The Kiss Beneath the Setting Sun
Sasha’s lips parted.
Victor’s breath brushed against her skin, warm and unhurried, carrying the faint scent of the afternoon’s wine. The space between them—thin as air, fragile as silence—simply vanished. The golden light of the dying sun stretched across their faces, painting her cheeks with molten warmth and his eyes with glints of athyst fire.
Neither spoke. Neither dared to move too fast.
It was as if the world itself wanted to see what would happen. The birds had gone quiet. The wind had slowed. Even the leaves above them seed to hold still, trembling faintly in expectation.
Then they leaned in.
The faintest brush of lips—uncertain, electric, soft. Sasha’s heart stopped for a beat, then started again, wild and fluttering in her chest. The touch was clumsy at first, hesitant, like she was afraid to do sothing wrong. But Victor moved with quiet assurance, guiding the mont with the patience of soone who knew the rhythm of hearts better than words.
Her breath hitched when he tilted his head slightly, deepening the kiss by a fraction. The warmth between them blood, gentle but consuming, and the world beyond that single point of contact lted away.
Inside Victor’s mind, sothing flickered.
A faint chi.
Ding.
System ssage: [Emotional bond detected — mory synchronization threshold reached.]
He ignored it. Not now. Not this mont. The sound could wait; she couldn’t.
Her lips were trembling, unsure, but she was learning fast—responding to the tempo of his touch, the way he paused and pressed, the faint pull of her breath against his. For her, it wasn’t just a kiss. It was discovery—of warmth, of closeness, of what it felt like to matter in soone’s world.
And for him, it was... sothing else. Sothing fragile. Sothing that felt alive.
When they finally drew back, the air between them felt too thin, too fragile to speak through. Sasha’s eyes fluttered open, wide and glassy with a shimr she didn’t understand. Her breath ca unevenly, and her lips—soft and flushed—trembled as if still chasing his warmth.
Her cheeks burned. She tried to breathe, but her chest rose and fell too fast, betraying her.
Victor watched her quietly, a faint curve touching his lips. "You’re trembling," he said softly.
"I–I’m not," she protested, voice small, betraying the truth her body refused to hide. She pressed a hand to her chest, as if she could calm her heartbeat.
He chuckled—low and warm, like a ripple through the air. "You are."
Her eyes darted away, flustered. "It was... my first," she admitted under her breath, the words nearly lost in the wind.
Victor tilted his head. "First?"
She nodded once, shyly. Then, quieter still, "First kiss. First ti I gave sothing like that to anyone..."
Her words faded, but in her mind, they spun fast and loud.
What did I just do?
I kissed him... I actually kissed him...
Why did my body move before I thought?
Did he feel how fast my heart was? Gods, he must have...
Her hands tightened in her lap, and she turned her face away, hiding the blush creeping down her neck. But inside, she couldn’t stop the thought that kept looping back—I gave my first kiss to him. The boy I love.
Victor leaned back slightly, still watching her with that half-smile—gentle, knowing, a little amused. There was a trace of satisfaction in his eyes, but it wasn’t arrogance. It was quiet joy. He found her reaction... adorable.
"You’re beautiful when you blush," he murmured.
Her head snapped toward him, eyes wide. "V-Victor!"
"What?" He grinned, teasing just enough to make her face burn hotter.
Victor leaned back slightly, still watching her with that half-smile—gentle, knowing, a little amused. There was a trace of satisfaction in his eyes, but it wasn’t arrogance. It was quiet joy. He found her reaction... adorable.
"You’re beautiful when you blush," he murmured.
Her head snapped toward him, eyes wide. "V-Victor!"
"What?" He grinned, teasing just enough to make her face burn hotter.
"Don’t say things like that so casually!" she said, hiding her face behind her hands.
He laughed, the sound rich and genuine. "You started it."
"I did not!"
"You leaned in first."
Her hands dropped, her expression caught between embarrassnt and disbelief. "That’s—no! I was— you—" She bit her lip, realizing there was no winning this. "You’re impossible."
He leaned slightly closer again, voice low. "And yet you kissed ."
Her breath caught. "You—" She shook her head, speechless. "You really don’t hold back, do you?"
"Never with honesty," he replied simply.
Sasha looked away, but a faint smile tugged at the corner of her lips despite herself. The awkwardness that had clung to their early days was gone now, lted into the soft glow of sothing real. They sat quietly for a while, neither rushing to fill the silence.
The sun was almost gone, dipping low enough that the garden turned gold and rose. The air slled of grass and late blossoms, warm and faintly sweet. Sasha drew in a deep breath, letting it settle her.
Her heart still raced, but there was peace in it.
Victor glanced toward the horizon, then back at her. She stood slowly, brushing her dress, and turned toward the fading light. Her hair shimred in the dusk, and for a mont she looked like sothing from a dream—soone who didn’t belong to the world’s noise, only its silence.
Victor rose too. The shadows stretched long across the garden path between them. He took a step forward.
She felt his gaze before he spoke.
"Sasha," he said quietly.
Her na in his voice—steady, deep, and threaded with warmth—made her heart skip all over again.
She turned to him, eyes soft and uncertain. The last light of day caught them both, caught the faint smile on her lips and the quiet in his.
And there, with the sun finally gone, the world once again seed to hold its breath—
waiting to see what ca next.
Reviews
All reviews (0)