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Call Me By Your Name  Novel Cover

Call Me By Your Name

When Amara Nwosu, a broken Nigerian photographer, lands in the vibrant heart of Lumeria, all she wants is silence- a place to heal, a city to disappear in, and a project to keep her hands busy while her heart stays numb. But Lumeria has its own plans. The city hums with color and chaos, music and memory, and somewhere between the rain-soaked markets and golden riverbanks, she crosses paths with Kairo Mbeki - an architect with a past as heavy as hers and eyes that see far too much. Their worlds collide under the weight of coincidence, and something unspoken sparks between them: a pull neither of them wants to name, a connection that feels both familiar and forbidden. As Amara's camera begins to capture the soul of Lumeria, Kairo becomes the part of it she cannot frame - the one thing she can't walk away from. But love in Lumeria isn't simple. Between family expectations, personal scars, and the ghosts of everything they've lost, both must decide whether healing means holding on... or finally letting go. In a story of second chances, cultural beauty, and quiet resilience, Call Me by Your Name reminds us that sometimes, love doesn't ask for grand gestures - it just asks to be seen.
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Chapter 2

The scent of morning rain still lingered when Amara stepped into Namira's central district, her repaired camera slung safely over her shoulder. The city was stirring to life again after yesterday's storm - motorbikes humming down narrow lanes, women sweeping their storefronts with long palm brooms, the air sweet with the scent of fresh mandazi and ground coffee.

It had been two days since she'd met him.

Kairo Mbeki.

The name had refused to leave her mind, echoing between her thoughts when she tried to sleep, slipping quietly into her dreams. She told herself it was curiosity - nothing more - that strange magnetism of meeting someone who seemed to see through the noise of the world.

But as she walked toward the old market with her camera, she knew it wasn't just that. It was something deeper. Something she couldn't name.

Mama Thebe's words replayed in her mind as she crossed the street: "Lumeria doesn't just show you who she is, child. She shows you who you've been hiding from."

Amara inhaled the morning air, steadying herself. Today wasn't about distractions or strangers with unreadable eyes. Today was about work. The exhibition deadline loomed closer than she wanted to admit, and she still hadn't captured what she came for - the heart of this place.

The old market unfolded before her like a living painting. Rows of fabric stalls shimmered in the sunlight - red, emerald, saffron, indigo - their colors bleeding into one another as the wind fluttered through them. Drummers played somewhere in the distance. Laughter rose from a group of girls trying on jewelry made of cowrie shells and glass beads.

This was Lumeria's heartbeat. And for the first time since she'd arrived, Amara felt like her camera might finally find its purpose again.

She began shooting in small bursts - faces, hands, gestures. A mother tying her baby to her back with a patterned kitenge. A group of schoolboys sharing roasted corn. A street artist painting the skyline on old scraps of wood.

Each click of the shutter felt like reclaiming a part of herself.

But it wasn't just the photos. It was the life they captured. The authenticity. The color. The rhythm of being alive after too many months of feeling half-dead inside.

As she adjusted her lens, she noticed a small boy sitting alone by a fruit stand, sketching in the dirt with a stick. His bare feet were dusty, his expression oddly thoughtful for someone his age. Amara crouched and asked softly, "What are you drawing?"

He looked up, his dark eyes shining. "A house," he said. "The one I'll build when I'm older."

She smiled, heart warming. "Can I take a picture of it?"

He nodded shyly.

The click of the camera was soft, but the moment etched itself deeply in her heart. She showed him the screen, and his grin broke like sunlight through clouds. "You made it look real!" he said, awe in his voice.

"That's what art does," she told him. "It makes dreams real, even if just for a second."

The boy beamed. "You talk like my uncle."

Amara tilted her head. "Your uncle?"

He pointed vaguely toward the far end of the market. "He builds big houses. Always tells me stories about how everything starts small - even dreams."

Her chest tightened at the innocence in his tone. "That sounds like a good uncle."

Before she could ask his name, someone called out from a nearby stall. The boy waved and ran off, his laughter echoing behind him. Amara smiled to herself, lowering her camera - until a familiar voice broke through the noise.

"You have a way with people," the voice said.

She turned, heart stopping for a second.

Kairo stood a few steps away, the crowd parting around him as if by instinct. He wore a crisp white shirt, sleeves rolled to his elbows again, and carried a file folder tucked under his arm. His expression was the same - calm, assured, quietly magnetic.

For a heartbeat, she couldn't move. Then she swallowed, forcing steadiness into her voice. "You again."

"Not quite an accident this time," he said, a flicker of a smile on his lips. "You're hard to miss with that camera."

Her pulse quickened. "Are you following me?"

"If I said yes, would you stop taking pictures?"

She narrowed her eyes, but the teasing curve of his mouth softened the words. "You're impossible," she muttered.

"I've been called worse."

He stepped closer, glancing at the display of fruits beside them - mangos, papayas, pineapples stacked high like sunshine. "I came to meet a client," he explained. "But I saw you and thought I'd say hello."

"Hello," she said simply, raising her camera again, pretending to adjust the focus though her hands trembled slightly.

He studied her for a moment, then gestured to the street ahead. "If you really want to photograph Lumeria's heart, you're in the wrong part of the market."

She frowned. "And where should I be?"

He nodded toward a narrow alley between two stalls. "Down there. The textile makers' row. Most people don't go because it's crowded, but it's where the real stories are."

Something in his tone - quiet, confident, certain - made her trust him against her better judgment.

"All right," she said. "Lead the way."

He hesitated for just a second, as if surprised she agreed, then guided her through the maze of vendors. The air grew thicker with the scent of dye and wet fabric. Music played from an old speaker - a slow, soulful melody that made her chest ache.

The alley was alive with color and motion. Women dipped cloth into steaming vats of indigo, lifting them out with long sticks as the dye bled into water like spilled ink. Children ran barefoot, carrying rolls of fabric to dry in the sun. Every face told a story of creation, labor, and pride.

Amara lifted her camera, snapping pictures quickly, almost breathlessly. Kairo watched quietly beside her, his expression unreadable.

"You were right," she murmured, lowering the lens. "This... this is it."

He smiled faintly. "You see what most people miss."

"Maybe," she said, looking at him. "Or maybe I'm just searching for what I've lost."

For a moment, the air between them shifted - something unspoken tightening, drawing them closer.

Then a voice interrupted, pulling him back to reality. "Kairo!"

A woman approached, tall and elegant, her hair tied in a silk scarf. She wore the kind of confidence that came from years of being seen and admired. She smiled when she saw Amara, but it didn't reach her eyes.

"I've been calling you," she said to Kairo, her tone laced with irritation and familiarity.

"Sorry, Laila," he replied evenly. "Got distracted."

"Clearly," she said, glancing at Amara again - this time with thinly veiled curiosity. "And who's your distraction?"

Before Amara could speak, Kairo answered calmly, "A photographer. Working on a project."

Laila's smile sharpened. "How charming." She turned to Kairo. "Your client's waiting at the café. Don't make him wait longer."

Kairo nodded, then looked back at Amara. "It was good to see you again."

She forced a smile, though something heavy settled in her stomach. "You too."

He hesitated as if wanting to say more but didn't. Then he turned and walked away beside Laila, disappearing into the sea of color and noise.

Amara stood still, her heart pounding, unsure why she felt suddenly cold despite the sun.

She lifted her camera again and took one last picture of the alley - of the fabrics, the hands, the laughter - trying to focus on anything that wasn't the hollow space he left behind.

But when she checked the photo, her breath caught.

Kairo was in the frame - captured in motion, head turned slightly as if looking back at her. The expression on his face wasn't indifference. It was something softer. Something almost vulnerable.

She stared at it for a long time, her pulse thrumming beneath her skin.

The world around her blurred, sounds fading into a distant hum. And for the first time since arriving in Lumeria, Amara realized she might be standing at the edge of something she couldn't control.

A story that had already begun without her permission.

And she wasn't sure if she was ready for where it would lead.

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