Jacob lead a normal life. A normal, pretty boring life by most people's standards. He'd always been a bit of a nerd, a quiet kid who looked at the world in a different way than his peers. Seeing the planet around him as something to be understood and explored he found an interest in science at an early age, toying around with building kits and chemistry sets that astounded him and bored his parents almost to tears. As the friends he'd made throughout his life grew interests in relationships and parties, he found himself enthralled by physics and how everything in this wonderous universe functioned so seamlessly. Everything from gravitational time dilation to energy equations drew a particular fascination for him as something to be dissected and understood. The path his life followed had led him to pursue a bachelor's degree in Physics. It was his first year and he'd found the course material stimulating, although he was truly excited for the quantum physics classes in the second and third years, but he would have to be patient for that.
He'd just finished class and had a few hours before the next one. He decided to head down to a little cafΓ© near the university that he frequented every so often for their sandwich and soup combo -- he wasn't much of a chef and it was a delicious, nutritious meal at a student-friendly price. He pushed the doors open to a bright day with a sky spattered with puffy white clouds and hopped down the small flight of stairs into the front lawn of the campus. Around him students were enjoying the weather -- a few jock types were tossing around a ball, some girls were sitting under a tree giggling away and there were a few people laying on the grass simply enjoying the sun.
He made his way out of the front gate, giving a subtle nod to the guard on duty, and rounded the corner along the street. His phone buzzed in his pocket and he pulled it out to see it was an email from his professor. As he squinted through the sun glaring off his phone his legs carried him instinctually to his destination, straight into the path of somebody walking the other way. His phone dropped from his hand and slid across the asphalt right between their feet as they toppled to the ground.
"Ah -- I'm sorry!" He stammered as his eyes trailed up from his phone to find a tall woman standing before him. She was lithe and sinewy, bereft of curvature, with long black hair that shimmered along her back like starlight. Her narrow face tapered to a point, and two emerald eyes sat deeply in her face. Her skin seemed to glow like a cloudy moon and was without blemishes, a blank canvas of delicate ivory flesh. It was difficult to tell at a glance just how old she was -- she could have been anywhere between twenty to forty. Even her ethnicity was a little bit of a difficult thing to extrapolate but with straightness of her hair and the depths of its blacks, coupled with the slight slant to her eyes there must have been some Asian in her somewhere. He helped her to her feet as she grasped at his wrist to pull herself up.
She in turn looked down at him, this boy of around 20 with slightly curly, slightly wavy brown hair that dropped into loose locks across his forehead. His eyes matched his hair perfectly. He wasn't tall nor muscular, but neither was he skinny and short. Even his clothes were the perfect example of mediocrity, but she could see the deep spark of understanding and patience in his eyes. He didn't seem particularly exciting from the outside, but like a geode, she knew there was a brilliance within him.
"No worries." She said in return, still staring down at him with a placid grin on her face.
"Oh shit." Jacob exclaimed, pawing at his phone. A huge crack ran from one corner of the screen all the way along across the middle. The screen still functioned, but the protective case he kept around it hadn't been able to absorb the full impact. "My screen's cracked." She held out her hands to get a look at it. Unblinking, she took the phone and held it up to the light.
"Yeah, that's pretty busted." She tapped away at the screen a few times, her eyes focusing tightly on the screen. Jacob just stood there, unsure of exactly what she was going to do. Was she going through his photos? Opening his emails? An uneasy feeling swelled in him, and then deflated again once she handed him his phone back. She still had that same look on her face, and still she stared with those deep eyes. He looked it over, but it was back on the screen he'd left it on. Curious, he checked his recently opened apps to see what she was up to but she'd closed that too. Clever girl. He felt bad for asking since it probably didn't matter anyway.
"You know of anywhere good to get this fixed?" He asked, looking back up at her. Holding his eyes on hers was difficult; her gaze was piercing and deep as though she was searching through his most precious memories.
"Mmm, I'm kinda new to the city." Each word she said was enunciated crisply, but slurred together as if the sentence was a word itself. She was unique, that much he knew. "There are a few places downtown but I can't vouch for how good they are." Her head tilted inquisitively to the side. "You're new here too?" The conversation took him by surprise. Normally he would have just grabbed his phone and been long gone by this point, but she seemed pleasant enough.
"I... just started recently at the university. This whole place is still pretty new to me."
"Oh, what are you studying?" She asked. She felt as though getting information out of him was like letting blood from a stone, but that made him all the more satisfying to crack.
"Uh, Physics." He responded curtly. She didn't seem to be saying anything in reply, but continued staring. She wanted more out of him. "Just Physics. I'm in my first year. I really want to be learning about quantum physics and time dilation, but I have to learn the other stuff first."
"That sounds pretty interesting. Give me a physics fact, go." She put him on the spot and he stumbled over his words for a second, but picked something quickly out of the back of his mind.
"Oh, ok, uh... because light travels at... well, the speed of light, it doesn't experience time at all." That was one she hadn't thought about.