Her Silence Gets Too Perfect

A compliment lands and she gets very busy with the menu.
Not confused. Not shy, exactly. Just busy. The clasp on her bag needs checking. Her glass needs moving. Her phone screen gets tapped even though there is nothing on it. Everyone close enough heard the comment, and everyone close enough can tell she heard it too.
That extra beat is the giveaway. If she answers too fast, her face might do the talking first. So the “thank you” comes late, neat, almost too controlled. Her friend looks down. The waiter waits. Her husband catches the pause.
She Acts Shocked By The Attention She Set Up

“Really? I almost changed.”
That line sounds a lot less convincing after three mirror checks, a lipstick redo, and the pair of shoes she swore she never wears because they hurt. The cover lines are usually small. “This old thing.” “I just grabbed it.” “I didn’t think anyone would notice.”
Maybe she did not plan every glance. Nobody plans the whole room. But she planned enough to make one likely. Acting surprised lets her enjoy the comment without admitting she dressed for it.



