Cherreads

When the Rain Fell

Udemba_Praise
35
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 35 chs / week.
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Synopsis
When the rain began to fall that morning, Mara Collins was just another face in a crowded city—an artist who’d forgotten how to create, a dreamer who’d stopped dreaming. After losing her sense of purpose to the weight of routine, she hides away in her favorite coffee shop, watching the world pass her by through rain-streaked glass. Then comes Eli Grant—late, flustered, and armed with a cup of coffee that will forever stain Mara’s favorite white blouse... and quietly change everything. What starts as a clumsy apology turns into an unexpected connection—one filled with easy laughter, long walks in the rain, and conversations that blur the line between strangers and something more. But as their bond deepens, both carry pieces of the past they’ve tried to forget. Mara must learn to trust her heart again, and Eli must decide whether he’s ready to stay in one place long enough to truly be seen.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — The Coffee Spill

Rain had a way of making the city look honest. It washed the lies off glass, blurred the edges of tall buildings, and left reflections in puddles that looked more like truth than the real thing.

Mara Collins watched the rain streak down the café window and tried not to think about how her life had begun to feel the same way—smudged at the edges, uncertain, too easily wiped away.

She was late again. Not for anything important—just her own plan to get her act together. She'd promised herself a year ago that she'd start painting again, that she'd stop letting work swallow her whole, that she'd try. Instead, she was still here, hiding in the same corner of Brew & Bloom, clutching a lukewarm cappuccino and pretending she had time to spare.

The bell over the door jingled.

She didn't look up—until someone's voice cut through the low murmur of music and conversation.

"Sorry! Sorry—oh no, no, no—!"

She turned just in time to see it happen: a blur of motion, a splash of brown, and the unmistakable scent of roasted coffee hitting fabric. Her fabric.

Her favorite white blouse now looked like an abstract painting.

The culprit froze, eyes wide. He was tall, rain dripping from his hair, a guilty half-smile already tugging at his lips. "I—uh—am so sorry. That was... a terrible first impression."

Mara blinked, then exhaled a shaky laugh. "You think?"

"I swear I'm not normally this destructive," he said, grabbing napkins in a flustered panic. "I'm usually more of a mild inconvenience."

He handed her the soggy pile, and for the first time, their eyes met.

Something electric passed between them—like the crackle that comes just before lightning hits the ground.

She noticed the dimple that appeared when he smiled, the way his voice softened when he said her name—after she'd reluctantly told him.

Eli. His name was Eli.

By the time the barista offered them both replacement drinks "on the house," Mara's ruined blouse didn't seem to matter anymore.

Eli glanced out the rain-streaked window. "You know," he said, "I think fate just used coffee as an excuse."

She tilted her head. "An excuse for what?"

"For me to meet you," he said simply.

And for the first time in months, Mara laughed—not because she had to, but because something in her heart remembered how.