Chapter 1: The Birthday Curse

The sky cracked open like it had something to say.

Rain poured down without mercy, smearing the city’s hard edges into a blur. New York looked beautiful when it cried. Lena Hart thought that as she stood on the corner of 43rd and Madison, soaked, holding a slice of discount birthday cake in a plastic container like a sad joke.

She had turned twenty-nine at midnight.

She hadn't even bothered to make a wish.

"Can’t believe I forgot my damn umbrella,” she muttered, squinting at her phone screen. No messages. No calls. Just a tiny 'Happy Birthday' text from her boss and a bank alert that her rent was due in five days.

Classic.

“Happy freaking birthday, Lena,” she said aloud to no one.

As she turned the corner toward her apartment, footsteps behind her caught her attention. Fast. Heavy. Too close.

She didn’t have time to react.

A hand yanked her purse. The strap cut into her shoulder. She screamed, stumbling back, arms flailing. Her phone hit the ground. The man was masked, hooded. No hesitation. He shoved her hard against the wall.

“Give it up, lady!”

“Take it! Just—take it!”

He tore the bag free, but not before ripping the necklace her mom had given her when she was twelve.

"No!" she cried out, reaching for it as if she could pull time backward.

But the man turned to run—then suddenly stopped.

Or rather, someone stopped him.

A blur lunged from the other end of the alley. A punch. A kick. The mugger hit the ground with a wet thud. Seconds later, he was gone—bolting down the street, no bag in hand.

“Are you okay?” a voice asked.

Lena blinked.

He was tall. Dark jacket. Wet curls plastered to his forehead. A little breathless. His voice wasn’t deep, but it was steady, calming.

“I—uh…”

“You’re bleeding,” he said, pointing gently to her scraped hand. “Come here, sit.”

She didn’t resist when he guided her down onto a dry spot beneath an awning. Her heart was racing too fast to argue.

“I can’t believe that just happened,” she breathed out.

“City never sleeps,” he said. “Especially not the creeps.”

He took off his jacket and placed it around her shoulders.

She looked at him closely now. Warm brown eyes. Strong jaw. Not too pretty, but striking. Like someone who’d seen things and didn’t flinch anymore.

“I’m Ethan,” he said.

She paused. “Lena.”

“Nice to meet you, Lena. Even under... dramatic circumstances.”

She gave a short laugh. It hurt, somehow. “Yeah. Welcome to my cursed birthday.”

He tilted his head. “Cursed?”

She nodded. “I get mugged, dumped, ghosted, fired—or all of the above—every birthday. This year, I thought I’d beat the odds by doing absolutely nothing.”

“Smart strategy. Didn’t work though.”

“Clearly.”

She looked down at the smashed cake on the pavement. Red velvet. The kind her dad used to get her every year before he left.

“Was that your birthday cake?”

“Yeah. Bought it myself. Woohoo.”

He gave her a look—one that wasn’t pity, but something else. Like he understood.

“I’ve got a better idea,” he said suddenly, standing.

“Oh?”

“There’s a 24-hour diner two blocks away. They do killer pancakes. My treat. You need coffee, food, and not to remember tonight like this.”

She hesitated. Every warning bell in her head buzzed.

But he’d just saved her.

“Unless you think I’m a serial killer,” he said with a small smile.

She gave him a long look. “You’re too clean to be a mugger and too charming to be a serial killer.”

He smirked. “I’ll take that as a yes.”

The diner was warm. Bright. The kind of place where the coffee tastes like burnt hope, but the eggs make up for it. Lena sat across from Ethan, still wrapped in his jacket, hands around a chipped mug.

“You really don’t have to pay,” she said again.

“I insist. Heroes get diner points. It’s a rule.”

“Oh, so you’re a hero now?”

“Well, you didn’t get stabbed, so...”

She laughed. “Touché.”

They talked. About nothing. About everything. He told her he worked in real estate. That he’d just moved into a loft nearby. That he liked thunderstorms and hated olives. That his mom taught him how to make scrambled eggs that didn’t taste like rubber.

She told him about her job in branding. About Kara, her best friend who made her swear off Tinder. About her dad walking out when she was ten and how birthdays never felt right after.

“You’re not what I expected tonight,” she said quietly.

“Same,” he replied. “You’re… not like most people.”

She looked up. “Is that a compliment?”

He leaned in a little. “It’s the highest one I give.”

A beat passed. Her heartbeat didn’t slow. And for the first time in what felt like years, it wasn’t from fear.

Outside, the rain had stopped. The streets shimmered like they were made of silver.

He walked her home, not asking to come in.

“Thanks, Ethan,” she said, pausing at her door.

“Happy birthday, Lena.”

“You saved me.”

“Let’s not make it a habit,” he said with a crooked grin. “But if you ever feel cursed again... I’m around.”

She stepped inside and closed the door. For a moment, she leaned against it, still smelling the rain and diner coffee on his jacket.

She looked at her reflection in the hallway mirror.

She was smiling.

For once.

And somewhere, just down the street, a man watched from the shadows.

He smiled too.

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