Stories

Hello/Hola/Bonjour/مرحبا

All my stories are free, created to bring comfort to those who need it most. If you choose to support me, it would mean so much—it helps me continue sharing these pieces of hope and art. Thank you for believing in my work.

The Orphan’s Valentine

Lost in time, hunted by pictures and voices from his past, the twenty-year-old
who’s lost it all weaves his life’s narrative, Through his tale, witness how the
world arround him shaped his destiny, bringing him to this enigmatic
crossroad.

Philophobia: fear of love

In Philophobia: Fear of Love, the heartbroken Delilah finds new hope when Valentine helps her heal from her ex-boyfriend’s betrayal. But when she falls for him, his own fear of love drives him away. Determined, she must confront his painful past to prove that love is worth fighting for.

you’ve got a friend in cold, Husky

Valentine is cold-hearted and ruthless, willing to eliminate anything standing in his way. But when he sees his own broken past reflected in his childhood friend, he chooses to help him, driven by a newfound understanding that saving his friend might be the only way to save himself.

Characters Description


Valentine is a man shaped by rejection and longing. Born into a world where his mother was already gone, he grew up under the shadow of a father who doubted he was his own. From an early age, he experienced nothing but coldness and rejection, leaving him with a deep, unfulfilled craving for love.

As he grew older, the absence of affection turned him numb and detached. He became cold and distant, masking the tenderness that still flickers deep within him. Though his demeanor may seem unfeeling, Valentine is a man on a quiet, relentless search for love—a love that might heal the wounds of his past and fill the emptiness inside him.

Valentine

Each story in Valentine’s world reveals a different side of him, a reflection of how his experiences shaped his character. But through it all, one thing remains the same: his yearning for connection, his desire to feel what he’s been denied his entire life.

Y.G / the You g Guy


Y.G. , short for Young Guy, is a character who exudes warmth, sympathy, and deep understanding. From the very beginning, Y.G. embodies what Valentine longs for—someone who listens without judgment, someone who feels the weight of his story as if it were their own. He is patient, compassionate, and attentive, offering Valentine the safe space he has never had. Y.G. represents the readers themselves—their emotions, their empathy, and their willingness to connect with Valentine’s tragic past.

But by the end of the story, the truth unravels: Y.G. and Valentine are two sides of the same person. Y.G. represents the good side—the hopeful, empathetic, and healing part—while Valentine embodies the pain, the trauma, and the darkness of that same soul. Valentine is not a separate person but a creation of Y.G.’s fractured mind—a way for him to confront his own tragedy by distancing himself from the suffering.

Y.G.’s warmth and compassion are not just for Valentine but for himself—a way to reconcile the duality within him. This twist reveals that the entire tale was not just Valentine’s story but Y.G.’s inner journey to process his pain, confront his darkness, and find hope. Y.G. bridges the gap between the narrative and the readers, showing how light and darkness coexist in all of us, and how we often tell stories to heal the parts of ourselves we find hardest to face.

Delilah

Delilah is more than a character; she is the emotional anchor of the trilogy, embodying what Valentine and Y.G. struggle to understand within themselves. Her presence is pivotal, as she transforms alongside their journey, reflecting their inner conflicts and aspirations.

1. In the First Story:

Delilah represents hope and longing—the light that Y.G. and Valentine both yearn for but cannot fully grasp. She is the embodiment of what they are missing: warmth, kindness, and love. To Y.G., she is a symbol of what is possible if Valentine can let go of his pain. To Valentine, she feels unattainable, like a star in the sky—bright, distant, and far removed from his darkness. She mirrors the readers’ desire for Valentine to find solace, as she becomes the bridge between Y.G.’s empathy and Valentine’s fear.

2. In the Second Story: Delilah becomes the manifestation of what Valentine fears the most—the vulnerability and intimacy that love demands. Her presence challenges him, forcing him to confront the walls he’s built around himself. While her warmth and femininity draw him in, they also terrify him, highlighting the stark contrast between her light and his self-perceived darkness. She represents the fear of losing control, the fear of abandonment, and the fear of being unworthy of love, driving the emotional tension in this part of the narrative.

3. In the Third Story: Delilah transforms into the symbol of healing and redemption, the dream that Valentine finally allows himself to believe in. She represents the possibility that love can mend even the most broken souls. As Valentine describes her—his Venus in the sky—Delilah is not just a figure of admiration but a guiding light, showing him the way out of his internal darkness. Her softness and femininity stand in stark contrast to Valentine’s hardened masculinity, reminding him that his strength doesn’t lie in shutting the world out but in opening himself to love.

Through her evolution, Delilah serves as the ultimate reflection of Valentine’s journey—from longing to fear to healing. Her warm, shy, and deeply feminine nature highlights everything Valentine is not, creating a dynamic that is both magnetic and transformative. She is the dream that Valentine must learn to embrace, proving that even the coldest hearts can find warmth when they dare to look beyond their darkness.