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The Sky Where You Existed (KEIRO)

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Synopsis
Keiro never planned to notice anyone. Then one rainy morning, Ayla ran into his life and left before he could understand why she mattered. Now he writes poems instead of words, watches from the edges, and slowly learns that some feelings are too quiet to be ignored. A story of rain, silence, and the love that may never be spoken.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1 – The First Rain

I never carry an umbrella.

Not because I forget. Because getting wet is the one thing

the world cannot take credit for making me feel.

It was the first week of monsoon season. The kind where the

sky gives no warning — just opens, and expects you to deal

with it. The streets smelled like wet earth and exhaust.

Puddles had already formed at the base of every wall.

I walked through it.

First day of high school. Three decisions already made.

Back corner seat. No clubs. No one needs to know me.

Simple. Manageable.

The Rain Bridge is an old stone underpass before the school

hill. I've been coming here since middle school — before

school, after school, whenever I needed somewhere to exist

without being watched.

It smells like wet concrete and cold metal.

I don't mind that.

I was leaning against the wall — notebook open, pen in hand,

page blank — when I heard footsteps.

Fast ones. Splashing.

She ran in from the other side.

Completely soaked. Dark hair plastered flat across her

forehead and cheeks. Bag held over her head like that had

ever helped anyone. She stopped, caught her breath —

Then she looked at herself.

Shoes dark with water. Uniform clinging at the sleeves.

One strand of hair stuck to the corner of her mouth.

She laughed.

Not embarrassed. Not polite. A real laugh — the kind that

comes from somewhere genuine, like she found herself

actually funny.

She noticed me after a moment.

"Oh — sorry, am I in your way?"

Two seconds.

"No."

She wrung water from her sleeve and looked at the rain the

way someone looks at a mildly poor decision they've already

accepted.

"I do this every time. Forget my umbrella on the one day it

actually rains."

She squeezed more water from her hair. A small drop fell

from her earlobe onto the stone.

"Genius, right?

I didn't answer. She'd already answered herself.

We stood there — her side warm and dripping, my side still.

The rain filled the space between us and somehow that was

fine. She didn't seem bothered by the silence.

I was used to it.

When the rain began to slow, she picked up her bag.

"I'm going to make a run for it."

She looked at me once more.

"You go to Vaelon High?"

"...Yes."

"See you there then."

She ran out. Hit a puddle immediately. Looked down at her

already-soaked shoes.

Laughed again.

Kept running.

She laughed at the puddle. Like it was in on the joke.

I have never laughed at a puddle.

I don't know what that says about her.

I don't know what it says about me.

I sat on the stone ledge. Opened the notebook.

Before I thought about it, the pen was already moving.

"SHELTER"

The bridge held the rain

the way it always does—

quiet, unchanged.

Then you—

running in,

hair across your face,

a drop falling from your earlobe

onto cold stone.

You laughed—

as if the storm

missed its purpose.

You stood in my place

like it had been yours longer.

Thirty seconds.

When you left,

the rain stayed the same—

but the space

didn't remember me.

— K.

I read it back. Didn't cross anything out.

I didn't write it for anyone. I never do. But sometimes

a thing happens and if you don't write it down, it's like

it never existed.

She existed. So I wrote it down.

Vaelon High was loud.

I moved through it the usual way — like a stone in water.

They parted without noticing me. I found Classroom 1-C.

Empty. First one here.

Empty classrooms are honest. They don't pretend to be more

than they are. Just walls and chairs and light.

I went to the back-left corner. Set my bag down.

Then someone dropped into the seat next to mine — the seat

I had put my jacket on.

"That jacket yours?"

"...Yes."

"Cool jacket."

He didn't move.

I looked at him. He looked back — cheerful, completely

unbothered. Wide face, messy hair that had clearly never

met a comb this morning. School blazer half-open. Bag on

one shoulder, hanging sideways.

"I'm Rahim. I picked this seat because you look like you

don't want to talk. That's my favorite kind of seatmate.

"...Then why are you talking?"

"Because I lied. I love talking. But I thought if I led with that you'd move."

I did not want to find that funny.

I found it slightly funny.

I did not tell him that.

My pen stopped when she walked in.

Hair still slightly damp at the ends. Laughing at something the girl behind her said. One sleeve of her uniform still faintly darker than the other — the rain hadn't fully dried.

She scanned the room. Found a seat near the window.

Front-right. Opposite end from me.

The girl from the bridge. Same class.

This city is small.

Rahim followed my gaze. Looked at her. Looked back at me.

Said nothing. Filed it away.

I noticed he did that.

When it was her turn to introduce herself:

"I'm Ayla. I forgot my umbrella this morning and walked

into school looking like I'd swum here — so, memorable

first impression, I think."

The class laughed. Easy, warm.

I counted three seconds before she sat back down.

She has a three-second smile after something lands. The

class moves on but she stays in it a little longer — like

the echo is still worth enjoying.

I have memorized her three-second smile.

That is probably wrong of me.

When my turn came I stood up and said:

"Keiro. Nothing memorable."

Sat back down.

"That," Rahim whispered, "was genuinely the worst

introduction I have ever heard."

"That was the point."

"...We're going to be good friends."

I have never been someone's good friend.

I didn't correct him.

I still don't know why.

Last one in the classroom at the end of the day. I always am.

I looked at the empty seats. When I reached the one near

the window — front-right — I stayed a moment longer.

She was here all day. I didn't speak to her.

She didn't speak to me.

That is how things should be.

I am telling myself that.

I took the long way home. The monsoon rain had returned —

quieter now, the city winding down under it. Drains full.

The road near the school gate had a long thin puddle

running the length of the wall.

I walked to the bridge. Sat on the ledge.

Took out the notebook.

At the top of a new page I wrote the date.

Then below it, small:

[ Day 1. She ran into the rain. She didn't seem to mind. ]

I write when something happens.

Today something happened.

I'm not sure what to call it yet.

I wrote two lines before I stopped.

You stepped into the rain

like you'd done it before.

I closed the notebook.

Walked home. Stepped around the puddles.

Stopped at one.

She had stepped into one just like this. Without hesitating.

Without caring. And laughed.

I stepped around it.

Kept walking.

Ayla.

I said it once, quietly, to see how it felt.

Like testing the weight of something

before you decide whether to carry it.

It felt like too much already.