

They always noticed each other in the quietest way.
Not in the loud, obvious moments—no grand entrances or stolen glances across crowded rooms. It was smaller than that. Softer. The kind of noticing that only happens when two people have already learned how to read silence.
She first saw it in him on a rainy afternoon. Everyone else rushed, annoyed, sheltering themselves from the inconvenience of the storm. But he stood still under the awning, not moving, not checking his phone, not complaining. Just watching the rain like it meant something.
That was the look.
Not sadness exactly. Not even loneliness. It was deeper—like someone who had already felt too much and learned how to carry it without letting it spill.
She recognized it immediately.
Because she had the same look.
Days passed before they spoke. It happened by accident—or maybe not. A shared table at a small café when there were no other seats. A brief hesitation. A polite “Do you mind?” that turned into quiet companionship.
They didn’t rush to fill the silence.

That was the first sign.
Most people try to cover silence like it’s something broken. But not them. They let it exist between them, unafraid. Like two people sitting beside a lake, both knowing there’s depth beneath the still surface.
“You don’t seem like someone who hates the rain,” he said eventually.
She smiled, just a little. “You don’t seem like someone who’s afraid of it.”
That was all it took.
From then on, their conversations unfolded slowly, like pages turning on their own time. They didn’t ask each other everything at once. No interrogations, no forced vulnerability. Just fragments—shared carefully, gently.
He told her how he used to believe people stayed.
She told him how she stopped believing that.
