Part 1
She remembered how it ended—no, not ended. How she ended it.Not with shouting. Not with accusations. But with silence so sharp it had cut deeper than any words ever could.
Maan had loved her quietly for years before he ever spoke it aloud.And when he finally did, it was not rushed, not desperate. It was patient. As if he had waited his entire life just to make sure she was ready to hear him.
She had been healing then—slowly, painfully—after Dev. Dev. The one who had smiled like sunlight and left like a storm she never saw coming. The one who had taken her innocence and called it affection. The one who had been his brother.
And Maan—her Maan had been nothing like Dev. Where Dev was flame without warmth, Maan had been warmth without demand. Quiet. Steady. Unmoving in his devotion even when she was breaking.
She still remembered his voice the night Maan confessed.No grand speech. No pressure. Just him standing there like he was offering something fragile and eternal.
“I don’t need you to choose me today,” he had said softly. “I just need you to know… I’ve already chosen you.”
And later, when she had finally begun to believe in love again, Maan had said something she never forgot.
“You look like the moon in that white saree. Like you don’t belong to pain anymore.”
She had believed him then.God help her, she had believed him.
And then she had stood at the altar. Red fabric- bridal red and golden promises - trembling around her like a promise she was too afraid to keep. Then she had run. Away from everything. Unworthy of him, his love.
Maan's eyes had searched and waited endlessly—confused at first, then slowly breaking into pain and betrayal of being left at the altar.
She had run. Not because she didn’t love him. But because she did. Because love, for her, had always meant loss. And she had been terrified of surviving him the way she had survived Dev.
A year had passed. A year of silence. A year where she had learned that absence is not emptiness—it is presence that never stops hurting.
She heard Maan had changed. That he worked too much. That he stopped laughing. That even his anger had gone quiet, like something in him had simply decided not to feel anymore. And still… Maan never loved anyone else.
That knowledge had been both comfort and punishment. She told herself it meant she still had time. That love like his did not die. It only waited.
So she came back. Carefully. Deliberately. As if returning could undo breaking.
She wore his favorite white saree. Not as disguise. As surrender.
She knew what she had done. She knew she did not deserve forgiveness. But she was ready to kneel for it. To beg. To stay unworthy for as long as it took to be loved again.
It was 9 p.m. when she arrived.The city outside was soft with evening lights, but her chest felt like thunder held too long in a closed sky.
Maan was still at work.Of course he was.They said he lived there now.That after she left, he had turned himself into something unbreakable. Something that did not wait anymore.
She entered the building quietly.Her heels made soft, uncertain sounds against the floor—like apologies that had not yet found words.Each step toward his office felt like walking into a memory that could turn around and reject her.
She paused outside his cabin.Her breath caught. She was ready. She had rehearsed this moment in a hundred sleepless nights.
I’m sorry.
I was afraid.
I still love you.
Please.
Just let me earn you back.
Her hand lifted.But she did not knock.
Because she saw it first.Through the glass.He was there.And he was not alone. He was holding a woman.A younger woman, no a girl, barely twenty, in a sky blue gown that looked like something fragile made human.
The girl was crying.And Maan was holding her like she was the only thing keeping his heart from collapsing.Not the way one holds grief.The way one holds home.
Maan's fingers, his beautiful long fingers, were gentle against her face as he wiped her tears. His lips brushed her forehead in something unbearably tender.
And then Maan spoke.Low. Certain.
“I love you.”
The words did not hesitate.They did not fracture.They landed like truth finally allowed to exist .The smile on his face—God, the smile—was something she had never seen before.
Not when he had loved her.Not even when he had tried to build a life with her.It was whole, Alive, Unburdened: in a way it was never with her.As if something inside him had finally been given permission to breathe.
She stood frozen.Her hand still raised.Her apology still unspoken.Her love still bleeding at the edges of her throat.For a moment, she forgot how to exist outside the glass.
And then memories came—cruel, uninvited.Maan's hand brushing her hair behind her ear when she used to wake up crying.
“You don’t have to be afraid here,” he had whispered once. “I’m not going anywhere.”
The way he had looked at her in white, like she was something sacred he did not deserve but would protect anyway.
And Dev.Always Dev .The brother who had shattered her trust in love.The brother who had unknowingly built the walls she later trapped Maan behind. She had never told Maan enough that it was never just him she was running from that day.It was everything Dev had taught her about leaving before being left.And Maan had paid for it: With silence, With years, With himself.Her chest tightened until breathing felt like betrayal.
Inside, Maan laughed softly at something the girl said. A sound so light, so bright, it hurt more than anger ever could.Because she realized something terrible.Maan had not stopped loving.He had simply learned how to move on while still feeling.
And now… Maan had chosen someone else.Not out of cruelty.But out of survival.
Her fingers slowly lowered from the glass.The apology she had carried all the way here suddenly felt like a language no one in that room still spoke.She had come ready to repent.To kneel.To beg him to remember what they were.But what she was seeing was not forgetting.It was healing.And she was not part of it anymore.
Her love did not vanish.It simply became something that had arrived too late to matter.
Inside the room, Maan held the girl again.
Outside the glass, she stood very still.Like a prayer no longer needed.
And for the first time since she had run from the altar, she understood the shape of her mistake completely.She had not only broken Maan.She had left him alone long enough to learn how to stop waiting.
Her white saree felt heavier than grief now.Not because it was stained.But because it was still a promise no one was coming to fulfill.
Her heart broke, Not because she stopped loving him. But because she finally understood, love does not always return just because it is still alive. Sometimes it simply learns to belong elsewhere.
482