╰┈➤ 𝔟𝔬𝔬𝔨 𝔣𝔬𝔲𝔯 𝔦𝔫 𝔥𝔦𝔰 𝔰𝔢𝔯𝔦𝔢𝔰.
✨️ 𝐈𝐍𝐀𝐀𝐘𝐀𝐓: 𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘴𝘢𝘭𝘷𝘢𝘵𝘪𝘰𝘯.
Some people don't crash into your life like meteors. They arrive like sunlit mischief, warm, effortless, impossible to ignore.
He walked in like laughter does, uninvited, contagious, leaving behind a brightness no one asked for but everyone needed.
Ishan Kishan.
A cricketer the country couldn't stop quoting, a boy-wonder turned man who wore stardom like a hoodie, casual, lived-in, never too precious. Jokes on his tongue, swagger in his stride, a soft heart hidden behind a don't care grin.
The world saw the reels: the sixes, the smiles, the spark. Only a few noticed the silence after, the boy who broke records wondering what he had broken in himself to get there.
She didn't enter rooms. She claimed them, with the kind of silence that doesn't ask, it decides.
Mandakini Mishra.
A writer who carved truth into sentences that bled clean. Savage not because she was cruel, but because she refused to be careful around lies. Rebellious to rules that tried to cage her voice. Cool on the surface, fire in the marrow, sass stitched with sense, softness locked behind an alarmed door.
Two people who didn't need saving.
One who laughed at expectations.
The other who underlined them with a red pen.
They didn't collide like thunder.
They crossed paths like a dare, his chaos waving, her calm smirking back. Not to fix. Not to fuse. But to co-author.
Because sometimes salvation isn't a sermon. It's a shrug shared at the right time.
Sometimes the loudest truths arrive with a grin and a raised eyebrow.
And sometimes, mischief becomes meaning, when the starboy finally stops running, and the writer finally stops waiting.
This isn't a love story built on rescue.
It's a love story built on recognition.
Two storms, two silences, finding rhythm in each other's noise.
And that rhythm?
That was Inayat.
╰┈➤ 𝔟𝔬𝔬𝔨 𝔬𝔫𝔢 𝔦𝔫 𝔥𝔦𝔰 𝔰𝔢𝔯𝔦𝔢𝔰.
💫 𝐊𝐀𝐈𝐍𝐀𝐀𝐓: 𝘩𝘪𝘴 𝘴𝘦𝘳𝘦𝘯𝘦 𝘤𝘰𝘴𝘮𝘰𝘴.
Some people don't enter your life like storms. They arrive like the sky- vast, unbothered, endless.
He walked in like the breeze, easy, unhurried, carrying the scent of something familiar.
Shreyas Iyer.
A cricketer the nation admired, a man who made chaos look calm. He didn't chase the spotlight, it followed him. Not because he demanded attention, but because his presence made silence feel like a song. People often mistook his laid-back smile for indifference, but those who really knew him... knew he was the calm after every storm.
She sat quietly, listening-always listening. Not to reply, but to understand.
Aarohi Agarwal.
A therapist with soft eyes and sharp comebacks. She healed people for a living, but rarely let anyone hold her broken pieces. Empathy was her strength. Boundaries were her armour.
She didn't like messes, especially the emotional kind. But she was a beautiful contradiction, sweet and sassy, soft-spoken but never a pushover. She knew what hurt felt like... and more importantly, what healing looked like.
Two people, neither looking for anything. One tired of being seen as just a jersey. The other too used to seeing through people.
They didn't crash into each other.
They collided gently, like constellations crossing paths. Not to complete, but to coexist. Because sometimes, the most unexpected souls find the quietest corners of each other.
And sometimes, the cosmos doesn't scream. It whispers.