Tag: free online romance

  • THE TIME KEEPER’S POEM- Chapter Seventeen- Settling Into Chaos

    THE TIME KEEPER’S POEM- Chapter Seventeen- Settling Into Chaos

    Dinner was surprisingly successful—meaning nothing was burnt beyond recognition, and the fire alarm remained mercifully silent. Arin had barely finished his plate when Shanaya leaned forward, her eyes twinkling with mischief.

    “Okay, so now that you’ve survived my cooking, you’re officially family,” she declared.

    Astha snorted. “That’s a very low bar.”

    “You say that like I haven’t raised that bar significantly,” Shanaya shot back. “Besides, Arin passed the real test—he ate everything without hesitation. That makes him either incredibly brave or slightly unhinged.”

    Arin smiled, placing his fork down. “Or maybe I just enjoyed the meal.”

    Astha raised an eyebrow. “See, that’s how you know he’s being polite. We don’t do polite here, Arin. We believe in brutal honesty.”

    “Oh? And what would brutal honesty sound like in this case?” he asked, leaning back, genuinely entertained.

    Astha took a sip of her tea and deadpanned, “That was an edible tragedy.”

    Shanaya gasped dramatically. “How dare you insult my masterpiece?”

    “Sweetheart, it tasted like you had a very close call with disaster, and somehow, miraculously, disaster backed off at the last minute,” Astha said, her face perfectly straight.

    Arin chuckled, shaking his head. He had never met anyone quite like her. Astha had this rare ability to make her words cut and amuse at the same time, her humor sharp but never unkind. It fascinated him.

    “So, what’s next on this family bonding night?” he asked, looking between the two.

    Shanaya grinned. “Movie roast night! We pick a terrible movie and mercilessly tear it apart. Mom is undefeated.”

    “She’s undefeated in a lot of things, it seems,” Arin mused.

    Astha shrugged. “What can I say? Excellence is a burden.”

    “Oh, please,” Shanaya rolled her eyes, pulling up a list of absurdly bad movies. “Alright, what’s your tolerance level for second-hand embarrassment? Because I have a selection that will make you question human intelligence.”

    Arin considered this for a moment. “I suppose I’m about to find out.”

    And just like that, Arin found himself seated on the couch, sandwiched between two women who had perfected the art of sarcastic commentary. The movie began, some over-the-top melodramatic dialogue filling the room, and before he knew it, Astha had fired off her first critique.

    “If stupidity were an Olympic sport, this character would take home gold.”

    Shanaya pointed at the screen. “And look! The hero has a tragic backstory that makes absolutely no sense. He fell down the stairs as a child, and now he’s a brooding billionaire.”

    Arin smiled, shaking his head. “That’s a very specific cause-and-effect.”

    “It’s all about trauma,” Astha said sagely. “Apparently, if you suffer even minor inconvenience in these movies, you either become a playboy CEO or a vengeful assassin. There is no in-between.”

    A particularly dramatic scene played out, with the heroine running in slow motion through the rain. Shanaya clutched her chest. “Oh no, she’s crying! And in movie logic, that means she’s suddenly in love.”

    Astha shook her head. “This woman just met him three days ago. I’ve had deeper emotional connections with my coffee.”

    Arin chuckled, shaking his head. “I’m impressed. You two could be professional critics.”

    “We have a dream,” Shanaya said dramatically. “To save humanity from terrible cinema.”

    Astha sighed wistfully. “But humanity keeps failing us.”

    As the movie rolled on, he wasn’t thinking about the past or the future.

    He was simply there.

    With them.

    And for the first time in his existence, he wasn’t just observing life.

    He was living it.

  • THE TIME KEEPER’S POEM: Chapter Sixteen: A Different Kind of Battle

    THE TIME KEEPER’S POEM: Chapter Sixteen: A Different Kind of Battle

    The drive back was quieter than usual, not awkward, but contemplative. Arin kept glancing at Astha from the corner of his eye, still processing everything he had seen earlier. Her warmth, the way people gravitated toward her, the way she disarmed them with humor and made them feel valued—it was something entirely different from the guarded, reserved woman she seemed to be at work.

    Astha, oblivious to his observations, was busy scrolling through her phone, checking a message from Shanaya.

    “She’s reminding me to bring ice cream,” she muttered. “Like I’d dare go home without it. The wrath of a teenager is not something I’m prepared to deal with.”

    Arin smiled. “Wise decision.”

    As they pulled into the parking lot, Astha unbuckled her seatbelt. “Thanks for the lift, but I’m warning you—this doesn’t mean you get permanent errand duty.”

    Arin leaned back against his seat, a slow smile forming. “I’ll take my chances.”

    She rolled her eyes, stepping out of the car. Arin followed, carrying a few bags despite her protests. As they made their way upstairs, the moment they stepped into the hallway, the door to Astha’s apartment flew open.

    “Ice cream?” Shanaya asked immediately, eyes darting to the bags.

    Astha sighed dramatically, handing over a small tub. “Your lifeline, madam.”

    Shanaya grinned. “You live to fight another day. Oh, hey, Arin! Did Mom make you carry everything? She’s a master at delegation.”

    “I’m starting to see that,” Arin replied dryly.

    Astha gave him a pointed look. “I don’t hear any complaints.”

    Shanaya laughed. “You poor, poor man. Welcome to the club.”

    Astha shook her head, then turned to Arin. “Since you’re already here, might as well stay for dinner. Shanaya’s cooking.”

    Arin raised an eyebrow at Shanaya, who nodded. “Oh yeah, I’m a culinary genius. As long as you like burnt toast, slightly overcooked pasta, and the occasional fire hazard.”

    Astha patted her daughter’s head. “We set low expectations, so when the food turns out edible, it feels like a win.”

    Arin chuckled, feeling something warm settle in his chest. This—this effortless banter, this sense of belonging—it was something he had never truly experienced before. And he wasn’t sure he ever wanted to step away from it.

    Astha led them inside, tossing her bag onto the couch. “Alright, let’s see if we make it through this meal without the smoke alarm going off.”

    Arin glanced around the cozy apartment, the scent of home-cooked food already filling the air. For someone who had spent his life surrounded by sterility and precision, this chaos, this warmth, was something entirely foreign.

    And yet, he found himself wanting more of it.