LOGINThe 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 kind of quiet that felt intentional, like the building itself demanded reverence. She adjusted the strap of her bag on her shoulder and exhaled slowly. This was supposed to be her safe place. Yet today, her chest felt strangely tight. She told herself it was exhaustion the late night, the restless thoughts, the way her mind refused to settle. But deep down, she knew that wasn’t the truth. The truth had a name. And a face. And a voice she had only heard once, yet it lingered as if it had etched itself into her memory. Ethan. She hadn’t expected to see him again so soon. She walked toward the literature section, her fingers grazing the spines of familiar books as she passed. Normally, this ritual soothed her the order, the predictability, the quiet companionship of words that never judged her. Today, though, she felt like an intruder in her own sanctuary. Her mind replayed yesterday’s encounter uninvited. The way he had looked at her not like he was staring, but like he was listening without sound. The calm in his posture, the restraint in his movements. The way he had spoken her name only once, yet it had felt… weighted. She shook her head slightly, as if that might dislodge the memory. You’re overthinking, she told herself. She pulled a book from the shelf and settled into one of the wooden chairs by the window, sunlight filtering through the tall glass panes. Outside, students moved freely, laughing, talking, living loudly. Inside, Amelia felt suspended caught between wanting to disappear and wanting something she couldn’t quite name. She opened the book but didn’t read. Instead, she stared at the page, the words blurring together as her thoughts drifted. It had been a long time since anyone unsettled her like this. Not because she lacked attention she had learned early on how to become invisible in plain sight. She spoke softly. She smiled politely. She kept her boundaries firm. Men came and went in her life like background noise, never quite reaching her heart. But Ethan had. And that scared her more than she was willing to admit. A soft sound broke through her thoughts footsteps. Measured. Unhurried. Her heart skipped before her mind could catch up. She didn’t look up immediately. She didn’t need to. Something in her knew. The chair across from her shifted slightly. Amelia’s breath hitched. “Good morning,” a familiar voice said quietly. She looked up then. Ethan stood there, one hand resting on the back of the chair, his expression calm but unreadable. He wasn’t smiling, but there was something warm in his eyes something patient, like he wasn’t in a rush to be anywhere else. “Hi,” she replied, her voice softer than she intended. He gestured toward the seat. “May I?” She nodded. As he sat, the space between them felt charged, like the air itself had grown heavier. He smelled faintly of something clean soap, maybe, or paper and Amelia suddenly became acutely aware of herself. The way she sat. The way her hands rested on the table. The way her heartbeat refused to slow. “I didn’t expect to see you today,” she said, more to fill the silence than because she needed an answer. He glanced at the book in front of her. “I could say the same. But I was hoping.” Her fingers curled slightly against the page. “Hoping?” she echoed. He met her gaze then, fully. “Yes.” No explanation. No embellishment. Just the truth, laid bare. Amelia swallowed. There was something dangerously honest about him. Something that made her feel seen in a way she wasn’t prepared for. She wasn’t used to men who didn’t perform, didn’t posture, didn’t push. That made him harder to read. “What are you studying?” he asked. “Literature,” she replied. “Final year.” His brows lifted slightly. “That explains the intensity.” She almost smiled. “Intensity?” “You read like someone searching for answers.” Her breath caught. “That’s a strange thing to say.” “Is it wrong?” She hesitated. “No. Just… accurate.” Silence settled between them again, but it wasn’t uncomfortable. It felt deliberate. Shared. Outside, laughter drifted in through the windows. Inside, Amelia felt like she was standing at the edge of something she couldn’t name. “Can I ask you something?” Ethan said. She nodded, cautious. “Why do you hide?” Her heart stuttered. “I don’t,” she said quickly. He tilted his head slightly. “You do. Not in a dramatic way. Just enough to protect yourself.” She stared at him, stunned. “You don’t know me,” she said quietly. “I know,” he replied. “But I notice things.” That scared her more than she wanted to admit. She closed the book in front of her slowly. “I don’t hide. I choose peace.” A corner of his mouth lifted, just barely. “Sometimes those are the same thing.” She didn’t respond. Instead, she stood, slinging her bag over her shoulder. “I should go.” His expression shifted not disappointment, but understanding. “Of course,” he said, rising as well. “I didn’t mean to overstep.” “You didn’t,” she replied. “I just… need space.” He nodded once. “I’ll respect that.” As she turned to leave, her heart twisted unexpectedly. “Amelia,” he said softly. She stopped. “If you ever want to stop choosing silence,” he continued, “I’m here.” She didn’t turn around. But his words followed her all the way out of the library. And for the first time in a long time, Amelia wondered if the walls she had built to protect herself were also the ones keeping her lonely. Amelia didn’t realize she was walking too fast until her breath began to shorten. The hallway outside the library felt louder than before voices overlapping, footsteps echoing, life moving on as if nothing had shifted. Yet inside her, something had tilted. Not broken. Just… disturbed. She tightened her grip on her bag strap, grounding herself. You asked for space, she reminded herself. You did the right thing. Still, her mind betrayed her, replaying his words in quiet fragments. If you ever want to stop choosing silence… She shook her head slightly, annoyed at herself. Silence had kept her safe. Silence had protected her from expectations, from disappointment, from wanting things that never stayed. She had learned early that yearning was a dangerous habit one that left you exposed. And Ethan had looked at her like he wasn’t afraid of that exposure at all. She reached the courtyard before she realized she had slowed down. Sunlight spilled across the open space, warming the stone benches and the paths students crossed without thought. Amelia chose a bench beneath a tree, its leaves whispering softly overhead. She sat. And for the first time since leaving the library, she allowed herself to feel. Her chest ached not sharply, but dully, like the kind of pain that came from holding something in for too long. She pressed a hand lightly against it, breathing in and out until her heartbeat steadied. Why did he see her? That question unsettled her more than anything else. She had spent years perfecting the art of being unnoticed not invisible, but unremarkable. Safe. Easy to overlook. People rarely asked her questions that mattered. Fewer still waited for real answers. Ethan had. Her phone vibrated in her bag, pulling her back to the present. She checked it absently a class reminder, nothing urgent. She slid it away again and leaned back against the bench, closing her eyes. Just for a moment. “Running away?” Her eyes flew open. Ethan stood a few steps away, hands in his pockets, expression unreadable but calm. He hadn’t followed her hurriedly there was no urgency in him, no pressure. Just presence. “I wasn’t running,” she said, sitting up straighter. “I was leaving.” He nodded, accepting that. “Fair.” She studied him, suddenly aware of how close he was. In the open air, he seemed different less restrained, somehow, though the same quiet intensity lingered. “How did you know I’d be here?” she asked. “I didn’t,” he replied. “I just thought… if I needed space, I’d come outside.” That answer unsettled her again not because it was intrusive, but because it was thoughtful. “You didn’t have to come after me,” she said gently. “I know,” he said. “I wanted to make sure you were okay.” She exhaled slowly. “You’re very sure of yourself.” A faint smile touched his lips. “I’m really not.” That surprised her. He gestured toward the empty space beside her. “May I?” She hesitated then nodded. He sat, leaving just enough distance to respect her boundary. The silence between them returned, but it felt different now softer, less guarded. “I don’t usually talk like that,” Amelia said quietly. “About… hiding.” “I figured,” Ethan replied. “Then why say it?” “Because it felt honest.” She glanced at him. “Honesty can be dangerous.” He met her gaze steadily. “So can avoidance.” That landed deeper than she expected. She looked away, focusing on the pattern of light filtering through the leaves above them. “People assume too much,” she said. “They think because you’re quiet, you’re empty. Or weak. Or waiting.” “And you’re none of those things,” he said immediately. Her breath caught. She turned to him. “You don’t know that.” “I know enough,” he replied. “You carry yourself like someone who has learned to survive quietly.” That word again. Survive. Her fingers curled against the bench. “You talk like you’ve been watching me,” she said, not accusing just curious. “I have,” he admitted. “But not in the way you think. You notice people when you feel… still around them.” She searched his face, looking for something careless, something false. She found neither. “What do you want from me, Ethan?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper. He didn’t answer immediately. When he did, his voice was just as quiet. “Nothing you don’t want to give.” That honesty scared her. Men always wanted something attention, affection, validation. They pushed, leaned, insisted. Ethan didn’t. And that made him harder to resist. “I don’t know how to be… whatever this is,” she said. “You don’t have to,” he replied. “We can just sit.” So they did. Minutes passed. Maybe more. Neither checked the time. The world continued around them students walking by, conversations drifting, life unfolding but Amelia felt oddly separate from it all, like she was suspended in a moment she hadn’t prepared for. “Why are you here?” she asked suddenly. “At this university?” he asked. She nodded. “My sister,” he said. “She studies here. I moved closer to keep an eye on her.” That softened something in her. “That’s kind.” “She’d argue otherwise,” he said with a faint smile. Amelia smiled too small, hesitant, but real. It surprised them both. “I should go,” she said after a while, though this time there was regret in her voice. He stood with her. “I won’t stop you.” She adjusted her bag again, hesitating. “Ethan?” “Yes?” “Thank you,” she said. “For not pushing.” He nodded. “Anytime.” As she walked away, she felt it again that quiet pull, that sense that something had begun whether she was ready or not. And somewhere deep inside, Amelia knew one truth with startling clarity: This wasn’t just attraction. It was the beginning of a choice one that would ask her to step out of the silence she had built her life around.For the next week, Ethan became suspiciously normal.Which was impressive considering she knew for a fact he was hiding something.He still texted normally.Still complained about coffee.Still sent pictures of random things.Still called at night.But now she noticed details.He asked more questions than usual.What days she was free.Whether she preferred mornings or evenings.If she liked crowded places.Once he casually asked—“Do you still like bookstores?”Too casual.Immediately suspicious.She answered anyway.Then spent the next hour regretting it.---Three days later she accidentally discovered something.Not intentionally.She wasn’t searching.She was innocent.Mostly.They were on a call.Ethan was doing something on his laptop while she was folding clothes.Then—his screen froze.Only for a second.But long enough.Calendar.One weekend blocked.Title:DO NOT TELL HERShe stopped folding.He noticed immediately.Their eyes met.He froze.She stared.He stared.Then clo
Ordinary Things Become DangerousThree days after coming home, she realized she had accidentally developed habits she couldn’t explain.She reached for her phone before breakfast.She took pictures of food she normally wouldn’t care about.She opened messages just to see if there was anything new.And most embarrassing of all—she started thinking in updates.This would make him laugh.He’d complain about this coffee.I should tell him this later.Which was ridiculous.Because she existed before him.She had routines.Friends.Her own life.So why did everything suddenly feel slightly incomplete?The realization annoyed her enough that she ignored her phone all morning.Which lasted exactly until 10:08.Message.Ethan.Important question.She stared.Opened.Do you still have that blue mug?She blinked.Typed.Yes??Seen immediately.Good.That was all.She stared.Then:Why?Typing.Stopped.Typing again.Nothing. Continue your day.She frowned.Suspicious.She put her phone down.Te
Nobody talks enough about the strange sadness of almost leaving.Not leaving forever.Just—leaving somewhere that started feeling normal.She woke up knowing.Three days left.That was all.Three days before she went home.Three days before calls became screens again.Three days before she stopped waking up in the next room.And suddenly—that felt unfair.She stayed in bed longer.Phone in hand.Thinking.Then—knock.She looked up.Door opened slightly.Ethan appeared.Still sleepy.Hair messy.Expression suspicious.He looked at her.Paused.Then quietly asked—“…why are you awake and sad?”Her eyes widened.Immediately—“What?”His expression stayed calm.“You have the face.”She frowned.“…what face?”He thought.Then answered.“The one where you’re thinking too much.”Annoying.She sighed.Looked away.Then quietly said—“…three days.”Silence.His expression softened immediately.Long pause.Then—he quietly said—“…yeah.”Her chest tightened.She smiled awkwardly.Then shrugg
The next morning—she woke up confused.For three seconds—she forgot where she was.Then she remembered.Different city.Ethan’s apartment.And suddenly—everything felt strangely quiet.She left the guest room.The apartment smelled like coffee.She followed it.Found Ethan in the kitchen.Back facing her.Half awake.Making coffee.He turned.Paused.Then smiled.Small.Warm.“…good morning.”Her chest softened.She smiled.“…morning.”Then she frowned.“…how long have you been awake?”He looked offended.“…normal amount.”She looked at the clock.7:03.Her expression changed.He defended himself immediately.“…I wake up early.”She sat.Watched him move around the kitchen.And suddenly—she realized.She had never seen his mornings.Never seen the in-between moments.The quiet version.He placed a cup in front of her.Then sat.Silence.Comfortable.Then—he looked at her.And quietly said—“…today I want to show you something.”Her eyebrows lifted.“…okay?”His expression softene
People imagine saying I love you as a huge moment.Rain.Music.Perfect timing.A certainty so strong you never question it.But nobody talks about the quieter version.The version where one day—you realize you’ve already been living inside the feeling for a while.⸻Three weeks passed.Life settled again.Calls.Work.Messages.Voice notes.Some days easy.Some days difficult.Nothing dramatic.Which made it more serious somehow.Because neither of them was staying because of excitement anymore.They were staying because ordinary life kept making them choose each other.⸻Thursday night—she came home exhausted.Bad meeting.Headache.Long day.She changed.Dropped onto her bed.Phone buzzed.Ethan.Voice note.She pressed play.His voice came through.Quiet.Warm.“I saw something today and thought you’d laugh… and then I realized I automatically reached for my phone.”Pause.Then—“That’s all.”Message ended.She smiled immediately.And suddenly—she missed him.Not painfully.Jus
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
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 t
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.
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







