The Boy Who Kissed Everyone But Him
Love wasn't supposed to feel like vertigo.
William has always been the kind of person who moves first, laughs loudest, and never stays still long enough to be caught. Kissing is easy. Intensity is easy. What isn't easy is loving one person without feeling like he's losing himself.
Est, his neighbor-his quiet rival, his mirror, his undoing-falls for the one boy who seems to belong to everyone but him. What begins as tension and almost-confessions turns into something deeper: midnight honesty, slow growth, and the painful realization that fear can look a lot like pride.
As graduation approaches and distance threatens to reshape their world, William must confront the version of himself who runs when love feels too big. Est must decide whether staying is worth the risk of being left.
This is not a story about dramatic passion that burns out.
It's a story about choosing.
About learning that steady can be louder than chaos.
About two people who grow without outgrowing each other.
Still water. Loud heart.
And the boy who once kissed everyone learns how to stay.