WebNovels

So Close, Yet Never Mine

Eaktha_Rajpurohit
7
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
She met him when she wasn’t looking for love—and lost him when she finally understood what it meant. As a quiet junior navigating the invisible rules of school life, Vamika’s world shifts when she meets Arav, a senior known for his calm confidence and distant smile. What begins as brief glances in corridors and hesitant conversations after school slowly turns into something deeper—something neither of them is ready to define. Arav is on the edge of leaving school, burdened with expectations and decisions that don’t leave room for uncertainty. Vamika, still discovering who she is, finds herself holding onto moments—shared notebooks, silent walks, and words that are felt more than spoken. They are close enough to care, yet never close enough to belong to each other. When time pulls them in different directions, Vamika is left with a love that was real, but incomplete. Through heartbreak and quiet growth, she learns that some people are meant to be chapters, not endings. Milke Bhi Mujhe Na Mila is a tender coming-of-age novel about first love, senior-junior dynamics, unspoken feelings, and the bittersweet truth that meeting someone doesn’t always mean keeping them.
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Chapter 1 - A senior she made fun of

Her name was vamika.

She was the kind of girl who laughed easily — loudly, freely, without thinking twice. Always surrounded by friends, always joking, always teasing someone or the other. Life, for her, felt light at that time. Or maybe she just knew how to hide heaviness behind laughter.

Vamika was a junior. And like most juniors, she had opinions about seniors — most of them not very respectful.

Especially about Arav.

He was a senior everyone seemed to know. Calm, composed, and always watching more than speaking. Vamika and her friends often laughed about him, made harmless fun, copied the way he talked, the way he walked — never cruel, just careless. For vamika, he was just another senior. Nothing more. Nothing worth thinking about.

What vamika didn't know was that while she laughed, someone was noticing.

Arav had seen her long before she noticed him. The way she laughed with her friends. The way she spoke without fear. The way she filled a space without trying. Her jokes reached him too — and strangely, he never minded them.

She didn't know he listened when she spoke.

She didn't know he smiled when she laughed.

She didn't know she had become interesting to him.

For vamika, this was just another ordinary phase — friends, fun, and laughter.

For Arav, it was the beginning of paying attention.

And sometimes, that's how stories start —

one person laughing,

the other already watching.