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Philophobia: A Heart That Fears Love

Shafa_Q_1665
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Tagline: “She promised never to love. He swore to break that promise.” Genre: Psychological Romance | Tragedy | Slow-Burn Length: Estimated 35–40 chapters Status: Ongoing Zoe doesn't believe in love. She fears it. Diagnosed with philophobia, she’s learned to survive by shutting down emotionally. Her past is a graveyard of abandonment, betrayal, and emotional chaos — love, to her, is a danger she refuses to invite. Walls up, heart locked, she lives by one rule: Don’t let anyone in. But then she meets Zayn Alvin— billionaire CEO's son, magnetic, arrogant, and impossible to ignore. In the boardroom and in public, he’s untouchable. But behind closed doors, he’s someone else entirely. With Zoe, he’s patient, vulnerable… safe. Zayn has always lived a double life — one molded by power and pressure, the other hidden beneath years of secrets. No one has ever seen his real self. Until Zoe. As their connection deepens, Zoe finds herself drawn to the one man who feels like home — and danger — all at once. Every time she lets him in, her fear claws its way back. And every time Zayn tries to protect her, his own mask begins to slip. But behind Zayn’s carefully curated charm lies a truth darker than Zoe’s past. And when that truth comes out, it threatens to destroy the only fragile trust she’s ever built. This is not a story about perfect love. It’s about broken minds, fractured identities, and a romance built in the shadows of fear.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter One: The Art of Being Untouched

People talk about love like it's some kind of miracle.

As if it doesn't leave you hollow.

As if it doesn't rot you from the inside out.

I've seen what love does.

The screaming, the begging, the broken plates on kitchen floors.

I've lived it — behind locked doors and bloodied voices, where "I love you" came with bruises and apologies that never lasted.

So, I made a decision years ago:

Never love. Never let anyone close enough to break you.

That's why I don't smile when someone flirts.

That's why I delete every "Hey, you're cute" before I even check who sent it.

I don't do attachments.

I don't do people.

I survive alone.

And honestly? That's how I like it.

--

The steam from the shower still clung to my skin, fogging the mirror as I tied my hair into a messy bun. My eyes — tired, dark-circled, guarded — stared back at me like a stranger I've grown used to pretending is fine.

Today was the first day of university.

A fresh start, they called it.

New people, new classes, new reasons to fake a smile.

Yay.

I threw on a hoodie two sizes too big and black jeans that hugged just enough to feel like armor. The fewer people noticed me, the better.

"Zoe! Breakfast is ready! You're going to be late!"

My mother's voice cut through the silence like a blade through silk.

I shut my eyes. Counted to three. Pretended she wasn't there.

I hated mornings.

I hated people pretending they cared.

I hated pretending I believed them.

Especially her.

Still, I grabbed my bag, slung it over one shoulder, and walked into the kitchen — quiet, distant, unreadable. Just the way I liked it.

She placed a plate in front of me. Toast. Eggs. Overcooked like always.

"You should eat properly," she said without looking at me.

I gave a half-nod, just enough to keep the peace.

We didn't talk about the past.

We didn't talk about why I wake up some nights gasping for air.

We didn't talk about why I flinch when someone raises their voice.

We just… existed. Like strangers in the same house, performing the roles we were given.

---

The university gates looked like prison bars.

People laughed in clusters, hugged like they meant it, snapped selfies with eyes full of light I could never fake. My steps slowed, heart heavy in my chest like a warning siren.

Don't let them in. Don't let them see.

I kept my hood up. Earphones in. Volume off.

Just enough to make people think I wasn't available —

Which was true.

Emotionally? I was gone a long time ago.

And that's how I planned to keep it.

Or at least…

That's what I thought.