The library had always been her quiet rebellion.
While the world outside pressed with schedules, subway noise, and small talk she didn’t have energy for, the library stood untouched, shelved in silence, dust, and possibility.
Meera came every Sunday. Always at ten. Always with a thermos of masala chai tucked into her oversized tote, alongside whatever book she’d half-finished the week before.
It started as a whim.
She found the old postcard wedged between the pages of a poetry collection, ‘Love and Other Small Wars’. The card was blank, except for a faded red border and a tiny, hand-painted sunflower in one corner. The space where a stamp should’ve been was empty. The address lines had never been used.
She stared at it for a long moment. Then pulled out a pen.
Hello, stranger.
I don’t know why I’m writing this. Maybe because we’ve both reached for the same book, perhaps that makes us kindred in some tiny, bookish way.
If you’re reading this, I hope you’re okay. The world can feel a bit too much sometimes, can’t it? But right now, this moment, here in the library, this quiet, ink-scented bubble, it feels like enough.
Be gentle with yourself.
—M
She slid the postcard back into the book, tucked between pages 48 and 49, and returned it to the shelf.
It was silly. It was nothing. But it stayed with her the rest of the day like the warmth of the sun on skin.
Two weeks passed. Meera almost forgot about the card.
Then, on a damp April morning, she returned to her Sunday haunt and pulled out another poetry book, this time from the bottom shelf.
A postcard fell into her lap.
It was the same one. But there was new handwriting below hers.
Dear M,
I never expected to find a note like yours in a library book. It stopped me in my tracks, in a good way. Thank you.
I read that book after a very long day. I wasn’t sure what I needed. Turned out, it was your words. So… thank you for the kindness you didn’t know you gave.
I guess this makes me S.
P.S. I also love this part of the library. It always smells like rain and paperbacks.
Meera stared at the postcard, her fingers trembling.
“Someone replied,” she whispered, half in disbelief.
She didn’t know who S was. But suddenly, the silence of the library felt fuller.
She replied quickly:
S,
You caught me off guard. In the best possible way.
Can we make this a thing? A secret mailbox through books?
She placed the card into The Book Thief, tucked neatly between chapters. And waited.
Over the next two months, their postcard exchange became a ritual.
They never met. They didn’t ask for names or details. Only initials. Only thoughts.
They spoke about books, rainy days, favourite quotes, and small fears. One card from S read:
Sometimes, I think the loneliest part of my day is when I leave the library. Like I’ve borrowed someone else’s silence and now I have to give it back.
Another from Meera:
I saw an old couple holding hands near the bus stop today. It made my heart ache, in a beautiful sort of way. Is it strange to long for something you’ve never had?
They began to confide more.
One day, Meera wrote:
What would happen if we met? Would we break the spell? Would we recognise each other?
S replied:
I think I’d recognise you. Maybe not by face, but by pause. You write with quiet spaces. I think you live with them, too.
They didn’t need faces. Just words.
In late May, Meera left a card that read:
S,
There’s something deliciously heartbreaking about caring for someone you’ve never seen. Is that what this is? Are we writing versions of each other that don’t exist? And yet, it feels real. Like a tide, I can’t hold back.
Sometimes I find myself watching the door, wondering if you’ll walk in. Would I even know it was you? Would you?
The reply came the next week:
M,
I read your card five times. I don’t have a clever response. Only this: I’ve started showing up early, hoping to see who reaches for the books I’ve just left behind.
I think I want to meet you. But I’m scared that the magic might break if we do.
Still, maybe some magic is worth risking.
Would you ever want to meet me, too?
Meera’s breath caught in her throat. Her fingers trembled.
Yes.
Let’s meet next Sunday. Same place. 10 a.m. I’ll be in the poetry aisle. Yellow scarf. Nervous heart.
Sunday arrived, wrapped in golden light.
Meera stood in the poetry aisle, yellow scarf around her neck, pretending to read.
Her heart thudded.
At 10:11 a.m., he appeared.
He was tall, in a dark blue sweater, with soft brown eyes and ink-stained fingers. He looked nervous.
He was holding a postcard.
Their eyes met.
He smiled.
“Hi,” he said softly. “I’m S. Samir.”
“Hi,” Meera breathed. “I’m M. Meera.”
They laughed, a gentle, awkward laugh.
“I was afraid you wouldn’t come,” he said.
“I almost didn’t,” she replied. “But then I thought… if you were anything like your words, I had to meet you.”
He touched the postcard in his hand.
“You changed my Sundays,” he said.
They sat together on the carpet, backs against the bookshelf.
“What now?” she asked.
He smiled.
“Now we write a new chapter. Together.”
A year passed.
They still left postcards for each other. Sometimes in books. Sometimes in coat pockets.
You smiled in your sleep last night. I hope you were dreaming of something silly and soft. Like marshmallows. Or me. —S
I wasn’t dreaming. I was remembering our first postcard. And hoping we’d never stop writing our story. —M
They didn’t.
Two years later, the city library hosted *”Voices Between the Pages.”
Among the displays: a series of postcards, gently ageing, gently loved.
The first read:
Hello, stranger…
No names were given. But two visitors returned every Sunday, wandering shelves, sometimes laughing softly, slipping a new card into a random book…
For the next stranger to find.
Because stories, like love, are meant to be passed on.
what a delightful story! i love it! it left me with a big smile on my face😊🥰 your stories are great: keep writing & sharing!👍🏼❤️
Thanks so much! Your comments always leave me with a smile 😊
wonderful story! it seems my first response didnt make it so this is a retry.
i love this story especially, because it made me smile & left me feeling better than before i read it. good job!!!❤️👍🏼
Your first response did make it! But this one is even better!!