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MaNan: Dark Notes

Aditi_Aryan_6157
21
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 21 chs / week.
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Synopsis
He was her chaos. She was his silence. Together, they were music too dangerous to be played. At Elite Space Academy, power rules, and no one wields it like Manik Malhotra — arrogant, magnetic, and dangerously untouchable. As lead of the legendary music group Fab 5, he owns the stage and the fear of every student who dares cross him. But then comes Nandini Murthy — the girl with fire in her eyes and a violin that speaks to pain. A scholarship student with a haunting past, she walks into Manik’s storm and doesn’t flinch. Instead, she plays — and in her silence, he hears something for the first time: peace. Their worlds weren’t meant to collide. But obsession doesn’t ask for permission. And neither does desire. As rehearsals turn into games of control, and stolen glances turn into nights of slow-burning temptation, lines blur between hate and hunger, rage and lust. But in the shadows of their growing passion, secrets stir — secrets that could break them both. Because loving him might cost her everything. And taming her might be the one thing he can’t win. A story of music, madness, and the kind of love that doesn't ask to be understood — only felt.
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Chapter 1 - Prologue: Some Notes Aren’t Meant to Be Played

"Some wounds don't bleed.They sing."

The first time she heard him, he wasn't singing.

He was screaming.

Not with his voice — with his guitar. The strings were almost snapping under the weight of his rage, the sound loud, distorted, violent. It poured out of the rehearsal room and flooded the corridor like a warning:Don't come close.

But Nandini Murthy had never been good at obeying rules. Especially when they were unspoken.

Her fingers itched to tune the chaos. Not because she pitied him — but because she understood it. The noise. The unrest. The madness that lives just beneath your skin when life hands you trauma and demands you smile.

She walked past the crowd, eyes down, violin case tight in hand. No one stopped her — not even the girl crying in the corner, not even the guy leaning back with amusement, watching her walk straight into fire.

Behind the door, the noise stopped.

So did her heartbeat.

And then… him.

He was taller than she expected. Leaner. Angrier. Shirt half-unbuttoned, knuckles bleeding, eyes void. Not the romantic kind of broken. The kind that should come with a warning sign.

"You're in the wrong room," he said, voice low. Lethal.

Nandini blinked. "I'm here for the audition."

He didn't smirk. He didn't move.

He just stared.

Until the silence turned sharp enough to cut bone.

Then, without warning, he stepped aside.

"Then play."

That was the beginning.

Of her unraveling.Of his obsession.Of something far more dangerous than love.

Because this wasn't a romance.

It was a war.

And music was their battlefield.