The space we left
Ahira Kapoor was the kind of girl who made ordinary school days feel important. The loud laugh during boring lectures, the dramatic retellings of small incidents, the girl who talked her way out of trouble and still topped her exams. Classrooms were her stage, corridors her comfort zone. But beneath all that confidence was someone who felt deeply especially about the one place that always felt like hers: the seat beside Ivaan Mehra.
Ivaan Mehra never needed attention to be noticed. Quiet, steady, and annoyingly dependable, he was the boy teachers trusted and friends relied on. He didn't talk much about feelings, didn't make big promises, didn't fight for space in anyone's life. He simply stayed. Every single day, he kept the seat next to him empty not because she asked him to, but because some habits don't need explanations.
They were just best friends. That's what they told everyone and maybe themselves too. Shared lunches turned into shared secrets, late-night calls into silent understandings, and somewhere between exams and expectations, something unnamed grew between them. Until one practical decision, one silent goodbye, and one moment neither of them stopped, created a distance that felt temporary but wasn't. Years later, when they stand in the same room again, older and far less certain, they realise something they should have understood back then
The space they left behind didn't fade with time. It waited.