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: “Some Friends Are Like Snow: A Winter Love Story of Silence, Respect, and Healing”

Thursday, January 29, 2026

“Some Friends Are Like Snow: A Winter Love Story of Silence, Respect, and Healing”

 



Story Continues…

A few days slipped by quietly.

Winter was loosening its grip on the city,

though patches of snow still clung stubbornly to the streets—

as if unwilling to let go.

New faces continued to enter the bakery every day.

Some came for hot chocolate,

some just to rest their tired souls for a moment.

But Ehsan knew—

the bakery was no longer just a workplace for him.

It had become the corner of the world

where his broken silences were slowly learning

how to turn back into words.

One evening, just as the shop was about to close,

the door opened softly.

A girl stepped inside.

She was wrapped in a deep blue shawl,

her eyes restless, as if searching for something she had lost.

She walked up to the counter and asked gently,

“Is Ehsan Arif here?”

Zoboriya looked up, surprised for a moment—

then offered a warm smile.

“Yes. Please have a seat. I’ll call him.”

Ehsan came out from the back.

The moment his eyes met hers,

he froze.

“You…?”

The girl smiled faintly.

“You don’t know me.

But I know you.

My brother spoke about you a lot—

about your photographs.

His name was Arslan.”

Ehsan’s hands began to tremble.

Arslan.

A name he had never truly been able to forget.

A friend from years ago—

taken away by a cruel accident.

And now…

his sister stood right in front of him.

Zoboriya felt the sudden heaviness settle in the air.

Without a word, she stepped aside,

giving them space.

The girl spoke softly,

“Arslan used to write in his diary that

his favorite photographs were the ones you took.

I…

I just want to see them.

Do you still have them?”

Tears welled up in Ehsan’s eyes.

He nodded slowly.

“Yes…

I still have them.”

The next morning,

Ehsan opened an old wooden box—

one he hadn’t touched in years.

Inside lay the photographs.

Arslan’s laughter.

His mischief.

His innocent joy while playing in the snow.

Moments preserved forever on paper.

The girl held the photographs in her trembling hands.

Tears streamed down her face,

yet a soft smile refused to leave her lips.

“You have no idea what this means to me,” she whispered.

“You brought him back to life for me.”

From that day on,

the girl—Adeeba—

began visiting the bakery often.

She would sit quietly with her coffee,

sometimes sharing small stories about her brother.

Zoboriya watched all of this from a distance.

She saw how slowly—

almost cautiously—

people, stories, and emotions

were returning to Ehsan.

But deep inside her heart,

a quiet fear stirred.

Would Adeeba’s presence take away

the place I’ve carved in Ehsan’s life all these years?

One evening, the bakery was unusually crowded.

Zoboriya managed the counter,

while Ehsan and Adeeba sat by the window, laughing together.

From afar, Zoboriya watched them.

Their laughter.

Their ease.

The comfort between them.

Everything looked so natural.

A sharp pang pierced her heart.

Perhaps… she thought,

I’m no longer needed.

But that night, after the shop had closed,

Ehsan approached her,

a tray in his hands—

two cups of steaming coffee.

“For you,” he said softly,

“and only you.”

Zoboriya looked at him, startled.

“But… Adeeba?”

Ehsan’s voice was calm, certain.

“Adeeba is my friend’s memory.

And you…

You are the habit of my life.

Both have their own place, Zoboriya.

No one can replace the other.”

Light returned to Zoboriya’s eyes.

She lifted her cup and smiled.

“Then, to our friendship—

the kind that stays warm

even in the coldest winters.”

Their cups clinked gently.

And outside the window,

snow began to fall again—

softly,

as if a new story was quietly being written.

That night, despite the warmth inside the room,

Ehsan couldn’t sleep.

He scrolled endlessly on his phone

until he opened Instagram.

His inbox was flooded with messages.

Most of them were from AbuZarr.

Every message carried the same desperation:

“Ehsan, for God’s sake, tell me where Zoboriya is…”

“What’s your relationship with her?”

“Is she alright? Just give me a sign…”

Ehsan inhaled deeply.

His fingers hovered over the screen for a long time.

Finally, he typed:

“Zoboriya is my dearest and closest friend.

But I can’t tell you where she is—

because she made me promise never to reveal it.

Her dignity means more to me

than anything else.”

When he pressed send,

a small weight lifted from his chest.

Yet an uneasy restlessness remained.

He knew that hiding Zoboriya from the world

also meant hiding her past.

And maybe—

right now—

hiding was necessary.

He placed the phone aside and looked out the window.

Snow was falling quietly.

A faint smile touched his lips.

He opened his camera gallery

and stopped at a picture from last week.

Zoboriya stood with her back to the lens,

snow resting on her shoulders,

while he laughed, tossing snow into the air.

The photo was innocent.

Pure.

Unguarded.

Ehsan posted it on Instagram.

The caption read:

“Some friends are like snow—

they make life beautiful, even in the cold.”

The next morning,

the bakery smelled of fresh coffee and warm bread.

Snow still covered the streets outside.

Zoboriya was arranging cups

when her phone began to vibrate nonstop.

Messages poured in.

“So beautiful!”

“Your bond with Ehsan is special.”

“Zoboriya, you look so happy.”

Her steps slowed.

A strange mix of warmth and unease filled her chest.

She opened Instagram

and saw the picture.

Her silhouette.

Ehsan’s laughter.

That caption.

She stared at the screen for a long moment.

A soft smile formed—

but her eyes glistened.

Taking a steady breath,

she walked toward Ehsan,

who was fixing the coffee machine.

Quietly, she said,

“You know…

I hadn’t seen this picture before.

But now that I have,

I realize something.

Maybe for the first time in my life,

someone has given me respect

without me ever asking for it.”

Ehsan turned toward her.

His eyes were steady, honest.

“Zoboriya,

I only did what felt right.

You are my friend.

And friendship means

making your pain my own.”

She let out a trembling laugh.

“Sometimes I wonder…

if I had met you earlier,

maybe my story would have been different.”

Ehsan remained silent for a moment,

then whispered,

“Perhaps.

But it’s not too late.

Because your next story, Zoboriya—

I’m writing it with you.”

Outside, snow continued to fall.

Inside the bakery,

a new beginning had already been written—

quietly,

in silence.

Meanwhile…

Ehsan’s post was spreading rapidly.

Likes.

Shares.

Comments.

But no one was more restless than AbuZarr.

He opened the photo again and again.

Zoboriya’s silhouette.

The snow.

Ehsan’s presence beside her.

Every detail stabbed his heart.

In anger, he slammed his phone onto the table.

“No… this can’t be.

Zoboriya was only mine.

So why is this Ehsan in her life now?”

He paced the room,

breathing uneven,

hands shaking.

But the most painful part—

the location was hidden.

He searched every comment,

every tag.

Nothing.

Through clenched teeth, he muttered,

“Canada?

Somewhere else?

Why did she leave me…

and why with him?”

Tears burned his eyes.

He typed another message:

“Zoboriya…

just once, tell me you’re okay.

I’m still waiting.”

He stared at the screen for hours.

No reply.

Not even a seen.

That night, AbuZarr lay awake, restless.

Every time he closed his eyes,

the same image returned—

Zoboriya’s smile,

and Ehsan standing beside her.

His heart whispered,

“If I can’t find her…

then maybe I’ll lose her forever.”




(Future Plot – Reader Hook)

Adeeba slowly realizes that her bond with Ehsan is rooted in memory, not the future.

Zoboriya begins to confront her fear of abandonment and learns to trust happiness.

AbuZarr’s obsession turns into regret when he starts understanding the damage he caused.

A moment will come when AbuZarr and Zoboriya face each other—not for reunion, but for closure.

Ehsan will be tested: protect Zoboriya’s peace or face the truth openly.

Love will not arrive loudly—

it will arrive quietly, through consistency, safety, and respect.

(Moral / Lesson)

Not every relationship needs to be named to be meaningful.

True care protects dignity, even in silence.

Some people heal us not by loving us loudly, but by respecting us deeply.

The past may explain pain, but it should never be allowed to control the future.

Friendship built on trust can be stronger than love built on possession.

🔹 Next Short Part (Mini Continuation)

Next Part – Short Scene

The snow stopped falling that night.

In the quiet bakery, Ehsan noticed something change.

Zoboriya no longer looked over her shoulder when the door opened.

For the first time, she felt safe enough

to stay present.

Outside, AbuZarr typed another message—

then erased it.

Inside, Zoboriya smiled without fear.

Some endings don’t need answers.

Some beginnings don’t need promises.

They only need peace.

🔹 Thank You, Dear Readers 🤍

Thank you for walking through this silent winter with us.

Thank you for feeling the pauses, the unspoken words, and the warmth hidden beneath the snow.

If this story touched your heart,

know that it was written for souls who believe

that respect is the purest form of love.

Stay with us—

the story is still breathing.


https://afsanawahidwrites.blogspot.com/2026/01/beeta-hua-rishta-aur-badhta-hua-khatra-kahani.html




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