I never thought a single text could make my heart feel like it might combust. And yet, there it was, glowing on my phone screen, a notification from someone I hadn’t even dared to imagine might notice me: Samuel.
It wasn’t even supposed to mean anything. He was just that boy I’d seen in church on Sundays, the one who always smiled at everyone but somehow looked at nothing and no one in particular. The boy who sat at the edge of my vision during Monday lectures, leaning casually against the doorway, always impeccably neat, perfectly put together, a living contradiction to everything about my awkwardness. He existed on the periphery of my life, untouchable, untamed by the small, desperate rules I had set for myself. Until tonight.
Snapchat. His name. My chest jolted. I can’t remember the last time my pulse had betrayed me like this. My fingers hovered over the screen like I was afraid of burning them, and then I opened it.
“Hey, we’re in Veritas too, huh?”
Just like that. Four words that made the air in my tiny dorm room feel too heavy, too thin, and all at once. My roommates giggled behind their doors, probably wondering why I was muttering to myself in the middle of the night, cheeks flushed, fingers trembling. I didn’t care. I barely even noticed them.
For a moment, I thought I would faint from the absurdity of my own luck. Me. The girl who had spent years shrinking herself, hiding her laugh, quieting her voice in classrooms, trying to be unseen. And now, a boy I’d admired from afar for months—maybe years—was talking to me. Not a friend request. Not casual like. A direct message.
“Yeah,” I typed, trying to make it sound casual, though my hands were clammy. “I’m surprised we’re in the same class too.”
That was the truth, though I added a little smiley face to soften the awkwardness. I was already nervous that my inner turmoil would spill through my fingers like a confession I wasn’t ready to admit.
I remember staring at my phone for what felt like an eternity, watching the three little dots appear and disappear as he typed back. Every time they appeared, my heart skipped, like it had learned a new rhythm just for him.
“I didn’t know you came to Veritas. Funny seeing you here.”
I laughed softly, a sound that surprised even me. “Funny” was the most neutral word I could muster while my entire body buzzed with something I wasn’t ready to name. Excitement? Hope? Terror? I didn’t care to distinguish.
The conversation flowed easier than I expected. A few laughs, a few shared observations, and then an invitation: a night walk.
It wasn’t anything romantic, not yet. That’s what I told myself. But the idea of walking under dim campus streetlights, with the occasional breeze stirring my hair, the night air damp with the faint smell of rain and grass, made something inside me ache in a way I didn’t recognize. I wanted to say yes before I even thought about what it meant.
We met near the chapel, where the shadows stretched long and soft, and the moon painted silver halos on the grass. Samuel was already there, leaning against a lamp post, his hands shoved casually into his pockets. I froze for a moment, caught between the urge to run and the desire to sprint toward him, like a moth drawn to impossible light.
He looked at me and smiled—just a small, unassuming smile—but it carried the weight of certainty I hadn’t felt in months. I wanted to tell him how much I had noticed him, how much I had admired him from afar, how much of my lonely heart had been quietly saving a space for him. I didn’t. I smiled back. Words were heavy, too heavy for something this fragile.
We started walking, side by side, silent at first. I could feel the tension coiling in my stomach, the way my chest tightened with every step. But it wasn’t the nervous, stuttering kind of tension I usually carried. This was different. It was light and sharp, electric and terrifying all at once. It was the kind that made me hope and fear at the same time.
He spoke first, about classes, about professors, about something silly someone had said in the library earlier that week. I laughed, a little too loud, but he didn’t flinch. He just smiled, as though my laugh was meant to be heard, as though it didn’t matter if it was awkward. And maybe it was just that—awkward—but at that moment, I felt like he saw me. The real me. The version I tried to hide behind textbooks and tight-lipped smiles and carefully curated indifference.
And somehow, that was terrifying.
Because how do you love someone you’ve been crushing on for months when you haven’t even learned to love yourself?
We walked past the fountain, the water shimmering like molten silver in the lamplight, and I found myself stealing glances at him. He had the kind of face you didn’t forget, the kind of presence that made you aware of every inch of your own body. I noticed the way his eyes caught the light, the subtle arch of his eyebrows, the curve of his smile when he laughed at something only he found funny. I knew I was falling before I even admitted it to myself.
But I also knew I wasn’t ready. I wasn’t ready to be loved the way he might love me, because I couldn’t even love the parts of myself that hurt the most.
I tried to push it down, tried to focus on the walk, on the gentle crunch of gravel under our feet, on the smell of wet grass after a sudden rain. But the words came out anyway, small and cautious.
“I… I’m glad we’re talking.”
He looked at me then, really looked at me, and the weight of his gaze made me shiver.
“Me too,” he said. “I’ve wanted to… talk to you for a while.”
I nodded, words failing me. My chest hurt in a way that was both sweet and terrifying. It was the ache of something I wanted desperately but feared to name, the ache of longing before hope had a chance to take hold.
We stopped at a bench under a flowering tree, the petals drifting like pink snow around us. He leaned back, hands clasped loosely in front of him, and I realized I was holding my breath.
“Elara,” he said softly, using my name like it belonged to him. “You’re… different. In a good way. I mean… I like talking to you.”
I laughed nervously, not trusting my voice to carry anything more substantial. “I… I like talking to you too.”
And that was it. That was the confession neither of us dared to make in full. Not yet. It hung between us like the night itself, tangible, electric, alive.
I wanted to reach for his hand. I wanted to lean closer. I wanted to tell him everything I had ever felt about myself, all the ways I thought I was unlovable, all the shame I carried. But I didn’t. I wasn’t ready. And yet, I felt seen in a way I had never been before, and that was enough… almost.
We stayed there, under the drifting petals, until the air grew cold, and the night pressed against us with its quiet inevitability. I left before the end of the walk, my stomach tied in knots, my heart both heavy and impossibly light.
And even as I crawled into bed that night, staring at the ceiling, I knew something was changing. I didn’t know if it was love, or infatuation, or desperation. I didn’t know if he felt the same way. I didn’t even know if I deserved it.
But I knew one thing for certain: I had just glimpsed something that might save me from myself.
The next day, I tried to focus on classes. I tried to bury the memory of our night walk in homework, in notes, in the hum of fluorescent lights. But it followed me. Every glance at the hallway, every shadow that stretched across the campus paths, every laugh I heard from friends carried echoes of him.
And then, there was the text.
“Hey… want to walk again tonight?”
My chest nearly stopped. My fingers shook as I typed my reply:
“Yes.”
It was reckless. It was foolish. But I couldn’t stop myself. I wanted to see him. I wanted to hear him laugh. I wanted to feel the small, terrifying warmth of being chosen.
And as I walked across the campus later that evening, my backpack heavy, my heart heavier, I realized I was teetering on the edge of something I had never imagined. Something dangerous. Something beautiful.
I didn’t know that night that I was stepping into a love that would both save me and destroy me. I didn’t know that the boy I had been crushing on quietly from afar would become the person I could not live without. I didn’t know that in loving him, I would also learn the most painful truths about myself.
All I knew was this: I wanted him.
And that, perhaps, was the beginning of everything.