Seven days.
That was how long Adrian Vale went without hearing Seraphina's voice.
At first, he told himself it was necessary. Space meant clarity. Distance meant perspective. He sent one message measured, reasonable. When she didn't reply, he sent another two days later. Then he called.
Once.
Twice.
Then again.
Each time, the call rang until it slipped neatly into voicemail. No rejection. No confrontation. Just absence. By the end of the week, the silence had stopped feeling temporary. It followed him into meetings. Into sleepless nights. He told himself she was being emotional. That she would calm down. That this was part of the process.
The business meeting at Blackwell University was meant to be a potential investment, a new innovation wing, donors and administrators eager to impress. Adrian sat through it with practiced attention, nodded at the right moments, shook hands, smiled when required.
When it was over, he stepped out into the main administrative building, loosening his tie as he walked.
That was when he heard her.
"I'm not refusing to pay," a female voice said, strained but steady. "I'm asking for an extension."
Adrian slowed.
At the finance counter stood a young woman clutching a folder to her chest like it was the only thing holding her upright. Her shoulders were tense, chin lifted in quiet defiance as the clerk spoke to her with rehearsed indifference.
"University policy doesn't allow delays," the clerk said. "If the balance isn't cleared, your registration will be suspended."
The girl swallowed. "Please. I just need a little time."
Something in her posture, proud, exhausted, refusing to break pulled Adrian closer before he realized it.
She was beautiful in a way that wasn't loud.
Her hair was dark, thick, pulled back into a low ponytail that had loosened with stress, soft strands framing her face. Her skin was warm-toned, her features delicate but defined, high cheekbones, a straight nose, lips pressed together to keep emotion contained. Her eyes were what stopped him. Brown. Deep. Tired. They reminded him of someone else.
Adrian felt an unexpected tightening in his chest.
He stepped forward. "What's the balance?"
Both the clerk and the girl turned to him.
"I didn't ask you," she said quickly, eyes flashing with something close to embarrassment.
"I know," Adrian replied calmly. "But I can help."
The clerk's tone changed immediately. "Sir, if you'd like to...."
"No," the girl said firmly. "Absolutely not."
She shook her head, backing away as if pride itself were holding her upright. "I'm not taking charity."
"It's not charity," Adrian said. "It's a solution."
She laughed once, sharp and humorless. "You don't even know me."
"I know you're trying," he said. "And that you shouldn't lose your education over timing."
She hesitated. He saw the conflict flicker across her face need warring with dignity.
"There are no conditions," he added quietly. "No expectations. No... obligations."
Her eyes narrowed. "Not even Sex?"
The word landed between them, heavy and blunt.
"No," he said immediately. "Nothing of the sort."
The clerk cleared his throat. "Shall I process it?"
The girl closed her eyes for a moment. When she opened them, something had shifted resolve hardening over shame.
"Fine," she said softly. "
When it was done, they walked out together. She didn't thank him immediately. Instead, she stared straight ahead, jaw tight, like gratitude was something she had to earn the right to feel.
"I'm Elara," she said finally and thank you
"Adrian." no problem
She glanced at him then really looked and something flickered in her eyes. Not hope. Not trust.
Attraction.
He was tall, broad-shouldered, his suit fitting him like it belonged there. Dark hair neatly cut, sharp features softened only slightly by the absence of his usual detachment. From behind, as he walked ahead of her, she noticed the straightness of his back, the quiet confidence in his stride like a man who never doubted the ground would hold him.
Elara exhaled slowly.
Stop, she told herself. This is not the time to be looking for a prince charming.
She had bills to pay. A brother in the hospital. A life that didn't pause for handsome strangers with kind eyes and impossible timing.
And yet, as Adrian Vale walked away, something inside her stirred unwanted, inconvenient, and dangerous.
Elara POV
Elara didn't mean to tell them.
But secrets felt heavier when you were the only one carrying them.
They were sitting in the campus café when she finally said it.
"A man paid my tuition."
Three heads snapped toward her.
"What?" Maya nearly dropped her drink. "What man?"
Elara exhaled slowly, pretending she wasn't still thinking about the way his voice sounded when he said i will for the tuition.
"He's... older. Not old," she corrected quickly. "Just... established."
"Established how?" Tessa asked suspiciously.
"Suit that fits like it was tailored by God," Elara muttered before she could stop herself.
The girls leaned in immediately.
"How does he look?"
Elara hesitated, then gave in.
"He's tall," she began quietly. "Not just in height. He carries himself like the world makes space when he walks. Broad shoulders. Sharp jaw. Dark hair, neat. His eyes..." She paused. "They're not soft. But when he looks at you, it feels like he's measuring something important."
Maya gasped. "That's criminal."
"He smells expensive," Elara added absently. "Like cedar and rain."
They all stared at her.
"You like him," Tessa accused.
"I don't," Elara said quickly. "He just... looks like someone who doesn't lose."
"Which is exactly why we're going out tonight," Maya declared, standing up. "You need to celebrate. One less debt. One less thing crushing you."
Elara shook her head. "I have to check on my brother...."
"For one night," Tessa insisted. "You are not the second parent. You are twenty-two. You're coming."
And somehow, they dragged her out.