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THE ART OF FALLING
THE ART OF FALLING
ผู้แต่ง: S.Riah

Crash Meeting

ผู้เขียน: S.Riah
last update ปรับปรุงล่าสุด: 2025-12-07 22:34:04

Chapter One

The air smelled like new beginnings.

Nora’s curls bounced softly as she pedalled through the streets of her new neighbourhood, her bike tires humming quietly against the pavement. A strange mix of nervousness and calm washed over her two emotions that rarely existed together inside her, but today, they blended like colors on a canvas. The city around her felt alive in a way she wasn’t used to. Everything buzzed. Everything moved.

Buses honked impatiently at intersections. Groups of teenagers shouted and laughed as they crossed the street. Music thumped from car windows Afrobeats from one side, rap from another, blending into a chaotic but strangely comforting soundtrack. Even the air felt different, thick with the scent of roasted corn, exhaust, and something sweet she couldn't place. Everything felt bigger here. Louder. Brighter. Even the sky stretched wider than the one she left behind, painted with streaks of orange and fading blue as the sun drifted down.

She had only arrived three days ago after transferring to a new university, and she was still getting used to the sharp shift in her life. It wasn’t the school she ran from. It was everything else, the whispers behind her back, the rumors that refused to die, the friends who slowly disappeared, and the boy who said he loved her but didn’t hesitate to watch her fall. The weight of those memories pressed on her, even now.

But this place? This place was supposed to be different.

A clean start.

A second chance.

A place where no one knew her name or her mistakes.

And God, she needed that more than she needed anything else.

Her fingers tightened around the handlebars. Her sketchbook rested safely inside her tote bag, tucked between her orientation documents and a small folded letter from her mom. She hadn’t opened it since she left home, but she kept it with her always. It was her reminder that someone believed in her, even when she struggled to believe in herself.

A slow breath escaped her lips as she looked up at the sky, the colours melting together in warm, gentle gradients. For the first time in months, Nora felt like she could breathe. Really breathe.

Then it happened.

BAM!

Something slammed into her front tire with brutal force, and her entire world shifted. A basketball shot out from an open court on her left and collided dead on with her wheel. Her hands slipped from the handlebars. The bike jerked violently. She gasped, losing control as the pavement blurred beneath her.

In those few trembling seconds, everything spun.

Then she hit the ground.

Hard.

The impact rattled her bones. Her elbow scraped painfully across the concrete, her knee stung sharply, and her bag flew open papers, forms, and a pencil scattering into the air like startled birds before fluttering down around her.

“What the hell…” she groaned, wincing as she pushed herself up. Dust clung to her palms, and gravel dug into her skin.

Footsteps approached fast, heavy, and confident.

“Sh*t—yo, are you okay?” a deep voice called out.

Nora looked up… and instantly regretted it.

The guy standing over her looked like he’d stepped straight out of a sports magazine tall, broad-shouldered, built like someone who lived in the gym. His caramel-brown skin glowed in the soft evening light. A few loose curls fell into his eyes, and his stupidly perfect mouth curved into an easy, relaxed smirk, the type of smirk that said he was used to getting away with anything.

His grey sleeveless hoodie clung to his chest, showing off arms that definitely didn’t come from casual workouts. And in one hand, he held the basketball like it weighed absolutely nothing.

“Didn’t see you coming,” he said. “I was trying to make a three-pointer.”

Nora stared at him, jaw tightening. “A three-pointer?” she hissed. “You made me crash! Are you crazy?”

He blinked once, then boldly gave her a slow, amused once-over. His gaze lingered just long enough to annoy her.

“Nah,” he said casually. “You made yourself crash. I just provided the ball.”

Her eyes widened. “Are you joking right now?”

His smirk grew even wider, like he was enjoying this way too much.

“I mean…” he shrugged, “you fell gracefully. Like a movie scene.”

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” she muttered under her breath. She stood up, brushing the dust from her jeans and hissing softly when she touched her scraped elbow.

He stepped closer too close. but his expression softened slightly. “You’re bleeding. Let me see.”

“I’m fine,” she snapped, jerking her arm away and stepping back. “Keep your basketball. I don’t want it anywhere near me.”

“Damn,” he said, raising both hands in surrender. “Alright, alright. Chill. You always this mean, or just when strangers try to talk to you?”

“I don’t talk to strangers,” she shot back, bending down to pick up her scattered papers.

He crouched beside her anyway, ignoring her protests. He grabbed her orientation form before she could reach it.

“Nora Monroe,” he read out loud. “New student?”

She snatched the paper from his hand. “You know how to read. Impressive.”

He burst out laughing, the sound rich, warm, and annoyingly attractive. “You’ve got spice. I’ll give you that.”

“I don’t need your compliments,” she muttered.

“And yet…” he said, spinning the basketball on one finger effortlessly, “you’ve got mine anyway. See you around, Nora Monroe.”

She refused to ask for his name it would have felt like giving him a reward.

She didn’t want it.

Didn’t need it.

But as she pushed her bike upright and climbed onto it, wincing slightly from the ache in her knee, she felt something deep in her chest. A flutter. A spark. A stupid, unwanted warmth.

His smile.

His voice.

His stupid, stupid face.

She didn’t like him. She didn’t even want to like him.

And yet, as she turned the corner and the street faded behind her, a tiny whisper slipped into her thoughts soft, dangerous, and impossible to ignore.

You’re going to see him again.

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  • THE ART OF FALLING    The Call That Broke Everything

    Chapter 33 Nora dreamed in fragments. Not images feelings. Fear without a face. A pressure in her chest. The echo of a ringing phone she could never quite reach. It rang and rang, sharp and insistent, slicing through the darkness around her. Her body felt heavy, like it had been stitched to the earth. She tried to move, to answer, to scream that she was here but the sound died before it could form. Somewhere in that endless dark, a voice whispered her name. And somewhere else, very far away, Trisha sat beside her hospital bed, clutching a phone that felt like it weighed a thousand pounds. Trisha hadn’t planned to call Nora’s family yet. She kept telling herself she just needed more time. One more hour. One more sign. One flicker of movement, a squeeze of fingers, anything to prove that Nora would wake up and explain everything herself, the way she always did. But the silence was eating her alive. Jaden stood by the window, arms crossed tightly over his chest, staring out at

  • THE ART OF FALLING    Machines Don’t Breathe for You

    Chapter 32 Hospitals always smelled the same clean, sharp, unforgiving. Jaden noticed it immediately, the way the scent clung to his clothes as soon as he stepped inside, like a warning he couldn’t ignore. The fluorescent lights overhead hummed softly, casting everything in pale white that made faces look tired, hollow. Too honest. Trisha walked a few steps ahead of him, shoulders tense, arms wrapped tightly around herself as if she might shatter if she didn’t hold on. Her eyes were swollen from crying, lashes clumped together, but she kept moving, one foot in front of the other, like stopping would mean accepting something she wasn’t ready to. Neither of them spoke. The doctor led them down a long hallway. Each step felt heavier than the last. Jaden’s heartbeat pounded in his ears, loud enough to drown out the distant beeping of machines, the muffled conversations behind closed doors. Please let her be okay, he thought, over and over, like a prayer he didn’t know if he deserve

  • THE ART OF FALLING    The Week She Vanished

    Chapter 31 The first day Nora didn’t show up, no one thought much of it. College had a way of swallowing people whole for days at a time late nights, skipped lectures, mental health days no one talked about. Absence was normal. Silence wasn’t suspicious yet. By the second day, Trisha noticed. Nora never missed their morning coffee on Tuesdays. Never. Even during exams. Even when she was exhausted. Especially when she was exhausted. Trisha stared at the empty chair across from her, fingers tightening around her cup as the minutes dragged on. She checked her phone again. No reply. “Maybe she overslept,” she muttered, more to reassure herself than anything else. By the third day, worry crept in quietly. Nora’s room stayed locked. Her bed untouched. Her sketchbook always open, always messy lay exactly where it had been days ago. No half-finished drawings. No new pencil shavings on the floor. Trisha knocked. Then knocked harder. Nothing. She sent messages. Left voicemails. Trie

  • THE ART OF FALLING    No One Came Looking

    Chapter 30 Loneliness did not arrive loudly. It crept in the way dusk swallowed daylight soft, unannounced, unavoidable. Nora felt it most in the pauses between things. Between footsteps. Between breaths. Between the moments when she almost reached for her phone and remembered there was no one she wanted to call. Or worse, no one she trusted enough to hear her voice without turning it into something ugly. The campus still moved around her, alive and careless. Laughter spilled from dorm windows. Doors slammed. Music thumped faintly through walls. People passed her with purpose, with somewhere to be, someone to meet. She felt like a shadow drifting through all of it.Invisible. After James was gone after the truth, the damage, the humiliation everything else seemed to fall apart quietly. Not in dramatic explosions. Not in confrontations or apologies. Just… distance. Jaden didn’t speak to her. He didn’t glare either. That would’ve hurt less. Instead, he looked through her when th

  • THE ART OF FALLING    The Quiet After the Storm

    Chapter 29 The campus didn’t celebrate. There were no announcements. No public apologies. No justice served banners hanging from walls. James was simply… gone. And the silence he left behind felt strange l unnatural, like the air after a storm when everything looks calm but still smells like rain and broken things. Nora woke up the next morning confused by the quiet. No buzzing phone. No sharp spike of fear in her chest. No instinctive reach for the light switch. She lay still, staring at the ceiling, waiting for the familiar panic to arrive. It didn’t. That scared her. Because fear had been her companion for so long that its absence felt like another trick. She sat up slowly, listening. Birds. Footsteps in the hallway. Someone laughing far away. Normal sounds. Her body didn’t know how to respond. Freedom, she realized, wasn’t loud. It didn’t arrive with relief the way movies promised. It came softly, uncertainly like a fragile thing that could still be taken away

  • THE ART OF FALLING    The Last Thread He Pulled

    Chapter 28 James didn’t torture Nora loudly. He did it carefully. After the panic attack, after the campus whispers cooled into something quieter but sharper, he shifted tactics. No more vague posts. No more anonymous messages. He wanted control without fingerprints. He wanted her paranoid. It started with timing. Nora would step out of her hostel, and moments later, her phone would buzz. Nice hoodie. She would be in class, finally managing to focus, when a message slipped through. You still draw sad girls. She stopped opening them. Blocked the numbers. Changed her privacy settings. It didn’t stop. The messages kept coming from new numbers, new accounts, burner profiles that disappeared after one text. James knew her schedule. Knew her habits. Knew when she was weakest. Fear stopped being sharp and became dull, constant like background noise that never switched off. Nora functioned on autopilot now. Smile when necessary. Nod when spoken to. Breathe shallowly so her che

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