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Chapter 2 - The Bicycles Race and the Broken Compass

The year was 2015. Ten-year-old Aarav had finally convinced his father to remove the training wheels from his bicycle. It was a rite of passage, a declaration of independence that he felt made him the king of the neighborhood. But every king needs a rival, and Meera was more than happy to fill the role.

​"I bet I can reach the old banyan tree before you can even find your pedals," Meera challenged, leaning against her own bike, which was decorated with mismatched stickers of sunflowers and superheroes.

​"In your dreams, Meera," Aarav retorted, tightening his grip on the handlebars. "The banyan tree is half a mile away. You'll get tired by the post office."

The Great Race

The race began with a shout from a neighbor's kid. Dust kicked up behind their tires as they pedaled furiously down the narrow lane. For Aarav, the world became a blur of green hedges and barking stray dogs. He could hear Meera's breathing right behind him—heavy, determined, and rhythmic.

​He took the lead near the grocery store, feeling a surge of triumph. But as they neared the steep incline leading to the banyan tree, his chain slipped. The metallic clack-clack-clack was the sound of defeat. He wobbled, his feet hitting the pavement to keep from falling.

​Meera didn't fly past him to claim victory. Instead, she skidded to a halt, her tires screaming against the asphalt.

​"What happened?" she asked, already hopping off her bike.

​"Chain's out," Aarav muttered, face red from exertion and embarrassment. "Go ahead. You win."

The Compass of Friendship

​Meera didn't move. Instead, she sat down on the curb and pulled a small, brass-cased compass out of her pocket—a treasure she had found in her grandfather's desk.

​"I don't care about the tree," she said, looking at the needle spinning wildly before settling North. "Anyway, we were supposed to be exploring. My grandfather says a real explorer never leaves a teammate behind."

​They spent the next hour with grease-stained hands, trying to fix the chain. Aarav watched her—the way she didn't mind the dirt under her fingernails, the way she hummed a song he didn't recognize.

​"Aarav?" she asked suddenly, not looking up from the greasy gears.

​"Yeah?"

​"If we ever get lost... like, really lost... will you use this compass to find me?"

​Aarav, who usually had a witty comeback for everything, found himself silent. He looked at the small brass object in her palm. It felt heavier than it looked.

​"I won't need a compass," he said softly, his voice cracking just a little. "I'll just look for the girl with the blue ribbons."

​Meera looked up, a smudge of black grease on her cheek, and smiled. It was the kind of smile that made the humid afternoon heat feel like a cool breeze.

The First Secret

That evening, as they walked their bikes back home under a purple-bruised sky, they made a pact. They wouldn't tell the other kids that Aarav's bike broke. In their version of the story, they reached the banyan tree at the exact same second, declared it a tie, and discovered a "hidden treasure" (which was actually just a particularly shiny rock Meera found).

​It was their first shared lie to the world—a small, golden secret that belonged only to them.

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