Chapter 1 (Late-Night Confessions)
Munni sat cross-legged on her small bed in the staff quarters, staring at the cracked screen of her second-hand phone. The Shanti Niketan above was buzzing with its usual late-night chaos, but down here, it was quiet—just her and a faint WiFi signal leaking from the living room.
She hesitated for a long time, biting her lip. Should I really do this? What if he finds out? What if Tulsi maa scolds me? Finally, she took the plunge and typed out a new username: Munmun. For a profile picture, she chose a blurry shot of the moon she had clicked weeks ago. Her bio read: Just a small world, big dreams.
Taking a deep breath, she searched for Hrithik Virani. His profile appeared instantly—selfies with Angad, awkward family photos, and too many posts about cricket. Her thumb trembled as she pressed Send Friend Request.
To her shock, the request was accepted within seconds. She blinked in disbelief. So fast? Does he even check before accepting?
Almost immediately, a message appeared. Hrithik asked who she was. Munni quickly typed back that she was just a friend, someone looking for a little fun and companionship.
And just like that, it began.
At first, their exchanges were light—silly memes, teasing jokes, and playful arguments about cricket versus Bollywood songs. Hrithik laughed when she called his hairstyle “a little too filmy,” while she rolled her eyes when he insisted he could easily become a professional batsman if he “just took practice seriously.”
But as the nights stretched on, the conversations deepened. One evening, Hrithik admitted something he had never told anyone. “You know, girls in college used to ignore me,” he wrote. “They called me a duffer. Said I wasn’t cool enough.”
Munni frowned at her screen, feeling the sting in his words. She replied softly, You’re not a duffer, Hrithik. You’re funny, you’re kind, and you make people smile. Being cool isn’t about Instagram likes or stylish clothes.
There was a pause, a long silence where she wondered if she had said too much. Then his next message appeared: You really think that?
Her lips curved into a smile as she typed back, Of course. Otherwise, why would I have accepted your friend request?
Somewhere in the grand Shanti Niketan, Hrithik grinned at his phone like a teenager. That night, their conversation stretched until almost three in the morning—Hrithik opening up about his insecurities, and Munni confessing her secret love for old Bollywood songs. They laughed about everything and nothing, two insomniacs bound together by weak WiFi and unspoken loneliness.
When Hrithik finally said goodnight, he felt lighter than he had in years. And Munni? She stared at his last message for a long time before sleep pulled her under, whispering to herself, “Just hope he never learns the truth.”
The days slipped into a rhythm neither of them had planned. Every evening, once the chaos of the Shanti Niketan settled and the lights upstairs dimmed, Munni would retreat into her little room, curl up with her phone, and wait for the familiar ping.
Hrithik never kept her waiting.
Their chats were no longer just playful jokes. They were longer, slower, filled with things Hrithik never said out loud in the real world. He told her how invisible he sometimes felt in his own house, how everyone expected him to be cheerful but no one noticed when he wasn’t. He admitted he hated being compared to Angad, who seemed to succeed effortlessly in everything.
One night, Hrithik typed, “Sometimes I wonder if anyone would miss me if I just… disappeared. People say I’m funny, but maybe I’m just the family clown.”
Munni’s chest tightened as she read his words. She wanted to run upstairs, to tell him face-to-face that he mattered more than he thought—but of course, she couldn’t. Instead, she poured her feelings into her reply. “Don’t say that. You make people laugh because you carry light in you. You may think they don’t see it, but I do. And honestly, it makes me feel less lonely too.”
Hrithik stared at the screen for a long time before sending back a single line: “You always know what to say.”
For Munni, the words were both a balm and a sting. She loved the way he trusted her, the way his laughter reached her even through text. But every time his guard dropped, every time he typed something vulnerable, her guilt gnawed a little deeper. He thought she was someone else—someone who belonged in his world, not just in its shadows.
And yet… she couldn’t stop.
If anything, their bond only grew. They teased each other about their worst habits—Hrithik confessed he talked to himself in the mirror before family events; Munni admitted she sometimes burned food just to avoid being asked to cook again. He began sending her voice notes, his deep, slightly awkward laugh echoing through her tiny room at night.
One evening, Hrithik wrote, “I don’t know why, but I feel like I can tell you things I can’t even tell my brothers and sisters. It’s like you’re… different.”
Munni’s fingers hovered over the keypad. She wanted to type, Because I see you for who you really are, but the words felt too dangerous. Instead, she settled for, “Maybe it’s because we’re strangers. Strangers are easier to be honest with.”
But Hrithik wasn’t convinced. “You don’t feel like a stranger anymore,” he replied. “You feel like… mine.”
The message made her heart thud wildly. She pressed the phone to her chest, eyes shut tight, torn between guilt and excitement. She had created Munmun as a mask, but every night the mask blurred a little more, until it felt like Hrithik was talking not to an invented profile, but to her.
Still, a question haunted her: How long before he finds out? And when he does, will he forgive me—or will he hate me for fooling him?
That night, Hrithik sent one last message before bed: “Goodnight, Munmun. I don’t know what I’d do without you.”
Munni stared at the glowing screen until her eyes burned. She whispered into the darkness, as if he could hear her, “Goodnight, Hrithik. Please don’t ever find out who I am.”
By now, Munni’s days revolved around a secret rhythm. She smiled when she carried tea to the Virani brothers, knowing that hours later she’d be laughing with Hrithik on her phone. She hummed while folding laundry, remembering the silly voice notes he had sent her the night before.
But with every message, Hrithik was growing closer. Too close.
One evening, their chat started the usual way—memes, teasing about Hrithik’s cricket obsession, and Munni’s dramatic rants about old Bollywood heroes. But then, out of nowhere, Hrithik typed, “You know what I realized? I don’t even know your real name.”
Munni froze, her fingers trembling above the keypad. She tried to brush it off: “Names don’t matter. Feelings do.”
But Hrithik wasn’t laughing. “It matters to me. I share everything with you, Munmun. My insecurities, my fears… and I don’t even know who you are. Don’t I deserve to?”
Her throat went dry. The truth hung on her lips, but so did the fear of losing everything. If he knew she was just Munni—the maid who polished his shoes and served his dinner—would he still smile at her texts the same way?
She tried to change the subject, but Hrithik pushed harder. “Meet me once. Just once. I promise I won’t ask questions. I just… I want to see you.”
Munni’s chest tightened. Her heart leapt at the thought of being seen by him—not as a shadow in the background of the Virani mansion, but as someone who mattered. Yet the risk was too high.
She typed, “Not now. Maybe someday.”
Hrithik’s reply came slower this time. “Someday… I’ll hold you to that.”
That night, Munni couldn’t sleep. She lay staring at the ceiling, guilt twisting in her chest. She had started this as harmless fun—a profile, a little escape from her ordinary life. But now Hrithik’s words echoed in her mind: You feel like mine.
For him, it was real. For her, it was real too. But it was also a lie.
She pressed her palms to her face and whispered, “What will you do, Hrithik, when you learn Munmun is just Munni?”
And upstairs, in his room, Hrithik scrolled through their old chats with a goofy smile, already imagining what it would be like to meet the girl who made his nights brighter.
For him, it wasn’t just Internet wala love anymore.
It was love, plain and simple.
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To be continued.
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