Contemporary Romance
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Coffee Stains and Heartbeats
Emma had always believed that life ran on schedules. She woke at six thirty brewed her coffee at six forty five and was on the subway by seven fifteen. Each day followed the rhythm she had carefully constructed leaving no room for chaos or unexpected encounters. That was until the day she spilled her latte on his notebook. His name was Lucas tall with a messy mop of hair that seemed to defy gravity and a laugh that made people turn their heads. He was the complete opposite of Emma. Where she was punctual he was impulsive. Where she planned he improvised. Their meeting should have been a disaster the…
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The Last Message She Never Sent
The city was loud that morning, filled with the noise of buses, horns, and the hum of people chasing hours they could never keep. Inside a small apartment on the seventh floor, Claire sat at her desk, staring at the blinking cursor on her phone. Her fingers hovered over the keyboard, then stopped again. The message read I miss you. Please come back. She had written it a hundred times but never pressed send. It had been six months since Adam left. They had loved deeply, fiercely, but life had turned into a series of misunderstandings too heavy to carry. One night, he packed a single bag and walked out,…
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The Garden Between Two Worlds
In a quiet neighborhood where the streets curved like ribbons and the air smelled of roses and wet earth, there was a hidden garden. It was tucked between two tall buildings, invisible to those who did not know how to look. People whispered that the garden existed between worlds, a place where time moved differently, and wishes could linger long enough to grow. Sophia discovered the garden by accident one afternoon. She had been walking home from the library, her bag heavy with books, when a faint path of wildflowers caught her attention. She followed it and found herself standing before a wrought iron gate entwined with ivy. The gate…
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The Lanterns in the Fog
There was a part of the city where fog rolled in like slow rivers every evening. The streets were empty, the lamps weak, and the air smelled faintly of salt and old paper. People avoided the district after dark but some nights lanterns appeared, drifting above the cobblestones, glowing warm and alive. Elise first noticed the lanterns while walking home late from the library. She worked as an archivist cataloging old manuscripts, living among words that had been forgotten for decades. That night she saw the lanterns rising and falling through the mist like tiny suns. She followed them without realizing how far she had walked until the fog became…
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Letters from the Rainy City
Lena arrived in the city during the first week of spring. The streets were wet from constant rain and the air smelled of damp concrete and blooming magnolias. She carried a small suitcase, a notebook filled with unfinished poems, and a heart that had grown tired of hoping. She found a small apartment above an old bookstore. The walls were cracked and the windows rattled when the wind blew, but she liked the quiet. At night she would sit by the window watching people pass, umbrellas bobbing through puddles like small floating islands. One evening as she was returning from the corner cafĂ© she noticed an envelope pinned to her…
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The Bridge Where Stars Fell
There was a bridge at the edge of the city where no cars ever crossed. It stretched over a dry riverbed now filled with wild grass and forgotten dreams. People said the bridge was cursed because every few years someone claimed to see lights falling from the sky onto it like silent fireworks. But no one ever found anything there afterward. Mira first saw the bridge on a night she could not sleep. The city was restless with noise so she walked without direction until she reached the outskirts where silence waited. The moon was full and the air smelled of rust and rain. When she stepped onto the bridge…
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The Sound of Morning Light
Evelyn lived above a small bakery at the corner of Maple Street. Every morning she woke before dawn to the sound of the ovens starting below her apartment and the faint hum of the first bus passing by. She worked as a violinist in the city orchestra but lately the music had begun to fade from her life. Notes that once felt alive now sounded like echoes of something she no longer understood. She had moved to the city chasing dreams of applause and purpose but somewhere along the way she had lost both. The nights grew longer and the silence after each concert heavier. When her mother passed away…
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The House That Waited for Her
There was a street in the old quarter that most people passed without noticing. The houses there leaned toward each other like tired memories and the cobblestones shone faintly even when it had not rained. At the very end of that street stood a house with ivy crawling up its windows and a door painted deep blue. The locals called it the house that waited because no one had lived there for decades yet every night a light flickered in the upstairs window. Clara first saw the house on a gray afternoon when she got lost looking for a gallery. She had moved to the city only two weeks before…
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The Girl Who Painted the Moon
In a quiet coastal town where the sea whispered secrets to the wind there lived a girl named Elara. She was known not for her beauty or her wealth but for the way she painted light. Every evening she would set up her easel by the cliffs and paint the changing colors of the horizon as if trying to capture time itself. People in town often said she was strange. She talked to the waves as if they could answer and sometimes she left lanterns floating on the water with small notes tied inside them. No one knew what those notes said. Some said they were wishes others thought they…
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Midnight Letters in the City of Glass
The city never truly slept. From her apartment window on the twenty first floor Maya watched the highways glow like silver veins beneath the rain. Somewhere below music thumped from a rooftop bar and laughter drifted up like smoke. Yet inside her small apartment the only sound was the scratch of her pen against paper. She had begun writing letters again. Not emails not messages not anything that could vanish with a click. Real letters on real paper with the scent of ink and the warmth of her hands. She wrote to a stranger named Julian. They had met once at a photography exhibition. He was standing in front of…