SolaMurasaki
Aiden is fairly certain his life has slipped into a badly written rom-com. The kind with awkward pauses, emotional whiplash, and zero background music to warn him when things are about to go wrong.
Still reeling from a separation he pretends he's over, Aiden makes a quiet, half-serious wish: to never see Claire again. Not because he stopped loving her, but because loving her ended in betrayal and silence before anything could ever be made official. It seems harmless. Cathartic, even. Except wishes, apparently, have terrible listening skills. The kind of wish you make assuming no one is listening.
And yet, the thought echoed on and on and on...
"What if the rain hears the whisper of wishes?"
Caught between the past he tried to erase and a present that feels subtly out of step, Aiden must confront the fear he keeps dodging: that avoiding pain isn't the same as moving on, and that some connections, like unfinished melodies, refuse to be forgotten.
A coming-of-age romantic comedy, My Rom-Com Story Can't Be That Bad, Right? blends humor, Filipino cultural texture, and introspective warmth into a story about love, regret, and the strange way timing forces honesty or deceit, whether you're ready for it or not.