Fallen
Chapter 1
The rain had been falling for hours, a steady, almost purposeful drizzle that slicked the streets of London with silver reflection. Car tires hissed through puddles, taxi horns cut through the evening air, and umbrellas bent under the relentless wind. Evelyn Hartley tugged the collar of her coat higher, trying to shield herself from the cold, but the rain had already soaked through her sleeves and plastered her dark hair to her cheeks.
She didn’t mind. Not really. Evelyn had grown used to walking alone, to walking through a world that seemed designed for people who were born with doors opening at every step. She had her books, her small apartment above a bustling café, and a part-time job that barely covered her rent. Yet there was something comforting about the rain tonight — as though the city itself understood her, washing the grime of the streets over everything, leaving only possibilities.
Her boots clicked against the cobblestones as she entered the small corner library tucked between two old brownstone buildings. It wasn’t a place for the wealthy, or for the elite students she often encountered at the university. It was quiet, dusty in corners, with tall wooden shelves that smelled faintly of paper and varnish. And it was here that she noticed him.
He wasn’t loud. He didn’t announce himself with a swagger or a smile. He simply existed, standing in the poetry section, leaning slightly on a mahogany bookshelf, eyes scanning the titles with an intensity that made the air between him and the books seem electric.
Alexander Sinclair.
Evelyn had heard the name before — a man of wealth, of influence, though in her circles such names meant very little. He looked… impossibly composed, like someone who had never waited in line for a sandwich or watched the rain soak through his coat without a taxi pulling up at the last second. And yet, there was something raw in his presence that pulled her gaze toward him.
For reasons she didn’t understand, her heart thumped faster. She looked away quickly, pretending to examine a shelf of old novels, but she could feel his gaze. Just the faintest awareness of eyes on her, and the small, almost imperceptible tilt of his head in acknowledgment.
“Who even reads Shakespeare anymore?” she muttered under her breath, though the words were swallowed by the echo of the library.
Alexander’s lips quirked upward at the corner — a smile too small to be mocking, too deliberate to be casual. He didn’t respond; he didn’t need to. Evelyn felt it: the spark, faint but undeniable, that made the space between them electric.
She shook her head, exhaling a breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. Focus. She was not someone who got noticed, and she certainly did not get drawn into worlds of wealth and power. Not her. Not ever.
Yet the universe seemed intent on proving her wrong.
⸻—————
Over the next few days, Evelyn found herself in the same library at roughly the same time, conveniently, or so she liked to tell herself. She caught glimpses of him — seated at a far table, headphones in, reading some massive leather-bound book, scribbling notes with a fountain pen she couldn’t imagine owning. Every glance left her pulse racing and her mind wandering.
And then came the first real interaction.
She had reached for a volume of Keats when his hand brushed against hers. A soft collision, almost imperceptible, yet enough to make her yelp and step back, dropping the book. He bent with a quiet grace, picking it up and holding it out.
“Sorry,” he said, his voice low, calm, almost hesitant. “You first.”
Evelyn’s fingers brushed his as she took the book, and it was like the world shifted, the air thickening in ways she couldn’t explain.
“It’s… fine,” she stammered.
He gave a small nod, a glance that felt like acknowledgment of something unspoken between them. Then, he turned back to the shelves, yet she couldn’t stop looking.
Why was this happening? Why did the sight of him make her stomach twist in ways that no math test, no overdue rent notice, no long shift at the café ever could?
⸻
A week passed, and the library meetings became accidental, though neither spoke of them. Until one day, the rain came heavier, the city gray and relentless, and Evelyn found herself cornered outside, the wind whipping her coat open.
“You’re soaked,” a voice said behind her.
She turned sharply, startled, and found him standing there, coat draped over his arm, umbrella in hand. A gentlemanly posture, but not the kind taught in etiquette books — the kind that came naturally, effortlessly, as if he existed only to protect.
“I… it’s just rain,” she said, brushing at her hair.
He didn’t answer immediately. His eyes were thoughtful, assessing, and for a brief moment, she felt seen, entirely and completely.
“You shouldn’t walk alone in this,” he said finally. “Not that you’re not capable — but… it’s reckless.”
Evelyn wanted to argue, to assert her independence, but she felt small beneath the weight of his gaze. And somehow, that smallness wasn’t humiliating; it was… intimate.
“Thank you,” she whispered.
He nodded once, silent, then offered the umbrella. Evelyn hesitated, but accepted. As they walked, side by side under the same canopy, she realized something dangerous: she was enjoying it. She was enjoying him
—————————————
The library remained their meeting place. The rain, a convenient excuse to linger. The city outside buzzed, unaware of the small, fragile world forming between them. Every glance, every shared silence, was a step closer to something neither fully understood yet.
Alexander was a puzzle, perfectly put together yet with subtle cracks he tried to hide. Evelyn could see them if she focused — the tightness in his jaw, the occasional distant stare, the way his fingers drummed lightly against any surface when he was thinking.
And she, for all her carefulness, found herself drawn into that world of quiet intensity.
It was not love, not yet. But it was something, something that whispered in the spaces between heartbeats, something that promised both wonder and danger.
She didn’t know, at that moment, that this spark — this fleeting connection — would ignite a flame neither could extinguish.
And that flame would burn them.
Chapter 2: Beneath the Rainlight
Evelyn hesitated, caught between her pride and the strange pull she felt toward him. There was something in the way Alexander Sinclair stood — calm, unyielding, as if the storm itself bent around him rather than through him — that made arguing feel pointless. She looked down at her wet shoes, then back up at him, the drizzle catching in her lashes.
“Fine,” she said finally, her voice barely above the rain’s hiss. “Maybe… I’ll take the umbrella.”
He offered it to her without a word, the simple gesture more intimate than any conversation could have been. She slipped it open, grateful for the sudden shield from the relentless downpour. For a few steps, they walked side by side in silence. The city seemed to shrink around them, the usual din softened into a muffled hum by the rain.
“I didn’t know people actually read in libraries anymore,” he said, a trace of amusement in his tone. “I thought it was all digital screens and e-books these days.”
Evelyn glanced at him, trying to mask the way her heart tripped over itself. “Some of us like the smell of old paper,” she replied. “The weight of a book in your hands… it feels different. Honest.”
Alexander tilted his head slightly, as if weighing her words. “Honest,” he repeated softly. “I like that.”
They passed a streetlamp, its light slicing through the rain like a spotlight, casting a golden halo around the two of them. For a fleeting moment, Evelyn felt like she was in one of those novels she loved — the quiet tension, the soft brush of hands, the weight of unspoken words.
“I… don’t think I’ve seen you around the city much,” he said, his voice carefully neutral but not without curiosity. “Do you live nearby?”
She hesitated. How much of herself should she give to someone she barely knew? To Alexander Sinclair — whose very name seemed to shimmer with an unspoken promise she didn’t yet understand?
“Above the café on Whitmore Street,” she said finally. “Small place. Cozy.” She almost added, not for someone like you, but the words died behind her teeth.
He nodded, as if filing that information away, but didn’t press further. Instead, he let a silence stretch between them, long enough for the rain to feel like it was pattering just around their shared bubble.
“You walk a lot,” he said after a pause, almost as if it were a random observation, yet she knew it wasn’t.
“I… guess I do,” she murmured, unsure why she was answering him at all.
He glanced at her, a subtle smile tugging at the corner of his lips. “I could walk with you sometimes,” he said, as if offering a truce to her solitude. “If you want.”
Evelyn’s chest thumped so loudly she was sure he could hear it. She looked at him, really looked at him, and saw not the impossibly composed man from the library, but someone who… maybe, just maybe, wanted to be understood.
“I… maybe,” she admitted, the words tasting strange and thrilling on her tongue. “Maybe I’d like that.”
They walked the rest of the way in quiet companionship, the umbrella shared, the city around them fading into the background. And for the first time in a long time, Evelyn felt like the rain wasn’t just a shield — it was a curtain lifting, revealing a world she hadn’t dared to hope for.
As they reached her building, he paused. “Well… here we are.” His gaze softened, lingered, and for a heartbeat, she thought she might lose herself in it entirely.
“Thanks… for… the umbrella,” she said, fumbling slightly with her keys.
“Anytime,” he replied, with that same calm certainty that made her feel like, in some strange way, the world had always been waiting for this moment.
And as she stepped inside, closing the door against the rain, Evelyn couldn’t shake the feeling that nothing — not the city, not the rain, not even her own careful walls — would ever be the same again.
Chapter 3: The Edge of Something New
The next morning, Evelyn woke with the soft hum of rain tapping against her window. London seemed incapable of anything else lately—rain in the morning, rain at night, rain filling every quiet space of her life. But unlike the other days, this morning felt… different.
She lay there for a moment, staring at the ceiling, unable to stop replaying the night before—the shared umbrella, the warmth of Alexander’s voice beside her, the way he looked at her as though she were the only person in the city worth seeing.
She wasn’t used to being seen.
And she definitely wasn’t used to someone like him lingering in her thoughts.
Shaking off the feeling, she got ready for her shift. But even as she tied her apron behind her waist, she couldn’t fight the flutter rising in her chest… the strange anticipation curling in her stomach.
He won’t come here, she told herself firmly. Why would he?
She repeated the words until they felt almost true.
But when the café bell chimed around noon, it was like time stilled. The chatter, the clinking cups, the hiss of the coffee machine faded into the background.
There he was.
Alexander Sinclair.
Walking into her world—one of noisy customers, cheap coffee, and tables that wobbled when leaned on. His presence felt impossibly out of place yet perfectly deliberate, like he meant to stand here, in this small café, dripping rainwater onto its mismatched tiles.
Evelyn nearly dropped the tray in her hand.
He scanned the café once, found her, and that subtle warmth touched his expression—the same soft familiarity he had in the library, the same look that made her chest tighten.
“I hope you have room for one more customer,” he said, voice quiet enough only she could hear.
Evelyn swallowed. “Y-yeah. Always.”
He took a seat in the corner booth—her booth, the one she always wiped first, the one that somehow felt safer than the others. She walked over with a notepad she didn’t actually need.
“What would you like?” she asked, her voice steadier than she felt.
“Something warm.” His eyes flicked to hers. “Something you recommend.”
She blinked. “You’re trusting me with that?”
Alexander leaned back slightly, studying her with an intensity that made her grip tighten on her pen. “I am.”
She brought him the café’s best attempt at a caramel latte. When she placed it on the table, she noticed his hands—elegant, steady, but not untouched by life. He wasn’t as perfect as he first seemed. There were faint marks on his knuckles, small reminders that even men of wealth weren’t immune to the world.
Evelyn didn’t realize she was staring until his voice broke through her thoughts.
“You disappeared quickly yesterday.”
“I went inside,” she said quickly. “It was cold.”
His lips curved slightly. “It wasn’t just the cold, was it?”
Her breath caught. “I— I don’t know what you mean.”
He didn’t push. Instead, he lifted the cup and tasted the latte she’d chosen for him. His eyebrows lifted slightly, gently impressed.
“This is good.”
“I… I’m glad.”
A silence settled between them, but it wasn’t uncomfortable. It was warm. Gentle. Familiar in a way that frightened her just a little.
When her break came, she found herself walking toward his booth. She told herself she was checking if he needed anything, but Alexander simply gestured for her to sit.
“Ten minutes,” he said. “Sit with me.”
She hesitated.
And then she sat.
They talked—about books, about rain, about the way the city always felt too big and too lonely at night. He asked about her favorite authors. She asked what he always wrote in that notebook he carried. He didn’t answer, only gave a small, secretive smile that made her curious in ways she didn’t admit out loud.
“Why are you here?” she finally asked quietly. “Really?”
Alexander was silent for a moment, turning the question over in his mind.
Then his gaze settled on her.
“I wanted to see you.”
Her breath hitched.
“You don’t even know me,” she whispered.
“I’d like to,” he replied simply.
Her heart thumped painfully, loudly, impossibly.
Before she could respond, her manager called her name sharply from across the café.
She stood quickly. “I need to—”
“Go,” he said softly.
She took two steps away.
Then—
“Evelyn.”
She froze.
He was watching her with a different expression now—not soft, not curious. Something deeper. Something heavier.
“There’s something I should tell you,” he said quietly.
Her pulse stuttered. “What is it?”
Alexander lifted his cup, hesitated, then set it back down.
“I didn’t come here by accident.”
Her stomach tightened. “What do you mean?”
He held her gaze, steady and unblinking.
“I’ve known who you are for longer than you think.”
The words slammed into her like cold water.
“I— what?” she whispered.
But he didn’t explain.
Instead, he stood slowly, leaving a tip and the untouched half of his latte on the table.
“Be careful walking home tonight,” he said, voice low—almost warning.
“Alexander,” she breathed, “you’re scaring me.”
His jaw tightened. For the first time since she’d met him, he looked conflicted. Torn.
“Good,” he said softly. “Maybe you should be.”
Then he walked out of the café and disappeared into the rain.
Leaving Evelyn frozen in place.
And leaving one terrifying, electrifying question echoing through her mind—
How long had Alexander Sinclair been watching her… and why?………