"I called you âthat attractive,â which is technically underselling it," I said, trying to sound casual while my little brother decided to revolt in my pants when she squeezed my legs her bare legs. "Starting with âyouâre so hot youâre making me forget pharmacologyâ seemed too aggressive for a first coffee meeting."
âDid I just call this a date? Fuck. I did.â
"So, this is a date?" She leaned back, teasing, but there was curiosity lurking under her grin, teasing my legs under table. "I thought this was just academic tutoring."
"It can be both. Multitasking."
"Youâre seventeen."
"Seventeen next month, technically. And youâre twenty-five. Just numbers."
"Eight years isnât just numbers, Peter." Her tone wasnât angry. Not really. It was sharp, aware, and yes... intrigued. "What would people say if they knew I was on a date with a student?"
"Probably the same thing those guys over there are thinkingâthat I either sold my soul or saved your life to get coffee with you."
Her eyes flicked around, catching the way the pre-med guy at the next table had practically drawn a sword in his mind and challenged me to a sword dual. She finally registered the audience.
"Theyâre not very subtle, are they?" she mused.
"To be fair, youâre not very subtle either. That sweater should come with a warning label."
"Oh my god." She buried her face in her hands, but I could see the grin stretching under her fingers. "Are you seriously hitting on me with pharmacology
and
fashion critique?"
"Is it working?"
She peeked through her fingers. "Maybe. Probably. Definitely more than it should be."
The words hovered in the air, heavy and dangerous. She lowered her hands, the playful teasing still thereâbut now something else had slid into the cracks. Something electric. Something that could ignite if either of us blinked wrong.
"This is crazy," she said softly. "Iâm literally sitting in a coffee shop, flirting with a teenager who made headlines for violence today."
"When you put it like that, it sounds bad."
"Doesnât it?" But she leaned forward again, close enough that I could count the individual eyelashes, the faint curl at the tips. "So why does it feelâ"
"Right?" I supplied, like it was the only possible answer.
"I was going to say exciting, but right works too." She shook her head, waging some silent argument with herself. "You know what? Fuck it. I spend every day being professional, appropriate, responsible. Maybe I want to do something a little crazy."
"Discussing pharmacology is crazy?"
"Discussing pharmacology with a teenager who looks at me like Iâm the most interesting thing in the universe? Yeah. Pretty crazy."
âAm I that obvious?â
"You are the most interesting thing in this coffee shop," I said honestly. "Possibly the entire university district."
"See, that." She pointed at me, still smiling. "That right there. You say things like that so easily. Most guys your age would be stammering and awkward."
"Most guys my age havenât had to grow up as fast as I have."
Something in my tone must have conveyed more than I intended because her expression softened. "No, I suppose they havenât. That thing today with Holloway..."
"Was necessary," I finished. "My sister was in danger. I did what I had to do."
"And now youâre here, having coffee with me, like violence isnât part of your repertoire."
"Violence is always part of everyoneâs repertoire," I said quietly. "The only question is what brings it out. Threaten someone I love? Yeah, I become someone else. But this?" I gestured between us. "This is who I actually am. Just a guy who likes smart women and knows too much about drug interactions."
She studied me, slow, deliberate. I could practically see her recalibrating every assumption sheâd made about me. "Youâre not what I expected."
"What did you expect?"
"Honestly? Some awkward teenager with a crush who memorized a few medical terms to impress me." She smiled ruefully. "Instead, youâre... this. Whatever this is."
"Disappointed?"
"The opposite, actually. Which is the problem."
âThereâs a problem?â
She must have seen the question in my eyes because she continued. "Peter, Iâm twenty-five. Youâre in high school. I work at your school. There are so many reasons why thisâwhatever this isâis a terrible idea."
"And yet youâre still here."
"And yet Iâm still here," she agreed. "Making eyes at a teenager over coffee like Iâve lost my damn mind."
"Youâre making eyes at me?"
She laughed, loud, unrestrained. "Are you fishing for compliments now?"
"Always. My ego needs constant feeding."
"Your ego seems plenty healthy from where Iâm sitting." Warmth, affection, maybe a touch of mischief in her tone. "God, what am I doing?"
"Having coffee. Discussing medicine. Enjoying yourself for what sounds like the first time in months."
"It is," she admitted. "The first time in months Iâve felt like myself instead of just... roles. Nurse. Student. Professional. Responsible adult."
"So stop being responsible for a few hours. Be Valentina instead."
"Just Valentina?" She tested the idea, curiosity glinting in her eyes. "And whoâs Valentina when sheâs not being responsible?"
"Thatâs... what Iâm trying to find out."
The look she gave me then was pure fire, age difference be damned. "Careful what you wish for, Peter. You might not be ready for just Valentina."
âTry me. Iâve handled supernatural sex goddesses and system-enhanced seduction. How dangerous could one graduate student be?â
"Only one way to find out," I said, matching her energy.
She held my gaze a moment longer, then seemed to come to a decision. "Okay. But weâre going to need more coffee. And possibly somewhere with fewer audience members."
I glanced around. Half the coffee shop had become our unwilling spectators. "Any suggestions?"
"Thereâs a 24-hour diner a few blocks away. Quieter, better food, and the owner doesnât care if people camp out in booths for hours." She started gathering her notes. "Plus, they have pie, and sugar helps with studying."
"Pie and pharmacology. You really know how to show a guy a good time."
"Oh honey," she said, standing and giving me a view that made my brain short-circuit entirely, "you have no idea what I consider a good time."
âThis woman is going to be the death of me tonight. And Iâm going to enjoy every second of it.â
As we prepared to leave, I caught her hand briefly. "Hey. Thank you. For taking a chance on this. On me."
She squeezed my fingers, electricity shooting up my arm like a minor seizure. "Thank you for being worth the risk."
We walked out together, ignoring stares and whispers, stepping into an evening that smelled like caffeine and bad decisions. Valentina slipped her arm through mine like it was the most natural thing in the world.
"So," she said casually, "tell me more about this sister you went to war for today."
And just like that, we fell into easy conversation, walking through the university district like any other couple. Except we werenât. We were a powder keg of attraction, intellect, and impossibility, heading to a diner where weâd pretend to study while really studying each other.
âFirst real date. And itâs perfect in all its complicated, inappropriate, absolutely insane glory.â
But fun was in what happened next.