The Beginning of Us
Chapter 1
Zara never believed in love at first sight. She thought it was something people said when they didnât know how to explain their feelings. But the first time she saw Eli, something shifted.
It was a Sunday afternoon, and the sun poured through the stained-glass windows of their small church like honey. Zara sat in the third pew, scribbling sermon notes in her journal, when she noticed himâtall, lean, with a quiet intensity in his eyes. He was seated at the back, sketching in a worn notebook, completely absorbed.
She thought he was distracted. Turns out, he was drawing her.
After service, she lingered near the mango tree behind the church, waiting for her cousin. Eli walked past, paused, and glanced at her journal.
âYou write?â he asked, voice soft but confident.
Zara blinked. âYou draw?â
He smiled. âOnly when I see something worth sketching.â
She blushed, unsure whether to be flattered or flustered. That was the beginning.
Zara was 14 when she first saw Eli. He was the boy who always sat at the back of the church, sketching in his notebook while the sermon echoed through the sanctuary.
Eli was gentle, curious, and had a laugh that made Zara feel like the world wasnât so heavy. She used to tell him that his laughter sounded like a musical instrument. They talked about dreams, fears, and the kind of love that felt like it could last forever.
âI think I love you,â Eli whispered one night under the mango tree behind the church.
Zara smiled, heart pounding. âI think Iâve been waiting to hear that.â
They started talking after youth fellowship. First about booksâZara loved Chimamanda, Eli preferred fantasy. Then about musicâZara sang alto in the choir, Eli played keyboard when no one was watching.
Their friendship bloomed in quiet corners: behind the church, during cleanup duty, on long walks home. They shared secrets like candyâsweet, wrapped in trust, and sometimes a little dangerous.
Zara told him about her strict parents, how her mum believed love was a distraction and her dad thought boys were trouble. Eli told her about his older brother who dropped out of school and how he was determined not to follow that path.
One evening, as the sky turned gold and the mango leaves rustled above them, Eli whispered, âI think I love you.â
Zaraâs heart raced. âI think Iâve been waiting to hear that.â
They were young, but their love felt ancientâlike something written in the stars.
As she hugged him as they sat curled up under the mango tree, she could hear his heart pounding in his chest, and she let out a smile, knowing it was because of the confession he just made. âI love you too," she said, still snuggled close to him.
That summer was magic.
They spent afternoons reading under the mango tree, feet bare, hearts open. Eli would sketch her laughing, singing, even sleeping. Zara wrote poems about himâlines filled with longing and light.
One day they went to the beach, looking at the horizon and enjoying the sounds of the waves beating against the shore. They promised that they would be there for each other.
They never kissed. Not yet. But their hands found each other often, fingers interlaced like prayers.
They talked about the future. Eli wanted to study architecture. Zara dreamed of becoming a doctor. They promised to support each other, to stay together no matter what. They spent so much time together that it was almost unbearable to be apart.
But even magic has its limits.
Zaraâs mother noticed the change first. Her daughter was smiling too much, humming love songs, spending too much time at church even when there was no service.
One evening, Zara came home late from youth fellowship. Her mother was waiting.
âWho is he?â she asked, arms crossed.
Zara hesitated. âJust a friend.â
Her mother didnât believe her. She confiscated Zaraâs phone, grounded her, and warned her about âboys who donât have a future.â
Zara cried that night. Not because she was punishedâbut because she knew her world was about to change.
Zaraâs punishment didnât last long, but the warning lingered like smoke in her lungs. Her mother watched her more closely now. Her father barely spoke to her unless it was about school or chores. The mango tree behind the church became their sanctuaryâZara and Eliâs secret world.
They met there every Wednesday after youth fellowship. Eli would bring groundnuts or plantain chips, and Zara would sneak her journal under her blouse. They sat close, knees touching, hearts racing with every glance.
âI wish we could freeze time,â Eli said one evening, brushing a strand of hair from her face.
Zara smiled. âI wish we didnât have to hide.â
Eli looked at her, eyes serious. âIâll wait for you. No matter what.â
She believed him. She wanted to believe him. So she wrote in her journal that night:
âHe said heâll wait. I think Iâll wait too.â
It happened on a rainy Sunday.
Zaraâs mother found a note Eli had writtenâtucked inside Zaraâs Bible. It was innocent enough: âIâm proud of you. Keep shining.â But to her mother, it was proof of rebellion.
There was shouting. Accusations. Tears.
âYouâre too young to know what love is,â her mother snapped.
âHeâs distracting you from your future,â her father added.
Zara tried to explain, but her words fell like stones. Her phone was taken again. She was banned from youth fellowship for a month. Eli tried to reach her through friends, but nothing got through.
She cried herself to sleep for days. Her journal became her only outlet.
âGod, if this isnât Your will, help me let go. But if it is⊠please fight for us.â
Weeks passed. Then months.
Zara returned to youth fellowship, but Eli had changed. He was distant, quieter. He no longer waited by the mango tree. He no longer looked for her during service.
One day, she saw him laughing with another girlâAda, the choir soloist. They looked close. Too close.
Her heart sank. She felt betrayed. But more than that, she felt abandoned.
Later that night, she opened i********: and saw a picture: Eli and Ada, smiling, tagged #MyPerson.
Zara stared at the screen for hours. Then she deleted the app.
She didnât speak to Eli again. Not for weeks. Not for months.
Instead, she wrote day by day pouring her heart into her journal. There was a raging storm within her that needed to be still. When she thought of him, tear wells up in her eyes and flows uncontrollably.
âI thought he was my forever.â, She wrote in her journal, But maybe he was just my lesson.â
âGod, I donât understand. But I trust You.â
âIf youâre writing my love story, Iâll stop trying to edit the pages.â
Her prayers changed. Her heart softened. She stopped asking for Eli to come back. She started asking for peace.
And slowly, it came.
Zara didnât stop writing.
Her journal became a gardenâpages blooming with prayers, poems, and letters she never sent. Letters to Eli. Letters to God. Letters to the version of herself she was still becoming.
She wrote about the mango tree, how its shade still felt like safety. She wrote about the ache that lingered, but also about the strength that surprised her.
One afternoon, while cleaning her room, she found an old sketch Eli had given herâher face, half-smiling, eyes closed. She stared at it for a long time, then gently placed it between the pages of her journal.
âI forgive you,â she whispered.
Not for him. For herself.
She started singing again in the choir. She joined the drama team. She helped organize youth outreach. People noticed her light returning, even if it flickered some days.
One night, she wrote:
âIâm learning that love isnât just about holding on.
Sometimes, itâs about letting go with grace.â