THE ONE GIRL CHIKE COULDN’T HAVE: Episode One
In the history of Crescent University, no male student carried a reputation quite like Chike Obalolu.
Tall, dark, with a smile so disarming it could thaw ice, Chike wasn’t just popular; he was a campus legend. His designer sneakers clicked confidently across the quadrangle, his cologne lingered in lecture halls long after he’d left, and the stories of his charm were whispered in hostel corridors like sacred gossip.
If there was a beauty contest among the girls, half the contenders would admit they had at least once dreamt of dating him. He was the star striker on the football team, the guy who could throw a wink from across the cafeteria and have a girl blushing before she realized it.
And Chike knew it.
He thrived on attention. His Instagram was a museum of sunlit abs, champagne at beach parties, and photos with girls whose names he barely remembered. Relationships? Never lasted. He treated romance like a buffet — take a little here, taste a little there, never commit to one plate.
Until she arrived.
Her name was Amara.
The first time Chike saw her was on a humid Monday morning at the Faculty of Arts. She wasn’t just beautiful; she was a masterpiece. Skin like she was carved from honey, eyes sharp but calm, a walk so graceful it felt choreographed. But what struck Chike most wasn’t her looks; it was the way she didn’t even glance in his direction.
She was talking with another girl, laughing softly, when Chike deliberately walked past, giving his best slow, confident stride. No reaction. Not even a flicker of recognition.
It was unsettling.
Over the next week, he found himself noticing her everywhere; at the library, under the jacaranda tree, in the cafeteria. Always neat, always composed, always… not looking at him. Other guys stared; some tried to talk to her. She was polite but distant, like someone who lived in a world entirely separate from theirs.
The first time he tried speaking to her, he approached while she was reading on a bench outside the faculty.
“Hi,” he said, turning his full charm on, dimples deepening. “You’re new here, right? I’m Chike. Most people say I’m...”
“Busy,” she interrupted, not looking up.
He blinked. “Busy?”
“Yes,” she said, flipping a page. “You seem busy. And I am, too.”
That was it. No smile, no interest, just a clear dismissal.
For the first time in years, Chike felt something strange: rejection. And instead of bruising his ego, it sparked an obsession.
Over the next month, Chike’s friends watched in shock as the notorious playboy turned into a man on a mission. He stopped skipping lectures. He actually took notes. He deleted a dozen flirty chats from his phone. He even returned books to the library, on time.
Rumors spread: Chike was chasing a girl who didn’t want him.
He tried everything. Surprise coffee deliveries to her department? She passed them to her classmates. Inviting her to his football matches? She didn’t show. Offering her a lift on rainy days? She preferred to walk with an umbrella.
The more she ignored him, the deeper he sank. His nights were restless, his appetite for parties faded, and for the first time in his life, he read; really read — the textbooks for his upcoming exams, partly because he knew she valued academics.
Then came the turning point.
One evening, while leaving the library close to 9 p.m., Chike saw Amara struggling to carry a pile of books. He offered to help, expecting another cold refusal, but this time she hesitated — and let him.
“I thought you didn’t notice me,” he said quietly as they walked.
“I notice everyone,” she replied. “I just don’t give my attention to everyone.”
Her words stung, but they also lit a fire in him. For the next weeks, Chike didn’t just chase her; he tried to become someone worth her attention. He stopped talking about himself and started listening. He worked on group projects instead of outsourcing them. He even volunteered at a campus charity she was part of, packing food boxes under the hot sun without a single complaint.
Still, she kept her distance.
It wasn’t until after their last exam paper that something shifted. Chike was sitting under the jacaranda tree, exhausted but relieved, when Amara appeared. She sat beside him, close enough for their shoulders to almost touch.
“I heard you’ve been doing well,” she said. “Your lecturers seem impressed.”
He shrugged, unsure how to play it. “I just… wanted to try something different.”
She looked at him then, really looked, and for the first time, her eyes softened. “Chike, I knew about your… reputation. I don’t get involved with people who treat others like options. But I’ve been watching. You’ve changed. Not for me, I hope?”
“Maybe at first,” he admitted. “But now… for me.”
She smiled; a small, slow curve of her lips that made his heartbeat loud in his ears. “Good answer.”
From that day, she stopped avoiding him. They began studying together, walking after lectures, sharing quiet jokes. Chike didn’t push for more; he was content with the steady warmth growing between them.
By the time the next semester started, they were inseparable, not because Chike had finally “won,” but because, somewhere along the way, he’d lost the boy who lived for conquests and found the man who lived for something real.
And Amara? She’d found someone who could love without needing to possess.
The jacaranda trees bloomed again, their petals falling like confetti around them, and for once, Chike didn’t notice the other girls looking.
He only noticed her.
To Be Continued ✍️ ✍️ ✍️ #CampusLove #RomanticFiction #NigerianStories #TheOneGirlChikeCouldntHave #LoveAndGrowth #StudentRomance #CampusLegend #LoveStory #AfricanRomance #FictionSeries #Bookstagram #RomanticTales
In the history of Crescent University, no male student carried a reputation quite like Chike Obalolu.
Tall, dark, with a smile so disarming it could thaw ice, Chike wasn’t just popular; he was a campus legend. His designer sneakers clicked confidently across the quadrangle, his cologne lingered in lecture halls long after he’d left, and the stories of his charm were whispered in hostel corridors like sacred gossip.
If there was a beauty contest among the girls, half the contenders would admit they had at least once dreamt of dating him. He was the star striker on the football team, the guy who could throw a wink from across the cafeteria and have a girl blushing before she realized it.
And Chike knew it.
He thrived on attention. His Instagram was a museum of sunlit abs, champagne at beach parties, and photos with girls whose names he barely remembered. Relationships? Never lasted. He treated romance like a buffet — take a little here, taste a little there, never commit to one plate.
Until she arrived.
Her name was Amara.
The first time Chike saw her was on a humid Monday morning at the Faculty of Arts. She wasn’t just beautiful; she was a masterpiece. Skin like she was carved from honey, eyes sharp but calm, a walk so graceful it felt choreographed. But what struck Chike most wasn’t her looks; it was the way she didn’t even glance in his direction.
She was talking with another girl, laughing softly, when Chike deliberately walked past, giving his best slow, confident stride. No reaction. Not even a flicker of recognition.
It was unsettling.
Over the next week, he found himself noticing her everywhere; at the library, under the jacaranda tree, in the cafeteria. Always neat, always composed, always… not looking at him. Other guys stared; some tried to talk to her. She was polite but distant, like someone who lived in a world entirely separate from theirs.
The first time he tried speaking to her, he approached while she was reading on a bench outside the faculty.
“Hi,” he said, turning his full charm on, dimples deepening. “You’re new here, right? I’m Chike. Most people say I’m...”
“Busy,” she interrupted, not looking up.
He blinked. “Busy?”
“Yes,” she said, flipping a page. “You seem busy. And I am, too.”
That was it. No smile, no interest, just a clear dismissal.
For the first time in years, Chike felt something strange: rejection. And instead of bruising his ego, it sparked an obsession.
Over the next month, Chike’s friends watched in shock as the notorious playboy turned into a man on a mission. He stopped skipping lectures. He actually took notes. He deleted a dozen flirty chats from his phone. He even returned books to the library, on time.
Rumors spread: Chike was chasing a girl who didn’t want him.
He tried everything. Surprise coffee deliveries to her department? She passed them to her classmates. Inviting her to his football matches? She didn’t show. Offering her a lift on rainy days? She preferred to walk with an umbrella.
The more she ignored him, the deeper he sank. His nights were restless, his appetite for parties faded, and for the first time in his life, he read; really read — the textbooks for his upcoming exams, partly because he knew she valued academics.
Then came the turning point.
One evening, while leaving the library close to 9 p.m., Chike saw Amara struggling to carry a pile of books. He offered to help, expecting another cold refusal, but this time she hesitated — and let him.
“I thought you didn’t notice me,” he said quietly as they walked.
“I notice everyone,” she replied. “I just don’t give my attention to everyone.”
Her words stung, but they also lit a fire in him. For the next weeks, Chike didn’t just chase her; he tried to become someone worth her attention. He stopped talking about himself and started listening. He worked on group projects instead of outsourcing them. He even volunteered at a campus charity she was part of, packing food boxes under the hot sun without a single complaint.
Still, she kept her distance.
It wasn’t until after their last exam paper that something shifted. Chike was sitting under the jacaranda tree, exhausted but relieved, when Amara appeared. She sat beside him, close enough for their shoulders to almost touch.
“I heard you’ve been doing well,” she said. “Your lecturers seem impressed.”
He shrugged, unsure how to play it. “I just… wanted to try something different.”
She looked at him then, really looked, and for the first time, her eyes softened. “Chike, I knew about your… reputation. I don’t get involved with people who treat others like options. But I’ve been watching. You’ve changed. Not for me, I hope?”
“Maybe at first,” he admitted. “But now… for me.”
She smiled; a small, slow curve of her lips that made his heartbeat loud in his ears. “Good answer.”
From that day, she stopped avoiding him. They began studying together, walking after lectures, sharing quiet jokes. Chike didn’t push for more; he was content with the steady warmth growing between them.
By the time the next semester started, they were inseparable, not because Chike had finally “won,” but because, somewhere along the way, he’d lost the boy who lived for conquests and found the man who lived for something real.
And Amara? She’d found someone who could love without needing to possess.
The jacaranda trees bloomed again, their petals falling like confetti around them, and for once, Chike didn’t notice the other girls looking.
He only noticed her.
To Be Continued ✍️ ✍️ ✍️ #CampusLove #RomanticFiction #NigerianStories #TheOneGirlChikeCouldntHave #LoveAndGrowth #StudentRomance #CampusLegend #LoveStory #AfricanRomance #FictionSeries #Bookstagram #RomanticTales
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