They left the blinds open. Now no one can look away.
Jennifer and Mark have a good marriage. They love each other. They're just not sure they know each other anymore.
When Jennifer spots their neighbor watching through an upstairs window at exactly the wrong moment, neither she nor Mark says a word about it. What follows isn't a crisis. It's something stranger and more compelling: a mutual awakening that neither of them can name yet, playing out in parallel, behind closed doors and open curtains.
Silhouette is an erotic romance told from both sides of the bed. Dual POV alternates between Jennifer and Mark as each privately chases the same unfamiliar hunger—the thrill of being seen, the intimacy of watching—while circling around conversations they're not yet ready to have. Their neighbor Erin acts as catalyst, mirror, and invitation, drawing each of them toward a line they'll have to decide together whether to cross.
This is not a book about infidelity. It's a book about desire surfacing inside a real marriage, and two people trying to follow it without losing each other.
Heat Level: Explicit. Voyeurism, exhibitionism, and mutual fantasy are central themes.
POV: Alternating first person, Jennifer and Mark.
Tone: Emotionally grounded, psychologically layered, with a dry wit and a strong sense of domestic intimacy.