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The Quiet Ones Don’t Break

MaraXtra
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Aria moves unseen in the shadows. She is quiet and unobtrusive, often overlooked and dismissed. But beneath her serene façade lies a mind with the precision of a scalpel and a determination as strong as steel. Aria doesn’t seek out conflict or make a fuss over herself. She doesn’t feel the need to comply with the mundane rules that govern everyday life. What she feels is the necessity to win, no matter what. And to achieve her objectives, Aria forces the world to obey her rules. Aria grew up realizing that the world preferred the brash, the brutal, and the violent. The meek were often walked over, while the irrelevant were ignored. But Aria had no intention of being one of those people. She meant to triumph and to endure. And if that required exploiting the most sordid aspects of humanity to her own ends, so be it. Her actions are never mindless. They are instead exact and purposeful. Every decision she makes is calculated, each step she takes is thought out, and each outcome she considers is anticipated. To the outside world, in which she dwells almost unconsciously, she is quiet, shy, and harmless. No one suspects that the calm exterior hides a restless mind that always looks ahead and reckons with all the possible risks and repercussions of her actions. No one realises that she plots her way through every conversation, through every decision and through every situation. And no one guesses that behind the mask of innocence and helplessness she plots her way towards her sole objective: remaining unbroken. Then there is him. Unpredictable, sharp as glass, exuding quiet confidence he believes is assurance. He’s an unravelling thread to the stitchwork that holds her world together and one she can’t manage to sew back up. Not yet, at any rate. Aria doesn’t fall in love easily. Perhaps she can’t or perhaps she refuses. The heart is a huge and ghastly and unnecessary vulnerability and Aria values none of those things. But even as she banishes him to the dark corners of her mind he persists there. Alone with her. In a world where conformity, submission and compliance are enforced by the State, Aria has grown up knowing only one way to live – a way that will one day see her in the inner circle. Born into a lower rank Aria knows more than she should, and has to fight for every small gain. Rivals constantly challenge her, strangers try to victimise her, and even those that appear to be friends can prove to be treacherous. The only way to survive is to prove yourself by outwitting all of those that want to do you harm. Aria's power plays are veiled, her deceitful lies go unseen, her plans are always strategic and she is constantly mindful of her own safety – all so that nothing can ever be traced back to her. Her gains are marginal, but they are also all her own. Stress and tension is everywhere in the world of Yelena. Externally, there's the magician Annandada Saodennea, the cruel Captain Maren, con artists, and numerous other people she must learn tretract
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Chapter 1 - The Girl Who Watches

People rarely notice the quiet ones.

It is a strange thing, how easily silence disappears in a noisy world. The loud voices always win the room. The confident smiles gather attention. The ones who laugh the hardest become the center of everything.

And the quiet ones?

They fade into the background like shadows pressed against a wall.

I have always preferred it that way.

Because when no one notices you, they also stop hiding things from you.

The rain had started before sunrise.

I stood near the window in my room, watching droplets slide down the glass in slow, uneven paths. The sky outside was the color of dull steel, and the street below looked tired. A few cars moved through the wet road, their tires slicing through shallow puddles.

Most people would complain about a morning like this.

I didn't mind it.

Rain makes the world quieter.

It blurs things. Softens them. Makes people hurry past each other without paying attention.

That makes it easier to watch.

Across the street, a man stepped out of a small café with a paper cup in his hand. He checked his watch twice within ten seconds. Nervous habit. Probably late for work. A woman followed behind him, speaking on the phone, her voice sharp even through the closed window.

Everyone had somewhere to be.

Everyone had something chasing them.

I watched them for another moment before turning away.

School waited.

It always did.

By the time I reached the front gates, the rain had softened into a thin mist. Students gathered under the awning near the entrance, their conversations bouncing loudly against the concrete walls.

Laughter.

Complaints.

The sound of someone arguing over something trivial.

I moved through them without speaking.

No one stopped me.

No one greeted me.

That wasn't unusual.

Most people at Westbridge High barely knew I existed.

And that was exactly how I liked it.

Inside the hallway, the noise became louder. Lockers slammed shut, shoes squeaked against the polished floor, and voices overlapped in a messy wave of sound.

I walked toward my classroom slowly, my eyes moving without appearing to move.

Observation is a habit.

A necessary one.

Three girls stood near the lockers by the stairwell. One of them laughed too loudly, tilting her head back in exaggerated amusement. The other two followed a second later, their laughter slightly delayed.

Not genuine.

People often laugh to belong, not because something is funny.

Further down the hall, a boy leaned against the wall while scrolling through his phone. His shoulders were tense, and he kept glancing toward the entrance.

Waiting for someone.

Probably hoping they would notice him.

They rarely do.

When I reached the classroom, most of the seats were already filled. The low buzz of conversation faded slightly as I stepped inside, but no one turned to look at me.

Perfect.

I took my usual seat near the back corner of the room.

From there, I could see everything.

The teacher's desk.

The door.

Every student in the room.

People think sitting in the front means you're paying attention.

But the best place to observe a room is from the back.

Evan Parker sat two rows ahead of me, leaning back in his chair like he owned the place. His voice carried easily across the room as he joked with the boys around him.

Confident.

Careless.

People like Evan never think about consequences until they arrive.

Across the aisle, Clara Jennings flipped through her notebook with neat, precise movements. Her hair fell perfectly over one shoulder, and her posture was straight enough to make her look almost staged.

Everything about Clara was controlled.

Except the way her fingers tapped lightly against the desk when she thought no one was looking.

Anxiety.

Small things like that reveal more about a person than words ever could.

The bell rang a moment later, cutting through the noise like a blade.

Our teacher walked in, carrying a stack of papers and an expression that suggested she would rather be anywhere else.

Class began.

I listened.

But not to the lesson.

Instead, I watched the room the way a chess player studies a board.

Every person has patterns.

Every person has weaknesses.

You just have to pay attention long enough to find them.

Halfway through the class, something unusual happened.

The door opened again.

A boy stepped inside, slightly damp from the rain outside.

New student.

You could tell immediately.

He paused near the front of the room while the teacher spoke to him quietly. His posture was relaxed, but his eyes moved quickly, scanning the room in a way that reminded me of someone calculating something.

Interesting.

Most new students looked nervous.

This one didn't.

After a brief conversation, the teacher gestured toward an empty desk near the middle row.

He walked past several students before sitting down.

As he passed my row, his gaze shifted briefly in my direction.

Not long enough to be obvious.

But long enough for me to notice.

Most people look around a room without truly seeing anyone.

He looked like he was actually observing.

A few minutes later, he leaned slightly toward the student beside him and said something under his breath.

The boy laughed quietly.

Confidence.

Comfort.

He adapted quickly.

By the end of the class, the room had already begun to accept him.

People are simple like that.

If you act like you belong somewhere, they rarely question it.

When the bell finally rang, students rushed toward the door in a wave of noise and movement.

I waited.

Crowds reveal things when they move.

Evan nearly knocked into someone while pushing his way out.

Clara carefully packed her books before leaving.

And the new boy remained seated for a moment longer than necessary.

Watching.

That was when I felt it.

The faint sensation of someone's attention landing directly on me.

I looked up.

The new student was standing beside his desk now, his bag slung casually over one shoulder.

His eyes met mine for just a second.

Long enough for something quiet and unspoken to pass between us.

Curiosity.

Recognition.

Then he looked away and walked out of the classroom.

Strange.

For the first time that morning, something felt… different.

I gathered my books and stepped into the hallway a moment later.

The corridor buzzed with movement again, students flooding toward their next classes.

As I moved through the crowd, I noticed him again near the lockers.

He was talking to someone, but his eyes flicked briefly in my direction before returning to his conversation.

Not obvious.

Careful.

That made it even more interesting.

The rest of the day passed in its usual rhythm.

Classes.

Noise.

Predictable conversations drifting through hallways.

But something lingered in the back of my mind.

A small shift in the pattern.

By the time school ended, the rain had returned, heavier this time.

I walked home through the gray streets, the cold air brushing against my face.

When I reached my apartment building, the hallway lights flickered faintly above me as I climbed the stairs.

Inside my room, the quiet returned instantly.

Comfortable.

Familiar.

I set my bag down and walked toward the window again.

The streetlights outside reflected against the wet pavement, turning the road into a long ribbon of gold and shadow.

For a moment, everything felt normal again.

Until my phone buzzed softly on the desk behind me.

One message.

Unknown number.

I stared at the screen for a moment before opening it.

Three words appeared on the display.

I see you.

My expression didn't change.

My heartbeat didn't speed up.

Fear is only useful when it teaches you something.

Instead, I read the message again slowly.

Someone had been paying attention.

A small smile touched the corner of my lips.

Good.

That meant the game had finally begun.