Chapters

Chapter 11: The first look...

Lavendermist Romance 5 hours ago

The bell above the café door chimed just as I reached for my drink, a soft silver sound that barely rose above the low hum of conversation. Still, it made me glance up — and that’s when I saw him.

He stepped inside like he wasn’t entirely sure he belonged there, brushing snow from his dark hair, blinking against the sudden warmth. His eyes swept the room once, quick and searching, before landing on the only empty seat left — the one directly across from me.

Of course.

He hesitated, and for a second I thought he’d turn around and leave. But then he offered a small, apologetic smile, the kind that tugged at something in my chest.

“Is this seat taken?” he asked, voice low and warm.

I shook my head, trying to look casual even though my pulse had decided to sprint. “Go ahead.”

He sat, setting down a worn leather backpack that looked like it had stories of its own. Up close, he was even more distracting — sharp jaw, soft eyes, a tiny scar near his eyebrow that made him look like he’d lived a little. Or maybe a lot.

I tried to focus on my laptop screen, but the words blurred. He smelled faintly of cedar and winter air, and it was impossible to ignore the way he kept glancing at me, like he was trying to figure something out.

After a moment, he cleared his throat. “I’m new in town,” he said, almost sheepish. “Do you know if this place is always this busy?”

“Only when it’s cold enough to freeze eyelashes,” I said. “So… basically every day.”

He laughed — a real one, warm and surprised — and I felt ridiculously proud for being the cause of it.

“I’m Rowan,” he said, offering his hand.

I took it. His palm was warm, steady. “Lena.”

Something flickered in his expression, something curious and bright, like he’d just found the first clue in a mystery he didn’t know he was solving.

“Well, Lena,” he said, leaning back slightly, “I think this might be the best accidental seat choice I’ve made in a long time.”

I tried to play it cool, but my cheeks betrayed me with heat.

Outside, snow kept falling in soft, quiet sheets. Inside, the world felt suddenly smaller — like the universe had nudged two people a little closer, just to see what might happen.

And I had the strange, certain feeling that this wasn’t the last time Rowan and I would cross paths.

Not even close.

Chapter 22: The almost confession

Lavendermist Romance 5 hours ago

The next morning, the café felt different.

Maybe it was just me. Maybe it was the way I kept glancing at the door like some lovesick character in a paperback novel. Or maybe it was the fact that every time the bell chimed, my heart did this ridiculous little leap.

I told myself I wasn’t waiting for him.

And then Rowan walked in.

He spotted me instantly — like he’d been scanning the room for one face, and mine was the one he hoped to find. His smile was small but unmistakably real, the kind that warmed the space between us even before he reached my table.

“Morning,” he said, sliding into the same seat as yesterday, as if it had been reserved for him all along.

“Morning,” I echoed, trying not to sound too pleased.

He set down his backpack, fingers brushing the frayed strap. “I wasn’t sure you’d be here.”

“I’m here most mornings,” I said. “It’s my unofficial office.”

“Good,” he said softly, almost under his breath.

I pretended not to hear the warmth in that single word.

For a few minutes, we worked in silence — or pretended to. I typed the same sentence three times. Rowan kept tapping his pen against his notebook, not writing anything. It was obvious we were both more aware of each other than our tasks.

Finally, he closed his notebook. “Can I ask you something?”

My pulse jumped. “Sure.”

He hesitated, eyes flicking to the window where snowflakes drifted lazily past. “Yesterday… when I sat here… it felt like—” He stopped, searching for the right word. “Like something shifted.”

I swallowed. “Yeah. I felt that too.”

His eyes snapped back to mine, surprised and relieved all at once. “You did?”

Before I could answer, the barista called my name — loudly, cheerfully, and at the worst possible moment.

I stood to grab my drink, trying to steady my breathing. When I returned, Rowan was staring at his hands, like he was debating something.

“Sorry,” I said, sitting down.

He shook his head. “No, it’s fine. I just… I’m not great at this.”

“At what?”

He looked up, and there it was — that spark again, bright and unguarded.

“Meeting someone and feeling like I’ve known them longer than a day.”

My breath caught.

But before I could respond, the café door swung open and a gust of cold air rushed in. A woman stepped inside — tall, confident, wrapped in a sleek coat. She scanned the room, her gaze landing on Rowan.

Her face lit up.

“There you are,” she said, walking straight toward him.

Rowan stiffened.

My stomach dropped.

The woman reached the table, placing a hand on his shoulder like she’d done it a hundred times before. “I’ve been calling you. You didn’t answer.”

Rowan’s jaw tightened. “I turned my phone off.”

She finally noticed me, offering a polite but curious smile. “And you are…?”

I opened my mouth, but Rowan spoke first.

“She’s—”

He stopped.

And in that pause — that tiny, fragile moment — everything shifted again.

Chapter 33: The introduction

Lavendermist Romance 5 hours ago

Rowan stood so quickly his chair scraped against the floor. The woman’s hand slipped from his shoulder, but she didn’t look offended — just expectant, like she was used to him reacting this way.

“Lena,” he said, voice tight, “this is… Seraphina.”

Seraphina.

The name alone sounded like it belonged to someone unforgettable — soft, elegant, almost too beautiful to be real. And when she smiled at me, I understood why Rowan looked like he’d swallowed a stone.

She was stunning in that effortless, unfair way: long waves of honey‑gold hair spilling over a cream coat, eyes the color of warm amber, cheekbones that could’ve been carved by someone with a very expensive chisel. Even the snow melting on her lashes made her look like she’d stepped out of a winter perfume ad.

“Nice to meet you,” she said, her voice smooth and melodic. “Rowan didn’t tell me he’d made a friend already.”

Friend. The word hit harder than it should have.

Rowan rubbed the back of his neck. “Seraphina and I… we used to work together.”

Her eyebrow lifted. “Used to?”

He shot her a look that said not now, but she ignored it, sliding gracefully into the seat beside him like she’d been born knowing how to take up space beautifully.

I tried to focus on my coffee, but the air felt too tight, too full of her perfume — something soft and expensive, like jasmine and winter air. Rowan noticed my discomfort immediately, his eyes flicking to me with a quiet apology.

“Sorry about the surprise,” he murmured.

“It’s fine,” I lied.

Seraphina glanced between us, her smile sharpening just a touch. “I didn’t mean to interrupt anything.”

“You didn’t,” I said quickly.

Rowan didn’t say anything at all.

For a moment, the three of us sat in a silence that felt like it had edges. Seraphina crossed her legs, her coat falling open to reveal a sleek black dress that looked like it belonged at a gallery opening, not a snowy morning café.

“So,” she said lightly, “are you two…?”

“No,” I said.

“No,” Rowan echoed — but his voice didn’t match mine. His sounded unsure, like he wasn’t convinced of his own answer.

Seraphina’s eyes flicked to him, curious. “Interesting.”

Rowan exhaled sharply. “Seraphina, what do you need?”

She shrugged, her hair shifting like silk. “I just wanted to talk. You left without saying anything, and I thought maybe you were upset.”

“I wasn’t upset,” he said. “I just needed space.”

Her gaze softened. “You could’ve told me.”

Rowan looked away, jaw tight.

I suddenly felt like I was sitting in the middle of a conversation I had no right to hear. I closed my laptop, trying to give them some kind of exit.

“I should probably get going,” I said.

Rowan’s head snapped toward me. “You don’t have to.”

“It’s okay,” I said, forcing a smile. “I have work to do anyway.”

Seraphina watched him watching me, and something flickered in her expression — not jealousy, but recognition. Like she’d just realized she wasn’t the only person in the room who mattered to him.

I stood, slipping my bag over my shoulder. Rowan rose too, almost instinctively.

“Lena,” he said quietly, “can we talk later?”

My heart did that stupid leap again. “Sure.”

He looked relieved — and something else, something warm and unguarded.

Seraphina noticed that too.

As I stepped outside, the cold air hit my cheeks, sharp and bracing. Snow crunched under my boots, and for a moment I just stood there, breathing in the winter silence.

I didn’t know what Rowan and Seraphina were to each other.

I didn’t know what Rowan and I were, either.

But I knew one thing with absolute clarity:

Whatever this was becoming… it wasn’t over.

Not even close.

Chapter 44: The space between us

Lavendermist Romance 5 hours ago

I didn’t make it far.

Just a few steps down the sidewalk, I stopped under the awning of the bookstore next door, pretending to check my phone while my heart tried to settle into something resembling a normal rhythm. Snow drifted lazily around me, soft and quiet — the opposite of what I felt inside.

I shouldn’t have cared so much.

But I did.

Through the café window, I could see Rowan and Seraphina still at the table. She leaned in close, her honey‑gold hair falling over one shoulder like it had been styled for the moment. Rowan looked… tense. Not angry. Not happy. Just caught.

I hated how familiar that expression felt.

I turned away, ready to leave, when the café door opened behind me.

“Lena.”

Rowan’s voice.

I closed my eyes for a second before facing him. Snow clung to his hair, melting slowly down his temples. He looked like he’d run after me — breath visible in the cold air, cheeks flushed.

“You didn’t have to come out here,” I said.

“I did,” he replied, stepping closer. “I didn’t want you to leave like that.”

“Like what?”

“Like you thought she meant something.”

I swallowed. “Doesn’t she?”

He hesitated — and that hesitation said more than any answer could.

Before he could speak, the café door opened again.

Seraphina stepped out, her presence almost cinematic against the falling snow. Her coat shimmered faintly in the streetlight, her amber eyes catching every bit of glow. She looked like she belonged in a winter romance movie — the kind where the girl always gets the guy.

“There you are,” she said to Rowan, her voice warm and lilting. “You left so suddenly.”

She moved to his side, slipping her hand around his arm with the kind of ease that comes from history. Rowan stiffened, but she didn’t seem to notice — or maybe she did, and chose not to care.

“I thought we could finish our conversation,” she said, tilting her head up at him. “Unless you’re busy.”

Her gaze flicked to me, soft but undeniably assessing.

Rowan gently removed her hand from his arm. “Seraphina, not now.”

Her smile didn’t falter, but something sharper glinted beneath it. “I’m not trying to intrude. I just missed you, that’s all.”

Missed you.

The words hit harder than I wanted them to.

Rowan exhaled, frustrated. “Seraphina, we talked about this.”

“No,” she corrected softly, stepping closer to him, “you talked. I listened. And I still think you’re making a mistake.”

She reached up, brushing a bit of snow from his shoulder — slow, deliberate, intimate. Rowan didn’t pull away, but he didn’t lean into it either. He just stood there, caught between us like gravity was pulling him in two directions.

Seraphina’s eyes lifted to his, warm and pleading. “Can we just… go somewhere and talk? Like we used to?”

Rowan looked torn.

And that hurt more than anything.

I took a step back. “You don’t have to explain anything to me,” I said quietly. “Really.”

Rowan turned to me, eyes wide. “Lena, wait—”

“It’s fine,” I said, even though it wasn’t. “You two should talk.”

Seraphina’s smile returned — soft, triumphant, beautiful. “Thank you,” she said, her voice like velvet.

Rowan looked at her, then at me, then back at her. “I’ll talk to you,” he said finally, “but not tonight.”

Seraphina blinked, surprised.

“Tonight,” he continued, turning fully toward me, “I’m walking Lena home.”

The snow fell silently around us.

Seraphina’s expression didn’t break, but her eyes did — just for a second. A tiny crack in the perfect porcelain.

Then she nodded, graceful even in disappointment. “Another time, then.”

She brushed past Rowan, her perfume lingering in the air like a challenge, and disappeared into the night.

Rowan stepped closer to me, his breath warm in the cold air. “I meant what I said,” he murmured. “I want to walk you home.”

My heart thudded once, hard.

“Okay,” I whispered.

And as we started down the snowy sidewalk together, I couldn’t help but wonder:

Was this the beginning of something real?

Or the start of something heartbreakingly complicated?

Either way… I wasn’t turning back.

Chapter 55: Seraphina returns

Lavendermist Romance 5 hours ago

Three days passed before I saw her again.

Three days of Rowan walking me home, of quiet conversations that felt like secrets, of moments where his hand brushed mine and neither of us pulled away fast enough.

Three days where I almost let myself believe Seraphina was part of his past, not his present.

But then she walked into the café.

And this time, she didn’t come quietly.

Heads turned — every single one — because Seraphina didn’t just enter a room. She arrived. Her coat today was a deep wine‑red, cinched at the waist, falling open just enough to reveal a silky, low‑cut top that shimmered like liquid gold. Her makeup was flawless: smoky eyes, glossy lips, cheekbones glowing like she’d been sculpted under perfect lighting.

She looked like temptation wrapped in winter air.

And she was looking for Rowan.

He noticed her before I did. His posture stiffened, his jaw tightening the way it did when he was bracing for something he didn’t want to face.

Seraphina’s smile bloomed when she spotted him — slow, confident, devastating.

“Rowan,” she purred, gliding toward our table. “You’ve been avoiding me.”

He stood, but not eagerly. “Seraphina… what are you doing here?”

She ignored the question, stepping close enough that her perfume — jasmine, warm vanilla, something expensive — wrapped around us. She placed a manicured hand on his chest, fingers splayed lightly over his shirt.

“You didn’t return my calls,” she said softly, her voice dripping with charm. “So I thought I’d come to you.”

Rowan gently removed her hand, but she only smiled wider, as if the rejection was part of the game.

Then her eyes landed on me.

“Oh,” she said sweetly. “You’re here too.”

I forced a polite smile. “Hi, Seraphina.”

She tilted her head, studying me with a kind of amused curiosity. “You two seem… close.”

Rowan stepped slightly in front of me — subtle, protective. “We’re talking.”

Seraphina’s brows lifted, but she didn’t look threatened. If anything, she looked intrigued.

“Well,” she said, brushing a strand of honey‑gold hair behind her ear, “maybe you can talk later. Rowan and I have some unfinished business.”

“No, we don’t,” Rowan said firmly.

Her smile didn’t falter. If anything, it sharpened. “Rowan, darling, we always have unfinished business.”

She leaned in, her lips grazing his ear as she whispered something I couldn’t hear — but I saw the way his shoulders tensed, the way he closed his eyes for a second like he was fighting something old and familiar.

Seraphina pulled back, her lips curved in a knowing smirk.

“Walk with me,” she said. “Just a few minutes. I promise I’ll behave.”

Rowan didn’t move.

Seraphina stepped closer, her voice dropping into a soft, intimate tone. “Rowan… please.”

For the first time, I saw something vulnerable flicker in her eyes. Not manipulation. Not charm.

Something real.

Rowan exhaled slowly. “Five minutes,” he said. “That’s it.”

My stomach dropped.

Seraphina’s smile returned, triumphant and radiant. “Perfect.”

She looped her arm through his — lightly, but deliberately — and led him toward the door. Rowan glanced back at me, guilt written all over his face.

“I’ll be right back,” he said.

I nodded, even though it hurt. “Okay.”

As they stepped outside, the cold air rushed in, carrying Seraphina’s perfume with it. I watched them through the window — her leaning in close, her hand brushing his arm, her laughter bright and melodic.

She was trying to win him back.

And she wasn’t subtle about it.

But Rowan… Rowan wasn’t leaning in. He wasn’t smiling. He wasn’t giving her what she wanted.

He kept glancing back at the café.

Back at me.

And for the first time, I realized something:

Seraphina might be beautiful, charming, unforgettable.

But I wasn’t invisible.

Not to him.

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A trip to the beach leads to a tense encounter between a couple and a persistent ex-lover.
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