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Chapter 1 - The Day I Met Him, I Didn’t Know He Was Temporary

I didn't fall in love with Noah the day I met him.

I noticed him — that was all.

He sat two tables away from me at a quiet café I went to whenever life felt too loud. He didn't look like someone waiting for anyone. No phone in his hand. No rush in his body. Just a man sitting still, as if time wasn't chasing him the way it chased the rest of us.

People who sit like that usually carry something heavy.

I knew, because I did the same.

The rain started without warning. Thick, impatient drops against the glass. The kind that traps you inside longer than you planned.

He looked up then — at the rain, not at me — and smiled softly.

Not a happy smile.A familiar one.

The kind you give when you've accepted things you can't change.

Our eyes met by accident.

Most people look away quickly.He didn't.

And for a second — just one — it felt like he saw me. Not the version of me I show the world, but the tired one underneath.

I broke the stare first.

I always do.

When the waitress came, I realized I'd left my wallet at home.

Again.

I laughed it off, embarrassed, already preparing to leave when a voice behind me said calmly,

"Put it on mine."

I turned.

It was him.

"You don't have to," I said quickly.

"I know," he replied. "I want to."

There was no flirtation in his tone. No expectation. Just kindness — the kind that doesn't ask for anything back.

I hesitated. Then nodded.

"Thank you," I said.

He smiled again — softer this time."You're welcome. Stay. The rain doesn't look like it's leaving anytime soon."

Something about the way he said leaving made my chest tighten.

I sat back down.

We didn't talk much after that. Just small things. Names. Coffee preferences. Silence that didn't feel awkward.

Before I left, I stood up and said, "I'll pay you back next time."

He shook his head.

"There doesn't have to be a next time."

I don't know why that sentence stayed with me longer than it should have.

I smiled politely. "There usually is."

He looked at me then — really looked.

"Not everything that feels right is meant to last," he said.

I laughed, uncomfortable. "That's a strange thing to say to someone you just met."

He smiled — sad this time.

"You'll understand later."

I walked out into the rain, annoyed for reasons I couldn't explain.

I didn't know his story.

I didn't know his secret.

I didn't know how deeply he would change me.

All I knew was this:

Somewhere between the sound of the rain and the quiet space between us,something had already begun.

And endings — I would later learn —don't always announce themselves.

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