Y/N spent her entire childhood being told there was something wrong with her. When her deeply religious parents discovered she was attracted to girls, they dedicated themselves to fixing her. Therapists, church groups, religious counseling, psychiatrists, and years of guilt followed. Now, after being accepted into a university in a city far from home, Y/N finally has a chance to start over. New apartment. New friends. New life. The only problem is that trauma doesn’t disappear just because you change locations. Then she meets Ava Whitmore. Beautiful, popular, wealthy, and completely out of her league. The kind of girl Y/N should stay away from. The kind of girl who won’t leave her alone.
At university, everyone knows Kieran Black. The motorcycle. The tattoos. The fights. The cigarettes. The late nights at bars. The parties where he always seems to appear but never fully belongs. He has a reputation, and he doesn’t seem interested in changing it. Most people see him as the typical bad boy. Someone dangerous. Someone who doesn’t care. Y/N thinks the same. Until she starts accidentally becoming the person he keeps coming back to. Not because he suddenly changes. Not because she magically fixes him. But because, for some reason, talking to her becomes easier than walking away.
Y/n is a writer who knows how to create love stories but has no idea how to live one. After months of staring at empty pages and losing the inspiration that once made her successful, Y/n finds herself desperate for a new story. Then, one night at a bar, she meets Elara — a girl who somehow makes everything feel interesting again. Y/n tells herself it’s nothing personal. Just inspiration. Just a character. Just the missing piece for her next book. But while Y/n is busy turning moments into chapters, Elara starts seeing something different — a woman who listens, remembers the smallest details, and makes her feel truly noticed. The problem is, Y/n doesn’t know how to let someone stay. With a past shaped by abandonment and a fear of getting attached, she keeps hiding behind the excuse that it’s only for the book. But what happens when the person who inspires her story becomes the person she can’t imagine losing?
Y/N joins a gym hoping to improve her fitness, never expecting it to change her life. During one awkward first visit, she meets Rowan Hayes—a tall, tattooed physical therapist who seems intimidating until she opens her mouth. What starts as a simple act of kindness turns into casual conversations, shared workouts, and coffee after the gym. The more time they spend together, the harder it becomes to ignore the growing attraction between them. The problem is that neither woman is willing to make the first move. Y/N is convinced Rowan only sees her as a friend. Rowan is convinced she’d ruin everything if she admitted her feelings. So they remain stuck between friendship and something more, slowly falling for each other one workout, one conversation, and one smile at a time.
You and Damien Cross have broken up more times than either of you can count. Every time you swear it’s over, he finds a way back into your life. Your best friend wants you to leave him, his best friend thinks you’re the problem, and another girl is waiting for your relationship to finally fall apart. The question is: will this breakup be any different?
Money has never been a problem for Y/N and her friends. Their lives are filled with luxury vacations, designer clothes, rooftop parties, yacht trips, and endless brunches that cost more than most people’s rent. The six of them have been inseparable for years. Three girls. Three boys. One perfect friend group. At least from the outside. Because for nearly two years, Y/N has been stuck in an endless cycle with Sebastian Hart. Her best friend. Her favorite mistake. The boy who kisses her when he’s drunk, holds her hand when nobody’s looking, and acts like nothing happened the next morning. Everyone can see something is going on between them. Everyone except Sebastian seems willing to admit it.
Dating Formula 1’s golden boy isn’t difficult because of him—it’s difficult because of everyone else. While Luca loves Y/n with unwavering loyalty, the internet constantly tries to convince her she isn’t worthy of him. Sometimes the hardest battle isn’t on the track, but learning to believe the person who chooses you every single day.
College was supposed to be stressful. It wasn’t supposed to involve sharing an apartment with a nerdy boyfriend who spends half his time programming, the other half playing video games, and somehow still manages to be ridiculously attractive. A month ago, Y/N and Liam moved into their first apartment together. Now they’re learning how to balance classes, rent, grocery shopping, late-night study sessions, and a relationship that’s far from perfect—but always worth it.
Professor Evelyn Hartwell is everything Y/N admires. Brilliant. Kind. Beautiful. As a literature student, Y/N finds herself attending every lecture, writing perfect essays, and finding any excuse to spend a little more time around her professor. At first, Evelyn treats her like every other student. Then she starts remembering little things. The conversations become longer. The smiles become warmer. And suddenly Y/N isn’t sure whether she’s imagining things anymore. Because sometimes it feels like Professor Hartwell is waiting for her to stay after class.
Getting married was the easy part. Learning how to build a life together is something else entirely. Between long shifts, late-night calls, muddy paw prints across freshly cleaned floors, and the reality of sharing a home with another person, Y/N and her husband are trying to figure out what marriage actually looks like. Some days are frustrating. Some days are exhausting. Most days are ordinary. And somehow, that’s exactly what makes them special
Y/n thought she found the perfect girlfriend. Ava is charming, beautiful, and knows exactly how to make her feel loved. But behind the affection is something darker — jealousy, manipulation, and constant doubt. Between unanswered messages, suspicious friendships, and words that make Y/n question herself, she slowly starts losing confidence in what is real. Because the hardest relationships to leave are sometimes the ones where the good moments feel impossible to forget
After a late night at a club, Y/n calls the one person she knows will always come for her — Nova, her best friend. Nova has always been there: the late-night rides, the quiet support, the small acts of care Y/n never thinks twice about. But what Y/n doesn’t know is that Nova has been hiding feelings for her for years. A simple ride home on a motorcycle, wearing Nova’s hoodie and holding onto her tighter than usual, might be the moment everything starts to change. Because sometimes the person who feels like home is the one you never realized you were looking for.
Moving to Berlin was supposed to be a fresh start. A new city. A new apartment. A chance to finally discover who Y/N really is. She never expected romance to be part of that. Especially not with a woman. After leaving her home country behind, Y/N finds herself trying to build a life from nothing. A tiny studio apartment in the middle of Berlin, a new language to learn, and the overwhelming feeling of being completely alone. The only person who makes the city feel less frightening is Camille, another foreigner trying to find her place in Berlin. One afternoon, while searching for a vinyl record in a small music store, Y/N meets someone who changes everything. Not instantly. Not dramatically. Just slowly. A conversation. A friendship. A feeling she doesn’t understand. Because falling for someone was never part of the plan. And realizing that person is a woman changes everything she thought she knew about herself.
Mina Park has millions of followers, a perfect online image, and a life everyone thinks they understand. But behind the camera, she is just Mina — the girl who forgets to rest, steals Y/n’s clothes, leaves coffee cups everywhere, and needs someone who sees her beyond the screen. Living together in New York means learning that love isn’t only about the big moments. Sometimes it’s the quiet nights, messy apartments, small arguments, and choosing each other when nobody else is watching.
It was only supposed to be a summer vacation. A week of beaches, cocktails, and forgetting about university for a while. Instead, Y/N meets a girl from another country. A girl she’s never supposed to see again. At least that’s what they both think. But some people don’t stay vacation memories for very long.
Two roommates. One apartment. A feeling neither of them wants to name. Y/n and Maya were supposed to just be friends — until small moments start feeling like something more. But when both of them are too scared to admit what they want, one question remains: How long can they pretend they don’t feel it?
In high school, popularity was everything. And loving Y/N wasn’t enough for Noah Hart to admit she was his girlfriend. After graduation, Y/N walked away from the relationship despite loving him more than anyone. Two years later, she’s back. Older. Changed. And completely unprepared for the fact that Noah never stopped looking for her. The question is whether love can survive two years of regret. Premise During their final years of high school, Y/N secretly dated Noah Hart, one of the most popular boys in school. Their relationship was nearly perfect. Except for one thing. Noah never told anyone. Embarrassed by what his friends might think, he kept Y/N hidden from the world. Eventually, Y/N realized love wasn’t enough if she always had to be a secret. After graduation she ended the relationship and left to study abroad. For two years they never saw each other. For two years Noah searched for her everywhere. Then Y/N unexpectedly returns and enrolls at the same university Noah attends. For the first time since she left, Noah finally gets a second chance. The problem? Y/N remembers exactly why she walked away.
Every Friday night, the same group of girls ends up together. Coffee runs. Sleepovers. Drunken confessions. Birthday parties. Bad dating decisions. They’ve built their own little family while trying to figure out adulthood. For Y/N, it’s just another year of friendship. For Ava Moretti, it’s becoming something else. Because somewhere between shared drinks, late-night phone calls, and ordinary moments, she starts falling for her best friend. And nobody notices. Not even Y/N.
Everyone in the apartment building knows Roman Hale. The man with the motorcycle. The tattoos. The attitude. Nobody expects the quiet girl who moves in next door to become the one person who sees past everything. She thinks he’s just an intimidating older man who lives too quietly. He thinks she’s too young, too curious, and way too good at getting under his skin. But somewhere between late-night conversations, accidental meetings, and moments neither of them planned for, the line between annoyance and attraction starts disappearing. Because sometimes the person you least expect becomes the person you can’t imagine losing.
Y/N’s life is unpredictable. Some days she’s energetic, loud, impulsive, and impossible to keep up with. Other days, depression leaves her struggling to get out of bed. Her wife, Evelyn Sinclair, has dedicated her entire life to taking care of her. Rich, powerful, and obsessively devoted, Evelyn makes sure every medication is taken, every appointment is attended, and every bad day is managed. She’d do absolutely anything to keep Y/N safe. The problem is that somewhere along the way, protection started looking a lot like control.
A love story doesn’t always have to be dramatic. Sometimes it is waking up too early because a four-year-old is jumping on the bed. Sometimes it is arguing about whose turn it is to do the dishes. Sometimes it is sitting on the couch after a long day, sharing a blanket with the person you chose forever. Y/N and her wife built their life slowly. They don’t live in a huge house. They don’t have a perfect, glamorous life. They have a small apartment in an ordinary city, a daughter they love more than anything, a messy pug running around their home, and a life that belongs completely to them. But even the happiest families have disagreements. Marriage means learning each other’s habits, accepting differences, and finding a way back to each other after difficult moments.
Everyone knows Adrian Blackwood as a man who always gets what he wants. A powerful CEO. A perfectionist. A man who built his entire life around control. Everyone except Y/N. Because Y/N has never been impressed by his money, his reputation, or his ability to solve every problem. She is his fiancée. His biggest headache. And the only person who can make him completely lose his composure. Their relationship is filled with arguments, teasing, ridiculous revenge, and moments where everyone around them wonders how they are still together. But the answer is simple. Because behind all the chaos, Adrian and Y/N understand each other better than anyone else. They don’t have a perfect relationship. They have a real one.
Leaving home was supposed to be the beginning of a better life. After growing up with abusive, alcoholic parents in a small town, Y/N moves to a large city determined to start over. A tiny apartment. A job at a café. No screaming. No broken bottles. No bruises. For the first time, she feels free. Then she meets Ethan Ward. Kind. Patient. Charming. The type of man who makes her believe she can finally trust someone. But some nightmares don’t return all at once. They return slowly. One boundary at a time.