After a small apartment fire, single mother Y/N is left shaken—especially when her young son Dylan’s fascination with firefighters raises quiet suspicions. Among the responders is Noah, a calm, steady firefighter who leaves a lasting impression. In a small town where paths keep crossing, a chance encounter begins to grow into something more, turning a moment of chaos into the start of an unexpected connection.
Getting pulled over for speeding was supposed to be nothing more than a minor inconvenience—five minutes, a ticket, and a story to forget. But meeting Officer Eric Darrington turns it into something else entirely. Eric is steady, guarded, and carrying more than just the weight of his badge. Recently divorced and devoted to his eight-year-old son, Ben, his life is carefully structured, leaving little room for unexpected connections. Yet somehow, he and Y/N keep crossing paths in ways that feel anything but accidental. What begins as fleeting encounters slowly grows into something harder to ignore—but with an age gap, complicated pasts, and a child at the center of it all, timing may be the one thing not on their side.
When Y/N travels to Prague with her three best friends—sharp-tongued bookworm Annabel, quietly emo Leoni, and bold, chaotic Poppy—she expects nothing more than a fun exchange year filled with studying, late-night drinks, and unforgettable memories. But one evening in a traditional Czech restaurant, she catches the eye of Luka, a reserved and striking local police officer finishing a late shift with his colleagues.
Their eyes only met once, across the torches and the murmurs of oaths sworn beneath the moon. His gaze was fierce, carved of shadow and fire. Hers was unyielding, yet sorrow trembled at its edges. Neither yet knew the road ahead: the monsters that lurked in the forests, the betrayals that waited in silence, the slow-burning flame that would consume them both. But the north always demanded sacrifice.
Over the years, Y/N developed crushes she never intended to act on. Instead of confessing, she wrote letters — private, embarrassing letters she never planned to send — to the boys she once loved: Draco Malfoy, Theo Nott, Blaise Zabini, and Mattheo Riddle. But somehow, the letters get out. What started as a harmless lie slowly turns into something much messier: jealousy, secrets, heartbreak, and the terrifying possibility that Y/N might actually lose the one person she never meant to fall for.
When a cruel bet forces your worlds together, what starts as a game quickly turns into something real. You fall first—quietly, carefully. He falls harder—when it’s already too late. And when the truth comes out, it won’t just break your heart. It might destroy you both.
Reluctantly dragged to an underground fight club by her thrill-seeking friends Leoni and Annabel, Y/N finds herself in a dangerous world she doesn’t belong in. While her friends are captivated, Y/N senses something is off—especially when a group of powerful fighters take notice of them. Among them, Jungkook becomes intensely drawn to her, watching her in a way that feels personal and unsettling. As tension builds, Y/N realises this isn’t just a one-time visit. The deeper they get pulled in, the
Mattheo riddle is never nice. To anyone. But when he sees a group of fifth years bullying a first year boy, he steps in. He treats the boy with a kindness he shows no one. What he doesn’t know? That little first year boy is your nephew.
From the moment their eyes meet, there’s something unspoken—tension, curiosity, something neither of them quite understands. He watches too closely; she pretends not to notice. Their interactions are brief, subtle, and edged with something sharper than simple dislike. But in a place like Slytherin, nothing stays quiet forever. And the more their worlds overlap, the harder it becomes to ignore the pull between them—no matter how much they try.
Theo and Mattheo were deeply in love, their bond unshakable—until Y/N appeared. She wasn’t like anyone else: distant, self-assured, impossible to ignore. What began as shared curiosity quickly became something deeper, something neither could deny. For the first time, their world felt incomplete without someone else in it. But they didn’t want to replace what they had—they wanted to expand it. Y/N wasn’t theirs to claim, though. She had her own choices, her own voice. So instead of chasing her, they made a risky decision: approach her together, honestly—hoping she might choose them too.