The rain fell in thick, glistening sheets, drumming softly against the tin roof of the small roadside café. The dim glow of a flickering bulb bathed the room in golden light, casting elongated shadows on the wooden walls. Outside, the city blurred into hazy streaks of silver and amber, its usual chaos muffled by the storm.
Ashiha curled her fingers around the warm ceramic cup, letting its heat seep into her palms. The scent of chai—rich with spices, tinged with honey—rose into the air, mingling with the fresh, crisp scent of rain. She had always loved storms. They made the world quieter, more intimate, like a secret whispered between lovers.
And tonight, she wasn’t alone in this quiet.
Across from her, a man sat in relaxed silence, his presence lingering at the edge of her awareness. His dark hair was damp, stray droplets still clinging to his skin, trailing down the sharp angles of his jaw before disappearing beneath the collar of his half-unbuttoned shirt. He held an unlit cigarette between his fingers, rolling it absently, as though lost in thought.
She wasn’t sure why she spoke, but the silence between them felt almost too delicate to leave untouched.
“Bad night for a walk,” she murmured, her voice soft, just above a whisper.
His lips twitched slightly, a faint smirk ghosting across his face. “Or the perfect one,” he countered, his voice low and smooth, carrying just enough weight to make her pulse stutter.
She tilted her head, intrigued. “And why’s that?”
His fingers drummed lazily against the table. “No noise. No rush. Just this.” He gestured toward the rain-splattered window, his gaze distant. “It’s like the whole world slows down.”
Ashiha followed his gaze, watching the rain wash the city into a blur of gold and silver. She exhaled softly, feeling the truth in his words.
“You like the quiet?” she asked.
He chuckled, tilting his head slightly. “I like moments that feel real.” His eyes flickered toward her, lingering. “This feels real.”
She felt something shift in the air between them, something warm and unspoken.
A small smile played on her lips. “You talk like a poet.”
His smirk deepened. “Do I?”
She nodded, bringing her cup to her lips, inhaling the rich scent before taking a slow sip. His gaze followed the movement, lingering for half a second longer than necessary.
“What about you?” he asked.
She arched a brow. “What about me?”
“Why are you here, alone in the middle of a storm?”
Ashiha considered his question, tracing her finger idly along the rim of her cup. “Maybe for the same reason you are,” she murmured. “Because the world is too loud sometimes.”
Something flickered in his expression, like a whisper of understanding passing between them. He leaned back slightly, his gaze never leaving hers.
“Zidan.” His voice was smooth as silk, the single word carrying weight.
She blinked. “What?”
He smirked. “My name.”
Ashiha let the syllables settle in her mind. “Zidan,” she repeated, testing the sound of it on her tongue. It suited him. Strong. Subtle. Just a little mysterious.
His eyes darkened slightly as he watched her. “And you?”
She hesitated, then answered, “Ashiha.”
Zidan let the name roll through his mind before murmuring, “Pretty.”
Ashiha felt warmth spread through her chest, unexpected but not unwelcome. She lowered her gaze, tracing patterns into the condensation on her cup. “So, Zidan,” she said, her voice teasing now, “what do strangers talk about when they’re stuck together in a storm?”
His lips curved, eyes glinting with amusement. “Anything they want,” he murmured. “Or nothing at all.”
Ashiha held his gaze, the space between them charged with something quiet, something unspoken. The rain continued to fall outside, but inside this tiny café, time slowed. Two strangers, caught in the storm, bound by a moment that neither of them quite understood yet.
And maybe, just maybe, neither of them wanted to.
The rain hadn’t let up. If anything, it had grown heavier, drumming against the café windows like an impatient visitor refusing to be ignored. Outside, the streets were nearly deserted, save for the occasional car slicing through the storm, headlights gleaming off the wet pavement.
Inside, the café was warm—quiet but not empty.
Ashiha traced the rim of her cup, the heat long gone, but she wasn’t ready to leave yet. Across from her, Zidan sat with the same relaxed posture, fingers idly rolling his cigarette along the surface of the table. He still hadn’t lit it. Maybe he never intended to.
“You don’t smoke?” she asked, breaking the silence.
He looked up, amused. “Not always.”
“Then why carry it around?”
Zidan smirked, tilting his head slightly. “Old habit, I guess.”
She raised a brow. “The kind you can’t quit?”
He exhaled a quiet laugh. “Or the kind I don’t want to.”
Ashiha studied him, the way his fingers moved—slow, deliberate, like he was waiting for something. Or maybe he was just comfortable in the waiting.
“You think too much,” she mused.
Zidan lifted his gaze, dark eyes locking onto hers. “And you don’t?”
She tilted her head. “I do. But not about things I can’t change.”
He considered her words, his expression unreadable. Then, with a slow smirk, he asked, “And what can you change?”
Ashiha smiled, leaning back against the chair. “Conversations.”
Zidan’s brow lifted slightly, intrigued. “Is that your way of telling me to change the topic?”
She shrugged. “Depends. Do you want to?”
A pause. The air between them felt heavier, thicker. The kind of silence that wasn’t empty but full—full of words that hadn’t been spoken yet, full of things that neither of them were ready to admit.
“I don’t mind,” he finally said, voice low, smooth. “Talking to you.”
Ashiha’s fingers stilled against the ceramic cup. She wasn’t sure why his words sent a slow warmth curling in her stomach. Maybe it was the way he said them, unhurried, like he meant them.
For a moment, she let herself study him. The sharp angles of his face, the quiet intensity in his gaze, the way his lips curved ever so slightly when he was amused. He was… different. Not in an obvious way, but in the way he carried himself, as if he wasn’t in a rush to prove anything to the world.
She liked that.
Outside, a fresh gust of wind howled through the streets, rattling the windows. The café owner shot them a glance from behind the counter, as if silently wondering how long they planned to stay.
Ashiha sighed, stretching her fingers. “I should probably go before this storm gets worse.”
Zidan didn’t respond right away. He simply watched her, his gaze steady. Then, in a voice softer than before, he said, “Or you could stay.”
A slight shiver ran down her spine, though she wasn’t sure if it was from the cold air seeping in through the door or the way he said those words—low, quiet, almost like a dare.
She met his gaze, something playful flickering in her own. “And why would I do that?”
Zidan leaned forward slightly, resting his forearm on the table. “Maybe you don’t want to leave yet.”
Ashiha held his gaze, heart beating just a little faster. He wasn’t wrong. But instead of answering, she reached for her scarf, winding it around her fingers slowly.
“Maybe,” she murmured, lips curving. “Or maybe I just enjoy unfinished conversations.”
Zidan chuckled, shaking his head. “You like mystery, don’t you?”
She stood, smoothing the fabric of her sleeves. “No,” she said simply. “I like stories that take their time.”
His gaze lingered on her for a second longer before he leaned back, his smirk deepening. “Then I guess we’ll see how this one plays out.”
Ashiha didn’t reply. She just smiled, turning toward the door. The rain was still falling, but it no longer felt like a storm.
It felt like a beginning.