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Now reading: Chapter 57 : Weight of Soul from Whispers of Lust in the Countryside, a Smut novel by KalvinSmasher.

As Haruto walked the narrow countryside path back toward his ho, the golden afternoon sun draped the world in a soft, honeyed glow. The air was heavy with the scent of salt and wildflowers, carried by a gentle breeze that humd through the tall grass. When he reached the ocean side, he stopped—drawn by the sound of waves sighing against the rocks like a heartbeat older than ti itself.

The sea stretched endlessly before him, shimring like liquid glass beneath the amber sky. Each wave rose and fell in slow rhythm, as if whispering secrets only the heart could understand. The horizon burned faintly with the mory of the sun’s warmth, and the gulls cried sowhere far away, their voices thin and lonely.

Haruto stood there quietly, hands in his pockets, eyes half-lidded against the wind. The world felt vast, yet tender—like a wound that had begun to heal. He thought of Aira—her smile, her eyes, the warmth of her breath when she whispered his na. The mory lingered in him, as soft and persistent as the ocean breeze.

A lone petal, carried from so faraway bloom, drifted past him and settled on the waves, floating until it was swallowed by the sea. For a mont, Haruto wondered if love was like that—beautiful, fleeting, and destined to dissolve into sothing larger than himself.

He closed his eyes and listened to the endless hush of the tide, letting it wash through him like a prayer. The countryside behind him was quiet, the ocean before him alive—and sowhere between the two, Haruto’s heart tried to understand which way it was ant to go.

The ocean breeze brushed against Haruto’s face as he stood there, gazing into the endless blue horizon. The waves rose and fell like the quiet breathing of the earth, and in their rhythm, he found the gentle echo of his own heart—restless, yet steady.

He thought of the girls who had crossed his path, who had opened their hearts to him, and whom he, in monts both tender and wild, had held close beneath the trembling moonlight. Their faces shimred in his mory like reflections on the sea—each one distinct, each glimr touched by its own hue of love.

Aira’s warmth, soft as dawn.

Miyu’s laughter, fleeting as sumr rain.

Ayaka’s quiet strength, steady as a mountain wind.

Kana’s fire, bright enough to burn through sorrow.

Aya’s Love.

Each of them had left a mark on his soul, and Haruto knew—love was not sothing that could be divided or asured. It flowed differently for each, like rivers leading to the sa sea. Their smiles, their tears, their trust—all of it had beco his responsibility.

He had touched their hearts, their bodies, their lives. And now, he wished to be the one who would protect them—not out of guilt, but from a quiet, growing resolve. The kind that cos when a boy begins to understand what it ans to be a man.

The waves shimred gold as the sun began to sink lower, painting the sky in hues of fire and peach. Haruto’s reflection wavered in the tide, blending with the light. In that mont, he realized—his journey wasn’t just about love, or desire, or mory. It was about care. About standing firm when the storm cos. About being the shore they could all return to, no matter how far the tides of life may pull them away.

He turned away from the sea, his chest heavy but certain.

The breeze whispered through the tall grass, like a promise—

and Haruto walked ho with the quiet strength of a heart that had chosen to love completely, even when love ant carrying the weight of many souls.

The sun had begun its slow descent when Haruto turned away from the ocean. The horizon was awash in orange and rose—colors that lted gently into the darkening blue of evening. The countryside road stretched before him, quiet and long, lined with tall reeds swaying softly in the fading light. Each step he took crunched against the gravel, steady and unhurried, like a rhythm to his thoughts.

The wind carried with it the scent of salt and soil, the faint fragrance of wild daisies blooming unseen. It tousled his hair as if urging him forward, whispering that even the day must end to be born again. His heart was heavy, not with sorrow, but with a weight that felt almost sacred—the awareness of what he carried inside him now.

He thought of the girls once more—their laughter, their tears, the warmth of their bodies and the trust in their eyes. He rembered how easily monts of love could slip away, like sand through open hands. But he also knew sothing new: that love wasn’t ant to be kept—it was ant to be honored.

The golden light brushed across his face as he walked. His shadow stretched behind him, long and fragile, as if it too wanted to hold on to the passing day. In the distance, the small roofs of his village began to appear—quiet silhouettes against the glowing horizon. The world felt simple, yet full.

As he neared ho, the cicadas had begun their evening chorus, their voices rising in waves that echoed through the fields. The first stars were already appearing, faint and trembling, scattered like forgotten wishes across the sky.

Haruto paused before his gate and looked once more at the last trace of the sun dipping below the ocean far beyond the hills. In its light, he found sothing steady inside him—a quiet determination that glowed even as night fell.

He wasn’t sure what tomorrow would bring—pain, joy, distance, or reunion—but he knew what he must do. To protect. To cherish. To grow strong enough so that no heart connected to his would ever have to tremble in fear again.

And as he opened the door to his ho, a soft smile touched his lips. The night had co, but his heart burned with the color of the sunset still.

The house was silent when Haruto stepped inside. The air carried the faint scent of evening tea and sun-ward wood, the kind of stillness that feels both comforting and lonely. He set down his bag by the door and walked through the narrow hallway, his footsteps soft against the floorboards that had learned his rhythm over the years.

In his room, the light of the setting sun slipped through the half-open window, painting golden lines across his desk and the sheets of paper scattered upon it. He sat on the edge of his bed, his eyes drawn to the faint glow outside—the world sinking gently into night. Crickets began their soft chorus, and the breeze that drifted in carried the hush of the countryside: distant waves, rustling trees, the murmured pulse of life continuing.

Haruto leaned back and stared at the ceiling.

So much had changed, and yet everything looked the sa.

He could still see the boy he used to be—uncertain, driven by impulse, lost in the tangle of youth and desire. But now, sothing within him had shifted. The monts with Aya, Aira, Miyu, Ayaka, Kana—each had carved a piece of him open and filled it with warmth, pain, and aning.

He realized that responsibility wasn’t a chain—it was a vow.

To love soone ant to protect what is fragile in them, to stay even when life grew silent. It wasn’t about desire anymore; it was about presence. About being the person who stands firm when the wind turns cold.

Haruto rose and went to the window. The stars had co out now, trembling over the dark horizon. The moonlight shimred faintly on the ocean far beyond, a reminder of where his heart had wandered that afternoon. He placed a hand on the wooden fra and closed his eyes for a long mont, breathing in the night air.

"I’ll do better," he whispered—not to anyone else, but to himself.

To the version of him that had loved too recklessly.

To the girls who had trusted him.

To the future that was still uncertain, but waiting.

When he lay down, the sound of the crickets lulled him, the rhythm of the countryside wrapping around his thoughts like a quiet lullaby. His eyes grew heavy, but in his chest, the ember of resolve burned steadily.

He dreamt not of kisses or skin, but of faces smiling beneath sunlight, of laughter carried on the wind, and of a promise—soft, unspoken, but real.

A promise that tomorrow, he would begin again.

We et so many people in the slow turning of our lives—so like passing rain, so like stars that linger long after the night ends. Each person steps into our days for a reason unseen, carrying laughter, sorrow, or lessons we didn’t know we needed. And though ti moves on and the seasons change, their presence leaves quiet footprints on the path of who we are becoming.

To cherish soone is not to hold them tightly, but to see them clearly.

To rember the warmth of their smile, the tone of their voice, the small kindnesses they offered without reason.

It is to carry their light with us, even when distance grows, even when words fade into silence.

For people vanish not only when they leave—but when we forget.

So we must rember them in the ways the heart knows best:

in a song that reminds us of shared laughter,

in a sunset that feels like the warmth of an old touch,

in the way we still find courage because soone once believed in us.

Every person who enters our story changes its shape a little—

like the tide carving its mark into the sand.

So stay for a mont, so for a lifeti,

but each leaves behind a trace of aning that cannot be erased.

So cherish them.

Speak gently. Listen deeply. Love honestly.

Because one day, we will look back and realize—

the true beauty of life was never in how far we walked,

but in the hands we held along the way.

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