A Cup Away

A Cup Away

Acire

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Carl Woode, a billionaire hardened by his mother's betrayal, has never believed in love. Pride, arrogance, and a guarded heart have always been his armor until he meets Marilyn Porter, a spirited and simple café worker whose kindness and courage challenge everything he thought he knew. Their first meeting sparks conflict, their arguments ignite passion, and slowly, Carl begins to see life and love through a new lens. But when his powerful father, Darius Woode, threatens to tear them apart, Carl must confront the man who shaped him and fight for the one woman who has captured his heart. As secrets unravel and emotions flare, Marilyn demands proof of Carl's love, and Carl must risk everything to show her that love is not weakness it is the most powerful force of all. In a story of transformation, trust, and undeniable chemistry, two hearts discover that love is worth every battle, every fight, and every leap of faith. Will Carl and Marilyn's love survive the weight of family, pride, and fear or will their hearts remain divided?

Chapter 1 Coffee Pride

Carl Woode had built an empire before he turned thirty-five, but the one thing he had never built never even attempted to was faith in love.

From the top floor of Woode Enterprises, the city stretched endlessly beneath him, a glittering sea of steel and glass. Carl stood behind the wide glass window of his office, hands clasped behind his back, tailored suit pressed to perfection. The world below moved at a pace he dictated contracts signed, companies acquired, lives altered by a stroke of his pen. Control was something Carl Woode understood intimately. It was something he trusted.

Love, on the other hand, was chaos.

He had learned that lesson early in life.

Carl still remembered the night his mother left. He had been thirteen, sitting halfway down the grand staircase of their mansion, listening to his parents argue in hushed but venomous tones. His father, Darius Woode, had sounded furious and wounded. His mother had sounded tired so terribly tired. When the door finally slammed shut and her footsteps faded into nothing, Carl knew something irreparable had broken.

She never came back.

From that night on, Carl made a silent promise to himself: love was a weakness, a lie people told themselves before walking away. His mother hadn't been poor, abused, or desperate. She had simply chosen not to stay. If love could disappear that easily, then it was never real to begin with.

So Carl hardened himself.

Years later, he ruled boardrooms with the same emotional distance he had perfected as a teenager. Women admired him ,his wealth, his power, his sharp jawline and cold gray eyes but he never let any of them stay long enough to matter. Relationships were transactions. Temporary. Replaceable.

Just like love.

That morning, Carl was already irritated before stepping into the elevator. A delayed meeting, an incompetent junior executive, and a bitter cup of coffee from the café downstairs had pushed his patience thin. He hated inefficiency. He hated mistakes.

And he especially hated when things didn't go his way.

The café near his office building was small, warm, and perpetually busy, a stark contrast to the sterile luxury of Woode Enterprises. Carl rarely went there himself; his assistant usually handled his coffee. But today, pressed for time and already annoyed, he walked in.

The bell above the door chimed softly.

The scent of fresh pastries and roasted coffee beans filled the air. Soft music played in the background. Carl approached the counter, eyes already scanning his phone.

"Good morning," a voice said.

It was calm. Polite. Unassuming.

Carl didn't look up. "Black coffee. No sugar. No cream. And make it quick."

There was a pause.

"I'm sorry," the voice replied evenly, "but you'll need to wait your turn."

Carl's jaw tightened. He finally lifted his gaze.

Behind the counter stood a young woman with warm brown eyes and dark hair tied loosely behind her head. She wore a simple apron dusted with flour, and there was something disarmingly calm about her expression. She wasn't intimidated. Not even slightly.

"I don't wait," Carl said flatly. "I'm late for a meeting."

She raised an eyebrow. "That sounds like a you problem."

A few customers nearby glanced over.

Carl stared at her, disbelief flickering across his face. "Do you know who I am?"

"Yes," she said calmly. "You're the man standing in line like everyone else."

The corner of her lips twitched not quite a smile, but close enough to feel like an insult.

Carl felt heat rise in his chest. No one spoke to him like this. No one.

"I spend millions in this building," he snapped. "You should be grateful for my business."

"And I spend my mornings serving coffee," she replied evenly. "That doesn't mean I let people be rude to me."

For a brief moment, their eyes locked.

Something unfamiliar stirred in Carl's chest irritation mixed with something else he couldn't quite name. She didn't cower. She didn't flirt. She didn't apologize.

She simply stood her ground.

"Name," Carl demanded.

"Marilyn," she said. "Marilyn Porter."

"Well, Marilyn Porter," he said coldly, "you've just lost a valuable customer."

She smiled then soft, genuine, and entirely unimpressed. "I'll survive."

The audacity.

Carl took his coffee when it was finally ready and walked out without another word, his temper simmering dangerously beneath the surface. Yet, as he stepped back into the elevator, he realized something that unsettled him far more than the argument itself.

He couldn't stop thinking about her eyes.

Days passed, and despite himself, Carl found his attention drifting whenever he passed the café. He told himself it was irritation, unresolved anger. Yet every morning, he found himself looking for a glimpse of dark hair and a flour-dusted apron.

Marilyn, for her part, remembered him clearly.

The arrogant billionaire with the sharp tongue and colder eyes.

She should have forgotten him after that morning but she didn't. There had been something beneath his anger, something lonely and tightly controlled. Marilyn had seen many difficult people in her life. Carl Woode wasn't cruel. He was guarded.

When he returned to the café days later, their encounters turned into a routine of sharp remarks and stubborn silences. " This isn't strong enough" Carl frowned. " I'll make it as strong as your attitude", Marilyn replied then picked up his coffee. Something about her stubbornness caught his interest. He scrolled away on his tablet, looking at the order of the day. Behind the counter, Marilyn murmured. " Its not strong enough" she mimicked him. " I'm going to show him real strength" she smirked as she dumped heaps of coffee powder into the already saturated coffee. "What took you so long" he exclaimed. Marilyn smiled politely then said " Enjoy" before turning to walk away. Marilyn watched with excitement from the counter as Carl's face froze when he took a sip of the coffee. Still struck from the taste of the coffee, he looked up only to see Marilyn grinning ear to ear. His blood began to boil with anger. She had done it on purpose. One would have expected him to put the coffee away and walk out but pride won't let him be. He began to gulp down the coffee despite the taste. Marilyn could see his evident struggle and couldn't watch his suffering any longer. She swiftly walked up to his table with a glass of milk and forcefully to the coffee from him. " Are you always like this? Proud and unapologetic? All I wanted was to have you remorseful not dying in my cafe from choking on strong coffee" she handed him the glass of milk and walked away. Carl was bewildered. This felt so new to him. No one stood up to him and cared for him as she just did. He proceeded take a sip of the milk to wash down all the bitterness. Despite the ordeal neither of them stopped showing up.

Underneath the conflicts and bickering, something slowly, quietly began to change.

Carl found himself lingering longer than necessary, listening to Marilyn laugh with customers. Marilyn noticed how his sharp edges softened when he wasn't trying so hard to be untouchable.

Neither of them realized it yet, but fate had already begun weaving a thread between them one that would challenge Carl's beliefs, test Marilyn's heart, and force them both to redefine what love truly meant.

And for the first time in his carefully controlled life, Carl Woode was standing at the edge of something he could not buy, command, or escape.

Something dangerous.

Something real.

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