113 comments

Contemporary Fiction Romance

You know that they are home even before the jangling keys can be heard. When your children look at you in wonder when you inevitably predict their appearance to the second, you just chuckle and run to kiss them.


When your lips meet theirs, it is just like the first day you awkwardly locked lips, behind that big wall in the school ground. You didn’t know what to do with your hands, so you just left them hanging from your sides while they held your face with their hands and tried to kiss you on the mouth. You couldn’t talk to them for the rest of the day because every time you saw them, you remembered their sweet mouth.


It certainly didn’t help the disastrous situation when a teacher saw your kiss and considered it a first-degree offence. No, it didn’t help at all when your parents were called to the school and you had to apologize for your misconduct in the morning assembly while the audience members were tasting each other with no repercussions.


Your big fight with them ends with them storming off with puffs of smoke coming out of their ears, and you sitting at the muddy stone steps of your house, head in your knees, wetting your favourite clothes with salty heartbreak.


Of course, since you are not one to give up, you pursue them for over a week before they break and commit to you for life. This time around, you both take various precautions with your relationship and make sure not to be suspiciously affectionate in the school corridors. For backup, you both come clean to your parents and hold each other’s slippery hands while they come to terms with the two of you.


They work harder at schoolwork so that they can get into the same university as you. They stay up at night, poring over their books so that your affair doesn’t become long-distance or non-existent due to ‘unforeseen circumstances’.


No one screams louder than you when their acceptance letter comes in and takes on the brief role of matchmaker in your union.


Everybody gapes at your hands still entwined with theirs after the three years spent in university. Money is exchanged in secret when they lose the bets made at your fresher year. You and they chuckle to yourselves to this day when you think about those people who thought that the two of you wouldn’t last.


It is definitely not a surprise when both of you get on your knees at the same time and try to propose to each other without bursting into tears. All the confetti and fireworks have finished when you finally are only a few inches away from each other, still on your knees.


You put their ring on first with a shaky hand and let them slide your ring into place with a ketchup-stained hand. All the plans that you had made had not gone exactly to plan, and neither had theirs. People had tripped and fallen on your expensive food, champagne had drenched you both, and the fireworks and music had started early.


But you both knew that none of it mattered when you kissed. The magic that shone from the two of you when you touched each other that night made up for all the mishaps that had occurred earlier that day.


Your wedding wasn’t the fairytale you had hoped for. There had been disagreements among your families, and sulking people with grey hair lined the photographs like ink splatters. But you both were happy. And somehow, your smiling faces spread enough light to blot out their frowns.


It is hard for you two. When your children ask you why their friends visit their grandparents and they don’t, you look at each other with pursed lips. You make up your excuses and convince them. Those are the hardest nights. You both talk to each other in whispered breaths and make shapes with your fingers to lull yourselves to sleep.


Your parents call at times, and so do theirs. They always hope that you both change your mind and get rid of each other. You try to explain to them that you both are partners for life the first time they interrogate you. The calls following this only consist of nods and convincing them that the children are fine. The gap between each call widens and you soon adjust to the fact that you are estranged from your family.


But you have each other. Somehow, in some strange way, having each other makes it better. It makes those feverish nights calmer and it makes those questions easier. Their hand in yours slows down your heart to an acceptable pace. Their lips in yours ignites a fire that can’t be extinguished by the rest of the world. Every second spent with each other is a blessing that can’t be taken back.


When you meet people from your past, they comment on the features that have changed. Their looks of shock are always worthwhile when you confess that your relationship still remains as strong as before. They take you aside and try to pull out your better half’s shortcomings, and they succeed. But their faces pull into frowns when you tell them that their shortcomings make them even more worth being with. They try and catch you in a compromising position but fail every time.


When the children are asleep, sometimes you tiptoe down the staircase and sit in the wooden chair on the porch, looking up at the star dotted sky and shedding tears until the lights around you become stringy.


They come behind you and place their hands on your shoulders, and you coat their hands with your weaknesses, and they don’t flinch at them because they have their own.


The years pass by without much difficulty, and you still have each other. The world is on fire, embers and dark fog. Bloodshot eyes and gaping cracks between the dysfunctional residents of a household. But your lives are still as whole as before. The fights and disagreements make your bond stronger. They make it harder to leave each other.


Through it all, you still have each other.


That is all that matters.

February 17, 2021 04:35

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113 comments

Echo Sundar
17:27 Feb 17, 2021

Aww. This story is so sweet! I loved it so much. I like how it's all memories it's like you were their on the journey with them watching from above as they slowly grew older... such a sweet story!

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Writer Maniac
17:28 Feb 17, 2021

Thank you so much, I'm so glad you liked it!

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Amarah Friedman
21:25 Mar 09, 2021

Your decision to use second person brings this piece to life. It feels gritty and sad and real. You have captured the nature of love, both the struggles and the joys. Nothing goes as planned-- not the proposal, the family dynamics, or even the friends acquired-- yet the couple has each other, and that's enough. I think that when people are forced to come to terms with the disappointments that relationships may offer, it can be difficult to come to focus on the brightness that persists. This story offers that brightness in the form of persis...

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Writer Maniac
02:30 Mar 10, 2021

Thank you so much, I really appreciate it! I tried to make it as realistic as possible so that anyone can relate to it. Thanks again for the comment! I would love to hear your thoughts on a story of mine called 'Not Worth It' :)

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Amarah Friedman
18:39 Mar 12, 2021

I will be sure to do that!

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Polly R.
12:46 Mar 09, 2021

i really enjoyed the story! it's so lovely and i love every single part of it. it's so enjoyable to read through events everyone faces and looks forward to/looks back at happily!

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Writer Maniac
14:05 Mar 09, 2021

Thank you so much, I'm glad you liked it! I would recommend reading 'Paper and Ink' and 'Game Over' next :)

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Polly R.
14:21 Mar 09, 2021

yeah ofc! thank you for the recommendations!!

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Writer Maniac
14:25 Mar 09, 2021

Would you mind upvoting me? I was at 4800 and a few days back, I was downvoted to 0. So I'm trying to get back to my original number of points. I would appreciate your contribution :)

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Polly R.
14:26 Mar 09, 2021

sure!

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Polly R.
14:32 Mar 09, 2021

and also, i'm so sorry that happened to you. i forgot to add that.

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Writer Maniac
14:33 Mar 09, 2021

Aww thanks :)

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Kate Winchester
03:42 Mar 03, 2021

This was really well-written and a creative take on the prompt. Your descriptions are amazing. While you have many great lines, some of favorite are: "they try and catch you in a compromising position but fail every time." "wetting your favourite clothes with salty heartbreak." "sulking people with grey hair lined the photographs like ink splatters." I like that you show the struggles they've had and continue to endure, but also the good moments that make them both fight for their relationship.

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Writer Maniac
04:24 Mar 03, 2021

Thank you so much, I'm glad you liked it!

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Kate Winchester
18:46 Mar 03, 2021

No prob. 😊 Would you mind giving me feedback on one of mine?

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Writer Maniac
03:39 Mar 04, 2021

Which one of yours would you recommend?

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Kate Winchester
04:28 Mar 04, 2021

That’s like picking a favorite child lol, but...how about either my two Falling stories or Flight Risk? Thanks! 😊

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Writer Maniac
04:37 Mar 04, 2021

Cool, I'll check it out :)

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Hey! I really enjoyed this story! Great work on all the inner and refined details, good work and keep writing!

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Writer Maniac
17:08 Feb 23, 2021

Thank you so much, I really appreciate it!

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Amel Parvez
16:13 Feb 22, 2021

SWEEEEET! loved it:)

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Writer Maniac
16:34 Feb 22, 2021

Thanks, I'm glad you liked it!

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Amel Parvez
16:38 Feb 22, 2021

:)

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Renee Avery
06:12 Feb 20, 2021

Such a sweet story. I'm confused by the first paragraph, though. "You know that they are home even before the doorbell rings. When your children look at you in wonder when you inevitably predict their appearance to the second, you just chuckle and run to kiss them." Who is home? Oh, I just realised - is it their partner/husband? If so, why are they ringing the doorbell?? It confused me a little. Honestly, cutting the first paragraph would make the opening sound a lot punchier, but that's just my opinion :) I liked this story though it felt...

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Writer Maniac
06:30 Feb 20, 2021

Thanks for the feedback! So basically, I wrote it in second person perspective because every reader can interpret it specifically to them based on their gender and sexuality, which is why I didn't use any gender-specific pronouns. The first paragraph is talking about how if your partner goes outside somewhere and returns, you know that they're back even before they ring the doorbell. At this kind of creepy telepathy, your kids are shocked. That's what I meant to say. I suggest you read it again with this explanation in mind to clear your dou...

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Renee Avery
08:56 Feb 20, 2021

I get that, but the doorbell thing threw me LOL - like a visitor instead of a partner coming home, iykwim? I don't know if I have any specific examples. Just like a bit of a polish?

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Writer Maniac
08:59 Feb 20, 2021

Obviously when a partner comes home they would ring the doorbell or knock the door, right? That's what I was going for. I mean that you could just tell me any part or sentence in the story which felt rough to you, so that I can improve it.

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Renee Avery
09:35 Feb 20, 2021

Okay, maybe it's a country/cultural thing? Because here the partner just lets themselves in with a key, if they live there - that's all I meant. Apologies if I came across overly critical, it just sounded oddly formal to me :) I will have to re-read to give specifics, which I can do another time (it's getting late here), if you still would like the feedback,

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Writer Maniac
11:43 Feb 20, 2021

Oh yeah probably, that makes sense. Over here we keep the key in the knob after locking the door so that the person outside has to knock or ring the bell. It's just a security thing that my family in particular does. Please take your time, don't feel pressurised to give me the specifics immediately :)

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Amarah Friedman
16:51 Mar 23, 2021

Sad:( Great story, but sad (I think that was the point, though, so a job well done;). This was a superbly effective use of second person-- so effective that I didn't even notice you were doing it until the third to last paragraph. Wow! It works so well because it feels real and practical and extraordinarily possible. As I read more of your pieces, I see that you're really good at making them feel relatable and personal. Nice!

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Writer Maniac
17:15 Mar 23, 2021

Aww thank you so much, this is a piece I'm quite proud of, so I'm glad you liked it :) I feel like second person helps make it all the more personal :D

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Amarah Friedman
19:00 Mar 23, 2021

Definitely!

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Leena Deshpande
01:50 Mar 10, 2021

An amazing story, incredible writing. I love the way you ended the story, the last lines sound very poetic

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Writer Maniac
02:31 Mar 10, 2021

Thank you so much, I really appreciate it! I would love your thoughts on a story called 'Not Worth It' :)

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10:41 May 31, 2022

How I Got My Ex Husband Back.. Am so excited to share my testimony of a real spell caster who brought my husband back to me. My husband and I have been married for about 5 years now. We were happily married with three kids, two boys and a girl. Four months ago, I started to notice some strange behaviour from him and a few weeks later I found out that my husband is seeing someone else. He started coming home late from work, he hardly cares about me or the kids anymore, Sometimes he goes out and doesn’t even come back home for about 3-4 days. ...

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