giuliamailblu
Amelia Clarke is a design student: she lives through colors, ideas, and creative chaos. She's the kind of person who fills every room she walks into, but behind her energy hides a constant fear of never being "serious" enough to truly be taken seriously.
Darren Kent, a mathematics student, is her complete opposite: precise, quiet, almost invisible. He analyzes everything, avoids emotions, and keeps people at a distance. Not because he doesn't feel anything, but because feeling makes him uncomfortable.
When their best friends, Anna and Mike, arrange a double date, it's immediately obvious that Amelia and Darren will never work. Too different. Too distant.
And yet, during that evening, Amelia catches a glimpse of something in Darren: the way he observes the world, his quiet intelligence, the pauses between his words. Something about him fascinates her deeply.
Darren, on the other hand, feels nothing. Or at least, that's what he tells himself.
Amelia decides not to give up. She starts seeking him out, drawing him into her world, pulling him out of his comfort zone: karaoke nights, spontaneous coffee runs, endless conversations about art and science.
Little by little, Darren begins to crack open. Not because of Amelia's persistence, but because of her authenticity.
But love is a difficult feeling to decode, and the distance that grows between them forces them to confront who they truly are: two very different people, yes, but perhaps not incompatible.
In the end, it's not about being similar. It's about choosing to stay.