Chapter one :An Unexplainable Pull

967 Words
I noticed him the moment the air changed. It wasn’t dramatic. No thunder, no sudden silence. Just a subtle shift—like the room leaned in without realizing it. I felt it in my chest first, a quiet pressure, as though my lungs forgot how to breathe for half a second. I looked up. He stood near the doorway, tall enough that the frame seemed too small for him. Dark clothes. Broad shoulders. Still. Watching. Not in a way that felt rude or hungry—just focused, like I was something he’d been looking for without knowing my name. I told myself not to stare. People walked past him easily, brushing his arm, laughing, living. None of them reacted. None of them seemed to feel what I felt. That alone unsettled me more than his presence. My fingers tightened around the glass in my hand. I should have looked away. I knew that instinctively. But something in me—something quiet and stubborn—refused. When his eyes finally met mine, it felt like stepping too close to a fire. Not hot. Warm. Familiar. His gaze softened, just slightly, as though he’d been holding something back and decided—against his better judgment—to let it slip. The corner of his mouth twitched, not quite a smile. Then he walked toward me. Every step was measured. Controlled. Like he was counting them. I tried to prepare myself for the moment he’d stop in front of me, but nothing worked. He smelled like night air and something deeper—earthy, clean, dangerous in a way I couldn’t name. My pulse stumbled. “Hi,” he said. One word. Low. Steady. My name hovered on his tongue, unspoken. I felt it there. The thought made my stomach twist. “Hi,” I managed, immediately annoyed at how small my voice sounded. Up close, he was worse. Sharper. Not handsome in a perfect way, but compelling—like every feature had been shaped with intention. His eyes were dark, unreadable, but alive. Too alive. “You look uncomfortable,” he said gently. I frowned. “I’m fine.” He studied me for a second longer than polite. Then he nodded, as if accepting a lie he didn’t believe. “I’m sorry,” he said. “I didn’t mean to intrude.” And yet, he didn’t move away. Neither did I. “I’m—” He paused, jaw tightening briefly. “I’m not very good at first impressions.” “That makes two of us,” I said before thinking. Something sparked in his eyes. Approval, maybe. Or relief. “I’m glad you’re here,” he said. The words were simple. Too simple. But the way he said them—like a truth he’d been carrying for a long time—made my chest ache. “You don’t even know me.” “I know,” he replied. “That’s what makes it… strange.” Strange was one word for it. There was something about him that made my instincts misfire. My body reacted before my mind could catch up. I felt safe and unsettled at the same time, like standing on solid ground that might suddenly shift. “What’s your name?” I asked. He hesitated. Just a fraction. But I saw it. Then he told me. The moment the sound reached my ears, a shiver ran through me. My heart skipped—actually skipped—and I had to grip the counter to steady myself. His eyes flicked to my hand, then back to my face. “You felt that,” he said quietly. “I don’t know what you mean.” He smiled, slow and careful. “You lie badly.” “Maybe I just don’t like strangers psychoanalyzing me.” “Fair.” A pause. “But you’re not like other people.” The words should have annoyed me. Instead, they settled somewhere deep, warm and heavy. “You shouldn’t say things like that,” I told him. “I know.” His voice dropped. “I’m trying very hard not to say a lot of things.” I searched his face for humor, arrogance—anything familiar. What I found instead was restraint. A kind of tension that looked practiced. Like he’d been holding himself together for a long time. “Why?” I asked softly. His gaze darkened. “Because if I do,” he said, “things will change.” Something in his tone made my breath hitch. “Change how?” He leaned closer, just enough that I felt the heat of him, felt my skin react as if it recognized him. His voice was barely above a whisper. “In ways you’re not ready for.” A warning. Or a promise. Before I could respond, he straightened abruptly, taking a step back like he’d crossed a line only he could see. “I should go,” he said. My chest tightened. The idea of him leaving felt wrong—sharp, sudden, like losing something I hadn’t known I owned. “Oh,” I said. “Okay.” He hesitated again. Longer this time. “I’ll see you again,” he said, not as a question. “You don’t know that.” A slow smile touched his lips. This one was different. Certain. “I do.” Then he turned and walked away, leaving behind a silence that felt too loud. I stood there long after he was gone, heart racing, skin warm, mind spinning. I didn’t know who he was. I didn’t know why he affected me the way he did. But one thing was already clear, even if I didn’t yet have the words for it— Meeting him wasn’t an accident. And whatever he was… he wasn’t just human.
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