Utsav's one-sided devotion to Aditi was not a romance; it was an act of agonizing endurance. Loving her in silence was exactly like a snail crawling along the razor-thin edge of a blade.
He was entirely vulnerable, dragging the immense, suffocating weight of his secret world on his back. Every agonizing inch he moved toward her-every sacrificed exam rank, every swallowed truth, every rainy afternoon he stood as her silent shield-was a slow, deliberate glide across sharpened steel.
The profound tragedy of the blade is its absolute indifference. Aditi never meant to cut him; she was simply existing in her own brilliant, untouchable reality. But the mere nature of his proximity demanded a blood price. With every tentative step he took into her orbit, the sharp, undeniable reality that she was looking in another direction sliced deeper into his bare soul.
Yet, Utsav kept crawling. He bled quietly, leaving a glistening, invisible trail of his own dignity and childhood behind. He convinced himself that the pain was a privilege, a noble suffering that proved the purity of his heart. He genuinely believed that if he just moved carefully enough, sacrificing enough of his own flesh, he could somehow conquer the weapon that was slowly tearing him apart.
But a blade is not a bridge, and unrequited love is never a sanctuary. It is a slow, self-inflicted execution, survived only through the tragic, desperate delusion that if you bleed enough, the cold steel beneath you might one day soften into a petal.