𝘆𝗼𝘂𝗿 𝘄𝗼𝗿𝗱𝘀 𝗶𝗻 𝗴𝗿𝗲𝗲𝗻 𝗶𝗻𝗸 - sylus qin oneshot
summary — After getting rejected by your college crush back in freshman year, you swore off dating—why bother when it clearly wasn’t meant for you? Years later, thanks to a well-meaning setup by your friends, you find yourself on a blind date… only to come face-to-face with him again. Totally not awkward—until he suggests something that makes it even worse. Or… maybe not?
pairings — excrush!sylus x fem!reader
content/tags— fluff, angst if you squint REALLY hard, blind dates, reader is traumatized, classic 10 dates trope, tara and her bf is their cupid, timeskips, kissing, SFW, second chance romance + more!
words— 10k
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“One caramel macchiato!”
The barista calls out your name, drawing your attention from the glow of your laptop screen for the first time since you sat down. You rise, stretching slightly as you make your way to the counter. She greets you with a warm smile, and you return it with a quiet one of your own before taking your coffee and slipping back into your seat.
After a few moments, the front door swings open with a soft chime, letting in a brief gust of warm air and the unmistakable voice of your co-worker.
“Hey!” Tara calls out, already grinning as she spots you.
You lift your head from your coffee with the energy of a drained phone battery, offering her a weak wave. She's radiant, as usual—like someone who actually slept last night and didn’t just survive on caffeine and deadlines.
She slides into the seat across from you without waiting for an invitation, eyes practically sparkling. That look. You know that look. You brace yourself.
“So,” she begins, drawing the word out like a plot twist. “You remember Ethan from accounting? Super cute, like ‘bakes-his-own-bread’ cute? Well—”
You groan softly, slumping forward until your forehead nearly kisses the table.
“Tara, I’m running on four hours of sleep and two existential crises. Please don’t set me up with someone who makes sourdough starters for fun.”
She just laughs, undeterred. “That’s exactly why you need someone! Balance, babe.”
You sip your coffee like it’s the only thing keeping you tethered to the mortal world.
“I’ve been single for almost my whole life, and I’m planning to be until I reach 35,” you reply flatly, sipping your coffee like it’s a shield.
Tara’s smile falters into a small frown, her brows knitting together. “Thirty-five? That’s so… specific. Why 35?”
“Because by then I’ll either have my life together,” you say, waving vaguely at your open laptop, “or I’ll be so far gone into the abyss of burnout that no one will want to date me anyway.”
She gasps like you just said you don’t believe in love or oat milk.
“That is the most depressing thing I’ve heard all week. And I sat through a budget meeting yesterday.”
You lift a brow. “And yet, you’re still trying to play Cupid.”
“Exactly!” She sits up straighter, suddenly energized. “Which is why you need someone before you become a recluse who hisses at the sunlight and lives off instant noodles.”
You squint at her over your mug. “That sounds like a dream, actually.”
“Oh my god,” she mutters, but she’s laughing. “You are impossible.”
“And yet, you keep trying.”
“Because I believe in love. And also because you’re too pretty to be left to your own self-sabotaging devices.”
You groan again and slump further into your seat.
““It’s Evan’s request!” she pouts, her lower lip jutting out like a child denied dessert.
You groan instantly at the mention of her beloved boyfriend. Of course. Of course she’d do anything for him. Ride or die—for his romantic fantasies involving you and some stranger.
“Who is it this time?” you deadpan. “A cousin? Colleague?” You narrow your eyes. “And before you say it—I’ve had enough of his friends. They’re all terrible on their first dates.”
You sigh and rest your cheek in your palm, memories flashing like a highlight reel of awkward handshakes, painfully long silences, and one guy who brought his résumé to dinner “just in case.”
Tara winces a little but pushes on like the soldier of love she is. “It’s his old college coursemate!” she insists, leaning forward dramatically.
“That means nothing to me.”
“He’s actually nice!” she protests. “Evan swears he’s not like the others.”
“You said that about the one who only talked about cryptocurrency.”
“Okay, that was a dark time. But this guy’s different. He reads books! He collects vinyls!”
You arch a tired brow. “So he’s a passionate adult. The bar is so low, Tara.”
She grins, undeterred. “Just one date?”
“I have deadlines.” You look at the report you have to finish before your meeting tomorrow morning before your boss starts to passive-agressively call you out, again.
“It’s coffee.”
“I already have coffee.” You lift your mug in emphasis.
“It’s free coffee, and he might be hot.”
You hesitate.
She sees it.
Victory blooms on her face like sunshine after rain.
“Fine, this is the last time.” You mutter, in which Tara smiles. “Yay! I really think this time it’s gonna be the one for you! I’ve seen his face and Evan told me things about him. He’s also very…” She made the classic money gesture—rubbing her thumb against her fingers—while grinning. “Cha-ching.”
You groaned harder at that. Fine, one last try.
By the time you finally cave and go on the date—mostly out of guilt, slight curiosity, and Tara’s relentless texting—you’re already bracing for disappointment. But nothing could have prepared you for this.
Because sitting across the table, casually sipping his drink like he didn’t just shatter your soul five years ago, is none other than your college crush from freshman year. The same guy you’d nursed a hopeless, head-over-heels attraction for. The same one you’d confessed to in a moment of naive bravery—and the same one who turned you down with that polite, almost apologetic smile that still haunts your occasional 3 a.m. spiral.
You stare at him, and he looks up with a pleasant smile, clearly having no idea who you are.
And that’s the moment it hits you.
Maybe love really isn’t for you. Maybe the universe is playing a long, humiliating game of romantic dodgeball, and you just got hit square in the face—again.
You force a smile, heart sinking into your gut as you stir your drink just to have something to do with your hands.
“So…” he says, leaning in slightly, “have we met before? You look kind of familiar.”
You laugh, but there’s no humor in it.
“Sylus Qin.” He offers you a handshake, his voice calm, smooth—like it hasn't shattered your ego once before.
You blink at him. The name confirms it, not that you needed it. You would’ve recognized that voice anywhere. The same one that used to echo down lecture halls and occasionally star in your daydreams back when love felt like something soft and full of promise.
Your hand hovers for a second too long before you take his. His grip is firm, warm. Too familiar.
He doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t blink. Just looks at you like you’re a stranger with slightly interesting eyes.
“Right,” you say, clearing your throat and slipping your hand back like it burned. “Nice to meet you… again.”
A small crease forms between his brows. “Mind reminding me where we met, Miss?”
Your smile tightens. “Freshman year. Psych class. I was the idiot who met you at the campus entrance and confessed and gave you a letter?”
His face stills. Then slowly—too slowly—his eyes widen with dawning recognition. “Oh.”
“Yeah,” you say, sipping your drink and praying for the floor to open up beneath you. “That girl.”
He opens his mouth to say something—maybe an apology, maybe nothing—but you cut in before he can gather a sentence.
“But don’t worry,” you add lightly, voice wrapped in practiced indifference. “I’m not here for a second chance. I was tricked into this by a mutual friend. Apparently Evan thinks we’d be great together.”
Sylus leans back, still watching you. “So… this is a blind date?”
“Unfortunately.”
He hums, gaze flicking over you with a hint of something unreadable. “Guess he forgot to mention the history.”
You raise an eyebrow. “Guess he didn’t know anything. It was a one second thing anyway”
The silence stretches—but it’s not exactly awkward. Just loaded.
And part of you already knows: this night is not going to go the way you expected.
And suddenly, you become extra conscious of what you’re wearing.
The blouse you’d thrown on in a rush this morning suddenly feels too casual, too slouchy. Your jeans, just slightly faded at the knees. Your hair—was it frizzy? Was there coffee foam on your lip?
Of all the days to run on autopilot.
You shift in your seat, subtly tugging at your sleeves like that’ll magically sharpen your entire look. But it’s too late. He’s already seen you. Really seen you.
Sylus watches you with a calm expression, but there's something unreadable in his eyes now—like he's reassessing, recalibrating. You don’t know whether it’s a good thing or a bad thing. And you hate that it matters. But it does.
Because no matter how long it’s been, or how hard you tried to file him away as a “learning experience,” some tiny, ridiculous part of you still wants to be… enough.
Still wants to make him regret saying no back then.
You force yourself to sit up straighter, chin tilted, like you’re fine. Like your heart isn’t doing little nervous pirouettes.
“Anyway,” you say, breaking the silence with a half-laugh, “how ironic is this?”
He quirks a brow. “Ironic?”
“Fate clearly has a sense of humor.”
Sylus’s lips curl into a faint smile. “Maybe. Or maybe fate’s giving me a second chance to get it right.”
Your breath catches—just slightly. You tell yourself not to read into it.
But it’s too late for that, too.
“Uhm, moving on,” you say quickly, trying to shove the tension back into its box. You tuck a loose strand of hair behind your ear, eyes fixed on the condensation forming on your glass. “What do you do now?”
Sylus leans back slightly, giving you a moment of reprieve from his steady gaze.
“I’m a software engineer,” he says, casually swirling his drink. “I mostly do freelance contract work. Apps, platforms, tech solutions for startups—you know, the usual keyboard warrior stuff.”
You nod, impressed despite yourself. “So you’re the guy everyone calls when their website crashes at 2 a.m.”
He chuckles softly. “Something like that. Less dramatic, more debugging-induced migraines.”
His laugh still sounds like it did years ago—low, easy, the kind that used to make you turn your head without meaning to.
You resist the urge to sigh.
“And you?” he asks, leaning in a little. “What did you end up doing?”
You shrug. “Marketing. Mostly brand copy and strategy. I sit in a lot of Zoom meetings, say ‘circle back’ more than I’d like, and write things that sound exciting but mean almost nothing.”
He grins. “Ah, professional illusionist. Respect.”
You huff a laugh. “Exactly.”
For a moment, there’s quiet—not awkward, just… contemplative. A shared pause between two people who were once on completely different pages, now reading from the same one without meaning to.
And though you’re still wary, still guarded, there’s a small flicker of something unspoken between you. Maybe.
You push it aside. For now.
You clear your throat, trying to push through the lingering weirdness. “So… you’re still based around here?”
“Mhm,” Sylus nods, taking a slow sip of his drink. “Moved back about a year ago. Needed a change of scenery. Or maybe I was subconsciously following a ghost from freshman year.”
Your eyes widen slightly, and you stare at him over the rim of your glass.
“Relax,” he says with a lazy grin. “Joking.”
“Right,” you mutter, cheeks warming. “Obviously.”
He leans forward on his elbows, resting his chin lightly on one hand. “You always get this flustered, or is it just me?”
Your mouth opens, then closes. “I am not flustered.”
“You’re stirring an empty cup,” he points out, amusement glittering in his eyes.
You glance down—and sure enough, you’re absentmindedly swirling your straw in a drink that’s been gone for five minutes.
You set it down a little too quickly. “It’s a nervous habit.”
“Cute one,” he murmurs.
You glare. “Do you always do this?”
“Do what?”
“Tease people on blind dates?”
“Only the ones I rejected five years ago and then ran into completely by accident,” he says, smile widening. “It’s a rare demographic.”
You groan and drop your face into your hands for a second. “This is so weird.”
“Maybe,” he says. “But it’s not terrible.”
You peek at him between your fingers. “You think this is going well?”
“I mean, you’re adorable when you’re awkward,” he says without missing a beat. “And I don’t not want to be here.”
You blink. That’s… not what you expected.
Sylus shrugs like it’s no big deal. “Honestly? I think it’s kind of poetic. Terrible timing back then. Maybe this time the timing’s just… less terrible.”
You don’t know what to say to that. You’re still mentally stuck on “adorable.”
So instead, you reach for your glass again—forgetting it’s empty.
He laughs.
You roll your eyes. “I’m never hearing the end of this, am I?”
“Nope,” he says, lifting his drink in a small toast. “But I am buying your next one.”
And despite yourself, despite everything—your lips twitch into a smile.
“What about dinner?” he suggests, casually, like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
You stare at him. “We’re… dragging this date?”
Sylus lifts an eyebrow, amused. “Dragging? That’s a strong word. I was thinking about extending.”
You squint at him suspiciously. “You sure this isn’t a social experiment? See how long you can tolerate the girl who confessed to you in college?”
He grins. “You keep bringing that up like I’m not flattered.”
You scoff. “You rejected me.”
“Regretfully,” he says, placing a hand over his chest with exaggerated sincerity. “I was young. Emotionally unavailable. Spiritually lost.”
You deadpan. “You were nineteen and dating a girl who made jewelry out of spoons.”
“Ah, Simone,” he says with a nostalgic sigh. “She had a vision.”
“She made you wear a fork necklace for a month.”
He laughs, and you hate that it sounds so nice. Like warm sunlight through a café window. Dangerous. “You know a lot about me, huh?”
“Knew. I literally had a crush on you.”
You glance at your watch. You could go home. Eat leftovers. Watch a true crime doc you’ll forget by morning. Or…
You exhale. “Fine. Dinner.”
He blinks. “That easy?” You didn’t reply when you stood up and he immediately followed you out.
The restaurant Sylus brings you to is tucked away on a quieter street—a cozy, dimly lit place with mismatched chairs and old jazz humming from a record player in the corner. Not fancy, but warm. Intentional.
“This feels… not like a first date spot,” you say as he pulls out a chair for you.
“That’s because it isn’t,” he replies, sliding into the seat across from you. “It’s a make-up-for-my-past-mistakes spot.”
You squint at him as you open the menu. “Do you have a designated restaurant for your emotional failures?”
“Only the meaningful ones.”
You snort. “So you bring a lot of people here.”
He winks. “Just you, actually.”
Your cheeks flush again—great—and you pretend to focus very hard on the pasta section. He watches you, though, openly and without shame, chin resting on his hand like he’s perfectly content just sitting across from you.
The waiter comes, and you place your orders. After he walks off, the silence between you settles again—but this time, it’s quieter. Softer.
“So…” you say, twirling the condensation on your glass, “you really didn’t remember me when you saw me at first?”
Sylus winces. “I remembered your face. Just… didn’t connect it right away.” You gave him a knowing look, in which he sighs.
"Fine, I knew it was you ever since I entered that cafe."
“Hm.”
“But when you brought up the confession and letter?” He taps the table lightly. “It all came back like it was yesterday. I even remember the pen color—dark green ink, right?”
Your eyes widen. “Okay, weird.”
“You wrote in cursive,” he continues, grinning. “All neat and swirly. I thought it was sweet.”
“And you read it after rejecting me?,” you asked him, stabbing a breadstick like it personally offended you.
He chuckles. “Hey, in my defense—I was an idiot. The kind who didn’t know what he wanted until years later.”
“Yeah, well,” you say, biting into the breadstick, “welcome to the club.”
Your food arrives midway through him telling a story about a client who paid him in garden vegetables. You’re genuinely laughing now—soft and a little surprised, like you forgot what it felt like to enjoy someone’s company this way.
Over dinner, the teasing doesn’t stop, but it shifts—less sharp, more playful. He leans in sometimes when you speak, nods like what you're saying matters. And every so often, he looks at you like maybe this was never just a coincidence.
When dessert comes, he casually pushes the plate of tiramisu toward you with a fork already ready.
“I didn’t order dessert,” you protest.
“You did,” he says, “you just didn’t know it yet.”
“You’re unbelievable.”
“Yet, here you are.”
You roll your eyes, but you do take a bite.
It’s unfairly good.
“...Damn it.”
“Exactly.” He smiles, slow and warm. “So... what do you say we drag this date a little longer?”
You stare at him, fork paused halfway to your mouth.
Then it hits you.
You can’t.
Not like this. Not with someone who clearly rejected you once, and maybe—just maybe—is only entertaining this out of guilt or curiosity. The warmth in his eyes, the way he leans in, the softness in his smile... it all feels too good, too dangerous.
And you've read some post on tiktok saying if a man rejected you once they shouldn't be in your life ever again. Even though you never really follow social media's advices, you're still unsure.
Because you remember exactly what it felt like to have hope, only to have it shut down with a kind smile and a polite “I’m sorry.”
And no matter how nice dinner is, no matter how different he seems now—you’re still you. And he’s still Sylus Qin.
The boy who took your letter and probably never really read the insides rather than a glance, and threw it out (That is what your dramatic heart convinced you happened)
You put the fork down slowly, like it's suddenly too heavy. “I can’t do this,” you murmur, your voice quieter than you mean it to be.
Sylus straightens slightly. “What?”
“This.” You gesture vaguely between you two. “Dinner. The... date. Whatever this is.”
His brows draw together. “Did I say something wrong?”
You shake your head, looking down at the half-eaten tiramisu like it holds answers. “No. You were—you are fine. And that’s the problem.”
He blinks, clearly confused. “You lost me.”
You take a slow breath. “You don’t remember how that felt, do you? Being rejected by someone you genuinely liked—someone who barely noticed you until years later. Someone who now decides, over pasta and charming smiles, that maybe you're worth a shot.”
Sylus is quiet for a moment, no longer smiling.
“You think that’s why I’m here?” he asks, voice low.
You shrug, arms folding tightly across your chest. “I don’t know why you’re here. And that’s the part I don’t think I can handle.”
There’s a pause between you—long and sharp.
“I didn’t come here to mess with you,” he says, tone more serious now. “I didn’t remember right away, but once I did, I chose to stay. I’m not trying to make up for the past. I just... thought this could be something new.”
You look up at him, uncertain.
“I get it,” he adds gently. “If you don’t want to keep going, I won’t push. But I’m not that guy from freshman year anymore. And maybe you’re not that girl either.”
You hesitate, heart torn between a self-defense mechanism you’ve polished to perfection—and the stupid, stubborn flicker of curiosity he somehow reignited.
You glance down again, then quietly push the dessert plate back to him.
“I think I’m still her...and uhm, I need a little space,” you say.
He nods slowly. “Okay.”
The server returns with the check, and Sylus pays without question waving in dismissal at your attempt to sneak in your card as well. You both rise, the air between you heavier now, but honest.
He walks you to the door, hands in his pockets. “For what it’s worth,” he says softly, “I’m glad I saw you again.”
You manage a small nod, already halfway out the door, already fighting the part of you that wants to turn back.
Maybe later.
Maybe next time.
Maybe.
One month later
The coffee shop’s the same.
Same mellow jazz humming from the speakers. Same barista who still gives you a warm smile and extra whipped cream when she thinks you look tired. Same seat by the window, where your laptop sits untouched, your fingers curled around a lukewarm mug of cappuccino.
But you’re not the same.
Not entirely.
Because ever since that dinner—since him—you haven’t quite been able to return to your emotional baseline. There’s a small ache under your ribs when you let your guard down. A lingering sense of something unfinished.
Tara drops into the seat across from you, smoothie in one hand, far too much energy in the other.
“You’re avoiding the question again,” she says, poking your arm with her straw.
You don’t look up. “What question?”
“The Sylus Question."
“I’m not.”
“You are.”
You sigh. “There’s nothing to say.”
Tara leans in, unconvinced. “You were gone for almost three hours. You came back looking like you’d seen a ghost and then refused to talk about it. Something happened.”
You stay quiet, eyes fixed on the steam curling from your drink. And for a while, she just watches you—not pressing, for once.
Then quietly, you say, “I never told you about him, did I?”
She blinks. “Told me what?”
“Sylus wasn’t just some random guy Evan picked out of a lineup. I knew him. From college.”
Her brows lift. “Wait—what?”
You nod slowly, not quite meeting her eyes. “Freshman year. I had the biggest crush on him. We had psych class together. I wrote him this ridiculous handwritten confession letter like I was living in some second-rate teen drama.”
Tara’s jaw drops. “You wrote him a letter?”
“In green ink,” you mutter. “Cursive. I poured my heart out. He was nice about it. Rejected me politely. But still... it stuck with me.”
“Oh my God,” she breathes. “And you, out of all people just proceed with the date?”
You finally look up, your expression tight. “Because the moment he sat down and saw him smile like he didn’t even recognize me, it all came rushing back. I felt stupid. Like I was nineteen again, waiting for a reply that never came.”
Tara leans back slowly, eyes softer now. “You never said any of that.”
“I didn’t want to make it a thing,” you murmur. “You were so excited to help me. And I thought I could handle it. I didn’t know it would be him! But after the date... I don’t know. He was kind. Charming. All the things I used to like about him. And somehow that made it worse.”
She studies you for a long moment. “You didn’t ask Evan for his number?”
You shake your head. “Didn’t want to. Didn’t dare to. Because what if he was only being nice to be nice? What if he was curious? Or worse—what if it meant nothing at all to him and I just end up falling again?”
Tara exhales slowly. “Evan said Sylus asked about you. He didn’t push. Just wondered if you were okay.”
Your heart gives a quiet, reluctant thud.
“I think you’re still thinking about someone you saw once a month ago,” she says gently. “That kinda says everything.”
You fall silent, eyes drifting to the window where the light hits just right, shadowing the table in soft gold. You remember his smile. The way he looked at you—not like he was sorry, but like he wanted to know you again. For real this time.
“Do you think…” you start, then pause, swallowing. “Do you think I messed it up?”
Tara doesn’t even hesitate. She reaches for her phone and gives you a raised eyebrow. “Should I text Evan?”
You stare at the screen.
Maybe you should.
You stare at Tara’s phone like it’s a bomb she’s about to detonate.
“What would you even say?” you ask, cautiously.
Tara shrugs, already typing. “Something neutral. Friendly. Non-dramatic. ‘Hey, can you send Sylus’s number to [Name]? She forgot to get it that night.’”
“I didn’t forget.”
She glances up, grinning. “Exactly. That’s why it’ll sound innocent.”
You hesitate. Your fingers tighten around your cup.
Tara pauses, thumbs hovering. “Do you want me to hit send?”
There’s a pause. A long, uncertain one. But your silence is a maybe, and she knows you well enough to hear it.
Send.
“Done,” she says brightly, locking her phone like she didn’t just possibly alter the trajectory of your emotional well-being.
You groan and sink further into your seat. “You’re evil.”
“I’m efficient,” she corrects. “Also, you’re welcome.”
You don’t respond. Your mind’s already spinning—what you’ll say, how it’ll sound, what he’ll think. If he’ll even reply.
You don’t have to wait long.
Tara’s phone buzzes. She unlocks it, reads the message, then slides the phone across the table to you.
Evan: Yeah, sure. He’s actually been meaning to reach out, but didn’t want to push. Here’s his number. Hope she’s doing okay.
You stare at the number for a few seconds, your heart weirdly loud in your chest.
“He was going to reach out,” Tara says softly. “He was waiting for you.”
You don’t say anything. You just copy the number into your own phone. Your thumb hovers over the message screen for way too long. You delete three different drafts before settling on the simplest version possible.
You: Hey. It’s me. From that very extended blind date. Mind if we talk?
You hit send before you can overthink it.
Then you both wait.
A few agonizing minutes pass. You sip your now-cold coffee. Tara picks at her muffin like she’s trying not to stare too obviously. You check your phone again. Nothing.
And then—finally—your screen lights up.
Sylus: Hey. Wow. Hi.
Sylus: I was hoping you’d text. Where should we start—apologies or second chances?
Your breath catches, somewhere between a laugh and a nervous sigh. You glance up at Tara, eyes wide.
She grins. “Well?”
You look back down at the screen, smile tugging at your lips before you can stop it.
You: Maybe… coffee. One cup. No letters. No expectations.
Sylus: One cup. No letters. Just you. When?
And this time, you don’t hesitate.
You: Tomorrow? Same café, 4pm?
Sent.
You stare at the message, heart tapping against your ribs like it’s trying to make a run for it. Across from you, Tara’s holding her breath with a weirdly intense look.
“I asked him,” you murmur.
Tara’s hands shoot up in silent victory. “Yes. Finally.” Then her voice drops, more sincere. “You okay?”
You nod—small, uncertain. “I don’t know what I want from this.”
“Then start with what you don’t want,” she offers. “You don’t want it to end with silence. Again.”
Your phone buzzes.
Sylus: I’ll be there. And I promise not to pretend we’re strangers this time.
Your lips twitch. You hate how fast your fingers move when you type back.
You: Good. Because I’m done pretending too.
—
You sat at the coffee table, waiting—nervously fiddling with the rim of your cup as your eyes flicked toward the door every few seconds. The café felt louder than usual, or maybe it was just your thoughts making too much noise.
What were you even doing here?
A month had passed. You should’ve let it go. But something about the way he’d looked at you that night—surprised, yes, but not indifferent—kept looping in your head like an unfinished sentence.
Your fingers stilled.
The door chimed.
You didn’t turn right away, but you felt it—the shift. The quiet recognition, the way the barista paused mid-sentence to smile, how a familiar set of footsteps approached the table.
“Hey,” Sylus said.
You looked up.
He hadn’t changed, but something in his posture was different. Softer, maybe. Less guarded.
“Hey,” you replied, quieter than intended.
He glanced at the cup in front of you. “Did you order for me again?”
You smirked. “Habit.”
“Dangerous. I could’ve turned into someone who drinks oat milk lavender lattes.”
“Then we’d have a real problem.”
That made him laugh. And you hated how nice it still sounded.
He slid into the seat across from you, exhaling slowly like even he wasn’t sure what came next.
You both sat there for a moment, letting the silence settle—not awkward, not entirely comfortable either. Just real.
“So,” he started, eyes meeting yours, “are we pretending this is just coffee?”
You paused, then shook your head. “No pretending this time.”
His gaze lingered. “Good. Because I’ve been thinking about you.”
You blinked. “Why?”
He smiled faintly. “Because maybe I was wrong about a lot of things back then. But mostly... because I don’t want to be wrong about you again.”
“What do you mean?” you ask, trying to keep your tone even, but you can already feel your chest tightening.
Sylus gives a small, breathy laugh and looks down at his hands. “I mean I haven’t been able to stop thinking about you. Since that night.”
Your eyebrows lift, skeptical. “We barely talked.”
“That’s the thing,” he says, meeting your gaze. “Even when you weren’t saying much, I could feel it. That weight between us. Like there was more. Like you knew something I didn’t.”
You don’t respond. You’re not sure if you can. Because part of you wants to believe he means this, and another part still remembers the awkwardness of freshman year—of your letter, of his rejection, of everything that made you feel small.
Sylus seems to sense it.
“I know I didn’t handle things well back then,” he says. “And I don’t expect us to magically reset, or rewind. I just… wanted a chance. A real one this time. No setups, no pressure, no expectations.”
A beat.
You bite the inside of your cheek. “You know this is kind of insane, right?”
He smiles softly. “The best things usually are.”
You stare at him—at his hopeful expression, at the way he’s sitting there with nothing but his words and his coffee and maybe.
You look away, jaw tightening. “If we hadn’t gone on that blind date, none of this would’ve happened.”
There's a pause. You expect him to deny it, to give some sweet romantic line about fate. But he doesn’t.
Instead, he says quietly, “You’re right.”
You glance back at him, surprised by the honesty.
“If we didn’t go on that blind date,” he continues, “we probably would’ve gone on living like strangers who once shared a college campus and a forgotten letter. But we did go. And I saw you again. And it... shifted something.”
You scoff under your breath. “You’re making it sound like a movie.”
“Yeah, well.” He gives a soft laugh. “I didn’t expect it either. I thought you’d be another awkward coffee and polite goodbye. But then you walked in and looked at me like you already knew who I was—and I couldn’t stop wondering why.”
You stay silent, the edge in your expression softening, but only slightly.
“You’re still mad,” he notes gently.
“I’m still trying to understand what this is,” you reply. “If it’s just guilt. Nostalgia. Or something you’ll forget in a week.”
Sylus leans back, eyes steady on yours.
“I don’t know what it is yet either,” he says honestly. “But I’d like to find out.”
You cross your arms, narrowing your eyes slightly. “And how exactly are you going to find out? Expect me to write you a letter again?”
Sylus smiles—not smug, not overly confident. Just steady.
“While it doesn’t sound so bad to receive one from you again, I have another idea,” he says. “But how about this: ten dates.”
You blink. “What?”
“Ten dates,” he repeats. “Maybe romantic, but not dramatic. Just… ten chances. To talk. To laugh. To see if this—whatever this is—is real.”
You stare at him, incredulous. “That sounds like a really desperate Netflix series.”
“Yeah, well, desperate is fair,” he replies with a half-shrug. “You’re kind of terrifying.”
That almost makes you laugh, but you suppress it. “Why ten?”
“Because I’m stubborn,” he says, leaning forward just a little. “And because if I can’t convince you by the tenth, I’ll back off for good.”
You look down at your cup, pretending to think, though your heart is already pacing.
“This is ridiculous,” you mutter.
“Maybe,” he agrees. “But so is the fact that I still remember what you wore when you gave me that letter.”
Your head snaps up, and he grins—caught you off guard again.
You sigh, long and tired. “Fine. But don’t expect me to be charming.”
He raises a brow. “So… that’s a yes?”
You pick up your drink and sip slowly. “It’s a maybe. A probationary date system. Conditional.”
Sylus holds up both hands in surrender. “I’ll take it.”
—
The rain drums lightly against the windows as you sit across from Sylus, sipping a warm chai latte in one of your favorite hideaway spots—a quiet bookstore café tucked behind a florist and barely staffed. You picked it on purpose. Familiar. Safe. Low stakes.
He’s dressed in a dark sweater and jeans, damp at the shoulders from the rain, hair slightly tousled like he ran a hand through it too many times on the way in. You hate that he still looks so... annoyingly good.
“You chose the most intimidating first date spot,” he comments, glancing around at the towering bookshelves and soft jazz playing overhead. “Is this a test?”
You raise a brow. “You said you wanted ten dates. I’m making sure you work for them.”
He chuckles. “So... trial by literature.”
“I heard you read a lot.” You reply as you look at him with a smile, in which he echoes.
“Making some research on me, huh?” He grins.
“Evan.”
“Oh, that guy. Was he giving you some biodata check before going on that blind date?”
“Just simple things like what you like, the fact that you collect vinyls amongst other things. Not too much to be considered as a Sylus Genius.” You say while sipping on your drink.
He clicked his tongue, “Then it is my duty to make you one, the only one, perhaps.”
You felt your cheeks grow warmer, what a stupid reason to be blushing, but still, he laughs.
“I like that expression,” He stares at you, eyes soft and bright. Something rare to see from someone like him, yet here you are eliciting it effortlessly.
You're flipping through a poetry book when Sylus suddenly sets his phone down between you both, screen facing up.
It’s a playlist. Titled: “For Date One, if she lets me.”
You raise a brow. “Really?”
“I made it last night,” he says, sheepish. “In case conversation got awkward.”
“It already is awkward.”
“Exactly. I planned ahead.”
You roll your eyes, but you can’t help the small grin tugging at your lips. You tap the first track. Soft acoustic guitar filters through the speakers—he must’ve connected it to the café’s Bluetooth. You recognize the song. Something nostalgic, early 2000s indie, a little cheesy, a little perfect.
“You’re lucky I like this band,” you murmur.
“I know.” He rests his chin on his hand, watching you a little too closely. “I remembered.”
That makes you pause. You look at him, unsure how he means it—remembered like he Googled your old Spotify profile or remembered as in… back then.
Your stomach knots.
“What else do you remember?” you ask quietly, not fully meaning to say it aloud.
He doesn’t look away. “You always carried two pens to class. A black one for notes. A blue one for thoughts.”
Your breath catches.
He keeps going. “You always tied your hair up during exams, even if you didn’t need to. Said it helped you think.”
You don’t respond.
“And you once cried in the back row after a presentation because someone laughed at your voice when you read your script.” He pauses. “I wanted to punch them.”
You blink hard, your throat suddenly tight.
“I wasn’t brave then,” he adds softly. “I should’ve said something. But I never forgot.”
You look away, blinking at the shelves, pretending to read the book in your hands. His words sit between you now, heavy but warm. Sincere.
After a long pause, you whisper, “Ten dates might not be enough.”
Sylus smiles—just barely. “That wasn’t me winning you over, was it?”
You shake your head, voice barely audible. “That was you... remembering me.”
He changes his seat from across you to beside you, before plugging one earphone in your ear while the other in his. “Decided not to let the whole cafe hear your little playlist?”
“Yeah, it’s special for you.”
—
On date two, you’re still not sure how he roped you into this.
“This is a terrible idea,” you say flatly, standing in the vegetable aisle with a shopping basket in hand while Sylus debates between two kinds of veggies like it’s a life-or-death decision.
He looks at you over his shoulder. “You said you wanted something low-key. What’s lower key than cooking?”
“You didn’t say I’d be cooking with you.”
“Technically, I said we would cook. Together.” He turns back to the mushrooms. “Also, you’re stalling.”
“I just don’t trust you to know the difference between coriander and parsley.”
“That’s fair,” he mutters, tossing the better-looking pack into the basket. “I Googled that this morning.”
You try not to smile, but it slips through anyway. He notices. You pretend not to see that he noticed.
His apartment is neat. Not obsessively clean, but clearly lived in. A jacket draped over a chair. A vinyl player in the corner. A pair of reading glasses on the coffee table you didn’t know he wore.
“You can put your stuff anywhere,” he says, motioning to the couch. “Shoes off if you want. I have house socks.”
You glance at him. “House socks?”
“Yeah, you know. Guest socks. Clean, fluffy, magical.”
“…You’re a menace.”
“You’ll thank me in five minutes.”
You do. They’re ridiculously soft.
Cooking is chaotic. He chops vegetables like he’s in a rush to win a knife skills competition. You end up laughing when he puts the pasta in before the water boils and looks genuinely shocked when you scold him.
At one point, you’re both standing shoulder to shoulder at the stove, close enough to feel the heat of his arm. He smells like citrus and something woodsy. Not cologne—like fabric softener and something more subtle.
You steal glances.
He catches one.
“What?”
You shrug. “Nothing.”
“You were looking.”
“Maybe.”
“You were definitely looking.”
You roll your eyes, but you’re smiling. “You’re insufferable.”
“And you’re cute when you’re trying to pretend this isn’t fun.”
You look up at him. “This doesn’t mean I like you.”
“I know.” He says it gently. “But it means you’re here.”
Dinner is good. Surprisingly so. You eat on the couch, plates balanced on your laps, a dumb movie playing in the background that neither of you really watches.
Halfway through, you notice him watching you again.
“What now?”
He shrugs. “Nothing. You just… look comfortable.”
You pause. It feels like a compliment, but it sinks a little deeper than that.
“Do you want dessert?” he asks quickly, maybe sensing the shift.
You nod. “Only if it’s something you didn’t burn.”
He laughs. “Rude. I bought ice cream. Zero effort involved.”
He disappears into the kitchen. And for the first time in a long time, you let yourself lean back into the couch, socks on your feet, a full plate on your lap—and a feeling creeping in that maybe, just maybe, letting go of the past isn’t the same as forgetting it.
It might even be… the start of something new.
—
It’s date seven.
The previous dates were all quiet and cozy, except for date five, where the both of you went to the amusement park. You've learnt that he hates rollercoasters due to their "anti-climatic" push when the controller decided to prolong the time at the top.
But for date seven?
You hadn’t expected a literal night market.
When Sylus texted you the location, you assumed it was a café or some quiet restaurant again — something low-key, in line with your still-fragile dynamic.
Instead, you’re standing in the middle of a lively crowd, colorful lanterns strung overhead and the scent of grilled meat, fried snacks, and sugary things thick in the air.
“Too much?” he asks, appearing beside you with two skewers in hand. One of them is unrecognizable and probably a challenge.
You take the safer one.
“I thought you were the introvert.”
“I am,” he says with a smirk. “But I figured if I keep taking you to quiet places, you’ll keep overthinking.”
You raise an eyebrow. “And now I’m supposed to... not overthink while holding a fishball skewer?”
“Exactly. It’s very grounding.”
You roll your eyes, but you don’t hand it back.
The night air is warm, heavy with humidity and noise, but there’s something oddly comforting about being one small story in a sea of strangers. It makes things easier. Lighter.
Sylus walks beside you, not saying much, just letting the sights and sounds fill in the space between. Sometimes, his hand brushes yours — never on purpose, but never fully accidental either.
You pass a booth with handmade rings, mismatched and colorful.
He pauses. “Pick one.”
You blink at him. “Why?”
“Date seven deserves a souvenir.”
You glance at the table, then back at him. “If I pick one, are you going to analyze what it means?”
“Undoubtedly.”
You sigh, but eventually point to a silver one with a tiny moon charm.
“Cute,” he says, paying for it without asking.
He slides it onto your finger — careful, slow — and it makes you shiver, just a little.
“You good?” he asks, eyes glancing up at you from beneath his lashes.
“I’m not used to this,” you admit, voice barely audible above the crowd.
“To what?”
“To being… wanted. Again. Still.”
He’s quiet for a moment. Then says, “You’ve always been wanted. I was just too late to realize it.”
You don’t respond. Just stare at the ring, then at the ground, then at him. Your heart’s too loud again. Too full of things you swore you’d buried.
Later, after sharing a cup of mango ice and pointing out constellations you can’t actually name, you find yourselves leaning against a closed-up stall. The market’s winding down. The crowd’s thinning.
He nudges your shoulder gently. “Date seven complete.”
You glance at him. “Three more, huh?”
He nods. “Unless you cancel the package early.”
You smile, just slightly. “What’s the return policy?”
“No refunds,” he says, voice low. “But… you could renew.”
You look away too quickly.
And he doesn’t press.
Just stands there beside you, hands in his pockets, like someone who’s willing to wait — even if he doesn’t say it out loud.
The night breeze makes you shiver as you’re wearing nothing more than a thin blouse — a poor choice, you realize now, when the heat of the crowd starts to fade and the open air settles in.
Sylus notices immediately. He doesn’t say anything at first, just glances at you, then shrugs off his jacket.
“Here,” he says, holding it out.
You hesitate.
“I’m fine,” you mumble, though your arms betray you by hugging yourself tighter.
“You always say that,” he replies gently, stepping closer. “Let me do one nice thing without making it weird.”
You sigh, but don’t fight it when he drapes the jacket around your shoulders. It’s warm. Smells faintly like him — like cologne and comfort and something you wish you didn’t miss.
You clutch it closer anyway.
He doesn’t comment. Just gives you a small smile and walks beside you again, closer this time, like maybe his presence alone could shield you from the rest of the chill.
And for a second, just a second, you stop resisting how easy it is to lean a little closer.
And as if he’s trying to push his luck, he slowly takes your hand, and interlocks your fingers together, before bringing it in his pockets.
You glance at your hands together before looking up at him, while he looks up front, like whatever he did is natural and was clearly bound to happen for him.
“Seriously?”
He looks at you, “helping you warm up.” He smiles.
—
Date nine.
You hadn’t planned on letting Sylus into your apartment yet.
It’s too personal, too you — a space you’ve protected the way you’ve guarded your heart: meticulously. No loose ends, no open doors.
But it’s raining, and he showed up early with two bags of groceries and a sheepish grin.
“You said you missed home-cooked food,” he says, already toeing off his shoes. “I make a decent curry. Or edible. Let’s start there.”
You narrow your eyes at him. “That was weeks ago.”
He shrugs. “I remember things.”
You don’t have the energy to argue. Not when he’s already heading toward your kitchen like he’s been here before — like this isn’t some emotional line being crossed.
The apartment smells like garlic and coconut milk within the hour. Rain taps against your windows. Soft music hums from your phone speaker, something low and jazzy that fills the silence without drowning it.
You lean on the counter as he stirs the pot, sleeves rolled up, focused.
He looks… settled here. Like he belongs in your kitchen. Like the space didn’t mind opening up to him.
It makes something ache in your chest.
“You cook often?” you ask.
“Sometimes. It’s... therapeutic. And cheaper than emotional damage.”
You snort. “You’re not wrong.”
There’s a pause. Comfortable.
Then you ask, “Why are you really doing this? The ten dates, I mean.”
He doesn’t look up at first. Just stirs slowly. Thoughtfully.
“Because I wanted to show you I could mean something to you,” he says quietly. “Without rushing. Without trying to fix what I broke before. Just… be there this time.”
You blink.
The honesty, the simplicity of it — it lands heavier than you expect.
“I don’t need fixing,” you murmur.
“I know.” He finally looks at you. “But you deserve someone who knows that.”
Dinner is warm. Slightly too spicy. You both laugh over it. You tease him for almost setting your pan on fire and he teases you for owning only two forks.
When he leaves later — umbrella in hand, jacket still with you — there’s a folded napkin left under your mug.
On it, in scribbled black ink: “You feel like home. Date Ten’s going to be dangerous.”
You stare at the note long after the door closes behind him.
And for the first time in a long time, you don’t feel afraid of what’s next.
—
At least that’s what you thought you felt.
It has been two weeks, 14 days.
You hadn’t meant to pull away.
Work just... got in the way.
One last-minute project turned into two. A client call stretched past midnight. You started checking your phone less, replying slower. Not intentionally — just the kind of slow fade that happens when real life creeps in.
Sylus doesn’t push. He sends a meme here and there, a good morning text you forget to answer until lunch. A voice note one evening — gentle, teasing — asking if you’re still alive and if he should send a search party or just a very persistent delivery driver with bubble tea.
You laugh, but don’t reply right away.
When you finally do, it’s short. Something like, “Just swamped. Talk soon?”
He leaves it at that. No guilt. No pressure. But still — it lingers.
You miss him.
Worse, you realize it on a Tuesday night, forehead pressed against your desk, your laptop glowing 2:47 a.m. back at you, and all you can think about isn’t the project due at 8 a.m.
It’s that you haven’t seen Sylus in almost two weeks.
And you don’t know what Date Ten is supposed to be anymore.
That was until you heard your front doorbell ring.
You blink, groggy. It’s late. Not a normal time for someone to suddenly show up, but close enough that your heart stutters as you push up from your desk.
Padding to the door in mismatched socks and a hoodie you barely remember putting on, you glance through the peephole.
It’s Sylus.
Holding a paper bag, umbrella folded under his arm, hair damp like he walked the last few steps in the rain.
You hesitate for half a second before opening the door.
“Hi,” he says, voice soft. “I come bearing caffeine and snacks.”
You stare at him.
“I... you didn’t text,” you manage, your voice scratchy with fatigue and something that feels suspiciously like guilt.
“You weren’t replying,” he says simply, not accusing. Just... explaining. “And I figured if I waited for a calendar opening, I’d see you in October.”
That earns a weak laugh from you.
“I didn’t mean to ignore you,” you mumble, stepping aside to let him in. “Work’s been—”
“—hell. I know.” He toes off his shoes and heads to your kitchen like it’s routine now. “I figured you wouldn’t feed yourself properly either.”
You blink at the bag he sets down. Soup. Tea. A small pastry you once said you liked.
“You didn’t have to.”
“I know,” he says again, but there’s no heat in it.
Just the same gentle, unshakeable Sylus from Date One through Nine. The same one who gave you space, and now—unexpectedly—shows up without asking for anything back.
You exhale slowly, walls slowly lowering.
“I forgot what day it was,” you say.
He smiles faintly. “It’s not Date Ten. Yet. This is just... a bonus round.”
You sit down at the counter. He pours you tea without asking. You watch him, warmth curling up beneath your ribs.
“You didn’t give up.”
“Nope,” he says. “I said ten dates. I’m not going anywhere until you get all ten.”
You look at him. Tired, but soft. Edges worn down by the weeks, but still holding space for him.
You reach for the tea. “Okay,” you murmur. “Let’s call this one... nine and a half.”
Sylus grins. “Nine-point-five. I’ll take it.”
You nurse the cup of tea slowly, letting the heat seep into your fingers. The apartment is dim except for your desk lamp, casting a soft glow across the space. Rain continues tapping against the window, steady and hushed.
Sylus sits on the other side of the counter, watching you — not in a way that makes you self-conscious, but like he’s trying to memorize the moment.
“Your eyes get glassy when you’re running on four hours of sleep,” he says gently.
You raise a brow. “You make that sound factual.”
“Maybe it is,” he says, and he’s not joking.
There’s something weighted in the silence that follows, but not heavy. Just... full. Brimming with all the things neither of you have dared to say out loud since that blind date started everything again.
You look down at your tea. “I didn’t mean to pull away.”
“I know,” he says. “And I didn’t show up to make you feel bad.”
“Then why did you show up?”
He pauses. And then—
“Because I missed you,” he says, quiet but certain. “And I wanted you to remember what it feels like to be taken care of, even when your world’s on fire.”
You stare at him.
It hits in a strange place — the truth of it, the care, the timing. The softness in his voice that reaches you deeper than any grand gesture ever could.
And maybe it’s the hour. Maybe it’s your exhaustion. Or maybe it’s the way he hasn’t stopped looking at you like you’re something fragile but worth holding onto.
But when you set your cup down, and say, “Come here,” your voice is steady.
He doesn’t question it. Just moves.
You meet him halfway around the counter. The rain hums in the background, steady and soft. He’s close now — warm, still damp at the edges from the walk over.
You look up at him. “This... doesn’t make us even,” you murmur.
“I’m not trying to settle a score.”
You hesitate. Then, finally—finally—you step into him.
And when you kiss him, it’s slow. Not rushed or desperate. Just a quiet press of lips in the middle of a rainy midnight, in an apartment that suddenly doesn’t feel so tired anymore.
His hand finds the side of your face, thumb grazing your cheek. Yours curls into the front of his jacket like you need to hold onto something steady.
It’s not a first kiss full of fireworks or dramatic music.
It’s soft.
Earned.
Real.
And when you pull back, neither of you says anything right away. He just presses his forehead to yours and exhales the smallest, happiest breath.
You smile.
“Ten’s going to be dangerous,” you whisper.
He grins. “Then it’s a good thing I’ve got nine and a half reasons to survive it.”
—
You wake up to sunlight sneaking through the curtains and the unmistakable scent of coffee.
For a moment, you think maybe you dreamed it all — the rain, the tea, the kiss.
But then you hear gentle clinking in the kitchen.
You push yourself up from the couch, blanket slipping off your shoulders, and find Sylus standing by your stove like he’s been there a hundred times. One of your mugs in hand. His hair still slightly messy from sleep.
He glances over when he hears you. “Morning.”
His voice is quiet. Familiar. Safe.
“You stayed,” you say, more like a thought than a question.
He tilts his head. “Did you think I wouldn’t?”
You shrug. “I don’t know. I kissed you and then fell asleep in the middle of your jacket, so I wasn’t really thinking straight.”
Sylus chuckles, crossing the room to hand you a fresh cup of coffee.
You take it with a small, grateful hum and sip. It’s perfect. Just how you like it.
He nods toward the table where he’s already laid out toast and eggs — simple but warm. Intentional.
“You didn’t have to do all this,” you say.
“I know,” he replies. “But I wanted the first morning after our nine-and-a-halfth date to start right.”
You pause. The phrase makes your chest tighten — not in a painful way. Just full. Softened.
“You’re very good at this, you know,” you murmur.
“What? Being your emergency food delivery guy?”
You give him a look, and he smirks, stepping closer until your hip’s pressed lightly against the counter and he’s standing in front of you.
“No,” you say. “At... making it feel easy.”
He shrugs, but there’s something fond in his eyes. “It is easy. When it’s you.”
That line shouldn’t make your heart skip, but it does. And before you can overthink it — again — he leans down and brushes a kiss to your temple, then your cheek, then finally your lips. This one slower, softer than the night before.
“Let me stay a little longer,” he murmurs when you part.
You nod, not trusting your voice.
Because for once, you don’t feel the need to run ahead or fall behind. You just want this moment.
His.
A few hours later, Sylus left, and date ten starts.
You’re already suspicious when Sylus tells you not to wear anything too fancy, and even more so when he insists on picking you up himself.
“I swear, if this is a paintball arena—” “It’s not,” he laughs, hand warm around yours as he leads you down a quiet path.
It isn’t until you recognize the stone archway ahead that your heart stumbles. Your old campus.
You blink. “You didn’t.” He raises a brow. “Didn’t what?” “This is where I met you.” “It’s where I saw you,” he corrects gently. “You met me after tripping over your own feet trying to sit in the last row.”
You gasp in mock outrage. “That’s not—okay, that is accurate.”
He grins, tugging you toward one of the empty benches just outside the old lecture hall. The sun’s low, sky blushing gold and soft blue.
“There’s a picnic,” he says, motioning to the small setup — nothing over the top. A blanket, some pastries, cold brew in glass bottles, and a small stack of your favorite snacks.
You sit beside him, heart full and quiet.
“You remembered this place,” you murmur, looking out over the familiar quad where your lives once barely brushed each other’s.
“I remembered you in this place,” he says. “That matters more.”
You glance at him. His expression is soft, unreadable in the best way — like he’s still amazed you’re here.
“You know,” you say after a while, voice quieter, “if we didn’t go on that blind date... we might not have ever come back to this.”
He hums, thoughtful. “Maybe. But I think something else would’ve pulled us together eventually.”
You raise a brow. “That’s bold.” “That’s fate,” he says simply. “Stubborn. Annoying. Kind of like you, actually.”
You nudge him, trying not to laugh. “You just ruined the moment.”
He shrugs. “Guess I’ll have to fix it.”
And he kisses you.
Not a hesitant first. Not a sudden second. But a tenth-date kind of kiss — full of memory, promise, and quiet affection that doesn’t need to prove itself anymore.
When you pull away, you press your forehead to his.
“This is my favorite date,” you whisper.
“Mine too,” he replies. “But... I want to show you something.”
His voice has shifted — softer now, more careful.
You watch as Sylus reaches into his jacket pocket and pulls out a timeworn envelope. Cream-colored. Slightly bent at the corners. A familiar messy swirl of ink where your handwriting signed his name.
Your breath leaves you. “Is that—?”
He nods slowly. “Your letter. From freshman year.”
Your world tilts a little. “I—I thought I threw it away after… after you said no.”
He looks at the envelope like it’s fragile. Like it’s sacred. “You gave it to me after that group project, remember? You said I could read it or pretend it never existed. I was too much of a coward to say anything back then.”
“You folded it and put it in your backpack,” you murmur. “Didn’t even open it in front of me.”
“I read it that night,” he admits. “Twice.”
Your eyes sting.
“I was young. Stupid. Scared. You wrote something so sincere, and I didn’t know how to be what you deserved. So I told myself it was easier to say nothing than to mess anything up.”
You’re silent. The weight of years pressing in on you. On both of you.
He carefully opens the envelope, pulling out the folded pages inside. The paper’s softened over time, but your words are still there — full of nerves, and longing, and a kind of bravery you barely recognize anymore.
He starts to read it aloud. Not theatrically. Not to embarrass you. But like it matters. Like it’s still beating.
To. Sylus Qin.
This might be stupid, in fact, this may be the dumbest thing you’ve ever encountered in your life. But if I don’t write this down, I might have even more sleepless nights overthinking all these thoughts in my head.
I like you. I really do. Ever since the first day of psych class. It felt like love at first sight but I don’t want to be dramatic with this, I can’t help it. The way you can answer every question the Prof gave us, or when you seemed to laugh so freely at your friend’s awful jokes (I sometimes overheard you guys, he was being pretty loud), Or maybe when you held the door open for everyone that one rainy morning even though you were soaked.
It’s okay if you don’t feel the same. I just needed you to know. Because I want to be brave, and this letter is the only way I know how.
You cringe at the words your past self wrote to him, burying your face in your hands with a soft groan. “Why did I have to say all that when I still got upset that you rejected me?”
Sylus chuckles, folding the letter back with surprising care before slipping it into his pocket again. “Because it was honest. And brave. And a little dramatic,” he adds, smirking.
You glare at him through your fingers. “I was nineteen.”
“And very articulate for someone confessing their heart and soul,” he teases. “Honestly, I think that’s when I started falling for you — I just didn’t know what to do with it back then.”
You lower your hands slowly, blinking. “Falling?”
“Don’t make me repeat it,” he says, leaning in just a little. “My pride’s already hanging by a thread.”
Your lips twitch despite yourself. “That’s what you get for carrying emotional artifacts in your coat pocket.”
He grins. “That letter’s my proof that you liked me first.”
You laugh, swatting his shoulder lightly. “You’re impossible.”
“Maybe,” he shrugs. “But I’m here. And if you’re still mad about nineteen-year-old me being a dumbass... I can make it up to you.”
“Oh?” you raise a brow, suddenly wary. “How?”
He lifts your joined hands and presses a kiss to the back of yours. “Ten more dates. Starting with breakfast tomorrow. I’ll even bring coffee and not screw up the order.”
You hesitate — heart twisting, tugged between the embarrassment of the past and the fragile wonder of now.
But then you smile, small and real.
“Only if I don’t have to write any more letters.”
Sylus leans in, nose nearly brushing yours. “No more letters. Just us.”
—
One Year Later
“You shrunk my sweater!” you shout from the bedroom, holding up the tiny, once-cozy piece of clothing like it's been murdered.
Sylus appears in the doorway, toothbrush in hand. “It said warm wash!”
You point an accusatory finger. “It said hand wash only, you chaos gremlin!”
He squints. “Are you sure?”
You shove the tag in his face. “Does this look unsure to you?”
He pauses, leans in, reads the tag, then slowly backs away like it might bite. “Okay. So I may have misread.”
“You may have committed a war crime.”
He raises a brow. “It’s just a sweater.”
“It was my comfort sweater. My post-long-day, rainy-night, sad-girl-hours sweater!”
Sylus tries not to smile. “Sad-girl-hours?”
You glare. “Don’t mock me in my time of grief.”
He disappears for a moment and returns with a hoodie — his hoodie. He tosses it at you.
You catch it and blink. “What’s this?”
“Official replacement,” he says with a shrug. “It’s softer. Smells better. Probably has my good boyfriend energy woven into the threads.”
You squint at him. “Bribery.”
“Compromise,” he says, smug. “Also, you look cuter in my clothes anyway.”
You roll your eyes and pull the hoodie on. It is soft. And warm. And kind of smells like him and cinnamon.
“…You’re lucky I’m forgiving,” you mumble.
“And you’re lucky I’m good at laundry 87% of the time.”
You shake your head, already smiling. “That 13% is dangerous.”
“I live on the edge,” he smirks, walking away.
You sigh dramatically, flopping onto the bed in your oversized hoodie.
“Next time,” you call out, “I’m making you sort socks for a week.”
“Babe!” he yells and comes back at you making you look up at him. “What now?”
He went to sit beside you on the bed, before suddenly crashing on top of you with all his weight. You let out an exaggerated oof as he smothered you like a human blanket.
“My hourly kiss,” he mumbled against your cheek, already pressing a noisy one there.
You squirm under him, half-laughing, half-annoyed. “You’re so heavy, Sylus—get off before my ribs turn into dust!”
“Nope,” he says, settling in even more like a cat refusing to move. “This is rent. You wore my hoodie. Now you pay in affection.”
“You’re ridiculous,” you mutter, but your arms are already wrapping around him out of habit.
He lifts his head just enough to look down at you, his grin softening into something gentler. “You love it.”
You wrinkle your nose, but your heart betrays you. “I do.”
He leans down, brushing his nose against yours. “Good. Now hurry and give me my kiss.”
You roll your eyes but oblige, lips brushing his in something far sweeter than the bickering that led to it.
And somehow, even after a year and countless ridiculous arguments, it still makes your heart race like it’s the first.
“Mmh..” He smiles into the kiss, like he always does.
You try to pull away, but his grip on you tightens and the kiss turns into something more rougher, more passionate.
“Not done,” Sylus murmurs, his voice low against your lips.
The next kiss catches you off guard—no longer playful, but deeper, rougher. Like he’s been waiting for this exact moment all day. His hand slides to the back of your neck, tilting your face toward him, anchoring you to the moment.
It makes your breath hitch, makes your fingers curl in the fabric of his shirt like you’re afraid to let go.
It’s still Sylus—still familiar, still home—but there’s something new in the way he kisses you now. Like all the quiet moments, the bickering, the small touches and soft laughs have been building to this. Like he’s telling you something he hasn’t yet found the words for.
When you finally pull back, your lips are tingling and your heart is racing far too fast.
He’s staring at you like you hung the stars.
You swallow. “What was that for?”
He doesn’t smile—just brushes your hair behind your ear and says, “Felt like a good time to remind you.”
You blink. “Remind me of what?”
He leans in, voice barely above a whisper. “That I’m in love with you. And I mean it every hour, not just the one with the kiss.”
Your chest tightens in the best way. You can’t quite speak, but your hand finds his, and that’s enough for now.
“I love you, baby.” He smiles.
And when you reply, he hugs you, wrapping your body in the warmth only he could provide for you. You sigh in his arms in content.
You’re happy, both of you are.
And you couldn't ask for more.
fin.
a/n: hmmm i didn’t expect it to be this long :\ but i hope you guys love this as much as i do! reblogs are very appreciated! do let me know what you guys think? 💭



















