S2S
spirits to spirituality-A journey
Monday, 25 May 2026
House on Fire
House on Fire
1. The house caught fire at 2:13 in the morning.
2. By 2:16, the curtains in the upstairs bedroom were burning bright enough to be seen from the end of the street.
3. By 2:20, neighbors stood outside in slippers and winter jackets, watching sparks rise into the black sky like frantic fireflies.
4. And by 2:27, when the first window exploded outward in a burst of glass and smoke, seventeen-year-old Ira Malhotra was standing barefoot across the road thinking one terrible thing over and over again:
5. I did this.
6. The firefighters arrived screaming through the silence with sirens and flashing red lights. People shouted. Someone cried. A woman wrapped a blanket around Ira’s shoulders, but she barely noticed.
7. Her father sat on the curb nearby with blood on his forehead.
8. Her mother trembled violently while answering police questions.
9. And the house—the old blue two-story house with crooked balcony railings and jasmine plants near the gate—collapsed inward room by room.
10. Everything inside it disappeared.
11. Photographs.
12. Letters.
13. Furniture.
14. Secrets.
15. Especially the secrets.
16. Ira watched flames consume the second-floor study and felt something dangerously close to relief.
17. Because now nobody would ever find the box hidden beneath the floorboards.
18. At least, that’s what she believed then.
19. She was wrong.
20. —
21. Three months earlier, before the fire, before the lies and police reports and shattered family dinners, Ira’s biggest problem had been invisibility.
22. Not literal invisibility.
23. The ordinary kind.
24. The kind that happens inside families slowly.
25. Her younger brother, Kabir, absorbed attention naturally because he was brilliant. At fourteen, he built robots from scrap electronics and won science competitions without trying. Teachers adored him. Relatives discussed his future like he was already famous.
26. Her mother, Ananya, commanded every room she entered. Elegant, intelligent, composed—she possessed the exhausting ability to make competence look effortless.
27. And her father, Dev Malhotra, existed somewhere between respected and feared. He owned a successful construction company, spoke rarely, and carried permanent disappointment in his posture like an expensive suit.
28. Then there was Ira.
29. Average grades.
30. Average talents.
31. Average existence.
32. At family gatherings, relatives asked Kabir about engineering colleges while asking Ira whether she had “thought about improving focus.”
33. Nobody intended cruelty exactly.
34. But neglect accumulates quietly.
35. By seventeen, Ira had mastered disappearing inside her own life.
36. She spent most evenings alone in her room sketching faces from imagination while music played softly through headphones. Drawing was the only thing that felt entirely hers. Not judged. Not compared.
37. Sometimes she imagined leaving home permanently after graduation. Not dramatically. Just…quietly. Slipping out of everyone’s expectations until she became unrecognizable.
38. Then one rainy Thursday afternoon, she found the box.
39. It happened accidentally.
40. Her father was away on a business trip. Her mother attended some charity event. Kabir stayed late at school.
41. Ira had the house entirely to herself.
42. Bored and restless, she wandered into the upstairs study searching for old art supplies. The room smelled faintly of dust and sandalwood. Her father rarely allowed anyone inside, which naturally made curiosity inevitable.
43. Most drawers contained boring documents.
44. Tax papers.
45. Contracts.
46. Blueprints.
47. Then Ira noticed scratches on the wooden floor beneath the desk.
48. Tiny marks.
49. Like something heavy had been dragged repeatedly.
50. Curiosity pulled stronger than caution.
51. She moved the desk carefully aside and discovered loose floorboards underneath.
52. Her pulse quickened instantly.
53. Every teenager secretly hopes for hidden compartments.
54. Most never actually find them.
55. The box beneath the floorboards was metal, black, and surprisingly heavy. No lock. No label.
56. Inside were photographs.
57. Hundreds of them.
58. At first Ira thought they were random family pictures. Then confusion arrived.
59. Every photograph featured the same woman.
60. Not her mother.
61. A younger woman with dark curly hair and sharp eyes.
62. Some pictures showed her laughing beside Ira’s father on beaches and balconies and city streets. Others were more intimate—foreheads touching, hands intertwined, expressions too soft to misunderstand.
63. Love photographs.
64. Ira stared silently.
65. Then she found the letters.
66. Thirty-seven of them tied carefully with faded blue ribbon.
67. The handwriting was elegant and slanted.
68. Dev,
69. I know you’ll choose your family eventually…
70. Another:
71. Sometimes I hate myself for loving someone who belongs elsewhere…
72. And another:
73. If she ever discovers the truth, promise me Kabir never will…
74. Ira stopped breathing for a second.
75. Kabir.
76. Why mention Kabir specifically?
77. Hands shaking now, she searched deeper through the box until finally she found the final item:
78. A birth certificate.
79. Name: Kabir Malhotra.
80. Mother: Leena Arora.
81. The world tilted sideways.
82. No.
83. No, that wasn’t possible.
84. Ira read it again.
85. And again.
86. Her brother.
87. Her actual brother.
88. Not her mother’s child.
89. The realization hit physically.
90. Suddenly strange childhood memories rearranged themselves into new shapes. The whispered arguments she overheard years ago. The way relatives sometimes fell silent around family history. The fact that Kabir looked nothing like their mother.
91. “Oh my God,” Ira whispered aloud.
92. The front door downstairs slammed shut unexpectedly.
93. Panic exploded through her instantly.
94. She shoved everything back into the box recklessly, nearly tearing letters in the process. Footsteps echoed downstairs.
95. Her father’s voice.
96. Home early.
97. Ira slid the box beneath floorboards, shoved the desk roughly back into place, and fled the study seconds before he climbed upstairs.
98. “Why are you home?” she asked too quickly.
99. Her father frowned slightly. “Meeting canceled.”
100. For one terrifying moment, she thought he somehow knew.
101. But he simply walked past her toward his bedroom while loosening his tie.
102. Ira stood frozen in the hallway.
103. Everything had changed.
104. —
105. That night during dinner, Ira couldn’t stop staring at Kabir.
106. He sat across from her enthusiastically explaining some robotics competition while their mother listened proudly.
107. Their mother.
108. Not his mother.
109. The secret hovered invisibly above the table poisoning every normal interaction.
110. “How was school?” her father asked suddenly.
111. Ira startled. “Fine.”
112. “You seem distracted,” her mother observed.
113. Because our family is built on hidden wreckage, thought Ira wildly.
114. Instead she shrugged.
115. Later that night she couldn’t sleep.
116. Questions swarmed endlessly.
117. Did her mother know?
118. Did Kabir?
119. Was Leena Arora still alive?
120. And perhaps most painfully:
121. How long had everyone been lying?
122. At 1:40 AM, unable to bear uncertainty anymore, Ira searched the internet for Leena Arora.
123. She found old articles quickly.
124. Leena Arora, twenty-eight, died in a car accident fourteen years earlier.
125. Survived by infant son.
126. Ira stared at the screen.
127. Kabir had lost his real mother before he could remember her.
128. And somehow her parents raised him as their own while burying the truth completely.
129. A tiny rational part of Ira understood the complexity. The compassion even.
130. But seventeen-year-old emotions rarely behave rationally.
131. All she felt was betrayal.
132. The family she trusted suddenly looked artificial.
133. Manufactured.
134. Like actors maintaining roles too long.
135. And once doubt enters a household, ordinary moments become suspicious retroactively.
136. Her father working late? Maybe visiting Leena’s grave.
137. Her mother occasionally distant with Kabir? Maybe because grief and resentment coexist strangely.
138. Every memory became unstable.
139. —
140. Over the following weeks, Ira changed.
141. Quietly at first.
142. Then noticeably.
143. She stopped joining family dinners regularly. Her grades slipped. She snapped at harmless questions.
144. Her mother eventually confronted her.
145. “What’s happening with you?”
146. “Nothing.”
147. “That’s obviously untrue.”
148. Ira nearly laughed.
149. The hypocrisy of that question felt unbearable.
150. Nothing truthful existed in this house.
151. “You wouldn’t understand,” she muttered.
152. Her mother’s expression hardened slightly. “Try me.”
153. Tell her, whispered a reckless voice inside Ira.
154. Tell her you know.
155. But fear stopped her.
156. Because revealing the secret would destroy everything permanently.
157. Wouldn’t it?
158. Instead she retreated further into silence.
159. Only Kabir still attempted connection consistently.
160. One evening he knocked gently on her bedroom door.
161. “You alive?”
162. “Unfortunately.”
163. He entered carrying two cups of instant noodles.
164. “Peace offering.”
165. Ira smiled despite herself.
166. Kabir sat beside her on the floor. “You’ve been weird lately.”
167. “Thanks.”
168. “I mean seriously weird. Like murder-documentary weird.”
169. She laughed softly.
170. Then unexpectedly tears burned behind her eyes.
171. Kabir noticed immediately.
172. “Hey,” he said quietly. “What happened?”
173. The concern in his voice almost broke her.
174. Because he didn’t know.
175. He sat here trusting a family built partly from lies while she carried knowledge capable of detonating his entire identity.
176. Nothing happened, she nearly said automatically.
177. Instead:
178. “If you found out something terrible about our family…would you want to know?”
179. Kabir frowned thoughtfully.
180. “What kind of terrible?”
181. “I don’t know. Hypothetically.”
182. He considered carefully before answering.
183. “Yes.”
184. “Why?”
185. “Because fake versions of happiness never last anyway.”
186. The sentence lodged deep inside her.
187. Fake versions of happiness never last anyway.
188. —
189. Two days later, Ira returned to the study while everyone slept.
190. This time she took the box entirely.
191. She carried it to her room, spread letters across the floor, and read until dawn.
192. A story emerged gradually.
193. Years earlier, before marrying Ananya, her father loved Leena deeply. But family pressure and expectations ended the relationship. He married Ananya instead.
194. Then, somehow, Leena became pregnant.
195. The affair resumed secretly.
196. Kabir was born.
197. Months later, Leena died unexpectedly in the accident.
198. And afterward, astonishingly, Ananya agreed to raise the child herself.
199. Not publicly.
200. Not heroically.
201. Quietly.
202. The letters revealed guilt everywhere. Regret. Shame. Attempts at forgiveness.
203. One letter from her father shattered Ira completely:
204. Ananya says she’ll raise him as her own if we never tell anyone. I don’t deserve that kind of mercy.
205. Mercy.
206. That word changed things slightly.
207. Until then, Ira imagined only betrayal and deception.
208. Now she glimpsed sacrifice too.
209. Her mother staying despite humiliation.
210. Choosing motherhood for a child conceived through betrayal.
211. The emotional complexity overwhelmed her.
212. Human beings were messier than villains and victims.
213. Still, one question remained unbearable:
214. Why never tell Kabir?
215. Didn’t he deserve truth?
216. The conflict consumed her entirely.
217. Eventually she made a terrible decision.
218. She would tell him herself.
219. —
220. The opportunity arrived accidentally.
221. Their parents attended some corporate event one Saturday evening, leaving Ira and Kabir alone again.
222. He sat in the living room building drone components while music played softly from speakers.
223. Ira stood nearby holding the box.
224. Her pulse thundered painfully.
225. “Can I show you something?”
226. Kabir glanced up. “That sounds threatening.”
227. She sat across from him slowly.
228. Then placed the birth certificate on the table.
229. At first he looked merely confused.
230. Then pale.
231. “What is this?”
232. Ira said nothing.
233. He read it again.
234. And again.
235. “No,” he whispered finally.
236. The room felt suddenly airless.
237. Kabir looked at her with growing panic. “This is fake.”
238. “I found it hidden upstairs.”
239. “Why would someone fake this?”
240. “I don’t know.”
241. But she did know.
242. Kabir opened the letters next.
243. His hands shook visibly.
244. The silence that followed felt catastrophic.
245. Not loud.
246. Worse.
247. Quiet devastation.
248. At fourteen, children still believe parents represent stability. Permanent truths.
249. Watching that belief collapse in real time felt horrifying.
250. Kabir stood abruptly.
251. “How long did you know?”
252. “Three weeks.”
253. “You waited three weeks?”
254. “I didn’t know what to do!”
255. He laughed once sharply. “Neither do I.”
256. Then he walked upstairs without another word.
257. The sound of his bedroom door locking echoed through the house.
258. Ira sat frozen beside scattered letters until midnight.
259. When their parents returned home, she almost confessed everything immediately.
260. But fear won again.
261. Cowardice disguised itself as timing.
262. Tomorrow, she told herself.
263. I’ll explain tomorrow.
264. Tomorrow never arrived properly.
265. —
266. The next morning, Kabir disappeared.
267. At first nobody panicked. They assumed he went cycling or visiting friends.
268. Then hours passed.
269. His phone remained off.
270. By evening, her mother’s composure began cracking visibly.
271. Her father called everyone he knew.
272. At 11 PM, police became involved.
273. Ira watched chaos consume the household while guilt spread through her chest like poison.
274. She should tell them.
275. Obviously she should tell them.
276. But every passing hour made confession harder.
277. How do you casually announce:
278. By the way, your son disappeared after I revealed decades of hidden family betrayal?
279. So she stayed silent while her parents suffered visibly.
280. By the second day, her mother looked barely functional.
281. Her father aged years overnight.
282. Police searched train stations and bus terminals.
283. And Kabir remained missing.
284. Ira stopped sleeping entirely.
285. Every scenario inside her mind became catastrophic.
286. Kidnapping.
287. Suicide.
288. Accident.
289. She replayed their conversation endlessly searching for signs she missed.
290. Fake versions of happiness never last anyway.
291. The memory tortured her.
292. On the third evening, police finally found him.
293. Alive.
294. At a small railway station two cities away.
295. He’d taken money from savings hidden in his room and boarded random trains without destination.
296. When her parents brought him home, relief crashed through the house so intensely everyone cried.
297. Everyone except Kabir.
298. He remained eerily calm.
299. Detached.
300. He barely spoke during dinner.
301. Later that night, Ira heard shouting downstairs.
302. Real shouting.
303. Not ordinary marital arguments.
304. Devastating shouting.
305. She crept halfway down the staircase and listened.
306. “You told her?” her father demanded.
307. “I found out accidentally!” Ira shouted back.
308. “How could you tell him without speaking to us first?”
309. “Because he deserved truth!”
310. Her mother’s voice cut through sharply:
311. “Not like this.”
312. Silence followed.
313. Then quieter:
314. “You think this was easy for anyone?”
315. Ira looked toward her mother then.
316. Really looked.
317. Ananya stood exhausted in the kitchen light, eyes red from days without sleep.
318. Not cold.
319. Not manipulative.
320. Just tired.
321. Deeply tired.
322. “I loved him,” her mother whispered. “From the moment I held him.”
323. Kabir stood unseen near the hallway entrance hearing everything.
324. No one noticed him initially.
325. Then he asked the question quietly:
326. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
327. The pain in his voice hollowed the room instantly.
328. No parent possesses adequate answers for something like that.
329. Her father sat heavily in a chair.
330. “We wanted to protect you.”
331. “From what?”
332. “Confusion. Pain.”
333. Kabir laughed bitterly. “How’s that working out?”
334. Nobody answered.
335. Because there was no defense left.
336. —
337. For several weeks afterward, the house transformed into emotional minefield territory.
338. Nobody trusted silence anymore.
339. Conversations became fragile negotiations around grief and resentment.
340. Kabir withdrew completely.
341. Her father attempted explanations constantly.
342. Her mother cried privately when she thought nobody noticed.
343. And Ira carried unbearable guilt through all of it.
344. She told herself truth mattered.
345. But maybe timing mattered too.
346. Maybe revelation without compassion becomes violence.
347. One evening, she found her mother alone in the backyard staring at dead jasmine flowers.
348. “I’m sorry,” Ira whispered.
349. Ananya remained quiet awhile.
350. Then:
351. “I know.”
352. “That’s it?”
353. “What else should I say?”
354. Anger suddenly flared inside Ira.
355. “You lied to us our entire lives!”
356. “Yes.”
357. The honesty startled her.
358. Her mother looked exhausted beyond defense now.
359. “I was twenty-seven,” she said softly. “Your father came home carrying a baby and enough guilt to drown inside. I should’ve left. Most people would’ve.”
360. “But you stayed.”
361. “I loved your brother before he could even speak.” Her voice trembled slightly. “And eventually I loved him too much to risk losing him.”
362. Ira sat beside her slowly.
363. “Were you ever happy?”
364. Ananya smiled sadly.
365. “Sometimes happiness and pain live in the same house.”
366. The sentence lingered quietly between them.
367. Inside the same house.
368. If only they knew.
369. —
370. The fire began eleven days later.
371. Electrical malfunction, investigators later concluded.
372. Old wiring in the upstairs study sparked behind wooden walls shortly after midnight.
373. By the time smoke alarms activated, flames already spread through half the second floor.
374. Everyone escaped barely.
375. Except the box didn’t.
376. The letters, photographs, and birth certificate burned completely.
377. At first, standing barefoot across the street watching firefighters battle flames, Ira believed the destruction symbolic somehow.
378. The physical evidence of lies disappearing forever.
379. But then she looked beside her.
380. At Kabir wrapped in blankets staring silently at the collapsing roof.
381. At her mother holding his hand tightly despite everything.
382. At her father crying openly for the first time in Ira’s memory.
383. And suddenly she understood something important.
384. The fire changed nothing essential.
385. Secrets had already escaped.
386. Truth already existed between them now—painful and messy and impossible to hide again.
387. Burning the evidence couldn’t undo that.
388. The house collapsed inward at 2:41 AM.
389. Sparks spiraled upward violently into darkness.
390. People gasped.
391. Ira watched flames consume the upstairs study entirely and realized with strange clarity that families were not destroyed by single events.
392. Not affairs.
393. Not lies.
394. Not even fire.
395. Destruction happens slowly through silence.
396. Through fear.
397. Through choosing appearances over honesty repeatedly until nobody remembers how to speak plainly anymore.
398. The fire merely revealed damage already burning beneath the walls.
399. —
400. They moved into a rented apartment afterward.
401. Smaller.
402. Temporary.
403. Four people compressed uncomfortably into shared grief.
404. And strangely, healing began there.
405. Not immediately.
406. Not dramatically.
407. But slowly.
408. Without the old house carrying years of buried tension, conversations became more honest somehow.
409. Kabir eventually asked questions instead of retreating into silence.
410. Her father answered everything this time.
411. Even ugly details.
412. Her mother stopped pretending strength constantly.
413. And Ira learned guilt could coexist with relief.
414. One rainy evening months later, the four of them sat eating takeout on apartment floors because furniture still hadn’t arrived.
415. Ordinary conversation drifted around the room quietly.
416. School.
417. Work.
418. Television.
419. Then unexpectedly, Kabir asked:
420. “What was she like?”
421. Everyone understood immediately who he meant.
422. Leena.
423. The woman erased and hidden and finally spoken aloud.
424. Their father smiled faintly.
425. “She laughed loudly,” he said softly. “At everything.”
426. And for the first time, nobody changed the subject.
427. Outside, rain tapped gently against apartment windows while somewhere far across the city, workers cleared debris from the burned remains of the old blue house.
428. But inside the cramped apartment, among unpacked boxes and uncomfortable truths, something fragile survived the fire after all.
429. Not perfection.
430. Not innocence.
431. Something harder to build.
432. Honesty.
White Lie
White Lie
By the time the police arrived at the wedding, Aisha Kapoor had told so many lies that even the truth sounded suspicious coming out of her mouth.
Which was unfortunate.
Because for once, she was innocent.
The wedding hall glittered beneath golden chandeliers while terrified guests whispered in clusters. At the center of the chaos stood Aisha in a lavender bridesmaid dress, holding a champagne glass she no longer remembered picking up.
Across the room, the groom’s uncle shouted angrily at two police officers.
Someone had stolen seventy lakh rupees worth of jewelry from the bride’s suite.
And somehow, unbelievably, Aisha had become involved.
The lead officer approached her calmly.
“Miss Kapoor,” he said, “we need to ask you a few questions.”
Aisha nodded slowly.
Her best friend Rhea stood nearby looking pale. “This is ridiculous,” she said. “Aisha would never steal anything.”
The officer gave a polite smile. “Routine procedure.”
Routine.
Aisha almost laughed.
Nothing about the past two weeks had been routine.
Because none of this—the missing jewelry, the suspicious guests, the lies—would have happened if she had simply told the truth about a cat.
A very expensive cat.
—
It began thirteen days earlier on a humid Sunday afternoon.
Aisha was sitting in her apartment eating instant noodles straight from the saucepan when her phone rang.
MOM CALLING.
Aisha considered ignoring it.
Then remembered she’d already ignored the previous four calls.
She answered reluctantly.
“Hi, Ma.”
“Aisha! Finally.” Her mother sounded breathless with excitement. “I have wonderful news.”
That sentence alone felt threatening.
“What news?”
“Mrs. Malhotra’s son is coming back from London.”
Aisha closed her eyes immediately.
Of course.
Marriage.
Always marriage.
“And why is this my problem?”
“He’s a doctor.”
“Congratulations to him.”
“Aisha.”
There it was. The Tone.
The one carrying years of maternal disappointment.
“You’re twenty-nine,” her mother continued. “You work too much. You never meet anyone. At least have dinner with him.”
“I’m busy.”
“You work remotely.”
“I’m emotionally busy.”
Her mother ignored this completely.
“His family is hosting a dinner Friday. I already told them you’re excited.”
Aisha nearly dropped her spoon.
“You WHAT?”
“Don’t shout. It’s a good opportunity.”
“I’m not going.”
Silence.
Then softly, dangerously:
“Are you still upset about Rohan?”
Aisha stiffened instantly.
“No.”
“You haven’t dated anyone seriously since—”
“I said no.”
The conversation should have ended there.
Instead her mother sighed dramatically and delivered the sentence that triggered everything.
“Sometimes I worry you’ll end up alone with only cats for company.”
Now objectively, this was not the worst thing a mother could say.
But Aisha had endured three years of subtle comments about marriage, loneliness, and biological timelines. Something inside her snapped.
“I’m not alone,” she said sharply.
“Oh really?”
“Yes.”
“Then who are you dating?”
A tiny pause.
A microscopic hesitation.
The crossroads.
And then:
“His name is Kabir.”
The lie appeared instantly.
Randomly.
Aisha didn’t even know a Kabir.
Her mother gasped.
“You have a boyfriend?”
Aisha should have corrected herself immediately.
Instead she doubled down.
“Yes.”
“How long?”
“Eight months.”
The number arrived automatically.
“Oh my God.” Her mother sounded emotionally overwhelmed already. “Why didn’t you tell me?”
Because he doesn’t exist, thought Aisha desperately.
Out loud she said, “I wanted to be sure first.”
This was how white lies worked.
They arrived wearing reasonable clothing.
Temporary lies.
Convenient lies.
Survival lies.
Her mother practically vibrated through the phone.
“What does he do?”
“Architecture.”
Why architecture?
No idea.
“Where did you meet?”
“At a bookstore.”
Now the fictional relationship had a cinematic origin story.
Perfect.
By the end of the call, Kabir had become a thirty-one-year-old architect who loved reading, disliked social media, and lived in Gurgaon.
A fully assembled human manufactured during one conversation.
When the call ended, Aisha sat frozen in silence.
Then she whispered aloud:
“What the hell is wrong with me?”
—
The logical solution was obvious.
Call her mother back. Admit the truth. End the lie immediately before it expanded.
Instead Aisha made tea and convinced herself she’d handle it “later.”
Later, unfortunately, arrived the next morning in the form of seventeen WhatsApp messages from relatives.
YOUR MOTHER TOLD US!!!
FINALLY!!!
SHOW PHOTO!!!
Apparently her mother had announced the relationship to the extended family within hours.
Aisha stared at the messages in horror.
One lie had already become public information.
Then came the fatal complication.
Rhea.
Her best friend since college.
“YOU HAVE A SECRET BOYFRIEND?” Rhea screamed over the phone.
Aisha groaned. “My mother told everyone?”
“She called my mother at midnight!”
Of course she did.
“Aisha, I’ve listened to you complain about men for three straight years. Suddenly there’s a mysterious architect?”
“It’s complicated.”
Rhea became suspicious immediately.
“Oh my God. He’s fake.”
Aisha hesitated one second too long.
Rhea shrieked triumphantly. “HE’S FAKE!”
“Keep your voice down!”
“You invented a boyfriend?”
“It was supposed to be temporary!”
Rhea laughed so hard she started coughing.
“This is the stupidest thing you’ve ever done.”
“Helpful.”
“What’s his name?”
“Kabir.”
“What does Fake Kabir do?”
“Architecture.”
Rhea wheezed laughing again.
“Architecture? You built a boyfriend from Pinterest.”
Despite herself, Aisha laughed too.
At that moment, the situation still felt manageable. Embarrassing, yes, but temporary.
Then her mother called again.
“We want to meet him.”
There it was.
The disaster evolving.
Aisha sat upright. “What?”
“Sunday lunch. Invite Kabir.”
Panic arrived instantly.
“He’s traveling.”
“When will he return?”
“Two weeks.”
Her mother hummed thoughtfully. “Perfect. Bring him to Rhea’s wedding then.”
Aisha froze.
Rhea’s wedding.
Three hundred guests.
Dozens of relatives.
Her entire social world concentrated in one location.
“No,” Aisha said immediately.
“Why not?”
“Because…it’s too early.”
“You said you’ve dated eight months.”
Right.
That lie.
“He’s shy.”
“Then this is good for him.”
Aisha felt reality beginning to tilt dangerously.
—
Over the next week, Fake Kabir developed a life independent of her control.
Relatives asked questions constantly.
What school did he attend?
Which architecture firm?
How tall was he?
Did he speak Punjabi?
Every answer required additional details.
Additional lies.
Aisha created entire fictional histories during auto-rickshaw rides and coffee breaks. She built parents for him. A college degree. A favorite movie.
The absurdity should have stopped her.
Instead, strangely, it became easier.
That frightened her slightly.
Humans adapt quickly to dishonesty when rewarded socially for it.
And Aisha was rewarded constantly.
Her mother sounded happier than she had in years.
Relatives finally stopped interrogating her about marriage.
Even coworkers noticed her improved mood.
“What changed?” one colleague asked.
Aisha almost answered:
I invented emotional stability through fictional romance.
Instead she smiled vaguely.
The worst part?
She began imagining Kabir accidentally.
Not delusion exactly.
Just involuntary details.
What his voice might sound like. How he’d react to jokes. Which coffee he’d order.
The fictional relationship slowly occupied emotional space inside her real life.
Then came the photograph problem.
“Aisha,” her mother texted one evening, “send picture of Kabir for wedding invitation board.”
Wedding invitation board?
Apparently Rhea planned a giant photo display featuring couples and close friends.
Aisha called immediately.
“What invitation board?”
Rhea laughed unapologetically. “Relax. Just send a fake photo.”
“A FAKE PHOTO?”
“You created an entire fake man. Don’t become ethical now.”
“This has gone too far.”
“Yes,” Rhea agreed cheerfully. “That happened days ago.”
Aisha paced her apartment anxiously.
“I can’t use a random person’s photo!”
“So hire someone.”
Silence.
Then:
“What?”
Rhea stopped laughing.
“Oh my God,” she whispered. “You’re considering it.”
“No!”
“You absolutely are.”
And that was how, three days later, Aisha found herself sitting across from a struggling theatre actor named Arjun Mehta in a café.
He looked confused but interested.
“So let me understand,” he said slowly. “You need me to pretend to be your boyfriend at a wedding?”
“When you say it out loud, it sounds criminal.”
“It sounds insane.”
“Technically temporary insanity.”
Arjun stared at her for several seconds.
Then unexpectedly grinned.
“How much?”
—
Hiring Fake Kabir should have solved the problem.
Instead it transformed manageable chaos into complete catastrophe.
Because Arjun turned out to be alarmingly good at lying.
Within twenty minutes he understood the fictional backstory better than Aisha herself. He improvised details naturally, remembered names, asked strategic questions.
“You’ve done this before,” Aisha said suspiciously.
“Acting is professionally sanctioned dishonesty.”
Fair point.
The plan was simple:
Attend the wedding together.
Convince relatives briefly.
Disappear afterward forever.
Easy.
Except reality again refused cooperation.
The first issue emerged immediately during rehearsal dinner.
Arjun was too convincing.
Her mother adored him within minutes.
Rhea’s relatives praised his manners.
Even Aisha’s skeptical uncle approved after discussing cricket for thirty minutes.
Watching everyone fall in love with Fake Kabir produced unexpected guilt inside her.
Because these people were genuinely happy.
And she was manufacturing all of it.
Then things became worse.
She started liking Arjun.
Not romantically exactly.
But his presence made lying feel effortless. They developed rhythms naturally, inside jokes, believable chemistry.
Several times Aisha forgot briefly that none of it was real.
That was dangerous.
Very dangerous.
On the second evening, while dancing during the sangeet ceremony, her mother pulled her aside emotionally.
“I haven’t seen you this happy in years.”
The sentence hit harder than expected.
Because Aisha realized with sudden clarity:
Her mother wasn’t obsessed with marriage.
She was terrified of loneliness.
Terrified her daughter would isolate herself forever after heartbreak.
And instead of explaining her real fears and vulnerabilities honestly, Aisha had created fictional reassurance.
The lie suddenly felt uglier.
She planned to confess after the wedding ended.
Unfortunately, the universe accelerated first.
—
The disaster began at 10:14 PM beside the dessert counter.
Aisha was arguing quietly with Arjun.
“We should end this tomorrow,” she whispered.
“That was always the plan.”
“No, I mean tell them.”
Arjun blinked. “Tell them WHAT?”
“The truth.”
“You want to announce publicly that I’m a rented boyfriend?”
“When you phrase it like that—”
“Because that’s literally what I am.”
Aisha rubbed her forehead. “I know this is insane.”
“Yes,” Arjun agreed. “But we’re already committed now.”
Before she could respond, a woman’s voice interrupted sharply.
“Arjun?”
Both turned.
A tall woman in emerald green stared at him in shock.
Arjun went pale instantly.
“Oh no.”
That phrase rarely precedes good outcomes.
“You know her?” Aisha asked.
The woman folded her arms dangerously. “Actually, I’m his girlfriend.”
Silence.
Complete catastrophic silence.
Aisha looked at Arjun slowly.
“You have a girlfriend?”
“She’s technically my ex.”
“Technically?” the woman snapped.
Guests nearby started noticing tension.
Wonderful.
“Aisha,” Arjun said desperately, “I can explain.”
“No,” the woman interrupted coldly. “Please do. I’d love hearing why my boyfriend is attending weddings with another woman.”
Several nearby relatives turned openly toward them now.
Panic detonated.
Because this wasn’t just relationship drama.
This threatened the entire structure of lies holding the wedding together.
Arjun lowered his voice urgently. “This is a job.”
The woman stared.
Then laughed once in disbelief.
“A JOB?”
Aisha closed her eyes.
Oh God.
No.
Arjun continued desperately, “She hired me—”
“STOP TALKING,” Aisha hissed.
Too late.
Her aunt approached immediately.
“Hired you for what?”
Nobody answered.
Which was answer enough.
Within minutes confusion spread through the reception like fire through dry grass.
Hired boyfriend.
Fake relationship.
Actor.
People whispered fragments rapidly, assembling conclusions worse than reality.
Her mother approached looking alarmed.
“Aisha?”
This was it.
The collapse.
The moment truth finally demanded payment.
Aisha inhaled shakily.
“Ma, I can explain.”
But before explanations arrived—
The lights went out.
Completely.
Darkness swallowed the ballroom while guests screamed in confusion.
Then someone shouted:
“The jewelry is missing!”
And suddenly, unbelievably, everyone forgot about Fake Kabir.
At least temporarily.
—
Chaos transformed the wedding hall instantly.
Security guards locked exits.
Relatives panicked.
The bride cried hysterically.
And because fate apparently hated Aisha personally, several witnesses reported seeing “the suspicious fake boyfriend” near the bride’s suite earlier.
Which brought police involvement.
Which brought questioning.
Which brought her entire web of lies directly into legal territory.
The officer sat across from her calmly.
“You hired Mr. Mehta under false pretenses?”
“Yes, but—”
“And he used a fake identity?”
“Only socially!”
The officer wrote notes patiently.
“You understand how this appears suspicious.”
Aisha laughed weakly. “Unfortunately yes.”
Across the room, Arjun argued with another officer while his ex-girlfriend looked vindicated beyond human limits.
Rhea approached quietly.
“You okay?”
“No.”
“Good. Because this is objectively insane.”
Despite everything, Aisha nearly smiled.
Then another officer approached carrying security footage.
“We found something.”
The room fell silent.
Onscreen, grainy hallway footage showed someone entering the bride’s suite shortly before blackout.
A tall man wearing black.
Not Arjun.
Not Aisha.
The groom’s cousin suddenly pointed.
“That’s the wedding planner!”
Within seconds chaos redirected completely.
The actual thief—a deeply indebted event manager—had exploited the blackout to steal jewelry before escaping through service exits.
Police left shortly afterward.
Guests slowly returned to celebration mode, though significantly more traumatized.
But the real disaster remained unfinished.
Because now the jewelry crisis was solved.
Meaning everyone remembered the fake boyfriend situation again.
Her mother stood silently near the stage.
Waiting.
Aisha approached slowly feeling about fourteen years old.
“Ma…”
“Was any of it real?”
There was no anger in her voice.
Just sadness.
Which felt infinitely worse.
Aisha looked down.
“No.”
Her mother nodded once.
“Why?”
The honest answer finally arrived after weeks of fiction.
“Because I was tired of disappointing everyone.”
Silence.
Then quietly:
“You think being unmarried disappoints me more than being dishonest?”
Tears burned suddenly behind Aisha’s eyes.
“I didn’t know how to explain myself anymore.”
Her mother’s expression softened slightly.
“Aisha, I worry because you stopped letting people close to you after Rohan.” She sighed tiredly. “Not because I need you married immediately.”
The simplicity of that truth felt devastating.
All this chaos built from assumptions never properly discussed.
Classic human behavior.
Behind them, wedding music resumed awkwardly.
Guests pretended not to stare.
Arjun approached carefully.
“I should leave.”
Aisha laughed unexpectedly.
“Yes. Probably.”
“I am genuinely sorry.”
“For lying?”
“For being caught.”
That actually made her laugh properly.
Her mother looked horrified. “You’re both impossible.”
“Accurate,” Aisha admitted.
Arjun hesitated. “For what it’s worth, your family really loves you.”
“They loved Fake Kabir.”
“No,” he said gently. “They were happy because they thought you were happy.”
That distinction landed quietly inside her.
After he left, the wedding slowly recovered around them. People danced again. Food reappeared. Families resumed celebration with the strange resilience unique to Indian weddings.
Eventually even gossip softened into amusement.
The rented boyfriend story would absolutely survive for years, unfortunately.
But something else survived too.
Truth.
Messy, embarrassing, humiliating truth.
And strangely, it felt lighter than maintaining fiction.
Later that night, while helping clean decorations, Rhea nudged her shoulder.
“So.”
“So?”
“You accidentally hired an actor, got investigated by police, and emotionally scarred your entire family.”
Aisha groaned. “Please stop summarizing my life.”
Rhea grinned. “You realize this sounds like a terrible Netflix movie.”
“It felt like one.”
Then after a pause, Rhea asked carefully:
“Are you okay?”
Aisha considered the question honestly.
For once honestly.
“Embarrassed beyond recovery,” she admitted. “But weirdly relieved.”
“Because?”
“No more pretending.”
Rhea nodded thoughtfully.
“Truth’s usually less exhausting.”
Outside, dawn slowly approached beyond wedding hall windows while exhausted guests drifted home carrying leftover sweets and fresh gossip.
Aisha stood quietly watching workers dismantle flower arrangements.
Two weeks earlier, one tiny lie about a fictional boyfriend had seemed harmless.
A temporary shield against uncomfortable conversations.
Instead it multiplied relentlessly—requiring actors, fake histories, emotional performances, and eventually police statements.
That was the terrifying thing about white lies.
They rarely stayed white.
They collected complexity like snowballs rolling downhill until eventually you weren’t protecting yourself from embarrassment anymore.
You were protecting the lie itself.
And lies, unlike people, are never satisfied with simplicity.
Her phone buzzed suddenly.
Unknown Number.
Aisha answered cautiously.
“Hello?”
Arjun’s voice emerged.
“So technically,” he said carefully, “you still owe me half the payment.”
For two seconds she stared into silence.
Then she burst out laughing so hard nearby guests turned toward her.
Not elegant laughter.
Exhausted, relieved, slightly hysterical laughter.
The kind arriving only after surviving disasters entirely of your own creation.
Maybe that was the final irony.
The truth she feared revealing had damaged far less than the lies she used to avoid it.
Mira’s two pairs of Eyes
Mira’s two pairs of Eyes
The first time Mira saw through someone else’s eyes, she thought she was dying.
One moment she was standing in the produce aisle of a crowded supermarket, comparing two nearly identical cartons of milk, and the next she was somewhere else entirely.
She blinked.
The supermarket vanished.
Now she stood at the edge of a railway platform beneath flickering yellow lights. Rain hammered metal tracks. Somewhere nearby, a child cried. Her heart lurched violently—not from fear alone, but from the impossible sensation that this body was not hers.
Her hands looked wrong.
Larger.
Darker.
A silver ring circled one finger.
Mira stumbled backward instinctively, but the body she occupied moved differently than she intended, slower and heavier. Panic exploded through her chest.
What is happening?
Then the body turned toward the tracks, and suddenly Mira understood something horrifying:
She wasn’t controlling this person.
She was merely seeing through them.
Like a passenger trapped inside another human being.
The stranger stepped closer to the edge of the platform. Mira could hear his breathing. Fast. Uneven. His thoughts were distant impressions rather than words—grief, exhaustion, hopelessness pressing together like storm clouds.
Then a train’s headlights appeared in the distance.
And the man took another step forward.
“No,” Mira whispered.
Except the sound never left his mouth.
Back in the supermarket, her real body collapsed.
—
When she regained consciousness, fluorescent lights buzzed overhead.
A paramedic sat nearby.
“You fainted,” he said. “Probably dehydration.”
Mira sat upright too quickly. “Where’s the train station?”
The paramedic frowned. “What?”
“The man on the platform—”
“You were unconscious for less than a minute.”
Mira stopped speaking.
Because the rain still echoed in her ears.
Even hours later, she remembered details impossible to invent: the smell of wet metal, the pressure of the stranger’s boots against concrete, the ache in his chest that didn’t belong to her.
That night, she searched local news obsessively.
At 11:43 PM she found it.
Man Dies in Apparent Suicide at Rajiv Chowk Metro Station.
The attached photograph showed a silver ring on the victim’s hand.
Mira stared at the screen until sunrise.
—
For the next three weeks, she told nobody.
How could she?
“Sometimes I accidentally see through strangers’ eyes” sounded less like a confession and more like untreated psychosis.
She tried explaining it rationally to herself. Stress hallucinations. Sleep deprivation. Neurological episodes.
But then it happened again.
This time during a morning bus ride.
Without warning, her vision tore sideways.
Suddenly she was inside a moving car speeding down a highway. Music blasted through speakers. Male hands gripped a steering wheel while sunlight flashed across the windshield.
Mira gasped.
The driver laughed at something his passenger said.
Passenger?
Mira turned instinctively and saw a young woman applying lipstick in the mirror.
Then headlights appeared ahead.
Too close.
A truck swerved into their lane.
Everything happened impossibly fast.
The driver jerked the wheel. Tires screamed. The woman shouted. Glass exploded outward in glittering fragments.
And then—
Darkness.
Mira returned violently to herself.
The bus passengers stared at her. Apparently she had screamed.
By evening, the news reported a highway collision involving two university students.
One dead.
One critical.
Mira vomited in her bathroom afterward.
Not because of the gore.
Because she had felt the impact.
Not physically exactly, but emotionally. Terror. Shock. The final unfinished instinct to survive.
It lingered inside her for hours.
—
Soon the episodes became frequent.
Random.
Unpredictable.
A few seconds here. A minute there.
Sometimes she saw through the eyes of strangers buying coffee or walking dogs. Sometimes through exhausted office workers staring blankly at computer screens.
Most experiences were ordinary.
But some were unbearable.
She witnessed a woman silently rehearsing divorce papers while smiling through dinner with her husband.
She saw a teenage boy standing on a rooftop convincing himself not to jump.
She experienced an elderly man crying quietly in a hospital bathroom after receiving a cancer diagnosis.
Every vision ended the same way: violently snapping her back into her own body.
At first, Mira believed the phenomenon targeted people in emotional distress. But eventually she realized something stranger.
She wasn’t seeing random moments.
She was seeing moments of emotional intensity.
Fear. Grief. Rage. Joy. Loneliness.
Human emotions acted like signals pulling her consciousness across invisible distances.
And every time it happened, the boundary between herself and others weakened slightly.
—
Mira stopped sleeping properly.
She feared what waited behind unconsciousness.
One night she awoke inside the body of a woman dancing at a wedding reception. Gold lights blurred beautifully across crowded tables while laughter echoed everywhere. For several glorious seconds Mira felt overwhelming happiness so pure it nearly broke her.
Then she snapped back into her dark apartment alone.
The contrast devastated her unexpectedly.
Another time she experienced a father holding his newborn daughter for the first time. The emotion flooding through him was so intense Mira cried after returning to herself.
It became increasingly difficult remembering which feelings belonged to her.
That frightened her most.
—
Eventually she told someone.
Her younger brother, Kabir.
He listened quietly while she explained everything in a single breathless stream.
When she finished, he said carefully, “Have you seen a doctor?”
Mira laughed bitterly. “There it is.”
“I’m not saying you’re crazy.”
“You absolutely are.”
Kabir leaned forward. “Mira, you’re describing supernatural body-hopping.”
“I know how it sounds.”
“Then help me understand.”
She hesitated.
“How much do you trust me?”
“Enough to be worried.”
Mira grabbed his wrist.
“Okay,” she whispered. “Wait.”
“What are you—”
The shift hit instantly.
Suddenly she was elsewhere.
A woman’s body this time.
Running.
Cold air slashed against unfamiliar lungs while footsteps thundered behind her. Panic surged violently. She turned down a narrow alley. Someone shouted in the distance.
Mira felt the woman’s terror so intensely it became physical.
Then—
Back.
She released Kabir’s wrist, gasping.
Across from her, Kabir stared in horror.
“You disappeared,” he whispered.
Mira froze.
“What?”
“For like… two seconds. Your eyes just…” He struggled for words. “It was like nobody was inside you.”
Cold dread spread through her chest.
Until then, she had assumed the experience occurred entirely inside her mind.
But apparently something real happened to her body too.
Kabir swallowed hard. “Tell me exactly what you saw.”
When she finished describing the alley and the pursuit, he immediately opened his phone.
Twenty minutes later they found a news alert.
Young Woman Assaulted Near Old Delhi Market.
Time of incident: approximately four minutes earlier.
Kabir slowly lowered the phone.
Neither spoke.
Because disbelief had just become impossible.
—
After that, Kabir became obsessed with understanding her condition.
He researched neurological disorders, quantum theories, collective consciousness, near-death experiences. None explained anything adequately.
Meanwhile Mira’s episodes worsened.
Longer now.
Stronger.
Sometimes she remained inside another person for several minutes at a time. She began recognizing patterns too. Physical proximity no longer mattered. Emotional intensity did.
The stronger the emotion, the stronger the connection.
One evening while sitting quietly at home, she suddenly found herself inside an elderly woman staring at old photographs.
The loneliness nearly suffocated her.
Not sadness exactly.
Absence.
The crushing ache of outliving everyone you once loved.
When Mira returned to herself, she cried for an hour without fully understanding why.
Another night she experienced a child hiding beneath a bed while his parents screamed at each other in the next room. The fear felt small and helpless and devastating.
Mira started avoiding crowds because every stranger became dangerous territory.
How many hidden catastrophes existed inside ordinary people?
Too many.
Far too many.
—
Then came the first time someone saw her back.
It happened during an episode involving a middle-aged taxi driver.
Mira suddenly inhabited his body while he sat parked beside a roadside tea stall. He drank from a paper cup absentmindedly, exhausted after a fourteen-hour shift.
Across the street stood a little girl holding balloons.
The driver watched her fondly.
Then abruptly, his eyes moved toward a mirror hanging inside the cab.
And for one impossible second—
The reflection looked directly at Mira.
Not the driver.
Her.
A distorted version of her own terrified face stared back through the mirror.
The driver flinched violently.
“What the hell—”
Mira snapped back instantly.
Her heart pounded so hard she nearly fainted.
Because until that moment, she had believed herself invisible during these experiences.
Apparently she wasn’t.
Or maybe she was becoming less invisible over time.
—
Sleep became impossible after that.
What if others could feel her watching?
What if she was invading real people without consent?
The thought disgusted her.
For days she isolated herself completely.
But isolation changed nothing.
The visions continued.
One afternoon she saw through the eyes of a surgeon during an operation. Another time through a prisoner staring silently at rain through barred windows.
Each experience carried emotional residue afterward like traces of another person left inside her mind.
Mira slowly stopped feeling entirely singular.
She contained fragments now.
Hundreds of emotional echoes.
—
Then she saw him.
The man in the blue coat.
At first, he appeared during brief episodes only.
A glimpse in crowds.
A reflection in windows.
Someone standing nearby watching.
No matter whose eyes she occupied, he occasionally appeared in the background staring directly toward her.
As though he knew.
The first few times she dismissed it as coincidence.
Until the night he spoke.
Mira had slipped into the consciousness of a bartender cleaning glasses after closing time. Jazz music hummed softly through empty darkness.
Then the bartender looked up.
The man in the blue coat sat alone at the counter.
Older. Thin. Sharp-eyed.
And staring directly at her.
“Interesting,” he murmured.
Fear slammed through Mira instantly.
The bartender frowned. “You talking to me?”
“No,” the man replied calmly. “Her.”
Mira froze.
The bartender laughed uneasily. “Buddy, I think you’ve had enough.”
But the man ignored him.
“You should be careful,” he said softly while maintaining eye contact straight through the bartender’s eyes. “The longer you stay connected, the harder it becomes to return fully.”
Mira tried to pull away.
Couldn’t.
For the first time, she felt resistance.
“You can hear me, can’t you?” the man asked.
The bartender suddenly rubbed his temples, confused by emotions not belonging to him.
Then Mira snapped back violently into her apartment.
She sat trembling for nearly an hour.
Because someone else knew.
—
Three days later, she met him in real life.
Or rather, he found her.
Mira exited a bookstore near Connaught Place and saw him immediately across the street.
Blue coat.
Watching calmly.
Every instinct screamed at her to run.
Instead she approached.
“Who are you?”
“Someone who learned too late,” he replied.
Up close, he looked exhausted in a permanent way. Like sleep had abandoned him years ago.
“You can do this too?”
He smiled faintly. “Not anymore. Mostly.”
“Mostly?”
“It fades eventually. Or you do.”
Mira stared at him. “Explain.”
So they sat inside a quiet café while he told her impossible things.
His name was Elias.
The condition—if it could be called that—had happened to him decades earlier after surviving a near-fatal drowning accident. At first he experienced random emotional connections exactly like hers. Eventually the boundaries intensified.
He could remain inside others for hours.
Sometimes days.
“Why does it happen?” Mira asked desperately.
Elias stirred his tea slowly. “My theory? Human consciousnesses aren’t as separate as we pretend. Trauma weakens the walls.”
“What trauma?”
“The kind that leaves cracks.”
Mira thought about her own past then.
Their mother dying when she was seventeen.
Years spent emotionally disconnected afterward.
Loneliness so deep it felt physical.
Maybe cracks had existed long before the visions began.
“Can it stop?” she whispered.
Elias hesitated too long.
Fear tightened inside her.
“You learn control eventually,” he said carefully. “But there’s a cost.”
“What cost?”
“The more people you experience, the less solid your own identity becomes.”
Mira looked away.
Because she already understood exactly what he meant.
—
Over the following weeks, Elias taught her techniques.
Grounding rituals.
Emotional barriers.
Methods for returning faster during episodes.
Some worked.
Others didn’t.
But gradually Mira gained partial control. She could shorten certain visions now or resist weaker connections entirely.
Still, stronger emotions remained impossible to block.
One evening she accidentally connected with a mother searching frantically for her missing child in a crowded festival. The terror was so overwhelming Mira nearly collapsed afterward.
Another time she experienced a musician performing before thousands of people. The exhilaration felt almost addictive.
That frightened her too.
Not all borrowed emotions were painful.
Some were intoxicating.
And the temptation to escape herself through others grew stronger each day.
Why endure her own loneliness when she could temporarily become someone else entirely?
Elias warned her about this repeatedly.
“That’s how you disappear,” he said.
“What does that mean?”
But he never answered directly.
—
The answer arrived on a rainy Thursday night.
Mira was walking home when the connection hit harder than ever before.
Suddenly the world vanished.
She opened unfamiliar eyes inside a crowded apartment filled with shouting.
A man stood near a balcony holding a gun.
People screamed.
Someone cried.
Panic detonated through the room.
Mira realized instantly she occupied the gunman himself.
His hands shook violently.
Not rage.
Despair.
Raw, unbearable despair.
The man raised the weapon toward his own head.
“No,” Mira whispered instinctively from inside him.
And for the first time—
He heard her.
His body froze.
Who said that?
The thought echoed clearly between them.
Mira’s heart stopped.
He could hear her.
“Don’t do this,” she pleaded.
Tears streamed down his face. I can’t anymore.
Behind him, people begged helplessly.
Mira felt his grief completely then: debt, humiliation, failure, hopelessness layered so heavily he could no longer see beyond it.
And suddenly something inside her shifted.
Not vision.
Control.
Without understanding how, Mira moved his hand slightly downward.
The man gasped.
What are you?
“I don’t know,” she admitted.
The gun trembled violently.
Then finally slipped from his fingers.
People lunged forward screaming.
Everything shattered apart.
Mira returned to herself collapsing onto wet pavement beneath pouring rain.
For several minutes she couldn’t breathe properly.
Because she had crossed a line.
Until then she had only observed.
Now she had interfered.
—
News reports later confirmed the incident ended without deaths.
But Mira barely cared about the headlines.
One fact consumed her entirely:
Connection could work both ways.
Which meant consciousness itself was not passive.
It was reachable.
Influenceable.
Shared.
The implications terrified her.
Elias seemed less surprised.
“It starts with emotions,” he said quietly after hearing what happened. “Eventually intentions follow.”
“You knew this would happen?”
“I suspected.”
“You could’ve warned me!”
“You wouldn’t have believed me.”
Mira paced angrily. “So what now? I become some kind of psychic parasite?”
Elias looked genuinely sad then.
“That depends on whether you remember who you are.”
His answer made no sense initially.
Later, it made too much sense.
—
Over the next month, Mira’s own memories began blurring strangely.
Not disappearing.
Mixing.
Sometimes she remembered childhood moments that weren’t hers. A beach she’d never visited. A grandfather she never had. A first kiss in a cinema she’d never entered.
Borrowed fragments leaked across boundaries.
Meanwhile other people occasionally reacted strangely around her.
Strangers staring too long.
People saying, “You look familiar,” despite never meeting her.
One cashier suddenly whispered, terrified, “You were in my dream.”
Mira left immediately.
She understood then what Elias had tried to explain.
Connections left traces both ways.
No consciousness remained untouched forever.
—
The breaking point came unexpectedly.
Kabir invited her for dinner one Sunday evening. They laughed normally for the first time in months. For a little while, Mira almost felt ordinary again.
Then during dessert, the connection struck.
Instantly she saw through Kabir’s eyes.
Not metaphorically.
Literally.
She looked directly at herself sitting across the table.
Her own face stared back.
For one horrifying moment she existed in both bodies simultaneously.
She felt Kabir’s concern for her.
His exhaustion.
His fear that he was losing his sister slowly to something impossible.
And then deeper beneath that—
Resentment.
Tiny but real.
Resentment at becoming responsible for her pain.
The realization devastated her.
When she snapped back fully into herself, Kabir looked alarmed.
“Mira?”
She suddenly understood something brutal about her ability.
Seeing through another person’s eyes meant more than borrowing sight.
It meant confronting truths people never spoke aloud.
No human relationship could survive complete transparency unchanged.
Some thoughts were never meant to be witnessed.
—
That night she visited Elias again.
“I don’t want this anymore,” she said immediately.
He nodded sadly. “Nobody does eventually.”
“Tell me how to stop.”
For a long time he remained silent.
Then finally:
“You have to close the cracks.”
“How?”
“You stop reaching outward.”
“I’m not doing this intentionally!”
“Yes, you are.” His voice stayed gentle. “Not consciously. But part of you keeps searching for connection because you’re terrified of isolation.”
Mira stared at him.
Because he was right.
Every vision horrified her.
But beneath the horror existed something else too:
Belonging.
For the first time in her life, she understood people completely. Their hidden griefs. Secret joys. Silent loneliness.
Human beings stopped feeling distant.
And maybe she had become addicted to that intimacy.
Elias continued quietly, “You think seeing through others’ eyes makes you less alone. But eventually it erases the difference between understanding people and becoming them.”
Mira whispered, “How did you survive it?”
A long silence followed.
Then Elias smiled faintly.
“I didn’t entirely.”
For the first time, she noticed how strangely hollow his expression looked. As though pieces of him had been worn away gradually over decades.
“How many people are inside your head?” she asked softly.
He didn’t answer.
He didn’t need to.
—
Weeks later, Mira stood alone beside the Yamuna River at sunrise.
The city hummed quietly behind her.
For once, no visions came.
No borrowed emotions.
Only silence.
She closed her eyes and focused carefully on her own breathing, her own heartbeat, her own thoughts.
Mine, she reminded herself.
Not borrowed.
Not shared.
Mine.
For the first time in months, the boundary held.
And yet she knew the ability had not vanished completely. Somewhere beneath consciousness, the connections still existed waiting for emotional fractures strong enough to reopen them.
Maybe they always would.
But now she understood something essential.
Seeing through another person’s eyes was not a gift because it revealed hidden truths.
It was dangerous precisely because it removed the comforting illusions people needed to remain themselves.
Human beings survived partly through mystery. Through separation. Through never fully knowing what existed inside another mind.
Absolute empathy came with consequences.
Because once you truly experienced another person’s pain, loneliness, terror, or love as your own, the idea of a singular self became difficult to defend.
A breeze moved softly across the river.
Mira opened her eyes.
Across the walkway, a stranger sat quietly watching the sunrise alone.
For one brief terrifying second, Mira felt the familiar pull beginning again.
Connection.
Emotion.
Opening.
But this time she resisted.
Not by shutting the world out.
By remaining anchored within herself.
The pull faded slowly.
The stranger remained only a stranger.
And Mira stood there breathing carefully in the growing morning light, holding onto the fragile miracle of being only one person at a time.
Who was Aarav Mehta
Who was Aarav Mehta
Everyone who knew Aarav Mehta had a version of him stored in their minds. To his colleagues, he was the charming strategist who could command a room full of executives with nothing but a grin and a well-timed joke. To his neighbors, he was the man who organized building festivals and remembered everyone’s birthdays. To strangers, he was effortlessly approachable—the sort of person who could begin conversations in elevators and leave with invitations to weddings.
If there were a dictionary definition for “extrovert,” people would have volunteered Aarav’s photograph.
No one noticed that after every social gathering, he disappeared.
Not metaphorically. Literally.
He would vanish from calls, mute every notification, pull his curtains shut, and sit in complete silence for hours, sometimes days, trying to recover from the performance of being himself.
Even he struggled to explain it.
As a child, Aarav had not been loud. He had been observant. His teachers described him as “thoughtful,” which was adult language for a boy who preferred listening to speaking. At family functions, while cousins screamed through hallways and fought over desserts, Aarav sat beside older relatives and listened to stories about cities they once lived in or people they had loved decades ago.
His mother often worried.
“Why don’t you go play?” she would ask gently.
“I am playing,” he’d reply.
And in a way, he was. Listening was his game. Watching people was his hobby. Silence was never empty to him; it was detailed, layered, alive.
But silence made other people uncomfortable.
By the time he reached middle school, he realized that quiet children were treated like unfinished projects. Teachers encouraged them to “come out of their shell.” Relatives compared them to louder cousins. Other children assumed quietness meant arrogance, sadness, or weakness.
So Aarav adapted.
At first, it was accidental. One day during a class presentation, his partner froze from anxiety, and Aarav had no choice but to speak. To his surprise, people laughed at his jokes. They listened attentively. The teacher praised his confidence.
That praise stayed with him.
For the first time, he understood something dangerous: personality could be performed.
Over the years, he studied people the way actors study scripts. He learned when to smile, how long to hold eye contact, when to laugh, when to lean forward to seem interested. Because he genuinely liked understanding people, the performance never felt dishonest. It simply felt useful.
In college, he became famous.
Not campus-famous in the cinematic sense, but the realistic kind—the kind where people constantly wave at you while walking across corridors. He hosted debates, managed festivals, attended parties, and somehow knew everyone from professors to janitors.
His friends admired his social battery.
“You never get tired,” they’d say.
Aarav always smiled at that because the truth was almost funny.
He was always tired.
After events, he would return to his dorm room and sit in darkness without turning on the lights. While his roommates went out for late-night tea, he stayed behind pretending to study, though most nights he simply stared at the ceiling in silence.
It wasn’t hatred for people.
That was the misunderstanding he could never explain.
He loved people deeply. He loved conversations, emotions, stories, humor, contradictions. But every interaction consumed something invisible inside him. Being around others felt like standing beneath bright stage lights for too long. Even when the audience applauded, exhaustion waited backstage.
Still, because he was skilled socially, nobody questioned the assumption that he was extroverted.
Even Aarav began believing it.
Until the night of Rhea’s birthday party.
The party took place on a rooftop glowing with fairy lights and loud music. Nearly everyone from college attended. Aarav arrived late, and within minutes he was surrounded by people asking him questions, pulling him into photographs, introducing him to strangers.
He performed naturally.
Three hours later, he disappeared.
Rhea found him downstairs sitting alone near the emergency staircase.
“You okay?” she asked.
He nodded too quickly. “Yeah.”
“You look miserable.”
“I’m just tired.”
“You? Tired of people?” She laughed softly as if the idea itself were absurd.
That sentence unsettled him more than it should have.
You? Tired of people?
The truth sat inside him like a secret identity no one would believe.
Rhea sat beside him quietly. Unlike others, she did not rush to fill silence.
“You know,” she said eventually, “I think people misunderstand you.”
Aarav smiled. “How?”
“They think because you’re good with people, you must always want to be around them.”
Her words landed with uncomfortable accuracy.
He turned toward her. “And what do you think?”
“I think you enjoy people in small doses,” she said. “Then you disappear to recharge.”
He stared at her for several seconds.
It was the first time anyone had seen him correctly.
That conversation should have comforted him, but instead it frightened him. Because once someone sees the real version of you, pretending becomes harder.
After college, Aarav entered corporate consulting—a profession practically built for socially convincing people. He thrived immediately. Clients trusted him. Managers admired him. He could walk into tense meetings and dissolve hostility with warmth and humor.
At twenty-nine, he was promoted faster than anyone in his department.
His office celebrated with champagne.
Aarav celebrated by going home alone and sitting silently on his kitchen floor for an hour.
The higher he climbed professionally, the more demanding his social life became. Networking dinners, conferences, leadership retreats, endless calls. His calendar looked less like a schedule and more like an invasion.
People envied him constantly.
“You’re living the dream.”
“You’re such a people person.”
“You have endless energy.”
The strange thing about assumptions is that once enough people believe them, they become difficult to challenge. Aarav worried that if he admitted the truth, people would think he had lied to them.
How could someone charismatic be introverted?
Most people misunderstood introversion entirely. They treated it like shyness, awkwardness, or dislike of attention. Aarav possessed none of those traits. He could speak before thousands without trembling.
But confidence and introversion were never opposites.
Energy and performance were.
He discovered this accidentally during a leadership workshop in Singapore. One evening, after spending an entire day networking with executives, he skipped the team dinner and wandered into a quiet bookstore instead.
The relief he felt entering that silent space was almost physical.
Rows of books stood calmly under warm lights. No conversations demanded responses. No expectations pressed against him. No performance was required.
He spent three hours there.
For the first time in months, his mind felt breathable.
When he returned to the hotel, his colleagues teased him.
“Who skips free cocktails for books?”
Aarav laughed along.
But privately, something clicked into place.
Maybe he wasn’t broken for feeling exhausted.
Maybe he was simply built differently from how people imagined.
After that trip, he began reading about personality psychology. Introversion. Social energy. Cognitive overstimulation. Solitude dependency.
Every page felt uncomfortably personal.
He learned that introverts were not necessarily quiet. Some became performers, leaders, comedians, speakers. The difference lay not in skill but in recovery. Extroverts gained energy through interaction; introverts spent energy through it.
Aarav finally had language for himself.
Oddly, this realization did not simplify his life. It complicated it.
Because now he recognized how often he betrayed his own nature to satisfy expectations.
He accepted invitations he dreaded. Forced conversations when he needed silence. Maintained friendships beyond his emotional capacity because he feared disappointing people.
He wasn’t living dishonestly exactly.
But he was overperforming.
The consequences arrived gradually.
Insomnia first.
Then irritability.
Then a strange emotional numbness where every conversation—even pleasant ones—felt exhausting before they began.
One Friday evening, after a brutal week of presentations and client dinners, his coworkers invited him to celebrate a successful project.
“Aarav’s definitely coming,” someone said automatically.
All eyes turned toward him.
Normally he would smile and agree.
Instead he heard himself say, “I can’t.”
The group fell silent.
“You’re sick?” someone asked.
“No,” Aarav replied carefully. “I just need to be alone tonight.”
The statement felt strangely intimate, as though he had confessed something deeply personal.
His coworkers exchanged confused glances.
“Alone? On a Friday?”
He laughed awkwardly, trying to soften the truth. “Yeah. Humans are exhausting.”
Everyone chuckled, assuming it was a joke.
But one colleague, Meera, watched him thoughtfully.
The following Monday, she stopped by his office.
“You know,” she said casually, “I don’t think you’re extroverted.”
Aarav nearly dropped his coffee.
“Why does everyone keep saying that lately?”
“Because you’re not,” she replied. “You’re socially skilled. Different thing.”
He leaned back in his chair. “Most people don’t see a difference.”
“Most people only understand personalities in stereotypes.”
That sentence stayed with him.
Socially skilled. Different thing.
Aarav began observing how often society rewarded extroverted behavior while ignoring the internal cost. Workplaces celebrated constant collaboration. Friend groups treated solitude like rejection. Productivity culture praised networking endlessly.
People assumed visibility equaled happiness.
Meanwhile, Aarav felt increasingly invisible beneath the version of himself everyone adored.
Things changed further when he met Naina.
She was a documentary filmmaker who hated small talk and loved long silences. They met through mutual friends at a crowded dinner where Aarav spent most of the evening entertaining everyone while Naina quietly observed from the corner.
Later that night, while others argued loudly over music choices, she asked him, “Does this tire you too?”
No introduction. No context. Just immediate understanding.
Aarav laughed in surprise. “That obvious?”
“To another introvert? Very.”
He sat beside her, relieved beyond explanation.
With Naina, conversations felt different. There was no pressure to perform constantly. They could spend entire evenings reading separately in the same room without discomfort.
For Aarav, that kind of peace felt revolutionary.
One rainy Sunday afternoon, Naina asked him something no one else had.
“When did you decide you had to entertain everyone?”
The question unsettled him because he had no answer.
Maybe childhood.
Maybe survival.
Maybe praise became addictive.
When people reward a certain version of you, abandoning it feels risky.
“You know what your problem is?” she said gently.
“I’m sure there are several.”
“You confuse being liked with being understood.”
Aarav looked away.
Because she was right.
People liked him constantly. But very few truly understood him. Most loved the energetic, endlessly available version he presented publicly.
The quieter version remained hidden.
And hiding, even successfully, becomes lonely eventually.
Months later, Aarav attended a corporate retreat in Jaipur. Hundreds of employees gathered for workshops, networking sessions, and team-building activities. By the second day, he felt mentally hollow.
At dinner, surrounded by loud conversations, he suddenly experienced something close to panic. Not dramatic hyperventilation or collapse. Just an overwhelming internal exhaustion so intense he could barely tolerate another second of interaction.
He excused himself and walked outside into the hotel gardens.
For nearly an hour, he wandered alone beneath dim lanterns and quiet trees.
When he returned, his manager joked loudly, “There he is! Our social butterfly flew away!”
Everyone laughed.
Aarav smiled automatically.
But internally, something shifted permanently.
He realized he no longer wanted to spend his life being misidentified.
Not because introversion was superior. Not because extroversion was wrong. But because constantly playing a role—even a successful one—creates distance between yourself and everyone around you.
That night, back in his hotel room, he opened his laptop and declined three upcoming social events.
Then he turned off his phone and slept peacefully for the first time in weeks.
The real transformation happened slowly afterward.
Aarav stopped apologizing for needing solitude.
When friends invited him somewhere and he felt drained, he simply said, “I need a quiet evening.”
Some understood immediately.
Others took offense.
A few disappeared entirely.
That hurt more than he expected.
Apparently, many relationships had depended on his constant emotional availability. Once he stopped performing endless sociability, some people lost interest.
But the relationships that remained became more honest.
Rhea still called him randomly to discuss books and life. Meera occasionally joined him for silent coffee breaks where neither felt pressure to talk constantly. Naina understood when he needed distance without interpreting it as rejection.
For the first time, Aarav experienced connection without exhaustion.
Ironically, accepting his introversion made him socially healthier.
Because now his interactions came from genuine desire rather than obligation.
At work, he changed too.
Instead of attending every networking event, he became selective. Instead of forcing nonstop collaboration, he scheduled quiet hours for deep focus. Surprisingly, his performance improved.
One afternoon, during a mentorship session, a young employee confessed nervously, “I think I’m too introverted for leadership.”
Aarav almost laughed at the familiarity of the fear.
“Who told you leadership belongs only to extroverts?” he asked.
The employee shrugged. “That’s just how it seems.”
Aarav leaned forward thoughtfully.
“People confuse loudness with confidence all the time. They’re not the same.”
The younger man listened carefully.
“You don’t need to become someone else to succeed,” Aarav continued. “You just need to understand how you function.”
As he spoke, Aarav realized he was also speaking to his younger self.
The child who thought silence needed fixing.
The teenager who learned personality could be performed.
The adult who exhausted himself trying to fulfill everyone’s expectations.
For years, he had treated introversion like a flaw hidden beneath charisma.
Now he understood it differently.
His quietness was not weakness.
It was the source of many strengths people admired in him without recognizing their origin. His listening skills. His observational ability. His emotional sensitivity. His thoughtfulness before speaking.
Even his social intelligence partly came from years spent studying people carefully from the edges of rooms.
He was not an extrovert trapped in exhaustion.
He was an introvert who learned performance exceptionally well.
And there was a difference.
One evening, nearly a year later, Aarav attended another party—smaller this time, mostly close friends. The room buzzed with conversation while music played softly in the background.
At some point, someone new asked the inevitable question.
“So, Aarav,” the man said cheerfully, “where do you get all this social energy from?”
Before Aarav could answer, Rhea interrupted from across the room.
“He actually hates all of us.”
Everyone laughed.
Including Aarav.
Then he shook his head. “No,” he said. “I love people. I just recover better alone.”
The statement surprised the room into brief silence.
Not uncomfortable silence.
Just thoughtful silence.
Then Meera nodded knowingly. “That makes sense, actually.”
And strangely, that tiny moment felt more authentic than years of carefully maintained impressions.
Because he had finally explained himself truthfully without fear.
Later that night, after returning home, Aarav sat beside his window watching rain slide down the glass. The city outside glowed with traffic and distant noise, but inside his apartment everything remained calm.
He thought about how long he had spent misunderstanding himself because the world preferred simple categories.
Quiet or loud.
Shy or confident.
Introvert or extrovert.
Reality had always been more complicated.
Human beings were performances layered over instincts, adaptations layered over needs. Some introverts became actors. Some extroverts feared loneliness. Some people spoke constantly because silence terrified them. Others mastered conversation because they feared invisibility.
Aarav understood now that personality was not always what people saw publicly. Sometimes the truest version of someone existed in private moments—in how they recovered, where they felt safest, what exhausted them, what restored them.
For him, restoration had always lived in solitude.
Not lonely solitude.
Peaceful solitude.
The kind where no one expected anything from him.
The kind where he no longer needed to sparkle.
His phone buzzed.
A message from Naina.
“Survived the party?”
Aarav smiled and replied:
“Yes. Recovering now.”
Three dots appeared immediately.
“Introvert.”
He stared at the word for a moment before typing back:
“Finally accepted it.”
Then he placed the phone aside and sat quietly in the dim apartment, feeling—not lonely, not hidden, not misunderstood—
just still.
And for the first time in years, stillness felt enough.
Sunday, 24 May 2026
*I am sure you would love it, even if you have already read it:*
*I am sure you would love it, even if you have already read it:*
He opened his dream medical practice in London. Not one patient came. So he wrote to pay rent—and accidentally created immortality.
In 1891, Arthur Conan Doyle made a decision he was certain would change his life.
He had spent nearly a decade as a general practitioner in Portsmouth. Steady work. Respectable work. But Doyle wanted more—real prestige, real authority, real income.
So he traveled to Vienna. Studied ophthalmology under the best instructors in Europe. Came back to London with everything he had left and rented office space at 2 Upper Wimpole Street—one of the most distinguished medical addresses in the city.
He hung his sign. He unlocked the door. He sat down at his desk.
And he waited.
Day after day. Week after week.
Not one patient walked through that door. Not a single one.
He later wrote in his autobiography: "Every day I walked to that consulting room and sat there waiting. And every day I waited in vain."
The rent came due. His savings evaporated. He had a wife to feed.
He was thirty-two years old, and his carefully planned second career had collapsed into silence.
So he did what he had always done when life gave him nothing but empty hours.
He picked up a pen and wrote.
It wasn't the first time. Back in Portsmouth, during slow stretches between patients, he had written a detective novel—a strange, brilliant story about an eccentric investigator named Sherlock Holmes.
Publishers had rejected it over and over until one small house finally offered him £25 for the full rights. Forever.
Desperate for any money, he had taken it.
He made almost nothing when the book sold out. He had unknowingly given away what would become the most valuable character in literary history—for the equivalent of a month's rent.
But sitting in that empty London clinic in 1891, Doyle wasn't thinking about legacy.
He was thinking about rent.
He wrote a short detective story. Sent it to The Strand Magazine.
The editor, Herbert Greenhough Smith, had been sifting through months of dull, forgettable submissions when Doyle's pages landed on his desk.
He later said it felt like "a gift from Heaven."
The story—"A Scandal in Bohemia"—was published in July 1891.
The public reaction was unlike anything the magazine had ever seen. Readers were captivated by this sharp, peculiar, brilliant detective who could deduce your entire life from a speck of mud on your shoe.
The Strand's circulation exploded—from roughly 300,000 readers to over 500,000 within months.
They begged for more.
Doyle delivered. "The Red-Headed League." "The Adventure of the Speckled Band." "The Adventure of the Blue Carbuncle."
Every story was a sensation. Within a year, the failed eye doctor was one of the most beloved writers in the English-speaking world.
But here is the part most people don't know.
Doyle hated Sherlock Holmes.
Not casually. Genuinely, bitterly hated him.
Doyle wanted to be a serious writer—historical fiction, literary novels, the kind of work that earned respect from scholars and critics. Holmes, to him, was a cheap trick. A character he had invented out of desperation to cover his bills.
So in 1893, he made a decision that stunned the world.
He killed him.
In "The Final Problem," Holmes and his nemesis Professor Moriarty plunge together to their deaths at Reichenbach Falls in Switzerland.
Doyle put down his pen and exhaled. Finally. Now he could write the literature he actually cared about.
The public reacted as though someone had died in real life.
Readers wore black armbands in mourning. Hate mail flooded his address. The Strand's circulation collapsed. People stopped him on the street—grief-stricken, furious, betrayed.
Doyle was baffled. Then annoyed. Then slowly, overwhelmingly crushed by the pressure.
For eight years, he tried to move on. He wrote the historical novels he'd always dreamed of writing.
Almost no one read them.
Finally, reluctantly—resentfully—he brought Holmes back. He explained that Holmes had faked his death at the falls.
Readers wept with relief.
Doyle kept writing. Story after story. Decade after decade. Fifty-six short stories. Four novels.
By the 1920s, he was the highest-paid writer in the world, earning up to ten shillings per word—a fortune.
He was wealthy. Famous. Globally celebrated.
And he still wished people would read his historical novels.
Almost no one did.
He once said of Holmes: "I feel towards him as I do towards pâtĂ© de foie gras, of which I once ate too much—the name of it gives me a sickly feeling to this day."
Arthur Conan Doyle died in 1930, at seventy-one years old.
His obituaries led with one name: Sherlock Holmes.
Today, Holmes holds the Guinness World Record for the most portrayed fictional character in film and television history. Over 250 actors. Over 1,000 adaptations. Portrayed in more languages, in more countries, across more generations than any other character ever created.
All of it traced back to one afternoon in an empty London office, where a broke and desperate doctor picked up a pen because he had nothing left to lose.
Doyle spent his whole life chasing the wrong thing.
He wanted literary glory. He wanted to be taken seriously by the establishment. He wanted his "real work" to matter.
But the thing he did just to survive—the character he created without passion, sold for almost nothing, and tried to erase from history—that is what made him immortal.
Think about that.
The work you're doing right now just to get through the week, just to pay the bills, just to fill the empty hours—that might be the work the world needs most.
You never know which story that will be.
The thing you're embarrassed by. The thing you think is beneath you. The thing you're only doing because you have to.
That might be your legacy.
Doyle died wishing the world would forget Sherlock Holmes and remember his historical novels.
The world did exactly the opposite.
And maybe—just maybe—the world was right.
*So keep writing. Keep creating. Keep doing the work, even when it feels like survival instead of art.*
*Because sometimes the thing that saves you is the thing that saves everyone else too.
I was chatting with a man online
I was chatting with a man online and he asked me to do a video call so l said yes and when I started the call he did not answer so I stopped the call and tried again for the second time then he did not answer again is he trying to hide his identity and messing me about but he asked for the video call so l am confused he messaged me and said I am sorry I missed your call and about one hour after he said am sorry my data was off so I messaged him and said you ignored my calls and he said can you do another one so l said no then I blocked him
My wife of 30 years cheated on me for 11 months
My wife of 30 years cheated on me for 11 months that I know of. Probably longer. We had good jobs and made plenty of money. We had a special connection and a great marriage. Raised 2 boys together and got along most of the time. We promised each other if it came down to infidelity we would let each other know and go our separate ways. That didn't happen. She lost her job while I received a healthy inheritance when my dad was murdered. She never looked for another job thinking I could take care of us both. That was not the case. For it all to work financially, she needed a job while i retire. She never went back to work and depleted my bank account. She stole money from me, lied to me and was not loyal. What makes someone change so drastically to do all those things to me?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)