Some stories are written to be finished. This one was written to be felt.
Constellations of Absence follows Aryan through the uncertain space between school and college - through rejection letters and mountain treks, new friendships and quiet heartbreaks. It is not a story about catastrophe. It is about something far more ordinary and far more devastating: the slow realization that you may not be as essential to others as they are to you.
It is about the loneliness that does not announce itself. The kind that settles in when you are surrounded by people you genuinely love, and you still wonder, somewhere beneath the laughter, whether your absence would disturb anything at all.
Constellations of Absence does not romanticize that feeling. It does not resolve neatly. But it does something rarer - it names the hunger for belonging with honesty and without shame, and it arrives, eventually, at something close to peace.
For everyone who has ever stood in a full room and felt invisible.
For everyone who has ever asked: would they miss me if I were gone?