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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 3

The afternoon sun was merciless that day, the kind that turned the air thick and heavy, clinging to the skin. Amara lifted a hand to shield her face as she stepped out of the taxi, the city's noise receding behind her. Before her stretched a wide construction site at the edge of Namira's new district - a forest of scaffolding and cranes silhouetted against the light.

She had promised herself she wouldn't see him again.

After the market encounter - and that woman, Laila - Amara had told herself Kairo Mbeki was just a passing stranger, someone she'd thank quietly in her heart for helping her fix her camera and forget. But fate, it seemed, had a strange sense of humor.

Two days ago, she had received an unexpected email from a design firm sponsoring her exhibition - an invitation to photograph their urban housing project. Attached was the architect's name.

Kairo Mbeki.

For a long time, she had stared at the name on the screen, her stomach twisting. Coincidence, she told herself. Just coincidence. But standing there now, dust swirling around her ankles and the echo of hammering filling the air, it didn't feel like coincidence at all.

A voice called from the distance. "You're the photographer, yes?"

She turned. A man in a yellow hard hat waved her over. He had an easy smile and an even easier energy, like he was used to talking his way through chaos.

"That's me," she said, shaking his hand.

"I'm Tendo," he introduced. "Project manager here. The boss said you'd be coming."

"The boss?" she echoed, heart tightening.

Tendo grinned. "Kairo Mbeki. He's around somewhere. Probably checking the site plans again - man never stops."

Amara's throat went dry. "Right."

Tendo motioned her forward. "Come. I'll show you around."

They wove through the site - men welding steel frames, women hauling buckets of concrete, the smell of dust and effort hanging heavy in the heat. Amara raised her camera, snapping pictures of hands, faces, sweat, and sunlight. These weren't just workers; they were creators, shaping something out of nothing.

"You see?" Tendo said proudly. "This isn't just construction. It's legacy. Kairo calls it the 'Lumerian Renewal Project.' Affordable homes built by local hands for local families. No imported nonsense. He says if we build for the people, the people will protect it."

Amara smiled behind her camera. "That's... beautiful."

"Yeah," Tendo chuckled. "He's all about purpose, that one. Doesn't talk much, though. You'll see."

As if summoned by the words, a deep voice spoke behind them. "Tendo."

Amara froze.

Kairo's voice was unmistakable - low, measured, with that quiet authority that seemed to bend the air around him. She turned slowly, and there he was, standing near a half-finished column, clipboard in hand, his white shirt streaked with dust. He looked different today - less polished, more human. And somehow, that made him even more striking.

His gaze found hers instantly. For a brief moment, neither of them spoke. The world hummed quietly between them.

"You're here," he said finally, his tone unreadable.

"I didn't realize this was your project," she replied, gripping her camera tighter.

"Seems Lumeria enjoys her little coincidences."

Tendo glanced between them, smirking. "I'll leave you two to it." He walked off before Amara could protest.

An awkward silence settled. The sun dipped lower, shadows stretching across the ground.

"So," she said finally, "should I start shooting, or do you have-"

"Follow me," he interrupted gently. "You'll want to see the foundation first."

They walked side by side through the site, the air thick with the smell of metal and dust. Amara lifted her camera occasionally, capturing the rhythm of work - the clang of hammers, the murmur of voices, the quiet determination etched on every face.

Kairo stopped near a large blueprint pinned to a board. "This," he said, gesturing, "is what I want people to remember. Homes that breathe with their people. You can photograph that."

Amara studied the plan - elegant lines, open courtyards, curved rooftops shaped like waves. It was unlike anything she'd seen. "You designed all this?"

He nodded. "Architecture is storytelling. The kind told with stone and patience."

She glanced at him, camera lowering slightly. "You talk like someone who builds more than just walls."

His lips twitched, almost a smile. "Maybe I do. Maybe I build to forget."

The words lingered between them, heavy and quiet.

Amara wanted to ask forget what? But something in his eyes - that flicker of old pain - stopped her.

Instead, she lifted her camera and took a photo of him standing there, backlit by sunlight, blueprint in hand. When he turned to look at her, she lowered the lens quickly, pretending to check her settings.

He noticed. "You always hide behind that thing when you're uncomfortable?"

She flushed. "It's not hiding. It's... observing."

"Observing is another word for distance."

The truth of it stung. "Maybe distance is easier."

He studied her for a long moment, eyes unreadable. "Easier doesn't mean honest."

She looked away, her pulse racing. There it was again - that effortless way he slipped under her defenses, as if he could read the spaces between her words.

They spent the rest of the afternoon in a delicate silence. Kairo led her to different sections of the site, pointing out features, explaining details. Amara photographed everything - the play of light on steel beams, the movement of workers, even the shadow of Kairo's figure against unfinished walls.

Each shot felt strangely intimate, as though through her lens she was learning him - his precision, his patience, the way he touched the blueprints as though they were fragile things.

When the sun began to dip, painting the horizon gold, Kairo finally said, "You've been quiet."

"Just... focused," she said softly.

He nodded. "That's good. Focus builds truth."

They stood near the edge of the site where the Namira River glimmered in the distance. The breeze carried the scent of wet clay and river grass. For a moment, everything felt still - like time had paused to listen.

"Why photography?" he asked suddenly.

Amara hesitated. "Because it's the only thing that ever made sense. I can't explain it - it's like breathing. But somewhere along the line, I stopped."

He turned to her. "Stopped?"

"I lost someone," she said quietly. "Someone who used to tell me I could turn pain into beauty. After they were gone, I just... couldn't see beauty anymore."

Kairo's expression softened. "You're trying to find it again."

"Maybe." Her voice trembled. "Or maybe I'm trying to find myself."

He was silent for a moment, then said, "Pain doesn't destroy art, Amara. It shapes it."

The way he said her name - soft, deliberate - made her chest tighten. She met his gaze, and for the first time, she saw something unguarded in him.

The air between them changed.

Her camera hung forgotten at her side. The noise of the city faded into the distance. Only the river's low murmur and the wind between them remained.

Kairo took a slow step closer, his voice low. "You look at the world like you're afraid it'll disappear if you blink."

She swallowed. "Maybe because it always has."

His eyes held hers - steady, searching. "Not everything leaves."

The words landed deep, stirring something fragile and long-buried.

Then, as if realizing how close they'd drifted, he stepped back, clearing his throat. "It's late," he said briskly. "You should get a taxi before dark."

Amara nodded, her heart pounding too loudly. "Right. Thank you... for today."

He gave a small, unreadable smile. "Thank you for seeing what others don't."

She turned to leave, the weight of the moment pressing against her chest. But before she reached the gate, Tendo jogged over, waving a folder. "Kairo! You forgot the revised site plan!"

Kairo took it, his jaw tightening. "Thank you."

Amara paused, glancing back. "You never stop working, do you?"

He met her eyes, something flickering behind his calm. "Work is safer than feeling."

Her breath caught - but before she could reply, a gust of wind lifted the edge of the folder, scattering papers across the dusty ground. She bent instinctively to help, catching one page before it flew away.

Her eyes froze on the name printed at the top.

"Mbeki Foundation - In Memory of N. Mbeki."

When she looked up, Kairo's expression had gone completely still.

Their eyes met - hers questioning, his guarded.

She wanted to ask who is N. Mbeki? but something about the tension in his face told her not to.

Instead, she handed him the paper quietly. "Here."

He took it without meeting her gaze. "Thank you."

And just like that, the invisible wall between them rose again.

Amara turned away, walking back toward the main road as the first hint of evening painted the sky. Her hands trembled around her camera.

She didn't know who N. Mbeki was. But she knew loss when she saw it - the kind that buried itself deep and never healed.

And for reasons she couldn't explain, she wanted to understand his pain.

Even if it meant risking her own.

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