark they both felt. It was small, almost invisible, yet powerful enough to linger. Moments like that don’t end marriages; they quietly rewrite them.
Later, it would become a story they told with equal parts smile and sting. Because love doesn’t last by never causing pain—it lasts by learning when to soften words, when to apologize, and how to find each other again after the line has been crossed.