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๐Ÿšฒ Benny and the Boring Day That Wasn’t ๐ŸŽ‰

   Benny the mouse pressed his nose against the toy store window, eyes wide. There it was—a  shiny blue bicycle  with streamers on the handlebars and a bell that looked like it could sing. “I  need  that bike,” Benny whispered. Mr. Mouse, his dad, didn’t even glance at it. “Bicycles are silly,” he said. “Come on, we’ve got shopping to do.” Benny sighed. “Shopping is  so  boring.” Mr. Mouse chuckled. “Maybe it’s more exciting than it seems.” At the greengrocer’s, while Mr. Mouse picked apples and carrots, Benny spotted something strange: The shopkeeper was juggling fruit— three apples and two oranges, flying through the air! “Dad! Look!” Benny pointed. “Nonsense,” said Mr. Mouse. “Shopkeepers don’t juggle. Too sensible.” At the dairy, Benny blinked in surprise. Mrs. Cow, the shop owner, was spinning in circles wearing a pink  ballet tutu , twirling to music only she could hear. “Dad! She’s  dancing! ” Mr. Mouse barely looked up from the c...

๐ŸŽจ In the Quiet of the Studio ๐Ÿ’™

 

Artist's studio

The studio always smelled like possibility.

A little turpentine, a little coffee… and something warm and wordless that Sofia couldn’t name—but always missed when she was away.

Barefoot on the splattered cloth, a brush in her hand, and a streak of deep blue across her cheek, she stood before an unfinished canvas. But her focus wasn’t on the art.

It was behind her.

Where he was.

Milo, sketchbook propped on his knee, pencil tucked behind one ear. He wasn’t looking at the skyline or the scattered paints on the table.

He was looking at her.

And he had been—every day—since she’d first said, “Sure, you can hang out while I paint.”

She had always been a solo act. Silence, space, solitude.

But Milo never interrupted. He just… blended. Like a soft brushstroke that made the whole picture better without trying to be the focus.

“You’re doing it again,” she said, not turning around.

“Documenting a masterpiece,” he replied, lazily. “The world deserves this.”

She let out a laugh. “You’ve drawn me so many times already.”

“Forty-two,” he said. “And counting.”

She turned, arms crossed, brush still held like a sword. “You’re trouble.”

He smiled, the kind that made her chest ache in the best way, and walked toward her. Fingers smudged with charcoal and dreams. He smelled like citrus and pages of books no one else read.

He stopped close—closer than usual. His thumb brushed her cheek.

“You had paint,” he said, voice soft.

She froze—not from the touch itself, but from what it carried. That quiet weight. That careful reverence.

“Milo…” she whispered.

He met her gaze.

“I don’t want to be just a sketch on the sidelines,” he said. “I want to be part of your story. Not just watching—in it.

She looked at his ink-stained hands. Then reached out, took one gently in her own, and pressed it over her heart.

“You already are,” she said. “I just hadn’t let myself see it.”

And in the hush of that studio—where the paint never dried the same twice—their story didn’t begin.

It simply deepened.

With color.

With quiet.

With love painted in gestures instead of words. 

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