A kid in the battlefield

Chapter 1: The Sound of Sirens

In the northern stretch of a troubled land, where the wind often carried more dust than laughter, lived a boy named Hussain. He was only five years old, small enough to still be lifted easily into his mother’s arms, yet old enough to notice that something in the world around him was not quite right.

Hussain lived in a modest home made of stone and patched walls. The house stood in a narrow street lined with others just like it, their windows often shuttered, their doors rarely left open for long. The sky above his town was wide, but it was not always peaceful. Sometimes it roared.

His father was a tall man with tired eyes. Hussain remembered him as strong, with a deep voice that could calm or command. But these days, his father was often away. When he returned, it was never for long. His clothes smelled of dust and metal, and his face carried stories he did not tell.

Hussain had two elder brothers, Kareem and Yaseen. They used to play with him when he was younger, lifting him onto their shoulders, running through the narrow streets, laughing loudly. But now they too were gone most of the time, following their father. When they came home, they spoke in hushed voices and stopped talking whenever Hussain came near.

His mother was gentle but always alert. Her eyes moved quickly, listening for sounds beyond the walls. She worked tirelessly, sometimes leaving early and returning late, her hands always busy, her mind always elsewhere. Hussain did not fully understand what she did, only that it was important, and that it made her worry.

His elder sister, Amina, had once braided his hair and told him stories before he slept. Now she too was often occupied, helping their mother, moving with a seriousness that did not belong to her young age.

Hussain noticed all of this, though he could not explain it. He only felt it—a quiet tension in the air, like the moment before a storm.

Each morning, Hussain went to his religious school. It was a small building, with faded walls and a courtyard where children once played freely. His teacher was kind, speaking softly and guiding the children through their lessons. They learned prayers, stories, and verses, repeating them together in gentle rhythm.

But even in school, there was something different.

Behind the building, partially hidden by a low wall, was a bunker. Hussain had seen it many times but had never asked much about it. One day, his teacher gathered the children and pointed toward it.

“If you hear the siren,” the teacher said calmly, “you must go there quickly. Do not run away. Do not hide anywhere else. Stay together.”

Hussain looked at the bunker, then at his classmates. Some of them nodded seriously, as if they had heard this many times before. Others looked just as confused as he felt.

“What is a siren?” Hussain asked quietly.

The teacher paused, then smiled gently. “It is a loud sound that tells us to be careful.”

That answer satisfied him for the moment, though it did not explain why careful meant hiding underground.

At home, his father had said something similar before leaving again.

“If you hear the siren,” his father had told the family, “go to the bunker. Stay there until it is safe.”

His mother had nodded. His sister had nodded. Even his brothers had nodded.

Hussain had nodded too, though he did not fully understand.

To him, the siren was just a sound he had heard once in the distance—a long, rising cry that made the air feel heavy. It had made his mother stop what she was doing. It had made his sister freeze. It had made everyone move quickly.

And it had made Hussain feel something unfamiliar—a quiet fear that he could not name.

One afternoon, as Hussain sat in school tracing letters on a worn slate, the teacher suddenly stopped speaking.

For a moment, everything was silent.

Then it came.

The siren.

It rose slowly, then grew louder, stretching across the sky like a warning no one could ignore.

Hussain looked up. His classmates were already moving.

“Come,” the teacher said, calm but firm.

The children stood, some holding hands, others clutching their books. Hussain followed, his small legs trying to keep up as they moved toward the bunker.

Inside, it was dim and cool. The walls were rough, and the air smelled of earth. The children sat close together. Some whispered. Some stayed silent.

Hussain sat beside a boy he barely knew. He could feel his own heart beating fast, though he did not know why.

“What is happening?” he asked softly.

The boy shrugged. “It happens sometimes.”

That was not an answer, but it was all Hussain received.

Above them, the world continued. Sounds echoed faintly—distant, unclear, unsettling.

Hussain closed his eyes.

He thought of his father, somewhere far away. He thought of his brothers, walking beside him. He thought of his mother and sister, wherever they might be at that moment.

He did not understand the words people used—conflict, danger, enemy. Those were too big for him.

But he understood this: the people he loved were not always safe.

And that thought stayed with him.

So, in the quiet darkness of the bunker, Hussain did the only thing he knew how to do.

He prayed.

Not with perfect words, not with memorized lines, but with a simple, honest wish.

He asked for his father to return.

He asked for his brothers to come home.

He asked for his mother and sister to smile again without worry.

He asked for his school to be a place of laughter, not hiding.

He asked for his friends to be safe.

And though he did not fully understand the world outside, he believed—deeply, purely—that someone, somewhere, was listening.

The siren continued for a while, then slowly faded.

Time passed quietly in the bunker.

Eventually, the teacher stood.

“It is safe now,” he said gently.

The children rose, one by one, stepping back into the light.

Hussain blinked as the sun touched his face again.

The world looked the same as before.

But to Hussain, something had changed.

He did not have the words for it yet.

Only the feeling.

That life, even for someone as small as him, could carry shadows.

And that hope, even in those shadows, could still exist.

As he walked home that day, holding his small slate tightly, Hussain looked up at the sky.

It was quiet now.

But he wondered when it would speak again.

And when it did, he knew what he would do.

He would listen.

He would hide.

And he would pray.

Because that, in his small world, was how he made sense of everything he could not yet understand.

End of Chapter 1

Chapter 2: The Night of Quiet Goodbyes

That night felt different.

The air inside Hussain’s small home was warmer than usual, filled with the rich smell of food his mother had spent hours preparing. A rare meal—rice, meat, and bread—lay neatly arranged. It was more than they usually had, more than they could afford in such uncertain times.

Hussain noticed it immediately.

“Is it a special day?” he asked, his eyes bright with curiosity.

No one answered right away.

His mother forced a gentle smile and placed a plate in front of him. His sister, Amina, avoided his eyes. His brothers sat quietly, their usual playful energy replaced by a silence that felt heavy.

Only his father spoke.

“Yes,” he said softly. “It is a special night.”

Hussain did not understand why his father’s voice sounded both warm and distant at the same time.

They ate together.

Hussain was happy. For once, everyone was home. No one was rushing away. No whispered conversations behind closed doors. No sudden departures.

But beneath that happiness, something else lingered—something he could not name.

His father watched each of them carefully, as if trying to remember every face, every movement.

After the meal, the house grew quieter.

One by one, his father stood up.

He walked to Kareem and Yaseen first, placing his hands firmly on their shoulders. No words were spoken, but something passed between them—something serious, something final.

Then he turned to Amina. He gently placed his hand on her head, whispering something too soft for Hussain to hear. Amina’s lips trembled, but she nodded.

Finally, he came to Hussain.

“Come here,” his father said.

Hussain climbed eagerly into his lap.

His father held him tightly—longer than usual. Then he kissed his cheek.

“You must study well,” he said, looking straight into Hussain’s eyes. “You must grow into a man better than all of us.”

Hussain smiled, not fully understanding, but liking the way his father spoke.

“I will,” he said proudly.

His father laughed softly, a sound that carried both joy and sorrow. He played with Hussain for a while, lifting him, tickling him, holding him close as if trying to pause time itself.

Then, slowly, he stood up.

He picked up a few tightly wrapped bundles from the corner of the room.

At the doorway, he stopped.

He turned back.

For a moment, no one moved.

His eyes met each of theirs—his wife, his daughter, his sons, and finally, Hussain.

Then, without another word, he stepped outside.

Hussain ran to the doorway.

He watched as his father walked toward a hidden entrance near the edge of the street—a narrow tunnel, half-covered with loose boards and cloth.

His father disappeared into it.

Just like that.

Gone.

“Ammi,” Hussain asked, tugging at his mother’s dress, “why did Baba leave at night?”

His mother knelt beside him, her face pale but steady.

“You will understand later,” she said softly.

Hussain frowned. That was not an answer.

Before he could ask again—

The siren began.

It rose suddenly, louder than he had ever heard before.

This time, it did not feel distant.

It felt close.

Urgent.

Real.

“Come!” his mother said quickly.

There was no hesitation now.

They rushed outside, joining neighbors who were already running. Some carried children, others dragged small bags, many had nothing at all.

The bunker entrance loomed ahead.

People crowded inside.

The air was thick, filled with fear, whispers, and hurried prayers.

Hussain clung to his mother’s hand.

Then—

A sound tore through the night.

A deafening explosion.

The ground shook violently. Dust fell from the ceiling. Some children screamed. Others cried out for their parents.

Hussain froze.

Another explosion followed.

Closer.

Louder.

The world above them was breaking.

Inside the bunker, people began praying aloud.

Voices trembled.

Some cried openly.

Some called out names that were swallowed by the chaos.

Hussain pressed his face into his mother’s side, his small body shaking.

He did not understand what was happening.

But he knew it was bad.

Very bad.

Time passed slowly.

Too slowly.

When the sounds finally stopped, silence felt just as frightening.

No one moved at first.

Then, cautiously, people began to step outside.

Hussain followed, holding tightly to his mother.

The street he knew was no longer the same.

Walls had collapsed.

Smoke rose into the sky.

And where his home once stood—

There was only broken stone.

Hussain stared.

His house… was gone.

His small belongings, his slate, his school bag—everything buried under rubble.

His mother fell to her knees.

Tears streamed down her face.

Amina stood beside her, crying silently.

Hussain did not cry at first.

He simply looked.

Trying to understand how something so familiar could disappear so quickly.

Soon, soldiers arrived.

They shouted instructions, guiding survivors away from the разрушed area.

“You must move,” one of them said firmly. “This place is not safe.”

They began gathering people, sending them toward temporary shelters.

One soldier stopped near Hussain’s family.

“Where are the men?” he asked.

Hussain looked up.

His mother hesitated for a moment.

“They went out,” she said quietly. “They haven’t returned.”

The soldier nodded, saying nothing more.

The journey to the shelter was long.

Dust filled the air.

People walked in silence, carrying what little they could.

When they finally arrived, Hussain saw rows of tents stretching endlessly.

Thin cloth walls.

No doors.

No real protection.

Inside, there was barely enough space to sit, let alone live.

This was their new home.

Days passed.

Then more days.

Life in the camp was difficult.

Water was limited.

Food was scarce.

There was no school.

No familiar streets.

No laughter.

Only waiting.

And wondering.

Hussain often asked the same question.

“When will Baba come back?”

His mother never answered directly.

“Soon,” she would say.

But her eyes told a different story.

At night, Hussain lay awake, staring at the thin fabric ceiling of the tent.

He thought about that evening.

The dinner.

The smiles.

The silence.

The kiss.

The way his father had looked back.

And the tunnel.

Something about it stayed in his mind.

Something important.

Something he still could not understand.

One night, as the wind whispered against the tents, Hussain closed his eyes and prayed again.

This time, his prayer was different.

Not just for safety.

Not just for peace.

But for answers.

For his father.

For his brothers.

For a home that no longer existed.

In the distance, the night remained quiet.

But Hussain had learned something now.

Even silence could carry fear.

And sometimes…

goodbyes were spoken without words.

End of Chapter 2.

Chapter 3: A World Made of Tents and Small Dreams

Life in the camp slowly began to take shape.

At first, every day felt the same—long, uncertain, and heavy. But over time, people started finding ways to live, even in a place that was never meant to be a home.

Rows of tents stood close together, stretching farther than Hussain could see. The ground was dry, and dust rose with every step. There were no proper roads, only narrow paths made by the feet of those who walked them daily.

Yet, in the middle of all this, something unexpected began to grow.

A routine.




Each morning, children gathered in an open space between the tents.

There were no proper classrooms, no walls, no blackboards. Just a few worn mats spread across the ground and a group of elders who had once been teachers, workers, and parents living ordinary lives.

Now, they had become something else.

Guides.

Hussain’s mother was one of them.

She sat with a small group of children, teaching them simple words, numbers, and basic ideas about the world. Her voice, though tired, was gentle and patient.

“Alif… Baa… Taa…” she repeated, guiding them through letters.

Hussain sat among the other children, trying to follow along. Sometimes he got distracted, watching the wind move the edges of the tents or listening to distant voices.

But he tried.

Because he remembered what his father had said.

Study well.

Nearby, other groups learned counting, simple maths, and even small lessons about nature—why the sun rose, why the wind blew, why rain sometimes came and sometimes did not.

There were no books for everyone.

No pencils for all.

But there was effort.

And hope.




By evening, the camp changed.

The seriousness of the day softened.

Children gathered in open spaces, turning emptiness into playgrounds.

Someone had found an old, worn-out football.

Another group used a piece of wood as a bat and a bundle of cloth as a ball.

Hussain watched them at first.

Then slowly, he joined.

He ran across the dusty ground, his small feet kicking the ball, laughter escaping him for the first time in many days.

For a while, the camp did not feel like a place of loss.

It felt… alive.




That was how Hussain made new friends.

Some of them were older—ten, maybe eleven years old. To Hussain, they seemed like they knew everything.

There was Sami, who spoke confidently about things Hussain had never heard before.

“There is fighting everywhere,” Sami said one evening as they sat together after a game. “Armies, groups… everyone wants control.”

Hussain listened carefully.

“Why?” he asked.

Sami shrugged.

“Because they believe different things. Because they want power. Because… that’s how the world is now.”

Hussain did not fully understand.

But he kept listening.

Another boy, Imran, added quietly, “My father said sometimes people fight for land. Sometimes for beliefs. Sometimes… they don’t even know why anymore.”

Hussain looked down at his hands.

“So… will it stop?” he asked.

The boys did not answer immediately.

Finally, Sami said, “Maybe one day.”

It was not a promise.

But it was something.




Days in the camp were not always the same.

Sometimes, help arrived.

Large vehicles carrying supplies would enter, and people would gather quickly.

Workers from United Nations and other groups distributed food—rice, flour, canned items.

Hussain stood in line with his mother and sister, watching as packets were handed out carefully.

On those days, there was a small sense of relief.

Food meant one less worry.

Sometimes, doctors came too.

They set up temporary medical tents, checking children, giving medicines, treating injuries.

Hussain once sat quietly as a doctor examined him, placing a cool hand on his forehead.

“You are strong,” the doctor said with a smile.

Hussain nodded, though he did not feel strong.




Despite everything, life continued.

But not without questions.

Hussain began to understand small pieces of the truth.

Not all at once.

Not clearly.

But slowly.

He understood that the explosions were not accidents.

That the sirens were warnings.

That the bunker was protection.

That his home had not just disappeared—it had been destroyed.

And that his father…

His father had not simply gone away.




One evening, as the sky turned orange and the camp settled into quiet, Hussain sat beside his mother.

“Ammi,” he asked softly, “will Baba find us here?”

His mother looked at him for a long moment.

Then she pulled him close.

“Yes,” she said gently. “He will find us.”

Hussain rested his head against her.

He wanted to believe her.

And somewhere deep inside, he did.




That night, as he lay under the thin cover inside the tent, Hussain listened to the sounds around him.

Whispers.

Wind.

Distant cries.

And somewhere far away…

a faint echo he could not be sure was real.

He closed his eyes.

This time, his prayer was quieter.

Not filled with many words.

Just one simple wish.

Let tomorrow be better than today.




In a place built from loss, Hussain was beginning to learn something new.

Even in the hardest ground…

small dreams could still grow.

End of Chapter 3

Chapter 4: The Day He Was Left Behind

The day began like any other.

The sun rose slowly over the rows of tents, casting long shadows across the dusty ground. Hussain woke to the familiar sounds of the camp—soft voices, footsteps, the rustling of cloth in the morning breeze.

For a moment, everything felt almost normal.

He sat beside his mother during the morning lessons, tracing letters in the sand with his finger. His sister, Amina, sat nearby, helping younger children pronounce words correctly.

There was no sign of danger.

No warning.

No siren.




By afternoon, the heat grew stronger.

Hussain joined his friends in the open space between the tents. They had found their usual ball—worn, dusty, but still good enough to play.

“Pass it!” Sami shouted.

Hussain laughed as he ran, his small feet kicking up clouds of dust. For a brief time, the world was simple again.

Just a game.

Just friends.

Just laughter.




Then—

It came.

Not a siren.

Not a warning.

But a sudden, violent explosion.

The ground shook beneath them.

A deafening sound tore through the air, louder than anything Hussain had ever heard before. It felt as if the sky itself had broken open.

For a second, everything froze.

Then chaos began.




People screamed.

Women called out for their children.

Children cried, confused and terrified.

Smoke rose in thick clouds from the edge of the camp.

Another explosion followed—closer.

Tents trembled. Some collapsed. Dust filled the air, making it hard to see, harder to breathe.

“Hussain!” someone shouted—but he couldn’t tell who.

His heart pounded wildly.

He looked around for his mother.

For Amina.

But all he saw were moving figures, blurred by smoke and panic.




“Run!” one of the older boys yelled, grabbing his arm.

But Hussain pulled away.

“My mother!” he cried.

He turned toward where their tent should be.

But the path was gone—lost in confusion, blocked by people rushing in every direction.

He tried to push through.

But he was small.

Too small.

People moved past him, faster, stronger, desperate.

He stumbled.

Fell.

Got up again.

“Maa!” he shouted.

No answer.




Trucks began arriving.

Large, loud, urgent.

Soldiers jumped down, shouting instructions.

“Move quickly!”

“Get in!”

“Don’t stop!”

People were pushed, guided, lifted—anything to get them into the vehicles as fast as possible.

There was no order.

Only urgency.

Children were picked up and placed into one truck.

Elders into another.

Families—separated in seconds.




Hussain ran toward the area where his tent had been.

But it was too late.

The space was empty.

Gone.

Only scattered belongings remained.

A torn piece of cloth.

A broken container.

No sign of his mother.

No sign of Amina.




A soldier grabbed Hussain gently but firmly.

“Come, child!” he said, lifting him.

Hussain struggled.

“My mother! My sister! They are there!” he cried, pointing blindly.

“They will come,” the soldier said quickly. “In another truck.”

“But—”

“There is no time!”

Hussain was placed into a truck filled with other children.

Some were crying loudly.

Some sat frozen in shock.

Some called out names again and again.

The truck door slammed shut.




As the vehicle started moving, Hussain stood unsteadily, holding onto the side.

He looked out.

Searching.

Hoping.

Praying.

Every passing second felt like something slipping away.

“Maa…” he whispered.

But the camp was already disappearing behind clouds of dust.




The journey felt endless.

The road was rough, shaking the truck violently. Children were thrown against each other, clinging for balance.

No one spoke clearly.

Only cries.

Only fear.




When they finally stopped, the doors opened to a new place.

Different.

Strange.

Temporary shelters again—but larger.

More crowded.

And nearby—

A makeshift hospital.

People moved quickly in and out, carrying the injured. The air was filled with the smell of medicine, dust, and something heavier—pain.

The children were helped down.

Hussain stepped onto the ground slowly.

His eyes searched immediately.

Every face.

Every direction.




But she was not there.

Amina was not there.

His mother was not there.




He ran to a soldier nearby.

“Where is my mother?” he asked, his voice trembling. “You said she will come.”

The soldier looked at him, then looked away briefly.

“They will arrive,” he said. “Other trucks are still coming.”

“When?” Hussain asked.

“Soon.”




Hussain waited.

Minutes passed.

Then more.

Then hours.

Trucks came.

More people arrived.

More injured.

More frightened faces.

But none of them were his family.




As evening fell, the sky darkened.

The noise of the camp softened into a heavy silence.

Hussain sat alone near one of the tents.

He hugged his knees tightly.

Around him, other children were reunited with their families.

Some cried in relief.

Some clung to their parents.

Some slept in their arms.

Hussain watched.

And waited.




No one came for him.




A volunteer approached gently.

“Where is your family?” she asked.

“They are coming,” Hussain said quickly. “In another truck.”

The woman nodded softly.

But her eyes held a sadness he did not understand.




Night settled.

The ground grew cold.

Hussain lay inside a tent filled with unfamiliar children.

No mother beside him.

No sister nearby.

Only strangers.




For the first time—

He was completely alone.




He turned onto his side, holding onto the edge of a thin blanket.

Tears slipped silently down his face.

He did not cry loudly.

He did not call out.

He simply… let the silence take him.




In his mind, he saw his father again.

That night.

The dinner.

The kiss.

The tunnel.

Then his mother.

Her voice.

Her promise.

He will find us.




Hussain closed his eyes tightly.

His small hands folded together.

And in the quiet darkness, he whispered his prayer.

Not for answers.

Not for understanding.

But for one thing.

Just one.

Let me not be alone.




Outside, the camp remained restless.

Inside, a small boy faced a world that had suddenly grown much bigger—

And much emptier.




That night, Hussain learned something he had never known before.

Sometimes, in the middle of chaos…

You don’t lose everything at once.

You lose it piece by piece.

And sometimes…

you don’t even know if what you lost will ever return.

end of chapter 4

Chapter 5: The Hand That Did Not Let Go
Morning came, but it did not feel like morning.
There was no sense of beginning.
Only continuation.
Hussain woke slowly, unsure of where he was for a moment. The tent above him was unfamiliar, the voices around him distant and strange.
Then he remembered.
The explosion.
The trucks.
The waiting.
And the emptiness.

He sat up quickly.
His eyes searched again, as if something might have changed overnight.
But nothing had.
His mother was still not there.
Amina was still not there.

The camp was already busy.
People moved in hurried steps. Some carried the injured toward the nearby medical tents. Others stood in long lines, waiting for food or information that rarely came.
Hussain stepped outside.
He did not know where to go.
So he simply stood.
Watching.
Waiting.

That was when he saw her.
She was dressed differently from most others—clean, simple clothes, with a red symbol on her arm.
A cross.
She moved quickly but gently, speaking to people, checking on children, guiding the injured.
There was something calm about her, even in the middle of chaos.
She noticed Hussain.
A small boy.
Alone.
Not crying.
Just… standing.

She walked toward him and knelt down so her eyes met his.
“Hello,” she said softly.
Hussain did not answer.
“Where is your family?” she asked.
“They are coming,” he replied automatically. “In another truck.”
The woman paused.
Then she nodded, understanding more than he had said.
“My name is Elisa,” she said gently. “What is yours?”
“Hussain.”
“That’s a strong name,” she said with a faint smile.
He looked at her for a moment.
Something about her felt… safe.
Not like home.
But not like fear either.

Elisa was a doctor working with the .
She had come from , far away from the land Hussain had always known.
She had seen many camps.
Many children.
Many stories like his.
But that did not make it easier.

“Have you eaten?” she asked.
Hussain shook his head.
She stood and gently held his hand.
“Come,” she said.

She gave him a small piece of bread and some warm food.
He ate quietly.
Not because he was very hungry.
But because he did not know what else to do.

The day passed.
Hussain stayed close to Elisa.
Whenever she moved, he followed.
Not because she asked him to.
But because he was afraid to be alone again.

By afternoon, officials began gathering children.
Names were written.
Details were taken.
Questions were asked.
Some children had lost both parents.
Some did not know where their families were.
Some were too young to even explain.
Hussain stood among them.

Elisa spoke to one of the coordinators.
“This boy,” she said quietly, “he is alone. No confirmed family here.”
The man nodded.
“There are many like him,” he replied.
She looked back at Hussain.
Many like him.
But still—
He was one child.
One life.
One story.

Later that evening, Elisa sat beside Hussain.
“I need to tell you something,” she said gently.
Hussain looked at her.
“You may have to travel,” she continued. “To another place. A safer place.”
Hussain frowned.
“Will my mother be there?”
Elisa hesitated.
“We will try to find her,” she said carefully. “But for now, we need to keep you safe.”
“I don’t want to go without her,” he said softly.
Elisa’s eyes softened.
“I know,” she replied.

In the days that followed, plans were made.
The war showed no sign of ending.
The camps were no longer safe.
Decisions had to be taken—difficult ones.
Some children would be given asylum in other countries, with government approval and under the care of humanitarian organizations.
A chance at safety.
A chance at life.

Hussain’s name was on that list.

The morning of departure was quiet.
Too quiet.
Children stood in small groups, each holding onto something—some had bags, some had toys, some had nothing at all.
Hussain had nothing.
Except memory.

He stood beside Elisa.
She held his hand.
Firm.
Reassuring.
Like she had decided something within herself.

As they walked toward the transport vehicle, Hussain looked back.
Not at a specific place.
Not at a specific tent.
But at everything.
The camp.
The dust.
The life he had just begun to understand.

“Will we come back?” he asked.
Elisa looked ahead for a moment.
Then down at him.
“Maybe one day,” she said softly.

He nodded.
Not because he understood.
But because he wanted to believe.

The vehicle door opened.
One by one, the children stepped inside.
When it was Hussain’s turn, he hesitated.
Just for a second.
Then he tightened his grip on Elisa’s hand.
She gently squeezed back.
“I’m here,” she said.

And for the first time since that day of chaos—
Hussain did not feel completely alone.

As the vehicle began to move, carrying them away from everything he had known, Hussain leaned slightly toward Elisa.
She reminded him of someone.
Not exactly like Amina.
But close enough.
Kind.
Protective.
Present.

Outside, the land stretched endlessly.
Inside, a small boy sat beside a stranger—
Who was slowly becoming something more.

That day, Hussain left behind his home, his past, and the pieces of his family he could not carry.
But he did not leave empty.
Because someone had reached out—
And held his hand when he needed it most.

And sometimes…
that is where a new story begins.

Chapter 5 ends

Part one of the story ends here..

Published by

Unknown's avatar

Muthukumar

I am interested in writing social issues in Tamil. Also interested in learning.

Leave a comment