expr:content='data:blog.isMobile ? "width=device-width,initial-scale=1.0,minimum-scale=1.0,maximum-scale=1.0" : "width=1100"' name='viewport'/> India Pulse Daily: November 2025

Saturday, November 29, 2025

My Blank Love – The Unfinished Story of Zoboriya, Abu Zarr & Safwaan

 

Hello friends,

After Bayaan Cafe, this is my new story — “My Blank Love,” the journey of Zoboriya.

I hope you will love it just as much as you loved Bayaan Cafe.

Readers from 42 countries have supported my previous story — thank you so much for your love.

Don’t forget to comment and share this story.

Your support means everything.

Thank you! ❤️



My Blank Love

Chapter One – The River That Remembered

The wind moved slowly, brushing against the lonely strands of Zoboriya’s hair that had escaped her scarf. The river beside her flowed with a hush — a quiet lullaby that only those carrying silent grief could understand.

She stood still, hands folded in front of her, the smell of wet stone and distant jasmine thick in the air. Behind her, the small Turkish town of Safranbolu breathed in its soft morning calm. But inside her?

A storm she hadn’t named.

A love she hadn’t confessed.

A pain she never expected to carry.

She looked at the water again, wondering if it remembered that moment —

the exact second her world had shifted.

“If only he hadn’t come that day…” she whispered, her voice barely audible.

“If only Abu Zarr had never stood in front of me.”

But he had.

And like a sudden gust in the middle of a still afternoon, he had shaken her soul awake.


It was early spring, the trees still dressing themselves in fresh green, and the cafĂ©s along the cobbled path hadn’t yet filled with tourists. That afternoon, three years ago, she had come to this same river, carrying nothing but a journal and a tired heart.

She had wanted silence.

She had wanted to sit and not be seen.

But he had found her anyway.

“Zoboriya.”

His voice had come from behind — firm, familiar, breaking the very air around her.

She had closed her eyes first.

Then turned.

And there he was.

Not as the Abu Zarr she remembered — the boy with laughter tucked in his collar and stars in his voice — but a man now. Quieter. Older. And with eyes that looked like they hadn’t rested in weeks.

He hadn’t smiled.

He hadn’t spoken again.

He had just looked at her —

like she was a story he still didn’t understand how to finish.


“Why did you come?” she had asked, her fingers tightening around the pen in her lap.

He had shrugged slightly, his gaze not leaving hers.

“Because I wasn’t done.”

She had laughed. Not the soft kind, but the one that hides wounds.

“You were the one who left. You were the one who turned your love into silence.”

He didn’t defend himself. He just stepped closer.

“Maybe I thought your silence would match mine.”

That day, everything blurred — the river, the air, her breath.

He had come back,

but not to explain.

Not to apologize.

Not to say he still loved her.

He had just come — and in that moment, it was both too much and never enough.


Now, years later, standing again by the same river, Zoboriya wondered what remained of that afternoon.

Maybe nothing.

Maybe everything.

“You left your noise behind, Abu Zarr.

But you left your silence inside me.”

The wind answered her this time, rustling the pages of her old notebook — the one that still carried his name in ink that had begun to fade.


To be continued…

My Blank Love

In the grand library of the most prestigious university in Turkey,

Zoboriya sat in a quiet corner,

surrounded by hundreds — yet feeling utterly alone.

A gentle yellow light fell on her book,

casting soft shadows on her fingers that trembled slightly.

She was holding a book titled:

“He Was Mine, Yet Never Truly Mine”

— and every word felt like an echo from her own life.

Each page pulled her heartstrings, each line carried the weight of an old memory —

and every moment mirrored the face of Abu Zar.

Tears streamed down quietly, one by one,

as if something inside her was slowly unraveling.

She closed the book gently, took a deep breath, and looked around — thankfully, no one seemed to notice.

She reached for her handkerchief, wiped her tears, and whispered under her breath:

“Oh Abu Zar… why did you do this to me?”

There was a storm within, but her face remained calm — like the surface of still water hiding a sea of pain beneath.

But she didn’t know…

that someone,

from across the table,

hidden behind a wall of books,

had been watching her all this time.


Those eyes had a depth —

as if they, too, carried an unshed tear.

They didn’t blink much,

as if afraid to miss a single moment.

The owner of those eyes remained silent.

He wasn’t Abu Zar…

but he wasn’t any less than him either.

His gaze followed Zoboriya’s every blink,

every breath she took in Abu Zar’s name.

He saw something in her pain —

something familiar, something unfinished.


His name did not reach her lips, but Zoboriya somehow felt the presence.

She turned her head slowly —

her senses alert to the soundless presence.

And just then…

the boy behind the pile of books shifted away, trying to hide.

But it was too late.

Zoboriya had caught the echo — the feeling that someone was silently listening to the cracks of her broken love.


Chapter 5 – A Place Where Love Speaks Without Words

Leaving behind the cold silence of the library, Zoboriya walked out, carrying her heavy heart like an invisible book.

She looked up at the sky — blue, vast, yet strangely hollow.

Her feet instinctively walked the path

toward her secret place —

a quiet corner of the world

she called “her refuge.”


She had to cross a trail of stones,

each one echoing with soft whispers of wind.

And finally…

she arrived.


Trees surrounded her —

branches full of green whispers, birds chirping from above as if the world still believed in forgotten songs.

A small stream flowed beside her —

its slow, hesitant waters

mirroring her own unsaid thoughts.

Far away, a couple sat close, laughing softly, lost in each other’s gaze.

A sad smile brushed across Zoboriya’s lips —

but it never touched her eyes.


She sat down silently on a familiar stone — as if it had been waiting for her all along.

Her scarf fluttered in the breeze, slipping off her shoulder and brushing against the earth — like her soul, tired and seeking rest.

She rested her hands in her lap,

and exhaled a long, deep breath.

“Sometimes the world seems full of color,”

she thought,

“but all I ever hold is a grey mist —

a fog that devours every light I try to find.”

Her eyes were still moist,

but the tears no longer fell.

They had become a quiet companion — a part of her now.


She didn’t know…

that the boy from the library —

the one with unread eyes —

had followed the same path.

He stood at a distance, watching her again.

He had never truly known love.

He had only witnessed its breaking.

And perhaps, for the first time, he saw someone who was just like him.

Someone whose silence was also a language.


"My Blank Love"

Your name still lives in my breath,

like a scent that lingers on a dried branch.

You were never fully mine, yet never truly gone,

like a story that forgot to write its final chapter.


You came... but left without saying a word,

and I sat there, quietly reading your silence.

We were love — voiceless and unfinished,

like a book missing its last page.


Zoboriya still sees that evening —

the one when Abu Zar’s single glance

had awakened her soul.

But after that glance, he left her trapped in a dream called love — a dream where even waking up hurts.


He was never a dream… nor a reality.

But in every memory,

his name is inked.

His return brought no peace to her,

because he was present —

but never truly there.


Some loves don’t need words.

They ask questions with just their eyes.

Abu Zar and Zoboriya…

an unfinished question

that’s too afraid of its answer.



My Blank Love

— “The Name That Was Never Spoken”


Zoboriya read the last line of her book —

and just then, her eyes found a boy sitting a little far from the stage.

It was him...

The one who never spoke her name,

yet understood every silence she lived through.

He didn’t clap,

didn’t take a photo,

just sat there…

his eyes holding the same peace —

As if he wished to be a witness

to all that Zoboriya had never said out loud.


The event ended.

People came forward, praised her, took autographs.

But Zoboriya’s eyes searched for only one face.

When she stepped outside,

she saw him on a bench across the way —

holding an umbrella, as light rain fell around him.


She walked up to him.

Said nothing.

Just sat beside him.

Minutes passed like that —

as if the rain had quietly allowed them to be wet… together.

Then Zoboriya asked:

“Why did you leave that day, when I wrote in my diary: ‘Maybe now, I’m beginning to understand’?”

The boy smiled.

His eyes were still soaked — and not just with the rain.

“Because I wanted you to have the right

to step out of Abu Zarr’s shadow…

and I didn’t want to be an obstacle in that.”


“So you were afraid to become a part of me?” Zoboriya asked softly.

“No,” he said,

“I just wanted to be a part of you that belonged to your ‘today,’ not your memories.”


“And your name?”

Zoboriya’s voice trembled.

“I never asked…”

The boy lowered his head. Then gently said:

“Safwaan.”


Safwaan —

a name that settled in Zoboriya’s heart like the final page of a long unread book.


He pulled out a crumpled paper from his pocket.

“I wrote this before I ever read your book…”

Zoboriya read the lines:

“I am a name that was never spoken in prayer,

yet somehow found a quiet corner on a forgotten page.”


Zoboriya looked at him — truly, for the first time.

He was no longer a stranger.

Even his silence now had a voice.

And his presence, though quiet, felt familiar… almost like home.


From that day forward,

Zoboriya and Safwaan were often seen together.

No confusion.

No forgotten names.

Just a friendship —

not rushing to become love.

“Maybe every love begins as friendship first…”

Zoboriya wrote in her next diary.


“The One Who Left… But Was Never Gone”

Winter had slowly crept into the university campus.

Falling leaves, quiet tea stalls —

everything looked exactly like the days

when Abu Zarr and Zoboriya would walk the same paths, side by side.

Abu Zarr doesn’t come anymore —

but oddly enough, he’s all everyone still talks about.


“Where did Abu Zarr go?”

“Someone said he left the university.”

“No, someone saw him near the old shrine in the city.”

But no one really knows.

Because Abu Zarr was always like that —

more present in his absence, than in his presence.


He was the merchant of silences —

the one who never confessed his love,

but left parts of his soul in Zoboriya’s gaze.


Now, Zoboriya sits alone in the library.

A chair remains empty across from her.

Sometimes she places a book there —

as if Abu Zarr might show up and start reading silently.


“People say I’ve learned to move on…”

she writes in her diary.

“But no one knows —

behind every step I’ve taken forward…

Abu Zarr is standing there.”


Safwaan is still around.

He understands her silences.

But he knows —

he may be the last page of her story,

but Abu Zarr was her very first ink.


Some nights, a single line wakes Zoboriya:

“Does Abu Zarr still walk through the same alley?”

“Has he ever tried to read someone else?”

“Or is he still frozen… at the exact place we left each other?”


Some professors still say:

“Abu Zarr was an unknown poet —

the kind who loved just one girl…

and stayed silent for her.”

Maybe that was his truest form of love —

to never say anything, and yet… say everything.


Zoboriya never forgot him.

She never could.

Because some loves don’t need names —

they live on in prayers.


And when someone asks her about Abu Zarr —

she just says:

“He was my answer —

the one I kept finding in every silence.”


Let me know if you'd like the next chapter:

A secret letter from Abu Zarr?

Zoboriya accidentally finding him again?

Or perhaps a final moment… where he finally speaks?

💌


https://fktr.in/yTaYZ6v


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/%20kandeel-psychological-romance-thriller-episode-5.html

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #35 — The Story That Returned Home



 Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #35




Bayaan Café | Tape #35
Tagline:

“Sometimes returning is not a door—
it becomes the journey of an entire lifetime.”


The Next Morning

Morning mist
still lingered on the windows,
forming soft droplets on the glass.

Nilofar and Zaria
sat quietly near the same corner.
The picture hanging on the wall
looked clearer than it did at night.

The face was complete now—
but strangely,
in the woman’s eyes
there seemed to be a path shining,
a distant one,
on which someone was returning.


The Child’s Promise

By noon,
the little girl came to the Café again.

This time
she wasn’t alone—
she held a thin blue diary in her hands.

Going straight to the picture,
she whispered softly—

“Mama…
I’ve read all your stories.
Today I’m going to tell everyone.”


The Blue Diary’s Pages

Nilofar asked gently—

“Can we read it?”

The girl nodded.

“This is the same diary
Mama wrote in every time she came here.
On the last page she wrote—
‘If someday I can’t return,
then let my stories
take me home.’


First Story — A Dream

The first page of the diary—

“Sometimes I dream
that there is a place
where people leave their stories behind,
and those stories
turn into the wind
and set out to find them again.

Bayaan Café
is that place for me.”


Second Story — Fear

On the second page—

“One day I was terrified.
So afraid
that even the walls of my own home
felt unfamiliar to me.
I ran here.
No one asked anything,
they just quietly
let me sit beside a window.
And that day I felt
that sometimes silence
can save a person.”


Third Page — The Last Time

Then it said—

“If I never return,
my little girl
will surely come.
She will recognize me.
I will keep smiling at her
from within the picture,
until a story
builds a home for me again.”


Silence in the Room

The diary closed.
For a while,
the room filled with deep silence.

Then,
from the corner where the picture hung,
a very faint rustle came—
as if someone was breathing softly.


The Picture Changing

Before everyone’s eyes,
the picture began to change again.

This time
it wasn’t just a face—
but a whole figure.
The woman was standing near the window,
holding the same blue diary,
with a smile in her eyes—
a smile
that only a mother could have.


The Child’s Call

The little girl reached out her hand—

“Mama…
please come back now.”


Suddenly,
the wind from the window grew stronger.
Nilofar felt
as if an invisible hand
rested gently
on the child’s shoulder.

The wall didn’t move,
but from the picture
a soft light
spread outward.

And in that light,
the woman’s voice echoed—

“I am right here…
do not be afraid.
With every step you take,
I will walk beside you.”


The CafĂ©’s New Beginning

From that day on,
that picture became
the deepest memory of the Café.

People would come,
look at it,
and say—

“There is someone breathing in this picture.”

And in the blue notebook,
Zaria wrote—

“Sometimes
stories do return home.
But a home—
is a place
where someone
never stops waiting.”


Epilogue

The little girl’s box
now rests in the same corner of the Café.
Sometimes she comes,
sometimes her father.

And each time,
the picture on the wall
smiles a little more.


“Sometimes returning is not a door…
but becomes a path
that lasts a whole lifetime.”


The Rest of the Café

The rest of the Café crowd
often pauses for a moment near that corner.
Sometimes it feels—
the woman truly came back,
and sometimes it feels—
this is just the shadow
of an old, deep longing
that takes shape on the wall
every day.

The question remains the same—
Did someone truly return?
Or is it only
her longing
that found its way back?


Bayaan Café | Tape #35
Tagline:

“Sometimes answers do not appear,
because some stories
wish to remain questions.”


The End

Now the journey of Bayaan Café ends here.
Some stories stay forever.
I believe this Bayaan Café
has certainly found its place
in people’s hearts.

— The End



🖋️ 2) Author Note for Blog (Ending Message)

Author’s Note

With Tape #35, the journey of Bayaan Café reaches its final chapter.
This series began as a whisper—
a small story hiding in a corner, waiting to be found.
But because of you, it became a world of its own.

To everyone reading from India,
and to all the readers from 42 countries around the globe—
thank you for giving this café a place in your heart.
Your love, your curiosity, your time,
and your silent connection with each chapter
is what kept this world alive.

If Bayaan CafĂ© touched your heart—
even for a moment—
please share it with your friends.
Your support helps more stories find their way to you.

From my heart to yours,
Thank you for walking this journey with me.
— Author, Bayaan CafĂ©



https://fktr.in/rOdJKS8

https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/kandeel-baksh-betrayal-hashim-love-story-new-twist.html

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

“Bayaan CafĂ©: The Haunting Photograph – A Mother’s Return Through Silence ”



The Third Morning

It was the third day.
The cold had grown even harsher.
Outside the café, the fog had settled
as if someone had wrapped
the entire city
in a white blanket.

Inside the café,
Nilofar adjusted every chair,
switched on the coffee machine,
and kept looking toward the door
again and again.


In Front of the Photograph

Zaria stood in front of the photograph.
That photograph…
the one in which,
in that corner,
an unfamiliar shadow
had been captured.

“Who is this?”
Nilofar asked softly.

Zaria’s eyes remained fixed on the picture.

“Maybe someone
whose story is still unfinished.”


The Door Bell

Around noon,
the bell hanging on the door chimed.

Nilofar’s heart suddenly began to race.
It was the same stranger.
The same tired face,
the same old camera
resting on his shoulder.

And with him,
the same little girl.


A Question

Zaria didn’t waste time and asked—

“The shadow in this picture…
who is it?”

The stranger looked at the photo slowly.
A strange shimmer
appeared in his eyes.

“It’s my wife.”


Silence

The entire café
fell into deep silence.

“Where is she?”
Nilofar asked cautiously.

The man sat down on a chair,
placed his camera on the table,
and said softly—

“She left three years ago.
Without saying a word.
Just left behind this child
and a few memories.”


The Child’s Secret

The little girl whispered—

“Mama told me
that if I ever come to this café,
she would see me.”


The Truth of the Photograph

The stranger picked up the picture.

“I’ve been to so many places,
taken countless photographs…
but she never appeared
in any of them.

But in this cafĂ©’s photo,
she did.
Maybe…
she’s here.”


By the Wall

The little girl took the picture
and stood by the exact corner of the wall
where the first wet paper
had once been placed.

In a faint voice, she said—

“Mama, I’m here.”

Her voice carried so much pain
that even the air inside the café
paused for a moment.


A Soft Rustle

Nilofar and Zaria
clearly felt it—
a gentle breeze
came from that corner.
As if a hand
had softly touched
the little girl’s hair.

The girl smiled and said—

“She’s listening.”


One Last Photograph

The stranger lifted his camera
and captured that moment.

After clicking the picture,
he took a deep breath and said—

“I’m leaving this photograph here.
Maybe now…
our waiting can stay here too.”


Before Leaving

As he walked out,
he said only this—

“If someday
another picture
makes that shadow clearer,
don’t remove it from the wall.
Because some people never return…
but their waiting comes back.”


The Last Line

That day,
Zaria wrote in her blue notebook—

“For the first time,
it felt like this cafĂ©’s wall
doesn’t just hold stories,
it holds waiting too—
the kind that pulls someone
back again and again.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #32

Tagline:

“Some people never return,
but their waiting always finds its way back.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #33

Tagline:

“Sometimes photographs begin to speak
when someone’s silence hangs on the wall
for too long.”


The Changing Photograph

Three days passed.

The photograph had been placed
on the cafĂ©’s stop-wall,
right where the girl had stood
and whispered “Mama.”

Nilofar noticed
that in the corner of the picture
where the shadow had once been blurry—
it had now grown clearer.


A Faint Face

Zaria examined the photograph closely.
It was no longer
just a hazy shadow.

A faint face had begun to form.
Hair…
half a cheek…
as if someone
was slowly trying to return.


The Fourth Day of Fog

On the fourth day,
as evening approached,
the same little girl arrived—
this time alone.

Nilofar rushed outside.

“Your father didn’t come today?”

The girl shook her head.

“No…
he says sometimes
we have to find our answers
ourselves.”


In Front of the Photograph

The girl went straight to the picture.
She pulled a chair,
stood on it,
and whispered—

“Mama…
can you really come back?”


The First Sign

Just then,
a soft rustle moved inside the café.
The glass window
slightly opened on its own.

A cold breeze
touched the photograph gently.
In the corner of the picture,
the face looked even clearer—
this time,
the eyes were visible.


Tears in the Girl’s Eyes

Crying softly,
the girl said—

“Nilofar-api,
this is my mama.
Look…
that’s her eyes.
I know it’s her.”

Her tiny fingers
were touching the photograph
as if knocking
on an old forgotten door.


Zaria’s Understanding

In a deep voice,
Zaria said—

“Maybe your mother
left a memory
inside this café.
And until someone
listens to her whole story,
she will remain
inside this photograph.”


 


The Secret of the Wall

That night,
after closing the café,
Nilofar and Zaria
sat in front of the picture.

Zaria whispered—

“I think…
if she tells us her mother’s story
tomorrow,
this photograph might change.

Some pictures
aren’t just paper.
They listen.”


Waiting for the Fifth Day

In her blue notebook,
Zaria wrote—

“The fifth day may be
a day of return.
Either a story will be completed
or this picture
will become a door
that never opens.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #33

Tagline:

“Sometimes photographs begin to speak
when someone’s silence hangs on the wall
for too long.”


The Fifth Day

The morning was still
covered in fog.

But inside the café,
there was a different kind of uneasiness.

Nilofar and Zaria
kept glancing at the door
again and again.


The Girl Returns

As evening descended,
the little girl
entered the café again.

In her hands
was a small box.

She went straight
to the photograph’s corner
and gently placed the box
on the floor.



An Old Story

Zaria asked softly—

“Will you tell us everything today?”

Tears shimmered
in the girl’s eyes.

“My mama…
used to come here often.
She told me—
if I ever get scared,
I should come to this café.

Because someone here
would find me.”


The Secret of the Box

Nilofar opened the box gently.

Inside were some old letters,
two photographs,
and a pen.

The first photo
was the same woman
whose shadow
was now appearing
on the café wall.


The Day She Disappeared

With trembling voice,
the girl said—

“Three years ago…
Mama just left one day.
No letter,
no message.

Everyone says
she left us.

But I think
she stayed inside this cafĂ©…
somewhere in these walls.”


The Photograph Changes

As the girl spoke,
the photograph
shivered slightly.

Suddenly,
the once-blurry face
became completely clear.

Her eyes
looked directly
into the little girl’s—
as if trying
to say something.


A Gentle Breeze

Nilofar and Zaria
held their breath.

A soft wind
from the window
brushed against the paper.

New words
slowly appeared
on the photo—

“I’m here.
Don’t be afraid.”


The Girl’s Hand

The girl touched the picture
and said through tears—

“I’ll come here every day
until you return.”

Her tiny drops of tears
fell onto the glass,
one by one.


The Last Line in the Blue Notebook

That night,
Zaria wrote—

“Some people leave their homes,
but some places
become their home instead.
Today, Bayaan Café
became someone’s mother’s home.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #34

Tagline:

“Some stories find their way home
through silence.”


👇 Reader Message


“Dear readers, whether you are from India or any other country,

please leave your valuable comment on this article.

Your one small comment gives me great motivation and inspires me to create even better content for you.

Also, don’t forget to share this article with your friends,

so their knowledge grows and my confidence grows as well!

Thank you ❤️

Your support is my biggest strength.”

https://timespeakestruth.blogspot.com/2025/11/%20tata-sierra-2025-new-model-review-price-features-launch.html


Saturday, November 22, 2025

“Bayaan CafĂ© Series: Lost Stories, Silent Walls & A Mysterious Stranger (Tape 29–31)”




Bayaan Café | Tape #29

Tagline:
“Sometimes someone’s silence opens a door for someone else.”


Slow Evening

The rain had stopped,
but in the air of the Café,
the scent of wet paper and coffee still lingered.

Zaria was sitting near the counter,
flipping through the first manuscript of ‘Raasta’.
Nilofar was turning off the coffee machine.

Looking at the wall,
Nilofar said softly—

“Isn’t this evening strangely quiet?”

Zaria smiled—

“Sometimes silence is the loudest sound.”


A New Paper

At that moment,
the door opened slowly.

A very young girl—
maybe 13 or 14—
walked in with wet hair and an oversized jacket.

In her hand was just a single sheet of paper,
completely soaked.

Nilofar rushed forward.

“Oh! You’re drenched!
Want some coffee?”

The girl shook her head—
“No… I just came to leave this here.”


Zaria’s Question

Zaria came near her,
her voice extremely gentle—

“You can sit here if you want.”

The girl said—
“I don’t have time to sit.
Just read this.
Maybe my mother will read it too… someday.”


That Paper

Zaria tried to open the paper,
but the letters had blurred with the wetness.
Still,
two lines in the middle were clearly readable:

“Mom, you said
there must be a place where there is no fear.
Maybe this is that place.”

Zaria looked up—
the girl was gone.

Only the door moved lightly.


A New Corner on the Wall

Zaria carefully took that wet paper
and pinned it to an empty corner of the wall.

She whispered softly—

“If your mother ever comes here,
believe me,
this corner will be the first thing she sees.”


Nilofar’s Realization

Nilofar paused and said—

“So many people
have started treating this CafĂ© like home.”

Zaria replied—

“Because maybe
everyone just needs one place
where their fear can turn into words.”


Night at the Café

That night, after closing the Café,
Nilofar placed a small post-it
next to the manuscript ‘Raasta’

“Today a little girl reminded us
that this CafĂ© isn’t just for coffee,
but for finding someone too.”

Zaria flipped the last page
and wrote in her notebook—

“Sometimes people come
just to leave a piece of paper…
and end up leaving their whole world here.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #30

Tagline:
“Sometimes the answers we search for
are hidden in a stranger’s eyes.”


Morning Fog

The next morning,
the Café opened late.

Fog had covered the city
as if hiding some secret.

When Nilofar cleaned the glass,
she saw—
the same young girl from yesterday
was standing outside the Café.

But today…
she wasn’t alone.


The Stranger

Behind her
stood a tall man.
Face covered,
holding an old camera.

His eyes were deep and tired,
yet searching for someone.

Nilofar stepped outside.

“You… came again?”

The girl nodded—
“Because… he wanted to see this place.”


His First Words

The man spoke softly—

“I take pictures.
Not of people…
of places.
Because some places
speak like people.”

There was a strange kind of silence
in his voice.


Inside the Café

They entered inside.
The girl walked straight to the corner
where the wet paper was pinned
and touched the wall—

“This is the place.
Mom was supposed to come here.”

Zaria asked in surprise—

“Your mother?”

The girl was about to say something
when the man gently placed his hand
on her shoulder.

“Some things
should be said slowly.
Like a picture forms.”


A Photograph

The man stood before the wall
and took a picture with his camera.

After lowering the camera, he said—

“I’ll get this printed
and bring it back.
Maybe someone will return because of it.”


Without a Name

Before leaving,
he wrote only one line on the counter—

“Sometimes lost people
return through a photograph.”

And he didn’t tell his name.


Zaria’s Doubt

As they stepped out,
Nilofar asked softly—

“Who were they?”

Zaria looked out of the window—

“I don’t know…
but their eyes held the shadow of a secret
that these Café walls
might reveal very soon.”

That night, in her blue notebook,
Zaria wrote—

“For the first time I felt
every silence pinned on this wall
is a doorway to a bigger story.
And someone… has come to open that door.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #31

Tagline:
“Sometimes a picture
speaks louder than paper.”


The Second Day of Fog

The next day too,
the same winter fog remained.

Inside the Café
was the scent of coffee,
but today the Stop Wall
looked a little sad—
as if it too was waiting
after that stranger left.


A Packet

Around noon,
someone quietly placed
a thick packet on the counter.

No one saw who it was—
just the bell rang
and someone left.

Zaria opened the packet—
inside was the same photograph
the stranger had taken yesterday.


The Photograph’s Effect

The photograph was very clear.
The wall and all the colorful papers
looked as if they were breathing.

But…
in the far corner,
where there was no paper,
a shadow of someone
was visible in the picture.

There was no one in the Café
when the picture was taken.
Then whose shadow was it?


Nilofar’s Fear

Nilofar’s voice trembled—

“Zaria…
there was no one standing there yesterday.”

Zaria stared at the photo
for a long time.
Her face turned firm and cold
like the winter air.


A Note

On the back of the photo
was a small note—

“Sometimes a photograph captures
what the eyes cannot see.
I will return on the third day.”


Waiting for the Third Day

That night
only the photograph was pinned
on the Stop Wall.

The Café was silent.
Everyone began waiting
for the third day—
for the stranger to return
and reveal
whose shadow that was.


Blue Notebook – Last Line

Zaria wrote today—

“Maybe this CafĂ©
is not just a place of paper and stories,
but a place calling someone
who has been wanting to return
for a very long time.”


Writer: Afsana Wahid


** My Readers**


“If this part of the Bayaan CafĂ© series

touched your heart,

then please share it with your friends,

your loved ones,

and on your social media.


Every small share,

every comment,

and every ❤️ reaction

gives me more strength to keep writing.

Whether you are in India

or living outside India,

your support means the world to me.

Thank you so much for reading…

With love,

Afsana Wahid”


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/%20chote-nawab-hashim-ki-wapsi-haveli-mein-raaz-aur-nayi-shuruaat.html 


https://timespeakestruth.blogspot.com/2025/11/blog-post_21.html

Thursday, November 20, 2025

“When Dreams Arrive Too Late: A Story of Time, Waiting and Reality”




“When Dreams Come True, But Too Late”


There is a point in life where everything has a limit.
Beyond that point, it becomes harder and harder to hold the weight of anything.
Since childhood, we all grow up carrying a few dreams, a few wishes that quietly live in our hearts.
We believe that one day, somehow, they will find their way to reality.
So we wait… with hope, with faith, with patience.

But time has its own journey.
It never pauses, never slows down for anyone.
While we keep waiting for our dreams to unfold, life keeps moving ahead—
days turn into months, and months into years.

And then, unexpectedly, a moment comes when those long-held dreams finally come true.
But by the time they arrive…
time has already travelled far, far ahead of us.
The dreams we once protected with so much love now feel tired,
their glow a little dimmer than before.

Because in the long distance between desire and fulfillment,
we see so much, we face so much,
that by the time we finally reach what we once prayed for,
something inside us has changed.
The heart no longer feels the same excitement.
The wish no longer feels as bright.
And the dreams we cherished for years…
don’t feel as alive as they once did.

Sometimes, dreams do come true—
but not always at the right time.
And timing… changes everything.


✅ Readers 


If you connected with these words, do leave a comment or share it with someone who is waiting for their dreams. Your support means a lot and helps me keep writing more heart-touching stories.


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/zille-huma-ki-khoobsurati-ka-raaz-hidden-truth-story.html

Wednesday, November 19, 2025

“Bayyan CafĂ©: A Diary, A Secret, and a Journey of Untold Emotions”

 




Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #29 –

Tagline:

“Kabhi-kabhi kisi ki chuppi,
kisi aur ke liye darwaaza khol deti hai.”

“Sometimes someone’s silence
opens a door for someone else.”


Slow evening

Baarish tham chuki thi,
The rain had stopped,

lekin Café ki hawa mein
bheege kaagaz aur coffee ki khushboo ab bhi ghuli hui thi.

but in the air of the Café,
the smell of wet paper and coffee was still mixed.

Zaria counter ke paas baithi
Zaria sat near the counter

‘Rasta’ ki pehli pandulipi palat rahi thi.
flipping through the first manuscript of ‘Rasta’.

Nilofar coffee machine band kar rahi thi.
Nilofar was turning off the coffee machine.

Deewar ki taraf dekhte hue
Nilofar ne dheere se kaha—

Looking toward the wall
Nilofar said softly—

“Aaj ki shaam ajeeb khaamosh hai na?”
“Tonight’s evening feels strangely quiet, doesn’t it?”

Zaria muskurai—
Zaria smiled—

“Kabhi-kabhi khaamoshi bhi
sabse oonchi awaaz hoti hai.”

“Sometimes silence
is the loudest sound.”


A new paper

Ussi waqt
darwaaza dheere se khula.

At that very moment
the door opened slowly.

Ek bahut chhoti-si ladki—
shayad 13–14 saal ki—
bheege baal aur badi-si jacket mein andar aayi.

A very young girl—
maybe 13–14 years old—
entered with wet hair and an oversized jacket.

Haath mein bas ek kaagaz tha,
jo poori tarah geela ho chuka tha.

She had only one paper in her hand,
which had become completely wet.

Nilofar jhat se aage badhi.
Nilofar quickly stepped forward.

“Arey! Itni bheeg gayi?
Coffee chahiye?”

“Oh! You got so wet?
Want some coffee?”

Ladki ne sir hilaaya—
“Nahi… bas ye yahan chhodna tha.”

The girl shook her head—
“No… I just had to leave this here.”


Zaria’s question

Zaria uske paas aayi.
Zaria came near her.

Aawaaz behad narm thi—
Her voice was extremely gentle—

“Tum chaho to yahan baith bhi sakti ho.”
“If you want, you can sit here too.”

Ladki ne kaha—
“Baithne ka waqt nahi hai.
Bas ye padh lena.
Shayad meri maa bhi ise padh le,
kabhi…”

The girl said—
“I don’t have time to sit.
Just read this.
Maybe my mother will read it too,
someday…”


That paper

Zaria ne kaagaz ko kholne ki koshish ki,
Zaria tried to open the paper,

lekin geelepan mein akshar phail gaye the.
but the letters had spread because of the dampness.

Phir bhi
beech ki do lines saaf padhi ja sakti thi:

Still,
two lines in the middle were clearly readable:

“Maa, tumne kaha tha
koi jagah hogi jahan dar nahi hoga.
Shayad yahi jagah hai.”

“Mom, you said
there must be a place where fear wouldn’t exist.
Maybe this is that place.”

Zaria ne nazrein uthaaeen—
ladki ja chuki thi.

Zaria lifted her eyes—
the girl had already left.

Darwaaza bas halke se hil raha tha.
The door was gently swinging.


A new corner on the wall

Us geele kaagaz ko
Zaria ne bahut sambhaal kar
deewar ke ek khaali kone mein laga diya.

Zaria very carefully
placed that wet paper
on an empty corner of the wall.

Dheere se fusfusai—
She whispered softly—

“Tumhari maa agar kabhi aayi,
to yaqeen mano,
unhe yahi kona sabse pehle dikhega.”

“If your mother ever comes,
believe me,
this corner will be the first thing she sees.”


Nilofar’s realisation

Nilofar ne rukkar kaha—
Nilofar paused and said—

“Kitne log hain,
jo is CafĂ© ko apna ghar samajhne lage hain।”

“So many people
have started considering this CafĂ© their home.”

Zaria boli—
Zaria said—

“Kyunki shayad,
har kisi ko bas ek jagah chahiye
jahan unka dar
kaagaz mein badal sake।”

“Because maybe,
everyone just needs a place
where their fear
can turn into paper.”


Night at the Café

Us raat Café band hone ke baad,
That night, after the Café closed,

Nilofar ne pehli baar
us pandulipi ‘Rasta’ ke paas
ek chhota-sa post-it laga diya—

Nilofar, for the first time,
placed a small post-it
beside the manuscript ‘Rasta’—

“Aaj ek bacchi ne humein yaad dilaya
ki ye Café sirf coffee ke liye nahi,
kisi ko dhoondhne ke liye bhi hai।”

“Today a little girl reminded us
that this CafĂ© isn’t only for coffee,
but also for finding someone.”


Zaria ne aakhri panna palatte hue
copy mein likha—

Turning the last page,
Zaria wrote in her notebook—

“Kabhi-kabhi log
bas ek kaagaz chhodne aate hain,
aur apni poori duniya
yahin chhod jaate hain।”

“Sometimes people
come only to leave one paper,
and end up leaving
their whole world here.”


Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #29 – 



Dear Readers,

If these tapes from Bayaan Café touch your heart even a little,

please let me know in the comments.

Every message you write becomes a small light on this CafĂ©’s wall—

and helps this story travel further.


Tell me which country or city you are reading from,

because every reader becomes a part of this CafĂ©’s journey.

Your support, your words, your presence…

they all matter more than you think.


– Afsana Wahid 


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/zille-huma-ki-khoobsurati-ka-raaz-hidden-truth-story.html


Monday, November 17, 2025

Bayaan Café: The Forgotten Note That Changed Two Lives | Heart-Touching Emotional Story




Bayaan Café |

Tagline:

“Sometimes, in the unheard stories… a voice takes us back to ourselves.”


Fourth Saturday morning.

The sunlight wasn’t too bright,
but the sky was clear.
There was just enough peace in the air
as if someone was saying—
“Live slowly today.”


Nilofar opened the window.
On the street outside,
a little girl was walking with balloons.
Behind her,
an old woman was walking—
slowly,
but with a smile.

Zaria noticed it too.
With a light smile she said,

“Someone will come to the CafĂ© today… carrying a new kind of pause.”

Ayaan opened his sketchbook
and without saying anything,
began drawing the little girl
he had seen for just a moment.


A little while later,
the Café door opened.

An elderly woman walked in.
White hair,
white dupatta,
and a small cloth bag in her hand.

With her was the same little girl.

The woman looked around
and said softly,

“Is this… the place where people… just sit and lighten their heart?”

Nilofar stepped forward and smiled,

“Yes, you’re in the right place.
No one asks questions here.”


The elderly woman
walked straight to the Stop Wall.
She stood there for a long time,
simply looking.

Then she said,

“I want to write something here.”

Zaria handed her
a small piece of paper and a pen.


She wrote:

“Fifty years have passed…
but even today, one name gets stuck in my throat.”


After sticking the paper to the wall,
she sat down.

For a long moment,
no one said anything.
Only the soft ticking of the clock
filled the Café.

Then Zaria gently asked,

“Sometimes speaking becomes easier…
if someone simply listens.
If you want to say it… you can.”


The woman took a deep breath.

“I once loved someone.
Back in the sixties…
there was a neighborhood, a rooftop…
and two hearts.

But my family said—
this relationship cannot happen.
I listened,
and then I never spoke of it again.

He left too.

I got married… had children…
but one corner inside me never filled.

Today this little girl said—
‘Grandma, let’s go to a place
where people listen.’
So I came.”


Nilofar’s eyes welled up.
She asked the little girl,

“How did you know about the CafĂ©?”

The little girl said,

“I heard my mom say
that here… people don’t stay lonely.
I didn’t want my grandma
to be lonely.”


Ayaan stopped sketching.
The new drawing he made
showed a white-haired woman
and a little girl
standing before the Stop Wall—
and behind them, an empty sky
in which an old name
was slowly drifting away.


For the first time that day,
the woman
turned her old pain into words.

Before leaving,
she said,

“I didn’t know
that a strange place
could give so much relief.
Thank you…
Today I’ve lightened the name
inside my heart… just a little.”

https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/%20kandil-hospital-drama-dr-bakhsh-vs-dr-sameer-latest-hindi-story.html 


As she left,
the little girl stuck a tiny note on the wall.

It had only two words:

“Grandma smiled.”


Evening fell into silence.
Zaria wrote in her blue notebook:

*“Sometimes the people we grow old with
don’t understand our wounds,
but a stranger
teaches us to live again
in a single moment.

Today the CafĂ© witnessed—
that a small child’s insistence
can melt down
a fifty-year-old longing.”*


Bayaan Café | Tape #23

Tagline:

“Sometimes, in the unheard stories… a voice takes us back to ourselves.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #24

Tagline:

“Sometimes a quietly placed paper on a wall… reveals someone’s deepest secret.”


Fifth Saturday morning.

Sunlight was dancing on the Café windows.
The soft winter breeze
was mixing with the aroma of coffee.

No new visitor had arrived today.
Nilofar said,

“It’s the same day again… when the CafĂ© feels empty.”

Zaria opened her blue notebook,
but her eyes kept drifting
towards the Stop Wall.

Ayaan held his sketchbook quietly.
His fingers were on the pen,
but he wasn’t drawing anything.


After a moment of silence,
Zaria suddenly stood up and said—

“Shall we read the wall ourselves today?”

Nilofar said,

“Yes… like last time.”

Ayaan nodded slowly.


The three of them
stood before the Stop Wall.

Among all the papers,
one was very old.
Its edges had turned yellow.
No one had ever touched it.

Zaria took it down gently
and read it.

“If someone is reading this…
then know
that I truly existed.
I tried my best to live.”


All three were startled.

Nilofar whispered,

“Who must have written this?”

Below the note
was a date—
three years old.


Ayaan’s hands trembled.

He said,

“This… might be one of the first stories of the CafĂ©.
Back when no one even visited here.”

Zaria asked softly,

“So this paper has been here for three years?”

Nilofar said,

“No one ever noticed it.
Maybe it hid itself.”


The three decided
to place the paper on a table
and write a reply beneath it.

Zaria picked up a pen
and wrote below the old note—

“If you tried to live,
we want you to know—
you truly lived.
Because today, after three years,
your words
are breathing inside our hearts.”


Nilofar said softly,

“I don’t know who it was…
But today it feels like
the Café showed us
the heartbeat of an old visitor.”


Ayaan began drawing immediately.
His sketch showed
a paper flying in the wind,
and three hands holding it—
so it wouldn’t fall.


Evening approached.
Before leaving,
Zaria placed the old paper
back at the center of the Stop Wall.

Now beneath it
were their words too.


That night,
Zaria wrote in her blue notebook—

“Sometimes an unknown voice
remains hidden in a wall for years…
and when it’s found,
it feels as if someone is reminding us
that effort is never wasted.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #24

Tagline:

“Sometimes a quietly placed paper on a wall… reveals someone’s deepest 


✅ Ending Audience Message (Edited & Professional)


If you loved this story, please take a moment to leave a comment.

Your words inspire me to keep writing.

Also, don’t forget to share this story with your friends.

And tell me from which country you are reading —

it truly means a lot!

Thank you for being here. ♥


Writer Afsana Wahid 

Thursday, November 13, 2025

“The Secret of Tape 21 & 22: A Chilling Story of Fear and Truth”




📚 Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #21

Tagline:
“Sometimes holding someone’s hesitation becomes their very first flight.”


The third Saturday morning.

The rain had stopped,
but the scent of wet earth still lingered in the air.
Raindrops clung to the windowpanes
like tiny pearls.

Inside the café,
there was a different kind of warmth today—
as if every corner was waiting
for a new story to take birth.


Nilofar lifted the lid off the pot of coffee simmering on the stove.
The aroma spread through the room.
Zaria sat in her usual “blue notebook” corner,
twirling a pencil —
she had chosen yellow and light orange today
to color Mahira’s sun.

Ayaan stood near his sketch,
gazing at the Stop Wall.
Many small pieces of paper were now pasted on it.

Each paper held someone’s story.
Mahira’s first paper was still at the very top.


The door opened.

Mahira walked in.
There was a bit more courage in her steps today.
Her feet were wet,
her hair slightly damp,
but her face had a new kind of glow.

She walked straight to the Stop Wall.

For a few moments,
she quietly stared at her own paper.
Then she softly asked:

“Today… can I read someone else’s paper?”

Zaria nodded,

“Of course. This wall belongs to everyone.”


Mahira picked a paper.
It said:

“Sometimes I feel like even in the middle of everyone… I’m nowhere.”

She gently placed it back.

Her eyes turned slightly moist.

Nilofar stepped beside her,
resting a gentle hand on her shoulder.

“See?
Hesitation doesn’t come only to you.
Many people pause.
The only difference is…
no one pauses alone here.”


That day, Mahira put up a new paper of her own.
It said:

“For the first time, I looked at my hesitation… and smiled.”

Ayaan sketched that very moment —
a little girl
pasting a sun on the wall.


Afternoon began to fade.
Inside the café,
soft conversations and calmness spread.

Mahira wasn’t silent today.
She had begun playing with colors.
Zaria showed her how to hold a paintbrush,
and Ayaan said,

“Your silence has started speaking in colors now.”


Suddenly, Mahira asked Zaria:

“Can I… tell my story?”

Zaria smiled gently:

“Only if you want to.”

Mahira took a deep breath.
Then slowly began…


“My mom says
when I first started talking,
I laughed a lot.
But then dad left…
and it was like sound stopped living in our house.

Everyone became quiet.
So did I.

I had friends at school,
but I felt like
if I said something…
people would leave too.
So… I stopped talking altogether.

I’m just scared…
what if someone listens
and still leaves?”

 


Listening to her, Zaria’s eyes welled up.
Nilofar gently caressed Mahira’s hair.

“No one will leave, Mahira.
Not here.
No one walks away from anyone here.”



At that moment,
a new kind of trust filled the air of Bayaan Café.

For the first time,
Mahira was able to tell someone everything.
And on her face bloomed
a soft, honest smile.


While leaving in the evening,
Mahira said to Ayaan:

“Next time…
I’ll bring my mom too.
Maybe she also needs to pause a little less.”


That night, Zaria wrote in her blue notebook:

*“Sometimes a child’s tiny bit of courage
changes the silence of an entire home.

Today, Bayaan CafĂ© witnessed…
that when someone speaks despite fear,
their voice isn’t just a story —
it becomes a prayer.”*


📚 Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #21 (End)

Tagline:
“Sometimes holding someone’s hesitation becomes their very first flight.”


📚 Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #22

Tagline:
“Sometimes the most unheard story… speaks from your own wall.”


That Saturday morning,
Bayaan Café felt a little different.

The sunlight was clear,
no sign of rain,
and the air carried a soft chill.

Nilofar opened the windows,
Zaria turned a new page in her blue notebook,
and Ayaan stood near the Stop Wall
with his sketchbook.


Today the café was empty.
No new visitor had arrived.

Nilofar said,

“Strange, isn’t it?
No one came today.”

Zaria smiled,

“Maybe today…
the cafĂ© wants to speak to us.”


All three of them looked at the Stop Wall.

Every paper pasted there
held someone’s hesitation —
some had just two or three words,
some had entire stories.

Today they decided
that without inviting anyone,
they would simply read those papers —
and listen to what the silence inside them was saying.


Ayaan picked the first paper.
A small yellow one.
It said:

“I know how to laugh…
but I forget the moment I reach home.”

Nilofar’s eyes filled with tears.

Zaria whispered,

“Sometimes… a tiny paper
says an entire story.”


The second paper said:

“I feel invisible.
Among everyone… yet unseen.”

Ayaan’s fingers paused on the paper.

“Reading this…
feels like maybe I’ve felt this way too.”

https://timespeakestruth.blogspot.com/2025/11/%20tata-car-sales-breakup-number-1-suv-in-october.html 


The third paper said:

“I wish one day someone would come to my door and say —
‘Come on, let’s just go out today.’”

Nilofar touched the paper softly.

“Some wishes are so small…
but when they don’t come true,
they can give the biggest loneliness.”


Zaria slowly spread all the papers on the table.
There were around twenty small notes.

Then she said:

“Today… we will give each paper a voice.
No names.
No faces.
Just each paper… and its story.”


Nilofar read the first one.
Ayaan read the second.
Zaria read the third.

And like that,
a quiet little gathering began inside the café.

Someone’s hesitation,
someone’s fear,
someone’s loneliness…
all were speaking through the papers.


Gradually, all three realized
that the cafĂ© hadn’t just changed the visitors —
it had changed them too.

Nilofar said,

“These walls have heard more
than we have heard ourselves.”


Suddenly, Ayaan closed his sketchbook,
and pasted a big blank paper
right in the middle of the Stop Wall.

On it he wrote:

“Today the cafĂ© told us
we all live inside each other’s stories.
Whatever you cannot say…
we will still listen.”


Zaria whispered,

“Today someone turned the cafĂ© itself
into a story.”


Evening began to fall.
Lights outside slowly lit up.
Inside, the three sat quietly.

They weren’t waiting for anyone.
Because today…
the silence of the walls
was the biggest guest of all.


That night, Zaria wrote in her blue notebook:

“Sometimes, to hear others…
we must pause inside ourselves first.
And today…
Bayaan CafĂ© taught us that.”


📚 Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #22 (End)

Tagline:
“Sometimes the most unheard story… speaks from your own wall.”


Plz readers comment, share, and interact 👇✨


⭐ Engaging Ending Paragraph (For Readers)

If you enjoyed this story, please don’t forget to leave a comment below.
Also tell me which country you are reading from — it really means a lot to me!
If you are from India, write “India 🇼🇳”…
And if you are reading from any other country, mention your country’s name too.
Share this story with your friends so that this journey of thrill and emotion can reach more people.
Your comments and shares are my biggest motivation. Thank you for reading! 😊✨


---

From,  Writer Afsana Wahid 


Saturday, November 8, 2025

Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #19 & #20 – The Silence That Spoke & The Friendship That Stayed




Bayaan Café | Tape #19

Tagline:

“Sometimes, even silence has its own voice — it just needs someone who can listen.”


It was Saturday morning again, and the sunlight at Bayaan Café was a little softer.
Nilofar was opening the window; a faint chill floated in the air.

Ayaan was finishing the sketch of the “Lost & Found Wall” in his sketchbook.
Zaria opened a new notebook and wrote the date on the first page.

She did that every Saturday —
as if every Saturday was a new birth.


The door opened slowly.

This time, no one came running in.
Just one small step… and then another.

It was a girl, about ten years old.
There was no panic on her face,
just a strange kind of silence —
as if she could speak,
but didn’t feel like speaking.

Her eyes were very deep.
So deep that Ayaan’s pencil stopped on its own.

Nilofar bent down and said softly,
“Come in, dear.”

The girl nodded and quietly stepped inside.


“What’s your name?” Zaria asked.

She stayed silent for a while.
Then her lips moved, and a soft voice came out:

Mahira.


Zaria seated her beside her.
“Mahira, do you know what this place is?”

The girl nodded, “A place of stories?”

Zaria smiled.
“Yes. Here, stories aren’t spoken… they are heard.

Mahira asked quietly,
“What if I don’t speak at all — will someone still listen?”


There was a strange tiredness in that question.
Zaria’s heart seemed to fill up.

She held Mahira’s hand and said:

“To speak, you need words —
but to listen, you only need a heart.”


Ayaan opened his sketchbook.
“Come on, let’s make a story without words today.”

Mahira looked at him curiously.

“You don’t have to say anything,” he said.
“Just stop my pencil whenever you feel like stopping.”


The sketch began.

The first line — a girl.
Then, slowly, Mahira’s fingers began to guide the pencil,
stopping it again and again.

Each pause appeared where the leaves fell from a tree,
where a house’s window was closed,
where the sky turned a little hazy.


Nilofar watched silently.

Every pause seemed to tell her a story of its own.

When the sketch was finished,
Mahira smiled — for the first time.


“What should we call this?” Zaria asked.

Mahira whispered softly:

The Places Where I Stop.


Ayaan wrote beneath it:

Sometimes the stops tell the story —
louder than the journeys.


After a while, Mahira asked for a blank sheet of paper.
She didn’t write any words.
She just drew a small, round sun —
with a dot in the center.

Zaria asked,
“What’s this?”

Mahira said,
“When everything becomes blurry,
only one small light remains in memory.”


Nilofar asked gently,
“Shall I drop you home, Mahira?”

Mahira shook her head — “No.”
“I’ll come again.”

And she left.


After she went,
a new kind of silence filled the corners of the Café.

Zaria hung that sketch on the “Lost & Found Wall.”

Below it, she wrote:

The Girl Who Drew a Sun Inside Her Stops.


That night, Zaria wrote in her notebook:

“Some children get lost by making noise,
and some by staying silent.

Bayaan CafĂ© has taught me —
every silence has its own language,
it just needs the right ears to hear it.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #19
Tagline:

“Sometimes, even silence has its own voice — it just needs someone who can listen.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #20

Tagline:

“Sometimes, friendship isn’t made by talking…
it’s made by holding someone’s silence.”


A week later.

The morning at Bayaan Café was a little different.
It was raining lightly.
Raindrops on the windows,
and inside — the same warm, calm atmosphere.

Zaria sat near the window with her blue notebook open.
Ayaan sat opposite her, sketching —
he was darkening the same picture of Mahira.

Nilofar smiled gently.
“Looks like she’ll come again today.”


The door opened.

Mahira came in.
Her silence was still there —
but her eyes carried a little more courage now.

She went straight to Zaria,
and without saying anything,
sat down beside her.

Zaria closed her notebook.
“So, do we listen to a story today… or make one?”

Mahira shook her head softly,
“Today… I just want to be here.”


Raindrops were falling on the glass.
Both of them sat quietly.

Then, suddenly, Mahira pulled out
a small piece of paper from her pocket.

It was damp, edges slightly torn.

Zaria asked,
“What’s this?”

Mahira said,
“This is my… ‘pause.’”


There was only one line written on it,
in a childlike handwriting —

“I don’t tell anyone… because everyone listens, then leaves.”


Zaria gently held her hand.

“What if someone doesn’t leave?”

Mahira looked at her.

“Then maybe… I’ll speak.”


For the first time, Mahira smiled — a faint, tender smile.

Ayaan captured that moment in his sketchbook —
two people sitting by the window,
and a small, damp piece of paper between them.


Nilofar came closer.

“Mahira, would you like us to make a new corner here?”

Mahira’s eyes lit up.

Nilofar said,
“I’ll call it the Stop Wall
where any child who feels stuck can hang a page,
so they’ll know no pause is ever alone.”


That day, Mahira pinned her paper to the wall.

Below it, Zaria wrote:

“At the root of every pause lies a waiting —
and every waiting just needs a friend.”


By evening, Bayaan Café had changed.

Mahira was now a little more open.
She was filling colors in Zaria’s notebook.
Every page that Zaria had left blank,
Mahira drew a small sun on it.


Before leaving, Mahira said softly,
“Zaria… if I speak someday,
will you listen?”

Zaria smiled,
“Always.”


That night, Zaria wrote in her notebook:

“For the first time today,
I felt that sometimes,
friendship begins with just one page…
and slowly becomes an entire book.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #20
Tagline:

“Sometimes, friendship isn’t made by talking…
it’s made by holding someone’s silence.”


✨ Author’s Note for Readers ✨


If this story from Bayaan CafĂ© —

“The Silence That Spoke & The Friendship That Stayed”

touched your heart,

please share it with your friends and loved ones ❤️

Sometimes, a simple story can make someone’s day a little lighter

and their heart a little warmer.

And yes, don’t forget to leave a comment —

Tell me how you felt about Mahira and Zaria’s quiet friendship.

Have you ever heard a story hidden in someone’s silence?

Also, let me know where you’re reading from —

your city, your country, or your cozy little corner of the world 🌍

Your one line of feedback means the world to me 💌


– Afsana Wahid (Writer, Bayaan CafĂ© Series)

https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/blog-post_07.html


https://timespeakestruth.blogspot.com/2025/11/hyundai-creta-2025-review-design-engine-features.html

Tuesday, November 4, 2025

Bayaan CafĂ© | Tape #17 & #18 – Letters, Sketches, and Lost Childhoods That Found Hope Again




Bayaan Café | Tape #17
Tagline:


Zaria was a little quiet that day.

Ayaan looked at her — the notebook was open, the pen was in her hand, but the page was blank.

“What happened?” he asked.

Zaria didn’t reply. She just lowered her head slightly and closed her eyes — as if some sound was echoing deep inside her, one that wasn’t easy to bring out.

Nilofar came to her softly, placed a glass of turmeric milk in front of her, and said:

“Some stories aren’t meant to be written… they’re meant to be understood. Maybe today, you’re living one of those.”


Ayaan quietly opened his sketchbook and placed it before Zaria.

There was a drawing — a girl and a boy sitting on a swing.
The girl’s face had no lines, only her eyes — deep, calm, and a little tired.

“This is you,” Ayaan said. “But your face is empty… because I couldn’t understand what you’re feeling today. Should I try to help?”

For the first time, Zaria looked at him — and gave a faint smile.

“Today my story won’t be made of words… maybe it’ll be made of an old letter.”


Zaria took out an envelope from her bag.

Old, slightly folded, torn around the edges. She handed it to Ayaan.

“My mother gave this to me when she sent me to the hostel for the first time. I never opened it… I was scared.”

Ayaan softly said, “Shall we open it today?”

Zaria nodded.

Even Nilofar, Hammad, and the other corners of the CafĂ© seemed damp — as if the walls too knew that something big was about to happen.

Zaria opened the envelope.

Inside was a small sheet of paper — written in her mother’s handwriting:

“Whenever you feel that your heart has become lonely, know this — you are my most beloved story. I didn’t raise you with words, I raised you with dreams. — Mom”


Zaria’s hands began to tremble.

Ayaan held her hand.

“Should I paste this page into your notebook?” he asked.

Zaria nodded yes.

“So that next time, when I forget that someone loves me… I’ll remember that I was once someone’s favorite story.”


That day, no song played in Bayaan Café.

There was only silence — that said a lot.

Zaria’s eyes were moist, but no longer afraid.

Ayaan turned to the next page in his sketchbook and drew a picture of a mother — resting her hand on her daughter’s head.

And below it, he wrote:

“Some letters don’t need to be read — they just need to be felt.”


That evening, a new board was placed in the Café.

Nilofar and Hammad hung it on the wall together:

“Letters & Sketches Corner”

Where children don’t just tell their stories,
they write them — to their parents, and to understand themselves again.


The next Saturday, a little girl came — her name was Inaaya.

She had no notebook, no sketchbook.
Just a small toy in her hand, and many silences in her eyes.

Zaria made her sit beside her.

“Do you want to listen to a story or tell one?”

Inaaya softly asked,
“If I can’t speak, can it still be a story?”

Zaria held her hand and said:

“Sometimes, the truest stories are the ones never told — only felt.”


Ayaan drew Inaaya’s picture.

She was sitting under a tree — and in the sky above, clouds were shaped by her silences.

Zaria wrote under that painting:

“The Girl Who Spoke With Her Eyes — And Wrote With Her Silences.”


Bayaan Café was slowly becoming a home for children.

Every Saturday, a new story was added, every picture had an unfinished letter behind it, and every voice carried a quiet kind of comfort.

Zaria and Ayaan had become mentors now — but their friendship remained the same: blank notebooks, half-done sketches, and countless smiles.


One day, Nilofar asked Zaria:

“Sometimes I wonder, why do you all keep coming here?”

Zaria replied:

“Because the world outside teaches us to grow up… and the walls here tell us — just stay who you are.”


The last line of Tape #17:

“Sometimes, a notebook, a pencil, and a friend — are enough to rewrite your whole life.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #17
Tagline:

“Every story has its own time — and every time, becomes a story.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #18
Tagline:

“Sometimes, the longest journeys begin with just holding a small hand.”


That Saturday morning, there was a bit of commotion in the Café.

Zaria was sitting near the window, Ayaan was sketching,
Nilofar was at the counter —
when suddenly, the Café door flung open.

A small boy came running in — around seven or eight years old, eyes red, hair messy, breathing fast… and hands trembling.

Fear was written all over his face.

Zaria and Ayaan both stood up.

“What happened?” Nilofar bent down beside him.

The boy couldn’t speak — he just kept crying, clutching his tiny T-shirt tightly in his fists.

Nilofar gently pulled him close, “It’s okay, son, you’re here now… you’re safe.”


The boy said his name — Areeb.

“I lost my mom… there were too many people… then she was just gone…”

Nilofar gave him some water,
and then brought him to Zaria.

Zaria made him sit beside her.

Ayaan stood a little away, sketchbook in his hand.

Zaria looked into Areeb’s eyes —
there was panic there, and something else… something that shouldn’t be in a child’s eyes: the fear of being left behind.

“Do you like stories?” Zaria asked.

Areeb nodded.

“Then let’s make one together, the three of us.”


Ayaan tore out a sheet of paper.

Zaria said, “We’ll call it — The Boy Who Lost His Hand… But Found a Hug.

Areeb smiled a little.

Zaria said, “Because when one hand slips away, another always appears — as an embrace.”


Ayaan began sketching.

There was a small boy surrounded by many blurry faces —
but in the middle stood a bright wall that read: Bayaan Café.

Behind the boy stood a girl — like Zaria —
wrapping him in a blanket made of wings.


Nilofar softly said:

“I’ve called the police… his parents might be looking for him.”

Areeb was calmer now.

Zaria took out her blue notebook, opened a blank page, and wrote:

“When you feel lost — sometimes, no one finds you… someone just meets you.”

Ayaan pasted that line under the sketch.


A little while later, a woman came running into the Café.

Tears filled her eyes, her voice trembled:

“Areeb!!”

Areeb turned his head…
and ran to her, wrapping himself tightly around her.

“Mama!”

Everything stopped.

Nilofar, Zaria, and Ayaan stood silently behind.

The mother folded her hands, saying,
“Thank you… thank you so much…”

Zaria just smiled and nodded.

“Sometimes a story exists only so that someone can find home again.”


That day, another frame was added to the Café wall.

The sketch Ayaan made was now placed on ‘The Lost & Found Wall.’

Below it was written:

“The Boy Who Was Found — Not By Name, But By Kindness.”


Now Bayaan CafĂ© had one more corner —

‘Areeb’s Corner.’
There stood the painting, with some blank notebooks beside it.

Nilofar also kept a small basket there, with a note that said:

“If ever a small hand gets lost — just open this notebook,
you’ll surely find it in some story.”


That night, Zaria wrote in her notebook:

“Childhood doesn’t lose to fear…
it only cries when no one calls its name in the crowd.
And when someone finally does —
it wears its wings again.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #18
Tagline:

“Sometimes, the longest journeys begin with just holding a small hand.”


🌍 Message for Readers 

> Dear Readers,

No matter which country you’re reading from — India or abroad — if this story touched your heart, please share it with your friends and family.


Your comments mean a lot! Tell me in the comment section how you felt about this story, and let’s spread the warmth of Bayaan CafĂ© to every corner of the world.


— With love, Afsana Wahid


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/doctor-bakhsh-kandeel-haveli-romantic-suspense-story.html

Monday, November 3, 2025

Bayaan CafĂ© Tape 14 & 15: The Girl Who Was Not a Princess – Zaria & Ayaan’s Emotional Story by Afsana Wahid




Bayaan Café | Tape #14

Tagline:

“Some stories aren’t measured by age — they’re measured by pain. And Zaria’s story is one of them.”


The café clock had just struck eight
when Zaria walked in with her blue bag —
her hair still a little damp,
perhaps her mother had hurried her through a bath.

Her slippers were slightly wet today —
the scent of rain-washed earth followed her inside.
Her eyes searched for that same corner, that same table…
and maybe for that same silence that had now become her closest friend.

“Good morning, Nilofar Aunty…”
she said softly, just as she always did —
like the first note of a gentle song —
quiet, yet full of trust.

Nilofar was behind the counter, slightly bent forward,
wiping the little wooden box on which Hammad had neatly written:

“Zaria’s Corner — where stories are built not by fairies, but by courage.”

“Good morning, little writer,” Nilofar replied,
pulling out that small yellow chair —
the one where Zaria would sit and unfold the layers of her thoughts.


That day, the Café felt different.

Because of the rain, there were fewer people,
but near the window, Hammad sat with an old camera in front of him —
capturing the cafĂ©’s quiet moments, frame by frame.

Nilofar smiled and asked,
“Still afraid of memories?”

Without looking up, Hammad replied:

“Not anymore…
I don’t try to stop them now —
I just try to hold them.”


Zaria seemed a little restless that day.

She opened her wooden box
and took out a blue notebook —
on its cover, in her own handwriting, were the words:

“The Girl Who Was Not a Princess.”

Nilofar noticed a bit of dirt under Zaria’s fingernails —
perhaps she had picked up a leaf on her way.

“Did you write something new today?” she asked.

Zaria lowered her head
and slowly passed the notebook toward Nilofar.


Nilofar began to read:

“The girl built a bridge out of her silences —
a bridge where she could finally meet herself.
She couldn’t fly like the fairies,
but she had learned to be afraid —
and still, she walked.”

“One day she decided —
she would write her own story.
The story where
her mother hugs her quietly every night before sleep,
and her father, before leaving, always turns to wave goodbye.”


Nilofar’s eyes grew moist.

She brushed a strand of hair from Zaria’s face and whispered:

“Your story is beautiful…
and very brave.”

Zaria asked,
“Is it hard to be brave?”

Nilofar smiled —
a smile that came from the depths of an old wound.

“Being brave is always hard…
but if you are brave,
the world’s best stories belong to you.”


Then, a new face entered the Café.

A boy — perhaps fourteen or fifteen —
holding a sketchbook in his hands.

He looked around,
then walked over and sat beside Zaria.

Nilofar looked a little surprised,
but Zaria smiled —
as if she already knew a new character was about to walk into her story.

“Hi, I’m Ayaan,” the boy said.

“Zaria,” she replied —
softly, but without hesitation.

“Can I draw your story?” he asked.

Zaria glanced toward Nilofar, then said:

“If my story makes you feel something — draw it.
Because the best pictures aren’t written… they’re felt.”


A New Frame on Bayaan CafĂ©’s Wall

A few weeks later, Ayaan made a sketch —
Zaria, sitting with her blue notebook,
and around her floated letters and words,
as if they were turning into wings upon her shoulders.

Hammad placed the sketch on the brightest wall of the CafĂ© —
right beside the corner where Zaria always sat.

And beneath it, he wrote:

“The Girl Who Was Not a Princess —
But Was Brave Enough To Be Herself.”


From then on, the Saturday mornings of the Café changed forever.

Zaria wrote.
Ayaan drew.
Nilofar served them turmeric milk.
And Hammad played old songs in new tunes.

Sometimes, an old customer’s gaze would stop at that corner —
watching the two children
quietly weaving a new world —
slowly, but with complete truth.


Tagline – Tape #15:

“Where words learn to fly, childhood forgets to fear — and every corner becomes a story.”


Bayaan Café | Tape #15

Tagline:

“Where words learn to fly, childhood forgets to fear — and every corner becomes a story.”


Zaria no longer wrote alone.
Ayaan sat right across from her —
sketchbook in hand, pencil between his teeth,
sometimes lost in her words, sometimes listening to her silences.

“Why do all your characters fly?” Ayaan once asked —
he had drawn little wings on the corners of her notebook pages.

Zaria replied:

“Because when things break,
they learn to fly…
the ground hurts too much.”

Ayaan said nothing.
On the last page of his sketchbook,
he drew a girl —
she had no feet,
but wings behind her.


Their worlds were a little incomplete —
but somehow, they completed each other.

Zaria wrote,
Ayaan read and captured her world in his lines.

“Have you ever drawn your father’s picture?” Zaria asked one day.

Ayaan’s pencil froze.

“No. Never had the courage,” he said softly.

“Then draw it someday in my notebook,” Zaria said.
“Maybe there you won’t be afraid…
because in my stories, no one stays angry.”

Ayaan’s eyes shimmered,
but he said nothing.


Saturday mornings were no longer small.

More children had started coming to the CafĂ© —
some inspired by Zaria and Ayaan,
some simply curious.

Nilofar had set up a small rack for them —
“The Young Dreamers’ Shelf,”
where Zaria’s stories and Ayaan’s little paintings were kept.

Hammad began a new program —
“Story Saturdays.”
Zaria would read her stories aloud
while Ayaan drew live sketches beside her.

People would stop, listen, smile —
and the voices of children
lit up the CafĂ©’s old corners with new light.


One day, Zaria handed Ayaan a letter —
a small pink envelope
with the words written on it:

“Open this when you don’t like your sketches.”

Ayaan smiled,
“How will you know I’ve opened it?”

Zaria replied:

“When you draw your next sketch with a smile…
I’ll know the letter reached you.”


Nilofar once asked them both,
“How did you two become such close friends?”

Zaria replied:

“Because we both wanted to understand ourselves
more than the world.”

Ayaan nodded.
“Zaria doesn’t talk much,” he said,
“but even her silences are full of stories.”


That corner of the Café was now called
“Zaria & Ayaan’s Table.”

People came and went,
but every week, the two of them remained —
the girl who wove stories out of broken words,
and the boy who colored them with his quietness.

One day, Zaria handed her notebook to Ayaan:

“This story is unfinished…
because at the end,
the girl is about to tell someone her secret for the first time.
Can you draw her eyes?”

Ayaan smiled:

“I’ll draw them from your eyes —
because now I know,
your eyes don’t hold stories…
they hold entire lives.”


Bayaan Café was no longer just a place.

It had become a shelter
for children who didn’t live in noise,
but built their worlds out of quietness.

Every Saturday, that corner would fill —
with tiny writers, young artists,
and big, big stories.

Nilofar and Hammad would sometimes watch from afar,
and sometimes walk up to say:

“Sometimes love doesn’t belong to a person —
it belongs to that quiet corner
where two broken souls learn to piece each other together.”


Tagline – Tape #16:

“Friendship doesn’t need age — only a shoulder where stories can rest for a while.”



“The Girl Who Was Not a Princess — But Was Brave Enough to Be Herself.”
Would you like that?




 

Dear Readers,


If this story touched your heart, please take a moment to read it completely, share it with your friends, and leave a comment below.

Your words mean a lot — they keep stories like Bayaan CafĂ© alive.


We’d also love to know from which country you’re reading Afsana Wahid’s stories!

Drop your country name in the comments — let’s see how far Zaria and Ayaan’s story travels across the world đŸŒđŸ’«


With love,

Team Bayaan Café | Written by Afsana Wahid


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2025/11/doctor-bakhsh-kandeel-haveli-romantic-suspense-story.html


https://timespeakestruth.blogspot.com/2025/11/hyundai-venue-2025-launch-price-features-specs-hindi.html

Whispers of the Journey: Love, Truth and a Misunderstanding that Changed Everything

  “Whispers of the Journey” The cold winds made the streets of Toronto even harsher. The warm glow spilling out of the bakery’s windows cut ...