LOGINAmelia Carter has always believed that some lines exist for a reason. At twenty-one, she is focused on finishing university, working late evenings as a library assistant, and keeping her life quiet and predictable. Love is the last thing on her mind until Ethan Brooks walks into her world and turns everything upside down. Ethan is confident, guarded, and completely forbidden. Their connection is instant, undeniable, and dangerous in ways Amelia never expected. What begins as harmless conversations and stolen glances slowly deepens into something intense something neither of them should want, yet cannot resist. As emotions grow and boundaries blur, Amelia is forced to confront a painful truth: the heart does not obey rules. With secrets threatening to surface, loyalties tested, and consequences closing in, loving Ethan may cost her everything she has worked so hard to protect. Love They Shouldn’t Have is a slow-burn, emotionally charged forbidden romance that explores desire, restraint, and the aching question of what happens when loving the wrong person feels more right than anything else.
View MoreThere were rules Amelia Carter lived by, even if she never said them out loud.
Rules about staying invisible. Rules about keeping her head down. Rules about not wanting things that would ruin her life. That night, she broke the first one without even realizing it. The university library was quieter than usual too quiet, almost. The kind of silence that pressed against her ears and made every movement feel louder than it should. Amelia sat behind the circulation desk, her chin resting lightly on her palm as she stared at the glowing screen of the computer in front of her. Ten forty-seven p.m. Her shift ended at eleven. She exhaled slowly, flexing her fingers. Her back ached from sitting too long, and her eyes burned from hours of pretending to study while secretly watching the clock. Outside the tall glass windows, the city lights blurred into a soft glow, rain tapping gently against the panes. She liked nights like this—calm, predictable. Safe. “Just one more hour,” she murmured to herself, even though there were only thirteen minutes left. That was when the door opened. Amelia looked up automatically, already preparing her polite library smile. It froze halfway to her lips. He was tall. That was the first thing she noticed. Tall enough that the doorway seemed smaller around him. Dark jacket damp from the rain, sleeves rolled just enough to expose strong forearms. His hair was slightly messy, like he’d run his fingers through it one too many times. He paused just inside the entrance, eyes adjusting to the light. And then he looked at her. Amelia’s breath caught sharp and sudden, like she’d forgotten how to inhale properly. There was nothing dramatic about his gaze. No smile. No intensity. Just a calm, assessing look that lingered a second too long before he glanced away, scanning the room. Still, something shifted inside her chest. She straightened quickly, fingers tightening around the pen in her hand. Get it together, she told herself. Men came into the library all the time. Students, professors, strangers. This was nothing. He approached the desk, footsteps quiet against the carpet. “Hi,” he said. His voice was low. Not rough. Just… steady. Controlled. “Yes—hi,” Amelia replied, a little too quickly. She cleared her throat. “How can I help you?” He slid a book across the desk. Ethics in Modern Law. Of course. “I need this,” he said. “If it’s available.” Amelia typed the title into the system, her fingers betraying her with a slight tremor. She focused on the screen, refusing to look at him again. “It’s available,” she said. “Do you have your student ID?” He hesitated. “No,” he said after a beat. “I’m not a student.” She finally looked up then, eyebrows knitting together. “Staff?” “Something like that.” That was… vague. She nodded slowly. “I can issue a temporary pass, but I’ll need a name.” For a moment, she thought he wouldn’t answer. His jaw tightened slightly, like he was weighing something in his mind. “Ethan,” he said. “Ethan Brooks.” The name settled into her like a quiet echo. She typed it in. As she handed the book back to him, their fingers brushed. It was brief. Accidental. But Amelia felt it anyway. A strange warmth spread up her arm, unsettling and unwelcome. She pulled her hand back quickly, heart beating a little too fast. “Due back in two weeks,” she said, keeping her tone professional. “Late fees apply.” Ethan’s lips curved faintly. Not quite a smile. “Good to know,” he said. He didn’t leave right away. Instead, he leaned slightly against the desk, eyes drifting around the room again. “You work late.” “Yes,” Amelia replied. “Finals season.” “Makes sense.” Another pause. She waited for him to go. He didn’t. Rain thundered harder against the windows, filling the silence between them. She could feel his presence like a weight, heavy and distracting. “You always this quiet?” he asked. She blinked. “The library?” “No.” His gaze returned to her. “You.” Her stomach tightened. “I suppose,” she said carefully. “It’s part of the job.” Ethan studied her for a moment, something unreadable flickering in his eyes. “Well,” he said, pushing off the desk, “thanks for the help.” She nodded, relief mixing with something she didn’t want to name. “You’re welcome.” He walked away, footsteps fading into the rows of shelves. Amelia let out a breath she hadn’t realized she’d been holding. Ridiculous, she thought. Absolutely ridiculous. She shook her head, forcing her attention back to the screen. But for the rest of her shift, she couldn’t stop noticing him. The way he stood between the shelves, flipping pages with quiet focus. The way his brow furrowed when he read. The way he glanced up occasionally, as if sensing her gaze even though she always looked away first. At exactly eleven o’clock, Amelia stood, slinging her bag over her shoulder. She turned off the desk lamp and headed toward the exit. Ethan was already there, returning the book to the counter. “That was fast,” she said before she could stop herself. He met her eyes. “Didn’t need it after all.” She nodded, unsure what else to say. As they stepped outside together, the rain had slowed to a drizzle. The air smelled fresh, clean. “I should” she began. “So should I,” he said at the same time. They both stopped. A small, awkward smile tugged at her lips. Ethan’s expression softened. “Good night, Amelia,” he said. Her heart skipped. “How do you” “You left your name tag on.” Of course. “Right,” she said, embarrassed. “Good night.” He took a step away, then paused. “Be careful,” he added quietly. “This area gets empty at night.” She nodded. “I will.” He watched her for a moment longer than necessary. Then he turned and walked into the darkness. Amelia stood there, rain dampening her hair, heart unsettled in a way she didn’t understand. She didn’t know his story. She didn’t know why he felt dangerous. She didn’t know why her chest ached as she watched him disappear. All she knew was this Somewhere between the silence of the library and the sound of his voice saying her name, she had crossed a line she hadn’t meant to. And she had a feeling it wouldn’t be the last.People always talk about missing people like it arrives dramatically.Like storms.Like crying.Like songs that suddenly become painful.Nobody talks about the quiet version.The version where life continues normally—and that’s what hurts.⸻His flight left at 6:40 PM.By 8:15—she was home.Changed.Face washed.Phone beside her.Everything normal.Too normal.That annoyed her.Because she expected something bigger.Expected sadness.Expected emptiness.Instead—her room looked exactly the same.Which somehow felt cruel.⸻She sat on her bed.Opened her phone.Opened messages.Closed them.Opened again.No new message.Of course not.He was traveling.She threw her phone aside.Immediately picked it back up.Annoying.⸻Around 10 PM—buzz.Her heart reacted before her brain.Ethan.She opened immediately.One message.Landed.Her shoulders relaxed unexpectedly.Then another.This city feels colder.She stared.Then smiled.And replied—You’ve been there ten minutes.Seen.Immediatel
Monday. Five days. That was all. Five days before Ethan left. Three months. Different office. Different city. Temporary. That word kept repeating in her head. Temporary. Like that was supposed to make losing easier. Like temporary meant harmless. ⸻ She didn’t sleep properly. Not because she was dramatic. Not because they were officially together. But because she realized something uncomfortable— she had gotten used to him. Not in a dependency way. Not in a life-changing way. Just— she expected him to exist in her day. Expected seeing him. Expected hearing his voice. Expected that somewhere in the building— he was there. And now— there was an ending date. ⸻ She arrived at work early. Too early. The office was quiet. She sat down. Opened her laptop. Closed it again. Opened email. Closed it. Nothing stayed in her head. Then— coffee appeared beside her. She looked up. Ethan. He smiled. Small. Normal.
There was something nobody warned you about.Love felt private until suddenlyit wasn’t.And then everyone had an opinion.Monday morning arrived too quickly.She stood outside the office building longer than usual.Hand around her coffee.Heart strangely nervous.Not because of work.But because today felt different.Like something had shifted over the weekend and nobody had told her what.She walked inside.Immediatelyshe felt it.Eyes.Not all.Not everyone.But enough.Conversations softened.People looked.Looked away.Then looked again.Her stomach tightened.She kept walking.Head down.Desk.Laptop.Breathe.Normal.Everything was normal.Right?Exceptnothing felt normal.By lunchtimeshe knew.People were talking.Not openly.Not cruelly.But quietly.Too quietly.She heard pieces.“…thought they weren’t serious…”“…HR got involved…”“…didn’t expect him…”“…she seems nice though…”Her throat tightened.She hated this.Not because people knew.But because she suddenly felt r
The week after the mediation felt unreal.Nothing had officially happened.But everything had changed.People became careful around them.Too careful.Coworkers lowered their voices when she entered rooms. Conversations stopped halfway. Meetings became colder.No one said anything directly.But silence could humiliate people too.And she hated that she understood that now.She adjusted faster than Ethan did.That surprised her.She stopped waiting for him outside meetings.Stopped checking if he had eaten.Stopped creating excuses to walk past his office.Not because she stopped caring.But because she cared enough to make space.She thought it would help.InsteadIt hurt.Ethan noticed immediately.She smiled less.Spoke less.Looked at him less.At first he told himself she needed time.Then days passed.And suddenly he realizedShe wasn’t leaning on him anymore.She was preparing herself.By Friday afternoon, he couldn’t take it.He found her in the archive room organizing files.S
The first thing she learned about love was that it never announced when it was about to hurt you.It arrived quietly.Settled gently.Then one day, without warning, it demanded more than you were prepared to give.She felt that truth deep in her chest as she walked into the office that morning.Som
Amelia dreamed of raised voices.Not clear words never words just sound. Sharp. Endless. Crashing into one another like waves that refused to retreat. In the dream, she was small again, sitting on the edge of her bed, knees pulled to her chest, counting the seconds between slammed doors.One.Two.
The library had a way of swallowing sound.Amelia noticed it the moment she stepped inside, the heavy wooden doors closing behind her with a muted thud that echoed briefly before dissolving into stillness. The scent of old paper and polished floors filled the air, familiar yet grounding. It was the
There were rules Amelia Carter lived by, even if she never said them out loud.Rules about staying invisible.Rules about keeping her head down.Rules about not wanting things that would ruin her life.That night, she broke the first one without even realizing it.The university library was quieter






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