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WHEN THE SKY FELL FOR US

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reincarnation/transmigration
HE
another world
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THE DAY EVERYTHING BROKE 

                      Chapter one

The morning began like any other, which is how it always tricks you. Ordinary mornings wear the disguise of safety. They let you believe that nothing essential can be taken without warning.

      I remember the sound of your laughter first, not loud, just soft enough to feel private. It slipped between us as we walked, brushing against my thoughts the way sunlight brushes a windowsill. You were talking about something small and unimportant, the kind of thing that fills the spaces between bigger conversations. I wasn’t listening closely to your words. I was listening to you, the rhythm of your voice, the way it steadied my own breathing.

       If I had known what the day would become, I would have stopped right there. I would have memorized the way the air felt in my lungs. I would have told you everything I had been saving for later.

Later never came.

       We were crossing the open square when  the light changed. It wasn’t dramatic at first, No alarms, No screams, Just a subtle shift, like the world adjusting its posture. You slowed your steps and I felt it immediately, that quiet instinct that had always tied me to you when you paused, I paused too.

“Do you feel that?” you asked.

      I nodded, though I couldn’t have explained what that was. The air felt heavier, thicker, like it had learned a new way to exist. Conversations around us faltered. Footsteps hesitated. People looked at one another with the same question written on their faces: Is it just me?

Then we looked up.

      The sky did not shatter. It folded inward, slowly and deliberately like something tired of holding itself apart. Colour drained from it in quiet surrender, blue dissolving into pale gray, gray turning into something almost transparent.

Your hand found mine without hesitation.

That was love, I think not the grand declarations people expect, but the instinct to reach, to anchor, to say I am here without words.

      The ground trembled, not violently, but uncertainly, as if it, too, had lost confidence. Somewhere, someone cried out. Somewhere else, glass broke. But all I could hear was your breathing, uneven now, trying to stay calm for both of us.

   “I’ve got you,” I said, though I didn’t know if it was true.

You squeezed my hand harder, as if you believed me anyway.

    When the sky finally fell, it wasn’t like anything we had been taught to fear. There was no fire raining down, no crushing weight from above. Instead, there was pressure and an inward pull, a sensation- like being drawn into the center of a moment too large to hold.

     For a heartbeat that felt endless, everything was suspended. The sound was dulled. Motion blurred. I felt you stumble, and I stepped closer, wrapping an arm around you, pressing your forehead to my shoulder as if my body alone could shield you from the impossible.

  In that suspended silence, a single thought rang clear and sharp inside me:

If this is the end, I want it to find us together.

Then the world exhaled.

     We were still standing. The ground steadied beneath our feet. The noise returned in fragments gasps, whispers, a distant sob. Above us was not ruin, not fire, not darkness, It was emptiness.

   Where the sky had been was now a pale, hollow stretch, like a canvas scrubbed clean No sun, No clouds, No familiar blue to promise 

Just absence, vast and unblinking. reflecting that impossible blankness.

“It’s gone,” you whispered.

    I wanted to argue, I wanted to say the world couldn’t simply lose something so essential. But words felt fragile, and the truth pressed in from every direction.

“I’m here,” I said instead.

You nodded, once, as if cataloging that fact for later, for when panic would try to erase it.

Around us, the square dissolved into chaos. People shouted questions no one could answer. Some ran. Some stood frozen, staring upward as if waiting for instructions. A few fell to their knees, overwhelmed by the sudden understanding that nothing above us was watching anymore.

I felt your fingers tighten in mine, grounding me.

“Don’t let go,” you said, not looking away from me.

“I won’t,” I promised  and this time, I meant it with everything I had.

We moved together through the confusion, guided less by sight than by the quiet agreement between us. Every step was shared. Every turn was checked. When someone brushed too close, I shifted you behind me without thinking. When my breath grew shallow, your thumb traced slow, steady circles against my hand, reminding me how to breathe.

Love became practical that day. Immediate. Necessary.

As the hours stretched on, it became clear that the world we had known was not returning not quickly, maybe not ever. The light above us never changed. Time felt loose, untethered. People began to gather in uncertain clusters, drawn to one another by the simple need to not be alone.

We found a place to sit on the edge of the square

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WHEN THE SKY FELL FOR US
HOLDING ON Chapter two Night did not arrive the way it used to. There was no gentle dimming, no gradual surrender of light to darkness. The world simply remained suspended in the same pale stillness, as if time itself had forgotten how to move forward. Hours passed only because our bodies felt them through hunger, through exhaustion, through the ache that settles in when fear has nowhere left to go. We stayed where we were for a long while, sitting shoulder to shoulder at the edge of the square. Around us, people murmured in low voices, clinging to one another or pacing as if movement alone might restore order. Somewhere, a child cried until their voice grew hoarse. Somewhere else, someone laughed too loudly, the sound sharp and fragile, like glass about to break. You traced small, absent shapes against the back of my hand. It wasn’t nervous. It was deliberate, grounding, as if you were reminding both of us that touch still meant something in a world that had lost its frame. “We should find shelter,” you said finally. The word felt strange. Shelter had always meant walls, roofs, something solid above us. Now, with nothing overhead to trust, shelter felt like a concept rather than a place. I nodded. “We’ll go together.” Together had become our rule. Not spoken aloud until now, but understood. No decisions made alone. No steps taken without looking back. We stood slowly, testing the world with careful movements. Everything felt slightly off, like walking after waking from a vivid dream. As we moved through the streets, I noticed how often people looked at us not with curiosity, but with something closer to longing. Two people walking in sync, hands linked, their pace matched. In a world coming undone, connection had become a kind of language. The buildings were unchanged, but they felt exposed, like actors performing without a backdrop. Windows reflected nothing but that endless pale above. Doors stood open where people had fled in confusion. A bicycle lay abandoned in the middle of the road, its owner’s destination suddenly irrelevant. You leaned closer to me as we walked, your shoulder brushing mine. “Do you remember,” you said softly, “how we used to talk about the future?” I did. Late nights filled with imagined versions of ourselves older, steadier, surrounded by details we thought would matter. Places we would go. Things we would build. Certainties we assumed would wait for us. “I remember,” I said. “I didn’t think it would change like this.” I stopped walking. You stopped with me, instantly, turning to face me fully. That was another thing I loved about you how quickly you met me where I was, how you never made me feel like an interruption. You looked smaller somehow, not in body but in posture, as if the weight of the day had found your shoulders and decided to stay. I lifted my free hand and brushed my thumb gently along your cheek, a quiet reassurance. “Neither did I. But we’re still here.” Your eyes softened at that. “Because we’re holding on.” “Yes,” I said. “Because of that.” We found shelter eventually not because it was strong, but because it was available. A community hall with wide doors and open space, already filling with people who looked just as lost as we felt. Someone had lit lanterns. Their warm glow gathered shadows into corners and gave the room a fragile sense of intimacy. We claimed a small patch of floor near the wall. There were no beds, no comforts to offer, just the permission to sit, to rest, to breathe. You sat close, knees drawn in, your arm pressed against mine. For a while, we said nothing. Silence can be heavy, but with you, it felt shared rather than lonely. I listened to the sound of your breathing, steady now, and matched mine to it without realizing I was doing so. Eventually, you spoke again. “I’m scared,” you admitted. I didn’t rush to erase that fear. Love isn’t always about removing pain. Sometimes it’s about making room for it. “I am too,” I said. “But you don’t have to carry it alone.” You turned toward me, resting your forehead against my shoulder, the same way you had earlier, as if the gesture itself had become a promise. I wrapped my arm around you, holding you just firmly enough to be felt, just gently enough to be trusted. Outside, the world remained uncertain. Inside that room, among strangers and flickering light, something steadier took shape between us. Holding on was no longer just physical. It was the way you listened when I spoke, even when my words were clumsy. It was the way I watched your face for signs of fatigue before you ever admitted to it. It was the silent agreement that whatever came next, we would face it side by side. At some point, exhaustion claimed us. You drifted into sleep against my chest, your breath warm and rhythmic, your fingers still curled into the fabric of my sleeve as if even rest required reassurance. I stayed awake longer, watching the room, listening to the quiet sounds of survival the shifting of bodies, the low murmurs, the soft determination settling in. My hand rested protectively at your back, rising and falling with each breath you took. I thought about how love had once felt like something optional, something we tended to when there was time. Now it felt essential. When the world breaks, you learn quickly what you cannot afford to lose. For me, that answer was clear. Holding on wasn’t about refusing to let go of the past. It was about choosing, again and again, to stay connected in a future that no longer made promises. As you slept, safe for the moment, I made one silently of my own: No matter how unfamiliar the world becomes, no matter how much changes or disappears, I will keep holding on to you, to us, to the love that remains when everything else falls away.

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