LOGINAimee has spent her entire life surrounded by luxury, expectations, and a name that opens every door. But when her father moves them to a quiet town, she chooses anonymity over perfection—hoping, for once, to be just another girl. Jayden has spent his life surviving. Between a broken home, financial struggles, and a future that feels out of reach, music is the only place he can breathe. They come from two completely different worlds. They were never supposed to cross paths. But one piano piece changes everything. #Slow-burn romance
View MoreAimee
The school was quieter in the morning.
Not the kind of quiet that felt empty, but the kind that hadn’t decided what it was yet. Like the building was still half asleep, waiting for voices to give it shape.
Aimee stepped through the entrance slowly, her shoes making a soft sound against the polished floor.
No one looked up.
There was no one to look up.
She adjusted the strap of her bag slightly and kept walking.
New schools always had a certain structure to them, even if she didn’t know it yet. Corridors led somewhere. Doors meant something. Spaces had purpose. She just hadn’t figured out which ones she was supposed to avoid yet.
That was usually the hardest part.
Not fitting in.
Just not standing out while learning how to disappear properly.
She turned a corner.
The hallway stretched longer than she expected, lined with closed classrooms and noticeboards filled with paper she didn’t read. The air smelled faintly of cleaning products, sharp and too clean, like everything had been reset but not yet used.
Her footsteps slowed without her meaning to.
She was early—too early for anything to matter yet.
That was the point.
Before students arrived, before teachers began speaking too loudly, before people started looking at her like they already knew who she was.
She didn’t want that here.
Not again.
Aimee walked further down the corridor, not because she had somewhere to go, but because standing still felt worse.
The silence shifted slightly as she moved deeper into the building. It wasn’t uncomfortable, just unfamiliar. At home, silence meant distance. Here, it felt like waiting.
She wasn’t sure which she preferred.
A faint sound broke through it.
Aimee stopped.
It wasn’t loud. Not enough to immediately identify. Just something soft threading through the quiet, like it didn’t fully belong to the building.
She listened.
It came again.
Piano.
Her fingers tightened slightly on her bag strap without her noticing.
The sound wasn’t polished. It wasn’t like the performances she had grown up hearing in large rooms where everything echoed too perfectly. This was different. Uneven in places. Slower. Like someone wasn’t trying to be heard by anyone at all.
That thought made her pause longer than she intended.
She turned toward it.
Not quickly. Not decisively.
Just… drawn.
The corridor changed as she followed the sound. Less light in some places, softer corners, a quietness that felt more contained. The school was becoming unfamiliar in a different way now—not because she didn’t know it, but because it was revealing something she wasn’t meant to find yet.
The music grew clearer.
Aimee slowed again as she reached a door slightly ajar.
The sound was inside.
She didn’t go in immediately.
Instead, she stayed just outside the frame of the doorway, careful not to let her presence be obvious. It felt wrong to interrupt something she hadn’t been invited into, even though no one had told her she couldn’t be there.
Inside, there was a piano.
And someone playing it.
Aimee saw him before she fully understood what she was looking at.
A boy sat at the piano, alone in a room that looked too large for him. Morning light filtered through the windows in pale streaks, catching on the edges of the instrument and the floor beneath him.
He wasn’t performing.
That was the first thing she noticed.
There was no awareness of being watched, no adjustment in posture, no performance in the way he held himself. Just hands moving across the keys like the sound already existed somewhere, and he was simply finding it.
Aimee didn’t move.
She wasn’t sure why.
Her gaze stayed fixed on him.
There was something unpolished about the moment. Not careless, but unguarded—like the room was witnessing something it wasn’t meant to interpret.
The music shifted slightly.
A pause slipped between the notes.
Then he continued.
His head moved faintly with the rhythm, dark hair falling forward in loose strands before settling again as he played. He didn’t seem aware of anything outside the music.
Aimee hesitated.
Not because she meant to.
But because something about the sound stayed with her even after it softened in the air.
It wasn’t unfamiliar.
Not entirely.
Her fingers tightened slightly around her bag strap as she tried to place it, resisting the urge to name it too quickly, like saying it out loud might break it.
Then it clicked.
She recognized it.
The melody.
Starry, Starry Night.
Something like that.
Her gaze lowered slightly, almost unconsciously, as the memory attached itself to the sound. Not from here. Not from now. Somewhere older, softer—something she had heard before without truly listening.
Now it felt different.
Stripped down.
Less like a song being performed.
More like something being remembered.
She didn’t step forward. But she stayed a moment longer than she intended to. Just enough to let it settle.
Then she turned away. And walked back down the corridor as if nothing had changed.
The school felt the same again as she moved through it.
But not entirely.
Something lingered behind her thoughts, quiet and uninvited, refusing to dissolve the way the sound had.
And she didn’t have a name for it yet.
AimeeAimee lay on her bed, her wrist lifted in front of her face, her gaze fixed on the red string wrapped around it. A soft smile played on her lips as she thought of the boy who had tied the bracelet on for her.He had been calm and gentle, and most of all, had surprised her.Aimee had expected him to reject wearing the bracelet. She had expected him to look at her funny and call her out, if possible, waking her up from her foolish dream, but he had been accepting. And not just that, he had worn it throughout the rest of the festival.Is he still wearing it now? she wondered, her eyes shifting to the clock on the wall. It was nearly twelve AM. He should be home by now...or could he still be working?He had mentioned to her during the festival that he would be clocking in for work right after it ended. She had thought it was at the pastry shop, but he had denied it when she asked, saying it was at a diner.Aimee had wanted to ask Jayden the name of the diner. She wanted to show up t
JaydenJayden felt overly aware of the weight of the red wool string around his wrist.Why did he accept it? Why did he let Aimee put it on him? Why did he shiver slightly when her fingertips grazed his skin?And why was he still wearing it?The festival had ended two hours ago, and Aimee had said goodbye before running off. He didn’t follow her, knowing she was likely heading to where the black jeep waited.Ever since seeing her get down from the car two blocks from Jacob’s house, and spotting the same car waiting for her a few blocks from the pastry shop, he had started paying attention to Aimee’s coming and going from school.She always walked into school, and always walked out on foot. He had never seen the car drop her off or pick her up in front of the school.He wondered why she did that. After all, there were students who were dropped off and picked up, so why was she hiding hers? But even though he wanted to know, he never asked.Now, two hours after they had said goodbye, he
AimeeAimee felt so full, but she knew it wasn’t because of what she had eaten. She felt full because of what was happening. Jayden holding her shopping bags, letting her hold his arm, quietly handing her whatever she wanted to eat, and also paying for them.Aimee didn’t know why those little things made her happy, but they did, and she found herself wishing for the day not to end.Jayden ate any other thing she offered him apart from sweets, and because of that, she stopped buying from the stalls selling sweets. She didn’t know if Jayden noticed, but she didn’t mind if he didn’t, after all, the festival would be more fun when they were both full.When they stopped in their class’s stall, Diane and Toby, who were the stall managers, were shocked to see them.Aimee only grinned and bought two pizza slices and two hotdogs. She had thought that as it was their class stall, maybe Jayden wouldn’t like to pay, or would rather want to maintain his solitude persona, and so she wanted to pay,
JaydenJayden had been surprised when Aimee entered the music room. With how much she had been looking forward to the festival, he had believed she would spend the day going around, stopping at stall after stall and stuffing her face with the things she bought.He never really enjoyed the school festival. After all, he never had anyone to go with, and besides, he would rather spend the day playing the piano and waiting for closing time so that he could check in for work.But when he received his payment yesterday, and as he put it into his savings in his new hiding spot, he had thought about today. He had thought about Aimee, and he had removed the money from his savings, hiding it on his person as he slept that night.When he woke up this morning, he told himself he did that because he didn't want his father taking the money again like he did before the field trip. He justified that reason for himself. But when he finished preparing for school, he still put the money in his pocket, a
JaydenThe sound of the bell was always louder than it needed to be.Not in volume.In timing.It marked the end of something that never really felt like it had started properly.Jayden closed his notebook slowly, not beca
Aimee“It’s nice to have you join us. Don’t worry, you’ll fit right in immediately,” Mr. Lance said as they left the principal’s office.Aimee offered a small smile, her head slightly lowered as she tucked a few strand
JaydenThe morning always felt shorter than it should.Not because time moved differently, but because there were moments in it that didn’t feel like they belonged to the same day.Jayden noticed that more on days he
AimeeThe school was quieter in the morning.Not the kind of quiet that felt empty, but the kind that hadn’t decided what it was yet. Like the building was still half asleep, waiting for voices to give it shape.Aimee stepped through the entrance slowly, her shoes making a soft sound against the po






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.