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The Girl Who Never Meant It

Monsouri
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
He was the kind of person people rarely noticed—the quiet boy who sat through his days without drawing attention, speaking only when necessary, and never expecting anything more from the world around him. She was the complete opposite. Sharp-tongued, easily irritated, and never honest with what she actually felt, she had a habit of saying things she didn’t mean and meaning things she would never say. When they first met, there was no special moment, no reason to remember it—just a small, accidental encounter that neither of them thought twice about. But somehow, they kept crossing paths. Small, meaningless moments began to repeat—shared silence, brief exchanges filled with irritation on one side and indifference on the other, and reactions that never quite matched the words being spoken. She would push him away without reason. He would accept it without question. And yet, neither of them ever truly walked away. In a world where both of them remained unaware of everything else around them, their connection grew slowly—hidden beneath denial, misunderstandings, and words that never carried the truth. This is a story about feelings that are never said properly, about moments that seem insignificant until they aren’t, and about two people who don’t realize they are getting closer… until distance becomes the only thing left between them.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 : An Unimportant Meeting

There are moments that later feel important, the kind people look back on and try to give meaning to, as if everything had been leading up to that exact point, but at the time they happen, they pass so quietly and without any sense of importance that no one stops to notice them, and if someone had asked Akira about the first time he met her, he would have said it was nothing more than an ordinary day that didn't deserve to be remembered.

The morning had begun like any other, with the classroom slowly filling with noise before the teacher arrived, voices overlapping without purpose, laughter breaking out in short bursts before fading just as quickly, and the constant movement of chairs and footsteps creating a rhythm that had long since become familiar to anyone who spent enough time there.

Akira walked in without reacting to any of it, his expression calm, almost detached, as if everything around him existed at a distance he had no reason to cross, not because he disliked people, but because he had never found a reason to involve himself more than necessary.

His seat was in the back, slightly to the side, near the window where sunlight reached without being too harsh, a place that allowed him to remain unnoticed while still being present, and as always, he moved toward it without hesitation, his thoughts already somewhere else, drifting in that quiet, unfocused way that had become natural to him.

It was only when he reached his desk that something felt different.

Not enough to stand out immediately, not enough to demand attention, but enough to interrupt the flow of routine for just a moment longer than usual.

The seat beside him wasn't empty.

Someone was already sitting there.

She didn't look like she belonged in the back of the classroom.

There was a certain presence about her—not loud, not exaggerated, but noticeable in a way that didn't try too hard, as if she carried her own sense of space with her wherever she went, and for a brief second, Akira found himself wondering whether she had always been there and he had simply never paid attention, or if this was the first time she had chosen that seat for reasons he couldn't understand.

He didn't think about it for long.

It wasn't the kind of thing that mattered.

He placed his bag down, pulled his chair slightly back, and sat without saying anything, his attention already shifting away before the moment had the chance to become anything more than what it was.

Rin didn't look at him.

Not immediately.

But the moment he sat down, her grip on the pen in her hand tightened just slightly, the movement so small it would have been impossible to notice unless someone had been watching closely, and for a brief second, it seemed like she was about to say something, her lips parting just enough for words to form.

She stopped herself.

Her expression shifted, not dramatically, but enough to hide whatever hesitation had been there, and she turned her attention back to her notebook as if nothing had happened, her posture straightening in a way that felt almost deliberate.

"It's not like I was going to say anything anyway…" she muttered under her breath, so quietly that it barely reached beyond her own space.

Akira didn't hear it.

Or if he did, he didn't react.

To him, nothing had happened.

The class began shortly after, the teacher entering with the same routine presence that immediately shifted the atmosphere of the room, conversations fading into reluctant silence as attention was redirected toward the front, and as the lesson started, everything fell into its usual rhythm.

It should have stayed that way.

Simple.

Ordinary.

Forgettable.

But there were small things that didn't quite fit into that routine anymore.

Rin noticed them first.

The way Akira didn't react to anything around him unless it directly involved him, the way his attention drifted without urgency, and the way he seemed completely unaffected by the presence of others, as if the space beside him was no different from an empty seat.

It annoyed her.

Not in an obvious way, not in a way she could explain clearly, but in the quiet, persistent way that made her more aware of him than she intended to be.

At one point, she tapped her pen lightly against her desk, once, then twice, a small, rhythmic sound that broke the silence around them just enough to be noticeable.

Akira didn't react.

She clicked the pen.

Once.

Then again.

Still nothing.

Her expression tightened slightly.

"Are you seriously not even going to notice?" she muttered under her breath, her voice carrying just enough irritation to match the faint frown forming on her face.

Akira remained focused on his notebook, unaware that anything unusual had happened.

Rin looked away quickly, her cheeks faintly flushed, though whether it was from annoyance or something else wasn't entirely clear.

"It's not like I care if he notices…" she said quietly, almost as if she was convincing herself.

The rest of the class passed without anything significant happening, but the silence between them no longer felt the same.

It wasn't empty.

It wasn't comfortable either.

It was something in between—something undefined, something that hadn't taken shape yet but had already begun to exist.

When the bell rang, signaling the end of the period, students immediately began to move, conversations starting up again as the structured quiet of the lesson broke apart, and as Akira gathered his things, his movements slow and unhurried, Rin hesitated for just a second.

It was a small pause.

Barely noticeable.

But it was there.

As if she was waiting for something.

For him to say something.

For him to acknowledge her presence in some way.

He didn't.

He stood up, adjusted his bag, and walked out of the classroom without looking back, without realizing that there had been anything to notice in the first place.

Rin clicked her tongue softly, crossing her arms as she looked in the direction he had left, her expression shifting into something that closely resembled annoyance.

"What's with him…" she muttered.

She looked away almost immediately.

"It's not like I expected anything."

And yet…

she stayed in that seat the next day.

Rin clicked her tongue softly, crossing her arms as she looked toward the door he had just walked through, her expression caught somewhere between irritation and something she refused to name.

"What's with him…" she muttered under her breath.

She looked away almost immediately, as if even thinking about it annoyed her.

"It's not like I expected anything."

The next day, she came early.

Earlier than usual.

The classroom was still half empty when she walked in, her steps slower than they needed to be as her eyes briefly scanned the room before settling on the seat near the back.

His seat.

She hesitated.

Just for a moment.

Then, without saying anything, she walked over and sat down beside it.

"It's just a seat," she said quietly, resting her chin on her hand as she looked toward the window.

But even after a few minutes had passed…

she didn't look away from the door.