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When silence finds you

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Synopsis
When Silence Finds You de Full Story Synopsis Aarav is not someone who hates people. He is someone who fears what people become in his life. To him, connection is not comfort—it is consequence. Every meaningful moment carries weight, and that weight leads to memories he cannot escape. So he chooses silence. Not loneliness in the dramatic sense—but emotional distance. He sits at the edge of every room, not physically excluded but mentally withdrawn. In school, he follows routine patterns: same seat, same route, same behavior. He avoids unnecessary conversations, not because he has nothing to say, but because he believes saying less means feeling less. But beneath this silence is something deeper—something unresolved from his past. A person he once failed to respond to properly. A moment he left unfinished. A message unanswered. A presence that once waited for him… and never received closure. That unresolved guilt doesn’t disappear. It becomes part of him. Aarav doesn’t call it pain. He calls it “something that stays.” Meera enters his life without drama. No grand introduction. No sudden emotional shift. Just a quiet presence. She is observant in a way that doesn’t feel invasive. She doesn’t force attention, doesn’t demand interaction, and doesn’t try to fix people. Instead, she simply notices. Where others see Aarav as distant, she sees restraint. Not emptiness—but control. She doesn’t approach him directly at first. Instead, she becomes part of his environment. She sits near him in class. Not too close to disrupt him, not too far to ignore him. Just present enough to be noticed. And that is where everything begins. Because Aarav cannot ignore presence that does not demand anything from him. Their first interactions are not conversations. They are pauses. Moments where something almost happens but doesn’t. A pen drops between them. Their hands reach at the same time. They stop. Not because they are afraid—but because neither knows what it means yet. This pattern repeats itself: brief eye contact that lasts a second too long, sentences that stop before becoming confessions, shared silence that feels less empty over time. Meera slowly begins to notice something important: Aarav doesn’t avoid people. He avoids moments that stay. Because moments that stay become memories. And memories are dangerous to him. Aarav reveals his emotional philosophy in fragments: “I avoid moments.” “Some moments don’t leave.” “If I stay quiet, nothing changes.” To him, silence is control. If he doesn’t engage deeply, nothing can hurt deeply. But Meera challenges this without confrontation. She doesn’t argue. She questions gently. “Do you think before you do something?” “I used to.” “And now?” “Now I think after.” This shows something important: Aarav is not emotionless. He is reactive—he feels deeply, but only after the moment has already passed. That is where his pain comes from—not lack of feeling, but delayed understanding. Their connection grows through small emotional and physical closeness: sitting side by side, accidental hand brushes, standing too close at bus stops, shared silence that no longer feels uncomfortable. One moment becomes turning point: their fingers almost touch. Neither moves. The pause lasts too long for it to be accidental. And in that moment, both realize something: This is no longer random. This is becoming real. But Aarav still pulls back—not completely, but instinctively. Not because he doesn’t feel something, but because he doesn’t know what happens if he doesn’t stop. Meera notices this pattern: “You always leave before something happens.” That sentence becomes a mirror Aarav cannot ignore. While Aarav builds connection with Meera, his past begins to resurface. A message from someone he once knew appears again. “You replied late.” This simple line carries emotional weight. It represents someone he once left emotionally unfinished. Someone who waited for him—and never gotclosureAarav once believed silence would erase
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Chapter 1 - Stay just little longer

🌙 When Silence Finds You

Episode 1 — Stay… Just a Little Longer

Some things don't end.

They just stop being spoken.

Aarav sat on the floor of his room, his back resting against the side of his bed, phone still in his hand. The screen had gone dim, but he didn't lock it. He just… let it fade.

The voice message had already finished.

Still, he played it again.

Not from the beginning.

Just the last few seconds—

"…I waited."

Silence followed.

Not the kind that feels empty.

The kind that feels like something is still there… just out of reach.

His thumb hovered over the keyboard.

He typed slowly.

I didn't know what to say.

He stared at it.

Then erased it.

Locked the phone.

And just like that… the moment was gone again.

Or maybe not.

Maybe it was still there.

Just… unspoken.

Morning came quietly.

The rooftop was colder than usual, or maybe he just noticed it more today.

Aarav stood near the edge, hands in his pockets, eyes not really focused on anything. The city stretched below him, full of noise that hadn't started yet.

He liked this time.

Not because it was peaceful.

But because no one expected anything from him here.

"If I stay quiet…" he murmured under his breath, almost like reminding himself, "…no one asks."

The wind brushed past him, light but steady.

"…and I don't disappoint anyone."

The school bell rang somewhere below.

He didn't move immediately.

Just stood there a second longer.

Then turned and left.

The classroom was already alive when he entered.

Voices overlapping. Chairs dragging. Laughter bouncing off walls like it always did.

He took his usual seat by the window.

Same place. Same angle. Same distance from everyone else.

It wasn't planned.

It just… stayed that way.

The door slid open again.

A few heads turned.

A girl walked in.

There was nothing dramatic about it. No sudden silence, no shift in music, nothing like that.

And still…

Aarav looked up.

Not because he meant to.

Just because something… felt different.

"Introduce yourself," the teacher said.

She stood there for a second.

Not frozen.

Not nervous.

Just… choosing.

"Meera."

That was all.

A few students reacted. A couple of quiet laughs. Someone whispered something that didn't matter.

She didn't respond.

Didn't try to fill the gap.

She just sat down.

Next to him.

For a while, nothing happened.

And somehow… that was what made it noticeable.

The wind slipped in through the window, moving the curtain just enough to brush the space between them. Not touching either of them, but not staying away either.

It felt like something undecided.

Minutes passed.

Then—

A pen rolled off her desk.

It hit the floor between them.

Both of them moved at the same time.

Same speed.

Same instinct.

Their fingers almost touched.

And both of them stopped.

Not suddenly.

Not dramatically.

Just… paused.

Like something invisible had drawn a line neither of them wanted to cross yet.

She picked up the pen first.

"…sorry," she said softly.

Aarav shook his head. "It's okay."

But it didn't feel like just "okay."

It felt like something had almost happened…

and both of them had stepped back before understanding why.

Lunch was louder.

It always was.

Groups forming, breaking, reforming. Voices rising, overlapping, fading.

Aarav sat alone, like always.

Not because he didn't have options.

But because this was easier.

Quieter.

Predictable.

A few minutes later, Meera sat down.

Not right next to him.

Not far either.

Just… close enough to be aware.

They didn't look at each other.

Didn't speak.

Just existed in the same space.

Time passed like that.

Then, without warning, she spoke.

"Do you ever feel like…" she began, her voice low, almost blending into the noise around them, "…you should say something…"

A small pause.

"…but if you do, everything will change?"

Aarav didn't move.

But something inside him did.

That sentence didn't feel new.

It felt remembered.

"…yeah," he said after a moment.

She nodded slightly.

Like that was enough.

And strangely… it was.

After school, the crowd thinned slowly.

Voices faded into distance. Footsteps echoed and then disappeared.

Aarav walked the usual path.

He didn't notice when she started walking in the same direction.

Or maybe he did.

He just didn't react.

Their footsteps fell into rhythm for a few seconds.

Then drifted apart.

Then matched again.

It wasn't intentional.

But it didn't feel random either.

"Do you avoid people?" Meera asked suddenly.

Aarav glanced at her, then back ahead.

"…I avoid moments."

She looked at him properly this time.

That wasn't the answer she expected.

"Why?"

He didn't answer right away.

The question didn't feel simple.

"…because some moments don't leave."

Silence followed.

But not the empty kind.

The kind that holds onto what was just said.

By the time they reached the bus stop, the sky had started to dim.

Not dark.

Just softer.

Like the day was slowly letting go.

They stood side by side.

Closer than before.

Still not close enough to touch.

"Then why didn't you avoid this one?" she asked.

Aarav turned slightly, looking at her fully for the first time.

No quick glance.

No hesitation.

Just… looking.

The answer didn't come easily.

Maybe because it wasn't something he had thought about.

Or maybe because he already knew.

A bus rushed past.

Wind followed.

She lost her balance for just a second—

and he caught her.

His hand around her arm.

Firm.

Instinctive.

And then—

still.

No rush to pull away.

No sudden movement.

Just a moment that stayed longer than it needed to.

Her eyes dropped to his hand.

Then lifted back to him.

"…you always hesitate," she said quietly.

He swallowed, just slightly.

"Not always."

"Then why now?"

The question hung between them.

And for once—

he didn't try to avoid it.

"…because if I don't…" he said, his voice lower now, more honest than before, "…I might not stop."

Silence.

Deep.

Unmoving.

Her breath shifted.

Not enough for anyone else to notice.

But enough for him to feel it.

"And that's bad?" she asked.

He held her gaze.

There was no distance in it now.

No hiding.

"…I don't know yet."

Slowly, he let go.

But she didn't step back.

That was the difference.

The space between them didn't return to what it was.

It stayed… smaller.

Closer.

Uncertain.

She looked at him for a moment longer.

Then said, softly—

"Then don't decide today."

Some feelings don't begin with a spark.

They begin with a pause.

A moment that stretches just a little longer than it should…

because neither person wants to be the one who ends it.

🌌 End of Episode 1