bc

between the shelves some stories are written others are lived by Ms Raihanah layik

book_age18+
0
FOLLOW
1K
READ
drama
mythology
like
intro-logo
Blurb

Rain tapped softly against the windows of the little bookstore on Rose Lane when Amina first met Yusuf.She had rushed inside only to escape the storm, clutching her tote bag against her chest while droplets slid from her hijab onto the wooden floor. The bookstore smelled of old paper, coffee, and jasmine candles. Warm. Quiet. Safe.“Careful,” a voice said gently.A stack of books tilted beside her. Before they could fall, a tall boy in a dark green sweater caught them with one hand.“You just saved literature,” Amina said, laughing nervously.“And possibly my job,” he replied with a smile.That smile stayed in her mind longer than she wanted to admit.Yusuf worked there every evening after university. Over the next few weeks, Amina found reasons to return. Sometimes she bought books she didn’t need. Sometimes she sat near the poetry shelf pretending to read while secretly listening to him recommend novels to customers.He always noticed her.“One coffee and one romance novel?” he teased one evening. “You’re becoming predictable.”“Maybe I like predictable things.”“Do you?” His eyes lingered on hers for a second too long.After that, everything changed quietly.He began saving books for her. She began bringing him homemade cookies. They argued about endings, shared playlists, and watched rainstorms from the shop window after closing hours.One night, the electricity went out during heavy rain.The bookstore fell dark except for tiny golden lights from the street outside. Amina stood frozen between shelves while thunder echoed overhead.“You scared?” Yusuf asked softly.“A little.”He lit a candle and placed it between them. The warm glow danced across his face.“You know,” he said, “I think storms are beautiful.”“Why?”“Because they make people stay.”Silence wrapped around them.Outside, the rain poured endlessly. Inside, the world felt impossibly small — just candlelight, books, and two hearts beating too loudly.Amina looked down at the novel in her hands. “Do all love stories begin in bookstores?”“No,” Yusuf said quietly.“Then where?”He stepped closer, close enough that she could hear the softness in his breathing.“Sometimes,” he whispered, “they begin the moment one person decides they never want another person to leave.”Her heart stumbled.The thunder faded into the distance. Somewhere between the shelves of forgotten stories, surrounded by thousands of love stories written by strangers, Amina realized her own had just begun.

chap-preview
Free preview
the girl on the morning train
Before Sunrise Every morning at 5:30, the same girl boarded the first train from the seaside town to the city. And every morning, Noah noticed her. She always sat by the window in the third compartment, headphones on, notebook in hand, coffee balanced dangerously close to the edge of the seat. Sometimes she wrote furiously. Sometimes she only stared outside at the dark ocean beside the tracks. Noah never spoke to her. Not for three months. He only knew small things about her. She liked vanilla coffee. She wore silver rings on almost every finger. And whenever it rained, she smiled at the window like the weather had told her a secret. One morning, the train stopped suddenly between stations. “Technical issue,” the announcement groaned overhead. Passengers sighed dramatically. The girl dropped her pen. It rolled directly to Noah’s shoe. He picked it up carefully and handed it to her. “You write every day,” he said before he could stop himself. She blinked in surprise. “You notice strangers a lot?” “Only the interesting ones.” For a second, she looked like she might laugh. “I’m Elena,” she said finally. “Noah.” That was how it started. After that morning, they began sitting together almost every day. Their conversations became the best part of the sunrise. She told him she wanted to become a novelist someday but was terrified nobody would care about her stories. He admitted he had studied architecture because it made sense, not because he loved it. “You know what your problem is?” Elena said once. “I’m scared to ask, but go ahead.” “You live your life like you’re trying not to make mistakes instead of trying to be happy.” Noah stared at her. Nobody had ever understood him that quickly before. Weeks turned into months. The city grew colder. Their closeness grew warmer. One evening, after missing the last train home, they wandered through empty streets lit by golden streetlights. Elena dragged him into a tiny 24-hour diner just to escape the snow. She sat across from him, cheeks pink from the cold. “What?” she asked when she noticed him staring. “I think I’m in trouble.” “Why?” “Because every time something happens, you’re the first person I want to tell.” Her expression softened. That scared her too. Elena had spent years leaving people before they could leave her. She believed love was temporary — beautiful, but temporary. But Noah felt steady. Safe. Dangerously easy to fall for. A week later, she disappeared. No messages. No train rides. Nothing. Noah returned to the station every morning anyway. On the eighth day, she finally appeared again. Tired eyes. Oversized hoodie. Nervous hands. “You vanished,” he said quietly. “My father was in the hospital.” Noah’s anger disappeared instantly. “You should’ve called me.” “I didn’t know if I was allowed to need you that much.” The words broke something open between them. Noah stepped closer. “Elena,” he said softly, “I think you’ve had my heart for a while now. You’re definitely allowed to need me.” Her eyes filled with tears she immediately tried to hide. “You make me feel brave,” she whispered. He smiled gently. “Then stay.” And for the first time in her life, Elena decided to stop running. The next morning, the train moved beside the ocean as the sun slowly rose over the water. Elena rested her head on Noah’s shoulder while he held her hand tightly, like he already knew — some loves are meant to last long after sunrise.

editor-pick
Dreame-Editor's pick

bc

Unscentable

read
1.9M
bc

He's an Alpha: She doesn't Care

read
736.8K
bc

Claimed by the Biker Giant

read
1.6M
bc

Holiday Hockey Tale: The Icebreaker's Impasse

read
970.9K
bc

A Warrior's Second Chance

read
354.4K
bc

Not just, the Beta

read
345.9K
bc

The Broken Wolf

read
1.1M

Scan code to download app

download_iosApp Store
google icon
Google Play
Facebook