The meeting

355 Words
Rain danced on the rooftop as Zara Winters dragged her grocery cart through the narrow aisles of the 24-hour convenience store. Her hoodie was soaked, her shoes squeaked, and her mood matched the gray storm outside. This wasn’t how she imagined Friday night—broke, jobless, and clinging to the last ₦2,000 in her account. She sighed. One more cup of noodles, and maybe she'd survive until Monday. She rounded the corner, nearly colliding with a man standing by the coffee machine—tall, suited, and entirely out of place. His umbrella dripped at his side, and his tailored coat screamed wealth. She mumbled an apology and tried to pass, but his voice stopped her. “You dropped this.” He handed her a packet of biscuits that had slipped from her basket. She blinked up at him, caught off guard by the deep baritone of his voice and the piercing storm-grey eyes beneath messy dark hair. “Thanks,” she muttered. “No problem,” he said, with a strange smile. “Are you always this jumpy?” Zara raised an eyebrow. “Are you always this nosy?” He chuckled, a sound too smooth for someone in a midnight corner store. “Only when I meet interesting people buying three packs of noodles and a single mango.” She laughed before she could stop herself. “It’s a budgeting strategy. Don’t judge.” “I wouldn’t dare.” He extended his hand. “Jason.” “Zara.” They stood in silence, the store buzzing with flickering lights and distant thunder. There was something unusual about him—not just the suit or the smile, but the way he looked at her. Like she wasn’t invisible, like he wanted to see her. She shook the thought away. Men like him didn’t talk to women like her—at least not for long. But Jason didn’t leave. He bought her coffee. Then he walked her to the bus stop. And somehow, in a city that never stopped moving, the universe paused just long enough for Zara’s lonely world to tilt on its axis.
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