Chapter 1-Long street lights

690 Words
Cape Town never really sleeps. Even at dusk, when the sky melts from gold to deep purple, the city keeps buzzing cars humming, street vendors shouting last-minute specials, and the ocean crashing somewhere just out of sight. Aiden Clarke watches it all through the viewfinder of his camera, narrowing his eye as he adjusts the focus. Click. Another photo. Another distraction. He isn’t taking pictures because he feels inspired. He’s doing it because the silence in his head becomes too loud when he stops. Back in London, photography was just a hobby. Here, in a city he barely understands, it’s survival. Aiden steps back as a group of tourists stumble past him, laughing loudly, the neon signs of Long Street painting their faces in pink and green. He slips his camera strap over his shoulder and blends into the crowd. He still doesn’t know where he fits in this place. A month in Cape Town, and he hasn’t figured out what to do besides take pictures and avoid thinking about the breakup that broke him more than he cares to admit. He lifts the camera again, taking a quick shot of the busy pavement, then.... Someone walks right into the frame. A girl. Not posing. Not noticing. Not even looking his way. Just existing. The type of existing that pulls his breath tight in his chest. Her hair is a mess of dark curls, bouncing as she walks. She wears a simple white dress, but she carries herself like the world can’t dim her shine. She’s beautiful, yesbut that’s not what hooks him. It’s the look in her eyes. Determined. Focused. Tired, maybe. But burning. Click. His camera captures her before he even thinks. She walks past him, fast, as if she’s late for something important. Aiden hesitates, lowering the camera slowly. Who is she? And why does he feel like he’s seen a ghost he’s supposed to remember? Naledi Jacobs doesn’t look back. If she does, she’ll lose time, and she can’t afford that. Her shift at the Sea Point café started ten minutes ago, and if she’s late again, her manager will give her another warning. Three warnings mean losing the job. Losing the job means losing her chance at applying for film school next year. She tightens the straps of her backpack and weaves through the crowd, ignoring the vendors calling her “sisi” and the smell of fried koeksisters drifting through the air. Her phone vibrates again. Thabiso. Her brother. She doesn’t need to open the message to know what it’s about. He wants money. He always wants money. And Naledi always says no even when it breaks her heart. She finally glances at the screen. I need you. Come home after work. Her stomach tightens. That usually means trouble. But she pushes the thought down. She has a job to get to. A life to build. A future to fight for. She crosses the street quickly then stops for half a second as a strange feeling washes over her. Like someone’s watching. Like the world paused on a single frame. She turns her head slightly. A boy stands across the road, holding a camera. His eyes meet hers, and for a moment everything else becomes background noise. He looks… lost. Soft. Sad in a way that reminds her of people who’ve loved too deeply and got hurt for it. She looks away before the moment can become something risky. And she keeps walking. Aiden lowers his camera again. She looked at him. Just for a second. But it felt like she saw straight through the wall he keeps around himself. He checks the photo he took. Perfect. Accidental, but perfect. He zooms in on her face, the warm street lights catching the gold in her eyes. “Who are you?” he whispers to himself. For the first time in a long time, the weight in his chest doesn’t feel so heavy. He presses the photo button again, saving the image like he’s afraid it might disappear. Maybe coming to Cape Town wasn’t just running away. Maybe it was running toward something. Or someone.
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