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The morning light stretched lazily across the village road, bathing everything in a warm, honeyed glow.

The sky was clear—no clouds, just that endless soft blue, like it too had slowed down to admire the day.

Billy and Artur walked side by side, their steps unhurried, quiet leaves crunching underfoot.

The town felt different today—awake, but in a way that felt patient, as though it too was holding its breath with them.

Billy’s hand brushed against Artur’s as they walked, their fingers eventually finding each other without a word.

He didn’t speak, but the way he clutched that hand said everything: I’m ready, I think. But stay close.

Ahead, the bookstore ca into view—tucked between ivy-laced brick and a fence freshly painted, its charm quiet but impossible to ignore.

The sign above the door rocked gently in the breeze, the new lettering catching the light like a quiet smile.

Billy slowed.

For a mont, he simply stared. At the windows they had cleaned.

The shelves they had stacked. The small flower box Mr. Dand insisted on adding under the front sill.

The doormat Artur picked out, a plain one with Welco, whoever you are written across it.

Billy let out a soft breath he didn’t realize he’d been holding.

Artur turned slightly. "Looks good, doesn’t it?"

He exhaled slowly, his gaze sweeping the shelves. "It feels... real now."

"You made it real," Artur said.

The door creaked slightly as Billy stepped forward and unlocked it.

He pushed it open slowly, letting the faint scent of paper, wood polish, and fresh beginnings wash over him.

Inside, everything waited in stillness. The books in their places. The small reading corner tucked neatly beneath the front window.

The counter clean and simple, holding only the cash tin and a small jar of mints.

Billy stepped in first, the wooden floor soft beneath his feet.

He looked around in silence, his eyes moving over every little corner as if morizing it all.

He turned just as Artur closed the door behind them.

"It’s ours," Billy whispered.

Artur nodded. "It is."

Billy let out a small laugh—relieved, grateful, overwheld.

Then the bell above the door jingled.

They both turned as Mr. Dand entered, still drying his hands on a towel.

"Don’t start without ," he said, looking around with quiet pride. "I want to see the first page turn."

Billy grinned, his heart full.

"Then let’s begin."

The little brass bell above the door gave a cheerful chi as the first guest stepped inside.

It was Mr. Thomas, their neighbor with the crooked hat and the habit of speaking like he was mid-thought.

He held a small wrapped bundle in his arms and offered a nod as he stepped in.

"Thought you might need bookmarks," he said simply, placing the package on the counter. "I make ’em from leather scraps. Good ones. Real sturdy."

Billy blinked. "Thank you, I—really... thank you."

Mr. Thomas gave him a half-smile before moving to browse, muttering to himself about poetry books and whether he still had his glasses.

More footsteps followed. A soft swell of voices. The doorbell chid again. And again.

A young couple holding hands wandered in, peering curiously at the shelves.

A woman with her toddler in tow knelt by the children’s section, whispering sothing about bedti stories.

A man in his sixties ca just to look, then quietly bought a novel with a worn spine from the secondhand table.

Billy stood behind the counter, watching in quiet awe.

Artur leaned in gently. "Still breathing?"

"Barely," Billy whispered back.

Then ca Sam, sweeping through the door like he’d been waiting all morning for this mont.

A cara dangled from his neck, and his grin stretched wide.

"You think I’d miss this?" Sam said, already snapping photos before Billy could respond. "Big day, small town, dreams being lived—this is gold."

He moved around like he belonged there, catching monts in corners: a child flipping pages with sticky fingers, Mr. Dand showing a guest a vintage cookbook he claid was "criminally underrated," and Billy—wide-eyed, flushed, trying to hold it all in.

Sowhere in the mix, soone brought a basket of muffins.

Another guest set down a bouquet of fresh daisies wrapped in newspaper.

A teenager handed over a folded note that simply read, I love books too. Thanks for making a place for us.

Billy didn’t know her na. He didn’t know half their nas.

But they ca.

They really ca.

He stood near the shelves, one hand trailing over the spines, his gaze flickering across the room, heart full and voice caught sowhere behind it all.

Artur found him there and gently bumped his shoulder.

"You okay?"

Billy nodded slowly. "I didn’t expect this."

"I did," Artur said.

Billy turned to look at him, eyes shining.

"You believed in before I did."

Artur gave a small shrug, then smiled. "That’s love, isn’t it?"

Billy leaned his forehead against Artur’s, just briefly, quietly.

Then the doorbell rang again.

The village kept coming.

And inside the small bookstore, sothing precious began—soft and slow, and exactly enough.

Billy glanced up from the register as the door crack again, ready with a polite smile—only to freeze mid-breath.

Jay stood just inside the doorway, a paper-wrapped bouquet in hand. Behind him was Mark, grinning with that quiet calm that never needed words to say everything.

Billy’s lips parted, stunned. "Wait—what...?"

"You really thought we’d miss this?" Jay raised a brow, stepping forward like he owned the room—because he usually did.

Mark chuckled as he closed the door behind them. "It’s not every day our friend opens a bookstore in the middle of nowhere."

Jay handed Billy the bouquet—sunflowers and eucalyptus, bright and clean. "Camilla made promise to deliver these. Your mom’s idea. She said, and I quote, ’Make sure he knows how proud we are, or don’t co ho.’"

Billy blinked fast, trying not to get misty-eyed right then and there. "You ca all the way from the city..."

"Drove all night," Mark said. "Jay nearly got us lost. Twice."

"I did not," Jay said. "I was navigating emotionally."

Behind the counter, Artur folded his arms, watching the scene with a smirk. "Are you sure," he asked dryly, "you didn’t just co here for the festival food and plan to disappear before clean-up?"

Jay turned toward him with mock offense. "Excuse , I happen to be deeply invested in books. And fried dumplings."

Mark gave Artur a knowing look. "He’s mostly here for the dumplings."

Artur chuckled. "I knew it."

Billy was still holding the bouquet, still trying to absorb it all.

His voice ca quieter this ti, thick with emotion.

"Thank you... for coming."

Mark stepped closer, placing a hand on Billy’s shoulder. "You built sothing beautiful here. We wanted to see it with our own eyes."

Jay nudged him. "And take embarrassing photos you’ll hate us for later."

"Too late," Sam said from the corner, cara already snapping. "This one’s going in the book."

"You have a book?" Jay turned.

"I will now," Sam winked.

Billy stood between them all—Artur by his side, Mark and Jay before him, Sam docunting it all, and strangers still flipping pages in the background.

Sohow it felt like every version of his life had folded gently into this room.

And for once, it didn’t feel like too much.

It felt like exactly enough.

The hum of voices softened as the piano bench creaked.

Billy ran his fingers gently along the keys—not playing yet, just feeling them, as if asking permission.

Then, slowly, he began. No fanfare. Just soft notes rising into the morning air, like a letter written without ink, only feeling.

The lody wasn’t perfect. It wavered once, hesitated again, then found its rhythm in a quiet, aching way.

The kind of music that didn’t need to impress—it only needed to be honest.

People turned from the shelves. So stopped mid-conversation.

Even the youngest children quieted, leaning in against their parents, listening.

Artur stood near the corner, arms loosely folded, a ghost of a smile on his lips.

Jay leaned against the window with a look Billy knew well—teasing on the outside, protective underneath.

Mark stood beside him, hand in his coat pocket, watching the way you do when you’re proud but don’t want to make it about you.

When the final note faded, Billy let it hang.

He rose slowly from the bench.

Clearing his throat once, he turned to face the small crowd—neighbors, friends, strangers, and pieces of his past all gathered in the tiny bookstore that sohow held them all.

"I didn’t plan to say anything," Billy started, his voice soft, sincere. "But I’ve been thinking about this mont for a long ti. Or maybe I’ve been trying to reach it without realizing it."

A few people shifted. So smiled, already knowing this would be more than a simple thank-you.

"This place... it didn’t start as a dream. It started as a way to breathe again. After the noise, after the silence, after everything I forgot... I ca here, and I started rembering who I was—not just as an actor, or a son, or soone who got lost. But as soone who still believed in stories."

A child coughed softly near the corner, but no one moved.

He paused, eyes sweeping over the quiet room.

"There’s sothing sacred about books. About stories. About the kind of people who walk into a store like this and look for sothing they don’t even know they’re missing."

He smiled faintly. "So of you are readers. So of you are drears. So of you... maybe haven’t read a book in years. But you’re here. And that matters."

His hand lifted slightly, as if offering sothing invisible to them.

"I believe stories can carry us through the hardest winters. They hold light when everything else goes dim. They remind us of the kind of people we want to be—even when we forget. Even when the world forgets."

A pause. The silence leaned in.

"So if this store becos anything... let it be a place where lost things are found. Let it be a place where readers find their courage, and drears find their voice. A place where Fate doesn’t stay unwritten—where you’re allowed to write it, shape it, ss it up and rewrite it again."

Billy’s voice softened.

"Thank you for letting start again."

A beat.

"And for showing up, not just today—but for every story waiting to be told."

For a breathless mont, no one moved.

Then the applause began—scattered at first, then full.

A small standing ovation in a village bookstore.

Artur’s eyes shone. Mr. Dand clapped without hiding the tears on his cheek.

Sam’s cara shutter clicked quietly, capturing the one mont that didn’t need editing.

Billy stepped back, blinking, smiling, heart full.

And sohow, in that crowded little bookstore, he felt more whole than he ever had on any stage.

"Alright, everyone—don’t move!" Sam called, already backing toward the center of the shop with his cara raised.

The crowd chuckled, rustling into place as Sam adjusted the lens. "If you blink, I swear I’ll make a poster out of it," he warned, grinning.

Billy laughed, a real one, head tilted slightly back.

Artur slipped beside him, hand resting lightly at Billy’s back. Mr. Dand stood tall at Billy’s other side, arms folded like a proud father trying to hide how much this ant to him.

Jay leaned in from the right, already pulling Mark by the wrist to stand in. "You’re part of this too," he said under his breath, and Mark gave a small smile as he let himself be dragged into the fra.

Neighbors stood behind them—Mr. Thomas with his cap slightly crooked, the children from next door trying their best to stay still but bouncing just a little.

Even the stranger who’d stopped in for directions was now grinning beside the shelf of poetry, like he’d sohow wandered into sothing magical.

"Alright, on three," Sam called. "One... two..."

Billy turned his face toward Artur, quietly.

"Three!"

The click captured them mid-smile, eyes locked—like the whole room had blurred except for that one mont.

Billy and Artur were caught mid-smile, eyes locked just for a second—like they forgot the cara, forgot the crowd, and rembered only the quiet understanding between them.

Another snap.

Then Sam lowered the cara with a satisfied nod. "Got it," he said. "That’s the one."

Billy looked around at the faces. Familiar. Unexpected. Smiling. Real.

"Can we get a copy of that?" Mr. Dand asked, voice a little rough.

"You’ll be getting a dozen," Sam said proudly. "One for every shelf in this shop."

Soone laughed. Soone sniffed.

Billy stepped down from the platform and leaned into Artur’s side.

"You okay?" Artur murmured softly.

Billy nodded, his eyes soft. "Yeah. It’s all... more than I thought it could be."

Artur kissed the top of his head. "That’s because you don’t know what you deserve yet."

The two stood there a mont longer, in the afterglow of applause and old books, and flashbulbs—and the kind of mory that didn’t need a fra to last.

You are reading Unwritten Fate [BL] Chapter 189: Where Lost Things Are Found on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
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