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One Hundred Almosts

Anonymous_Bookworm
56
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 56 chs / week.
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Synopsis
He is running out of time. Diagnosed with a terminal illness he refuses to name out loud, a young man becomes fixated on a single belief: that before he dies, he must find the person he is meant to love. Not casually. Not briefly. Truly. Then he starts seeing her. On trains. In cafés. At pedestrian crossings. In waiting rooms. Always close enough to notice the way she tucks her hair behind her ear. The way she holds her jacket to her shoulder. But, never close enough to speak. He begins counting their encounters. One becomes ten. Ten becomes fifty. He tells himself that if fate keeps placing her in his path, it must be asking something of him. He deliberately shapes his life around her orbit, believing that on the hundredth meeting, the universe will finally allow them to collide. And it does. They fall in love quietly. Genuinely. At the exact wrong time. When his condition suddenly worsens, he vanishes without explanation, choosing disappearance over letting her witness his decline. She is left with unanswered questions, grief without closure, and a love that never had time to grow roots. What neither of them knows is that she works as a nurse. And fate, cruel and meticulous, brings her into the same hospital where he lies sedated, unrecognizable, and slipping away. They pass each other in corridors. She tends to patients beside him. She hears fragments of his story spoken by others. When she finally stands before him, he cannot see her. Cannot know her. Cannot say her name. Their love becomes a pattern of presence without recognition. A story about timing that never forgives. About love that arrives too late. And about whether being seen, even once, can be enough.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter One: The First Almost (1)

The first time he noticed her, it was raining.

Not dramatically. No cinematic downpour. Just enough that the city looked blurred at the edges, like it was trying to soften itself. Elias stood under the narrow awning outside a café he couldn't afford to sit in anymore, watching the rain bead against the glass, counting the seconds between passing buses.

He wasn't waiting for anyone.

That was the strange part.

He had learned, over the past few months, that waiting implied expectation. Expectation implied disappointment. So he practiced standing still without hope, the way patients practiced breathing through pain.

She stepped into the frame of his vision without asking permission.

Dark hair pulled back loosely, strands already slipping free. A canvas tote bag pressed against her side, soaked at the bottom. She paused just inside the awning, shaking rain from her sleeves, her face tilted upward like she was briefly considering whether the weather might listen if she complained politely.

Elias noticed details the way he always did now. The way time had sharpened his attention, made everything feel precious and slightly unreal.

Her hands were red from the cold.She wore a watch with a cracked face.Her shoes were practical, not pretty.

She glanced sideways, just once. Their eyes nearly met.

Nearly.

A bus roared past, spraying water onto the pavement, and she stepped forward instinctively, bumping into his shoulder. The contact was light. Unremarkable. The kind of thing people apologized for without thinking.

"I'm sorry," she said automatically, already turning away.

"It's fine," he replied, but she was already moving, already gone, already absorbed back into the anonymous choreography of the street.

He stood there long after the rain eased, replaying the moment in his head like a song fragment he couldn't quite place.

That night, in the quiet of his apartment, Elias wrote a single line in the notebook he kept beside his bed.

Encounter One. Café awning. Rain.

He didn't know why he numbered it.

At the time, it felt like nothing.