Chapter One: Unexpected encounter.

585 Words
In Seline's little, reasonable world, at least, everyone agreed that a girl from her middle-class background didn't meet a pampered, wealthy child like Michael. Not unless she was serving him coffee, which she just so happened to be doing. The smell of roasted beans was a familiar comfort in the busy café as Seline adjusted the strap of her apron. Her existence was a neatly crafted mosaic of carefully planned finances, evening classes, and early morning shifts. Every cent she made went toward her goal of obtaining an education that would enable her to leave the comfortable but occasionally confining surroundings of her family's home on the outskirts of Nairobi. She had been raised with a strong sense of independence and a steadfast faith in the value of sincere effort by her parents, bless their diligent souls. Seline kept according to those principles, taking pride in minor triumphs such as passing a challenging test or finally being able to purchase that new textbook. Her eyes strayed to the table by the window, where the very thing she wasn't was seated. Thorne, Michael. His name even had the sound of something that might have been on a golden invitation. His well-groomed hair contrasted with her own continually escaping curls, creating a pleasant mess as he relaxed in his seat with a fancy watch gleaming on his wrist. He frequently waved his hand boredly and muttered something barely audible as he ordered the most costly, complicated dishes on the menu. He treated the café employees like intangible extensions of the porcelain cups they carried, never looking at them or acknowledging the person serving him. He served as a constant reminder of how far apart their worlds were. In contrast, Michael lived in a constant state of mild annoyance. His days were a hazy mix of late mornings, pointless trips in his sports vehicle, and efforts to evade his father's constant "proposals" to join the family's vast real estate business. A luxury condominium in Westlands, a trust fund that guaranteed he would never have to look at a price tag, and the implicit expectation that he would simply exist and eventually inherit were all gifts bestowed upon him. His existence had become a golden prison, and he was bored—deeply and genuinely bored.The café's faceless bustle was a pleasant diversion from the oppressive silence of his own affluence, and it served as a location to kill time between one unfulfilling activity and the next. Only the hands bringing his absurdly foamy lattes caught his attention, and he hardly noticed the faces behind the counter. But it was different today. Seline came to his table with his customary ornate order on a platter. During a moment of distraction from a challenging calculus problem, her foot snagged on a loose floor tile. The tray was tilting dangerously. Time slowed. "Oh, no!" With a gulp, Seline prepared for the inevitable. But there was never a crash. Just before calamity struck, a hand that was shockingly firm and swift darted out, stabilizing the tray. It had been caught by Michael Thorne, the eternally aloof, easily bored Michael Thorne. When his eyes finally met hers, they were a striking shade of hazel. For the first time, Seline saw a glimpse of something she couldn't quite identify, not simply a pampered, wealthy child. Michael Thorne noticed the girl with the serious eyes and the flour smudges on her cheek for the first time. The latte, miraculously, remained intact. The silence, however, was broken.
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