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《The Quiet Shelter at the End of the Alley》

haebark
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
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Synopsis
In the heart of a bustling traditional market lies a hidden alley—a place few notice, and fewer still wander into. At its quiet end stands a little coffee shop with an old, faded sign: “The Quiet Shelter at the End of the Alley.” No one knows when it opened or who started it. The man who runs it now was once just a quiet visitor, lost in thought like so many who find themselves there. He offers coffee and curated books—not with explanations, but with intuition. The shop does not heal, but it listens. Each episode in this gentle, episodic tale introduces a new visitor: A child who learned loss through a broken toy. A woman too afraid to unwrap her own joy. A man who rehearses old regrets like a worn-out melody. A couple trying to part ways with grace. A soon-to-be parent terrified of repeating the past. And through them all, the master of the shop remains—a quiet figure pouring coffee and placing bookmarks, each inscribed with a message just for them. This is a story not of miracles, but of stillness. Not of answers, but of pause. Not of endings, but of shelter. Perfect for readers who find comfort in the quiet, and hope in the smallest acts of understanding.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue — She Had Just Finished Her Grocery Shopping

The market was still loud.

More words floated through the air than goods exchanged,

and glances collided faster than people.

Hanna had finished her shopping,

but for some reason, her heart felt empty.

"Maybe I should've just gone to the supermarket..."

She muttered silently as she carried the heavy bags through the narrow alley.

Then came a scent.

A warmth she didn't recognize, but wasn't unfamiliar either—

the smell of freshly roasted coffee beans.

At the end of the alley,

a weathered sign reflected the sunlight as it swayed slightly.

"The Quiet Shelter at the End of the Alley."

Before she realized it,

she was pushing the door open.

It made no sound.

And the inside felt like it belonged to a different time altogether—

a place where the noise of the market couldn't reach.

"Welcome," said a voice.

She looked up.

A man in his forties, plain-looking,

wearing a white shirt and a knitted vest.

He glanced from a book to his phone, then back to the book—

calm, uninterested, and somehow exactly what this place needed.

That was her first visit.

And that visit, in the quietest way possible,

made her day feel just a little less lonely.