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Angel Who Sits Next To Me

Low_Effort_Lore
14
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In the quiet corridors of Aozora High, Takumi Tachibana prefers to keep to himself—smart but lazy, and never one to seek attention. That changes when he’s paired with Yuri Shinomiya, a graceful and seemingly perfect classmate who starts breaking through his aloof exterior. As school life unfolds with class duties, events, and chance encounters, a slow and delicate connection begins to form between them. The Season follows their evolving relationship, the subtle push and pull of emotions, and the quiet moments that begin to mean more than words. Along the way, friendships blossom, tensions stir, and the ordinary days of high school life slowly become unforgettable.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue

[𝐓𝐡𝐚𝐭 𝐑𝐚𝐢𝐧𝐲 𝐀𝐟𝐭𝐞𝐫𝐧𝐨𝐨𝐧]

The rain had been falling quietly that day—not heavy, not loud. Just steady. The kind of rain that blurred the world, softened sounds, and made everything feel a little more distant.

She was small back then. Maybe seven or eight. Her light brown hair clung to her cheeks as she sat on the park bench, a pink umbrella resting in her lap, barely shielding her from the drizzle. Her knee stung from a fall, and though she wasn't crying loudly, her tears slipped down her cheeks in silence.

She didn't expect anyone to notice. No one ever did.

Until he appeared.

A boy, just a little taller, stood a few steps away with an umbrella patterned in cartoon dogs. His black hair was messy, and he looked like he didn't really want to be there.

But he walked over anyway.

"You okay?" he asked, his voice quiet but steady.

She didn't answer, just looked at him with wide eyes.

Without saying more, he reached into his pocket and held out a small, slightly crumpled pack of tissues.

"Here," he said. "For your tears."

That was the moment.

Not the umbrella. Not the awkward silence that followed.

But that simple gesture—offering kindness without asking anything in return.

He sat beside her on the swing, their umbrellas barely covering both of them. They said very little, but somehow, that was enough.

When her mother returned and called her name, she stood up, hesitated, and looked back.

The boy gave her a small wave. She waved back with both hands.

She never forgot that moment.

And many years later, when she walked into her high school classroom for the first time and saw a boy with messy black hair staring lazily out the window—

She knew.

He didn't remember her.

But she remembered everything.