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Chapter 2 - Chapter 2: The Day She Asked Me Out

A week after our interaction at the fresher's party,

something happened that I still consider one of the most unexpected moments of

my life: Lilian asked me out.

 

Yes—she asked me. Not the other way around. I was stunned. Not because girls hadn't

shown interest in me before—they had. I'd been asked out several times by girls

from our school and even other universities. I have my lockers full of gifts

and love letters since kindergarten. But Lilian? Lilian Smith? The girl

everyone referred to as the most beautiful on campus? The same Lilian who

seemed to float through conversations with effortless grace, who had become

somewhat of a myth even before school officially started? Her asking me out was

a kind of shock that left me speechless.

 

In the days following the fresher's party, Lilian

and I had grown surprisingly close. bit by bit. Nothing dramatic. No

love-at-first-sight kind of moment. It was subtle—like the kind of connection

that creeps in when you're not even looking for it. It was a gradual thing, not

some whirlwind romance. Despite being in different departments—I in finance,

she in arts—we found reasons to talk, to text, to spend a little time together

after lectures. We didn't have much in common when it came to our interests or ambitions.

I lived in numbers, market trends, legacy planning, and corporate futures, and

a cold world. She lived in stories, theatre scripts, poetry, and emotional

realism with a warm world full of flowers and sunshine. Our worlds barely

touched. But we were curious about each other. And that curiosity turned into

comfort. There was something easy about being around her, even when we were

just sitting silently on opposite sides of a bench.

 

We had different classes, different friends,

different worlds. Yet, somehow, we kept ending up in the same spaces. A quick

"hi" turned into longer chats. Casual meetings became routine.

 

At first, it was small things. Random conversations

in the library. Light-hearted banter during campus events. Occasional texts are

exchanged after class. And though we were very different people, there was a

kind of natural rhythm between us—one that neither of us tried too hard to

maintain, but that kept moving forward anyway.

 

Looking back, I can't say we were in love at that

point. That would be dishonest. But we both definitely had something—an

unspoken connection, a growing warmth. We enjoyed each other's company more

than we admitted out loud. It was just enough to keep pulling us closer. And

that was what made her sudden confession so shocking.

We had just finished grabbing lunch at a quiet café

off campus. She'd just finished rehearsal, still dressed in casual rehearsal

clothes—hair tied up, skin glowing with sweat and sunshine. And I had skipped a

finance club meeting just to hang out with her. We were talking about something

random, laughing about something meaningless, She was unusually quiet that day.

I assumed she was tired or distracted. Then she looked straight at me across

the table and said, without any buildup, "I want to date you."

 

Just like that. No drama. No teasing. No games.

 

I blinked. "Wait… what?"

 

She didn't smile. She didn't laugh it off. She

looked straight at me and repeated herself "I'm asking you out," she repeated,

as casually as if she were commenting on the weather. "I want to try a

relationship with you," she repeated, her voice calm and completely serious. as

casually as if she were offering me a ride home. 

 

Now, let's be clear—Lilian isn't the first girl to

ever ask me out. And I know she won't be the last. I've had my fair share of

interest from women. With my family name, my looks, my academic achievements,

and the reputation I had from topping the national exam, I was used to

attention. I wasn't new to being liked. But this—this was different.

 

Because it was Lilian.

We had just finished grabbing lunch at a quiet café

off campus. She'd just finished rehearsal, still dressed in casual rehearsal

clothes—hair tied up, skin glowing with sweat and sunshine. And I had skipped a

finance club meeting just to hang out with her. We were talking about something

random, laughing about something meaningless, She was unusually quiet that day.

I assumed she was tired or distracted. Then she looked straight at me across

the table and said, without any buildup, "I want to date you."

 

Just like that. No drama. No teasing. No games.

 

I blinked. "Wait… what?"

 

She didn't smile. She didn't laugh it off. She

looked straight at me and repeated herself "I'm asking you out," she repeated,

as casually as if she were commenting on the weather. "I want to try a

relationship with you," she repeated, her voice calm and completely serious. as

casually as if she were offering me a ride home. 

 

Now, let's be clear—Lilian isn't the first girl to

ever ask me out. And I know she won't be the last. I've had my fair share of

interest from women. With my family name, my looks, my academic achievements,

and the reputation I had from topping the national exam, I was used to

attention. I wasn't new to being liked. But this—this was different.

 

Because it was Lilian. of beauty that made people stare, even when she wasn't trying.

Graceful. Confident. Mysterious. She stood out without needing to do anything

at all. She had a presence that couldn't be ignored, and everyone on campus

knew it. Even girls who didn't like her respected her. And what made her even

more compelling was the fact that she didn't seem to care. She didn't chase

attention. She didn't flaunt anything. She just was, and people noticed.

 

 

So when someone like her asked me out—openly,

plainly, without any games or hints—it stunned me. Most girls, even if they

liked you, would never say it. Especially not the beautiful ones. Even when

they're clearly interested, they'd rather die than say it out loud. They drop

hints, laugh at your jokes a little too long, maybe "accidentally" bump into

you, but they don't spell it out. They'd flirt, smile more than usual, maybe

drop subtle signs—but they'd never outright confess. Pride always gets in the

way. Growing up in privilege, I was used to admiration. Some girls flirted

boldly. Others played the long game. I knew how to read those signs.

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