š§ļø The Old Man at the Bus Stop
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Every morning at exactly 8:15, the old man arrived at the bus stop.
Rain or shine, winter or summerāit didnāt matter. He wore the same faded brown coat, carried a small paper bag, and sat on the far end of the bench as if the rest of the world didnāt exist.
People noticed him.
But no one really saw him.
Buses came and went. Crowds gathered and disappeared. Students rushed, workers checked their watches, drivers shouted destinationsābut the old man never moved.
He never boarded a single bus.
One day, a young boy named Ayaan began to notice him.
Ayaan waited at the same stop every morning for his school van. At first, he just glanced at the old man like everyone else did. But after a few days, curiosity started to grow.
āWhy does he come here every day?ā Ayaan wondered.
One morning, he watched more carefully.
The old man looked at every bus that arrived. Not casuallyābut deeply. As if searching for someone in the crowd.
Every time the doors opened, his eyes lit up for a brief second.
And every time the bus left, that light quietly faded.
Days passed.
Ayaan couldnāt ignore it anymore.
So one morning, gathering a little courage, he walked up to the old man.
āAssalamualaikum, Baba,ā he said softly.
The old man looked surprisedābut then smiled gently.
āWalaikum Assalam, beta.ā
Ayaan hesitated, then asked, āYou come here every day⦠but you never go anywhere. Why?ā
For a moment, the old man didnāt answer.
He simply looked ahead at the empty road.
Then, after a long pause, he spoke.
āIām waiting for someone.ā
Ayaan sat beside him.
āWho?ā he asked.
The old manās fingers tightened slightly around his paper bag.
āMy son,ā he said quietly.
Ayaan blinked. āYour son?ā
The old man nodded.
āMany years ago, he left home after an argument. He was angry⦠and I was stubborn.ā His voice trembled slightly. āBefore leaving, he said, āOne day Iāll come back⦠youāll see.āā
The wind passed gently between them.
āI didnāt stop him,ā the old man continued. āI thought he would return in a day⦠maybe a week.ā
āBut he never did.ā
Ayaan felt something heavy in his chest.
āSo⦠youāre waiting here for him?ā
The old man smiled faintly.
āThis was the last place I saw him,ā he said. āHe got on a bus⦠right there.ā
He pointed toward the road.
āI thought⦠if he ever comes back⦠he will come the same way.ā
Silence filled the space between them.
A bus arrived. People stepped down. Others rushed in.
The old manās eyes searched every face.
Hope flickered.
Then faded.
āBabaā¦ā Ayaan said gently, āitās been many years⦠what if heāā
He stopped.
He didnāt know how to finish that sentence.
The old man looked at him kindly.
āBeta, when you love someone⦠you donāt measure time the same way.ā
Ayaan lowered his gaze.
The next day, Ayaan came again.
But the bench was empty.
No brown coat.
No paper bag.
No quiet eyes searching the crowd.
A strange uneasiness filled his heart.
āMaybe heās late,ā Ayaan thought.
But he didnāt come the next day either.
Or the day after that.
A week later, Ayaan saw a small notice pasted near the bus stop.
A simple paper.
A picture.
And a few words.
It was the old man.
āIn loving memoryā¦ā
Ayaan felt his throat tighten.
His eyes moved slowly to the bench where the old man used to sit.
For the first time⦠it looked truly empty.
The next morning, Ayaan arrived at 8:15.
He didnāt sit in his usual place.
Instead, he walked to the far end of the bench⦠and sat quietly.
Just like the old man used to.
A bus arrived.
People came and went.
Ayaan looked at every face.
Not because he expected someone.
But because now⦠he understood.
Some people arenāt waiting for buses.
Theyāre waiting for moments that never returned.
For apologies that were never said.
For people⦠who never came back.
About the Creator
Imran Ali Shah
š Vical Midea | Imran
š„ Turning ideas into viral content
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