Genre Ranking
Get the APP HOT
He Loved Her Too Late
img img He Loved Her Too Late img Chapter 2 The Habit of Finding Each Other Without Trying
2 Chapters
Chapter 10 Almost Choosing, Almost Leaving img
Chapter 11 The Fear He Never Explained img
Chapter 12 Loving Someone Who Won't Decide img
Chapter 13 The Night He Didn't Call img
Chapter 14 The Apology That Changed Nothing img
Chapter 15 When Hope Becomes Exhaustion img
Chapter 16 The Moment He Almost Stayed img
Chapter 17 What Silence Finally Cost Him img
Chapter 18 The Space She Learned to Keep img
Chapter 19 The Moment He Almost Chose img
Chapter 20 The Truth He Took With Him img
Chapter 21 The Choice That Didn't Ask for Proof img
Chapter 22 Learning How to Stay img
Chapter 23 The Quiet After Choosing img
Chapter 24 The Part Where Trust Learns To Breathe img
Chapter 25 What Stability Feels Like img
Chapter 26 The Day Nothing Went Wrong img
Chapter 27 The Comfort of Being Expected img
Chapter 28 When Ease Stops Feeling Fragile img
Chapter 29 The Way Routine Became a Promise img
Chapter 30 The First Time It Felt Certain img
Chapter 31 The Ease of Choosing Again img
Chapter 32 The Safety of Being Seen img
Chapter 33 The Difference Between Comfort and Complacency img
Chapter 34 When Growth Stops Being Quiet img
Chapter 35 The Space Between Missing and Trusting img
Chapter 36 The Way Absence Confirmed What Was Already There img
Chapter 37 When Staying Became a Pattern img
Chapter 38 The Day It Stopped Feeling Temporary img
Chapter 39 The Quiet Fear That Comes After Certainty img
Chapter 40 The Promise Neither of Them Asked For img
Chapter 41 The Calm That Didn't Ask for Permission img
Chapter 42 When Love Stopped Being a Question img
Chapter 43 When Love Stopped Being a Question img
Chapter 44 The First Time It Felt Shared img
Chapter 45 The Weight That Finally Shifted img
Chapter 46 The Moment It Became Ours img
Chapter 47 A statement that left space without creating distance. img
Chapter 48 The Way the Future Entered the Room img
Chapter 49 The First Time It Felt Chosen Out Loud img
Chapter 50 The Halfway Point That Felt Like Arrival img
Chapter 51 The Day They Stopped Counting img
Chapter 52 The Ease That Didn't Ask to Be Earned img
Chapter 53 The Conversation That Didn't Change Anything-And Meant Everything img
Chapter 54 The Day It Felt Like Home img
Chapter 55 The Security That Didn't Need Reassurance img
Chapter 56 The Distance That Didn't Feel Like Leaving img
Chapter 57 The Comfort of Knowing Where He'd Be img
Chapter 58 The Trust That Didn't Need Monitoring img
Chapter 59 The Space Where Doubt Used to Live img
Chapter 60 The Peace That Didn't Ask to Be Explained img
Chapter 61 The Stability That Didn't Dull the Feeling img
Chapter 62 The Choice That Repeated Itself Quietly img
Chapter 63 The Depth That Didn't Announce Itself img
Chapter 64 The Way Love Learned to Be Unremarkable img
Chapter 65 The Safety That Didn't Shrink the World img
Chapter 66 The Confidence That Didn't Need Proof img
Chapter 67 The Freedom That Came From Staying img
Chapter 68 The Way Love Became a Place to Return To img
Chapter 69 The Day It Felt Like It Would Last img
Chapter 70 The Future That Didn't Feel Heavy img
Chapter 71 The Confidence to Say We img
Chapter 72 The Stability That Made Room for Want img
Chapter 73 The Way Want Learned to Be Gentle img
Chapter 74 The Trust That Didn't Ask for Proof img
Chapter 75 The Love That Didn't Ask to Be Tested img
Chapter 76 The Stability That Made Love Brave img
Chapter 77 The Stability That Made Love Brave img
Chapter 78 The Way Certainty Learned to Breathe img
Chapter 79 The Day Nothing Needed to Be Saved img
Chapter 80 The Way Love Stopped Holding Its Breath img
Chapter 81 The Ease of Being Seen Without Explanation img
Chapter 82 The Quiet Assurance That Didn't Fade img
Chapter 83 The Way Presence Became the Promise img
Chapter 84 The Security That Didn't Silence Curiosity img
Chapter 85 The Calm That Didn't Erase the Spark img
Chapter 86 The Safety That Let Them Reach Further img
Chapter 87 The Choice That Didn't Need Defending img
Chapter 88 The Honesty That Didn't Ask to Be Softer img
Chapter 89 The Understanding That Didn't Need Agreement img
Chapter 90 The Commitment That Didn't Feel Like a Trap img
Chapter 91 The Way Love Learned to Hold Space img
Chapter 92 The Ease of Letting Things Be Unfinished img
Chapter 93 The Way Trust Became a Shared Language img
Chapter 94 The Quiet Joy of Not Needing to Brace img
Chapter 95 The Peace That Didn't Ask to Be Earned img
Chapter 96 The Strength That Didn't Need Armor img
Chapter 97 The Moment Love Stopped Being Careful img
Chapter 98 The Future That Didn't Ask for Permission img
Chapter 99 The Certainty That Didn't Need a Countdown img
Chapter 100 The Love That Finally Felt Like Home img
img
  /  1
img

Chapter 2 The Habit of Finding Each Other Without Trying

The Habit of Finding Each Other Without Trying

Rowan was known for one thing, though no one ever said it out loud he showed up even when he didn't know why.

Elira noticed this before she understood what it meant.

The hallway outside the meeting room hummed with quiet anticipation.

The air conditioner whispered overhead, and behind the closed doors, voices blended into a low, steady murmur.

Elira stood near the wall, flipping her pen between her fingers, the tip clicking softly against her notebook. Her bag rested against her ankle. She had arrived early again.

She always did.

Rowan appeared at the end of the hall, walking at the same even pace he kept everywhere unhurried, controlled.

His coat was draped over his arm, tie loosened just enough to suggest the day had already asked more of him than he wanted to give. When he saw her, he slowed.

Not stopping.

Just... slowing.

"You're early," he said.

Elira looked up, surprised by how natural it felt to hear his voice now.

"You say that every time."

"And every time it's true."

She smiled, small and unguarded.

"I like being settled before things start."

"Prepared," he corrected.

"Or nervous," she said honestly.

He considered that. "Could be both."

She gestured to the empty chairs along the wall. "You can sit if you want."

He did.

They sat side by side, a careful space between them that neither mentioned. Elira crossed her ankles, pen still in motion. Rowan rested his forearms on his thighs, hands clasped loosely, gaze forward.

Rowan glanced at her folder. "Same manuscript?"

She nodded. "Still refusing to behave."

"Some things don't like being fixed," he said.

"That's depressing."

"Realistic," he replied.

She turned to him. "You talk like someone who's tried."

His jaw tightened subtle, almost imperceptible. "Maybe."

She didn't push.

Inside the meeting room, chairs scraped and voices overlapped.

Elira took a seat across from Rowan, her notebook open, pen poised. As the discussion unfolded, she caught his eye once, then again each time someone made a point that felt unnecessarily dramatic.

His reaction never became a smile, just the faintest lift at the corner of his mouth, like a private acknowledgment meant only for her.

When the meeting ended, people spilled into the hallway in clusters, already debating deadlines and next steps. Rowan lingered.

"So," he said, falling into step beside her, "do your manuscripts ever win?"

"Sometimes," Elira said. "But only when they feel understood."

"That sounds unfair."

"It is," she agreed. "But so are people."

They walked toward the elevators, neither pressing the button.

"You're avoiding something," Rowan said.

She glanced at him. "Am I?"

"You walk slower when you don't want to go back to your desk."

She laughed softly. "I didn't realize I had habits."

"You do," he said. "You just don't hide them well."

She stopped and turned to face him fully. "Is that a complaint?"

"No," he said quickly. "Just an observation."

She studied his face, the calm composure, the tiredness behind his eyes. "You observe too."

"I have to," he said. "It helps me stay... grounded."

"From what?"

He hesitated. "Things."

She nodded, accepting the incomplete answer.

Later that afternoon, Elira found him again by accident, or so she told herself.

She was in the break room, pouring hot water over a teabag, when she felt a presence behind her.

"Let me guess," she said without turning. "Coffee's still winning."

Rowan chuckled quietly. "I was hoping you'd be here."

She turned, surprised. "You were?"

"I mean " He stopped, recalibrated. "I thought you might be."

She smiled. "That's almost the same thing."

He watched her stir the tea. "You don't drink coffee?"

"It makes my hands shake."

"That explains the pen tapping."

She froze. "You noticed that?"

He shrugged. "You do it when you're thinking too much."

She met his eyes. "Do I think too much?"

"Yes."

"Is that bad?"

"Not for me," he said. "I don't like loud thoughts."

She smiled, slower this time. "You don't like loud anything."

"True."

They stood there longer than necessary, the kettle clicking softly as it cooled.

"Do you ever feel like work follows you home?" she asked.

"All the time."

"And?"

"And I let it," he said. "It keeps things simple."

She frowned slightly. "Simple doesn't always mean healthy."

His eyes darkened. "Being healthy isn't always possible."

"It doesn't have to be perfect," she said gently.

He looked away. "You sound like someone who believes that."

"I do," she said. "Most days."

He looked back at her. "I envy that."

"You don't have to," she said. "You could try it."

He smiled, but it didn't reach his eyes. "I don't think I know how."

Over the next few days, their conversations grew longer.

Not deeper, just longer.

They talked while waiting for meetings to start, in hallways between tasks, through brief messages that began about work and drifted elsewhere.

How was your day?

Long.

Anything good about it?

Coffee worked this time.

Elira never asked questions that felt invasive. Rowan never offered information that felt too personal. It became a careful balance, comfortable, almost fragile.

One evening, Elira noticed Rowan still at his desk as the office emptied.

"You're still here," she said, stopping beside him.

"So are you."

"I'm finishing edits."

"So am I," he said, though his screen showed a blank page.

She raised an eyebrow. "That doesn't look finished."

He sighed. "I keep starting over."

"Why?"

"Because the first version always feels too honest."

She leaned lightly against the desk. "Honesty isn't a flaw."

"It is when it makes people expect things from you."

Her chest tightened. "Does that happen to you a lot?"

"Yes."

"And do you give them what they expect?"

"No."

"Then why worry?"

He looked at her like he was seeing the question behind the question.

"You ask difficult things in simple ways," he said.

"I think difficult things deserve simple words."

He nodded slowly. "You'd be good at architecture."

She laughed. "I can barely draw a straight line."

"It's not about drawing," he said. "It's about understanding space. Where things belong."

Her voice dropped. "And what if you don't know where you belong?"

He didn't answer right away. "I'm still figuring that out."

She smiled gently. "Aren't we all?"

The rain returned the next week.

Elira stood by the window, watching droplets race down the glass.

"It's been raining a lot," she said.

Rowan stood beside her. "It suits the city."

"That's sad."

"Accurate."

She glanced at him. "You don't believe in optimism, do you?"

"I believe in preparation."

"That sounds lonely."

"It is," he said, without pretending otherwise.

She turned fully toward him. "Do you want it to be?"

He hesitated. "I don't know. I've been alone long enough that it feels... expected."

"That doesn't mean it's right."

"It means it's familiar."

She took a breath. "Familiar isn't the same as safe."

"Sometimes it is."

Their eyes held, something unspoken pressing between them.

"You don't have to talk about it," she said.

"I know," he replied. "But for some reason... it feels easier with you."

Her heart skipped. "Why?"

"I don't know," he admitted. "You don't look at me like you're waiting for something."

She swallowed.

"What if I am?"

His breath hitched just slightly. "Then I'd disappoint you."

"You don't get to decide that for me," she said.

He looked conflicted. "You make things complicated."

"I will make them honest."

"That's worse," he said quietly.

That night, Elira lay awake, staring at the ceiling.

She wasn't falling in love.

She told herself that.

She was just... noticing him.

At work the next morning, Rowan didn't show up on time.

She noticed.

By noon, she checked the hallway more often than she meant to. When he finally appeared, hair slightly disheveled, eyes more tired than usual relief washed through her before she could stop it.

"You're late," she said, trying to sound casual.

"Sorry," he said. "Didn't sleep."

"Are you okay?"

He paused. "Not really."

Her heart clenched. "Do you want to talk?"

He glanced around the quiet office. "Not here."

They stepped outside, the air cool and damp. Rowan stopped under the awning, rain dripping from the edge.

"There are things," he began, then stopped.

Elira waited.

"I don't talk about my past," he said. "Because when I do, people start expecting a future."

She nodded. "I won't."

He met her eyes. "Promise?"

"I promise."

He exhaled slowly. "Then maybe... someday."

Her breath caught. "Someday," she repeated.

They stood there, rain falling, words hanging unfinished between them.

Rowan opened his mouth to say something else

His phone rang.

He looked at the screen, expression closing off instantly.

"I have to take this," he said.

Elira nodded, stepping back.

He turned away, voice low, unreadable. Elira watched him, chest tight, sensing that whatever he had almost said, whatever lived behind his silence, was something she might not be ready to hear.

And yet, she already wanted to.

Previous
            
Next
            
Download Book

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022