
The city had quieted to a hum. Outside, the rain had thinned to mist; inside, the air was warm and slow. A candle threw its soft circle of light across her shoulder.
DH: You always think in stories. Even now, I can tell you’re building one in your head.
Lena: Maybe I was trying to remember the first time you looked at me without trying to understand me. You just saw me. That’s when I started loving you, though I didn’t know the word for it yet.
DH: You’ve always been the mystery, not me.
Lena: No. You’re the stillness that mysteries need to echo.
She turned onto her side to face him, eyes open in the half-light.
Lena: You want to know why I love you so much?
DH: Always.
Lena: Because you’re unafraid of my depth. Most men like the surface — the cleverness, the laughter, the stories about old rabbis and my grandmother’s Yiddish curses. But you keep listening after the jokes fade. You meet the part of me that doubts, that questions everything holy, and you don’t flinch. You just hold space for it.
DH: That’s easy to do when I see the way your mind moves.
Lena: No, it’s not. My mind isn’t easy. It circles, it analyzes, it grieves. You make it quiet without silencing it. You make me feel safe to be complicated. That’s what love feels like to me — safety inside complexity.
She paused, studying his face as if committing it to memory.
Lena: You came from a world where faith is action, not argument. You build, you fix, you believe in the strength of your own hands. I love that. It’s like watching someone talk to God through motion. You remind me that holiness can look like work boots and calm certainty.
DH: And you remind me that holiness can sound like laughter in the dark.
Lena: Exactly. That’s why we fit. You anchor me, and I keep you questioning. Between us there’s movement — not just love but learning. Every day, I discover new rooms inside the house of you.
She reached for his hand, fitting her fingers through his.
Lena: I love you because you make my mind rest without putting it to sleep. Because you meet my fire with steadiness. Because when I doubt the world, you’re still there, quietly believing.
He brushed her hair back, his voice low.
DH: And that’s enough?
Lena: It’s everything. You’re the place my thoughts go when they need to feel like home.
The lamp hummed faintly. The rain stopped completely. They lay together, not saying another word — her head against his chest, his breath steady beneath her ear — two kinds of faith keeping each other alive.
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