
Rain tapped softly against the windows of the little bookstore on Rose Lane when Amina first met Yusuf.She had rushed inside only to escape the storm, clutching her tote bag against her chest while droplets slid from her hijab onto the wooden floor. The bookstore smelled of old paper, coffee, and jasmine candles. Warm. Quiet. Safe.“Careful,” a voice said gently.A stack of books tilted beside her. Before they could fall, a tall boy in a dark green sweater caught them with one hand.“You just saved literature,” Amina said, laughing nervously.“And possibly my job,” he replied with a smile.That smile stayed in her mind longer than she wanted to admit.Yusuf worked there every evening after university. Over the next few weeks, Amina found reasons to return. Sometimes she bought books she didn’t need. Sometimes she sat near the poetry shelf pretending to read while secretly listening to him recommend novels to customers.He always noticed her.“One coffee and one romance novel?” he teased one evening. “You’re becoming predictable.”“Maybe I like predictable things.”“Do you?” His eyes lingered on hers for a second too long.After that, everything changed quietly.He began saving books for her. She began bringing him homemade cookies. They argued about endings, shared playlists, and watched rainstorms from the shop window after closing hours.One night, the electricity went out during heavy rain.The bookstore fell dark except for tiny golden lights from the street outside. Amina stood frozen between shelves while thunder echoed overhead.“You scared?” Yusuf asked softly.“A little.”He lit a candle and placed it between them. The warm glow danced across his face.“You know,” he said, “I think storms are beautiful.”“Why?”“Because they make people stay.”Silence wrapped around them.Outside, the rain poured endlessly. Inside, the world felt impossibly small — just candlelight, books, and two hearts beating too loudly.Amina looked down at the novel in her hands. “Do all love stories begin in bookstores?”“No,” Yusuf said quietly.“Then where?”He stepped closer, close enough that she could hear the softness in his breathing.“Sometimes,” he whispered, “they begin the moment one person decides they never want another person to leave.”Her heart stumbled.The thunder faded into the distance. Somewhere between the shelves of forgotten stories, surrounded by thousands of love stories written by strangers, Amina realized her own had just begun.

