In the quiet corridors of academia, where intellect meets restraint, Amelia, a diligent student, finds her world subtly disrupted by Professor Robert. His presence is commanding yet distant, his lectures profound yet personal. What begins as academic admiration slowly transforms into a complex web of emotions, where every glance, every word exchanged, carries weight.
Their connection deepens during the rainy season, where shared umbrellas become symbols of unspoken understanding. Amelia's internal battles intensify as she grapples with her growing feelings for Robert, questioning the boundaries between student and teacher. Robert, too, finds himself drawn to Amelia, torn between his professional ethics and the undeniable chemistry between them.
Raindrops Between Silence explores themes of longing, restraint, and the complexities of forbidden love. Set against the backdrop of a university campus, the story delves into the emotional turmoil of a slow-burn romance, where every moment is laden with anticipation.
He's been watching her for weeks.
She's been performing for him almost as long.
Neither of them planned to fall.
Amber Knight's anxiety has a soundtrack-the hum of her laptop at 3 AM, the tap of rain against windows, the silence of a phone that never rings with the right voice. She's perfected the art of looking fine while slowly disappearing, and everyone in her life believes the show.
Everyone except Porter Blackwell.
Porter sees through her careful lighting and choreographed movements to the woman drowning behind the glass. He knows watching her is wrong. Following her friends is worse. Breaking into her house crosses every line he's ever drawn for himself.
But when caring becomes obsession and protection becomes possession, some lines are worth crossing.
Some obsessions destroy. Others save. And sometimes, being seen by the wrong person is exactly what you need.
A dark romance about two broken people finding salvation in the spaces between right and wrong.
For readers who love their romance dark, their heroes morally gray, and their heroines strong enough to choose their own salvation.