Panchiwrites
- LECTURAS 270
- Votos 37
- Partes 5
(This is a story about a famous sportsman and a nobody.)
They say a billion people hold their breath when Abhishek Sharma takes his stance.
In this country, he isn't just a man; he's a religion. He's the face on the billboards, the name screamed until throats go raw, the "Golden Boy" who carries the weight of a nation's pride on his shoulders. He lives in the noise. He lives for the applause.
But I've seen the man behind the hoarding.
I've seen him at 5:00 AM in a deserted airport lounge, hiding behind a hoodie and a weary silence. I've seen the way his hands sweat, when the crowd keeps calling his name and he isn't hitting a boundary. I've seen the loneliness that comes with being a god in a world that forgets you're also a human.
Then there's me. Adhira.
I'm the girl who lives in the shadows of the stadium. The one with the tablet, the itinerary, and the walls built so high that no one has ever climbed them. I don't do "fame." I don't do "distractions." I do order. I do survival. Because when you've spent your life being the only thing standing between your family and the abyss, you don't have the luxury of falling.
We were never supposed to happen.
He's the storm, and I'm the anchor. He's the headline, and I'm the fine print. According to the world, there is a line between us-a thick, white, unbreakable boundary that keeps us in our place.
But the world is wrong.
Because the most important things don't happen in the headlines or under the floodlights. They happen in the stolen glances, the shared earpods, and the midnight drives where no one is watching.
They happen Between the Lines. And once you cross that line? There's no going back.