
Iced Heart Found Love Beneath The Waves
Chapter 7
Retreat Urged by His Best Friend
The first night at the villa was quiet—almost painfully so. No city noise, no blaring ads, no distant honking of impatient traffic. Just the waves, rhythmic and relentless, lapping at the shore below. I wandered through the house, tracing my fingers along the polished wood of the railings, marveling at the way sunlight had faded into gold and deep purple across the living space.
The kitchen was small but functional, with a coffee maker that smelled faintly like roasted beans and a fruit basket that looked too perfect to eat. I poured myself a glass of water, realizing how little I had drunk today in the chaos of practices, calls, and appearances.
I carried it to the balcony, leaning against the railing, staring at the ocean as the waves glistened under the last light of the sun. My chest felt strangely tight, and not from exertion. From stress, from years of never stopping, of always performing, always being… seen. Out here, there was no one to see. No one to measure me by, no one to judge. Just me. And the ocean.
I closed my eyes, letting the sound of the waves fill the space around me. My shoulders loosened. My hands unclenched. And for a moment, I didn’t think about Instagram posts, contracts, or expectations. I thought about nothing, and it was… terrifyingly peaceful.
By the second day, I was already settling into a rhythm I didn’t expect. Kairo had left me with a short list of “recommended activities” that were vague enough to let me decide but structured enough to force me out of my own head. Surf lessons, yoga, cooking with local ingredients, exploring the coastal paths.
I started small, walking down to the private stretch of sand below the villa. My feet sank into the warm, coarse sand, the waves curling around my ankles. It felt absurdly luxurious—like the kind of thing I only ever saw in travel magazines. Yet here I was, alone, and… enjoying it.
As I wandered, I noticed the horizon beginning to glow. The sun rose in shades of tangerine and rose, and I caught myself thinking, I haven’t seen a sunrise this beautiful in years. My chest tightened with an unfamiliar ache—nostalgia, maybe, or just longing for a life less dictated by schedules and cameras.
And then I heard it—a soft voice from behind me.
“Beautiful, isn’t it?”
I spun around, heart thumping, half expecting a local tourist or someone else at the villa. But there she was. A woman, perhaps in her mid-twenties, strong but graceful, standing with her arms folded casually, eyes shaded by a wide-brimmed hat. Her hair was dark and pulled back, and she had a quiet confidence about her that made the sun at her back look like it was merely highlighting her presence.
“Uh… yeah,” I said, voice rougher than I intended. “Incredible.”
She smiled faintly, not in a way that demanded attention, but in a way that made me want to study her face, memorize the curve of her lips, the tilt of her head. “It’s mornings like these that make you forget about everything else. Even if just for a moment.”
I nodded, unsure why I was suddenly aware of how tense my shoulders were. Or how fast my heart had been beating since I first noticed her. “I… yeah. I get that.”
She tilted her head, her eyes meeting mine directly now. There was no judgment, no forced charm—just presence. “You’re here on retreat?” she asked casually.
“I am,” I said, though I didn’t elaborate. “My… friend dragged me here. Kairo.” I felt an unexpected blush creeping up my neck. “He promised it would be good for me.”
She laughed softly, like a melody I didn’t know I needed. “Good for you, huh? Sounds like someone who knows what they’re doing.”
I couldn’t help but grin, the tension in my chest loosening slightly. “He’s… persistent.”
“Good,” she said simply. “Sometimes people need that push.”
Her name was Rosalie, she told me after a brief, easy exchange. And I realized something instantly: she had that rare ability to make you want to talk, to reveal yourself, but without pressuring you to do so. I didn’t know why, but I wanted to tell her everything—my exhaustion, my constant need to perform, my fear of slowing down. But I didn’t. Not yet.
Instead, we stood together in silence, watching the sun climb higher, the ocean sparkling like shards of broken glass in the early morning light. And somewhere deep inside, I felt a stir—a dangerous pull toward something I couldn’t yet name.
Later that day, after a lunch of fresh seafood and tropical fruits delivered by a local vendor Kairo had recommended, I explored the villa further. There was a small meditation deck overlooking the cliffs, a hammock strung between two coconut trees, and a spiral staircase leading down to a hidden path that led straight to the beach.
I found myself drawn to that path, walking barefoot, feeling the sand and the heat beneath my feet. Every step loosened the knots I hadn’t realized I’d carried—tension in my shoulders, the tightness in my jaw, the constant weight of expectation. I realized I hadn’t even noticed how heavy it all had been until now.
By the time I reached the beach, the sun was high, the waves louder, more insistent. And I understood, with a clarity that startled me, how much of my body and mind were coiled in defense, ready for stress, ready for performance, ready for… everything.
I let myself sit, legs stretched out, hands digging into the warm sand, and just… breathed. Inhale. Exhale. Inhale. Exhale.
The ocean seemed to breathe with me, its rhythm steady and unwavering. And with each inhale, the tension drained out of me, carried away by the tide.
I didn’t notice Rosalie approaching until she was nearly beside me, her bare feet leaving small prints in the sand.
“You look like you needed this,” she said softly, settling down a few feet away without breaking my space.
“I didn’t know I did,” I admitted, voice low. “I didn’t know I could… feel like this again. Without thinking, without worrying.”
She nodded, her eyes on the waves. “Most people don’t. They get used to carrying it, thinking it’s normal. But it’s not. Not really.”
Her words struck something deep in me, and I felt an odd mixture of vulnerability and longing. The kind of longing that scared me because it was… not for fame, not for validation, not even for distraction—but for peace. And maybe, I realized with a jolt, for connection.
The conversation shifted then—small talk at first, about the village, the waves, the local food—but there was a subtle undercurrent, an electric hum in the air that made my chest tighten in a way I hadn’t expected. She laughed at something I said, and it was like sunlight breaking through clouds, warming the cold edges I hadn’t known existed.
And I noticed my gaze lingering longer than necessary, the way her hair caught the light, the way her eyes reflected the water, the way her smile made my chest ache in that familiar, dangerous way.
I was supposed to be on a retreat, learning to let go. But I realized something: sometimes, letting go didn’t just mean being alone. Sometimes, letting go meant opening yourself to someone else, even if only a little.
And maybe—just maybe—I was ready to try.
By the end of the second day, I was completely hooked on the rhythm of the place. The ocean, the sun, the solitude, the occasional appearance of Rosalie. Even the air tasted different here—lighter, freer.
When I lay on the hammock that evening, the sky a canvas of purples and oranges, I thought about how rare this felt. To feel alive without the constant pressure of perfection, without the weight of expectations.
And then I thought about her. Rosalie. Strong, mysterious, utterly grounding. She had no idea of the chaos I carried beneath the surface—or maybe she did, and that was why she was here, without judgment, without demand.
I let myself drift to sleep that night with the sound of waves crashing below, and a single thought looping in my mind: Seven days. Just seven days. Maybe by the end, I’ll be ready to see more than just the ocean… maybe I’ll be ready to see her too.
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