Like any good story it was layered upon the premise of the love between two perfect strangers.
Like any good story it was about romance that blossomed... and then flourished as quick as it was fierce.
Like any good story it spun a far-reaching web of hope and longing whilst still holding on to the uncompromising nature of responsibility to one's dreams.
Like any good story, there was a spot of intimacy. The gradual build up of physical and psychological attraction that culminated in the merging of two, was nothing less than tasteful.
Like any good story there was conflict. But it was not the cliched garnish that involved oppressive parenting styles nor glaring racial differences. It did not rope in the overused notion of "we're so different, we're two parts of a whole". It was... a beautiful conflict. One that does not allow the audience to choose sides. In fact, it encourages you to think inward and root for both parties - be them together or apart. If anything at all, it boils down to the pursuit of each individual's happiness.
Like any good modern day story, it ended with a breath held in a gasp. You hold it there for the longest moment and you have to close that breath with a heavy sigh of loss. It also leaves you with ample room to deliberate the "what if" factor. Happy endings last a while but sad ones... they rip a hole in you that almost never closes... and you cannot help but go back to read it over and over again in the hopes of finding the elusive right answer or the best alternate ending.
Like any good story it was tailored in my fit. Because I envisioned myself in it. I got consumed by it. Overwhelmed by it, enough to almost break the pipes.
And like any good story, it's worth keeping... In heart and in mind.
So I read a story today. And I didn't want it to end.