I Think Married the Wrong Man... Not Knowing He Owns Bangkok

That morning, the apartment was oddly silent, as if Bangkok had taken a deep breath and was holding it. Traffic droned beyond the windows, distant and softened, round and gentle like a lullaby, but inside Luna’s ears it snapped and crackled and buzzed. Sitting on the bed’s edge, the sun warming the wooden floorboards beneath her, she studied the thin gold band on her finger, wrinkling her nose at the way the light winked where it rested. It was modest, with no stones, no shells, and no tiny swirls of embellishment, bought with optimism, chosen by stubborn hope, rather than any promise of return. It was a symbol of the line she kept repeating (sometimes aloud) that true love was enough. She had to believe it; there was no space for anything else today.

Ethan was leaning on the balcony railing, looking down on the city as a smear of silver, glass, and stone. Bangkok was just a crowd of faceless humanity, sparkling and uncaring about one person’s life. His tie hung loose, his sleeves were rolled up to the elbows, a calculated impertinence after the cruelty they'd endured last night. A steadiness had settled to him now, a hushed gravitas, making it so she didn’t unravel when her thoughts spiraled loose.

She edged closer and tucked a stray curl behind her ear. He turned, and the instant his gaze caught hers, it softened. “Thinking about your boys again?” he asked, tenderly, with a hint of mischief.

Luna exhaled and leaned into his shoulder, shutting her eyes for just a second. “They say I destroyed my life,” she said. “That I married a sorry loser, who doesn’t have any needs or ambitions, or—” she snipped herself off and smirked. “Or money, I suppose.”

Ethan laughed, unaffected. He wove together their fingers as if none of that mattered. “I’m glad you married me,” he whispered.

She lifted her hand, so the ring caught the light. “Because of this?” she teased.

“No.” He shook his head steadily. “Because of you.”

And the feeling washed warm and deep. And for a moment, the sharp grin, the barbed words, and the barrage of unbelief that had spiked Luna’s mornings were all swept aside. With Ethan beside her, the world resumed the narrow focus of the balcony, the coffee-stuffed table, and the silence that stretched between them.

The morning grew precise and domestic and felt, so oddly, perfect. Luna cooked; Ethan did the washing up. There was a purposeful mildness to him, rinsing delicate plates with languid, practiced strokes, drying them with gentle, methodical pats. Every few minutes, his hand brushed hers, or he mumbled a phrase that made her grin. It was the sort of familiarity that was so extremely familiar that it was almost comforting, and it was beginning to fill corners she hadn’t yet realized were empty.

Then her phone buzzed with a message from her mother: Luna, don’t forget that shacking up with a loser who’s not going anywhere is a gamble. Remember what’s on the line. Short. Cutting. Predictable.

“They simply don’t comprehend,” she muttered, mostly to herself.

He crept up behind her and gathered her in against him. His chin brushed her shoulder before he pressed brief kisses to her temple. “They will never understand,” he said. “But we do. And that should be enough.”

She leaned into him, breathing him in like a charm. Outside, the world moved on. Inside the world was a silent, fragile peace. Then the doorbell rang out, loud and clear, a note that pierced the clamor. Luna stared; Ethan’s grip on her waist tightened by a hair, not dramatically, just protectively.

In the hall, the courier held an unassuming envelope. “For Miss Harris,” he said.

She took it, surprised at the cold thread crawling through her. She ripped it open on the counter. One page. The handwriting struck her like a physical blow, the loops, the pressure, and the repetition reminiscent of when Marcus wrote. The words: Congratulations have been received. We must meet. As soon as possible.

She shivered and whispered, “It’s Marcus.”

Ethan watched her carefully, her own collectedness unreadable in him. Yet, his eyes held something, something she couldn’t quite place. “Tomorrow,” he whispered. “We’ll work him out. Us.”

She nodded and allowed him to enfold her. His presence tried to smooth the cold thread of dread in her stomach. She took comfort in that for a little bit. Then she left him and went to the little garden beside her building. It smelled fresher. A few sparrows darted through the shrubs. Petals fluttered like wayward promises. She slipped her finger underneath the ring and balanced it on her thumb, drawing the tickling nick in its banks. “Love has to be enough,” she murmured, as if to tell herself it was.

Ethan pressed a hand on her shoulder from behind. He fingered loose hair and kissed her temple. Empty, deliberate, promised.

Her phone rang again. Vanessa’s name was carved across the screen: How quaint. Enjoy your little delusion. Don’t be terrified if reality intrudes. Too short, too specific.

Luna chuckled, tender and bitter. “They simply don’t understand happiness.”

“But you know,” Ethan mumbled, leaning into a sweet press on her mouth and nose, “and that has to be enough.”

A small mountain of washing and more cooking awaits them. Small, aggregated movements: a hand candy here, a shoulder bumped there, jokes a word here, a whisper a syllable. Luna hummed. Ethan listened like he meant to keep that fragile thing locked away safe. Those tiny stitches stitched up her hopes, weaving her back piece by piece until she was sure that love could clutch a person tight enough to keep them all right.

And then dinner was over, and on the rooftop, lanterns hovered above the two of them, casting lucent, amber light, and Ethan came to her, and his voice said, “Do you trust me?”

And she did. “I do,” she whispered.

Her phone sang it for her. Marcus: I am aware of your location. If you dare to believe that granting you your request is optional, then be prepared. Prepare yourself.

Her knees were shaking. Ethan’s face didn’t shift. The knot in her stomach grew colder; icy, electric dread sparked to life. Love is a power. She’d been holding to that belief, but at that very instant, she knew, in a bitter little tremor, that it might not be enough.

Cliffhanger: The city outside shone while the flowers swayed in the summer wind. Outside, pressing in too tight to breathe. Marcus was hunting; irresistible; methodical; he wouldn‘t stop until tomorrow had come and gone. And she? She had Ethan. Quiet, still, holding secrets Luna hadn‘t discovered. Whatever happened tomorrow would shatter illusions and reveal the truth, and everything Luna knew would cease to be what she knew. Tomorrow’s here. Everything is about to change.

Chapters
Customize
Next Chapter

You'll also like

Logo
Your guide to the best short dramas online. Free episode previews, full cast info, and links to official platforms — all in one place.
©2026 PinesDramas All Rights Reserved