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The Back Bench Buddies

Payal_Goswami_6362
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Synopsis
This is a story about noise—the kind that fills classrooms, cafeterias, group chats, and living rooms. About chaos that looks childish from the outside but quietly keeps people alive on the inside. At its heart is Rhea, sharp-tongued, observant, dramatic in her own head, navigating school days packed with surprise tests, ridiculous debates, sibling wars at home, and friendships that feel louder than the school bell. Through her eyes, ordinary days turn into spectacles—teachers roasting students, friends losing battles to notebooks, lunch tables becoming debate stages, and laughter becoming a survival skill. Around her is a group that doesn’t try to be perfect: Kabir, calm, sarcastic, steady—feeling more than he admits. Yuhan, quiet, thoughtful, carrying the weight of past loneliness and slowly learning what it means to belong. Samar and Neel, walking disasters with golden hearts—overacting, bickering, losing games, winning laughter, and turning every moment into a scene no one forgets. There is no dramatic love confession here. Just glances held a second too long. Comfort in silence. Care disguised as jokes. Feelings that exist before anyone is brave enough to name them. This story isn’t about toppers or backbenchers, heroes or villains. It’s about friendship that feels overwhelming in the best way, families that tease because they love, birthdays that matter only because of the people around you, and school days that someday become memories you miss without realizing when they ended. A chaotic, wholesome, funny, and deeply human slice of growing up— where love hides in laughter, and belonging sounds a lot like noise.
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Chapter 1 - 2.Next Day

Rhea's Pov

I had understood one universal truth of school life:

The front bench doesn't mean smart.

It means audible.

They sat there like unpaid brand ambassadors of discipline—backs straight, pens ready, nodding aggressively at every sentence the teacher spoke. Half of them nodded even when nothing was said. Commitment like that deserves an award.

Meanwhile, the last row?

We were relaxed. Observant. Dangerous.

"Watch this," Samar whispered, leaning back so far I was genuinely concerned about gravity.

Mrs. Chatterjee turned to the board. "Now, if we consider the definition—"

A girl in the front bench immediately raised her hand.

"Yes, Aditi?" the teacher asked, already smiling.

Aditi cleared her throat. "Ma'am, is this… important for exams?"

Of course it was Aditi. There is always an Aditi.

Mrs. Chatterjee blinked. "Yes. Everything is important."

Aditi nodded intensely and started underlining the date.

I leaned toward Samar. "She underlined the wrong thing."

Samar smirked. "She underlines emotions too."

Kabir didn't even look up. "She'll ask for notes later."

Neil removed one earphone. "She'll ask you for notes."

I sighed. "I hate that you're right."

Mrs. Chatterjee continued, writing a definition so long it deserved its own biography.

"Can anyone explain this in their own words?" she asked.

Front bench silence.

Middle bench panic.

Last bench peace.

Finally, a boy in the front raised his hand. "Ma'am, it means… um… when something is… related?"

The teacher stared at him.

He panicked harder. "Like… related deeply."

I whispered, "Wow. So poetic."

Samar added, "Shakespeare would be proud."

Kabir muttered, "This is why we're doomed as a generation."

One of the front bench boys turned around and shot us a look.

"Some people wouldn't understand," he said loudly. "They don't take studies seriously."

Ah. There it was.

I smiled sweetly. "True."

He smirked. "At least you're honest."

I tilted my head. "I meant you. You memorise words. We understand them."

Dead silence.

Neil coughed. "Ouch."

Kabir finally looked up, eyes sharp. "Also, turning around during class is against the rules."

The boy turned back, offended and defeated.

Samar leaned toward me. "I think I'm in love."

"Get in line," I said.

Mrs. Chatterjee suddenly called out, "Rhea."

I froze.

"Yes, ma'am?"

"Explain the definition."

The front bench smiled. The gotcha smile.

I stood up slowly, mentally apologising to my future.

"Well," I began, "the definition looks scary, but it's actually simple. It just means—"

I explained. Clean. Clear. No unnecessary English Olympics.

When I finished, the room was quiet.

Mrs. Chatterjee nodded. "Good. Sit."

Front bench faces fell like stock prices.

Samar whispered, "You just committed academic violence."

Neil added, "They'll never recover."

Kabir smiled.

Actual. Smile.

I sat down, heart racing, pretending I wasn't enjoying this.

Lunch bell rang.

Front benchers rushed out discussing syllabus completion.

We stayed seated.

"Why are they like that?" I asked.

Samar shrugged. "They think seriousness equals intelligence."

Neil stretched. "Meanwhile, we think intelligence equals survival."

Kabir closed his notebook. "And silence."

I looked at the three of them—relaxed, underestimated, unbothered.

The last row wasn't lazy.

It was watching.

And for the first time that day, I thought—

Let them underestimate us.

We'd enjoy the view.