There’s a stillness to the bookstore that feels almost sacred.
Clara stands in front of the second shelf in Literary Fiction, fingertips grazing book spines like they’re old friends she’s forgotten the names of. The quiet hum of the overhead lights, the faint scent of paper and dust — it’s a kind of sanctuary. Outside, the city moves — cars, footsteps, lovers arguing under their breath. But in here, the noise stops just short of the door. Time folds in on itself.
A different kind of time. One where stories breathe and heal on their own terms.
She’s started coming here almost every evening after work. Just to walk by the aisles. Sometimes she buys something, but mostly, she just… exists. Among the pages. Among the quiet. It’s been four months since she moved to this quieter part of the city. Three months since she last heard from her ex. Two weeks since she deleted the thread of messages that she used to reread like a favorite tragedy.
Some days she doesn’t know whether that was a moment of strength or surrender.
She doesn’t believe in fate anymore. But she believes in places — in corners of the world that seem to hold something for you, even when you’re not sure what. And this place — with its wonky floorboards and handwritten staff picks and every comforting creak of the door, which may be not much — feels like it’s been waiting for her.
She pauses, her fingers coming to rest on a familiar gap in the shelf.
The God of Small Things. It was missing last week too. She remembers noticing, remembers the small flicker of disappointment. Not because she couldn’t find another book to read, but because that one — that one mattered. She hadn’t read for a long time now, but it had stayed with her. A story that didn’t shy away from the messy parts. That whispered instead of shouted.
Her fingers linger on the empty space, as she sighs softly with a hint of disappointment.
“Good choice,” comes a voice from beside her — warm, quiet, unhurried.
She hadn’t realized anyone else was in the aisle.
She glances sideways. He’s taller than she expected. Worn denim, a charcoal coat, a stack of books in his hand. The kind of face that looks like it belongs in this kind of place — thoughtful, a little tired, open in a way that doesn’t ask for anything in return. He doesn’t look at her — not quite — just gestures toward the gap in the shelf.
“I just finished it,” he says, almost apologetically. “Couldn’t put it down.”
A beat passes.
“I was hoping it would be back,” Clara says. “It’s one of those books that… doesn’t try to fix you. Just understands.”
He nods once, then smiles — not big, just enough. Like they’re both in on something quiet and true.
That’s it. No names. No lingering conversation.
Just a shared space.
And a missing book.
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Comments
ᶜʳʸˢ͢͢͢ᵗᵃˡ & ʙʟᴀᴢᴇ
Wow... it was so Nice and Pretty Mesmerizing ✨
2025-09-10
1
Anne
wooooww
2025-09-10
1