Zara never believed in love that started with a swipe.
To her, dating apps were just… distractions. A
place people went when they were bored, lonely, or curious. Not a place where
something real could grow.
And yet, there she was — lying on her bed at 11:48
PM, her room dimly lit by the soft glow of her phone — scrolling through profiles
she didn’t really care about.
Swipe left.
Swipe left.
Swipe left.
She sighed.
“Why am I even doing this?” she muttered.
Then —
She paused.
A profile appeared that didn’t look like the
others.
No overly edited photos.
No forced poses.
Just a simple picture of a man with glasses standing
sideways, wearing a slightly oversized shirt and smiling sweetly at the camera.
His name Robert.
Bio: “Only includes stickers.”
Zara blinked.
“That’s… different.”
Something about it felt honest. Quiet. Real.
Without thinking too much, she swiped right.
It’s a match.
Her eyes widened slightly.
“That was fast.”
She stared at the screen.
No message.
No movement.
Just the quiet notification.
Zara bit her lip.
Normally, she would wait.
But something about this felt… unfinished.
“Okay, fine. I’ll just say something simple.”
She tapped the chat box.
“Hi. Your bio… why only stickers?”
She hovered over the send button for a second.
Then pressed it.
Message sent.
No reply.
Five minutes passed.
Then ten.
Zara sighed and locked her phone. “Of course.”
She turned to the side, pulling her blanket over
her shoulder.
Just as she was about to fall asleep —
Ping.
Her phone lit up.
She reached for it.
Robert: “That’s probably the nicest thing
anyone has ever said about my lack of social skills.”
Zara smiled.
And just like that —
It started.
~ ~
Their conversations were slow at first.
Careful.
Like two strangers testing the depth of water
before stepping in.
Robert wasn’t the type to send long messages.
But he always replied.
And somehow, his short responses carried more
meaning than most long conversations Zara had ever had.
Zara: “So you really hate small talk?”
Robert: “Not hate. I just don’t know what to do with it.”
Zara: “Then what do you like talking about?”
Robert: “Things that matter. Or things that feel like they do.”
Zara stared at that message longer than she
expected.
“Things that feel like they matter…”
She typed again.
“Okay. Then tell me something that matters to
you.”
There was a longer pause this time.
Then —
Robert: “People who stay.”
Her heart skipped.
She didn’t know why.
But it did.
~ ~
Days turned into a routine.
Morning greetings.
Random thoughts in the afternoon.
Late-night conversations that stretched longer
than intended.
Zara found herself checking her phone more often.
Waiting.
For him.
It was strange.
She had talked to many people before, but none of
them felt like this.
None of them made silence feel comfortable.
None of them made simple messages feel…
important.
One night, after a particularly long
conversation, Zara stared at their chat and sighed.
“This app feels too… limited.”
Typing. Waiting. Typing again.
It felt slow.
Like trying to build something meaningful through
a narrow space.
She hesitated for a moment.
Then typed:
“Do you want to move to another app? Maybe
something easier to talk on.”
She sent it before she could overthink.
A minute passed.
Then two.
Then —
Robert: “Yeah. I was hoping you’d say that.”
Zara smiled.
“Of course you were.”
They exchanged numbers.
And just like that —
Everything changed.
~ ~
If the dating app was a doorway, then this new
space was a room.
A place where they could actually exist together.
Their chats became faster.
More natural.
More… alive.
Voice notes replaced long texts.
Photos of random moments started appearing.
“Look at this sunset.”
“I tried cooking today. It went terribly.”
“Why does this song remind me of you?”
Zara laughed more.
Smiled more.
Even on days that felt heavy, his messages
somehow made things lighter.
One night, Robert sent a voice note.
His voice was soft.
Calm.
Slightly deeper than she expected.
“Hey… I don’t know why, but I feel like talking
to you is the easiest part of my day.”
Zara replayed it three times.
Her heart felt… warm.
And a little scared.
~ ~
Weeks passed.
They hadn’t met in person yet.
But somehow, it didn’t feel like they were
strangers anymore.
They knew each other’s habits.
Favorite songs.
Random fears.
The way Zara overthought everything.
The way Robert stayed quiet when he was
overwhelmed.
It felt real.
Too real.
One evening, Zara sat in her room, feeling
restless.
Her phone rested in her hand.
Chat open.
His name at the top.
She typed.
Deleted.
Typed again.
Deleted.
Finally —
“Can I ask you something?”
Robert replied almost instantly.
“You just did.”
She rolled her eyes, smiling.
“Okay, something serious.”
“Go on.”
Her fingers hesitated.
Then moved.
“What are we?”
The message sent.
Her heart raced.
Why did that feel so big?
The typing indicator appeared.
Stopped.
Appeared again.
Then —
Robert: “Do you want the safe answer or the
honest one?”
Zara swallowed.
“Honest.”
A few seconds passed.
Then —
“I think we’re something that started
unexpectedly… and is becoming something I don’t want to lose.”
Zara’s chest tightened.
That wasn’t what she expected.
It was… more.
“Why is he like this?” she whispered.
She typed slowly.
“That’s not really an answer.”
Robert: “I know.”
Robert: “Because I don’t want to define it too early and ruin it.”
Silence filled her room.
But it wasn’t uncomfortable.
It was full.
~ ~
From that moment, something shifted.
Not dramatically.
But noticeably.
Robert started opening up more.
Sending longer messages.
Calling sometimes.
And when they called for the first time —
It felt… right.
No awkward pauses.
No forced conversations.
Just two people talking like they had known each
other for years.
“Your voice sounds exactly like your texts,” Zara
said.
Robert chuckled. “What does that even mean?”
“I don’t know… calm. Like you’re always thinking
before you speak.”
“I am.”
“Yeah, I can tell.”
“And you,” he said, “sound like you say things
before you think.”
Zara gasped. “Excuse me?”
He laughed.
And Zara realized —
She liked hearing him laugh.
More than she expected.
~ ~
But feelings are never simple.
And timing is rarely perfect.
One night, Robert was quieter than usual.
His replies were slower.
Shorter.
Zara noticed immediately.
“Are you okay?” she asked.
There was a long pause.
Then —
“Just tired.”
She frowned.
“That’s not it.”
But she didn’t push.
Not yet.
The next day, he barely replied.
And for the first time since they met —
Zara felt distance.
Real distance.
Her chest tightened.
“This is how it ends, isn’t it?” she thought.
No explanation.
No warning.
Just… fading.
That night, she couldn’t take it anymore.
She called him.
He didn’t pick up.
Her heart sank.
Then —
A few minutes later —
Her phone rang.
“Robert.”
She answered immediately.
“Hello?”
Silence.
Then his voice.
Soft.
Tired.
“I’m sorry.”
“For what?” she asked.
“For disappearing.”
Zara sat up, her heart racing.
“Then don’t,” she said quietly.
Another pause.
“I didn’t mean to,” he said. “I just… got
scared.”
“Of what?”
“…Of how much you matter.”
Her breath caught.
“What?”
“I didn’t plan this, Zara,” he continued. “I
didn’t plan to care this much. I didn’t plan to think about you all the time. I
didn’t plan to...”
He stopped.
“...to what?” she whispered.
“To fall for you.”
Silence filled the call.
Zara’s heart pounded so loudly she thought he
could hear it.
“This is crazy,” she said softly.
“I know.”
“We haven’t even met.”
“I know.”
“And you’re saying you...”
“I love you.”
The words landed between them.
Heavy.
Real.
Unavoidable.
Zara closed her eyes.
Everything felt overwhelming.
Too fast.
Too deep.
Too real.
“You don’t even know me completely,” she said.
“I know enough,” he replied. “And I want to know
the rest.”
Tears filled her eyes.
“Why me?” she asked.
Robert’s answer came without hesitation.
“Because you stayed.”
Her chest tightened.
The same words.
From the very beginning.
“People don’t usually stay,” he continued. “But
you did. Even when I was quiet. Even when I didn’t say much. Even when it
would’ve been easier to leave.”
Zara wiped her tears.
“I didn’t even realize I was staying,” she said.
“I did.”
Silence again.
But this time —
It felt like something was being built.
Not broken.
~ ~
A week later, they finally met.
No rain.
No dramatic setting.
Just a quiet cafe.
Simple.
Real.
Zara arrived first.
Her hands slightly cold.
Her heart racing.
“Why am I nervous?” she muttered.
Then —
The door opened.
And there he was.
Robert.
Exactly as she remembered.
And yet —
Different.
More real.
More… hers.
Their eyes met.
And in that moment —
Everything felt familiar.
Like they had done this before.
Like they had always been meant to reach this
point.
He walked toward her slowly.
“Hi,” he said.
Zara smiled.
“Hi.”
A brief pause.
Then she laughed nervously. “So… you’re real.”
Robert smiled softly.
“So are you.”
They sat down.
Talked.
Laughed.
And everything felt natural.
No awkwardness.
No distance.
Just… connection.
At one point, Robert looked at her seriously.
“Can I say something?” he asked.
“Depends. Is it weird?”
“Probably.”
“Go ahead.”
He took a breath.
“I’m really glad you made the first move.”
Zara smiled.
“Me too.”
“Because I don’t think I would’ve,” he admitted.
“Why not?”
He looked at her, his gaze soft.
“Because I didn’t expect to find something real
there.”
Zara nodded.
“Neither did I.”
He reached across the table.
Hesitated for a second.
Then gently held her hand.
“And yet,” he said quietly, “here we are.”
Zara squeezed his hand lightly.
“Here we are.”
Sometimes, love doesn’t start with a grand
moment.
Sometimes, it starts with a simple message.
A small risk.
A quiet decision to reach out.
And sometimes —
The person who wasn’t looking for love…
Becomes the one who feels it the deepest.
