• Contemporary Romance

    Before We Learn To Leave

    Clara first noticed Ethan on a late afternoon when the city seemed undecided about becoming evening. The sky hovered in a pale gray that made buildings look softer than usual, as if the edges of everything had been gently worn down. She stood at a bus stop near the river, one hand gripping her phone, the other buried in her coat pocket. The bus was late again. She had stopped checking the schedule because it only sharpened her impatience. Around her, a few strangers waited in separate pockets of solitude, each absorbed in private endurance. Ethan stood several steps away, leaning against the glass shelter. He was reading something folded…

  • Contemporary Romance

    The Distance Between Ordinary Days

    Elena first noticed Marcus on a Thursday afternoon that felt indistinguishable from every other workday she had lived through that year. The office lobby smelled of polished stone and stale air, and the light from the tall windows failed to warm the space. People moved through with practiced efficiency, eyes lowered, shoulders slightly hunched as if bracing against something unseen. Elena stood near the security desk, flipping through her bag with mounting irritation, certain she had misplaced her access card again. Marcus stood several feet away near a column, holding a folder against his chest. He appeared calm in a way that contrasted sharply with the restless energy of the…

  • Contemporary Romance

    The Shape Of Staying Still

    Maya first noticed Julian in the long hallway of a public hospital where the air always felt slightly too cold and the light never fully rested. The walls were a muted beige that absorbed sound, and the floor shone faintly from constant cleaning. She had been walking that corridor for weeks, learning the rhythm of it, counting her steps without realizing she was doing so. Her mother slept behind one of the identical doors, tethered to machines that hummed softly like distant insects. Maya carried a paper cup of coffee that had gone untouched, her thoughts moving slower than her body. Julian sat in a chair against the wall near…

  • Contemporary Romance

    What Remains When We Stay

    Iris first noticed Thomas in the shared kitchen of the coworking building on a quiet Monday morning when the city seemed to hesitate before fully waking. The windows were tall and narrow, letting in a pale light that softened the concrete walls and long wooden counters. The smell of coffee lingered heavily in the air, layered with the faint sweetness of someone else breakfast. Iris stood by the sink, rinsing a mug she did not remember using, her mind already tangled in unfinished thoughts about deadlines and the slow unraveling of a life she once felt certain about. Thomas stood at the counter near the window, carefully slicing an apple…

  • Contemporary Romance

    After The Last Train Home

    Camille noticed Rowan for the first time on a platform that smelled of damp concrete and old electricity, the air vibrating faintly from trains that had already passed. It was late enough that the crowd had thinned to clusters of tired bodies spaced far apart, each person wrapped in their own version of endurance. The overhead lights cast uneven shadows, turning faces into half stories. Camille stood near a column, her coat pulled tight, her phone dark in her hand. She had stopped checking the time because it made the waiting feel heavier. Rowan stood several steps away, leaning against a bench with a backpack at his feet. He looked…

  • Contemporary Romance

    Where The Light Slows Down

    Nora first became aware of Elias in the elevator of her apartment building on a Tuesday evening that felt heavier than it deserved. The fluorescent lights hummed softly overhead, casting everything in a pale tired glow. The air smelled faintly of metal and cleaning solution. Nora stood near the control panel, clutching a grocery bag that cut into her fingers, her shoulders drawn inward as if to make herself smaller. She had spent the entire day speaking carefully, choosing words that would not invite questions, and the silence of the elevator felt like a fragile reward. Elias stepped in just before the doors closed, carrying a canvas bag that looked…

  • Contemporary Romance

    The Weight Of Quiet Promises

    Lena first noticed Aaron in the late afternoon light of a neighborhood library that most people only entered to use the restroom or escape the heat. The building smelled faintly of paper and dust and something floral that had seeped into the carpet years ago and never left. Sunlight filtered through tall windows, settling on wooden tables scarred by decades of quiet use. Lena sat near the back with a notebook open, though she had not written anything for nearly an hour. Her thoughts moved slowly, circling the same unanswered questions about her life and the recent ending she still had not named. Aaron stood by the shelves labeled Local…

  • Contemporary Romance

    Quiet Rooms Between Us

    The first time Mira noticed Jonah he was standing alone near the window of a quiet cafe on Ninth Street, the kind of place that smelled like old books and burnt espresso. Rain pressed against the glass in soft uneven patterns, turning the city outside into a blur of silver and gray. The tables were scattered and mismatched, and the low music seemed unsure of itself, drifting in and out like a thought that refused to settle. Mira had come there to escape the noise of her apartment and the ache of unfinished plans, carrying her laptop like a shield. Jonah stood still, hands wrapped around a chipped mug, eyes…

  • Historical Romance

    The Quiet Harbor Of Redcliffe Bay

    The sea lay calm when Margaret Linton arrived at Redcliffe Bay its surface stretched wide and silver beneath a sky softened by drifting clouds. The small harbor curved inward like a sheltering hand and fishing boats rested against the quay with their ropes humming faintly in the breeze. Margaret paused at the edge of the road where stone met sand and felt a familiar ache bloom in her chest. She had not seen Redcliffe Bay in more than twenty years yet the smell of salt and seaweed reached her with unmistakable clarity. This place had shaped her first understanding of love and her first decision to leave it behind. She…

  • Historical Romance

    The Long Return Of Hawthorn Vale

    The valley opened slowly before her as the carriage descended the final bend and Hawthorn Vale revealed itself in layered greens and muted stone. Morning mist lingered low among the hedgerows and the scent of damp leaves drifted through the open window. Isabel Fenwick rested her hand against the door steadying herself as if the land itself exerted a quiet pull. She had not seen Hawthorn Vale in nearly twenty years yet the rhythm of it felt instantly familiar. Returning had not been part of her plans. It had been necessity shaped by inheritance and obligation. Still beneath those reasons lay a deeper truth she had avoided naming. Somewhere in…