Cherreads

“I Fell for a Mature Man”

FK_LUH
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
63
Views
Synopsis
Synopsis: I was nineteen when I met him—the man I should never have fallen for. He was quiet, mature, unreadable… the kind of man who carried stories in his eyes but never shared them. He didn’t belong in my world of lectures, noisy dorms, and cheap instant noodles. Yet he was the only person who made my heartbeat feel loud. A simple visit to a small café turned into something I couldn’t escape. His voice, his calmness, the way he remembered my usual order— all of it pulled me closer to a line I knew I shouldn’t cross. He warned me to stay away. He said I was too young. He said he couldn’t give me what I wanted. But the more he pushed me away, the more my heart insisted on falling. Was it fate? Or a mistake waiting to happen? A slow-burning, forbidden-age-gap romance about a college girl who falls for the older man she shouldn’t love… and the older man who tries—yet fails—to resist her.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 — The First Time I Saw Him

I first noticed him on a blistering hot afternoon.

I had only wanted a place to escape the heat when I pushed open the door of the small café outside campus. The air-conditioning washed over me, cooling my skin instantly. But it wasn't the chill that made my breath catch.

It was him.

In the corner, a man in a crisp white shirt was reading documents.

He looked like someone in his mid-thirties—maybe early forties—calm, composed, and completely out of place among noisy students.

His profile was sharp, the kind that looked naturally stern…

but his eyelashes were surprisingly long.

I stared a little too long.

He lifted his head, and our eyes met.

My heart skipped—actually skipped.

"Can I help you?" His voice was low, steady, and warm in a way a stranger's voice shouldn't be.

That's when I realized… he wasn't a customer.

He worked here.

Flustered, I blurted out my order.

Except my brain short-circuited and I mixed up the words.

"I—I'll have an Ameri… uh… Ameri—c-c— uncle—"

I wanted to dig a hole and die right there.

He blinked, and then—just barely—the corner of his lips curved.

"…One Americano," he repeated, saving my life.

Embarrassed beyond belief, I found a seat.

But from that moment on, I remembered everything about him—

his voice, his calm demeanor, the faint scent of coffee on him.

And after that day…

I found myself returning to the café.

Every. Single. Day.

Even when I didn't need coffee.

Even when I had no time.

Just to see him again.