WebNovels

Chapter 31 - Chapter 29: Her World Expands

The thing about getting used to something is, once it changes, you realize how badly you relied on it in the first place.

For months, I saw her only on trains — that narrow window between sunrise and school, sealed off by cheap earbuds and coffee-stained uniforms.

Now?

She exists everywhere.

In hallways.

In the courtyard.

In the music room.

In places where I'm not used to seeing her — smiling like she owns the space.

It's mildly terrifying.

---

She joined the music club.

And by "joined," I mean she walked in one afternoon, poked around, threatened to break a ukulele, then sat in the back and refused to participate until someone played a Mitski song.

By the second meeting, she was sitting cross-legged with a cheap keyboard on her lap, pretending not to know how to use it.

By the third?

She was laughing with second-years and writing lyrics into a star-covered notebook like she wasn't a flight risk.

---

She passed me a slip of paper in class one day.

I expected a drawing. Or a sarcastic haiku about my bad posture.

Instead: lyrics.

Messy handwriting. Too many metaphors. A coffee stain on the edge.

> "It's about... y'know. Stuff."

That was all she said.

Then she leaned back in her seat and chewed on the end of her pencil like she hadn't just dropped emotional TNT in my lap.

---

The lyrics weren't even subtle.

There was a whole verse about a boy with "silent hands" and "weather in his eyes" — which is either deeply poetic or a weird way to say I need sleep and eye drops.

I didn't ask.

She didn't explain.

---

After school, I walked by the music room.

Not on purpose.

Definitely not.

Totally not timing my route to pass it exactly when I thought she'd still be there.

Inside, she was laughing with a girl who played guitar upside down.

Like, literally upside down. I don't know. Art kids are strange.

Hikari leaned over the keyboard and tapped something out — a few notes, then a frown.

She didn't see me.

Which felt... weird.

Not bad.

Not good.

Just different.

---

That night, I opened my sketchbook.

Drew her without realizing it.

Again.

Not the usual: not her with messy hair or headphone wires in knots.

Just her sitting in that music room, smiling like the piano wasn't a battlefield.

---

She texted me around 10 p.m.

> [Hikari]: if i wrote a song abt u would you sue me

[Me]: probably

[Hikari]: u wouldn't

[Hikari]: you'd cry

[Me]: inaccurate. i'd leak it anonymously and deny involvement

[Hikari]: liar

[Hikari]: i started it already btw

[Hikari]: just don't make a big deal out of it

I didn't reply.

Because I was smiling.

And apparently that makes me emotionally compromised.

---

The next morning on the train, she looked tired.

Her hair was tied sloppily.

Her jacket was on inside out.

There was pen ink on her chin.

"You look like a Tumblr post from 2012," I muttered.

She yawned. "Stayed up late. Music things."

"Ah yes, the painful suffering of the artistic elite."

She shoved a muffin at my face.

"Shut up and eat my breakfast. I wrote you into the chorus."

---

I took the muffin.

It was banana.

Not my favorite.

But still warm.

Still hers.

---

We shared earbuds.

As usual.

Except this time, I noticed how she didn't just lean against me — she stayed there. Settled in. As if the train was a place she belonged again.

---

Halfway through the ride, she said:

> "I didn't think I'd like school again."

I didn't respond right away.

Just kept staring at the window like the scenery would give me answers.

Finally, I muttered:

> "It's easier when someone's waiting at the end of the day."

She blinked up at me.

Then nodded once.

Tucked the earbud back in.

And closed her eyes.

---

I kept looking at her for a moment.

Because for the first time in weeks, she looked like she wasn't running anymore.

Like the lyrics were slowly becoming her.

Like this, all of this — the club, the music, even the awful banana muffin — was her rebuilding from the inside out.

---

And me?

Still in the same train seat, holding the same bag, listening to the same jazz playlist.

But it didn't feel lonely anymore.

Just... steady.

---

Maybe she's the one expanding.

But I'm still the stop she returns to.

And for now?

That's enough.

---

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