Chloe thought she understood her life.
She had a shop she loved, a rhythm that worked, and relationships that fit neatly into the spaces she allowed them. Nothing was defined too tightly. Nothing asked too much.
Until it did.
When her carefully balanced world begins to shift, Chloe finds herself pulled into something more complicated than she ever intended-where intimacy demands honesty, and connection comes with a cost she can't ignore.
This is a story about power, desire, and the quiet negotiations that shape modern relationships.
Not the dramatic kind. The real kind-the ones that happen in kitchens, in late-night conversations, in the spaces where no one is quite telling the full truth. As Chloe navigates love, control, and the uncomfortable act of being truly seen, she is forced to confront a question she's spent years avoiding:
Who is she, when she stops adapting to everyone else?
Set in a London bookshop and the lives that orbit it, Chloe is an intimate, character-driven novel exploring emotional vulnerability, unconventional relationships, and the fragile line between independence and connection.