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Chapter 4 - Permission

School auditorium.

Dust in the sunlight.

Plastic chairs.

Students shouting.

The annual function practice list is on the notice board.

Anya stands in front of it.

Her fingers slightly shaking.

There it is.

Dance Performance – Lead: Anya Sharma

Her name.

Printed.

Not hidden.

Not secret.

Her chest feels warm.

Scared.

Excited.

All at once.

Riya hugs her.

"Tu toh star banegi!"

Anya smiles.

But inside, one thought:

How will I tell at home?

That evening, she waits for the "right moment."

Her father is reading the newspaper.

Her mother is folding clothes.

There is no perfect moment.

So she just says it.

"School mein annual function hai… mujhe dance mein select kiya hai."

Silence.

Her mother looks up first.

"Dance?"

"Lead," Anya adds quietly.

Her father lowers the newspaper slowly.

"Boards ke time pe?"

Her excitement shrinks.

"It's just practice after school…"

He interrupts.

"Extra cheezein zaroori nahi hoti 10th mein."

Extra.

That word again.

Like her dream is decoration.

Not important.

Her mother speaks softly,

"Log kya kahenge agar marks kam aaye toh? Dance karne se future nahi banta."

There it is.

Future.

Always future.

As if she's not allowed to choose what that word means.

Anya's throat tightens.

For a second, she almost says, "Theek hai, main mana kar dungi."

Because that's easier.

That's what a "good daughter" does.

But then—

She remembers the notice board.

Her name printed.

For the first time, visible.

She gathers courage.

"Main padhai bhi karungi."

Her voice is shaking.

But she continues.

"Bas ek performance hai."

Her father looks at her for a long moment.

Measuring.

Judging.

Worrying.

Finally he says,

"Marks girne nahi chahiye."

Not yes.

Not no.

A condition.

But to her—

It feels like oxygen.

That night she doesn't cry.

She doesn't dance either.

She just sits on her bed.

Thinking.

This is the first time she didn't stay silent.

It wasn't rebellion.

It wasn't disrespect.

It was just…

Choosing herself a little.

Next day at practice, something changes.

She dances stronger.

Not because she's confident.

But because now she has something to protect.

If her marks fall—

They'll say, "Dekha?"

If she fails—

They'll say, "Isi liye mana kiya tha."

So now she's not only dancing.

She's proving.

And in the back row of the auditorium—

There's a boy watching quietly.

Not clapping loudly.

Not teasing.

Just watching carefully.

Noticing the way she counts beats under her breath.

Noticing the seriousness in her face.

His name isn't important yet.

But he will be.

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