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Silent rebellion.

  • Writer: Stefanos Oungrinis
    Stefanos Oungrinis
  • Jan 16
  • 3 min read

Updated: 6 minutes ago


Her husband was the national bank's number two, which explained a lot: the silence, the control, the habit passed off as ritual, like people with an addiction. He treated the table like an extension of his office—structured, predictable, and secure: every Friday, the same performance, same seats, exact wine, same movements. And usually, they traded compliments like business cards—slick, empty, transactional.


She was a ghost in expensive silk. She had perfect hair, teeth, fabulous jewelry, and no life in her eyes.


The others weren't much different—suits, watches, polished shoes tapping under the table like nervously. It was the perfect show, and no one wanted to admit they were part of it. Sometimes, they talked—monologues mostly, baptized as conversation. No one asked questions that mattered. No one risked an opinion that wasn't pre-approved.


The conversation stayed in the safe lanes: golf handicaps, board appointments, and vacation homes that sounded more like investments than escapes.


They wanted to be seen but not heard, definitely not questioned.


She never ordered for herself. He always did it. She never corrected him. Even when he got it wrong, which wasn't often—he studied her preferences the way he probably studied interest rates with cold efficiency. She drank the wine without tasting it and smiled, the smile that stretched thin across faces that never quite relaxed. When he spoke to her, it was in the third person. She'll have the ribeye. She prefers the Pinot as if she wasn't sitting there like a well-trained pet, predictable and polished.


But this Friday, something changed. She was late, late, in a way that disrupted the ritual. He checked his watch once, then never again, and the air around him charged with something close to irritation—or fear. She wasn't wearing silk, no jewelry, and no carefully constructed mask. Just a simple black dress, slightly wrinkled, and a pair of flats that made no apology for their comfort. Her hair was down, not in the smooth waves they were used to, but wild, careless waves, like a part of her that had finally refused to behave. She didn't wait for the ritual. She sat down, picked up the menu herself, and, for the first time anyone could remember, spoke before he could. "I'll have the lamb tonight," she said, her voice calm, almost too steady. "And I'll drink a Negroni" with London dry gin.


The words didn't slam into the table—they floated above it, heavier than any argument could have been. A silence followed, and the polished shoes stopped tapping. He said nothing. She said nothing more. But everyone felt something enormous and invisible shifting under the surface, a crack in the perfect, curated world they had all agreed to inhabit. And for once, no one knew where to look. I made the Negroni with an unexplained satisfaction, and I got out of the bar to serve it myself. Set the Negroni in front of her. She didn't thank me, not out of rudeness, but because this wasn't a favor—it was a choice. Her choice.


She lifted the glass slowly, as if to mark the moment. And when she sipped, something about her changed—not on the outside, but inside, where only she could feel it. Maybe it burned a little. That's what first sips do. She didn’t smile. She didn’t apologize. She just sat there, sipping something bitter and entirely her own. And for the first time, she wasn’t waiting to be chosen. This wasn’t a return. This wasn’t revenge.This was not a love song.


It was strange how something as simple as a drink could feel like a bridge between two worlds: the one she was leaving behind and the one she hadn't fully entered yet.


I wish I could have known what it meant to be her at that moment—the courage it took, the loneliness it demanded, the small, silent rebellion wrapped inside a single choice. It was the first real thing she'd done for herself in a long time.


The man beside her—her husband—adjusted his cufflinks. It was a small movement, but desperate as if he were trying to find control over something. Anything. He didn't look at her. Not really. I think he knew that if he did, he'd see it: the part of her that had returned, or maybe the part that had finally arrived.


And he wouldn't know what to do with it.

 
 
 

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