So let’s begin,
Three cities.
Three girls.
Three different worlds.
Yet one heartbeat, one invisible thread of friendship that tied them closer than blood.

Aarohi Rathore – The Firebrand Dreamer
America. The bustling campus of the University of Southern California – School of Cinematic Arts, Los Angeles—a place considered the mecca of filmmakers, dreamers, and storytellers. Aarohi had fought tooth and nail to be here. Not because life was kind, but because she was stubborn enough to not take “no” for an answer.
At just twenty-three, she had already carved a niche for herself back in India with her short films and edits. But it wasn’t enough. She wanted more. Bigger canvases. Worlds built from pixels and imagination. She breathed animation, lived in the magic of VFX, and spoke the language of editing like poetry.
Her hostel room looked less like a place to sleep and more like a battlefield of dreams—sticky notes scribbled with story ideas, sketches of imaginary 3D environments, half-rendered character models running on her laptop at odd hours. Amidst the chaos, Aarohi thrived.
But she wasn’t easy to deal with.
Impulsive. Fiery. Quick to anger. Quick to defend.
People called her arrogant at first. But those who stayed long enough saw the childlike innocence underneath. For those she loved, Aarohi could break herself without hesitation.
And right now, she had only two constants in her whirlwind life—the dream of becoming one of the world’s greatest filmmakers… and the two girls she called sisters, even though no blood connected them.
---

Vidhi Singhania – The Calm Healer
Back in Delhi, the marble walls of AIIMS stood tall, intimidating, and glorious. For Vidhi, it wasn’t just a campus. It was home. Her temple. Her dream turned into reality. She had worked relentlessly through sleepless nights, endless exams, and the weight of expectations to be here.
Her days began before the sun rose and ended long after the world was asleep. She was calm, reserved, and soft-spoken. People around her often mistook her silence for weakness. But Vidhi had a quiet strength, one that didn’t need to shout.
Where Aarohi was fire, Vidhi was water. She absorbed, soothed, balanced. The perfect counterforce to her best friend’s storm. Yet the partners-in-crime.
Her hostel room was stark, neat, everything arranged with a discipline only medical students knew. Thick textbooks with highlighted notes, stethoscopes, white coats hanging crisply—her life revolved around medicine. Yet in between, her phone would buzz with messages from Aarohi, dragging her out of her seriousness with laughter and chaos.
Her heart was tender, her focus razor sharp. She didn’t talk much, but her love for her friends ran deep.
---

Kavya Sharma – The Silent Strategist
Mumbai, the city of dreams, but for Kavya, it was the city of battles.
At twenty-three, she was working as an article at Verma Industries., one of the most reputed CA firms. While most of her peers struggled to even balance study and life, Kavya had thrown herself headfirst into the grueling world of corporate accounts and tax filings, all while preparing for her CA Finals.
Unlike Aarohi’s chaos or Vidhi’s gentle aura, Kavya was… silent. Observant. Mature for her age. Her PG flat was immaculate, every file labeled, every book stacked with precision. She hated mistakes—especially her own.
Her colleagues often found her intimidating, her “don’t mess with me” attitude keeping unnecessary chatter away. But deep down, Kavya wasn’t unkind. She simply didn’t trust easily. The world, to her, was not forgiving. Principles were her shield, and discipline her weapon.
The only place her walls came down was with Aarohi and Vidhi. With them, she wasn’t the CA student. She was just Kavya—the friend who listened, teased, but understood more.
---
The Sisters Beyond Blood
The three of them were scattered across cities and worlds. Yet their friendship was a home they always carried within themselves.
Late-night video calls were their therapy sessions.
Random texts in between deadlines and classes were their lifelines.
Arguments over petty things like whose career was harder or whose professor was scarier often turned into fits of laughter.
Distance never weakened them. If anything, it made their bond stronger.
It was only with each other that they felt seen. Safe. Secure.
---
The Verma Brothers
Just as fate had crafted three women in three different molds, destiny had shaped three men on the other side of the story.
---

Mihir Verma – The Charmer with a Lens
Los Angeles wasn’t just home to Aarohi—it was also Mihir’s playground.
At twenty-four, Mihir had joined the same university, studying filmmaking and editing, though his approach to life was wildly different. Where Aarohi saw discipline and strategy, Mihir saw freedom and spontaneity. He lived without rules, thrived in chaos, and laughed at seriousness.
Handsome, witty, often infuriating—he was the kind of person who could charm his way through any situation. For him, life was about experiences, not boundaries.
Yet beneath that carefree exterior was a loyalty that ran deep. His brothers meant the world to him, and no dream or ambition came before them.
---

Vihaan Verma – The Rebel Healer
In Delhi, while Vidhi walked the silent corridors of AIIMS with discipline, another Verma walked them with defiance.
Vihaan, Mihir’s twin, was also pursuing his MD at AIIMS. But unlike Vidhi, he wasn’t the topper or the disciplined prodigy. He was brilliant, yes, but reckless. He did things his way—questioning professors, challenging norms, and often getting into trouble for it.
Where Vidhi was calm water, Vihaan was untamed waves. They were bound to clash when their worlds collided.
---

Atharv Verma – The Relentless Leader
The eldest, twenty-five-year-old Atharv, bore the weight of responsibility on his shoulders. With their father gone, it was Atharv who had taken over Malhotra Industries, running it with an iron hand.
He was sharp, ruthless when needed, and uncompromising. His life revolved around principles, success, and control. His brothers may have been far away, chasing their own paths, but they remained his strength.
Atharv too was pursuing his Masters and CA Finals in parallel, balancing education with empire. He wasn’t the kind to bend easily, and clashes with equally strong personalities were inevitable.
---
The Brotherhood
If the sisters were soulmates beyond blood, the brothers were no less than best friends disguised as siblings.
They fought, they argued, but they stood unshaken in loyalty. Mihir’s carefree nature, Vihaan’s rebellion, Atharv’s discipline—all three were wildly different, yet their bond was unbreakable.
Distance didn’t matter. Their late-night calls were filled with inside jokes, arguments over trivial matters, and unspoken support.
---
For now, the sisters and brothers were strangers.
Living their own lives.
Fighting their own battles.
Aarohi’s fire hadn’t yet met Mihir’s carefree chaos.
Vidhi’s calm hadn’t yet clashed with Vihaan’s storm.
Kavya’s unbending discipline hadn’t yet faced Atharv’s dominance.
But destiny had plans.
Unseen, unheard, unnoticed, their paths were drawing closer.
Their laughter, fights, dreams, and battles were about to intertwine.
The sisters didn’t know that their next late-night banter about “soulmates and destiny” would soon turn into reality.
The brothers didn’t know that their teasing about “future partners” would soon walk right into their lives.
Life was about to collide. Worlds were about to clash.
And in the wreckage of that collision, love would bloom.
This wasn’t just a story of six individuals.
It was a story of fire meeting air, water meeting waves, and discipline meeting iron.
A story of strangers who would turn into soulmates.
And it was only just beginning.
---
London, Hostel Room
The glow of a laptop screen lit up Aarohi Rathore’s small hostel room. Wires, sketch pads, sticky notes, and half-open books lay scattered like evidence of a storm. Aarohi sat cross-legged on her bed, headphones slung around her neck, her eyes fixed on the rendering bar crawling painfully across the screen.
“Ugh!” she groaned, throwing her hands in the air. “If this rendering takes one more hour, I swear I’ll sue the software company!”
Her phone buzzed. Vidhi Calling. Aarohi’s irritation melted instantly. She picked it up, her fiery tone softening.
“Madam Doctor,” she teased, “do you even know it’s 2 a.m. in America? Or did you call to remind me again how studious you are?”
On the other end, Vidhi’s calm yet mischievous voice flowed like water.
“Firstly, it’s 6:30 a.m. here in Delhi, so technically, I’m right on time. Secondly… you look like you’ve been fighting dragons all night.”
Aarohi laughed, pushing her hair out of her eyes. “Dragons? More like 3D environments. They’re nastier.”
Before Vidhi could reply, another notification popped up—Kavya Sharma has joined the video call.
The screen split into three. Kavya’s face appeared, neat as always, hair tied back, spectacles balanced perfectly, and files stacked in military precision behind her. Yet the stern mask cracked as soon as she saw her two girls, a faint smile tugging her lips.
“Finally,” Kavya said with a smirk, “both of you decided to remember I exist.”
“Oh please, Miss CA Finalist,” Aarohi rolled her eyes. “You probably just finished balancing ten balance sheets.”
“Eleven,” Kavya corrected without missing a beat. “And one client meeting. But yes, thank you for underestimating me as always.”
Vidhi chuckled softly, “And people say I’m the workaholic…”
“Excuse me?” Aarohi raised her eyebrows. “You literally dream of surgeries. Don’t act innocent.”
The three of them burst into laughter.
This was their ritual—chaotic, comforting, irreplaceable. Distance didn’t matter when a video call could stitch their souls back together.
---
Delhi, AIIMS Hostel
Vidhi adjusted her white coat on the back of her chair while nibbling on a biscuit. She looked at her two best friends, her voice quiet yet firm.
“You both fight with the world too much. Sometimes, silence wins.”
Aarohi groaned. “Silence? Vidhi, I’d rather fight ten dragons than stay quiet.”
Kavya smirked. “And that, dear Aaru, is why you get into trouble. A little discipline won’t kill you.”
Aarohi clutched her chest dramatically. “Again, Kavya? Now you sound like my professors.”
Vidhi smiled, sipping her tea. “That’s because they’re right. You’re impulsive.”
“And you’re too calm,” Aarohi shot back playfully. “Sometimes I want to shake you.”
“And you two,” Kavya said in her low, measured tone—her smile reserved only for them—“are both crazy."
The banter went on—fire, water, earth—three elements bound into one unshakable force.
But beneath their teasing was a promise, unspoken yet eternal: I’m here, no matter what.
---
Mumbai, PG Flat
Kavya closed her laptop after finalizing a report, yet her eyes lingered on the video call. Watching her friends laugh gave her something numbers never could—warmth.
She wanted to tell them about her struggles, the loneliness of Mumbai, the weight of CA Finals—but she didn’t have to. Aarohi’s fire gave her courage. Vidhi’s calm gave her strength. Together, they gave her hope.
She cleared her throat. “Anyway, enough about me. Aaru, when’s your next project deadline?”
“Tomorrow,” Aarohi groaned, flopping on her bed. “And I still need to fix the textures. I swear, deadlines are a conspiracy against me.”
Vidhi’s eyes softened. “You’ll do it. You always do.”
“And you?” Kavya asked Vidhi. “Exams next week?”
“Yes. But I’ll manage.” Vidhi’s tone was quiet but confident.
For a moment, silence stretched across the call. Three girls in three different worlds. Yet, the same heartbeat.
---
Los Angeles, Room of Mihir Verma
On the other side of the world, another screen lit up. Mihir Verma leaned back on his chair, his messy hair falling into his eyes. A half-eaten pizza lay forgotten on the table, camera equipment scattered around like toys.
“Bhai, tu kabhi serious hota hai kya?” a voice asked over his speaker.
Mihir smirked, holding his phone. “Seriousness is boring, Vihaan. Life’s short. Eat pizza, shoot films, live free.”
The screen split as Vihaan joined the call, his white coat slung carelessly on a chair in Delhi. His tone was mocking.
“Says the guy who submitted his project one week late.”
“And still got an A,” Mihir winked.
“Show-off,” Vihaan muttered, though a small grin betrayed him.
Just then, Atharv’s ID popped up. The eldest Verma appeared on the screen from his office in Mumbai. His crisp shirt, sharp eyes, and files stacked neatly screamed authority.
“You both have time for this nonsense?” Atharv’s deep voice cut in. “Mihir, your deadlines. Vihaan, your rounds. Do I have to remind you?”
Mihir leaned forward, grinning. “Relax, boss-man. Life isn’t just about files and profits.”
“Or rules and regulations,” Vihaan added, smirking at Atharv.
Atharv sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. “One day, your recklessness will land you in trouble. And as usual, I’ll be the one cleaning it up.”
The twins laughed. Atharv shook his head, but even his stern face softened at their voices.
This was their ritual too—arguments, banter, but always together.
---
On one side of the world, three girls teased each other about deadlines and dreams.
On the other, three brothers mocked each other about responsibilities and rules.
Different screens. Different worlds.
Same bond. Same laughter.
If the sisters were soulmates beyond blood, the brothers were brothers beyond fate.
And none of them knew… that destiny was quietly weaving their threads together.
---
Aarohi shut her laptop after the call, staring at the night sky outside her hostel window. “One day, girls, we’ll meet again. And then, the world better be ready for us.”
At the same moment, Atharv closed his office blinds, muttering, “Someday, these two will learn responsibility. Until then, the world better be ready for me.”
Six strangers.
Six lives.
Six dreams.
Their worlds hadn’t collided yet.
But when they did, sparks would fly.
And in the fire of those sparks, love would be born.
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