Chapter 1 | Winter’s Last Melody (Author-Narrated) - podcast episode cover

Chapter 1 | Winter’s Last Melody (Author-Narrated)

Jan 11, 202623 minSeason 1Ep. 1
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Episode description

A winter campus in Sapporo, where snow dulls every sound and breath hangs in the air a little longer than it should.


Two students.

Two quiet paths crossing.

One music box table tucked near the windows, and a season that began without warning.


Haru, unsure of where he belongs yet, drawn to warmth in the middle of winter.

Ren, gentle and focused, building small wooden boxes that hold more feeling than he knows how to say.


A shared table.

A brushed hand.

A walk that goes on longer than planned.


They don’t call it anything at first.

They don’t need to.

Their closeness grows in pauses, in heater hums, in snow falling softly outside dorm windows.


This is Winter’s Last Melody - Chapter 1: The Days That Stayed.


From Gay Audio Books, a cinematic audio-drama about first love, quiet timing, and the memories that refuse to melt.


No visuals. Just snowfall, footsteps, and two voices finding warmth in the hush of winter.


The Days That Stayed | Official Audio

⁠https://youtu.be/2959Z9X4lCM⁠ 


Winter’s Last Melody | Instrumental Playlist

https://youtu.be/CMUkswANl08



Men Being Too Intimate, Novel Series Exclusively on Kindle Now.


The Time We Had: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0G8W4XZVY 



For more from Gay Audio Books, listen on YouTube:

⁠https://youtube.com/@GayAudioBooks⁠


For official music from SNWB:

⁠https://youtube.com/@SNWB.official⁠

Transcript

Some winters begin without warning. A breath in the cold, a sound softened by snow. A moment you don't realize you'll keep forever, they say. Memory drift like snowfall. Light, quiet, returning to the places where warm Swans lived. And sometimes, in the hush of a winter morning, you find yourself standing in an old version of your own world, one where everything felt simpler, softer, brighter than you remember.

This is the story of the days that stayed, the one that settled gently on the heart and never melted away. This is winter's last melody, the days that stayed. Some memories don't feel like memories at first. They feel like small, ordinary moments, until time turns them into something brighter. Haroud remembered the hall that day, the warmth of the heaters, the way snow drifted lazily outside the tall windows, softening the walled beyond the

glass. He had just entered a building, boots still dusted with white, not really sure which club to join, only knowing that the winter made him want to try something warm and quiet. That's when he saw him. Wren stood behind the small wooden table with a handmade sign. Music box. Craft club. Beginners welcome. He wasn't calling out to students like the other clubs. He wasn't flashy or loud or even trying to recruit.

He was simply focused, turning a tiny wooden gear between his fingers, examining it with a kind of gentle concentration that made the whole noisy hall feel quieter. Haru slowed down. Rent scarf was wrapped too high, covering half his face, but his eyes were soft, steady, warm in a way Harold didn't expect from a stranger. Ren looked up, sensing someone had stopped in front of the table. Just for a moment, their eyes

met. Harold opened his mouth to say something, anything, but Ren spoke first, voice quiet and shy. You can try making one. The music boxes, I mean, if you want. It wasn't a sales pitch, not even close. It was an invitation, said the way Wren did everything at that age. Something in Harrow melted a little. He stepped closer, drawn in by the warmth of the scene, the wooden pieces lined neatly in trees, the soft ticking sound of a tiny metal spring.

Wren's breath fogging slightly as cold air from the hallway drifted in. Harrow reach for a small wooden box, Wren's finger brushed his by accident. And just like that, the memory opened, bright and quiet, exactly the way Haru chose to keep it. Haru remember sitting down before he even decided to, Wren had pulled the chair out for him. Awkwardly, shyly, as if unsure whether it was the right thing to do. Haru sat. Wren excelled, relieved. Between them, the beginner music

box kid waited. A small wooden casing, 4 tiny gears, a metal comb wrapped in paper. Ren cleared his throat softly. You start with this one. He said, picking up the first gear. It's easy. I mean, maybe not too easy, but you'll get it. His voice was gentle, almost careful, the kind of tone people use when they want you to feel welcome. Haru watched his hands move, steady, precise, yet somehow nervous too. He mirrored to motion, picking up the same piece.

Their elbows brushed. Neither pulled away. Ren leaned a little closer to point at the slot on the wooden frame. Here. Haru fitted the gear into place. It clicked softly. Ren's eyes brightened, not dramatically, just enough for Haru to notice. Perfect. Wren murmured, almost proud, and Haru, surprised by the warmth blooming in his chest, smiled without thinking. Wren noticed, looked away quickly, then back again, but somehow that moment lingered. Wren handed him the second

piece, fingertips brushing his. Haru tightened the tiny screw. Ren steadied the box so it wouldn't wobble. Their hands worked in a quiet harmony. The last gear slid neatly into place. Ren let out a soft breath, a laugh almost too small to hear. See, you're good at this. Harold shook his head. You just explained it really well. Ren's ears turned pink. He didn't deny it.

He didn't look away this time. For the first time that winter, Harrow felt something shift, a gentle, warming talk inside him, the beginning of a melody he would remember 4 years. The snow outside thickened, blurring the world to white. Inside, the music box took its shape, and so did something else. Some people don't enter your life slowly. They arrive, and before you know it, your days begin to bend toward them without effort,

without fear, without thinking. Haru remembers in its flashes, bright, warm, quiet pieces of a winter that felt kinder than the ones before it when waiting for him outside the club room, hence talked into his sleeves because he forgot gloves again. The two of them walking across campus was the kind of closeness that didn't need explanation, carrying the same pace, the same

quiet comfort. The way Ren would look at the music box part was deep focus, and Haru would study him instead, learning more from the curve of Ren's expression than the lesson itself, and how Ren always seemed relieved when Haru showed up again the next day, Ren offered Haru the warm can of

cocoa from the vending machine. It's cold, so here evenings where they stayed too long in the club room, the heater humming, the campus outside turning blue, was early night cold and neither of them wanting to leave first. It happened fast, faster than anything in Haru's life up to that .1 winter, and when more suddenly the person he saw everywhere. Looking back, Haru often felt this was when they became one, just two boys who didn't know

how not to be around each other. The campus pass was nearly empty by the time they left the club room. Evening had turned the snow pale blue and the lamps glowed in a small Hallows that trembled with the wind. Harold walked a little slower than usual, not because he was tired, but because Rand was next to him, close enough that their sleeves brushed now and then. A patch of ice caught Harrow off guard. He slipped just half a step, but Wren reacted before either of them had time to think.

A hand at Harrow's wrist. However. We gain balance. But Wren didn't let go right away. His fingers stayed where they were, not gripping, not pulling, just there. Harrow's pulse flickered in his chest, surprised at how much a touch could feel like being seen. The snowfall thickened, each flake drifting slower, heavier, as if the world was trying to give them a moment. Wren's hand loosened, just slightly, as if about to retreat. Harold didn't move.

His fingers shifted, only a small adjustment, barely noticeable, but enough for Wren's hand to settle into his, their palms aligning underneath. For a second, nothing happened. And then everything dead. Ren's fingers curled softly around his, Not a bold holed, a shy 1A beginning. No one else was on the pass, No club members heading home, no couples passing by. Just the two of them and the sound of a snow touching ground. They were supposed to split at the courtyard. That was the routine.

Haru toured the dorms, ran toward the station, but after the handhold, neither of them loosened their fingers. When the crossroad arrived, Harrow slowed down. Ren matched him. Harrow turned left. Ren followed. Neither said anything about it. The snow started falling heavier, each flake tapping softly on the hood of Ren's jacket. Harrow glanced sideways. You're soaked, he said, voice warm. Was concerned. Do you want to come in just for a bit, to warm up?

Ren nodded too quickly, a little embarrassed, a little relieved. Inside Haru's small dorm room, the air smell faintly of laundry. An instant miso. He turned on the small floor heater, it's orange coils glowing softly. Ren sat across from him on the floor, legs tucked in, steam rising from his breath. They didn't talk much, they didn't need to. A long moment passed where they just listened to the heater hum. Ren's knee brushed Haru's once, then again, then they both

pretended not to move closer. Haru handed him a towel for his hair. Ren used it clumsily. Haru laughed softly. Ren looked up with pink cheeks, towel half covering his face. Sorry. Ren murmured. For what? Ren shrugged. For everything, I guess. Harrow shook his head. Something softened in the air. The heater swarm spread across the room. Ren's fingertips inched closer along the floor, stopping just besides Harrow's hand without touching.

Harrow felt his breast catch, not out of fear, but because it felt inevitable. You OK? Harrow asked quietly. Wren nodded. I just don't want to go back out yet. Then don't. Harrow said, and he meant it. Wren's shoulder relaxed for the first time since they came inside. They ended up sitting shoulder to shoulder, back against Harrow's narrow bed, sharing the same blanket. The snow outside kept falling. The night kept deepening, but need of them.

Move toward the door. Ren leaned just slightly, his head almost touching Harus. Haru felt the warmth of him, like something fragile. And you? Is it OK if I stay a little longer? Ren whispered. Haru didn't look at him, he didn't need to. Yeah, He said, voice soft. Stay. And Ren did. The blanket shifted, their shoulders pressed closer. Their hands, which had been resting separately, began drifting again, slowly, naturally, until Ren's finger found Harrows under the fold of the fabric.

Harrow felt something loosen in his chest, something that had been held tightly for weeks without a knee. They stayed like that, shoulders touching, hands hidden, but held, their breasts brushing the same small pocket of air. Harrow turned slightly toward him. Ren mirrored. Tim was out thinking. The room felt smaller. The space between them felt careful, fragile, full. Ren looked at Harrow for just a second too long, the kind of 2nd that says everything was out

sound. Harrow's breast caught Ren notice, and that noticing brought him closer. Not all at once, just a slow lean, like gravity was choosing for them. Harrow didn't move away. Their foreheads brush first. A quiet, accidental touch. Ren inhaled shakily. Harrow exhale, like he'd been waiting for this without knowing. Ren leaned the rest of the way. Their lips met softly, barely there. A feather light touch, a nervous

press. A first kiss that felt like stepping into warm light after standing in the cold too long. Ren made a tiny sound, and they pulled Harrow closer. Without thinking, they parted by owning a breath. Ren's lashes trembled. Harrow swallowed, heart unsteady and full. Then Harrow leaned in again. This time, the kiss landed with intention. Ren's hand lifted from under the blanket and culped Harrow's cheek, thumb brushing once. They didn't rush, they didn't

deepen. They simply held a moment, as if it was something delicate and rare. When they finally pulled apart, foreheads still touching, their breasts mixed in the narrow space between them, Wren capped his hand on Harrow's cheek. Harrow covered it with his own, holding it there, their lips still warm from the kiss. The blanket slipped from their shoulders. They didn't notice. Wren shifted closer, his knees brushing Harrows, his breast trembling with something new.

Not fear, not uncertainty, just unfamiliar weight of wanting. Harrow lifted a hand, hesitating for only a heartbeat before touching Ren's jaw, his fingers tracing along warm skin like he was learning a shape he always wondered about. Ren's eyes fluttered shut at the touch. Harrow leaned in again, their lips meeting with a little more certainty, a little more want. Still slow, still gentle, but carrying a warmth that spread through the room like the quiet

glow of the heater. They stayed close like that for a long time, kissing softly, carefully, with the hesitant confidence of two people who had never done this before. But they knew, instinctively, how to be gentle with each other. Wren shifted and Harrow led him, their bodies aligning in a way that felt natural, like they were finding a place that had always been waiting. Harrow's hands slid to Wren's shoulder. Wren's fingers curled into Harrow's sweater.

Their breasts tangled. Their hearts caught. They paused once, the tiniest moment of stillness where both of them seemed to ask wordlessly. Is this OK? Harrow nodded first, barely noticeable, but enough. Wren answered by leaning in again, his forehead resting against Harrows as their lips met in a slow, trembling kiss that deepened by emotion alone. The room felt warm, the world felt soft.

Their closeness unfolded piece by piece, gentle touches, the kind of warms 2 first timers find when they are learning someone they care for. They held each other like it was the most natural thing they ever done. Learning warms, learning closeness, learning each other with a tenderness that didn't need to be explained. Winter didn't change all at once. It changed in small ways, quiet ways, The kind that never feel like a beginning until you look back.

After the first night, Ren started staying over often. At first it was once a week, then twice. Then it became so natural that Hara found himself leaving a spare toothbrush in the cup beside his own without thinking about it. Ren laughed when he saw it, a soft, embarrassed sound, but he never moved it. Kisses becoming part of their routine, a greeting, a good night. A pause between words, each one soft and tentative at first, then deeper, then something that

need of them questioned anymore. Some nights their closeness deepened in the shy, careful way of two first timers learning warms with hands and breath rather than certainty. A memory folded into light and quiet, the room dimming into something tender and unspoken. Rumours drifted through the campus like early snow, but neither boy cared. They walked past whispers with fingers brushing with smiles they couldn't hide was a closeness that didn't need

permission. Between classes and cold mornings, they spent hours in the music box room. The scent of wood shavings, A metallic click of tiny gears, the soft glow of the lamp above their workspace. Harold worked quietly on his project, a box carved with two small trees inside, their branches leaning just close enough to touch. He sanded them carefully, traced the shape again and again until the wood felt like a memory

under his fingers. Ren sat beside him, tongue between his teeth and concentration working on something of his own. One late afternoon, with snow drifting lazily outside the frosted window, Ren finished his box. He held it out awkwardly. Here. Harrow blinked at him, surprised. Ren's box wasn't perfect, the carving slightly uneven, the figures a little simple, but inside 2 tiny shapes held hands. It's us. Ren muttered, face going pink. Harrow's heart tightened in a

way he didn't have words for. He opened his mouth, felt the weight of the box in his hands, felt Ren's hope like a soft light beside him, and froze, his own project set unfinished beside him. Not perfect enough, not ready, not good enough to give back. He hesitated, just a second, but it was enough. Ren's expression flickered, barely there, a small crack in his smile before he pulled it

back together. I just wanted you to have it, Hara. Forced to smile, Ren nodded, but the moment had already shifted just a little, a faint shadow where only worms had been. The snow outside thickened, blurring the world to white. Wren moved closer again, and Harrow leaned into him, letting the worms return. The air felt clear somehow, sharp, bright, filled with the quiet bus of something unspoken between them. They walked together toward the courtyard.

The same way they had always did, shoulders brushing every few steps, hands grazing. Wren looked tired from studying, eyes soft, hair pushed back vastly under his beanie. He kept stealing glances at Haru whenever he thought Haru was unlocking. Haru noticed everything at the courtyard. Their passes split Haru toward his dorm, ran toward the station. They stopped without needing to say why. The snow fell lightly, dusting Ren's scarf and lashes. See you tomorrow? Ren asked.

Haru nodded. Ren smiled, a small, relieved curve off his lips, and turned to go. Haru watched him take a few steps, just a few, Then Ren paused. He turned back, eyes meeting Haru's across the quiet courtyard. It wasn't dramatic, it wasn't a grand gesture, just a soft look that said everything they hadn't found words for yet. Haru's hand tightened on the strap of his back. Ren's fingers flexed at his side like he almost reached out again. Neither of them moved closer,

neither stepped away. The snow kept falling between two boys standing in a silence that didn't feel empty at all. Wren gave a tiny nod. Haru answered with one of his own. Then they walked their separate routes, but both kept turning back, just once more, and then once again, until the past curved and the other was out of sight. Some winters stay with you in the way footsteps linger on fresh snow, or how a single moment can echo long after it's gone.

For Haru, this was the winter he remembered most. The warmth, the closeness, the days that stayed. And if you like to keep walking through Haru's memories with us, there's more waiting. This was Winter's last melody, Chapter 1. The days that stayed. Thank you for listening to Winter's Last Melody. If you want the next chapter, don't forget to like the video, subscribe to gay audio books and leave a comment so you never missed the next part. And tell me, do you prefer it

when I narrate? I'd love to know what you think.

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