Chapter One: The Girl In the Bookstore
Rain pattered gently against the tall windows of the city bookstore café. Outside, people hurried past in coats and boots, umbrellas tilting in the wind. Inside, the warmth smelled like espresso, old paper, and cinnamon muffins. A soft jazz tune hummed under the quiet murmur of readers and baristas.
Maya pulled the hood of her oversized coat back, shaking droplets from her hair. Her fingers were cold, and her suitcase wheels had jammed three times on the uneven pavement. But she’d finally arrived — her first stop in this new city: a secondhand bookstore tucked between two tall apartment blocks.
The bell above the door jingled behind her. She glanced around, shy but curious. Shelves stretched to the ceiling. A handwritten sign said: “Books are cheaper than therapy.”
She smiled.
“Need help with something?” a voice asked from behind.
Maya turned — and nearly dropped the stack of books she’d just picked up.
A young man stood there with kind, nervous eyes and a crooked smile. He wore a forest-green sweater, and his hands were already outstretched to catch the toppling books.
“Oh! Thank you,” she said, blushing. “I was just... overwhelmed, I guess.”
He chuckled, steadying the books for her. “It happens. First time here?”
“First day in the city,” Maya replied.
He raised his eyebrows. “Then welcome. You’ve officially made a perfect choice. This place is the city’s best-kept secret.”
“I can see that.” She reached out for the books. Their hands brushed. Just briefly — but enough to spark a pause.
“I’m Liam,” he said.
“Maya.”
They smiled, a little too long. In the silence that followed, Maya realized she felt... at ease.
“You like that one?” Liam asked, nodding toward the worn copy of The Little Prince in her stack.
Maya looked down, her smile softening. “It’s my favorite. It reminds me... not to grow up all the way.”
“That’s the best reason I’ve heard all week.”
They both laughed gently, and Maya finally pulled her hand away. “You work here?”
“Sort of. I volunteer. Or maybe I just hang around long enough that they gave me a badge.”
She tilted her head. “That’s either really charming or mildly concerning.”
Liam grinned. “Hopefully charming.”
He was trying to be casual, but there was something about her presence — a kind of quiet radiance that unsettled him in the most beautiful way. The way she looked directly into his eyes when she spoke. The way she didn’t rush to fill silences. The way she said so much with so little.
“So what brings you to the city?” he asked, guiding her toward the café counter.
Maya shrugged as they walked. “Honestly? I think I was running. From routines. From safe choices. I was tired of knowing exactly how my life would look in five years.”
He watched her as she spoke — not just listening, but absorbing every word.
She continued, “I don’t want perfect anymore. I want real. Messy. Scary. Worth it.”
Liam swallowed. She wasn’t just pretty — she was lightning in a quiet sky. Unexpected. Unapologetic.
“Damn,” he murmured before he could stop himself.
Maya turned to him, amused. “What?”
“That was... a really honest answer. Most people just say ‘work’ or ‘school.’”
“I guess I’m not most people.”
“No. You’re not.”
They reached the counter. He ordered her a vanilla chai without asking her preference. She looked surprised, then impressed.
“How’d you know?” she asked.
“I didn’t,” Liam admitted. “But it felt right.”
When they sat down at a window seat, rain streaking the glass beside them, Maya unzipped her coat and curled her legs up into the chair, as if she’d known this place all her life. Liam studied her like he was afraid to blink and miss something.
“What about you?” she asked. “Why do you spend so much time here?”
He looked down at the table for a moment. “I guess I’ve always liked stories more than people. But lately...” His voice faltered. Then he looked at her again, eyes steady. “Lately I think I just hadn’t met the right person to share them with.”
Maya didn’t speak. She just looked at him, and in that pause — that breathless space between silence and meaning — something shifted.
They stayed for hours, talking about their favorite films, the weird things they noticed about people, their worst dates, their best childhood memories. When Maya yawned, apologizing with a sleepy grin, Liam glanced outside. The rain had stopped. The world was misty and dark.
“Let me drop you off?” he offered.
“You don’t have to—”
“I want to.”
The drive to her apartment was quiet in a comfortable way. Maya hummed a song that Liam didn’t recognize, her eyes half-closed as she leaned against the window. He didn’t speak — he didn’t want to break whatever magic was in the air.
When they pulled up to the small brick complex, she turned to him.
“Thank you, Liam.”
“For what?”
“For making this place feel like... less of a stranger.”
He didn’t know what to say, so he just smiled. She opened the car door and stepped into the night.
She was gone before he realized her scarf was still on the passenger seat.
Liam picked it up slowly. It smelled like her — something floral and warm. He held it in his lap the whole way home, unable to stop thinking about her voice, her eyes, her honesty. His chest felt full and aching all at once.
And in that moment, he knew something had changed.