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Always My Brother Forever My Friend

Stronger together no matter the storm

By Bahar AliPublished 10 months ago 3 min read

The rain had returned, soft and steady, falling over the town like a familiar lullaby. It danced gently against the windowpanes, painting silver trails down the glass. Inside the modest home, the smell of ginger chai drifted through the air, mixing with the quiet hum of an old ceiling fan.

Aanya sat on the floor near the window, a worn-out photo album open in her lap. She traced her fingers over the fading images: her small face beaming with mischief, her brother Aarav’s arm always protectively slung around her shoulders. Each photo was a memory frozen in time—of scraped knees, birthday cakes, school uniforms, and shared secrets.

"Still going through that old thing?" Aarav's voice cut through the silence, warm and teasing.

She looked up, her lips curling into a soft smile. He was standing in the doorway with two steaming cups in his hands. His hair, once thick and black, now carried streaks of silver, and his face bore the marks of years that had passed too quickly. But his eyes—calm, kind, quietly strong—were just the same.

"You know I always come back to it," she replied, accepting the cup he offered.

He sat beside her, his knees cracking as he lowered himself to the floor with a grunt. "I need to stop getting old," he joked.

"You started that trend years ago," she grinned.

They sipped their tea in silence for a moment, the warmth of the drink a comfort against the cool monsoon air. The photo album lay open in front of them, revealing a picture of the two as children—Aanya crying with a scraped elbow, and Aarav beside her, frowning at the camera with her tiny hand clutched in his.

"You remember that day?" she asked.

Aarav leaned forward to get a better look. “Yeah. You fell off the swing trying to stand on it like a stuntwoman.”

“You pushed me too high.”

“You dared me to.”

They both laughed, their voices echoing softly through the room, mingling with the rain. Aanya took another sip of chai, then set her cup down.

"You know," she began quietly, "I think about everything you gave up for us. For me."

Aarav didn’t look at her, but his silence was attentive.

"When Mom got sick… you were just seventeen. You had dreams too, bhaiya. You could’ve gone to college, left this town, done something big.”

“I did do something big,” he said simply. “I made sure you got to live your dream.”

Her eyes stung unexpectedly. “I don’t know how you did it. You worked full-time, cared for Mom, made sure I never felt the weight of any of it. I didn’t even realize what you were carrying until years later.”

“That’s how it’s supposed to be,” he said, finally turning to her. “You were a kid. It was my job to protect you.”

“You did more than that,” she whispered. “You became my world.”

Aarav smiled, his gaze soft. “I didn’t lose anything, Aani. I gained something. Watching you succeed, seeing you grow into someone strong and independent… that’s enough for me.”

The room was quiet again, filled only by the sound of the rain and the occasional creak of the old house settling into its foundation. Aanya leaned her head on his shoulder, just like she had countless times growing up.

“You know,” she said after a while, “I used to be scared of storms. But I never told you. I just waited for you to sit with me until I fell asleep.”

“I knew,” he replied, chuckling softly. “That’s why I never left.”

She looked up at him, eyes glistening. “You always stayed, didn’t you?”

“Always.”

They sat like that for a long time, two souls woven together by years of shared hardship and quiet love. Outside, thunder rolled low across the sky, but neither of them flinched. They had weathered bigger storms than this one.

As the evening deepened and the light in the room dimmed, Aanya closed the photo album and placed it aside. She looked at her brother—her constant, her hero—not with the eyes of a grateful sibling, but with the reverence of someone who had come to understand the depth of true love.

“You were my first friend,” she said softly. “And still my best.”

He didn’t answer right away, just pulled her into a one-armed hug. “Always my sister,” he murmured. “Forever my friend.”

And in that moment, nothing else mattered. Not the missed opportunities, not the long years, not even the rain. Because in that little house, two hearts beat stronger together—proof that some bonds don’t fade with time.

They only grow stronger.



ClassicalfamilyLoveFan Fiction

About the Creator

Bahar Ali

Storyteller at heart, always chasing the magic in everyday moments. I write to explore, to feel, and to connect. From fiction to personal musings, my words are pieces of the world as I see it. Welcome to my little corner of creativity.

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