LOGINThe first sip of her cocktail tasted wonderfully cold. She closed her eyes for a second longer than necessary. Bliss. Perhaps she should start doing this more often. Not waiting until she felt completely exhausted before allowing herself an hour to breathe.
She spent so much of life moving from one responsibility to another that she had almost forgotten what stillness felt like.
Her gaze wandered across the room. Two elderly gentlemen argued cheerfully over a crossword. Three women dressed for a night out attempted to take a group selfie, dissolving into laughter every time someone blinked. Near the bar, a man in a suit gestured dramatically while telling what looked like an embarrassing story to his colleagues.
It all felt reassuringly ordinary. Exactly what she needed. She reached into her handbag for the novel she had been reading. The bookmark remained stubbornly halfway through chapter twelve. She managed perhaps three pages before realising she had read the same paragraph four times without taking in a single word.
Her mind simply refused to settle. Instead, it drifted back to work. Had she attached the correct document to that final email? Would Martin notice she had reorganised his entire schedule? Should she have spoken up during the afternoon meeting instead of apologising when Simon interrupted her?
She sighed.
Overthinking really should qualify as an Olympic sport.
"You look thoughtful."
The waitress had returned to clear an empty glass from the neighbouring table.
"I think too much."
She smiled knowingly.
"Most people in here on Fridays are trying to stop thinking."
"I might borrow that strategy."
"It usually starts with a second glass."
Amelia laughed.
"I'll see how brave I feel."
When the waitress disappeared again, Amelia found herself smiling. Small conversations with strangers had always come more naturally than large conversations with people she knew. There were no expectations and no pressure. Just tiny moments shared before both people carried on with their evenings.
She liked that.
Outside, dusk had begun softening the edges of the city. The lights inside the bar grew warmer as daylight slowly faded beyond the windows. Amelia rested one elbow on the table and watched the world continue around her. Then, without quite knowing why, she felt the unmistakable sensation of being watched.
It was not dramatic. Not frightening. But it was simply enough to make the tiny hairs on the back of her neck rise.
She looked up.
Across the room, standing near the bar with a pint in one hand, was a man she did not recognise. He was perhaps in his mid-thirties, neatly dressed in a navy shirt with the sleeves rolled to his forearms. At that exact moment, their eyes met.
He smiled politely.
Amelia instinctively smiled back before looking away. Perhaps she had imagined it. People looked around bars all the time. It hardly meant anything. She picked up her book again. Another paragraph passed without registering.
When she looked up a second time, the man was still there. Not staring exactly. Just... looking. Every so often his attention drifted elsewhere before returning in her direction.
She frowned slightly.
Maybe he thought he recognised her. That happened occasionally. Or perhaps she reminded him of somebody. She certainly was not the sort of woman strange men watched across crowded bars.
She had never considered herself particularly remarkable. Perfectly average height, perfectly average appearance. The sort of person who disappeared happily into crowds. She tucked a strand of honey-blonde hair behind one ear and returned her attention to the room.
Don't be ridiculous. He was probably waiting for someone.
A woman entered through the front doors. For one hopeful second Amelia assumed he had been looking past her all along. Instead, the newcomer joined a completely different group.
The man remained exactly where he was.
She took another sip of wine.
Stop it. You are inventing stories again.
She had always done this. One tiny observation became ten imagined explanations before she even realised she was overthinking. It was entirely possible he had not looked at her once. Entirely possible she had simply noticed him because there was nothing else demanding her attention.
She checked her phone again. No new messages.
The city outside continued glowing beneath the deepening evening sky. Inside, conversations rose and fell in gentle waves. She was just beginning to relax again when curiosity tempted her into one final glance.
The man was still there.
This time he looked down into his glass for a moment before finishing the last mouthful. He placed the empty pint carefully onto the bar. Then, after a brief pause, he picked it up, thanked the bartender with a nod, and turned.
His eyes found hers once more and a small, confident smile touched his face.
With his drink now empty and nowhere else to be, he began walking across the room towards her table. Amelia's fingers tightened ever so slightly around the stem of her wine glass.
She had the distinct feeling that her quiet evening was about to become considerably less ordinary.
"Because she stayed polite.""Exactly."Evelyn sighed quietly."How many women have found themselves in that position?""Too many."Jake looked into his coffee."I couldn't just watch.""So you stepped in.""I pretended to be her boyfriend."His mother smiled."I did wonder where your dramatic streak came from.""It worked.""I'm sure it did."Jake found himself smiling too."Then what?""For a second she thought I was making things worse."Evelyn laughed softly."Reasonable.""But the moment she realised what I was doing..."His voice faded."What happened?" Evelyn asked gently.Jake hesitated."I don't know."She waited."There was this feeling.""What sort of feeling?""I've never experienced it before."He searched for the right words."It was like..."His brow furrowed."...like every instinct I possess suddenly focused on one person."His mother didn't interrupt."I couldn't stop watching her."Jake rubbed a hand across his jaw."Not because I wanted anything from her.""No?""N
Jake barely remembered the drive home. The streets of Birmingham blurred beyond the windscreen while the engine purred beneath him, every familiar junction passing almost unnoticed. He drove the route so often he could have managed it with his eyes closed, yet tonight his concentration drifted back to the same pair of blue-green eyes every few seconds.It made no sense.He had spent years building a life around control. Control over his business. Control over the pack. Control over himself. Tonight, for the first time in years, he felt as though something inside him had ignored every rule he'd ever lived by.Kade refused to settle. Normally, once danger had passed, the restless energy faded within minutes. The instinct to protect eased until it became little more than a quiet awareness beneath his skin.Not tonight. Every instinct screamed that he had left something important behind. Someone. Jake tightened his grip on the steering wheel."Enough."The single word disappeared into the
Amelia stared at the question. It should have been easy to answer.Amelia:No.He just...Wouldn't leave.Lucy replied almost immediately.Lucy:Sometimes that's worse.Amelia found herself staring at the words. There had been no shouting, no threats, no grabbing her arm, nothing dramatic enough that anyone else in the pub had looked twice. And yet somehow she'd felt smaller with every passing minute. As though she had slowly lost permission to say no.Amelia:Exactly.I felt stupid for feeling uncomfortable.Lucy:Don't.A moment later another message appeared.Lucy:If you felt uncomfortable, that was enough.You didn't owe him your evening because he bought you a drink.Or because he was "being nice."Or because you smiled.Amelia stopped typing. Her fingers rested motionless above the screen. Those last three words caught in her chest.Amelia stopped typing. Her fingers rested motionless above the screen. Those last three words caught in her chest.Amelia:That's exactly what he s
Amelia found herself sitting perfectly still on the sofa with her eyes closed. She had intended to make herself a cup of tea, curl up beneath a blanket and forget the evening had ever happened. That was usually how she dealt with difficult days. A hot drink, a romance novel and an early night could fix almost anything.Tonight, none of it seemed to work.The tea sat untouched on the coffee table, slowly cooling in its mug. The book lay open in her lap where she had abandoned it after only a few pages. The television hummed quietly in the background, though she couldn't have said what was on.Instead, the evening replayed itself.Daniel smiling as though she owed him her time. The scrape of the chair as he'd sat down without permission. The casual confidence with which he'd answered questions directed at her. The growing knot in her stomach every time she'd tried to end the conversation, only for him to steer it somewhere else. The horrible realisation that nothing he was doing seemed
She did not know why disappointment touched her. She barely knew him. Yet something about his presence had felt grounding in a way she could not explain.“Will I see you again?” she asked before she could stop herself.Jake’s expression shifted. Something warm. Something pained. Something she did not understand.“I hope so,” he said.He stepped back, giving her space. For a moment she thought he might say something else, but instead he offered her a gentle smile and turned away. He walked through the bar with the same quiet confidence she had noticed earlier. When he reached the door, he paused. His shoulders lifted slightly, as though he were taking a breath.Then he left.Amelia stood alone beside the four chairs, her pulse steadying at last. She should have gone home immediately. Instead she found herself staring at the door he had just walked through. She did not know his surname. She did not know anything about him. Yet she felt as though something significant had just happened.
Amelia followed the tall stranger through the soft glow of the bar, her hand still held gently in his. She had not expected him to keep hold of it, yet she found herself grateful for the steady warmth of his palm. Her pulse had not yet recovered from the encounter with Daniel, and the stranger’s presence felt like the only solid thing in a room that had tilted dangerously off balance.He guided her towards a quieter corner where four wooden chairs surrounded a small round table. The lighting here was softer, the noise gentler, the atmosphere calmer. It felt like a pocket of safety carved out of the crowded room. Amelia lowered herself into the nearest chair, her handbag resting against her leg, and tried to steady her breathing.The stranger took the seat opposite her. He did not sit in the one beside her, nor the one that would have blocked her view of the exit. Instead, he chose the chair that allowed him to face the room while still giving her space. It was a small detail, yet it m







