The Collision
Ariana's POV
The automatic doors of Adolfo Suárez Madrid-Barajas Airport slid open, and the Spanish winter hit me like a slap to the face. It wasn't just the cold; it was the air of a new life.
I gripped the handle of my oversized suitcase, my knuckles turning white. December 15th. I had made it.
People rushed past me—families reuniting, couples holding hands, businessmen barking into phones—but I stood frozen near the curb, a small island in a chaotic sea of coats and scarves. A giant Christmas tree glittered near the taxi stand, its lights blurring as my eyes stung.
*Don’t cry, Ariana. You promised Mom you wouldn’t cry.*
I closed my eyes, inhaling the scent of jet fuel and roasted chestnuts, letting the memory of the goodbye at the terminal back home wash over me.
*“Go,”* my mother, Isabella, had whispered, her hands cupping my face. She looked younger than her forty years, her eyes finally bright again after five years of shadows. *“Ari, look at me. Michael is taking me to the cabin for Christmas. If you stay, I’ll worry about you. If you go, I can finally fall in love again without feeling guilty that I’m leaving my little girl behind.”*
Michael Reyes, the man who had finally put a genuine smile on her face after Dad died, had stood behind her, his hand resting reassuringly on her shoulder. He was a good man. Stable. Safe.
Safe was boring. I didn’t want safe anymore.
I adjusted my scarf, the wool scratching against my neck. I had spent the last five years being the "good daughter." The one who stayed home on Friday nights to watch movies with her grieving mother. The one who studied nursing until her eyes burned because she wanted to save lives after failing to save her father’s.
I had been so good. And look where it got me.
My mind betrayed me, flashing back to *that* night six months ago. The red lace bodysuit I’d spent a fortune on. The key to Tyler’s apartment trembling in my hand. I had wanted to give him everything—my virginity, my trust, my future. I had walked in, heart hammering a frantic rhythm against my ribs, only to hear the sounds.
The wet, animalistic sounds of skin slapping against skin.
I didn't scream. I didn't throw things. I had just stood there, the expensive lace feeling like barbed wire against my skin, watching Tyler bury his face in a blonde girl’s neck—a girl who definitely wasn't me.
*“You’re just too… stiff, Ari,”* he had told me later, as if his infidelity was a performance review. *“I needed something wild.”*
Wild.
I looked down at my sensible boots and my neat coat. I wasn't wild. I was Ariana Cole. I was organized. I was the girl who followed the rules.
But here I was, standing in a foreign country, thousands of miles away from the wreckage of my heart, waiting for a girl I had never actually met in person.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. A text from *Cami*.
**Cami:** *PARKING THE CAR! DON'T MOVE! I’M SCREAMING!!! I CAN’T BELIEVE YOU’RE HERE!*
I smiled, the first genuine smile in twenty-four hours. Camila López. My soulmate. My trauma twin. We had found each other on a grief forum five years ago—two eighteen-year-olds who had lost a parent within months of each other. My dad to a heart attack, her mom to cancer. We had typed our souls out to each other across the Atlantic, filling the voids in our hearts with late-night video calls and endless messages.
She was the rich, chaotic, free-spirited daughter of a famous doctor. I was the scholarship girl with a plan. We made no sense, which was why we made perfect sense.
"Okay, Ariana," I whispered to myself, exhaling a plume of white mist. "New city. New job. New you."
I checked my watch. I needed to fix my hair before Cami saw me. I turned sharply, intending to head back toward the glass reflection of the sliding doors—
*BAM.*
It felt like hitting a brick wall.
The impact knocked the breath out of my lungs. My shoulder screamed in protest as I stumbled back, my boots slipping on the icy pavement. My suitcase wobbled and tipped over with a loud *thud*.
The person who hit me didn't even stumble. He barely slowed down.
The sheer rudeness of it ignited a fuse inside me. The jet lag, the anxiety, the lingering anger at Tyler—it all boiled over.
"Hey!" I snapped, finding my balance. "Watch where you're going, douchebag!"
The man stopped.
The air around us seemed to drop ten degrees. He wasn't just a man; he was a towering figure in a charcoal bespoke suit that probably cost more than my entire nursing degree. He slowly turned around.
And the insult died in my throat.
He was… devastating.
He had to be in his early forties, but he wore authority like a second skin. His hair was thick and dark, brushed back with streaks of silver at the temples that only made him look more dangerous. His jaw was sharp enough to cut glass, covered in a shadow of stubble that suggested he hadn't slept in days.
But it was his eyes that pinned me in place. They were dark, bottomless, and cold. Like a predator looking at a rabbit that had just made a very fatal mistake.
He didn't apologize. He didn't rush to help me pick up my bag. He just looked at me, his gaze dragging from my boots, up my legs, lingering on my waist, and finally locking onto my face.
A shiver went down my spine, but it wasn't from the cold. It was a heavy, throbbing heat that pooled low in my belly. It was the same feeling I used to get when I thought about Tyler, but multiplied by a thousand. This was raw. This was terrifying.
"Excuse me?" his voice was a deep baritone, rough and textured like gravel. It wasn't a question; it was a warning.
My mouth went dry. You should apologize. I should look away. But the *'no nonsense'* part of me, the part that refused to be walked over ever again, lifted my chin.
"I said," my voice wavered slightly, then firmed up. "You almost ran me over. A simple 'sorry' would suffice."
One corner of his mouth quirked up. It wasn't a smile. It was a smirk. Arrogant. Knowing.
"You were the one standing in the middle of the walkway, *niña*," he drawled, the Spanish endearment sounding less like 'little girl' and more like an insult. "If you don't want to get hit, learn to be aware of your surroundings."
He checked the heavy silver watch on his wrist, his brows knitting together in annoyance. He looked agitated, a chaotic energy vibrating off him that whispered *emergency*.
"I don't have time for this," he muttered, mostly to himself.
He turned his back on me. Dismissing me. As if I were nothing more than a traffic cone he had inconvenienced.
"You—!" I started, stepping forward.
But he was already moving, his long strides eating up the distance as he headed toward the VIP pick-up lane, his phone already pressed to his ear.
I stood there, chest heaving, staring at his broad back. I hated him. I absolutely hated him. And yet, my skin felt electrified where his shoulder had slammed into mine.
*What the hell is wrong with you, Ariana? He’s a jerk.*
"ARI!!!!"
The shriek shattered the moment.
Before I could process the encounter, a whirlwind of faux fur and expensive perfume slammed into me from the other side.
"Oh my god! You're real! You're actually real!"
I was nearly tackled to the ground as Cami wrapped her arms around me, squeezing the life out of me. She smelled like vanilla and expensive shampoo. She pulled back, her dark curls bouncing, her eyes wet with tears.
"I can't believe it," Cami sobbed, laughing at the same time. "My best friend is finally in Spain!"
I laughed, the tension of the encounter with the stranger melting away as I hugged her back. "I'm here, Cami. I'm really here."
"Come on! The driver is waiting," she squealed, grabbing my fallen suitcase with surprising strength. "We have so much to do! Shopping, wine, showing you the apartment. Oh, and you have to tell me—why were you glaring at that side? Did someone annoy you?"
I glanced back toward the VIP lane, but the dark stranger was gone, swallowed by the black interior of a luxury sedan.
"Nothing," I lied, though my heart was still racing. "Just a rude local. Forget it."
Cami linked her arm through mine, beaming. "Well, forget him. You’re in Madrid now, baby! We’re going to find you a nice, hot Spanish lover who treats you like a queen. No more douchebags."
I forced a smile, following her toward the car. "Right. No more douchebags."
As I slid into the backseat, the driver slammed the door shut behind us—and the noise of the airport swallowed everything else.
Somewhere out there, the chaos of Madrid didn’t stop. And neither did my pulse.