Cherreads

Playful love

Daniel_Lemo
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
One latte. Two names. A mix-up that started it all. Samantha Caldwell lives a quiet, well-ordered life. As a children’s book illustrator, she’s used to whimsical stories but she’s never lived one. Her weekly routine at the local café is her sanctuary… until a stranger named Luke Bennett sits across from her, claiming she stole his chai latte. What begins as a playful misunderstanding quickly spirals into a charming game of pranks, laughter, and escalating flirtation. Week after week, their coffee shop banter deepens into something neither expected: a bond that feels as real as it is unpredictable. Luke is spontaneous, poetic, and a little messy everything Sam avoids. But love, it turns out, has its own rhythm. And just when they’re getting closer, distance, doubt, and a life-changing opportunity threaten to derail everything they’ve built. From missed calls to heartfelt notes, and fox doodles to latte fueled confessions, Playful Love is a heartwarming story about the joy of letting someone in and discovering that sometimes, the best love stories begin with a little mischief.
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Chapter 1 - A Chance Encounter

Saturdays were sacred to Samantha Caldwell.

They were her escape from the noise of the world and the pressure of freelance deadlines. By 8:45 a.m., she was always at Bean & Brew Café a cozy, plant-filled spot on the corner of 6th and Main where the baristas knew her order before she reached the counter. A medium chai latte with oat milk, no foam, extra cinnamon. She'd claim her favorite window seat, plug in her headphones, and sketch whimsical animals that might someday fill the pages of a children's book.

This Saturday felt no different until it very much was.

She reached for her latte, only to find her hand collide with someone else's.

"Hey," a voice said, amused rather than annoyed. "You've got good taste."

Samantha looked up. He was tall, early thirties maybe, with dark curly hair, a navy hoodie, and a grin that looked like it had never lost a bet.

"I believe that's my drink," he added, holding up the identical cup in his hand.

"I believe you're mistaken," she replied, arching an eyebrow. "Unless you're Samantha Caldwell."

He chuckled, showing a perfect row of teeth. "Can't say I am. I'm Luke Bennett. But the order's the same. Medium chai, oat milk, extra cinnamon, no foam. Which means we either have freakishly aligned taste buds or the barista messed up."

The barista, overhearing, quickly apologized. "Sorry! It's rare we get two of those at the same time. Let me remake one for you."

But Luke held up a hand. "Nah, it's fate." He turned to Samantha. "Want to share? Could be a fun social experiment."

She gave him a long, skeptical look. "Do you always ask strangers to share beverages?"

"Only when they steal mine first."

Despite herself, she laughed. Something about his easy charm cut through her usual wariness. She nodded toward the empty seat across from her. "Fine. But I get the first sip."

They sat there for over an hour.

What began as light conversation how absurdly expensive cinnamon was, the superiority of oat milk over almond, the eternal debate between muffins and scones turned into a more meaningful exchange. She learned Luke worked in urban planning by day, but confessed, with a sheepish smile, that he wrote poetry at night.

"For real?" she asked, surprised. "Like, rhyming verses and all?"

He shrugged. "I'm not great at talking about feelings. Writing helps me figure out what I'm really thinking. Even if it's just badly written metaphors about city traffic."

Samantha shared her own secret ambition: to write and illustrate her own children's book. "I sketch stories all the time. I just haven't had the guts to submit anything. It feels like showing someone your dreams and hoping they don't laugh."

Luke leaned in slightly. "Well, if your stories are anything like your drink order, they're probably amazing."

She blushed, then deflected. "Flattery will get you nowhere."

"Darn. I thought I was at least getting a second shared latte out of this."

She raised an eyebrow, her lips tugging into a smirk. "We'll see."

At 11:15, Samantha packed her things. She hesitated as she tucked her sketchbook into her bag.

"Same time next week?" Luke asked, scribbling something on a napkin.

She looked at it. A number. A small doodle of a fox. And a message: 'Next round's on me, Copycat.'

"I'll think about it," she said, slipping the napkin into her coat pocket.

As she walked home, she felt a weightless buzz in her chest not the caffeine. Something lighter. Brighter.

She had always been cautious with strangers. Careful with her routines. But something about Luke had slipped past her usual barriers. The playful banter. The warmth in his eyes. The way he made her laugh without trying too hard.

She opened the napkin again, standing in the doorway of her apartment.

The fox drawing looked oddly like her own style loose, quirky lines with exaggerated features. Maybe it was a coincidence. Maybe he was just the kind of person who noticed those details.

Maybe, she thought, this was just the beginning.