Uzaifa (by Afsana Wahid)
“She no longer collected stories to preserve them — but to listen to them.”
Uzaifa still came to the café.
But now, she no longer carried a register.
No prepared questions.
Just a blue diary —
whose corners had grown more frayed,
as if touched by many fingers.
One day,
an elderly man sat in the corner.
An old shawl draped over his shoulders,
his eyes full of sleep… and memories.
He asked Uzaifa:
“Do you also hear the words hidden in people’s silences?”
Uzaifa didn’t reply.
She simply slid her blue diary towards him.
It opened to a blank page —
on which was written only:
“I don’t answer anymore — I write down people’s silences.”
📚 “Bayaan was no longer just a café — it was a document.”
Now, there was no register on any table,
but each table held a story.
A girl who came every Tuesday,
to write poems for her late father.
A boy, who read the same page every time —
the one Uzaifa had once left behind.
It said:
“Love needs neither time nor destination — just a single word.”
✨ “One night — when even time learned to pause”
That night, there was no rain.
No noise.
Just a soft melody,
and faint shadows on the wall.
Uzaifa sat in silence for a long time —
as if waiting for a new letter,
or reliving an old phrase.
Then she opened her diary,
and for the first time,
wrote something for herself:
“I no longer wait for someone to return.
Now, in every stranger,
I search for a forgotten moment.”
🕊️ “She wanted to fly now — without a destination”
One day she told the café manager:
“Install a small cupboard in this corner —
I want people to leave their stories here.”
And slowly, every day,
someone left behind a page.
Some stained with tears,
some spotted with coffee,
some half-burnt,
some marked only by a name.
💫 “She didn’t write anymore — she made others write.”
Uzaifa had a new habit now.
She’d sit at random tables,
look into people’s eyes —
and wouldn’t ask anything,
just smile.
Her smile seemed to say:
“Leave behind what you wish to say.
I won’t read it —
but I’ll feel it.”
📖 “Bayaan’s new identity”
A board now hung in the café:
“Bayaan: A corner
where words aren’t read —
they’re simply felt.”
🔚 “Then one evening — a page fluttered”
Someone old returned.
He had no register in hand,
but a camera —
and eyes that held an old search.
He pulled a chair,
sat down, and picked a page from the blue diary.
It read:
“I never forgot you —
I just learned to find you in everyone else.”
🧷 “Who was Uzaifa now?”
Maybe a girl
who didn’t write in registers —
but had become the destination
of every incomplete love.
She no longer belonged to a single story —
She was now the voice
of everyone who had once been unable to say:
"I feel it too."
🌙 “Bayaan was now a city — of words, silences, and hope…”
And Uzaifa?
She still comes.
Sometimes alone,
sometimes with a stranger.
But every time, she leaves something behind —
a phrase, a smile,
or just a faint feeling…
So someone may return one day and say:
“Let me live again,
in your words.”
🌼 “Bayaan now needed a new voice…”
That evening felt different.
No strong winds,
no dark clouds,
no heavy silence.
Just a girl entered the café for the first time.
Seeing her walk in,
Uzaifa didn’t smile —
but a trembling story stirred in her eyes.
✨ “Her name was Elina”
Elina —
a girl who was quiet,
but her eyes carried the weight of many untold things.
She silently sat in the same corner
where Uzaifa had once written her first line.
But she had nothing before her —
no diary, no pen, no questions.
Just empty hands… and heavy breaths.
Uzaifa gently slid her blue diary toward her.
“If you have nothing to say,
then just think of it —
Sometimes even silence becomes a script.”
📜 “Bayaan was no longer a book — it had become a journey”
For days, Elina kept coming.
Sometimes she wrote nothing.
Sometimes she flipped through old registers.
Sometimes she stared at the poems pinned on the wall.
One day —
she asked Uzaifa:
“Will I ever be able to write something
that makes someone else see themselves?”
Uzaifa said:
“If there’s a trembling feeling in your silence —
then it’s already written.
You just need to learn how to read it.”
🖋️ “She wasn’t taught how to write — she was taught how to read herself”
Elina began bringing a small register.
Every day, she wrote one line in it.
Sometimes like this:
“Today I looked into someone’s eyes for the first time —
and I wasn’t afraid.”
Or like:
“What had once broken inside me —
has now started talking to the air.”
📦 “Then one day, Bayaan’s cupboard was full”
That little cupboard
was now packed with hundreds of letters.
Uzaifa called Elina —
and without a word,
handed her a pile of registers.
Then smiled and said:
“Now they’re yours.
People will keep writing —
but now, you’ll be the one to read.”
🌻 “Uzaifa now stood behind — and the stories moved ahead”
One evening, Uzaifa didn’t sit —
she stood near the window.
And watched:
Elina now sat in the corner
that once belonged to Uzaifa.
Before her lay three pages —
A girl remembering her mother.
A boy forgiving himself.
And an unfinished letter…
That simply said:
“I could never say it —
but I kept listening.”
📖 “Bayaan was now a legacy — passed on”
One morning —
Uzaifa closed the blue diary.
Its corners were more worn than ever.
She placed it above the cupboard —
for the last time.
“I won’t sit here anymore, Elina…
Now you must meet the stories
that have waited for years.”
“Sometimes a story ends
right where another one begins.”
Now in the café, people ask:
“Whose blue diary is that?”
And Elina smiles and replies:
“It’s not mine…
It belongs to the woman
who never said anything —
but heard it all.”
✍️ “Uzaifa was no longer a name — she had become a feeling”
Now when a child writes their first poem,
an old man brings a story from his youth,
or a lover leaves behind an unfinished letter —
Their first stop is always Bayaan.
And when someone seeks an answer —
the last page of the register
still says:
“I never saw you —
but I recognized myself
in your words.”
— Afsana Wahid
Because some tales never truly end…
They simply turn the page. ✨📖💙
Hello, I’m writer Afsana Wahid.
If this story touches even one heart, please do let me know in the comments —
so I can feel the magic of my words reaching you.
And please tell me where you're reading from, especially if you're outside India.
Thank you so much!
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