Ahmed loved the little library at the end of the street. It smelled of old paper and rain, and the lamps glowed like small gold moons. Every afternoon Ahmed would slip between the tall shelves, looking for a story that felt brand new. Most days the books were ordinary and kind. But on this grey afternoon, something on the very top shelf was shimmering, soft and blue, as if it were quietly breathing.
Ahmed climbed the wobbly wooden ladder, one careful step at a time. At the top sat a small book with a cover the colour of deep water. When Ahmed touched it, the glow spilled out like sunlight through a window. The pages held no words at all — only empty space, waiting. Hello? whispered Ahmed. To everyone's surprise, the book whispered back. Read me, it said, and you will write me too.
The moment Ahmed opened the cover, the library folded away like a paper crane. Suddenly there were green hills, a silver river, and a sky full of slow, friendly clouds. Ahmed was standing inside the story. A small fox with a lantern for a tail trotted over and bowed low. We have been waiting, said the fox. Our world is missing one important word, and only a reader can find it.
Together they searched the hills, the river, and the hush of the woods. Ahmed asked careful questions, listened closely, and stayed brave when the path grew dark. At last, beneath an old singing tree, Ahmed understood. The missing word was begin. The whole world had been waiting for someone with the courage to start. Ahmed said it out loud — begin! — and colour rushed back into everything, brighter than before.
The fox smiled and pressed a tiny golden seed into Ahmed's hand. For the next story, it said softly. With a gentle sigh the pages closed, and Ahmed was back on the wobbly ladder, the book now warm and full of words. Outside, the rain had stopped and the street shone. Ahmed walked home holding the seed, knowing that every good story begins the very moment someone is brave enough to open the cover.
That night Ahmed planted the golden seed in a little pot on the windowsill and whispered the word the fox had loved: begin. By morning a slim green stem had risen, and balanced on its tip was a single curled leaf shaped exactly like a page. Ahmed laughed out loud. Each day the plant unfurled another paper-leaf, and on every leaf, in tiny silver letters, a brand-new story waited to be read. Ahmed understood at last what the magic book had meant — that stories never run out, and that anyone brave enough to begin will always find another tale ready to grow. From then on, Ahmed never feared an empty page again.
Every story is waiting for a reader brave enough to begin.