Chapter 1 — The Rainy Evening

739 Words
Rain has a way of making a city look honest. Not beautiful. Not peaceful. Just honest. The kind of rain that washes dust off the streets and leaves everything exposed — cracked sidewalks, tired buildings, people rushing home like they’re afraid of the quiet. That was the night I met him. I didn’t know it then. At that moment he was just another stranger standing somewhere behind the gray curtain of rain, someone whose name I didn’t know and whose face I had never seen before. But somehow that night stuck to my memory like a scar. I remember the cold first. The rain had started earlier than anyone expected, heavy drops crashing against the pavement like the sky had suddenly lost its patience. My umbrella had already broken, the wind turning it inside out like a useless piece of metal and cloth. So I walked. Head down. Shoes soaking through. The streetlights blurred into long streaks of yellow in the water running along the road. Cars passed by now and then, spraying thin waves across the sidewalk. It had been a long day. The kind of day where nothing dramatic happens, yet everything still feels wrong. Work had been exhausting. My head was still full of unfinished conversations and quiet disappointments. Life felt like it had slowed down in the worst possible way — not crashing, not burning, just dragging its feet. I stopped under the weak shelter of a bus stop. The roof barely blocked the rain. Water dripped through the cracks in steady rhythms. For a moment I just stood there breathing. Watching the empty street. The bus was late. Or maybe it wasn’t coming at all. I didn’t really care. That’s when I noticed him. At first he was just a shape through the rain. Standing a few feet away near the edge of the streetlight. Tall. Still. Hands buried deep inside the pockets of a dark coat. He wasn’t waiting for the bus. I could tell. People who wait for buses check the road every few seconds. They shift their weight, look at their phones, sigh impatiently. He did none of that. He just stood there like he had nowhere else to be. Like the rain didn’t bother him. I tried not to stare. But something about him kept pulling my eyes back. Maybe it was the calm. Or maybe it was the strange feeling that he had been there longer than I realized. Then suddenly a car sped past too close to the curb. Water splashed across the sidewalk in a violent wave. Before I could even react— A hand grabbed my arm and pulled me back. Fast. The water crashed against the pavement exactly where I had been standing. For a second my heart stopped. I turned. It was him. Up close his face looked different than I expected. Not older. Not younger. Just… quiet. The kind of face that didn’t try to impress anyone. His hand was still holding my arm. Warm. Steady. “You should stand further back,” he said. His voice was calm. Almost too calm for someone who had just yanked a stranger out of the path of a splash. I blinked. “Right.” He released my arm immediately, stepping back like the moment had never happened. The rain continued falling between us. For a second neither of us spoke. Then he glanced toward the street again. “The buses are usually late when it rains,” he said. I looked at him. “You waiting for one too?” He shook his head once. “No.” That answer made me frown slightly. “Then why are you standing here?” He hesitated. Just a small pause. Then he gave a quiet shrug. “Seemed like you might need someone to keep an eye on the street.” I stared at him. Rain dripping from my hair. Confused. Because people didn’t normally wait around in the rain just to make sure strangers didn’t get splashed by passing cars. But before I could ask anything else— A bus appeared through the rain. Its headlights cutting through the darkness like two tired eyes. I turned toward it instinctively. When I looked back… He was already walking away. Vanishing slowly into the rain-soaked street. And somehow… Without even knowing his name… I had the strange feeling that this wasn’t the last time I would see him.
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