I wasn’t looking for love.
Just a distraction. Something… different.
I’m thirty, work remotely, and my social life mostly lives in the glow of a screen. One night, curiosity got the better of me, and I signed up for a hookup site for married people — the kind that promises privacy and no strings attached.
I wasn’t expecting her.
Her profile picture wasn’t seductive — just a quiet smile, a shadow on her face, and the words “I miss feeling wanted.”
I almost scrolled past. But something about that line felt real — human.
We started chatting. Her name was Laura. She was forty, married, with two kids in high school.
Our first messages were polite — cautious.
Then, slowly, we began sharing little pieces of truth — the kind you can’t say out loud to anyone else.
She told me about the silence in her house. About the man who used to bring her flowers but now only brought questions:
“Did you pay the bills?”
“What’s for dinner?”
And I told her about the loneliness that hides behind ambition — the kind that no one talks about because everyone assumes you’re doing great.
By the end of the week, she had become my secret addiction.
Her words made me feel seen. Wanted. Alive.
We met a few days later in a café far from both our neighbourhoods. She was wearing a simple black dress and sunglasses too big for her face.
I remember thinking how strange it felt to look at someone and realise they already know everything about you — except your scent.
The Affair
What started as curiosity turned into something deeper — something dangerously close to love.
We would steal moments: short afternoons, hotel rooms that smelled of her perfume, whispered promises neither of us could ever keep.
I told myself it was temporary, but I stopped believing it the night she whispered, “I wish I met you first.”
That line broke me. Because it wasn’t lust anymore.
It was everything love is — except the timing.
If you’ve ever wondered how people actually meet for discreet connections or forbidden romance, you’d be surprised how real it gets. There’s an entire world of people searching for moments like these — and sites that cater exactly to that. I even wrote about one of the most popular ones, Ashley Madison, and how it became the king of discreet dating.
That’s where Laura and I met.
That’s where everything began.
The Ending I Didn’t Expect
One day she stopped replying.
No goodbye. No explanation.
Her last message said:
“He found out. Please don’t write again.”
For a while, I kept checking that chat window — the one that started it all — expecting a sign, a word, a heart emoji.
Nothing ever came.
A month later, I deleted my profile. But not before seeing her account still active. Except now her profile quote had changed.
It said:
“Sometimes, you only realise what was real after you lose it.”
Maybe she was talking to me.
Or maybe to herself.
Either way — that night, I finally understood:
It wasn’t about being found.
It was about feeling alive, even if only for a moment.
