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Chapter 3: The Shadow on the Stage

  A grayish purple hung overhead when practice began. When storms near in Punjab, everything slows under thick air smelling of wet soil mixed with burning sticks. Heavy clouds matched how I felt inside - tight, close to breaking.

  "Dhanya, your hair is messy," Amma said, tugging at my braids while I gulped down my breakfast. "And why are you wearing your new ribbons? It's just a Tuesday."

  That’s just how things are done here, Amma,” I told her, looking away. Lying felt heavy in my chest. She never shouted or scolded, yet somehow caught every flicker behind my careful smile. Her silence held more questions than words ever could.

  "Be careful," she whispered, almost to herself. "Your father is stressed about the plant today. Don’t give him a reason to worry."

  A quick nod came as I held the bag tighter. Hidden beneath Math and Science texts inside sat something small - pages filled with Shlokas and Raags, hand-scribed by Muthassi back in Kerala. This notebook traveled far. Luck lived between its lines.

  The Great Rehearsal Heist

  Fizzing through the corridors, energy bounced off lockers and chatter. Shifting the "Zonal Rehearsal" meant it now filled the Main Hall - floors of aged wood groaning beneath each step, sounding just like timbers in a weathered vessel at sea.

  Priya stood by the entrance, Monisha beside her, both blocking the way like guards. Then again, they’d always played tough at crossings.

  "The seniors are coming in through the back," Monisha hissed, her eyes darting around. "I saw Chandru’s group. They’re sitting in the last row so the teachers won't see them."

  Shaking started in my fingers. Over at Arjun and Karthik, my eyes landed. Seriousness showed up on Arjun’s face - something rare. Jokes stayed tucked away, so did his usual push.

  "Ready, Dhanya?" he asked, adjusting his school tie. "Let's show them that 6th grade doesn't mean 'small voices'."

  The room glowed faintly as our feet touched the stage floor. Back rows held shapes - older kids, just outlines at first. Noise poured from them, full of jokes, not caring about us younger ones standing there. That is when my eyes caught his face.

  Back in the final seat, propped by the wall, sat Chandru - sketchbook resting on his knees. Not joining the laughter around him. Just watching. From where I stood onstage, something about him drew attention without effort. A quiet intensity. The sort who seems shaped more by drawings than words, guided by reflections few notice.

  The Voice That Ended Quiet

  A soft nod came from the front of the room. Out of stillness, the harmonium breathed a steady tone.

  My voice started out weak. Singing felt like answering my father’s refusal. It carried the weight of hiding, of almost getting caught. Then something shifted - Chandru came into view. His charcoal lay on the desk now. The stage held his eyes.

  Eyes shut, memories pulled me back to Muthassi. Kerala’s coconut trees swayed in my mind, morning light caught in their leaves. Temple bells rang soft then, just before day broke fully. Obedience slipped away one breath at a time. Belonging settled into its place, quiet and sure.

  Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.

  Out of nowhere, the high note arrived. Most times, right here, my breathing would freeze. Not now. This moment, I released it instead. Up it flew into the room, striking the old wood above before echoing down again. Sound faded from behind. Laughter died out mid-breath. Crinkles of wrappers just hung there, then vanished.

  A hush fell as the sixth grader from Kerala began. Three minutes stretched like prayer inside those walls. The Punjab school room breathed differently now - still, focused. Her voice carved space where noise once lived. Feet stilled. Eyes lowered. A temple formed without stones or bells. It rose from silence, shaped by presence alone.

  The Encounter

  A hush hung thick in the air right after we stopped. Then came the sound of hands meeting - teachers applauding without delay. Off the stage I rushed, chest pulsing, breath tight, as if something wild beat inside trying to escape.

  "Dhanya! You did it!" Priya tackled me in a hug. "Even the 10th graders were staring!"

  Out into the open, I went. Through the side exit it was, heading toward the quiet part where the music rooms sat unused. A breath - that is what I chased, nothing more. Before returning as the girl who follows every rule, one pause mattered.

  "You dropped this."

  A sound - low, steady - drifted out from the dark stretch of hallway. My body stopped moving.

  There stood Chandru. Even closer, his presence felt heavier. In his hand appeared my grandmother’s notebook. Must’ve slipped during the scramble down from the stage.

  Mine… it belongs to me. Thanks,” I said, shaky, stretching my hand out. His skin met mine just for a second when I grabbed the book, then - zap - a shock ran through me, strong enough to tighten every muscle down to my feet.

  It took him a moment to release his grip. His eyes stayed on the drawing of a tiny jasmine bloom I’d sketched on the cover. That quiet skill lives inside you, Dhanya. Others push notes from their throat. Yours come back from what you’ve held onto

  Words slipped away. "Recall?"

  "You sound like you're missing a place you've never been to," he said, a small, mysterious smile playing on his lips. "Don't let the rules of this school - or any other place - quiet that down. We need more voices like yours."

  A shout rang out down the hall - his name called by older students - before I had time to speak. Off he went with just a tilt of the head, vanishing into the stretch of noise and light. Dust swirled where sun hit floorboards, and there I stayed, arms tight around my notebook like it might slip away.

  The Reality Check

  Home changed everything - suddenly, the night felt heavier.

  A hush hung inside. Not just quiet - too still.

  Papa sat by the dining table. Not rice, not Sambar - just my school bag waited there. Beside it rested a slip, yellow as sunlight. A piece of paper, sharp in its brightness.

  That old piece of paper. Stuffed away where no one would think to look. Meant never to be found - just gone

  Dhanya,” Papa said. Not mad, his face held something else… a quiet letdown. Worse than shouting by far. In hunting down her extra pen - needed for the power company form - he’d stumbled on it

  Heavy on my feet, the school shoes pinned me near the doorway.

  "You didn't just hide the paper," he said softly. "You hid your heart from me. Do you think I don't know you want to go? Do you think I enjoy saying no to my own daughter?"

  Falling down my cheeks now, the words came soft - “All I ever wished was to sing, Papa.”.

  "You are singing," he stood up, walking toward me. "But you are also learning to be a stranger in your own home. If you start keeping secrets at eleven, what will you be doing at twenty?"

  He took the slip and tore it slowly into four pieces. "No Zonal. And for the next month, no music practice after school. You will come straight home. You need to remember who you are before you forget us."

  Faster than thought, I was inside my room, falling across the mattress. Close behind, Shwetha moved next to me - silent, her tiny fingers settling on my shoulder without a sound.

  Chandru walked into my life. My words started coming out clear. Then came the noise - paper ripping, touching down on tiles next door - and suddenly it hit me: growing up never happens softly. Things crack along the way.

  Back then, school still felt like a distant maze. Seventh grade loomed ahead, untouched. Not once had I stepped into that classroom.

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