WebNovels

Chapter 3 - Someone Heard the Music”

"Someone Heard the Music"

That evening felt like any other.

Homework done.

Dinner finished.

Parents watching TV.

Anya waited.

She always waited.

Until the house became quiet.

11:32 PM.

Door locked.

Music low.

She started practicing.

Today she wasn't soft.

She danced harder.

Like she was angry at something invisible.

At time.

At fear.

At the number 18.

Her steps were sharper than usual.

Her breathing louder.

She didn't notice the music volume slowly increasing.

Didn't notice the wooden floor making more sound than usual.

She didn't notice—

Until there was a knock.

Not soft.

Not patient.

A real knock.

Her heart stopped.

The music kept playing for one extra second before she rushed to turn it off.

"Anya?"

It was her father's voice.

Her hands felt cold.

She opened the door slowly.

He looked confused.

"Abhi tak jag rahi ho? Aur ye awaaz kaisi thi?"

Her throat went dry.

"Woh… bas thoda exercise…"

He looked past her shoulder into the room.

Her hair messy.

Sweat on her neck.

Books pushed aside.

Silence.

Long silence.

"10th hai tumhari," he said finally.

"Ye sab baad mein bhi ho sakta hai."

Baad mein.

That word hit harder than scolding.

Because she doesn't believe there is a "baad mein."

He walked away.

No shouting.

No punishment.

Just disappointment.

And somehow that hurt more.

She closed the door slowly.

Sat on the floor.

Back against the bed.

Tears filled her eyes again.

But this time they weren't only from loneliness.

They were from frustration.

Why does something that makes her feel alive

look wrong to everyone else?

Why does dancing feel like a mistake?

She lay down without practicing again.

For the first time in months.

The room felt different.

Heavy.

Like maybe they were right.

Maybe she should focus only on studies.

Maybe this is childish.

Maybe dreams are luxury.

Next day in school, she felt slower.

Less energy.

In PT period, the teacher asked everyone to stand in lines.

They were playing music for a simple group activity.

Most girls were just moving casually.

Laughing.

But when the beat dropped—

Anya's body reacted automatically.

Sharp turn.

Perfect timing.

Controlled expression.

She didn't even realize she was doing it properly.

Until someone clapped.

"Arre Anya, tu toh mast dance karti hai!"

It was Riya from her class.

A simple sentence.

Nothing dramatic.

But it froze her.

Because it was the first time someone said it out loud.

Not "timepass."

Not "cute."

But real surprise.

The PT teacher looked at her too.

"School function aa raha hai. Interested ho?"

Her heartbeat got louder.

Interested?

Was she allowed to be?

She hesitated.

For just one second.

Then nodded.

"Yes, ma'am."

And in that small yes—

Something came back.

Not confidence.

Not success.

Just hope.

Small.

Fragile.

But alive.

That night, when she practiced again—

She didn't feel completely alone.

Because now, at least one person knows.

And maybe…

That's how it starts

More Chapters