THE CITY THAT KISSED HERđč
READING AGE 16+
đč âTHE CITY THAT KISSED HERâ By Mixie ChvTHE COLLISIONRose Hartley always believed the city had its own heartbeat â a rhythm pulsing underneath the blaring horns, the chatter, the distant train rumbles. She moved through it every morning: heels tapping pavement, hair tied high, iced coffee in hand, eyes on her goals. She didnât step lightly; she stepped like a woman planning to conquer all of Manhattan in a pair of red heels.This morning, however, the city beat back.She was running late. Her boss had scheduled a last-minute meeting. Sheâd slept through her alarm after binge-watching a drama she swore sheâd stop after âone more episode.â And of course, the cafĂ© line was out the door. But Rose was a woman of stubborn routinesâcoffee first, chaos later.Finally clutching her iced caramel latte, she pushed through the revolving door⊠and straight into a hard chest.Her coffee exploded.âOh my Godâ!â Rose gasped, staring in horror at the brown stain dripping down the manâs perfectly pressed white shirt.The man looked down, blinked once, then lifted his eyes to hers.Warm brown eyes. A sharp jaw. A tiny scar near his eyebrow. Hair just messy enough to look effortlessly handsome.He was the kind of man romance novels put on the cover.âItâs fine,â he said, voice deep and unbothered. âAdds character.ââIâIâm so sorry. Seriously. I can pay for dry cleaning. Or a new shirt. OrââHe chuckled, lifting a hand. âYouâre flustered.ââYou think?ââIâm Adrian.â He extended his hand, stained shirt and all.She took it. âRose.âHis smile widened, slow and appreciative. âBeautiful name. Accidentally violent, but beautiful.âHer face burned.âLet me make it up to you,â Adrian said. âHow about I buy you a new drink?ââYouâre the one who should be furious,â she muttered.He looked down at his ruined shirt. âIâd be furious if it were anyone else.âHer heart did a ridiculous flip.They reentered the cafĂ©. Rose tried to act casual; Adrian looked like he strolled through life with a permanently raised eyebrow and a hint of mischief.While they waited, he asked, âSo, whatâs your story, Rose Hartley? You look like a woman with one.ââMy story is that Iâm now late for work and responsible for caffeinating a stranger.ââLucky stranger.âShe tried not to smile. She failed.---Two hours later, Rose was sitting across from him at a wooden corner table, her untouched replacement coffee sweating beside her. Sheâd never talked to someone this longâespecially not someone sheâd just drenched in caramel latte.Adrian was magnetic. Ridiculously so. He asked questions that made her think, laughed in a way that felt like warm honey, and somehow made her feel like the room shrank to just the two of them.âTell me your dream,â he said.âWhat?ââEveryone has a dream. Even people who ambush strangers with beverages.âShe rolled her eyes but answered. âI want my own fashion line someday.âHis brows lifted. âYou design?ââI sketch. A lot. Itâs kind of my⊠escape.ââThatâs incredible.âShe shrugged, shy in a way she hadnât been since high school.âWhat about you?â she asked.Adrian hesitated, fingers tapping his cup. âIâm a software architect. I build things that help corporations pretend they know what theyâre doing.âShe burst into laughter, startling him into smiling.Outside, the city kept beating. But inside, something had shifted.When they stood to leave, Adrian paused, looking down at her with that heart-stopping gaze.âDinner tonight?âRoseâs breath caught. âTonight?ââWeâve already skipped half a workday together. Might as well commit to being irresponsible.âShe hesitated. She wasnât impulsive. She was Rose the Planner. Rose the Structured. Rose the Color-Codes-Her-Calendar.But something in his eyes tugged at her.âAlright,â she whispered. âTonight.âThe smile he gave her felt like sunrise.âMeet me at Vela Rooftop. Seven.âHe walked away, sunlight catching his shoulders, coffee stain still drying across his shirt. Rose stood frozen in the doorway, heart thundering like sheâd woken a sleeping part of herself.Tonight.God help her.---Seven oâclock arrived too quickly.Rose stepped out of the elevator to the rooftop restaurant, wind teasing her hair, the city glowing below like it was holding a thousand secrets. Her red dress hugged her hips, the slit brushing her thigh like a whispered dare.She spotted him immediately.Adrian stood near the glass railing, hands in pockets, jacket tugged by the breeze. He turned, eyes raking over her slowlyâslow enough to heat her skin.âRose,â he said, voice lower than before. âYou lookâŠâShe waited.He exhaled. âDangerous.âThe words slid over her like warm water.Dinner was laughter. Shared stories. Lingering touches. Moments of silence that felt loaded.When their fingers brushed for the first time, neither pulled awayWhen his knee touched hers beneath the table, he didnât move.Neither did sheEvery time his eyes drop- PART 2?
Unfold
The night was cold, but Rose barely felt it as she walked through the city, her mind racing. The photo, the messages, Lenaâs triumph â everything swirled like a storm she couldnât outrun. She ended up at the bench overlooking the river, the place where she and Adrian had once shared their first real, vulnerable moment.
The city lighâŠâŠ
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