Izzy | 98' | just reblogging things and venting | Mingyu and Wonwoo biased, often tempted by Joshua and Seungcheol | this account is +18 / MINORS DO NO INTERACT
Synopsis: Jeonghan is the second hand in a crime syndicate. When you catch his eye, his interest quickly turns into an obsession. And when he wants something, he'll eventually have it.
Warnings: mdni 18+, stalking, dark!jeonghan, b & e, jeonghan is a perv, corruption kink, stolen panties, masturbation (m. rec), jeonghan might be crazy idk, dirty-talk, camera set-up you don't know about, you're the daughter of an FBI agent woahhhhh, youâre his new obsession
WC: 1438+
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Jeonghan knows he should stay away.
You were everything he was not. Soft, sweet, a light in a world of darkness. Innocent.
Without ever actually meeting, you had crawled yourself under his skin. An itch he couldn't scratch, an itch that he couldn't get rid of.
And so, he watched.
Keeping tabs, learning little crumbs about you to feed his amusement. His interest was piqued; he'd become a dog with his favorite chew toy. He knew where you worked, who your friends were, and where you lived.
On days he wasn't busy, he'd cut time to quietly follow you. Always seventeen steps behind, his hands in his pockets, watching you have no care in the world. How could you not know you were being followed? How could you have headphones over your ears? He could just snatch you away, and you wouldn't even know until it was too late.
His lips pursed together, his eyebrows furrowing as he realized you were so naive - the world had not yet corrupted you. His fingers twitched, curling into his palms to form a fist. And before he could let his intrusive thoughts win and grab you, you had turned the corner, greeting your friend happily as he walked right past.
You were none the wiser.
His interest slowly morphed into an obsession. It happened the moment his tech-guy, Wonwoo, gave him a file. A simple, "You need to see this." Falling from the quiet man's lips, before he had disappeared back into his office, multiple monitors along a wall flashed through hundreds of cameras.
Jeonghan's fingers softly opened the file. A ghost of a smile curving on his lips when he saw there was a candid picture of you on the first page. His finger traces down your cheek, you are smiling so big, and then his eyes flicked to the right, family information.
Seungcheol thinks it's just Jeonghan's luck that you happen to be the daughter of the FBI director who sanctioned a special unit literally out to get Jeonghan and his people. It's tough running a crime syndicate - but Jeonghan always gets what he wants, and he's just decided he wants you.
He has Joshua come with him when he first breaks into your apartment. They broke in about ten minutes after you had already left for work. And they went into every room, one by one, opening every drawer - every cabinet. Joshua searched every pillow, every lampshade, every knick-knack you owned in the living room while Jeonghan took your bedroom himself.
His eyes slowly trailed over your bedroom with a light smirk. The lights strung up on your ceiling, the plush stuffed animals on your bed, and a pile of clothes on a chair in the corner of your bedroom. His fingers danced across your bed. You didn't make it today, and it was still warm from where you lounged in it before racing out the door. He took his time scoping out your dresser, taking a sniff of your perfume, and pocketing a bracelet you had failed to wear today.
When Joshua had moved from the living room to your kitchen, Jeonghan was getting onto his knees to open every drawer in your dresser. He sifted through your socks, smirked through your bras, and salivated through your panties. A pretty lacey one finds its way into his pocket as he moves onto your closet.
He skims through your clothes, already familiar with your favorites, which you would wear over and over again. And finishes his inspection when Joshua finds him again. "Clear," Joshua confirms the same findings as Jeonghan. You're not bugged, Jeonghan grins, perfect.
The second time he breaks in, he brings Joshua and Jihoon. They work your living room and kitchen while Jeonghan takes your bedroom again. They install cameras while you are visiting a friend for lunch.
You still didn't even know Jeonghan had been in your apartment in the first place. And heâd make sure you wouldnât know now.
But like last time, Jeonghan takes a souvenir - another pair of your panties, this time though, from your dirty laundry basket.
When they finish installing all the cameras, Jeonghan is eager to get home. Your pretty panties feels like it's burning a hole in his pants. And his feet canât carry him fast enough to his bedroom, the door slamming behind him with a resonating 'click.'
The moment heâs alone, he's instantly bringing your pretty panties up to his face. His eyes fluttering closed, as your scent fills his lungs and causes his mouth to water. He groans, full-out groans, low from his throat - stumbling to his bed, his cock straining against his pants, because he can't get enough of you. He shoves his pants low enough to free his aching cock. It curves up, the mushroom tip red, throbbing, and leaking profusely with his precum.
His long fingers wrap around his fat girth, your panties still shoved against his nose, and he strokes his length from base all the way to tip. His body shudders, his lips parting as he begins to imagine what it would be like if you were here. His thumb swipes over the head of his cock, smearing the precum down his shaft, and the slick creates a lewd squelch each time his wrist flicks, stroking his cock faster each time he takes another huff of your used panties.
He wished you were here.
His hand squeezes his base as his cock twitched at the thought. He could only imagine how you'd look, staring at him wide-eyed as he stroked his cock, knowing you made him like this. It was all for you. His cock swelled, hard, slick with his precum. "Mmph-" Jeonghan grunted, twisting his hand mid stroke and milking more drops of precum to drip down his heavy cock.
You're so innocent, he'd want to make you watch him for a bit as he pumped his fat cock in his hand. Would want to see your eyes round in curiosity, your tongue licking your lips. And when you press your thighs together he would demand you to strip with soft coaxing, manipulation. His stroke would turning languid, slowing down as you would slowly take pieces of your clothing off one by one.
Such a tease.
Once you were completely bare to him, he'd need you to crawl to him. He needed to see you slowly crawl across the bed up to him, your cheeks flushed as you obeyed him without hesitation.
"Lemme see that pretty pussy, Baby." His voice had a strained rasp to it. His balls heavy and filled with so much cum. His cock throbbed with need as you moved closer to Jeonghan. But it wasn't close enough; his tongue licked his lips, wet. His eyes, dark and intense, as he clicked his tongue with a tut. "No, Baby. C'mere," his hand squeezed his cock again as he nodded his head at you, his eyes hooded. "Straddle m'face, wanna see that pretty pussy up close, Baby."
Your thighs would tremble with just hovering over his face. His mouth opens, and he pants over your slicked wet folds. You'd be dripping, soaking wet. And it'd make Jeonghan's head spin, seeing your pretty pussy pulse with need. "Is this all for me?" He could only imagine the pretty little noises that would leave your lips.
His cock jerks, and he curses as he brings your messy panties down onto his heavy cock. The lacey material wraps around his precum-coated shaft along with his hand. And his eyes roll to the back of his head. His hand jerks his cock with your panties, fast. His abs flexing, a warmth pooling in his lower stomach. "Oh fuck, fuck, fuck," his lips are spit-covered as he curses. His teeth sinking into the bottom of his lip, trying desperately to hold in the whimpers of pleasure. His thighs shook; the obscene, soppy noises of his hand on his cock echoing with his moans.
And when he cums, it's hard and heavy. His eyes rolling to the back of his head, his jaw slacking open in a broken, choked whine. His hand refuses to stop pumping, milking every last drop of his cum from his balls until it overflows and drips down his cock, your panties, and his hand. It's messy, wet, and euphoric. His thighs continue to shaking long after his cock jerks in over-sensitivity.
Your dirty little panties, now covered with his hot, sticky cum, were filthy - ruined. His chest heaved, his lungs aching for breath as he brought the panties back up to his face. His cheeks were flushed darkly, his eyelashes fluttering as his tongue took the panties into his mouth. The taste of you mixed with his own earned another deep groan to fill his bedroom.
You tasted sweet.
You tasted like his.
-
A/N: ... So I heard dark!Jeonghan got possessed, and this was what came out. My mind didn't go to the gutter; it nose-dived into hell. Idk - my mind is a little funny.
But like always, comments, kudos, and feedback are greatly appreciated! I just like talking to people idk-
you can find more of my stuff here in my  svt mstr lst - bts mstr lst
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ââââ in which ïž” you always thought jake was the shy, inexperienced type; quiet, nerdy, awkwardly innocent compared to you and your chaotic dating life. so when teasing turns into tension during a late-night study session, you expect a hesitant first time at best. instead, jake completely flips the script, leaving you overwhelmed, speechless, and realizing way too late that maybe he was never as innocent as you made him out to be.
you met jake during your freshman year of college, back when gen eds still had lecture halls packed with hungover students and you were too busy flirting with the guy behind you to pay attention to the syllabus.
jake sat in the front row, always on time, always typing faster than the professor could speak. you didn't talk to him at first. he was quiet, soft-spoken, a little awkwardâbut sharp as hell, and once you were grouped for a project in psych, you realized he wasn't shy so much as selective.Â
you, on the other hand, were loud, social, and unapologetically open about everythingâyour opinions, your hookups, your weekend party plans. you weren't ashamed of how many people you'd been with. if anything, you liked watching jake blush when you casually mentioned fucking someone in the backseat of their car or getting eaten out in the frat house laundry room. he'd adjust his glasses, press his lips together, and look anywhere but at you.
now, sophomore year, you and jake were close. close enough to hang out late in his dorm with your legs in his lap. close enough to let your jokes get borderline inappropriate. close enough that you thought you knew him. in your mind, jake was textbook virgin materialânever talked about sex, never mentioned a body count, always deflected when you asked.
he didn't have a girlfriend, didn't flirt, didn't date. so naturally, you assumed he hadn't gotten around to it yet. maybe he was waiting for someone special.Â
maybe he was nervous. maybe he just didn't have the confidence.Â
either way, the idea of jake having any real experience never even crossed your mind.
you were very, very wrong.
jake wasn't a man-whore. he wasn't the type to sleep around for sport, and he didn't brag. but he wasn't inexperienced either.Â
seven bodies, each one intentional. a handful of casual flings, one almost-relationship, and more than enough practice to know what he was doing. he just didn't feel the need to talk about itânot to anyone. especially not you. not when he could tell how much you liked playing the dominant one in the friendship. you liked teasing him, liked pretending he didn't know anything. and jake? he liked letting you think that.
which brings you to nowâsprawled out in his one-person dorm room, papers scattered across his bed, half studying and half talking shit like usual. the desk light is on, casting a soft yellow glow across the room, and the sound of some random playlist hums quietly in the background. you're dressed comfortablyâstretchy shorts that ride up every time you shift and a big tee that covers just enough to make it unfair. jake, as always, looks effortless in his nerdy little uniform; black sweatpants that sag a little too low on his hips and a tight, long-sleeve compression shirt that clings to every lean muscle in his upper body.
he's leaning against the wall, long legs stretched out, eyes flicking back and forth between a printout and his notes. you're not paying attention. you haven't been for at least twenty minutes.Â
"sooo⊠i slept with that guy from my art history class,"'you say suddenly, voice light and smug as you stretch out across the mattress.
jake doesn't look up. just hums softly in response, the sound low in his throat. you roll onto your stomach, propping yourself up on your elbows so you can watch him while you talk.Â
"he was cute. decent mouth, boring fingers. kinda soft. i had to fake it twice." his pen keeps moving. steady. unaffected. you narrow your eyes.Â
"you never tell me about your sex life. like, ever. i could probably name your gpa, your favorite protein bar, and the order of your morning routine, but i have no idea what you're like in bed."
"maybe that's not somethin' you need to know," he says without missing a beat. you scoff, smiling. "so you do have one." jake just shrugs, not even looking at you. and that makes you grin wider.
"what?" you tease. "scared to tell me you're a virgin?" that gets him. not visiblyânot in any dramatic wayâbut his pen pauses for just a second too long. his shoulders stay relaxed, but his eyes finally lift to meet yours. "you think so?" he asks, calm. flat. you nod, teasing lilt in your voice. "one hundred percent positive you're a virgin."
he stares at you. you stare right back. and the tension, usually playful, suddenly shifts.
still light, but dense enough to press against your chest. his lips twitchânot quite a smile, not quite a frownâand then he says it: "wan' see what a virgin can do?" your breath catches. for a second, you think you misheard him. but the look on his face tells you otherwise. he's serious. composed. like this has been sitting in his back pocket for weeks, waiting for you to finally test him hard enough. you lean back, settling against the headboard, raising a brow. "you're serious?"
jake doesn't respond. doesn't need to. he sets his notebook aside, pushes the last of his notes away, and shifts toward you without breaking eye contact. his hands find your hips firstâstrong, certainâand he pulls you gently, slowly, until you're flat on your back beneath him. his knees settle between your thighs, spreading them slightly as he leans down. your shirt rides up, shorts tugged tight around the tops of your thighs, but jake doesn't even glance down. his eyes stay locked on yours as he dips in, kisses you softly.
you kiss him back, waiting for the awkward tongue or messy pressure, but it doesn't come. it's gentle, yeah, but not unsure. his lips part yours like he knows exactly how he wants to take his time, and his hand comes up to cradle your jaw as he deepens it. it's a kiss that says he's not in a hurry. not at all.
you break the kiss first, smirking as you look up at him. "typical virgin," you mutter. he doesn't react. doesn't even blink. he just lowers his head to your neck, lips brushing softly along your skin.Â
"you don't have to be gentle with me, you know," you add, almost challenging. he hums, breath warming the dip beneath your ear. "i know."
you scoff under your breath, cocky and unimpressed. "clearly notâŠ" and that's when he sinks his teeth into your neck, hard enough to make you gaspâhands tightening around your hips like he's just made up his mind. his bite lingers just long enough to leave heat throbbing under your skin, and when he pulls back, his voice is lower than it's ever been.
"y'know," he says, tilting his head, "i've really had enough of the attitude. i think s'time i shut you up, yeah?" your smirk returns instantly. you roll your eyes as if he hasn't just made your heart skip. "you can try, virgin boy."
he doesn't rise to itânot with words, anyway. he just hums. quiet and calm, like he's already halfway to somewhere you can't follow.Â
then he moves, pushing off the bed and standing at the edge with that same slow, deliberate control that's suddenly making you nervous. his hands reach out for your hips again and this time, he doesn't pull you gentlyâhe drags you down the mattress until your thighs are hanging just slightly off the edge, knees bent, body sprawled under him like he's setting up a game he's been dying to play.
his voice comes again, firmer now: "ass up." and you listen. you shift to your stomach without a second thought, lifting your hips and arching your back into position, cheek pressed into the sheets.Â
you feel the air hit your thighs as your oversized t-shirt rides up, and your breath catches when jake slides your shorts down to your thighs and pauses.
"no panties?" he says, voice dropping further. "been plannin' this, haven't you?" you don't answer. your face is already warm and your body is buzzing, and part of you wants to keep playing it coolâkeep pretending this isnât throwing you off balance.
bad idea.
his palm lands on your ass, fast and loud. the smack makes you jolt and hiss, more from surprise than pain, and he doesn't waste a second before rubbing over the sting with a gentle sweep of his hand. "i asked you a question, didn't i?" he says, calm but sharp.
you swallow and nod. "yeah," you breathe. "been wanting it." he lets out a soft, breathy laugh, one that sounds more like satisfaction than amusement. "mm. such a slut." his knees hit the floor behind you, and the next thing you feel is his handsâwide, steady, practicedâgripping both of your ass cheeks, spreading them apart without hesitation.
the room goes quiet except for your breathing and the shift of fabric and skin, and then jake hums again, deep and almost pleased.
"hm. look at that," he murmurs, staring down at your soaked cunt.
"fuckin' drippin' f'me." and then he's leaning in. no warning, no teasing.
his tongue meets you with full intention, licking through your folds and groaning into your skin like he's waited months for this. his hands keep you spread open while he eatsâsloppy and slow at first, then precise, mouth focused on your clit until you're grinding back against him in desperation. his tongue drags up and down before circling, sucking, licking again until your arms shake from holding yourself up.
you moan loud enough that it fills the room, and jake doesn't stop. doesn't pause. he just buries his face deeper and lets you cry out, fingers digging into your ass to keep you still. you feel the tip of one finger, then two, slip insideâeasing in with a slow stretch that has your mouth falling open, eyes fluttering closed.
he pumps them gently while his tongue stays locked on your clit, and it's all too much, too fast, too good. your stomach tightens and your thighs begin to tremble, that pressure building deep and lowâuntil he pulls away. everythingâhis mouth, his fingers, his warmthâgone.
you whine before you can stop yourself, pushing back toward him with your hips, but he's already standing up again, towering over you with a fresh edge to his voice.
"aw," he says, feigning sympathy, "you wanted to cum?" you whimper in response, breath shaky. your legs are sticky with slick and your skin's hot all over. he smacks your ass again, harder than before. "use your words like a big girl."
"y-yeah," you stammer, eyes squeezed shut. "please, jake. pleaseâŠ" you hear the shuffle of fabricâhis sweatpants sliding down, the low groan that leaves his throat when his dick springs free. your hips twitch involuntarily, needing something to touch, to feel, and then his hand is on your back again, pressing you down into the bed. "stay just like that," he mutters. "don't fuckin' move."
his dick is hot and heavy as he runs it through your slick, dragging the head over your folds, letting it catch against your entrance again and again. he lets out a quiet groan at the wet sound it makes, then finallyâfinallyâhe presses in. not soft. not gentle. he sinks into you in one rough thrust, and your mouth drops open with a strangled moan.
he's big, thick, filling you all at once without a single pause to let you adjust. your hips jerk forward from the force of it, knees nearly slipping on the sheets, and jake groans behind youâlow and filthy, like he's been holding back all night.
he doesn't move. just holds there, deep inside, his palm still planted on the small of your back. "still a virgin?" he asks, voice thick. you try to speakâtry to throw another jab, keep the upper handâbut all that comes out is a broken moan. you manage half the sentence: "yeah, you're s-still a virgâ" and he pulls out halfway, then slams back in. you cry out, thighs shaking, arms barely keeping you upright.
"since you wan' be a lil fuckin' brat," jake mutters, hips still, dick buried to the base, "you'll do the work yourself."Â
you whine, low and desperate, hips squirming in his grip like you're trying to retreatâbut there's nowhere to go. he's still buried inside you, thick and unyielding, his palm pressed to the small of your back keeping you locked in place. you feel every inch of him, the stretch still fresh and sharp, your walls fluttering around his dick as your body tries to adjust. it's overwhelming. too full, too deep, too sudden. you shift slightly, trying to roll your hips to find some kind of rhythm, some reliefâbut jake doesn't move. doesn't help. he just stands there behind you, breathing heavy, watching.
"what're you waitin' for?" he says after a moment, voice flat and laced with quiet challenge. "go on. do the work. this is what you wanted, right?" you turn your head against the mattress, eyes half-lidded and lips parted as you suck in a shaky breath. you want to mouth offâwant to say something smug, something cocky, keep the upper handâbut your body betrays you. your thighs tremble when you start to move, back arching deeper as you pull forward slightly, then push back onto him in a slow, testing grind.
the stretch is brutal, even with how wet you are. his dick drags against every sensitive spot inside you as you try to fuck yourself on him, try to show him you can handle it. you do it again, a little faster, trying to establish a rhythm. it's messy and uneven, but it's something. your hands claw at the sheets as you rock back again, your ass slapping softly against his pelvis.
"mm, yeah," jake hums above you, his hand sliding from your lower back to your hip, fingers digging into the flesh there as he watches you fuck yourself on his dick. "that's what i thought." you don't answer.
your breath comes out in gasps, each roll of your hips making it harder to think. you're doing exactly what he told you to, but it's not enough. not really. your pace starts to falter after a few minutes, your thighs burning and your arms weakening beneath you, and jake notices. he can feel itâthe way your movements slow, the way you sink lower into the mattress with each tired thrust. and instead of helping you, instead of rewarding the effort, he tsks under his breath like he's disappointed.
"already gettin' tired?" he mutters. "but you were talkin' all that shit earlier, weren't you?" you start to whimper, hips stuttering as you try to keep going, but he cuts you off with another sharp smack to your assâthis one harder than the rest. your body jolts forward with the impact, a moan ripping from your throat as your walls clench around him involuntarily.
"pathetic," jake says, his tone flat but dripping in mockery.Â
"thought you could handle a 'virgin,' right? what happened to all that attitude, huh?" you try to say something, anything, but all that comes out is a garbled soundâa half-broken sob against the sheets. your body feels hot all over, skin tingling, your cunt aching and tight around him. you need him to move. need him to do something.
he leans forward without warning, his chest brushing your back as his hand slides up your spine and tangles in your hair. he grips it tight, forcing your head back just enough so your cheek lifts from the mattress, and his other hand reaches around, fingers prying at your lips until two of them slip into your mouth. "open," he says, voice low and steady. "tongue out."
you obey instantly, tongue pressing against his fingers as he slides them deeper, thumb flattening on your tongue while the others rest inside your mouth. it's filthy. controlling. it leaves you drooling onto the sheets as your mouth stretches around him, throat vibrating with every sound you try to make. you moan around his fingers when he finally starts to move behind youâslow, grinding thrusts that feel impossibly deep with the way he angles his hips down.Â
each push forward punches a breath out of your lungs, and every retreat makes you cry for more.
"mm," jake groans behind you, his voice closer now, his hips pressing harder. "fuckin' tight. y'feel that, baby? feel how good you grip me?" you moan again, louder this time, and he just pushes his fingers down harder on your tongue to shut you up. your eyes roll back, body twitching as he begins to thrust harder, rougher, fucking you like he's trying to prove a point. his hand on your hip keeps you steady, dragging you back to meet every slam of his dick, the sound of skin against skin echoing off the walls of his tiny dorm. your thighs shake uncontrollably now, and you're practically drooling around his fingers as your body starts to break apart beneath him.
"yeah?" he pants, voice ragged with effort. "feels so good, doesn't it, baby? this what you needed? needed me deep inside you? thrusting into you all rough like that?" all you can do is sobâno real words, just broken, desperate sounds as your body trembles under the force of it all. your pussy flutters around him, tight and wet and throbbing, and jake groans deep in his chest when he feels it.
"i know, baby," he murmurs. "i know."
he pulls his fingers from your mouth and lets them trail down your chin, your spit glistening on your skin. his hand finds your throat nextânot squeezing, just resting there, heavy and warmâas he keeps fucking into you at a punishing pace. you're so far gone you can't tell where your body ends and his begins, your vision blurred and your mind clouded with heat and sound and scent. his dick is so deep it feels like he's splitting you in half, like you'll never be able to think straight again without remembering what this felt like.
you thought you could handle him.
you thought he was soft.
you thought he was a virgin.
you were so, so wrong.
you don't know when your moans turn into full blown criesâsomewhere between his dick slamming deep inside you and the sharp press of his hand around your throat, your body crosses a line. your legs aren't just shaking nowâthey're folding under you. your arms gave up minutes ago, chest collapsed into the mattress, spine arched in a perfect curve while he keeps holding you in place like he owns you. your mouth is open, your eyes squeezed shut, and everything feels tight and slick and heavy, like your body's been split into pieces and jake is the only one holding them together.
he's breathing hard now, jaw clenched above you as he fucks into you like he's possessedâdeep, brutal thrusts that make your whole body jerk with each impact. his grip on your hip is so tight it might bruise. his palm slides from your throat to your jaw, forcing your face to the side so he can see the mess you've become. your spit's on your chin, your mascara smudged, and there's a thin sheen of sweat sticking your shirt to your back. he doesn't say anything for a moment. just watches. breathes. thrusts.
and then, low and clear in your ear: "you still think m'a fuckin' virgin?" you try to shake your head, but it's weak, barely a twitch.Â
your voice comes out as a slurred moanâsomething like no, but not quite human. "mm. that's what i thought," he murmurs, voice dark with satisfaction. "you run your mouth like a brat, but look at you nowâbarely takin' me, gettin' ready to tap out."
you feel his hand slide down, fingers slipping between your legs until they find your clit againâsensitive, swollen, already throbbing from being teased. the second he touches you there, you cry out, body jolting in overstimulation. "you close?" he asks, like it's casual. like he doesn't already know the answer from the way your cunt clenches around him every time he grinds against your sweet spot.
you nod frantically, almost sobbing. "yes, yes, pleaseâ" but it's too easy. he pulls his fingers away. slows his thrusts to an agonizing roll of his hips, dragging his dick out slowly before snapping back in hard enough to knock the breath from your lungs. "yeah, no," he mutters. "not yet."
âjake,â you sob, back arching, toes curling into the sheets. "pleaseâ"
"should've thought about that before you ran your fuckin' mouth," he snaps, and suddenly the rhythm picks back up again. he fucks into you harder this time, like punishing you for every word you've said since the moment you walked into his room. "call me 'virgin boy' again. go on. say it."
you're incoherent. your lips move, but the only thing you can manage is a gasp, a plea, your hands grabbing at the blankets like they might save you. he laughs. fucking laughs. low and mean. "yeah. not so mouthy now, are you?" his fingers return to your clit, fast and rough, rubbing tight circles that make your hips buck against his. you're begging without words now, just high, desperate noises, whimpering into the mattress as your orgasm coils tighter and tighter until you're seconds away from snappingâand again, he stops.
you whine, full-body shaking, face crumpling against the sheets. you're soaked. trembling. ruined. âjake,â you cry, voice raw.Â
"please. i-i can'tâ" he grabs your hair again, pulls your head up so your ear is near his mouth. "yes you can," he says, cruel but quiet.Â
"you wanted this to happen, you begged for this to happen, so now you have no other choice but to take it."
then he pushes your face back down. hand back on your hip. cock slamming into you again like he's trying to make you forget your own name. every thrust punches another moan out of you, rough and desperate, your body grinding into the mattress, thighs soaked and shaking as he gives you no space to recover. no escape. just him. inside you. everywhere.
"gonna cum," you choke out, voice high and broken. "go ahead," he says, voice thick with arousal. "cum all over my fuckin' dick, mama." and you do. hard. your whole body seizes under him, every nerve on fire, pussy clenching so tight around him that he groansâloud and deepâlike the sound gets dragged out of him from somewhere in his chest.
your orgasm crashes over you in waves, dizzying and uncontrollable, your cries muffled by the sheets, thighs twitching violently as you come harder than you ever have in your life.
"fuckâthere you go," jake grits through his teeth. "just like that. look so fuckin' good when you fall apart." he doesn't stop. he keeps fucking you through it, deep and relentless, using your spasming cunt to chase his own high. he's not even trying to hold back nowâhis grip turns bruising, his breathing ragged, dick slamming into you at a brutal pace until you're crying all over again.
"shitâgonnaâ" jake cuts himself off with a groan, then slams into you one last time and holds there, buried deep, his dick twitching as he spills inside you. the heat of it floods your already-sensitive body, and all you can do is moan, breathless and wrecked. jake stays still for a few seconds, head tipped back, chest rising and falling as he comes down from it.
then he slowly pulls out, careful with your oversensitive body, your hips jerking as his dick leaves you. his cum leaks down your thighs almost immediately, and you can barely move. your body is limp, shaking, forehead pressed into the sheets as you gasp for air. he bends over you, fingers brushing your lower back, light now.Â
reverent. "you okay?" he whispers, voice softer again. real.
you nod weakly, and he presses a kiss to your spine. then another to your shoulder. and finally one to the base of your neck, right where he bit you earlierâlike sealing it. like claiming it. you donât say anything for a while. you don't need to.
Joshua Hong could be many things. For one, he is your next door neighbour. He is a rockstar, a relentless tease, a menace. But, ironically, he is always willing to lend a hand whenever you need it, regardless of the nature of your desires.
âź pairings: joshua hong x female reader
âź genre: smut [18+]
âź aus: rock singer joshua, neighbours with benefits
âź word count: 177k
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part i | insomnia
The last bit of sanity in your mind vanished the moment before you asked your hot neighbour to be your fuck buddy. Whatever prompted you to muster the courage to get the words out was something you didn't know you had inside you. But he wasn't saying no.
part ii | reverie
Joshua Hong was many things aside from your hot neighbourâhe was a menace, a relentless tease. But most importantly, he was the first guy to ever make you feel wanted. And you were yet to know how dangerous that was.
part iii | pillow talk
Deep down, you knew you were growing an attachment to... whatever this was. Joshua was not intoxicating, you were wrong about that, he was addictive.
part iv | lunacy
You could no longer hide your infatuation over Joshua Hong. It was becoming painfully obvious, though you weren't sure to what extent he was aware of this. Or if he even cared, for that matter.
part v | stargazing
Joshua should've known the minute he saw you standing outside his door for the first time. Then, maybe he would've gotten the opportunity to make things right with you. But no, he let his hedonistic ways get in the way first. Now, will he get the opportunity to make things right with you?
part vi | blue hour
If there was a guideline to how to be a fuckbuddy, you were sure you had already broke every rule in the book. It was ridiculous at this point, and you were so sure that Joshua might be catching all of your signs already, because you couldn't be more obvious.
But oh, Joshua is only but a man.
part vii | lullaby
For months, you've been hiding how you really felt about your fuckbuddy and the remorse for deceiving him can be sickening. For both of you.
part viii | after dark
It all started with a deal with your next door neighbor, Joshua Hong. A little harmless deal that surprisingly led you to finding love; and a part of yourself that you were still discovering.
part viii | after dark pt. ii
side chapter | 3:14 AM
part ix | badsleeper âș finale
For as long as you've been with Joshua, you've always had this... fantasy. And your boyfriend isn't one to not let you indulge.
letting your loser boyfriend hit it raw for the first time at a party turns out better than youâd both expected.
pairing: nerd!han jisung x popular!f!reader, established relationship genre/tags: college au, smut, sub!jisung, oral (m. receiving), jisung being a professional yapper as always, unprotected s*x, an ass slap or two, creampie, overstim words: 2.9k
[ note. ] â last fic upload before i leave for vacayy, hope u guys fw it. also iâm going to be posting all my fics in lowercase from now on for aesthetic purposes <3
you can read the other parts iâve previously made here and here but this could be read as a standalone !
itâs always the same.
heâll start talking about his newest little hyperfixation, voice notching an octave or two higher, words tumbling over each other, eyes lit up behind those too-big glasses that never sit quite right on the bridge of his nose. he fidgets with the drawstring of his hoodie while he talks, tugging it tight, then loosening it again, as if heâs trying to keep his own excitement from spilling out too fast.
and youâll just be sitting there across from him, all pretty and patient, thighs crossed in your tiny skirt, chin resting in your hand, pretending to care. you try, you really do. but the longer he talks, the harder it is to focus, not on what heâs saying, but on him.
because heâs just so fucking cute when he rambles, way too animated and overly passionate. his hands always gesturing in wild, uncoordinated circles, one knee bouncing like heâs trying to burn off the excess energy. he talks super fast, stumbles over words, corrects himself mid-rant, and whenever he gets something right, like some equation or probability heâs been chewing on for hours, he glances at you like heâs hoping youâre proud, like he wants a gold star for being smart.
his lashes are thick behind the lenses, his lips are pink and plush and chapped at the corners, his voice isnât that deep or confidentâ itâs soft, a little scratchy, but so full of warmth.
âso if you run the stats for the gacha drop rate and multiply it by, like, uh, thirty-two? you get this number, right? and then you compare that to the JP versionâs old banners, and their pity system was actually better than what the global servers offer now, which is total bullshit, âcause mathematically it just doesnât track when you- uh, wait, let me show you..â
heâs flipping his phone around to pull up some cluttered spreadsheet, thumb swiping too fast through endless tabs filled with numbers, graphs, and notes like heâs been preparing for this conversation all week.
you get a little closer, nodding slowly. not because you understand, but because just he looks so goddamn sweet when heâs talking like this. the way his cheeks are flushed from excitement, the way heâs sweating the tiniest bit under the collar of his hoodie, and how heâs so wrapped up in his own little world and still wants you to be part of it.
âbaby,â you interrupt, reaching under the table to brush your freshly manicured fingertips along the inside of his thigh, slow and light.
he falters mid-thought. whole body stiffens up and his lips part in a soft little gasp. his glasses slip down a bit and his thumb freezes against the slightly cracked screen, looking up at you like heâs just remembered you exist and realized where he is.
âyouâre so cute when you talk like that,â you smile at him, giggling sweetly like you werenât thinking about jumping his bones right then and there.
jisung blinks, blushing immediately, making a little sound that even he couldnât describe what it was.
âi-i wasnât trying to be.. i mean, itâs just numbers. sorry, i was rambling again, wasnât i? i know itâs boringâŠâ
you shook your head, ânot boring,â leaning in even closer now and never breaking eye contact with him, âjust makes me wanna fuck you even more.â
heâs full-on glitching now. mouth half open, eyes wide and cheeks so red you can feel the heat radiating off him. his leg jerks under the table and his fingers clench around his phone, nearly dropping it.
âwhaââ he squeaks, âyou- you canât just say that. weâre- this is a party, thereâs peopleââ
heâs whispering now, but frantically. internally panicking. looking around like someone mightâve heard you, even though thereâs absolutely no one paying mind to either of you.
you lean in some more, all slow and smug, until your lips are practically inches away from each others.
âthereâs an empty closet down the hall.â
his breath hitches audibly.
you see the way his adamâs apple bobs, how fast his hand shoots up to adjust his crooked glasses, his thighs shifting under the table, voice caught somewhere between disbelief and arousal.
heâs already hard, you know him well enough to know the telltale signs. tenting his grey sweats, twitching against the fabric as you slid your hand higher. he doesnât even try to stop you, just sits there, jaw slack, watching you with big eyes like youâve cast some kind of spell.
maybe you have, because the thing isâ jisung doesnât really do parties. he wasnât invited to shit like this before, not until you came into the picture.
he was always known as the weird kid in STEM. the one who played rhythm games in the library and forgot to eat lunch when he was coding. he wore sweatshirts in summer and muttered to himself and would gett teased by the lacrosse team. so he never really expected to be dating the prettiest girl heâs ever laid eyes on for nearly three months now, the one who wears expensive lipgloss and wears matching juicy couture tracksuits with her friends who stared at him like heâs an alien.
but you love and adore him in a way that still feels surreal to him. youâd hold his hand in public, kiss his cheek in the hallways, wait for him after every class, sit in his lap and call him baby, not caring if people swap odd locks about such an unlikely pair. it lowkey terrifies him, but heâs obsessed, because heâs yours.
and the fact that you want him this badly? it blows his mind. every. single. time.
your fingers drag up his thigh and he twitches again, a shaky moan falling from his lips before he bites it back. heâs warm, already leaking, probably. you can feel how sensitive he is, how badly he wants it.
you tug him up by the sleeve, smiling, your tone soft but firm.
âdonât make me ask twice.â
by your words alone, han jisung knows that heâs already done for.
+
the second the closet door slams shut behind you, he wastes zero time to be all over youâ not in a confident way though. itâs messy, too eager, full of stifled sounds and nervous fingers, as if heâs afraid if he doesnât kiss you now, he might never get the chance again.
his lips move over yours too fast and sloppy, his hands everywhere all at once, gripping your waist, your hips, your sides like he canât decide where to touch first. his nose accidentally bumps against yours when he tries to kiss you deeper and you giggle into his mouth, gently slowing him down with your palms at his jaw.
âeasy, baby,â you whisper, barely parting from him.
âs-sorry,â he breathes out, already so out of it. âi just.. you look so good tonight, and your skirt- fuck- iâve been thinking about it all day, i couldnât focus when you sat on my lap after class, i was so close to cummingââ
âji,â you interrupt sweetly, brushing your knuckles over his cheek. âyouâre rambling again.â
he shuts up immediately. blushing.
you lean in to press a soft, lingering kiss to the corner of his mouth, then his jaw, going down even further until your knees coil down to the floor, right in front of him.
he could literally feel his heart beating out of his chest.
âw-wait,â he stammers, his back already hitting the wall. âbaby, you donât have to- fuck..â
his words fall apart the minute you tug down the waistband of his sweats, his boxers go with them, and his cock springs free in front of youâ flushed a pretty shade of pink, tip already leaking delicious precum, and twitching where it rests against his stomach. so thick, so heavy, so obscenely hard. you donât even touch it before he moans.
you look up through your lashes, watching the way he presses the back of his head to the wall, lips parted like heâs trying to remember how to properly breathe.
then you lean forward, slowly dragging your tongue from the base to the tip.
he shudders so hard his legs almost give out.
âjesus christ,â he bit down on his lip harshly, âyour mouth.. shit, feels too good, i canâtââ
his thighs are trembling, and his hand reaches out instinctively to cradle your jaw, anchoring himself to feel something.
you smile around the head of his cock before wrapping your lips around it, sliding your head down. soft, warm suction, just enough pressure to make him gasp. you suck deeper, taking more of him in your mouth as your hand strokes the rest in slow, steady pulls. spit runs down your wrist, the sound is wet, vulgar, echoing off the walls of the cramped space.
he groans again, louder this time. one leg shifts to stabilize himself.
âoh my god,â he gasps, âoh fuck- baby, baby- shitââ
his voice breaks on every moan, hips twitching forward, but he doesnât thrust. he never does. heâs too good, too well-trained.
but he literally canât stop shaking.
âyouâre so good,â he whimpers, praising you to no end. âyouâre so fucking good at that, iâm not gonna last.. âm gonna- fuck, youâre âbout to make me cumââ
you pull off with a soft âpopâ, your hand still stroking him agonizingly slow.
âyou better not cum yet,â you warn, pressing your tongue under the head and dragging it gently along the slit. âyou havenât even been inside me.â
his whole body jolts. eyes going wide, almost scared, like the idea of fucking you now might actually break him.
âthen let meââ he blurts out, hands twitching at his sides. âpleasepleaseplease. fuck, i need to. i wanna be inside, please baby, can i fuck you now?â
you smile and finally stood up, turning around to face the wall.
âfuck me like this, ji,â you whisper, hiking your skirt up and wiggling your ass against him. âfuck me raw.â
heâs completely frozen, his breath stuttering in his throat.
âwha- are you serious? wait- y/n- no condom?â
you glance back at him with half-lidded eyes, giggling.
âyou wanna feel me, right?â you ask, no hesitation detected in your words. âyou wanna cum inside?â
he nods so quickly its almost embarrassing, his hands are moving faster than his brain can form a thought.
âyes. fuck. please,â he choked out desperately, already fumbling his cock into his hand.
his grip is shaky, you feel the blunt head brush your folds once, twice, then he finally lines up right and sinks inâ real slow and careful, bracing himself as he slides in every inch. his moan is strangled, like hes unsure of whether heâs dying or dreaming.
your wetness takes him easy, your pussy already clenching around him with need, swallowing him so greedily he loses control of his rhythm for a second. he bottoms out with a deep, gasping groan, cock buried to the hilt, your walls pulsing around him.
âholy shit,â he breathes out, practically shaking. âyouâre so warm.. s-so tight.. baby.. oh my godââ
you barely have time to process the stretch before heâs stuttering forward with a broken whimper, hips twitching.
two thrusts. thatâs all it takes.
you feel the sharp jerk of his cock, the way his whole body tenses up, and then the sudden warmth flooding you deep insideâŠ.
he cums early. too hard and way too fast.
you smirk, turning your head slightly, âoh no,â you murmur. âyou didnât just cum, did you?â
jisung lets out the softest, most wrecked noise youâve ever heard and hides his face against your back, the tip of his nose pressed between your shoulder blades.
âfuck,â he groans. ââm sorry.. i couldnât help it! fuck, it just felt too good, your pussyâs too perfect, i didnât mean toââ
you clench around him, tight and deliberate.
his knees nearly buckle.
âyouâre not pulling out.â
he gasps again, panicked and overwhelmed.
âb-but i already- baby, wait, âm sensitiveââ
you simply drown out his whines and start rolling your hips back, slow and deep, grinding against him, and he whimpers.
âthen cum again,â you demand sharply.
his hands slid down the slope of your waist, fingers gripping tightly, mentally preparing himself for the next round. even though heâs overstimulated, his cock never softens. still rock hard inside you, still twitching, still leaking.
your pussyâs so wet now itâs sinful, every roll of your hips drawing a filthy squelch, your slick and his cum mixing into a hot, messy slop between your thighs. itâs dripping down his balls already.
âyouâre milking me,â he whines, voice high and sweet. âfuck, fuck.. i canât- âm gonna cum again- already- baby, please. sâtoo muchââ
âyou can do it,â you breathe, forehead pressed against the wall. âyouâre doing so good, ji. fuck, feel so full.. love your cock so much,â
he moans like it hurts.
his pace picks up, just a litttle. short thrusts. clumsy and deep.
your ass bounces back against his thighs with every movement, and he canât stop watching it. canât stop staring at the way your body moves for him, the way you take him. he reaches around and grabs a handful of your tits, squeezing greedily, fingers slipping under your top like heâs desperate to feel your skin. youâre bouncing in his hands with every thrust and he whimpers against your shoulder.
âyouâre so beautiful,â he pants. âso fucking beautiful. your tits, your ass. god, your pussyâs made for me- i swearââ
you feel it again. the sudden twitch of his hips, the quickening pace, and then he slaps your ass once.
you freeze and so does he.
ââŠdid you just slap my ass?â you say, trying not to laugh.
âi-i donât know,â he stammers behind you. âi didnât mean to.. i mean- i did, but also i didnât- fuck, it just happened..â
you giggle and push back against him, grinding your ass into his hips.
âdo it again.â
he moans and gives you another gentle, shy little slap.
ââm sorry,â he breathes. âyouâre just so hot. your ass jiggles everytime i move, itâs driving me insane- i love you.. i love you so muchââ
his arms wrap around your middle, pressing his lips to the back of your neck, kissing softly, over and over. each one messier than the last, wet and open-mouthed and desperate.
âi wanna stay inside you forever,â he mumbles into your dewy skin. âwanna keep fucking you like this, raw, every single day. wanna wake up buried in your pussy- cum in you before breakfast, again before bedââ
your whole body trembles. the heatâs unbearable now, your orgasm building sharp and tight in your belly.
ââm gonna marry you,â he rambles again, âmake you mine- fuck, i love you, love you, love youââ
you clench down and he cries out. hips stuttering.
his cock throbs inside you, deep and messy, and he cums againâ hot and thick and endless, spilling into your cunt like heâs trying to fill you up completely. you feel it leak around him instantly, dripping down your thighs, making a mess between you.
your walls flutter and you go with him. body shaking, legs unsteady, your orgasm crashing over you like a wave.
you squirt. hard.
you feel it spray out around him, and he groans so deep it turns into a moan that curls into a whine. heâs still inside. still twitching. and your pussyâs squeezing every last drop from him.
you both go limp, falling forward against the wall, panting, soaked in sweat and cum, but fully in love with each other.
his arms stay looped around you. his lips trail down your spine, kissing every inch of skin he can reach, mouth whispering shaky little âi love youâsâ in between labored breaths.
youâre still dripping. still stuffed full of him.
you feel him kiss your shoulder again, going up to your neck. his hands are still cupping your tits like they belong to him.
âyouâre my favorite person,â he mumbles, voice dreamy and thick. âyouâre so good to me. youâre everything.â
you laugh breathlessly. your legs are barely holding you up.
âyouâre insane,â
âand you let me fuck you raw,â he says, smiling against you. âso whoâs really the insane one?â
you snort and roll your eyes, tugging your skirt down. your thighs are all sticky and your knees are a little wobbly.
he pulls his sweats back up, still swaying on his feet. glasses fogged, damp strands of hair sticking to his forehead, lips red and puffy from kissing every part of you.
youâre about to open the closet door when he tugs you back in and kisses youâ deep and passionate. nothing controlled. just all lips and tongue and the faint taste of sweat.
âwas it⊠was it good?â he asks shyly, eyes wide and searching.
you grin, still panting. âji, you have the best dick iâve ever had.â
he whines, hiding in your neck like he canât handle hearing such high level of praise coming from you.
âyouâre so fucking lucky to have me,â he mumbles into your skin.
you roll your eyes. âyou literally came in two thrusts.â
âokay, but it was two raw thrusts. thatâs different!â he attempts to defend himself.
he has a point. kind of.
you both sneak back into the party a few minutes later. jisungâs face is flushed, hair a mess, his walk wobblier than usual. your thighs are still slick and your lipgloss is ruined.
if anyone notices they donât say anything.
but jisung doesnât let go of your hand for the rest of the night.
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đČ Bf!Seventeen finding out they aren't your bias | HYUNG LINE VER.
â content info âžș paring. seventeen x f!reader. genre | tags. fake texts, reactions, humor/comedy. warnings. jealousy, biblical references (?), swearing, member dissing member (just playfully). requested: yes/no.
Ê A/N: My first ever request đ„ș It only took me a month to make but it's finally here. Thank you whoever requested, I had a lot of fun making it, I hope you enjoy reading it.
# NAVIGATION | MASTERLIST | TAGLIST | MAKNAE LINE VER.
Every ask & comment gives me life đ If youâre enjoying it, donât forget to reblog, helps so much and gets the fic out there!!
summary: two top university debaters have been competing for first place since freshman year. she works hard for every point to keep her scholarship, while jake seems to win effortlessly. when theyâre forced to lead an important research project together, their rivalry gets more complicated â and working side by side might be harder than losing to each other.
wc: 60k (damnâ i'm sorry)
genre: heavy angst, fluff, a tiny bit of smut, very suggestive dialogue | college!au, very slowburn, rivals to lovers, drunk confessions
tags: m/f, academic rivals to lovers, slow burn that actually burns, rich boy trauma (surprise!), forced proximity, competitive sexual tension, âi hate youâ but make it yearning, mutual obsession disguised as rivalry, she works twice as hard - he makes it look easy, high-stakes academia, scholarship stress, power struggle romance, âyou donât trust meâ core, denial x denial, emotionally constipated idiots in love, golden boy complex, rich boy with abandonment issues, identity split (jake vs jaeyun), fratboy persona as coping mechanism, performance vs authenticity, ego built on insecurity, secretly sensitive jake, lowkey needy jake, praise-starved jake, soft dom energy but emotionally fragile, overachiever reader, perfectionism as a coping mechanism, drunk honesty, jake cries while drunk, jealousy but subtle, everyone sees it but them, chaotic friend group, niki cockblocking, intellectual intimacy, slow emotional unraveling, reluctant trust, vulnerability arc, emotional hurt/comfort, earned happy ending, emotional payoff, âweâre better togetherâ, control issues translate to the bedroom, kiss while raining, dorm hook up, very consensual, dry humping, fingering (f rec), praise, suggested brattaming, almost-sex
this fic will also include mentions of the le sserafim and other enhypen members
a/n: hi <3 yes i disappeared for two months. life was stressful, my brain was fried, and i didnât get to any requests â iâm sorry about that. i needed a second to breathe. but!!! i wrote this instead. you all know i donât play about college jake. something about golden boys under too much pressure and a fratboy mask just does something to me đ« and honestly, i think this might be my favorite thing iâve written. it really feels complete to me right now. also i really wanted to explore expectations, scholarship stress, golden boy syndrome, and what it feels like to perform a version of yourself that everyone loves. so yes. yes, i gave him abandonment issues. yes, i made him cry while drunk. yes, the academic power dynamics mirror in the bedroom. and no i will not apologize 𫥠also this is a really slow burn. like. really slow burn. tension-first, feelings-first, ego-vs-vulnerability slow burn. this was originally intended to have full smut, but the slow burn said no. there still is a smut scene â itâs just a little different from my usual âweâre going to hellâ level of smut, but it fit the pacing better this way. itâs still heated. itâs just very them. SOOO if you like insecure men who pretend theyâre fine or praise-starved golden boys with soft dom energy â welcomeđ
youâre halfway through your rebuttal when jake interrupts. of course he does. sim jaeyun - jake, to everyone who isnât close enough to him - has an instinct for timing that makes him unbearable. he never cuts you off early enough to look rude. he waits until the exact second your argument sounds airtight, then slips in with a âcorrectionâ like heâs doing you a favor. heâs been doing it since freshman year, since the first debate qualifier where he showed up late, apologized in that faint australian accent of his, and then proceeded to dismantle three seniors like it was casual exercise. âyour economic model assumes stabilityâ he says now, voice smooth, measured. âwhich would be impressive if we were discussing a world that actually functions that way.â thereâs a soft ripple of laughter from the audience. you donât look at him. âthe model assumes reasonable policy intervention. if youâd listened instead of preparing your one-liners, youâd know that.â - âoh, i listenedâ he replies lightly. âi just disagree.â jake doesnât raise his voice. he doesnât need to. he stands with that easy posture, sleeves rolled to his elbows, tie slightly loosened like this is beneath him but still worth winning. jake is confident. jake is effortless. jake is the version professors love. âyouâre oversimplifyingâ you continue, flipping a page without rushing. âshort-term volatility doesnât invalidate long-term structural reform.â - âand blind faith in structure doesnât prevent collapseâ he counters immediately. âhistoryâs pretty clear on that.â you finally glance at him. heâs already looking at you. thereâs something infuriating about the way he debates - not aggressive, not even arrogant exactly, just assured. like he trusts his brain enough not to panic. you donât have that luxury. you prepare. you outline. you rehearse transitions until theyâre automatic. jake improvises. the moderator signals for final statements. you straighten your notes, pulse steady, and deliver your closing with controlled precision. every statistic placed intentionally, every sentence built to corner his argument. when you finish, you hear a few murmurs of approval. good. jake doesnât check his notes before he begins. he just steps forward, hands loosely clasped, and talks. âmy opponent builds beautiful frameworksâ he says calmly, nodding toward you. âtheyâre detailed, organized, almost airtight. the problem is they assume people act rationally. they assume institutions behave ethically. and if the last decade has taught us anything, itâs that they donât.â he doesnât rush. he doesnât stumble. he adjusts mid-sentence like heâs rearranging thoughts in real time. âand when systems failâ he finishes, glancing at you again, âflexibility matters more than control.â thereâs a beat of silence before applause. you hate that itâs good. the judges deliberate longer than usual. when they return, the head judge smiles politely. âby a margin of three points⊠jake.â three points. thatâs nothing. thatâs everything. he leans slightly toward you as the applause starts. âyou almost had me.â you gather your papers without looking up. âalmost is still losing.â he laughs under his breath. âyouâre terrifying when youâre competitive.â âiâm always competitive.â-âyeahâ he says. âi know.â
backstage is crowded, loud, chaotic. someone bumps your shoulder. you barely notice because jake is suddenly right in front of you, close enough that you have to tilt your head slightly to maintain eye contact. âyou relied too much on theoryâ you say quietly. âyou relied too much on control.â - âyou improvise when youâre cornered.â - âyou overprepare because youâre scared.â your jaw tightens. âscared of what?â he studies you for half a second too long. âbeing wrong.â - âand youâre not?â - âi amâ he says easily. âi just donât mind it.â thatâs a lie. you donât call him on it. someone from the team claps him on the back. âjaeyun, youâre insane.â he winces slightly. âitâs jake.â they blink. âright. sorry.â he waves it off like he doesnât care, but you notice the tension in his jaw before he smooths it away. âyouâd think after two years theyâd learn itâ you mutter and he looks back at you. âdid you just defend me?â - âi hate incompetence.â that makes him grin. âsure.â you check your phone out of habit and freeze. thereâs an email from the department chair flagged urgent. jakeâs phone buzzes at the same time. he glances down, then back up at you, expression shifting from amused to intrigued. âyou got that too?â- âapparently.â he steps closer so you can both read from one screen without fully admitting thatâs what youâre doing. your shoulders almost touch. youâre aware of it. you ignore it. âtop two ranked debaters selected to co-lead the undergraduate policy research initiativeâ he reads aloud. âpublic presentation at the end of the semester. faculty oversight minimal.â you exhale slowly. âyouâre kidding.â he looks delighted. âweâre partners.â - âi donât want to be your partner.â-âand yetâ he says lightly, âfate persists.â you step back first. âthis isnât debate. this is research.â -âiâm aware.â-âyou donât outline.â-âi can outline.â-âyou donât.â - he folds his arms. âyou donât adapt.â- âi adapt.â- âreluctantly.â you stare at each other for a long second. the hallway noise fades into background static. heâs close enough that you can see the faint scar near his eyebrow from some story he once told about rugby at his private school in brisbane. you remember more about him than youâd like. âyouâre not taking this seriouslyâ you say. âi amâ he replies, and for once the teasing edge drops slightly. you answer, âitâs a big opportunity.â- âfor you, maybe.â he says. his eyes sharpen. âfor you too.â you hesitate. he notices. âyou think i donât know?â he says quietly. âyou donât compete for fun.â you donât like how observant he is. âi compete to winâ you reply.âsame.â -ânoâ you say. âyou compete because you enjoy it.â-âand you compete because?â you donât answer. he watches you for a moment longer, then straightens. âwe have the briefing tomorrow at ten.â -âyou read the whole email?â -âobviously.â you hate that he did. âdonât be lateâ you say. he smirks. âiâm never late.â you shake your head. âyouâre impossible.â - âand yetâ he says again, softer this time, âwe work well together.â you donât respond because thatâs the worst part. when you were forced onto the same side last semester, your arguments flowed. you anticipated each other. you hate how natural it felt. he steps around you to leave, then pauses. âyou knowâ he adds casually, âif weâre co-leading this, youâll have to stop looking at me like iâm the enemy.â you meet his gaze evenly. âyou are.â he smiles slowly. âthatâs the problem.â he walks away before you can decide what that means. you stand there a second longer than necessary, staring at the email again. public presentation. faculty evaluation. visibility. itâs the kind of thing that goes on transcripts. the kind that matters. of course itâs him. sim jaeyun - jake - the boy who makes everything look easy. the boy who improvises brilliance. the boy who interrupts you exactly when it hurts most. and now youâre supposed to build something with him. you donât know which is worse - losing to him, or having to work beside him. your phone buzzes again.
unknown number.
jake: donât overthink it. weâll survive.
you stare at the message. you type back before you can stop yourself.
you: speak for yourself.
three dots appear immediately.
jake: oh, i plan to.
youâve known jake since freshman year, which means youâve known him since before he figured out how to win without looking like he was trying. the first week of college, you were already in the library at midnight outlining your coursework when he walked in wearing a hoodie from some brisbane private school, dropped his backpack on the table across from you, and asked if anyone was using the seat next to you. youâd looked up, irritated, because you donât study socially. heâd smiled like he knew that. ârelaxâ heâd said back then, noticing your expression. âiâm not here to copy.â you hadnât replied. you just went back to highlighting. the first ranking list came out six weeks into your first semester. it wasnât supposed to matter that much, but for you it did. your scholarship isnât automatic - itâs conditional. top three in the cohort, minimum. fall below that and the funding gets âre-evaluated.â thatâs the polite wording they use. re-evaluated means meetings. meetings mean explanations. explanations mean risk. and by midterms, he was ranked first in your cohort. you were second. the worst part wasnât that he beat you. it was that you never saw him studying. you saw him at campus parties, leaning against kitchen counters with a drink in his hand. you saw pictures of him at football games, at some rooftop event, at someoneâs birthday dinner. you saw him laughing. and then youâd see the grades posted. first. jake. - second. you. now, two years later, youâre sitting across from him in a glass-walled study room, the email about the research initiative open between you. heâs scrolling through the proposal guidelines while you already have a notepad out. âwe should decide on a topic tonightâ you say, tapping your pen once against the paper. âif weâre presenting at the end of the semester, we need a clear framework.â jake leans back in his chair, arms folded. âitâs been twelve minutes.â - âand?â -âand youâre already planning the presentation.â he adds. âthatâs how planning works.â you say. he studies you for a second, then says, âyou know we donât have to treat this like war.â -âit is warâ you reply evenly. âpublic evaluation. faculty panel. rankings.â he tilts his head slightly. âyou really care about rankings.â -âyou donât?â you question. -âi care about doing it well.â -âthatâs vague.â he smiles faintly. âyou care about beating me.â you donât deny it. âyou make it necessary.âhe laughs quietly and leans forward now, elbows on the table. ânecessary?â -âyouâve been ahead of me since freshman year.â -âby decimal points.â-âit still counts.â he watches you closely, like heâs deciding whether to push further. âyou think i donât notice you chasing me?â -âiâm not chasing you.â -âsure.â you close your notebook with more force than needed âyou donât even try.â that lands. his expression shifts just slightly. âyou think i donât try?â -âi see you at partiesâ you say. âi see you out. i see you doing literally everything except studying.â -âand you assume thatâs all i do.â-âisnât it?â thereâs a pause. not dramatic. just longer than comfortable. âiâm efficientâ he says finally. âthatâs not an answer.â-âitâs the only one youâre getting.â you hold his gaze. thereâs something in his tone that doesnât match the casual posture. itâs faint, but itâs there. defensive.
you change direction. âwe need a policy topic that allows for divided interpretation. something with room for debate.â-âenergy reformâ he suggests immediately. -âthatâs too predictable.â-âpredictable wins.â-ânot if itâs boring.âhe raises an eyebrow. âyouâre worried about boring now?â-âiâm worried about standing out.â he looks amused. âyou always stand out.âyou ignore that. âhousing policy?â -âoverdone.â-âimmigration?â he hesitates, then nods slightly. âthat could work.â you start outlining possible angles. he watches you write for a moment before saying, âyou donât have to prove yourself every five seconds.â-âiâm not,â you stop writing. âand you donât get to say that jakeâ-âwhy not?â -âbecause you donât know what itâs like.â his jaw tightens just slightly. âyou think iâve never had to prove anything?â-âyou donât act like it.â-âand you think acting relaxed means i am?â you open your mouth, then close it again. thatâs not how this conversation was supposed to go. jake leans back again, running a hand through his hair. âyou donât see everything.â -âthen show meâ you say before you can stop yourself. he studies you, something unreadable flickering across his face. âcarefulâ he says lightly, but thereâs no real humor behind it this time. âyou might not like what you see.â your phone buzzes. you glance down. a reminder about tuition deadlines. you lock the screen quickly, but not before he notices. âscholarship stuff?â he asks. -âthatâs none of your business, jayeunâ-âfair.â you gather your papers âweâll meet tomorrow at ten. donât be late.â he smirks slightly. âiâm never late.â - âyou were late the first day of freshman orientationâ you remind him. he shakes his head. âi wasnât late. i walked in after they started talking. thatâs different.â -âyou missed roll call.â -âi made an entranceâ he says, and this time thereâs a flash of that easy grin again. as you head toward the door, he calls after you, âand donât call me jaeyun in front of people.â you pause. âyou donât like it?â -âitâs not for hereâ he says simply. you nod once- whatever thatâs supposed to mean? âfine. jake.â he relaxes slightly at that, like you passed some small test you didnât know you were taking. as you leave the study room, you tell yourself the irritation in your chest is purely academic. purely competitive. purely about rankings and decimal points and research proposals. it totally has nothing to do with the fact that when he said you always stand out, he meant it.
the next day youâre sitting in chaewonâs apartment with a half-melted iced latte in your hand and five pairs of eyes staring at you like youâve just announced youâre transferring schools. âyouâre co-leading it?â yunjin repeats, leaning forward across the coffee table. âwith jake?â - âyesâ you say flatly. âunfortunately.â sakura lets out a low whistle. âthatâs either iconic or catastrophic.â -âitâs catastrophicâ you reply immediately. kazuha tilts her head. âit could be iconic.â -âit wonât be.â
eunchae, whoâs curled up on the floor next to the couch, glances up from her phone. âisnât this kind of what you wanted? a big research opportunity?â -âyesâ you say. ânot with him.â chaewon crosses her arms. âokay, but explain it again. slowly. why do you hate him?â - âi donât hate himâ you correct. âyou absolutely hate himâ yunjin says. you press your lips together. âheâs just⊠exhausting.â -âhow?â sakura asks. âheâs polite. he holds doors. he apologizes when he bumps into people.â -âthatâs performanceâ you argue. -âfor what audience?â kazuha asks calmly. âfor everyoneâ you reply. eunchae snorts softly. âthatâs dramatic.â -âyou didnât see him yesterdayâ you say, sitting up straighter. âhe interrupted my rebuttal again. of course he did. perfect timing. perfect tone. he wins by three points and acts like itâs casual.â -âthatâs because it is casual for himâ yunjin says. chaewon studies you carefully. âyouâre not mad that he wins.â -âyes, i am.â-ânoâ she says. âyouâre mad that he makes it look easy.â you glare at her. she smiles slightly. sakura stretches her legs out on the couch. âokay but letâs be honest. you two have been number one and two since freshman year. this was inevitable.â -âit didnât have to be with himâ you insist. âit literally did,â eunchae says. âthe email said top two.â you drop back against the couch cushions. âhe doesnât take anything seriously.â -âhave you considered,â kazuha says mildly, âthat maybe you donât see everything?â you narrow your eyes at her. âyou sound like him.â yunjin laughs, âoh my god, you do. thatâs exactly what he says.â- âthatâs because itâs trueâ kazuha replies. you shake your head. âyou all see him at parties. thatâs it. heâs always out. always somewhere. meanwhile iâm in the library rewriting notes for the fourth time.â sakura raises an eyebrow. âyou rewrite your notes four times?â -âthatâs not the point.â you argue. chaewon leans forward. âyouâre acting like he personally attacked your gpa.â -âhe kind of doesâ you mutter. eunchae finally sits up properly. âsunghoon says jake barely sleeps during midterms.â you pause âwhat?â she shrugs. âhe mentioned it once. said jake disappears for like three days and no one hears from him.â -âthatâs not trueâ you say automatically. âit is,â eunchae insists. âsunghoon was complaining because they had plans and jake canceled.â you hesitate. that doesnât match the image youâve built. yunjin notices the shift immediately. âsee? you donât know everything.â
before you can respond, thereâs a knock on the door and chaewon calls out, âitâs open!â sunoo walks in first, smiling brightly, followed by jungwon and niki. jungwon drops down next to eunchae without hesitation, greeting her quietly, while niki flops into an empty chair. sunoo looks around at the tension in the room. âwhy does it feel like someone died?â -ânikiâs best friendâ yunjin says sweetly. niki gasps dramatically. âjake?â - âyesâ you say dryly. âspiritually.â sunoo laughs. âwhat did he do now?â -âhe existsâ you reply. sunoo walks over and sits on the armrest of the couch near you. âokay, no, seriously. what happened?â -âhe and i got paired for the research initiativeâ you say. sunooâs eyes light up. âoh. thatâs perfect.â-âitâs not perfect.â -âit is,â he insists. âyou two are literally the same person.â -âwe are not.â -âyouâre both competitive. you both overthink. you both pretend you donât care when you absolutely do.â-âi do not pretendâ . jungwon looks between you and sunoo. âwhy do you guys act like enemies? itâs confusing.â-âbecause we areâ you say. sunoo tilts his head. âbut why?â you open your mouth, then hesitate. the answer sounds less convincing when you try to say it out loud. âhe makes everything look easy.â -âand thatâs a crime?â niki asks. âyes. it is.â everyone laughs except you. sunoo leans closer. âbe honest. do you actually hate him?â-âi donât hate him.â -âdo you dislike him?â-âyes.â-âwhy?â-âbecause he interrupts me.â sunoo blinks. âthatâs it?â-âand he wins.â-âby decimal pointsâ jungwon adds quietly. you glare at him. he raises his hands defensively. sunoo studies you for a long moment before saying, completely serious, âyou guys should just fuck.â the room goes silent. âwhat?â you say. âiâm seriousâ sunoo continues. âthe tension is insane. itâs exhausting. just fuck once and get it over with.â yunjin bursts out laughing. âi was waiting for someone to say it.â -âi was notâ you snap. chaewon looks amused. âheâs not wrong.â -âhe is very wrong.â you insist. sunoo shrugs. âyou glare at each other like divorced parents.â-âthatâs dramatic.â- âyou stand too closeâ sakura adds helpfully.-âi do not.â- âyou doâ eunchae says. âat debates especially.â -âthatâs proximity strategy.â you say. sunoo grins. âsure.â you feel your face heating slightly, which only makes it worse. âthere is no tension.â -âthere is so much tensionâ niki says. âenough that niki and heeseung bet on who will snap firstâ jungwon adds casually. you stare at them. âyouâre betting on us?â - ânot seriouslyâ niki says quickly. âitâs just⊠for fun.â you look at sunoo. âyouâre encouraging this?â - âi just thinkâ sunoo says thoughtfully, âthat youâre both stubborn and bored. and when stubborn people are bored, they create drama.â - âwe are not boredâ you say. -âokayâ he replies lightly. âthen why does it bother you that he parties?â-you freeze for half a second. âit doesnât bother me.â -âit doesâ chaewon says gently. sunoo nods. âyou think heâs not working as hard as you.â -âhe isnâtâ you insist. âyou donât know thatâ jungwon says. -âi do.â- âdo you?â sunoo asks softly.
the room feels quieter now. yunjin breaks the silence. âokay, but regardless, you two leading the research project together is objectively entertaining.â -âi donât want entertainingâ you say. âi want stable.â-âyouâre in collegeâ niki says. ânothing is stable.â sunoo leans back, crossing his arms. âwhenâs your first official meeting?â -âtomorrow morning.â he grins slowly. âcanât wait.â-âyouâre not invited.â-âi donât need to beâ he replies. âiâll hear about it anyway.â eunchae glances at jungwon. âplease donât make this a group event.â- âno promisesâ jungwon says lightly. you stand up abruptly. âyouâre all impossible.â-âand yetâ sunoo says, smiling at you, âyou keep hanging out with us.â you hesitate at that. because despite everything, despite the rivalry and the rankings and the decimal points, this - sitting in a messy apartment arguing about nothing - feels easier than the quiet intensity of that glass study room. âjust donât let it ruin youâ chaewon says gently as you grab your bag. âit wonâtâ you reply. sunoo tilts his head again. âyou sure?â he studies you one last time before saying, âfor what itâs worth, he doesnât hate you.â you pause âi didnât ask.â-âi knowâ sunoo says. you leave before anyone can say anything else, your mind louder than it was when you arrived.
youâre walking across campus with yunjin when your phone buzzes with a message from jake.
jake: study room b. donât be late.
you glance at the screen and scoff. âhe really thinks heâs in charge.âyunjin looks over at you as you both step around a group of freshmen blocking the sidewalk. âwho?â - âjakeâ you reply, slipping your phone back into your bag. âhe booked the room and now heâs acting like i work for him.â yunjin hums thoughtfully. âmaybe he just doesnât trust you to show up.â you give her a look. âiâm always on time.â-âthatâs trueâ she admits with a grin. âyouâre aggressively punctual.â you cross your arms as you walk. âhe texted âdonât be late.â like iâve ever been late to anything.â yunjin laughs softly. âhe likes getting under your skin.â-âheâs not under my skin.â -âsure.â you stop outside the academic building and glance at the time. youâre five minutes early âgoâ yunjin says, nudging you lightly. âi have class in ten. try not to murder him.â-âno promisesâ you reply. she grins and heads down the hallway toward her lecture room while you take the stairs up to the study rooms. as you approach study room b, you can already hear laughter inside. you frown. you push the door open and freeze for half a second. jake is sitting on the table instead of in a chair, sleeves pushed up, laptop open in front of him. niki is sprawled in one of the chairs, leaning back dangerously far, feet propped against the table leg. niki is mid-sentence when he notices you. âoh, lookâ he says, straightening slightly. âsheâs here.â jake glances toward the door and smiles faintly. âyouâre early.â -âiâm on timeâ you correct as you step inside. âyouâre early.â niki looks between the two of you with open amusement. âwow. already fighting. weâre thirty seconds in.â - âweâre not fightingâ you say. jake tilts his head and says âyou sound defensive.â -âiâm not defensive.â -âyou somehow always areâ niki says cheerfully. you set your bag down on the table and look at niki. âwhy are you here?â - âiâm supervisingâ niki replies, completely serious. âsupervising what?â you ask. âwhatever this is.â he gestures loosely between you and jake. jake lets out a quiet laugh and closes his laptop halfway. âignore him.â -âi am not ignoring himâ you say, pulling out your notebook.
âthis is supposed to be a work session.â -âit isâ jake replies calmly. âwe were just⊠warming up.â- âby laughing?â - âyesâ niki says. âitâs something people do.â you shoot him a look. âdo you not have somewhere to be?â niki pretends to check an imaginary watch. âactually, i cleared my schedule for this.â jake shakes his head slightly. âyou donât have a class?â -âi doâ niki admits. âin twenty minutes.â -âthen why are you here?â you ask again. niki leans forward, resting his elbows on his knees. âbecause i heart you two got paired, and i wanted to see the tension in real time.â - âthere is no tensionâ you say immediately. jake raises an eyebrow at you. âyou just said that very quickly.â -âthatâs because itâs true.â . niki grins. âyou two look like youâre about to argue over who gets the better chair.â jake slides off the table and gestures toward the chair across from him. âtake it. i donât want it.â you narrow your eyes slightly. âi wasnât asking.â -âsee?â niki says, pointing between you. âthat.â. jake glances at niki with mild amusement. âyouâre exaggerating.â -âno, iâm notâ niki insists. âheâs been pretending he doesnât care all morning.â you turn your attention to jake. âyou donât care?â jake leans back against the table, crossing his arms loosely. âabout what?â -âabout this project.â he looks at you steadily. âi care.â-âit doesnât look like itâ you reply. niki makes a dramatic gasp. âoh, she went there.â jakeâs jaw tightens slightly, though his tone stays even. âweâve been here ten minutes.â -âand you were joking aroundâ you say. -âwith my friendâ he replies. âbefore you got here.â you hold his gaze for a second too long. âwe agreed to take this seriously.â -âi am taking it seriouslyâ jake says. ârelax.â you hate that word. âi am relaxedâ you say, sitting down across from him and opening your notebook. niki watches the exchange like itâs live entertainment. âyou knowâ he says thoughtfully, âif you guys just admitted you get turned on by arguing with each other, this would be easier.â jake rolls his eyes slightly. âyouâre projecting.â - âi told you iâm supervisingâ niki corrects. you ignore him and flip to your outlined topic ideas. âweâre doing immigration policyâ you say, glancing at jake. âunless youâve changed your mind overnight.â -âi havenâtâ jake replies. âeconomic integration versus resource strain.â-âgoodâ you say. âi drafted a preliminary framework.â jake pushes off the table and takes the seat across from you. he leans forward slightly, resting his forearms on the table. âletâs see it.â you slide your notebook toward him. he scans it quickly, eyes moving fast. niki shifts in his chair and watches jakeâs expression carefully. jake nods once. âthis is solid.â-âthatâs it?â you ask. âwhat do you want, applause?â he replies lightly. -âi want critique.â -he studies the page again. âyouâre focusing heavily on structural reform. we should balance it with adaptive local policies.â -âthat weakens the central thesisâ you argue. ânoâ jake says calmly. âit strengthens it by showing flexibility.â niki glances between you. âwow. this is intense.â you both ignore him. jake taps one of your bullet points. âif we frame it as binary, the panel will push back.â -âthey always push backâ you reply. âexactly.â he says. you hesitate. heâs not wrong. niki leans back again. âyou two talk like youâre negotiating a peace treaty.â-âweâre building an argumentâ you say.
âit sounds like marriage counselingâ niki says. jake huffs out a small laugh despite himself. âcan you leave?â-âin a minuteâ niki replies cheerfully. you pull your notebook back slightly and look at jake. âif we incorporate adaptive policies, we need stronger case studies.â -âi can handle thatâ jake says. you raise an eyebrow. âcan you?â he meets your gaze evenly. âyes.â niki watches that exchange carefully, then smirks. âyou donât trust him.â - âi trust dataâ you reply. jake tilts his head. âyou just donât trust me.â-âthatâs different.â-âhow?â-âbecause you improvise.â-âand you donâtâ he says. âthatâs why this works.â-you frown slightly. âworks?â-âwe balance each otherâ he says simply. the air shifts just slightly at that. niki notices immediately. âoh my godâ he mutters under his breath. you ignore him again. âwe need to divide tasks.â jake nods. âiâll handle case studies and adaptive frameworks. you refine the structural argument and gather economic data.â-âthatâs reasonableâ you admit.niki claps softly. âlook at that. cooperation.âjake throws him a look. âyouâre insufferable.â-âi learned from the bestâ niki replies, grinning.you close your notebook. âif youâre done supervising, you can go.â niki checks his phone and stands up dramatically. âfine. my class is starting. but before i leave-â he points between you and jake. âtry not to kill each other.â-âwe wonâtâ jake says dryly. niki pauses at the door and looks back at you. âyou know he doesnât actually think this is easy, right?âjake immediately says, âniki.â-âiâm just sayingâ niki continues, ignoring him. âshe assumes things.â you cross your arms. âi donât assume.â -âyou doâ niki says lightly. âboth of you do.â jake stands up slightly. âgo to class.â niki laughs and opens the door. âhave fun, kids.â he leaves, the door clicking shut behind him. silence settles into the room.
you exhale slowly. âheâs dramatic.â jake sits back down and opens his laptop again. âheâs bored.â -âyou find that funny?â -âi doâ he admits. you narrow your eyes. âof course you do.âhe glances at you. âyou donât?â-âno.â-âthatâs unfortunate.â you shake your head and look down at your notes again, trying to refocus. the room feels different now that niki is gone. quieter. smaller. jake clears his throat softly. âyou really think i donât work.â itâs not phrased like a joke this time.you donât look up immediately. âi think you donât look like youâre working.â-âthatâs basically the same thing.â-you finally meet his eyes. âthen what is it?âhe holds your gaze for a moment before answering. âitâs just not as visible.â-âthatâs vagueâ you say. âi knowâ he replies. you study him carefully. he doesnât look defensive now. just tired. âwhy do you care what i think?â you ask quietly. he leans back slightly, considering that. âbecause youâre the only one who competes with me like it matters.â -âit does matter.â -âi knowâ he says. the way he says it makes something tighten in your chest. you break eye contact first and flip to a new page in your notebook. âletâs just work.â he nods once. âokay.â for the next several minutes, you fall into a rhythm. you outline. he types. you debate phrasing. he adjusts it. the arguments sharpen.
the tension doesnât disappear, but it changes shape-less sharp, more focused. for a while, the only sounds in the study room are the quiet tapping of jakeâs keyboard and the soft scratch of your pen moving across paper. the earlier teasing from niki feels distant now. the air has shifted into something focused, almost tense in a different way. jake suddenly stops typing. you look up immediately. âwhy did you stop?â you ask, your pen hovering above the page. jake doesnât answer right away. he narrows his eyes slightly at his screen and scrolls upward. âhold onâ he mutters, leaning closer to his laptop. you straighten in your chair. âwhat?â jake tilts the screen slightly toward you. âdid you download this dataset directly from the initiative portal?â he asks, tapping the trackpad. âyesâ you reply, leaning forward to see better. âitâs the one linked in the official brief.â jake scrolls again, slower this time. âlook at the resource strain percentages from 2018 to 2020â he says, his voice losing its casual edge. you move your chair closer and scan the column. âthey increase graduallyâ you say. âthatâs consistent.â -âtoo consistentâ jake replies, glancing at you briefly before looking back at the screen. âreal-world immigration strain doesnât trend that cleanly. especially not across multiple regions.â you frown. âit could be averaged.â -âit is averagedâ jake says, pointing at the methodology note. âthatâs the issue.â you pull your own laptop toward you and open the public government archive you bookmarked yesterday. âgive me a secondâ you say as you start searching for the original data. jake watches silently while you compare the figures side by side. your stomach drops. âthese donât even matchâ you say quietly, your eyes flicking between the two screens. jake nods once. âi noticed.â
you scroll faster, your jaw tightening. âthe university dataset rounds up in some regionsâ you say slowly. âand rounds down in others.â jake leans back in his chair, folding his arms. âit balances out to reinforce a specific trend.â you shake your head. âno. it canât be intentional.â jake studies your expression. âyou see it too.â you donât respond. instead, you double-check the years again, hoping you misread something. the numbers remain the same. jake exhales slowly. âif we use their version, our argument is skewedâ he says, his tone controlled but firm. âitâs the official datasetâ you reply, closing your laptop halfway. âitâs the provided datasetâ jake corrects. you stand up from your chair and take a few steps toward the glass wall, trying to think.
âyouâre suggesting the university manipulated research data for a student initiative?â you say carefully. -âiâm saying the dataset was curatedâ jake replies as he stands as well, resting his hands on the table. âand not transparently.â you turn back to face him. âthatâs a serious claim.â -âitâs an observable discrepancyâ he counters. you cross your arms. âif we accuse them of manipulating data, we jeopardize the entire project.â jake steps slightly closer to the table. âif we ignore it, we jeopardize our credibility.â-âthatâs dramaticâ you say. -âitâs accurateâ jake replies, his voice sharpening slightly. you shake your head. âyou donât know why it was adjusted.â-âand neither do youâ he responds evenly. âbut youâre assuming bad intentâ you argue. âand youâre assuming good intentâ he fires back. you take a breath, trying to steady yourself. âwe donât need to escalate this. we can adjust our framework so we rely less heavily on those specific figures.â jake studies you for a moment before asking, âso you want to work around it?â-âi want to be strategicâ you say. jake lets out a short breath through his nose. âstrategicâ he repeats, though thereâs frustration underneath the word. âyesâ you insist. âthereâs no reason to challenge faculty-provided material unless absolutely necessary.â jake steps fully away from the table now, running a hand through his hair as he processes that. âyou care more about how this looks than whether itâs accurateâ he says quietly. âthatâs not fairâ you reply immediately, your voice tightening. jake looks directly at you. âit is fair. youâre calculating risk before youâre evaluating integrity.â -âiâm evaluating consequencesâ you correct. âyouâre protecting your rankingâ he says. you feel your pulse spike. âthis affects rankingâ you reply. âpublic evaluation affects scholarship.â jakeâs expression shifts slightly. âso this is about being first again.â -âitâs about staying fundedâ you snap. âyou know that.â jake hesitates for half a second before saying, âyou think i donât have stakes here?â
âyouâll be fine either wayâ you reply, your voice sharper than you intend. âyou always are.â jakeâs jaw tightens. âyou really think that.â - âyou make it look easyâ you say. âyou always have.â he takes a step closer, though not aggressively. âlooking easy doesnât mean it isâ he says, his tone lower now. âthen why not prove that?â you challenge. jake stares at you for a moment before answering. âbecause i donât owe you a performance of my struggle.â the words hit harder than you expect. you fold your arms tighter. âif we call out the discrepancy, it draws attention. attention means scrutiny.â -âand scrutiny isnât bad if weâre rightâ jake replies.âit is if weâre dismissedâ you argue. âweâre undergraduates.â- âso what?â he asks. âif we find inconsistencies, we address them.â -ânot by accusing them outrightâ you insist.jake shakes his head. âyouâre compromising.â-âiâm adaptingâ you reply. âyouâre compromisingâ he repeats, firmer now. âand youâre idealizingâ you shoot back. jake looks away for a second before meeting your gaze again. âif this were reversedâ he says carefully, âand i brought you flawed data and told you to ignore it, youâd destroy me.â-âthatâs differentâ you reply immediately. âhow?â he presses. âbecause youâre my partnerâ you say, then realize how that sounds. jake notices. his expression flickers. âand the university isnât?â he asks quietly. âthatâs not what i meantâ you say quickly. jake studies you, something unreadable in his eyes. âyou trust them more than you trust meâ he says. âthatâs not trueâ you respond, though your voice lacks certainty. jake exhales sharply. âyou think i can afford to challenge this because i went to private school?â he says. âyou think iâve had it easy.â -âyou have connectionsâ you reply. âyou have options.â -âand you think that equals safety?â he asks, his voice tightening. âyou do have a safety net jake.â you insist. jake goes very still at that. âyou donât know anything about my safety netâ he says, his tone controlled but strained. âthen explain itâ you reply. for a moment, it looks like he might. instead, he steps back and shakes his head. âthis isnât about thatâ he says. âit isâ you argue. âbecause you can afford to risk conflict.â-âand you think i want to?â he asks. âyes, apparentlyâ you say. jake laughs once, but thereâs no humor in it. âyou donât know meâ he says. âyeah, maybe i donâtâ you reply. silence stretches between you. jake finally says, âiâm not building our project on altered data.â - âand iâm not tanking our evaluation over something we can strategically navigateâ you reply.
âitâs not a minor thingâ he says. âit can be managedâ you respond. jake looks at you steadily. âyouâre afraid.â you lift your chin. âjake, iâm realistic.â he studies you for a moment longer before saying, ârunning from it wonât fix it.â - âiâm not runningâ you reply as you grab your bag from the chair. jake watches you. âyou areâ he says quietly. you move toward the door. âweâll revisit this tomorrow.â -âyou canât avoid this foreverâ jake says as you reach for the handle. you pause briefly but donât turn around. âwatch meâ you reply before opening the door and stepping into the hallway.
itâs been three days since the study room. three days of short, strictly necessary texts from jake about scheduling. three days of you avoiding any conversation that isnât logistical. three days of replaying that argument in your head and getting more annoyed every time. now youâre sitting cross-legged on chaewonâs bedroom floor while sakura flips through something on her phone and yunjin lies on the bed staring at the ceiling. kazuha is sitting against the wall with a notebook in her lap, and eunchae is leaning back against jungwonâs hoodie like she lives here. âyouâre quieter than usualâ yunjin says, turning her head slightly to look at you. âiâm fineâ you reply, picking at a loose thread on your sleeve. chaewon glances at you from her desk chair. âthat means youâre not fine.â -âiâm just busyâ you say. âwith the project?â sakura asks without looking up from her phone. âyes.â yunjin shifts onto her side. âyou and jake still not talking properly?â-âwe are talkingâ you correct. âweâre communicating.â-âthat sounds worseâ sakura says.âitâs efficientâ you reply.chaewon narrows her eyes slightly. âwhat happened?â you hesitate for half a second, then shrug. âwe disagreed about data interpretation.â-âthat sounds academicâ kazuha says calmly. âit wasâ you insist. yunjin sits up slightly. âthatâs not what you look like when itâs academic.â you glare at her. âwhat does that even mean?â -âit means you look like youâre personally offendedâ she replies. âiâm not,â you exhale slowly. âthe dataset they gave us was adjusted.â-âadjusted how?â sakura asks. âinconsistent with public recordsâ you explain. âhe wants to call it out.â-âand you donât?â kazuha asks. âitâs not that simple,â you say quickly. âif we accuse them of manipulating data, that reflects on us.â eunchae tilts her head. âbut if itâs wrong, isnât that worse?â - âitâs not wrong,â you argue. âitâs curated.â-âthat sounds like wrong with extra stepsâ yunjin says. you shoot her a look. âitâs nuanced.â chaewon leans back in her chair. âand you two argued.â - âyesâ you admit. âhow bad?â sakura asks. ânot too badâ you say. âscale of one to dramaticâ yunjin presses. you hesitate. âmaybe⊠a six.â eunchae raises her eyebrows. âthatâs high for you.â-âit wasnât dramatic,â you say defensively. âit was controlled.â-âthatâs your version of dramaticâ sakura mutters.
thereâs a knock on the door and jungwon pokes his head in. âare we interrupting?â âwe?â eunchae repeats. sunoo walks in behind jungwon, smiling like he already knows something. âgroup therapy?â he asks, glancing around. ânoâ you say immediately. sunoo sits on the edge of the bed anyway. âyou look like you need it.â-âi donâtâ you reply. jungwon steps fully inside and sits next to eunchae. âjakeâs been weirdâ he says casually. your head lifts. âweird how?â sunoo glances at jungwon with interest. âoh?â jungwon shrugs. âquieter.â - âthatâs not weirdâ you say. âfor him it isâ jungwon replies. yunjin looks at you slowly. âyour fighting made him quieter, damn.â - âwe debatedâ you correct. sunoo studies you carefully. âabout the data?â you blink. âhow do you know that?â sunoo gives you a look. âbecause i know him.â- âthat doesnât mean you know thisâ you say. âhe mentioned itâ jungwon adds. you straighten. âwhat did he say?â- âthat you think heâs recklessâ jungwon answers honestly. you look away. âand that you think he has it easyâ sunoo says gently. your jaw tightens. âi never said that.â sunoo doesnât argue. he just looks at you like he doesnât need to. eunchae shifts slightly. âokay, new topic before this gets intense.â -âyesâ sakura agrees quickly. eunchae glances at jungwon. âyou should tell them.â jungwon looks mildly amused. âyou can.â eunchae turns to you. âthereâs a party tomorrow night.â you blink. âwhat does that have to do with anything?â- âitâs at heeseungâs placeâ jungwon explains. âsmall thing.â - âsmall?â sunoo repeats with a grin. âthatâs a lie.â- âitâs manageableâ jungwon corrects. eunchae smiles slightly. âhe invited me.â - âand?â you ask.- âand i thought we could all goâ she says. you immediately shake your head. âno.â yunjin groans. âyou didnât even think about it.â - âi donât want to goâ you say. âbecause heâll be there?â sakura asks carefully. âthatâs not whyâ you reply. âthen why?â chaewon presses. âi have work, plus i never partyâ you say. âitâs fridayâ yunjin replies. âi still have work.â-âyouâve been locked in your room for three daysâ sakura says. âyou need air.â- âi go outsideâ you say. âwalking between classes doesnât countâ yunjin replies. sunoo leans back on his hands. âyou two need to stop acting like divorced co-founders.â- âweâre not acting like anythingâ you say sharply. jungwon looks at you calmly. âhe hasnât said anything bad about you.â- âi didnât say he did.â - âyou assumed he wouldâ sunoo says lightly. you cross your arms. âi donât assume.â- âyou doâ chaewon says gently. you look at eunchae. âyouâre going?â- âyesâ she says simply. âand you want all of us to go?â- âyes.â kazuha closes her notebook. âit might actually help.â
âhelp what?â you ask. âbreak the tensionâ she replies. âthere is no tensionâ you say. sunoo laughs quietly. âyouâre very committed to that narrative.â yunjin sits up fully now. âyouâve been spiraling over this argument for days.â -âi have not.â- âyou haveâ sakura says. âit was an academic disagreement.â- âthen why do you look personally offended?â chaewon asks. you open your mouth, then close it again. sunoo glances at jungwon before speaking. âheâs not trying to undermine you.â- âi didnât say he wasâ you reply. âyou kinda didâ jungwon says. you exhale sharply. âhe thinks iâm compromising.â - âand you think heâs recklessâ sunoo replies. you look at him. âhe is.â sunoo shrugs. âsometimes.â- âexactly.â- âbut heâs not carelessâ jungwon says. you hesitate. eunchae leans forward slightly. âjust come tomorrowâ she says gently. âyou donât have to talk to him.â- âthatâs unrealisticâ you reply. âthen donât argueâ sakura says. âhe argues with meâ you counter. âand you argue backâ yunjin says. you fall quiet. chaewon stands up and walks toward you, handing you a bottle of water. âyou donât have to prove anything at a partyâ she says calmly. âiâm not proving anything.â- âyou always try toâ she replies softly. that stings more than you expect. sunoo glances at jungwon again before saying, âheâs going to be there regardless.â- âi knowâ you say. âand if you donât goâ sunoo continues, âyouâre still going to think about it, and itâs really not that deepâ you glare at him. âyouâre very invested in this.â- âi enjoy chaosâ he replies. eunchae nudges jungwon lightly. âtell her.â jungwon sighs slightly. âjake almost didnât want to go.â you look up sharply. âwhy?â jungwon shrugs. âsaid he wasnât in the mood.â your chest tightens for a second before you push it down. âwhy would i care, thatâs not my problem.â-âno one said it wasâ sunoo replies. âit kind of isâ yunjin mutters. you look at her. âhow?â- âwell, youâre both avoiding each other because of some stupid dataâ she says. âiâm not avoiding him.â-Â âyou havenât met outside scheduled sessionsâ sakura points out. âthatâs intentional.â-âexactlyâ yunjin says.
thereâs a long pause. eunchae finally says softly, âjust come. if itâs awful, we leave early.â you look around the room. five faces watching you. not judging. just waiting. âi donât want to talk to him, iâll just work on my part of the project alone.â you say. sunoo laughs. âheâs fun when he drinks.â - âthatâs not reassuringâ you reply. âit should beâ jungwon says. you run a hand through your hair. âfine.â everyone perks up slightly. âiâll goâ you clarify. âbut iâm not staying late.â chaewon smiles faintly. âdeal.â- âand if he starts somethingâ you add, âiâm leaving.â - âhe definetly wonâtâ sunoo says confidently. âyou donât know that.â - âi doâ he replies. you look away, staring at the floor for a second. tomorrow evening. a party. the thought unsettles you more than youâd like. âdonât overthink itâ yunjin says, like she read your mind. âiâm notâ you lie. sunoo stands up, stretching slightly. âthis is going to be fun.â- âyouâre enjoying this too muchâ you tell him. âiâm just saying it will be fun. i promiseâ he replies with a grin.
heeseungâs house is louder than you expected. you hear the music before you even reach the gate, bass thudding through the warm evening air. yunjin walks ahead of you like she belongs here, sakura beside her already laughing at something chaewon said. kazuha is walking calmly at your side, hands tucked into her jacket pockets, while eunchae is texting jungwon. âi can still leaveâ you mutter under your breath. yunjin glances over her shoulder immediately. âno.â - âi didnât say anythingâ you reply. âyou were thinking loudlyâ sakura says, pushing open the gate. the yard is already full. not packed, but crowded enough that you canât slip in unnoticed. there are groups gathered around the patio, Â Â has set up speakers near the sliding doors, and the living room inside is lit with that dim, warm light that makes everything feel softer than it is. you step inside with the others and immediately scan the room out of habit. jake is across the living room near the kitchen island. you notice him because heâs laughing louder than usually. not the controlled, polite debate-team smile. not the half-smirk he uses when heâs about to interrupt you. itâs fuller, easier. heâs leaning back against the counter with a red plastic cup in his hand, sleeves pushed up, head tilted slightly as jay says something animated in front of him. niki is half sitting on the counter, and sunoo is talking with his hands like heâs telling a dramatic story. jake looks relaxed. you look away first. âokayâ chaewon says quietly beside you, following your gaze. âweâre not staring.â-âi wasnâtâ you reply. âi was observing the room.â-âacademically?â sakura asks sweetly. eunchaeâs phone buzzes and she smiles. âjungwonâs in the kitchen.â- âobviouslyâ yunjin mutters. âwhere else would he be?â you take a breath and step further into the house. the music shifts into something louder, and someone near the couch cheers for no clear reason. sunoo is the first to notice your group. he lights up immediately and waves both hands. âthey made it!â jake turns his head at that. your eyes meet for half a second. he raises his cup slightly in acknowledgment. you nod once. thatâs it. no confrontation. just recognition. thankfully.
sunoo pushes off the counter and weaves through the crowd toward you. âyou actually cameâ he says, sounding genuinely impressed. âi said i wouldâ you reply. âi didnât believe youâ he admits cheerfully. âyouâre very supportiveâ you tell him. niki appears behind him a second later. âi give her an hourâ he says, glancing at you. âbefore she leaves.â-âiâm stayingâ you reply. âweâll seeâ niki says. jungwon steps forward next, immediately slipping an arm around eunchaeâs waist. âyou found it okay?â he asks her. âyesâ eunchae says with a small smile. heeseung appears from somewhere near the hallway. âdrinks are in the kitchenâ he announces. âif you donât like whatâs there, thatâs a you problem.â-âthatâs comfortingâ sakura says. you follow the group toward the kitchen. jake is still leaning against the counter when you approach. up close, you notice his eyes are slightly softer than usual and thereâs a faint flush across his cheeks. heâs not drunk. but heâs not entirely sober either. he looks at you and says, âyou made itâ his tone light but steady. âi said i wouldâ you reply. he tilts his head slightly. âi know.â thereâs something about the way he says it that feels layered, but you donât dwell on it. jay claps jake on the shoulder. âwe were betting on whether youâd showâ he says to you. âdo you have a gambling problem?â you ask flatly. âjust friendly speculationâ jay corrects. âshe was comingâ jake says casually, taking another sip from his cup. you glance at him. âyou sound confident.â jake shrugs. âyou donât back out of things.â you donât respond to that as chaewon moves past you to grab a drink from the counter. âwhatâs safe?â she asks heeseung. ânothingâ heeseung replies immediately. yunjin laughs. âthatâs reassuring.â sunoo hands you a cup without asking what you want. âstart lightâ he advises. âiâm not planning to get drunkâ you tell him. âfamous last wordsâ niki says. you take a cautious sip. itâs stronger than you expected. jake notices your expression and smirks slightly. âtoo much?â - âitâs fineâ you say. he studies you for a second longer than necessary before looking away.
the kitchen grows louder as more people filter in. someone turns the music up again. jungwon and eunchae drift slightly toward the living room couch together. jay and heeseung start arguing about something sports-related. you find yourself standing in a loose circle with chaewon, sakura, yunjin, kazuha, sunoo, niki, and jake hovering just slightly off to the side. sunoo looks around at the combined group and claps his hands once. âokay. weâre merging.â- âweâre not countriesâ you reply. âspeak for yourselfâ niki says. âiâm a sovereign state.â-âyouâre barely functionalâ sakura tells him. jake laughs quietly at that. you pretend not to notice how easy it sounds. sunoo gestures between everyone. âthis is good. cross-cultural exchange.â-âwe go to the same universityâ kazuha points out calmly. âstill countsâ sunoo insists. heeseung leans against the fridge and surveys the group. âare we doing something or just standing here like weâre in a debate?â-âwe can do bothâ you say. jake looks at you immediately. âyou would.â you meet his gaze. âyou wouldnât?â he tilts his head. âdepends.â -âon?â you ask. âhow competitive youâre feeling tonightâ he replies. niki groans dramatically. âdonât start.â-âiâm not startingâ you say at the same time jake says, ârelax.â sunoo looks between you both. âyou two talk like youâre in a panel discussion.â-âitâs a habitâ jake says lightly. âbreak itâ yunjin tells him. jake raises an eyebrow at her. âyou first.â she laughs. ânot my rivalry.â -âitâs not a rivalryâ you say automatically.niki points at you. âyou said that very fast.â jake takes another sip of his drink, watching the exchange with mild amusement. he doesnât jump in this time. chaewon nudges you gently. âloosen upâ she murmurs. âi am looseâ you reply. sunoo looks at jake and then back at you. âheâs already ahead of you.â - âiâm not competingâ you say. jake finally steps closer into the circle. âyouâre always competingâ he says casually. âwith you?â you ask. âwith everyoneâ he replies. âthatâs projectionâ you say. niki looks between you. âsee, this is why we needed you here. the energy is unmatched.â heeseung nods. âit was too calm before.â you roll your eyes. âyouâre welcome.â
sunoo suddenly looks inspired. âokay, weâre playing something.â- âwe just got hereâ kazuha says. âexactlyâ sunoo replies. âprime time.â - ânot yetâ jungwon calls from the couch. âgive it ten minutes.â jake glances at you again. âyou planning to stay?â he asks, tone neutral. âfor nowâ you reply. he nods once. âgood, you really need to loosen up a bit.â you study him for a moment. âyou smell like cheap beer.â he doesnât deny it. âa little.â - âalready?â you ask. âitâs been longer than you thinkâ he says. âyou got here early?â you ask. he shrugs. âhelped set up.â you pause at that. you hadnât expected that answer. before you can respond, jay calls jakeâs name from across the room. jake glances over, then back at you. he nods once, then moves away toward jay. you watch him go for half a second before chaewon snaps her fingers in front of your face. âeyes upâ she says. âi wasnât-â you start. âyou wereâ sakura says. you take another sip of your drink and decide not to answer. the group slowly spreads out into smaller conversations, but thereâs an underlying pull that keeps everyone within the same area. jungwon drifts back toward the kitchen with eunchae still at his side. niki climbs onto one of the bar stools. sunoo is narrating something dramatic again. jake returns a few minutes later, cup refilled. he stands slightly closer this time. âyouâre quieter than usualâ he says, looking at you rather than the group. âiâm listeningâ you reply. âto what?â he asks. âeverythingâ you say. he studies you for a moment, then nods slightly like that answer makes sense. across the room, someone cheers loudly. the music shifts again. sunoo suddenly raises his voice. âokay, thatâs enough standing. weâre doing something.â- âwhat?â heeseung asks. âweâre socializing like adults. letâs playing something.â sunoo says. heeseung groans from the armchair. âdefine something.â - ânever have i everâ sunoo declares.âthat sounds threateningâ sakura says. jake drops down onto the rug across from you, legs stretched out, leaning back on his hands. âiâm inâ he says easily, already sounding a little looser than earlier. niki drags a coffee table slightly out of the way to make space. jungwon sits down beside eunchae, automatically pulling her closer. jay flops down next to jake, and chaewon settles cross-legged beside you.
ârulesâ sunoo says, raising his cup. âyou say something youâve never done. anyone who has done it drinks.â-âsimpleâ kazuha says. âand no lyingâ niki adds. jake tilts his head slightly. âwhoâs enforcing that?â-âi amâ niki says. âyou canât even enforce your own bedtimeâ jay tells him. sunoo points dramatically. âiâll start.â he clears his throat like heâs about to present a thesis. ânever have i ever pretended to understand a reading in class.â thereâs immediate movement. heeseung drinks. jay drinks. niki drinks. jake raises his cup without hesitation and takes a sip. you look around, unimpressed. yunjin squints at you. âyouâre not drinking?â- âiâve never pretendedâ you say calmly. jake lets out a soft laugh. âof course you havenât.â - âhave you?â you ask. jake lowers his cup and looks at you. âabsolutely.â you raise an eyebrow. âthat explains a lot.â he smirks slightly. âyou say that like youâve never winged a seminar.â-âi always prepareâ you reply. âobsessivelyâ niki adds. sunoo points at you. âsee, this is what i mean. sheâs terrifying.â -âitâs called competenceâ you correct. jake tips his cup slightly toward you. ârelax, professor.â you narrow your eyes. âiâm not tense.â sunoo claps again. ânext!â jay leans forward. ânever have i ever skipped a lecture to go out.â multiple people drink immediately. jake drinks again without hesitation. you donât move. niki notices and looks at you suspiciously. âyouâve never skipped?â - ânoâ you reply. ânot even once?â sakura asks. âi donât skip lecturesâ you say. jake shakes his head slowly, smiling faintly. âthatâs insane.â he gestures vaguely with his cup. âyou need to live a little.â- âand you all need to attend classâ you shoot back. he laughs, louder this time. âi attend.â- âyou arrive lateâ you say. âthatâs differentâ he insists. âthatâs worseâ you reply. sunoo is watching the two of you like this is premium entertainment. âis this considered academic foreplay?â he mutters. âshut upâ you say automatically. jake nearly chokes on his drink laughing. jungwon clears his throat, amused. âmy turn.â he looks around thoughtfully. ânever have i ever argued with a professor during class.â thereâs a pause. then jake drinks. niki drinks enthusiastically. âyouâve argued?â you ask them. jake wipes his mouth with the back of his hand. âmultiple times.â- âof course you haveâ you say. he leans slightly toward you. âyou havenât?â-âi pick my battlesâ you reply. âyou avoid some of themâ he counters. âthatâs called strategy.â-âthatâs called fear of confrontationâ he says, grinning. you lean back slightly. âyouâre tipsy.â-âand?â he asks. âitâs making you louderâ you reply. âitâs making him honestâ niki says. sunoo whistles softly. âoh, thatâs a line.â jake waves him off. ârelax.â chaewon nudges you. âyouâre still not drinking.â you shrug slightly. âiâm pacing.â niki leans forward suddenly, resting his elbows on his knees. âokayâ he says casually, glancing around the circle. âweâre done pretending this is educational.â sunoo smirks. âit never was.â niki lifts his cup. ânever have i ever hooked up in a university bathroom.â thereâs a brief pause. then jungwon takes a sip without looking up. jay drinks. heeseung drinks. yunjin drinks. jake lifts his cup and drinks too, barely reacting. eunchae rolls her eyes lightly at jungwon. âfreshman year?â jungwon shrugs. âallegedly.â kazuha shakes her head but doesnât look surprised.
jay nudges niki. âyou definitely asked that because you have a story.â- âi always have a storyâ niki replies. sunoo points lazily. âmost likely to hook up somewhere public.â this time, a few people point at niki immediately. niki grins. âprobably.â jake doesnât vote. heâs staring vaguely at the ceiling like heâs half listening. chaewon takes a small sip and shakes her head. âyouâre all predictable.â - âyour turnâ heeseung says, gesturing at her. chaewon considers it for a moment. ânever have i flirted with a ta for a better grade.â thereâs quiet laughter. jay drinks. niki drinks. heeseung drinks slowly. jake doesnât. jake glances at jay. âthatâs embarrassing.â jay shrugs. âit worked once.â-âyouâre admitting that?â sakura asks calmly. jay nods. âproudly.â the game keeps moving without much structure now. people speak when they feel like it. heeseung raises his cup. ânever have i ever pulled an all-nighter and cried about it.â that one hits differently. jungwon drinks.yunjin drinks. you take a small sip this time. jake hesitates, then drinks too. niki notices you drinking again and squints. âyouâre way too sober.â-âi need to drive laterâ you reply. he shrugs and moves on. jay leans forward next. âmost likely to ghost someone after one date.â sakura points at niki immediately. niki raises his cup. âi have standards.â-âyou have attachement issuesâ sunoo corrects. jake laughs under his breath at that and reaches blindly for a refill from a bottle near the table, misjudging slightly before steadying himself. heâs definitely drunk now. jungwon raises an eyebrow at jake. âyou good?â jake nods once. âperfect.â niki smirks. âthat means no.â kazuha looks thoughtful. ânever have i ever thought about dropping my major.â a few people drink. you donât. jake does. he doesnât look at anyone when he does it. the detail lingers quietly in your mind, but you donât acknowledge it. sunoo glances at him briefly, then deliberately looks away like heâs not going to push. eunchae speaks next. âmost likely to burn out before graduation.âa few people point at jay. jay protests weakly.no one points at you this time. jake watches the votes but doesnât say anything. niki suddenly shifts the energy again.
âokay. itâs getting boring again. whoâs the hottest person in this room?â thereâs a collective groan, but no one looks shocked. heeseung immediately gestures vaguely around. âbroad category.â - âpick oneâ niki insists. sakura laughs. âthatâs dangerous.â-âexactlyâ niki replies. jay shrugs. âjungwon.â jungwon blinks. âwhat?â - âyou have good hairâ jay says. jungwon nods thoughtfully. âvalid.â heeseung points at kazuha. kazuha stares at him flatly. âwhy?â-âbecause you look calmâ he replies. âthatâs your standard?â she asks. jake laughs again, softer this time, and lifts his cup lazily. âthis is chaotic.â niki points directly at him. âanswer.â jake looks around the circle slowly, clearly thinking much longer than necessary. jake finally gestures vaguely toward the group. âstatistically impossible to choose.â - âthatâs a cop-outâ niki says. jake shrugs. âiâm diplomatic.â- âyouâre so fucking drunkâ jungwon corrects. jake smiles lazily. âalso true.â the game continues without structure now - people throwing out ânever have i everâ and âmost likely toâ whenever they feel like it.ânever have i ever kissed someone from a rival departmentâ jay says. niki drinks. heeseung drinks. jake drinks again, slower this time. sunoo watches him carefully. niki tosses another one out. ânever have i ever thought about someone here more than once.â that one is looser. casual. everyone drinks, except for you. jake sets his empty cup down and exhales slowly. he leans his head back against the couch and closes his eyes for a second longer than normal. jungwon nudges him lightly. âyouâre done.â jake opens one eye. âiâm fine.â-âyouâre obviously notâ jungwon says calmly. jake sits up slightly, steadying himself with one hand on the floor. âi said iâm fine.â and the second he stands, thereâs a slight delay in his balance. jake corrects himself quickly, brushing it off with a small laugh. âsee?â niki squints at him. âyouâre cut off.â jake waves him off lazily. âyouâre not in charge.â sunoo stands up too, stepping closer subtly in case he needs to catch him. the game dissolves into chaotic commentary after that. people start talking over each other. someone suggests music. jay is trying to explain something loudly to heeseung. jake leans back again, head tilting slightly as he looks at the ceiling. heâs very clearly drunk now.
someone changes the music to something louder, bass heavier. jay starts arguing with heeseung about who has the worst first-year haircut. niki is halfway through telling a story that keeps changing depending on who interrupts him. jake is in the middle of it. heâs sitting on the arm of the couch now, leaning too far back, one foot hooked loosely under the coffee table like thatâs enough to stabilize him. heâs laughing harder than necessary at something sunoo says, head tipping back fully this time. âyouâre enjoying this too muchâ sunoo tells him, amused. jake waves him off loosely. âyouâre dramatic.â- âthatâs my brandâ sunoo replies. jake slides off the couch arm and lands on his feet, slightly off balance. jungwon immediately steadies him by grabbing his sleeve. âiâm fineâ jake says, pulling his arm back with a lazy grin. âstop babysitting.â- âyouâre not fineâ jungwon replies calmly. jake ignores him and points at jay instead. âtell them about the time you tried to impress that philosophy major.â jay groans. âwhy are you like this?â- âbecause itâs funâ jake says. he attempts to reenact something- some exaggerated bow combined with a poorly delivered line. his foot catches slightly on the edge of the rug, and he stumbles forward into niki. niki bursts out laughing. âoh my god. youâre done.â jake straightens immediately, offended. âi am not done.â - âyou tried to bow and almost face-plantedâ niki says. âit was intentionalâ jake insists. âit was tragicâ jay corrects. jake points at jay with unnecessary seriousness. âyouâre jealous.â - âno one is jealous of thatâ jungwon says dryly. jake pushes himself upright and adjusts his shirt like dignity can be recovered that easily. âi need another drinkâ he announces. ânoâ jungwon says immediately. âyesâ jake replies, already moving toward the kitchen. you step forward at the same time jungwon does. jungwon reaches him first and grabs his wrist lightly. âyouâre cut off.â jake looks down at jungwonâs hand like it personally offended him. âyou donât control me.â - âyou can barely walkâ jungwon says evenly. jake rolls his eyes and tries to pull free. he succeeds, but only because jungwon lets go. jake makes it three steps toward the counter before you move into his path. âyou donât need another one, itâs getting hard to watchâ you say calmly. he blinks at you slowly, focusing like itâs taking effort. âyouâre⊠still here.â- âyesâ you reply. âgoodâ he says vaguely. he tries to sidestep you. you shift slightly to block him without making it obvious. âyouâre not drinking moreâ you tell him. he tilts his head. âwhy do you care?â- âi donât,â you say automatically. âi just donât want you embarrassing yourself further.â he squints at you like heâs trying to decode whether that was an insult. jungwon steps up beside you. âsheâs right.â jake exhales dramatically. âyou two are teaming up. thatâs suspicious.â-âyouâre swayingâ jungwon says. jake pauses. then, as if proving the point, he sways. he catches himself on the counter, laughing at his own lack of coordination. âgravity is aggressive.â- âokay, youâre doneâ jungwon repeats.
jake looks at you again. his expression shifts slightly-less performative, more unfocused. âyou didnât drink muchâ he says. you shrug. âiâm driving.â he nods slowly like that makes sense to him. then he reaches for a bottle on the counter. you move first and gently push it out of reach. âno.â he stares at your hand like it betrayed him. âwhy are you mean?â he asks, not angrily-just confused. âiâm not meanâ you reply. âyou areâ he insists softly. jungwon steps closer now, lowering his voice. âokay. thatâs enough.â jake blinks again, then leans back against the counter heavily. for a moment, he looks like heâs just resting. then his head tips forward. âjakeâ jungwon says immediately. jake doesnât respond. you step closer. âjake.â he makes a vague sound but doesnât lift his head. jungwon grabs his shoulders and straightens him carefully. âhey. stay with me.â jake opens his eyes halfway, unfocused. âiâm here.â - âbarelyâ jungwon replies. jake exhales and lets his weight drop slightly forward again. you glance around. the party is still going. no one is paying close attention. jungwon looks at you. âwhen are you leaving?â you hesitate. âsoon. itâs getting too much.â he nods once. âcan you drive?â - âyesâ you say automatically. jungwon exhales. âgood.â you immediately shake your head. âno.â he looks at you. âwhat?â- âiâm not driving him.â-âyou just said youâre leaving.â- âthat doesnât mean iâm responsible for himâ you reply. jungwon lowers his voice. âhe canât stay here like this.â-âniki can deal with itâ you say. ânikiâs already half goneâ jungwon replies. âand heeseung will just film him.â you glance at jake, who is now leaning almost fully into jungwon for support. âi donât even know if he can walk to the carâ you say. âiâll helpâ jungwon says immediately. you hesitate. âheâs not going to wake up properly if we leave him hereâ jungwon continues. âand i donât trust anyone else to get him back safely.â you cross your arms. âjust ask anyone, why me?â jungwon looks at you directly. âbecause youâre sober.â thatâs true. you look at jake again. he mumbles something incoherent and shifts his weight again.âiâll carry him to your carâ jungwon says quietly. you hesitate longer than you should. âiâll call sunghoonâ jungwon adds quickly. âheâs at the dorm. heâll come downstairs and carry him up.â you blink. âsunghoonâs there?â- âyesâ jungwon says. âhe didnât come tonight.â you still hesitate. jungwonâs tone softens. âplease.â you look at him. âwhy are you asking me like this?â- âbecause i donât want him waking up on heeseungâs lawnâ jungwon says honestly. you sigh heavily. âyouâll just drop him off, thatâs itâ jungwon continues. âhe wonât even talk to you. iâll text sunghoon now. heâll be waiting outside.â jake shifts again, almost slipping. and itâs true, jake probably wonât be able to talk. heâs so drunk he can barely get a word out. the ride will likely be quiet anyway, so you decide to give up. âheâs heavier than he looksâ jungwon mutters. you stare at jake for a second longer. then you exhale slowly. âfine.â relief flashes across jungwonâs face. âthank you.â-âheâs so annoyingâ you say quickly. âi knowâ jungwon replies. jake makes a soft, incoherent protest as you both adjust his arms over your shoulders. âdonât let him throw up in your car, but i donât think he will.â jungwon adds under his breath. you glare at him. âthatâs not helpful.â jungwon manages a small smile despite everything. âiâll text sunghoon now.â jakeâs weight settles more fully against you.
jungwon and you practically carry him to the car. jake is heavier than he looks. not in a dramatic way - just dead weight in the way only drunk people can be. jungwon has one of his arms thrown over his shoulder, and youâre holding the other side, trying not to let his shoes drag across the pavement. âheâs not this heavy normallyâ jungwon mutters under his breath. âheâs not normally unconsciousâ you reply. âiâm consciousâ jake mumbles suddenly, lifting his head just enough to protest. âyouâre both⊠dramatic.â jungwon snorts quietly. âsure.â by the time you reach your car, jakeâs head is lolling slightly again. jungwon opens the back door and helps guide him inside. itâs not graceful. jakeâs foot catches on the doorframe, and jungwon has to physically guide his head down so he doesnât knock it against the roof. âsitâ jungwon says firmly as he pushes jake back against the seat. jake blinks up at him, unfocused but indignant, and mutters, âi am sittingâ in a tone that suggests he believes heâs proving something. you stand by the open door for a second, arms crossed, watching as jungwon adjusts jakeâs legs fully into the car and pulls the seatbelt across him. âyouâre not allowed to unbuckle thisâ jungwon warns. jake squints at him and replies, âyouâre not allowed to threaten me in my own vehicleâ which makes jungwon sigh and glance at you. âitâs her carâ jungwon corrects, and jake goes quiet for a beat before mumbling, âoh. that explains a lot.â jungwon straightens and looks at you over the roof of the car. âsunghoonâs at the dormâ he says. âi texted him. heâll meet you outside.â you nod once. âif he throws up-â you begin, but jungwon cuts you off with a firm, âhe wonâtâ though jake chooses that exact moment to murmur, âi mightâ with unsettling honesty. you close the door gently before he can elaborate and walk around to the driverâs seat. the engine hums to life, and for a moment, thereâs only the sound of the air conditioning and jake shifting in the back.
as you pull out of the curb, jake lifts his head just enough to squint at the back of your seat. âyouâre drivingâ he says slowly, like heâs discovering something profound. âyesâ you reply evenly, keeping your eyes on the road. âthatâs suspiciousâ he continues, leaning his head back against the window. âhow is that suspicious?â you ask, unable to stop the small edge of amusement in your voice. âbecause you donât volunteerâ he says, his words slightly tangled but determined. âi didnât volunteerâ you correct him. âyou collapsed.â he makes a weak protest. âi did not collapseâ he insists. âyou were horizontalâ you reply. âthatâs⊠interpretiveâ he mutters, and then goes quiet again. you drive in silence for a few seconds before he speaks again, his voice softer but still muddled. âyou didnât drinkâ he says, almost accusingly. you glance at him through the rearview mirror and see him blinking slowly like heâs trying to focus on you. âi paced,â you answer. he shakes his head slightly, the movement uncoordinated. âand you drank enough for both of us.â he hums thoughtfully, then says, âthatâs efficientâ with misplaced approval. the streetlights pass in steady rhythm, illuminating his face in brief flashes, and you can see the shift happening slowly-less chaotic, more reflective. after a minute, his voice comes again, quieter and more deliberate. âyou donât trust meâ he says, and the tone makes your hands tighten slightly on the steering wheel. âthatâs not itâ you reply automatically. he shakes his head against the glass. âyou think iâm recklessâ he says, and though the words arenât slurred anymore, theyâre heavy. âi think you take risksâ you answer carefully. âthatâs not the same.â he exhales, long and unsteady. âyou think i donât careâ he continues. âi never said thatâ you tell him, but he responds immediately, âyou didâ and thereâs no humor in his voice now. the car feels smaller as he shifts upright, pushing himself forward slightly despite the way his balance wavers. âyou think i have it easyâ he says, and this time his words land cleanly. you hesitate before replying, âthatâs not what i meant.â he lets out a short laugh that sounds more tired than amused. âit always isâ he says. he rubs a hand over his face and stares at his knees. âyou think because i went to private school and because i donât panic before presentations that i donât tryâ he continues, and the vulnerability creeping into his voice makes your chest tighten. âi know you tryâ you say quietly. ânoâ he says, shaking his head. âyou know i win. thatâs different.â the road is almost empty now, and his voice steadies further as if the motion of the car is grounding him. âif iâm not good at this,â he says slowly, âthen what am i?â you glance back at him, startled by the honesty in the question. âyou are good at thisâ you tell him firmly. he swallows and looks out the window. âthatâs the problemâ he replies. âeveryone expects that.â he exhales shakily and continues, âmy parents expect it. my teachers expect it. everyone here expects it. if i drop, if i mess up, itâs not just a bad semester. itâs confirmation.â you donât interrupt him this time. he presses his fingers against his eyes like heâs trying to hold something back. âyou think i can afford to call out the university because i have optionsâ he says, his voice thinner now. âi donât. if i look difficult, if i lose ranking, it follows me. i donât get to just disappear.â you feel the guilt settle heavy in your stomach as he goes on. âi admire youâ he says suddenly, and the simplicity of it catches you off guard. âyou donât improvise. you donât gamble. you build everything carefully, like if you just work hard enough, nothing can surprise you.â
he lets out a breath that wavers halfway through. âyou scare meâ he admits, and you glance back at him again, stunned. âwhy?â you ask softly. he answers without hesitation. âbecause you deserve to be firstâ he says, and his voice cracks on the last word. âand if i beat you, it feels like i stole something.â the confession sits heavy in the car. he drags a hand down his face and laughs weakly at himself. âthis is stupidâ he says. âiâm drunk.â -âyouâre honestâ you correct him gently. he shakes his head again, and this time when he speaks, his voice wavers. âiâm tiredâ he says quietly. âiâm tired of being the one whoâs supposed to just be good at it.â thereâs a small pause, and then his breathing changes. he swipes at his face quickly, embarrassed, but you can see in the mirror that his eyes are wet. âyou donât get to fall apart when youâre the talented one,â he says, barely above a whisper. âyou just get better.â your throat tightens as you pull into the dorm parking lot.
sunghoon is already waiting near the entrance, hands in his pockets, watching your headlights approach. jake exhales shakily from the backseat. âi didnât want you to think i didnât careâ he says softly, his voice steadier now but fragile. âi donât think thatâ you reply, and this time you mean it completely. he looks at the back of your seat like heâs memorizing something and whispers, âi was happy when we got paired.â the words linger in the space between you. âi wanted to work with youâ he adds, and thereâs no competition in his voice anymore, just sincerity. you put the car in park and sit there for a moment, the engine still running. everything feels different now-quieter, heavier, real. âyou donât have it easyâ you say finally, turning slightly in your seat so he can see you. he blinks at you slowly, exhausted, and nods once like thatâs enough. when sunghoon opens the back door and carefully lifts him out, jake doesnât resist. as sunghoon takes his weight, jake glances at you one last time and murmurs, âyou work harder than anyoneâ before his head drops against sunghoonâs shoulder. you watch them disappear into the dorm building, the door closing softly behind them, and for the first time since freshman year, the rivalry doesnât feel like a war.
the next morning jake wakes up aware of two things at once: his head feels like itâs been hollowed out and replaced with concrete, and something about last night went wrong. he stares at the ceiling of the dorm room for a long moment before rolling onto his side and immediately regretting the movement. across the room, niki is already awake, sitting in the desk chair with one leg hooked over the armrest, watching him with poorly concealed amusement. âyou look tragicâ niki remarks casually, spinning the chair once before planting his feet on the ground. jake squints at him and mutters, âlower your voiceâ pressing the heel of his hand to his temple. from the bathroom doorway, sunghoon steps out holding a glass of water and says calmly, âdrink this before you attempt to standâ placing it into jakeâs hand without ceremony. jake takes it and downs half in one go before asking, with visible suspicion, âwhat happened?â niki leans forward, resting his elbows on his knees, and asks with a grin, âyou seriously donât remember?â jake frowns and shakes his head slightly before stopping himself because it hurts. âi remember the gameâ he says slowly. âi remember jay yelling. thatâs it.â sunghoon crosses his arms and replies in his usual measured tone, âyou didnât come back alone.â jakeâs stomach tightens. âwhat does that mean?â he asks carefully. niki answers first, unable to resist, saying, âit means jungwon called because you were barely functional.â jake blinks and asks, âwho drove me?â sunghoon answers evenly, âyour debate partner.â jake stares at him for a second before repeating, ây/n?â as if confirming something heâs not ready to process. sunghoon nods once. jake runs a hand through his hair and mutters, âthatâs not ideal.â he goes quiet for a moment, then looks up sharply and asks, âdid i do something?â the question comes out more urgent than he intended. âdid i hook up with someone?â niki laughs immediately and says, âthatâs your first assumption?â jake shoots him a look and says firmly, âanswer.â sunghoon responds first, shaking his head. âyou didnât,â he clarifies. jake exhales through his nose, some tension leaving him.
 but sunghoon continues after a brief pause, âbut you did cry.â the word hangs in the air. nikiâs grin drops for a second before he straightens and asks, âwait. actually?â sunghoon nods once and repeats calmly, âyes. in the car.â jake stares at him. ânoâ he says flatly. âi didnât.â sunghoon doesnât argue. he simply says, âjungwon said you were emotional. quiet, but emotional.â niki processes that for a second before letting out a surprised laugh. âyou cried in her car?â he repeats, now fully invested. jake presses his palms to his face and mutters, âstop talking.â niki stands up and walks closer, still grinning. âthis is hugeâ he says. âyou only cry during finals.â jake lowers his hands slowly. âwhat did i say?â he asks sunghoon, ignoring niki. sunghoon shrugs slightly and answers, âi donât know. i saw you crying in her car. thatâs it.â niki folds his arms and studies jake. âso you donât remember anything?â he asks, this time less teasing and more curious. jake shakes his head once, carefully. ânoâ he admits. âi remember getting into a car. thatâs it.â niki whistles softly and says, âthatâs worseâ before adding, âbecause now she knows whatever you said and you donât.â jake glares at him but doesnât deny it. he reaches for his phone with more hesitation than heâd like to show. he opens your chat and stares at your name for a long moment before typing,
jake: did i embarrass myself last night?
niki leans slightly over his shoulder and comments, âthatâs subtleâ and jake nudges him away without looking up, muttering, âback off.â he sends the message and waits, staring at the screen like it might offer him context. when your reply arrives Â
you: you were drunk.
jake exhales softly, but the neutrality unsettles him. he types back,
jake: thatâs not what i asked
and waits again.
across campus, youâre sitting at your desk, notes spread out in front of you, when your phone lights up. you know immediately what itâs about. you read his message and feel the memory of the car ride settle heavy in your chest - the way his voice cracked, the way he said he was tired of being expected to be better.
you: you didnât embarrass yourself
keeping the tone light and detached. on his side, jake reads the message twice before typing again,
jake: did i say anything weird?
he sends it quickly, like he doesnât want to overthink it. you stare at the screen for several seconds before answering. you donât want to humiliate him. you donât want to expose him.
you: you talked about rankings and stress.
thatâs true, just not complete. back in the dorm room, jake reads your response and feels some of the tension in his shoulders ease. stress. thatâs manageable. he types again
jake: i didnât insult you, did i?
you: no.
he nods faintly to himself. niki watches his expression carefully and asks, âwell?â jake locks his phone and replies evenly, âshe said i didnât embarrass myself.â niki raises an eyebrow and says, âthatâs suspiciously generousâ but jake ignores him. he picks up his phone one more time and types,
jake: can we finish the project the day after tomorrow? i feel like i got hit by a truck.
you: sure
jake: and thanks. for driving me.
you: sure, just donât mention it.
jake stares at that final reply for a moment before setting his phone down on the desk. the room falls quiet except for niki moving around behind him. jake leans back against the wall and closes his eyes briefly. he doesnât remember crying. he doesnât remember what he said. he doesnât know how much of himself he exposed. and the fact that you now hold that information - while he doesnât - sits heavier than the hangover pressing behind his eyes.
you consider that for a moment before saying carefully, âitâs structured well, but itâs risky.â sunoo looks at you and replies evenly, âitâs measured risk. thatâs different.â you fold your hands together on the table and say, âchallenging the dataset could imply bias within the department.â sunoo doesnât hesitate before asking, âdo you think heâs wrong?â you look down briefly before admitting, âno.â sunoo watches you closely and says, âthen whatâs the hesitation?â you glance at your notes and answer, âpresentation matters.â sunoo nods immediately and replies, âof course it does, but youâre good at that.â you look back up at him and say, âthat doesnât eliminate the risk.â sunoo gives you a small, knowing smile and says, âyouâre not afraid of risk. youâre afraid of looking reckless.â you donât deny it, and the silence that follows stretches just long enough to feel intentional. after a moment, sunoo raises his hand slightly as if outlining an argument. âoption oneâ he says, âyou present the data as given. safe. high marks. no friction.â you nod faintly. âoption twoâ he continues, âyou follow jakeâs structure, highlight the inconsistencies, and frame it as critical engagement.â you meet his eyes and say, âoption two could irritate the professor.â sunoo shrugs lightly and replies, âor it could impress him.â you sit back in your chair, considering that. sunoo leans forward slightly and says, âyou trust him academically.â you answer without hesitation, âyes.â sunoo nods once and says, âthen build on his framework. refine it. thatâs what youâre good at.â he pauses before adding quietly, âheâs not reckless.â you look at him sharply, and sunoo continues calmly, âhe thinks more than he shows.â you exhale slowly before nodding once. âokayâ you say. sunoo smiles faintly and asks, âokay?â you clarify, âiâll follow up with him. weâll use his structure, and iâll tighten the language.â sunoo closes his laptop and says lightly, âthat sounds suspiciously like collaboration.â you give him a look and reply, âdonât romanticize it.â sunoo laughs softly and says, âfine. efficiency.â as you gather your notes, he adds, âheâll appreciate that youâre backing his approach.â you pause briefly before answering evenly, âitâs not about appreciation. itâs about accuracy.â sunoo smiles in a way that suggests he doesnât entirely believe you but doesnât argue further.
after sunooâs motivational speech the walk to the study room feels strangely normal, which unsettles you more than if it had felt dramatic. students move through campus in steady streams, doors open and close, conversations overlap in the courtyard, and nothing reflects the quiet shift you feel internally. you push that thought aside as you enter the study building and walk down the narrow hallway toward the reserved room. the fluorescent lights hum faintly overhead, and the familiar scent of dry-erase markers lingers in the air. when you step inside, eunchae is already seated at the table with printed notes spread in front of her, and jungwon is standing near the whiteboard with a marker in his hand, staring at an unfinished outline. eunchae looks up first and says with a small smile, âyouâre earlyâ while jungwon glances at the wall clock and adds without turning fully toward you, âyouâre usually not this early unless somethingâs bothering you.â you place your bag on the chair and reply evenly, âi wanted to go over the dataset section againâ then slide into your seat and open your laptop. jungwon sets the marker down and walks over to the table, folding his arms lightly as he asks, âstill thinking about the imbalance jake pointed out?â you nod once and answer, âyes. the sample distribution doesnât align with the raw counts, and if we present it without addressing that, it weakens the entire argument.â eunchae leans forward slightly and says, âyesterday you sounded hesitant about pushing itâ and you glance briefly at her before clarifying, âi was hesitant about how it was framed, not about whether it was valid.â you scroll to the shared document and reread the section quietly for a moment before beginning to type. jungwon watches the screen and asks, âso what are you changing?â without looking up, you respond, âweâre not accusing anyone of bias. weâre identifying a methodological inconsistency and inviting clarification.â eunchae nods slowly and says, âthat sounds less confrontationalâ and you answer, âitâs not about confrontation. itâs about precision.â jungwon leans closer to the table and observes, âyouâre integrating the alternative distribution model he referencedâ and you confirm, âyes. it strengthens the critique without sounding defensive.â the room grows quieter as you restructure one of the central paragraphs, moving the statistical comparison earlier so the logic builds gradually. eunchae studies the screen and says thoughtfully, âthat reads strongerâ and jungwon adds, âit shows depth without implying misconduct.â you pause, reread the revised paragraph, and then say, âitâs defensible now.â jungwon looks at you carefully and asks, âyouâre comfortable standing behind that?â you meet his gaze and answer, âyes.â thereâs a brief pause before jungwon asks more carefully, âyou and jake didnât argue about this?â you close your laptop halfway and respond calmly, âwe didnât need to.â eunchae glances between the two of you and says quietly, âheâll probably appreciate that youâre not dismissing his pointâ and you reply, keeping your tone steady, âthis isnât about him. itâs about the integrity of the argument.â jungwon gives you a knowing look and says, âsureâ but doesnât press further. you reopen your laptop and read the section from top to bottom one final time before saying, âweâll present it like this.â jungwon nods once and says, âi agreeâ and eunchae follows with, âso do i.â you save the document without adding anything else. you didnât do this to surprise him. you didnât do it to prove anything. you did it because it was correct. as the three of you move on to the next portion of the project, discussing transitions and citation formatting, you realize something subtle but undeniable: choosing to stand beside his reasoning academically doesnât feel like losing ground. it actually feels like the right thing to do.
itâs the next day and you arrive at the study room before him, though not intentionally this time. the hallway smells faintly of dry-erase marker and overused carpet cleaner, and the fluorescent lights hum softly overhead. you set your laptop down and open the revised draft of the policy section, rereading the paragraph you integrated from his framework last night. the structure is solid. risky, but solid. you didnât misjudge him. you just didnât look closely enough. the door opens, and jake steps inside looking noticeably less polished than usual. his hair isnât styled with the same careless precision, and thereâs a slight stiffness in the way he moves, like every sound is sharper than it should be. he drops his bag into the chair across from you and says, âif you scheduled this early as revenge, i respect itâ rubbing a hand briefly over his face. âitâs tenâ you reply calmly, closing the document tab and turning your screen slightly toward him. âthatâs not early.â- âfor someone who feels like they swallowed broken glass, it isâ he mutters, lowering himself into the chair with exaggerated care. you study him for half a second longer than usual before asking, âitâs been two days, did you at least drink water?â he blinks at you, mildly surprised. âthatâs unexpectedly considerate.â - âanswer the questionâ you say, though thereâs less bite behind it. âyesâ he replies, leaning back slightly. âniki forced electrolytes on me like i was a dying victorian child.â you almost smile. âgood.â thereâs a small pause while he opens his laptop. his eyes flick toward you, searching your expression in a way that feels different now that you know what you know. he doesnât remember the car ride. he doesnât remember admitting he was tired. he doesnât remember saying he was happy to work with you. âdid i make a complete idiot of myself?â he asks finally, keeping his tone light but not quite meeting your eyes. ânoâ you answer evenly, and this time itâs fully true. he studies you for a second, as if testing for sarcasm. âthat sounded suspiciously sincere.â - âit wasâ you reply, folding your hands neatly on the table. âyou were drunk. not reckless.â something in his posture shifts slightly at that word. he exhales through his nose and nods once. âthatâs⊠reassuring.â you open the shared document and scroll to the revised methodology section. âi restructured the critiqueâ you say, turning the screen toward him. âi kept your comparative distribution model but moved it earlier so the logic builds before the challenge.â he leans forward to read, closer than necessary, his shoulder nearly brushing yours. âyou integrated it cleanlyâ he says after a moment, scrolling carefully. âyou softened the phrasing.â-âitâs not softenedâ you correct gently. âitâs precise.â he glances at you. âyouâre backing it.â- âyesâ you say simply. he watches you more carefully now. âthatâs risky.â - âitâs defensibleâ you reply. âyou werenât wrong.â the silence that follows is different from your usual standoffs. thereâs no edge to it. no competition. just acknowledgment.
he sits back slightly and tilts his head. âyouâre being unusually agreeable today.â - âiâm being efficientâ you answer, echoing his earlier phrasing deliberately. his mouth curves faintly. âthatâs my line.â- âyou donât own efficiency.â-âdebatableâ he says lightly, though thereâs less challenge in it than usual. you notice heâs still pale around the edges, the fatigue not fully masked. he reaches for his water bottle and winces almost imperceptibly at the movement. âyou donât have to pretend youâre fineâ you say before thinking it through. he pauses, bottle halfway to his mouth. âiâm not pretending.â-âyou are a littleâ you reply quietly. he studies you for a second longer than comfortable. âyouâre observing a lot today.â-âi always observeâ you say. âyeahâ he says, and this time thereâs no teasing in it. âyou do.â he looks back at the document, scrolling slowly. âiâm glad you adjusted itâ he adds after a moment. âi thought you might scrap the whole critique.â-âi considered itâ you admit. âbut the inconsistency is measurable.â-âthatâs not what i meantâ he says softly. you meet his gaze. he doesnât elaborate. instead, he shifts back into familiar territory. âif this tanks our evaluation, iâm blaming you publiclyâ he says with mock  seriousness. âyou can tryâ you reply evenly. âiâll bring charts.â he laughs quietly at that, the sound easier than yesterday but still tired around the edges. âyouâre terrifying.â - âiâve heard that beforeâ you say. âyeahâ he answers, closing his laptop for a moment and leaning back. âyou have.â thereâs something in the way he says it that feels layered, but you donât press. not today. for the rest of the session, you work without arguing. you refine phrasing. he challenges a statistic once, and instead of snapping back, you explain your reasoning fully. he nods and accepts it. when he suggests adjusting a conclusion line, you consider it instead of rejecting it immediately. when you both finally pack up, he hesitates before slinging his bag over his shoulder. âthanksâ he says casually, though his eyes hold yours for a beat longer than the word requires. âfor what?â you ask. âfor not letting me completely self-destruct after the partyâ he replies, attempting a smirk that doesnât quite land. âyou didnâtâ you say calmly. âself-destruct, i mean.â he studies your face one last time, like heâs trying to decide whether to ask something else. then he nods once. âsee you tomorrow.â- âdonât be lateâ you say automatically. he almost smiles. âiâm never late.â this time, it doesnât sound like a challenge. it sounds like a promise.
the noise fades slightly as he pushes open the bathroom door and steps inside, bracing his hands briefly against the sink as if steadying something internal rather than physical. a second later, the door swings open again. jake doesnât look up at the mirror when he says, âyouâre predictable.â niki locks the door behind him and leans against it, folding his arms. âyou left mid-conversationâ he replies lightly. âthatâs suspicious.â jake turns on the faucet, letting the water run longer than necessary before splashing some onto his face. âitâs loud out there.â- âitâs always loudâ niki says calmly. âyou donât usually retreat.â jake shuts off the water and looks at his reflection instead of at niki. his expression is composed, but the crease between his brows hasnât fully disappeared since this morning. âyouâre reading into nothing.â-âiâm not readingâ niki replies. âi hate reading.â jake lets out a short breath that almost sounds like a laugh. âyouâre insufferable.â-âand youâre distractedâ niki counters easily. jake finally turns around, leaning back against the counter and crossing his arms. âiâm not distracted.â-âyouâre staringâ niki says, not unkindly. âand you donât stare at people unless youâre trying to solve something.â jake hesitates for half a second before responding, âsheâs acting different.â nikiâs expression shifts slightly-not surprised, just interested. âdifferent how?â jake looks back at the mirror briefly, as if checking the answer there. âquieterâ he says slowly. ânot quieter in general. just with me.â niki waits. âsheâs not snapping back as fastâ jake continues, running a hand through his hair. âsheâs⊠softer. but not weak. just-â he exhales, frustrated with his own phrasing. âless defensive.â-âand thatâs bothering you?â niki asks. jake frowns faintly. âitâs confusing me.â niki pushes off the door and steps closer, lowering his voice slightly even though theyâre alone. âmaybe sheâs just comfortable.â jake shakes his head immediately. âno. she doesnât get comfortable.â -âthatâs dramaticâ niki says. âyou know what i meanâ jake insists, jaw tightening slightly. âsheâs always braced. even when sheâs calm sheâs braced. today sheâs not.â niki studies him carefully. âyouâre very observant for someone who claims heâs not staring.â jake ignores that. âi donât know what changed.â niki tilts his head. âmaybe you did.â jake lets out a quiet scoff. âi didnât.â -âdidnât what?â niki presses. âdo anythingâ jake replies quickly. âi mean-i was drunk. but she said i didnât embarrass myself.â niki watches him carefully at that. âyou trust that?â-âyesâ jake says without hesitation. âinterestingâ niki murmurs. jake straightens slightly. âwhat is that supposed to mean?â -âit meansâ niki replies evenly, âthat if she says you didnât embarrass yourself, then you probably didnât.â-âthatâs not helpfulâ jake mutters. niki shrugs lightly. âyouâre not upset that sheâs softer. youâre unsettled because you donât know why.â
jake doesnât answer immediately. niki continues, âyou like predictability. especially with her. you know how she reacts. you know the rhythm.â jake looks at him sharply. âi donât care about rhythm.â- âyou absolutely doâ niki replies. âyou debate like itâs choreography.â jake exhales slowly and rubs the back of his neck. âitâs just-â he stops, searching for a word that doesnât feel too revealing. âwhen sheâs competitive, i know where i stand.â - âand now?â niki asks. jake looks down at the tile floor for a second before answering, ânow i donât.â the silence that follows is not heavy. itâs thoughtful. niki studies him with a familiarity that borders on surgical precision. âyouâre not confused about herâ he says quietly. âyouâre confused about yourself.â jake immediately shakes his head. âdonât start.â - âiâm not starting anythingâ niki replies calmly. âiâm just saying- you donât look at people like that unless something shifted.â jakeâs jaw tightens. ânothing shifted.â niki raises an eyebrow. âthen why did you leave the table?â jake doesnât respond right away. he looks at the mirror again, at the faint flush still lingering from earlier embarrassment, at the way his expression is slightly less controlled than usual. âshe was laughingâ he says finally, quieter. niki blinks. âokay?â - âshe doesnât laugh with meâ jake continues, almost to himself. ânot like that.â -âand you wanted her to?â niki asks gently. jake hesitates. thatâs the first real crack. âi donât knowâ he admits. nikiâs expression softens just slightly. âyouâre in troubleâ he says, though thereâs no mockery in it this time. jake rolls his eyes automatically. âshut up.â-âi didnât say anything dramaticâ niki replies. âiâm just making a note.â jake pushes off the counter and moves toward the door. âdonât.â-âdonât what?â niki asks. âturn this into somethingâ jake says firmly. niki opens the door and steps aside to let him pass. âi donât have toâ he says quietly. âyouâre doing that on your own.â
when jake and niki return, the conversation has split into two clusters. jungwon is sketching something on a napkin while explaining a policy framework to heeseung and jay, and at the other end of the table, sunghoon has shifted into the seat beside you while youâre mid-sentence. you donât seem to notice the change in proximity. jake does. sunghoon is leaning slightly toward you, one arm resting casually along the back of your chair as you explain something about the faculty panel timeline. âif we anticipate the critique angleâ youâre saying calmly, tracing an invisible outline on the table, âwe can preempt the statistical pushback before they even raise it.â sunghoon nods once and replies, âthatâs efficient.â - âitâs actually very strategicâ you correct automatically, though thereâs a faint smile in your voice. jake stops just short of his chair. itâs subtle -the pause. barely a second. then he pulls the chair out a little harder than necessary and sits down. niki notices. jake leans back, posture loose, expression neutral. he doesnât interrupt. he doesnât insert himself into the conversation. he just listens. but his gaze keeps flicking toward sunghoonâs arm. sunghoon laughs quietly at something you add and says, âyou think three steps ahead. thatâs terrifying.â- âyeah, sheâs always terrifyingâ jake says lightly from across the table. you glance at him. sunghoon glances at him too. it all feels a bit awkward but jake smiles, easy and controlled. niki watches the exact way jakeâs fingers tighten briefly around his cup. sunghoon shifts slightly closer without realizing it, lowering his voice as he asks you, âare you nervous at all?â-ânoâ you reply. âi donât get nervous.â jakeâs jaw tightens almost imperceptibly. niki leans closer to him and murmurs under his breath, âyou look thrilled.â jake doesnât look at him. âi amâ he replies evenly. âyour eye just twitchedâ niki says mildly. -âit did not.â -niki takes a slow sip of his drink, still watching. âwow, you already hate when someone else gets her attention.â jake finally turns his head slightly. âthatâs not what this is.â-âthen what is it?â niki asks quietly. jake looks back across the table just in time to see sunghoon brush a crumb off your sleeve with absent ease. his grip tightens again. niki hums softly. âthere it is.â jake exhales slowly through his nose. âheâs not-â he stops himself. ânot what?â niki prompts, almost pleasantly. jake shakes his head once. âitâs nothing.â niki smiles faintly. âsure.â across the table, you laugh again -softer this time -and jakeâs gaze drops to the table like heâs recalibrating something internally.
the dorm room smells faintly like instant ramen and laundry detergent that promises too much. jake falls down on the edge of his bed, elbows resting on his knees, phone facedown beside him like it personally offended him. niki is sprawled across the desk chair backward, arms folded over the backrest, while sunghoon leans against the wall near the window, quiet but very clearly listening. jake exhales slowly and says, âiâm not spiraling.â niki raises one eyebrow. âyou said that unprompted.â sunghoon glances between them. âspiraling about what?â jake drags a hand down his face. ânothing.â- âthatâs not how this worksâ niki replies calmly. âyou donât get to call a team meeting and then say ânothing.ââ -âi didnât call a team meetingâ jake mutters. âyou walked into the room, sat down dramatically, and sighed like a widowâ niki corrects. âthat counts.â sunghoon suppresses a faint smile. âwhat happened?â jake leans back slightly, staring at the ceiling like the answer might be written there. ây/nâs different.â sunghoon tilts his head. âdifferent how?â jake hesitates before answering. âsheâs not trying to kill me lately.â niki nods slowly. âtragic.â- âiâm seriousâ jake insists, dropping his gaze back to them. âsheâs⊠nicer. not obvious. just-quieter. softer. itâs weird.â sunghoon crosses his arms. âthat doesnât sound bad.â-âitâs confusingâ jake replies immediately. niki watches him carefully. âyou prefer when sheâs sharpening knives?â
---btw go stream enhypenâs âknifeâ---
âat least then i know whatâs happeningâ jake says. âthereâs structure.â sunghoon blinks once. âyou want hostility because itâs predictable.â-âi want consistencyâ jake corrects. niki snorts softly. âyouâre upset because she adjusted her tone.â-âiâm not upsetâ jake says quickly. âi just think iâm overreacting.â-âoverreacting to what?â sunghoon asks evenly. jake hesitates again. âtoday she was explaining the panel strategy to youâ he says, nodding vaguely in sunghoonâs direction. âshe doesnât explain things to me like that.â sunghoon frowns faintly. âyou interrupt her.â-âthatâs not the point.â-âit might beâ niki says. jake ignores him. âit was just⊠easy. she was laughing. relaxed. she doesnât do that with me.â niki studies him for a second longer than comfortable. âyouâre jealous.â jakeâs head snaps toward him. âno.â-âyou areâ niki repeats calmly. âiâm not jealousâ jake says firmly. âit was one conversation.â sunghoon shifts slightly, thoughtful. âyou paused when you saw me sitting next to her.â jake looks at him like heâs been personally betrayed. âyou noticed that?â sunghoon shrugs lightly. âyouâre not subtle.â-âi am extremely subtleâ jake protests. niki lets out a quiet laugh. âyou gripped your cup like it owed you money.â jake groans and drops his head briefly into his hands. âthis is ridiculous.â sunghoonâs voice softens slightly. âyouâve been off since the party.â jake freezes for half a second. niki doesnât look away from him. âthat has nothing to do with thisâ jake says too quickly. âdoesnât it?â niki asks. jake straightens slightly. âi was drunk. i cried. itâs humiliating. thatâs all.â sunghoonâs expression doesnât change. âyou donât cry.â-âapparently i doâ jake mutters. niki tilts his head. âyou also donât usually let her drive you home.â jake glares at him. âi wasnât conscious enough to veto that.â-âthatâs not what i meantâ niki replies evenly. the room grows quieter. sunghoon pushes off the wall and sits down on the edge of his own bed, elbows resting on his thighs. âyou said you were happy you got pairedâ he says carefully. jake looks at him sharply. âhow do you-â -âyou told me, also you talk when youâre drunkâ niki cuts in. jake stares at him. âwhat exactly did i say?â niki shrugs lightly. âenough.â jake exhales slowly, tension settling across his shoulders. âthatâs not romanticâ he says defensively. âi respect her. thatâs it.â - âno one said romanticâ sunghoon replies calmly. jake looks between them. âyouâre both implying it.â -âweâre implying youâre reactingâ niki corrects. jake leans back again, staring at the ceiling. âshe was just nice. one time. thatâs probably it. iâm overanalyzing because itâs different.â sunghoon considers that. âorâ he says quietly, âyouâre not used to her seeing you.â jakeâs eyes flick back to him. âsheâs always seen me.â -ânot like thatâ niki says.
jake swallows once. âlike what?â-âlike youâre humanâ sunghoon answers simply. that lands harder than the teasing did. jake looks away first. âi donât need her to see meâ he says after a moment, though it sounds less certain than he intends. niki leans back in the chair again. âyou absolutely do.â jake exhales sharply. âyouâre both insufferable.â sunghoon shrugs faintly. âyouâre the one whoâs bothered.â-âiâm not botheredâ jake insists. niki smirks slightly. âyouâre threatened by kindness.â -âthatâs not-â jake stops, frustrated. âshe changed the rhythm.â sunghoon blinks. âyou keep using that word.â -âbecause it fitsâ jake snaps lightly. âwhen she argues, i know where to stand. when sheâs calm, i donât.â niki watches him closely. âso figure it out.â jake shakes his head. âitâs not that simple.â-âwhy?â sunghoon asks. jake hesitates. because if sheâs not fighting him-then maybe sheâs not just competing. and thatâs harder to navigate. he rubs a hand over the back of his neck and mutters, âi think i just donât like not knowing where i stand.â nikiâs teasing expression softens slightly. âyou could ask.â jake lets out a short laugh. âand say what? âhi, are you being emotionally strategic or is this genuine?ââ sunghoon smiles faintly. âyouâd phrase it worse.â jake throws a pillow in his direction without real force. âshut up.â niki stands up finally, stretching slightly. âyouâre not overreactingâ he says more quietly now. âyouâre just not in control.â jake looks at him sharply. âthatâs new for youâ niki adds. jake doesnât answer. because that part might be true. the room settles into silence, not uncomfortable, just thoughtful. after a moment, jake mutters, âif this turns into something dramatic, iâm blaming both of you.â niki grins. âitâs already dramatic for you.â
professor kimâs office smells faintly like paper and burnt coffee, the kind thatâs been reheated twice and forgotten on a desk stacked with journals. the walls are lined with framed policy certificates and annotated newspaper clippings, and the bookshelf behind him looks aggressively intellectual. you sit upright in one of the narrow chairs across from his desk, notebook already open on your lap. jake sits beside you, relaxed in posture but noticeably alert in the way his fingers rest lightly against his knee. professor kim adjusts his glasses and looks between the two of you before saying, âso. how is my top-ranked rivalry experiment functioning under forced collaboration?â you answer first, because you always do. âefficientlyâ you reply evenly, folding your hands over your notebook. âweâve refined the methodological critique and adjusted the distribution model to frame it as analytical rather than accusatory.â professor kim nods slowly. âand that was mutual agreement?â -âyesâ you say without hesitation. jake glances at you briefly, then adds, âwe disagree loudly but productively.â professor kim smiles faintly at that. âi expected nothing less.â he leans back slightly in his chair and studies you both. âany major friction?â you consider the question carefully before answering. ânot beyond normal structural debate.â jake tilts his head slightly at your phrasing but doesnât interrupt. professor kim looks toward him now. âand you? how do you feel about the direction?â jake shrugs lightly. âitâs solidâ he says. âshe integrated the critique cleanly.â you glance at him for half a second, surprised at the phrasing. professor kim nods again. âiâve skimmed your shared draft. itâs ambitious.â- âweâre awareâ you reply. âiâd hope soâ he says dryly. âambition without awareness is how departments implode.â
thereâs a small pause while he flips through a printed version of your outline. âthis comparative distribution sectionâ he says, tapping the paper lightly. âwhose initiative?â you open your mouth to answer, but you stop. instead, you say calmly, âjake.., jake mapped the initial inconsistency.â jakeâs head turns toward you immediately. professor kim looks at him with renewed interest. âyou did?â jake hesitates for the briefest fraction of a second before nodding. âyes. the sample allocation didnât align with the raw demographic breakdown.â professor kim hums thoughtfully. âand youâ he says, turning back to you, âchose to support it.â-âyesâ you answer. âthe critique strengthens the argument.â jake is still looking at you. professor kim sets the paper down and folds his hands. âthatâs good leadershipâ he says, directing the comment at you. âbacking your partnerâs risk when itâs substantiated.â jake blinks. you remain composed. âitâs not about backing him. itâs about accuracy.â professor kim smiles faintly. âaccuracy is rarely neutral.â jakeâs jaw tightens almost imperceptibly. professor kim continues, âhave there been any concerns about workload distribution?â you shake your head slightly. âno. jake has been doing great.â the words leave your mouth calmly. directly. jake freezes.professor kim nods approvingly. âthatâs what i like to hear.â jakeâs expression shifts from confusion to something sharper, something that doesnât quite have a name yet. he clears his throat lightly and says, âiâve been doing whatâs necessary.â professor kim raises one eyebrow. âshe said youâre doing great.â jake glances at you again. you donât react. you simply say, âheâs thorough.â jake straightens slightly in his chair. âsheâs the one who restructures everythingâ he says quickly. âi just point things out.â professor kim looks between you both. âthat sounds like division of strengths.â jake nods once. âright. but iâve handled the bulk of the statistical comparison.â you blink at him. professor kim glances at the document again. âjoint authorshipâ he says mildly. âyesâ you reply calmly. jake shifts slightly in his seat. âi mean, she polished it. but the framework-â - âwas yoursâ you finish for him, tone neutral. he looks at you again. professor kim studies the shift in tone with mild amusement. âare we competing in my office?â -ânoâ you answer immediately. jake says at the same time, ânot exactly.â professor kim leans back again, clearly entertained now. âi do enjoy watching this.â jake exhales lightly and runs a hand through his hair. âweâre alignedâ he says. âmostly.â-âmostly?â professor kim echoes. jake glances at you. âshe overprepares.â you raise one eyebrow. âyou understate.â professor kim laughs quietly. âthere it is.â jake shifts again. âiâm just saying, if weâre discussing contributions, itâs not one-sided.â -âno one said thatâ you say confused.
he studies your face carefully, as if looking for something beneath the calm surface. professor kim taps his pen lightly against the desk. âjake.â jake looks up. âwhy are you defensive?â the professor asks casually. jake blinks. âiâm not.â -âyou are slightlyâ professor kim replies. jake straightens. âi just donât want her carrying the narrative that i needed support.â the room goes still for half a second. you look at him fully now. professor kim tilts his head slightly. âno one said that.â jake exhales slowly. âright.â you speak before the silence stretches too long. âyou didnât need supportâ you say calmly. âyou identified the inconsistency before i did.â jakeâs gaze snaps back to you. professor kim looks pleased. âthatâs collaboration.â jakeâs expression softens for a split second-then something else replaces it. he leans forward slightly and says, âbut she adjusted the conclusion angle before i wouldâve.â you blink. professor kim blinks. jake continues, âi wouldâve been more direct.â -âyesâ you reply slowly. âyou would have.â professor kim looks between you both. âis this about tone?â jake nods. âit matters.â you tilt your head slightly. âyouâre arguing with praise.â-âiâm notâ he says quickly. âi just think-â-âyou think what?â professor kim prompts. jake pauses. you watch him carefully. he frowns slightly and says, âif sheâs telling you iâve been doing great, i want it to be precise.â professor kim looks genuinely amused now. âyouâre objecting to positive feedback?â jake rubs the back of his neck. âi donât like vague metrics.â you stare at him. professor kim laughs outright this time. âyou two are impossible.â jake leans back again, posture stiffening slightly. âiâm not competing.â-âyou areâ you say gently. he looks at you sharply. kim sets his pen down. âlet me clarify somethingâ he says calmly. âif either of you underperforms, i will know. if either of you excels, i will also know. i do not require inter-office self-sabotage.â jake blinks. âiâm not sabotagingâ he says quickly. âyou are arguing against being complimentedâ professor kim replies. jake looks at you again. you are watching him with an expression he canât quite read.not amused.not irritated. just⊠concerned. professor kim folds his hands again. âjake.â jake straightens slightly. âyou are ranked first for a reasonâ the professor says calmly. âbut rankings are not personality traits.â jakeâs jaw tightens faintly. âandâ professor kim continues, âneither is composure.â the air in the room shifts subtly. you glance at jake again. he doesnât look at you this time. instead, he nods once and says, âunderstood.â professor kimâs tone lightens slightly. âgood. now, are we done subtly fencing with each other, or would you like to duel in the hallway?â you almost smile. jake huffs out a quiet laugh despite himself. âweâre done.â- âfor todayâ you add. professor kim looks pleased. âthatâs the spirit.â the meeting shifts back into structured discussion after that, but the energy has changed. jake speaks slightly more than usual. he corrects one minor statistical phrasing that doesnât actually need correcting. he clarifies a citation you had already cited. itâs not aggressive. itâs just⊠awkwardly competitive. professor kim notices. so do you.
and when the meeting finally ends and you both step out into the hallway, the door clicking shut behind you-jake exhales sharply like heâs just run a mile. you turn toward him and say calmly, âwhat was that?â he frowns. âwhat was what?â -âyou arguing against your own praiseâ you reply. he looks away briefly. âi wasnât arguing.â -âyou wereâ you say. he sighs. âi just donât like it when things sound unearned.â you study him carefully. âit wasnât unearnedâ you say quietly. he doesnât answer immediately. he nods once, but he doesnât look convinced. âit sounded like you were compensating.â the words hang there. you straighten slightly. âcompensating?â - âfor-â he gestures vaguely between the two of you. âfor the other night.â you stare at him. âfor driving meâ he clarifies quickly. âfor-whatever i said.â your expression cools almost imperceptibly. âyou think i praised you out of pity.â he winces faintly. âi didnât say that.â he exhales again, frustrated. âi just donât want you adjusting your tone because i had one bad night.â-âone bad nightâ you repeat slowly. he nods. âi donât need that.â you study him carefully now. âyou think i changed how i work with you because you cried in my car.â his jaw tightens. âyou donât have to say it like that.â-âthatâs what happenedâ you reply evenly. he looks away again. thereâs a small pause, then you say quietly, âi didnât praise you because of that.â he doesnât respond immediately. âyou identified the inconsistencyâ you continue. âyou mapped the comparison model. thatâs not charity.â he shifts his weight from one foot to the other, clearly unsettled. âit just felt⊠different.â-âdifferent how?â you ask. âyouâre not usually thatâŠâ he hesitates, searching for a word that wonât make this worse. âpublic about it.â-âiâm not usually asked directlyâ you reply. he nods slightly, but the tension doesnât leave his shoulders. âstill.â -âstill what?â he looks at you finally, and thereâs something raw there -not dramatic, just unsteady. âyou donât have to soften things.â your expression changes at that. âyou think that was soft?â -âit sounded-â he stops himself again. âit sounded careful.â-âi am always carefulâ you say. ânot like thatâ he replies. thereâs a beat of silence.
then you fold your arms lightly. âyouâre upset because i supported you.â-âiâm not upsetâ he insists. âyou are.â he lets out a breath that almost turns into a laugh. âthis is exactly what i mean.â -âwhat do you mean?â-âyouâre dissecting this like itâs a policy flawâ he says. âand youâre reacting like i insulted youâ you counter. he rubs his temple briefly. âi just donât want you treating me differently.â-âiâm notâ you say. âyou areâ he replies immediately. you stare at him for a second longer than necessary. âyouâre the one acting differently.â he opens his mouth to argue, then closes it. because that part is harder to deny. you adjust your bag again and say, âif youâd prefer i withhold credit next time, i can.â his head snaps toward you. âthatâs not what i said.â-âit basically isâ you reply, your voice still controlled but noticeably cooler now. he shakes his head quickly. âno. i just-â he exhales sharply. âforget it.â you watch him carefully. âno. finish the sentence.â he hesitates. then, quieter, he says, âi donât want you feeling responsible for me.â the hallway feels smaller. âi donâtâ you reply. âyou drove me homeâ he says. âbecause jungwon asked me to.â -âyou stayedâ he continues. ânot because of you?â you answer. he swallows once. âyou listened.â you donât deny that. âi donât need you adjusting your behavior because of thatâ he says. your jaw tightens slightly. âyou think iâm adjusting?â- âyes.â-âthen maybe youâre misreading it.â he looks at you sharply. âi supported your argument because it was strongâ you continue. ânot because i felt sorry for you.â -âi didnât say you felt sorry for meâ he mutters. âyou didnât have to.â he exhales slowly, clearly realizing this isnât going the way he intended. âiâm not good at thisâ he says finally. âat what?â you ask. he gestures vaguely again. âthis,â you wait. ânot knowing where i standâ he finishes. the honesty catches you slightly off guard. âyou stand where you always haveâ you reply. âfirst?â he asks lightly, though it doesnât quite sound like a joke. you donât smile, and youâre so confused with what heâs saying. âno, as my partner.â, you say. he blinks. the word hangs heavier than it should.
he shifts again, clearly thrown off balance now. âright.â thereâs an awkward pause. students pass at the end of the hallway, voices echoing faintly, but the space between you feels strangely insulated. he clears his throat. âi have to-â he gestures vaguely toward the stairwell. âi need to grab something from the dorm.â you look at him. âwe were going to review the data update.â- âiâll send comments laterâ he replies quickly. you stare at him for half a second longer. âyouâre so weird.â- âiâm notâ he says and gives you a tight, almost apologetic half-smile. âi just donât want to work right now.â for a moment, it looks like he might stay. then he takes a step backward instead. âiâll text youâ he says, already retreating. you watch him go. he walks down the hallway too quickly to look casual, one hand pushing open the stairwell door with more force than necessary. the door swings shut behind him with a dull echo. you remain standing there for a few seconds. then you exhale slowly. âunbelievableâ you mutter under your breath. maybe heâs right, maybe you do pity him. and somehow, that had turned into something fragile. you adjust your bag on your shoulder and start walking in the opposite direction, irritation simmering just beneath your calm exterior. if he wanted competition, you could give him that, but after the drive it would just feel wrong. youâre already pulling your phone out of your bag as you head toward the library. thereâs no message from him, which you expected, and that annoys you more than if there had been something awkward waiting on the screen. you lock your phone and sit down at a table without hesitating, opening the shared document and scrolling straight to the risk section. you make three edits before your phone buzzes.
jake: iâll review tonight.
you: send comments before midnight. iâm finalizing tomorrow morning. okay.
thatâs it. no explanation. no acknowledgment of the hallway. just logistics. you work for another twenty minutes before another notification appears.
jake: you moved the risk paragraph?
you: yes. it reads stronger after the comparative section.
jake: it sounds like weâre accusing them.
you: we are.
jake: thatâs not subtle.
you: subtlety created the inconsistency.
jake: youâre pushing harder than yesterday.
you: iâm being precise.
jake: whatever
the next morning he walks into the study room exactly on time, and when he sets his bag down beside the chair he says, âmorningâ in a tone that is neutral enough to pass for casual. without looking up from your notebook, you answer, âmorningâ keeping your voice even as you continue scanning the page. he sits across from you and opens his laptop, then glances at you briefly before saying, âi left comments on the framingâ as though announcing something procedural rather than provocative. you nod once and reply, âi sawâ still not lifting your eyes. his fingers hover over the keyboard before he adds, âyou didnât change themâ and you respond, âthey didnât need changingâ in the same steady cadence. leaning back slightly, he studies you and says, âitâs aggressiveâ to which you reply, âno jake, itâs accurateâ finally meeting his gaze. he watches you for a second longer and remarks, âyouâre back to stabbingâ and you answer evenly, âyou apparently prefer that.â a faint, humorless curve touches his mouth as he says, âitâs familiarâ and you conclude, âthen weâre aligned.â he exhales softly and shifts in his seat before saying, âyou donât have to swing that farâ and you counter, âiâm not swinging.â he tilts his head and insists, âyou areâ then adds, âyesterday you were⊠differentâ his pause deliberate. you close your laptop slowly before saying, âand you just leftâ and he responds, âi needed spaceâ while holding your gaze. âyou walked awayâ you reply, your tone precise, and he looks at you directly now as he says, âyou were looking at me like iâd cracked.â you remain calm as you answer, âyou were talking nonsenseâ then clarify, ânot in a bad way.â his jaw tightens before he says, âi donât need you adjusting because of one bad nightâ and you respond, âiâm not adjusting.â he leans forward slightly and says, âyou were softerâ and you reply, âand now iâm notâ before adding, âproblem solved.â frustration flickers across his face as he says, âthatâs not what i meantâ and you answer, âthen clarifyâ but he doesnât. instead, he looks down at his screen and says, âletâs just focus on the data.â- âagreedâ you reply, reopening your laptop.
you work in silence for several minutes, the only sound the steady rhythm of typing, until he finally says without looking up, âyou donât have to pretend it didnât matterâ his voice quieter now. you glance at him and ask, âpretend what didnât matter?â and he answers, âthe night.â you study him briefly before saying, âyou donât even remember itâ and he replies, âi remember enough.â tilting your head slightly, you ask, âdo you?â and after a pause he admits, âi remember feeling stupid.â- âyou werenâtâ you say, and when he looks at you more sharply, he mutters, âstop looking at me like that.â you hold his gaze and ask, âlike what?â and he answers, âlike youâve decided something.â- âi haveâ you say, watching him go still before he asks, âand?â you donât hesitate as you tell him, âyouâre not effortlessâ then add, âyouâre just controlled. like me.â he blinks once and says, âthatâs worseâ a brief silence stretches between you before he says quietly, âyou donât pity meâ and you answer, âno.â he searches your face and asks, âyouâre sureâ and you reply, âyes.â he nods once and says, âthatâs inconvenientâ and although you almost smile, you donât. instead, you reopen your laptop and say, âwe still need to finalize the funding implicationsâ and he nods, returning to his typing as the air between you shifts into something unsettled but no longer hostile. after a while, he breaks the silence again by saying, âyou donât have to go back to competing just because i made it weirdâ and you look up at him before replying, âiâm not competing.â he studies you and insists, âyou areâ and you counter, âiâm working.â his eyes narrow slightly as he says, âyouâre punishing meâ and you ask, âfor what?â he holds your gaze and answers, âfor walking awayâ and you respond evenly, âif i wanted to punish you, youâd know.â he huffs out a quiet breath that almost sounds like a laugh and says, âthatâs reassuringâ and you reply, âi promise.â another stretch of silence follows before he says more quietly, âi didnât think youâd⊠back me like thatâ and you ask, âin the meeting?â he nods and says, âyeahâ and you answer simply, âyou were right.â he shakes his head slightly and says, âthatâs not whyâ and when you remain silent, waiting, he murmurs, âforget it.â -ânoâ you say firmly, adding, âfinishâ and after hesitating he admits, âit didnât feel strategic.â -âit wasnâtâ you reply, and he looks at you carefully before asking, âthen what was it?â you pause before answering, âit was fairâ and he holds your gaze a second too long before looking away first. the rest of the session remains steady but tense, and when you finally pack up your things, you notice him watching you as he asks, âyouâre not going to say it?â adjusting the strap of your bag, you reply, âsay what?â and he says, âthat youâre still annoyed.â you adjust your bag more firmly on your shoulder and say, âyouâre weirdâ and he responds, âiâm not.â -âyou areâ you insist, and he gives you that tight half-smile before saying, âi just donât feel like working anymore.â you shake your head slightly and tell him, âthatâs not what this isâ and he asks, âthen what is it?â after a brief pause, you answer, âyou donât like not knowing where you standâ and he goes quiet. you hold his gaze and add, âand i donât like being misunderstoodâ and he looks like he might say something else. instead, he nods once and says, âiâll send the revised funding draft tonight.â -âiâll review itâ you reply, and this time you walk out first.
the ranking board goes up at 9:03 a.m., not 9:00 and not 9:05 but 9:03, as if the department enjoys suspense, and by 9:04 the hallway outside the faculty office is packed with bodies pressing forward in anticipation. you did not plan to come this early and you definitely did not plan to stand this close to the board, but eunchae dragged you here under the excuse of âemotional supportâ and now you are wedged between jungwon and chaewon while jay stretches on his toes trying to see over everyoneâs shoulders. from somewhere behind you, sunoo complains, âmove. i canât breathe and i refuse to faint before seeing my academic downfallâ and kazuha answers calmly, âitâs alphabetical. no one is faintingâ while niki mutters, âspeak for yourself.â you do not speak. you do not breathe. you just scan, your eyes moving automatically to the top where the numbers settle into focus.
rank 1: l/n y/n - 4.98.
for half a second your brain refuses to process it, and then eunchae grabs your arm and says, âyou moved upâ already grinning as you blink and reply, âby one decimal.â chaewon leans closer to the board and says, âthatâs not the point. you moved upâ and somewhere behind you jay whistles and adds, âof course she did. unreal.â you do not look at them. you look down one line instead.
rank 2: sim jaeyun - 4.97.
your stomach tightens in a way that feels strangely wrong because he dropped, not dramatically and not catastrophically but by one decimal, and it is enough. âwhoaâ niki says softly, and a subtle shift moves through the crowd, the kind that happens when something unexpected but not explosive occurs as heads turn and whispers travel quickly. you do not turn immediately because you know he is here and you can feel it, standing slightly behind jungwon, close enough to see but far enough not to be at the center of the cluster. jay is the first to say it out loud when he mutters, âthatâs brutalâ though he does not sound entirely sympathetic, and heeseung replies, âitâs one decimal. relaxâ while niki adds lightly, âyeah. itâs not like he dropped to fifth.â you finally turn and find jake looking at the board as if he is analyzing a case study, not reacting and not smiling, just reading. sunghoon glances at him carefully and asks, âyou good?â and jake nods once before replying easily, âyeah. itâs mid-semester. it shifts.â his tone is smooth and controlled and practiced, and you recognize it instantly when he continues, almost amused, âitâs literally nothing. statistical fluctuation.â niki snorts and says, âyou sound like youâre narrating your own declineâ and jake answers lightly, âiâm not declining. i dropped by one decimalâ while jay adds, âand she moved up by one.â jakeâs gaze flicks to you then, brief and measured, and he says, âcongratsâ the word clean with no sarcasm and no edge, and you reply, âthanks.â it should feel like victory. it kinda does, but somehow also does not. eunchae squeezes your shoulder and whispers, âyou did itâ and you nod faintly as the group begins to disperse into smaller clusters, some debating what caused the shift and others laughing it off while the tension dissolves into regular campus noise. jake does not move right away. he stands there a second longer than necessary before shrugging once and saying, âguess iâll try harderâ and itâs a joke and itâs not. niki watches him closely and says, âyou donât have toâ and jake gives him a look before replying, âiâm fine.â you hate how quickly he says it, and before you can overthink it you step closer and say, âitâs one decimalâ and he glances at you and answers, âi know.â you add, âit doesnât define anythingâ and he smiles faintly before replying, âiâm awareâ but there is something too polished about the exchange and too tidy. sunoo leans toward you and murmurs, âthis is awkwardâ and you whisper back, âshut up.â jake runs a hand through his hair, posture relaxed but eyes sharper than usual, and says, âwe still have the funding review next week. that matters moreâ and jungwon nods as jake continues, ârankings fluctuate. the project doesnât.â he is performing calm. you can see it, and everyone else definitely can too.
for years this has been the dynamic. he wins. you chase. you narrow the gap. now the gap has shifted, and instead of relief you feel like something tilted that was not supposed to.
when the group starts planning the weekend in loud overlapping suggestions, jake steps slightly back from the circle, just half a step and subtle enough that most would miss it, but you see it, and for the first time being first does not feel like victory. it feels like distance. then he checks his phone, his expression flattening for half a second before he pushes back his chair and stands. âi have a thingâ he says casually as he slides his phone into his pocket, and niki replies over the rim of his cup, âyou always have a thing.â jake shrugs into his jacket and says, âitâs a busy lifeâ which makes jay roll his eyes and answer, âyouâre second, not unemployed.â jake smirks faintly and says, âexactly. i have standards to maintainâ and you just canât laugh. you watch him grab his bag, tracking the efficiency of the movement, until eunchae looks up and asks, âyouâre leaving?â and he replies, âyeah. iâll see you later.â there is no pause and no glance in your direction this time. he just walks out, the door swinging shut behind him. you sit there for three full seconds before standing and saying, âiâll be backâ and sunoo immediately asks, âare you chasing him?â you answer too quickly with, ânoâ and niki mutters into his coffee, âyes, you areâ but you ignore them and step outside. jake has not gone far. he is standing near the side entrance, staring at his phone like it personally insulted him, and when he hears the door open he looks up and asks, âyou forgot something?â -âyesâ you say, and he waits, one eyebrow lifting slightly as you walk closer and tell him, âyouâre not fine.â he exhales through his nose and says, âi amâ and when you reply, âyouâre notâ he answers flatly, âitâs one decimal. you donât need to manage my emotional stability.â you shake your head and say, âiâm not managing youâ and he counters, âyouâre hovering.â you blink and say, âiâm standingâ and he replies, âsame difference.â crossing your arms, you tell him, âyouâre acting weirdâ and he says, âiâm not.âhe laughs quietly before adding, âthatâs rich.â when you ask, âwhy?â he answers, âbecause you win and then you chase me outside to make sure iâm okayâ and there is something sharper under the humor now as he adds, âitâs unnecessary.â you feel that land but keep your voice steady as you say, âitâs not about winningâ and he replies, âsure.â -âit isnâtâ you insist, and he says your name more quietly, ây/n, i dropped by one decimal. thatâs not a breakdown.â -âi knowâ you say, and he responds, âthen stop looking at me like it is.â you hesitate just long enough for him to notice, and he says, âthatâs what i thought.â your jaw tightens and you tell him, âyouâre allowed to be botheredâ but he answers immediately, âiâm not bothered.â -âbut i know you areâ you press, and he steps back slightly, creating space as he asks, âwhy do you need me to be?â the question catches you off guard and you say, âi donâtâ and he replies, âthen let it go.â you study him, taking in the too-straight posture and the tightness in his jaw before saying quietly, âyou donât have to pretendâ and he laughs again, thinner this time, as he says, âiâm not pretending.â- âyou hate losingâ you say, and he answers, âi didnât lose.â- âyou movedâ you counter, and he shoots back, âso did you. congratulationsâ the word not bitter but not soft either. you swallow and say, âthis wasnât supposed to be like thisâ and he raises an eyebrow as he asks, âlike what?â -âyou behind meâ you admit, and his eyes sharpen as he repeats, âbehind you?â -âthatâs not what i meantâ you say quickly, but he answers, âitâs exactly what you meant.â you stop yourself mid-sentence and then say instead, âit feels offâ and he looks at you for a long second before admitting quietly, âyeah. it kinda does.â
the honesty slips out unintentionally, and you soften without meaning to as you say, âitâs temporary.â he exhales and says, âyou donât know thatâ and you reply, âyouâll move back up.â he gives you a look you cannot quite read and asks, âand if i donât?â- âyou probably willâ you insist. âyou sound very confident in meâ he says, and you answer, âi amâ watching something flicker in his expression before it closes again. âthatâs the problemâ he says, and you frown as you ask, âwhat does that mean?â he answers slowly, âit means you donât need to reassure me.â -âiâm not reassuring youâ you say, and he replies, âyou are.â when you start with, âjake-â he cuts you off more sharply than before and says, âiâm fine. i donât need a motivational speech.â -âitâs not a speechâ you argue. âit feels like oneâ he says. you stare at him and ask, âwhy are you mad at me?â and he answers, âiâm not mad.â -âyouâre snappingâ you say. âiâm not snappingâ he insists and runs a hand through his hair, frustration bleeding through as he says, âi donât need you calibrating your tone because i dropped a decimal.â- âiâm not calibrating anythingâ you reply, and he says, âyou are. youâve been different since the party.â -âthat has nothing to do with thisâ you answer, and he counters, âit has everything to do with this.â you go quiet, and he notices as he says, âyou donât get it.â -âthen explainâ you tell him, and after hesitating he says lower, âitâs easier when youâre chasing.â you blink and ask, âwhat?â and he repeats, âitâs easier when iâm aheadâ before adding, âbecause then i know what i am to you.â the words hang between you, and you ask quietly, âand what are you to me?â he looks at you like he did not expect the question and answers, âcompetition.â the word feels wrong in the space between you. âand if youâre not ahead?â you ask, and his jaw tightens as he says, âi donât knowâ the honesty slipping out before he can stop it. you step closer and say, âit doesnât change anythingâ but he answers immediately, âit does.â -âhow?â you press, and he looks away as he says, âyou donât see it.â - âthen tell meâ you say, and he shakes his head once and answers, âno.â- âwhy?â you ask. âbecause i donât want to overreact to something that isnât even realâ he says. âwhat isnât real?â you ask, and he looks at you with something raw flashing across his expression before he gestures vaguely between you and says, âthis. whatever this is.â your pulse stumbles and you say, âwhat? there is no thisâ and he lets out a short laugh as he replies, âexactly.â silence stretches between you until he straightens, control sliding back into place like armor, and says again, âitâs fine. i just need to work harder.â - âthatâs not the solutionâ you say. âit usually isâ he replies. âyou donât need to punish yourselfâ you tell him. âiâm not punishing myselfâ he answers. âyou ordered black coffeeâ you point out. âthatâs not a crimeâ he says. âbut you hate black coffeeâ you remind him, and he almost smiles as he says, âyou care too much.â - âand you deflect too muchâ you reply.
he exhales slowly before saying, âi donât want you feeling responsible for my ranking.â - âi donâtâ you insist. and he studies you carefully before saying, âthen stop trying to fix it.â you freeze and say quietly, âiâm not trying to fix anythingâ and he nods once as he says, âgood.â after a pause he adds more softly, âyou should be happyâ and you stare at him as you say, âi am.â- âare you though?â he asks, and the question hits harder than you expect. you hesitate, and he sees it as he says quietly, âsee?â you look away for the first time and admit, âit just doesnât feel right.â - âwhy?â he asks. âbecause it feels like i stepped forward and you stepped backâ you say, and he nods slowly as he replies, âthatâs how rankings work.â - âthatâs not what i meanâ you say, and he knows it but does not want to say it. after a moment he tells you, âyou donât have to chase meâ and you answer, âiâm not chasing you.â - âyou are right nowâ he says. you exhale sharply and say, âyou leftâ and he replies, âand you followedâ the words sitting heavy between you. you hold his gaze and say again, âi donât pity youâ and he nods as he answers, âi know.â - âthen why are you acting like i do?â you ask, and after hesitating he says almost under his breath, âbecause itâs easier than the alternative.â - âwhat alternative?â you press, and he meets your eyes and for a second almost says it, but then his expression hardens and he says, âitâs nothing.â you feel the wall go up as he steps back and says, âiâll see you tomorrow.â - âjaeyun-â you start, âdonât.â, his voice cuts you sharp. âdonât call me that.â it comes out quick, almost harsh. you catch yourself. âjake.â a beat. âwhatâs going on with you?â- âiâm fineâ and this time it sounds less like reassurance and more like a boundary. âjust-⊠just leave me alone y/nâ he walks away before you can stop him, and you stand there watching him go again.
by the time his dorm room goes quiet, jake tells himself itâs one decimal. he tells himself itâs mid-semester. he tells himself the ranking board is a temporary snapshot and not a verdict. he tells himself a lot of things, because if he doesnât keep repeating them, his brain starts doing what it always does when something slips. it starts forecasting the worst outcome like itâs preparing a case file. the worst outcome is not âsecond placeâ not really. the worst outcome is being seen as someone who can be beaten, someone who can be surpassed, someone who can be caught and left behind, because jake has lived long enough in rooms where praise turns to disappointment the moment you stop being exceptional. he hasnât been allowed to be average. he hasnât been allowed to be âfine.â fine is what people say right before they stop looking at you. he sits on the edge of his bed with his laptop open, the ranking board still there on the screen like itâs nailed to his wall. 4.97. the number should not matter this much. it is a decimal, a rounding error, a meaningless fluctuation in a system that loves to pretend it can quantify human effort. but his body doesnât treat it like a decimal. his body treats it like threat. his chest is tight, his throat feels strange, his eyes burn in a way that makes him blink too hard and stare too long at the screen like he can intimidate it into changing. he isnât crying, he tells himself. heâs just tired. his eyes are just irritated. heâs been staring at the screen too long. âthatâs allâ he adds under his breath, like saying it aloud will make his body believe him, and he still doesnât close the tab, because if he closes it, it becomes real. it becomes something he canât monitor. the overhead light is off. he doesnât remember turning it off. the desk lamp makes the room feel smaller, like a box, and he is used to boxes because boxes are controllable and boxes are predictable and boxes have rules. he can win inside boxes. the problem is that his life keeps getting bigger, the expectations keep expanding, and the rules keep changing without warning, and every time they change, he has to run faster just to keep the same ground.
nikiâs expression shifts like something in him softens and then hardens in the same breath as he replies, âshe wasnât trying to fix youâ and jake says too fast, âyou werenât thereâ but niki answers, âwe were ten feet awayâ and jake pushes on, voice sharpening as if heâs arguing a point in debate because arguing is easier than admitting he liked it. âshe followed meâ he says. âshe came outside like i was- like i couldnât handle itâ and sunghoonâs eyes stay steady as he replies, âor she came outside because she noticedâ which makes jake laugh once, humorless, as he asks, ânoticed whatâ and sunghoon answers, âthat you were not fine.â jakeâs chest tightens at the phrase, not fine, the worst label, the one that means youâre slipping, and he insists, âi was fineâ but niki doesnât buy it as he says, âyou keep saying that.â jake turns toward the window as if the glass can give him distance and make his body stop reacting, pressing his palm to the back of his neck as he exhales hard and says, âitâs stupidâ but niki answers, âtry usâ and jake stares at the curtain seam, jaw clenched, before admitting quietly, âshe looked at me like she.., i donât know- saw something.â the room goes still, and niki tilts his head and asks, âsaw what?â and jake snaps, sharper than he intended, âi donât know. thatâs the pointâ because he hates not knowing and he hates being uncertain and he hates not being able to categorize a situation, because uncertainty is where failure grows. sunghoon doesnât flinch as he says, âyou donât like being seenâ and jake scoffs, âthatâs not-â but sunghoon continues, calm as a judge, âyou donât. not when you canât control what they seeâ and jakeâs throat tightens because he wants to deny it and laugh it off and make it a joke and escape, but his eyes burn again, and this time the wetness is real, and it makes him furious because he has spent years proving he doesnât break. nikiâs voice drops, less teasing now, as he says, âitâs not about losing firstâ like heâs naming a thing jake refuses to name, and jake swallows hard and answers, âit is.â but niki continues, âitâs about what happens if youâre not first. what it meansâ and jakeâs laugh comes out jagged as he says, âit means iâm secondâ while niki replies, âit means people stop expecting you to be perfect.â
jakeâs jaw tightens like a trap as he says, âpeople never stop expectingâ and the truth slips out before he can guard it. sunghoon watches him and says, âthere it isâ and jake turns back fast, eyes sharp, as he says, âdonât.â but niki doesnât look away as he says, âyou act like you canât afford to slipâ and jakeâs chest tightens harder because he canât. he canât afford it. he has built his entire safety on performance, not emotional safety, actual safety, stability, respect. the kind of doors that open when youâre the best and close when youâre merely good, and being âgoodâ is a cliff edge in his mind. he doesnât tell them that, but his silence does. âit was predictable beforeâ jake says instead, because predictable sounds reasonable and fear sounds pathetic. âit was structuredâ and sunghoon asks, âand now?â and jakeâs voice goes lower as he admits, ânow sheâs first.â nikiâs eyebrows lift as he says, âand youâre second?â and jakeâs fingers flex as he insists, âit shouldnât matterâ but sunghoon answers softly, âyet it doesâ and jake exhales slowly as he says, âi donât like how it changes things.â niki presses, âhow does it change things?â and jake opens his mouth and nothing comes out, because he doesnât know how to explain that the chase was a script he understood, and without the script he doesnât know what heâs supposed to be, and he canât say that without sounding like heâs admitting he needs you to keep him sharp, needs you to keep him defined, needs the tension to keep him from dissolving into whatever he is without competition. âi shouldnât have snappedâ he says instead, because guilt is easier to admit than fear, and niki nods once as he replies, âno. you shouldnât haveâ while jakeâs voice cracks slightly when he says, âshe wasnât even wrong.â sunghoonâs expression softens faintly as he says, âshe was trying to be decentâ and jake looks down, hands clenched again, as he admits, âi made it sound like she was pitying meâ and nikiâs voice is blunt when he says, âbecause you were embarrassed.â jake swallows and says, âi hate that i did thatâ and that is the truth, not the decimal and not the ranking but the fact that you followed him and tried to steady him and he threw it back at you like it was an insult. and he doesnât say that the look on your face keeps replaying. and he doesnât say itâs easier to take a hit from anyone else than to see disappointment in your eyes. because he doesnât know why, he just knows. niki pushes off the chair and stands as he says, âthen fix itâ and jake looks up and tries, âit wasnât that badâ but sunghoonâs voice is quiet and firm when he says, âyouâre in the dark. it was that badâ and jake rubs his face hard before asking, âwhat if she doesnât want to see me.â niki pauses like the question actually surprises him and asks, âsince when do you care about thatâ and jakeâs jaw tightens as he says, âi donât?â but niki lifts an eyebrow and replies, âyou literally just askedâ making jake look away. sunghoonâs voice lands steady as he says, âitâll be alright, she followed you.â and that hits because you did. you didnât have to. jakeâs phone sits on the desk and he hasnât touched it, because he has been sitting here trying to will his nerves into obedience and he canât, and when he admits quietly, âi donât know what to sayâ niki shrugs and says, âstart with âi was an idiotââ which makes jake shoot him a look as he says, âiâm not saying thatâ while sunghoonâs mouth curves faintly as he replies, âbut you were.â jake huffs a breath that almost becomes a laugh and fails, then grabs his jacket like grabbing something physical will stop his thoughts from spinning as he mutters, âiâll be backâ and nikiâs grin is small but real when he says, âlook at that. functional human behaviorâ while jake answers automatically, âshut upâ but the bite isnât there.
he leaves before they can push further, and the hallway outside is loud with dorm life, doors opening and voices echoing and someone arguing on the phone, but jake feels like heâs moving through it underwater. his pulse is too loud. his hands feel too cold. he tells himself this is not a big deal. he tells himself this is basic decency. he tells himself this has nothing to do with anything else, even as the truth he refuses to name stays simple underneath it all. he is terrified of being the kind of person who loses control and then loses respect, and right now he feels dangerously close to that line.
you step a little closer without thinking, not confrontational, just closer, and you ask quietly, âthen whyâre you hereâ and the question catches him because he didnât expect it. he looks at you. really looks at you this time. and the streetlight glow softens the edges of everything, your expression and the tension in your shoulders and even the night itself, and he says, âbecause i donât like leaving things like that.â - âlike what?â you ask. âunresolvedâ he answers, and you search his face as you say, âyou think weâre unresolved?â and he hesitates before admitting, âmaybe.â you look away for a second, then back at him, and you say, âyouâre not replaceable, you knowâ and he stiffens slightly as he replies, âi didnât say i wasâ but you answer, âyou donât have toâ and he swallows. you step back slightly to give him space again as you say, âi didnât move up because you moved down. those arenât connectedâ and he replies quickly, âi know.â - âyouâre acting like they areâ you say, and he runs a hand through his hair as he admits, âit just feels different.â you nod slowly and say, âyeahâ and when he glances at you and asks, âyeahâ you repeat, âyeah. it doesâ and that surprises him, because he expected you to argue or rationalize, and instead you just agree. âitâs weirdâ you continue. âiâve been chasing you for three yearsâ and he lets out a faint breath as he says, âyou make it sound like a sport.â - âit wasâ you reply. he almost smiles and says, âyouâre competitiveâ and you answer, âso are youâ and he doesnât deny it. the silence between you shifts again, not empty and not tense, just full, and he notices the way the light moves in your eyes when you blink like itâs caught there intentionally, and he doesnât know why that detail sticks or why he catalogues things like that about you, he just does. âyou deserved itâ he says quietly, and you look at him and ask, âwhat?â and he clarifies, âthe move up. you deserved itâ and your expression softens almost imperceptibly as you say, âthanksâ and he nods once. âiâm not going anywhereâ he adds quickly, like he has to reestablish something, and you reply, âi didnât think you wereâ but he says, âi mean academically-â and you raise an eyebrow slightly as you answer, âyeah, i know what you meantâ and he pauses because he doesnât know if you do.
the breeze shifts again, and the campus feels strangely intimate with warm lights and quiet paths and distant familiar buildings, the kind of night that makes everything feel closer than it actually is, and suddenly he says, âyou donât have to catch me.â you blink and ask, âwhat â and he hesitates before shrugging like itâs nothing as he says, âyou donât have to chaseâ and you stare at him for a long moment before saying quietly, âi wasnât chasing because i had toâ and that lands somewhere deep in him even if he canât name where. he nods slowly, and neither of you move and neither of you step closer, but the air feels different now, softer, and neither of you knows exactly why. close enough that he can see the way your breath fogs faintly in the cool air. close enough that the streetlight above you casts gold along the curve of your cheek. close enough that he notices the tiny flicker in your eyes when you blink. he shouldnât notice that. he definitely shouldnât be thinking about it. you say quietly, âyouâre not falling behindâ and he swallows before replying, âi knowâ though the word comes out rougher than he means it to. the campus is quiet around you, the breeze moving gently through the trees, a door shutting somewhere in the distance while the world keeps going, and youâre still looking at him like that. not competitive. not guarded. not sharp. just open. it does something to him, and he doesnât think about it or weigh the consequences or calculate the variables. he just moves. itâs subtle at first, barely a step and barely a shift, and then his hand lifts almost on instinct, his fingers brushing lightly against your jaw like heâs checking if youâre real. you inhale sharply, and he sees the question in your eyes but doesnât answer it. he kisses you. itâs not rushed and not aggressive. itâs almost hesitant for the first half-second, like he expects you to pull away, but you donât. your breath catches warm and startled against his mouth, and thatâs what undoes him. the kiss deepens, not wildly and not recklessly, just enough that it stops being accidental, his hand sliding slightly along your cheek with his thumb brushing your skin while the streetlight glows warm against closed eyes and quiet night air and the world narrows down to warmth and breath and the realization that this feels different. soft. real. you donât move for a second, and then you respond. not aggressively. not desperately. just there. and thatâs what snaps him out of it, because this isnât a theory and this isnât tension and this isnât rivalry. this is you. and he just. fuck. why did he-
he pulls back first. too quickly. like he touched something electric. the distance between you feels enormous now, and you blink up at him with your lips slightly parted and your eyes wide not with anger but confusion as you breathe, âjake.â he steps back like he needs physical space to think and runs a hand through his hair as he exhales sharply and says, âi-â before cutting himself off and adding, âthat wasâŠâ then dragging a hand over his face like heâs trying to erase the last ten seconds as he mutters, âthat was stupid.â the word lands wrong. you swallow and ask, âwhyâd you do that?â and he opens his mouth but nothing coherent forms because he doesnât know. he doesnât know why your eyes looked like that under the streetlights or why the air felt charged or why standing close to you felt like standing on the edge of something he didnât understand. âi donât knowâ he admits finally. you stare at him, not hurt and not furious, just confused, and you repeat softly, âyou donât know?â and he shakes his head once with his jaw tight as he says, âit just happened.â that doesnât help. you look down for a second and then back up at him, and the softness from earlier is gone, not replaced with hostility but with uncertainty, as you say quietly, âi should go back inside.â he nods immediately, too fast, and says, âyeahâ and you hesitate like youâre waiting for him to say something else, but he doesnât, because if he opens his mouth again he might make it worse. you step back, then turn, then walk toward the dorm entrance without looking back, and he watches you go until the door closes behind you. suddenly heâs alone in the courtyard with the streetlights and the quiet and the echo of what he just did, and he drags a hand down his face as he mutters under his breath, âwhat the hell.â he just kissed you. he didnât plan it and didnât think about it and didnât even understand it, and you looked-
âgodâ he mutters to himself as he groans softly and starts walking back toward his dorm faster than necessary. by the time he pushes his own door open, niki looks up from his desk and asks, âwell?â and jake doesnât answer. he walks straight past him and drops onto his bed, covering his face with both hands, and sunghoon glances over and says, âyou look worseâ while jake muffles his voice behind his palms and says, âi messed up.â nikiâs eyebrows lift as he asks, âhow bad?â and jake exhales slowly before admitting, âi fucking kissed her.â silence follows, and then niki says, âyou what?â and jake drags his hands down his face and stares at the ceiling like it personally betrayed him as he mutters, âi donât even know why.â thatâs the worst part, because he canât categorize it and he canât frame it as strategy and he canât explain it as impulse. he just knows that when the light caught in your eyes and you looked at him like that. he stopped thinking, and now he doesnât know what this is or what he just changed.
you barely slept and the morning after feels so wrong. you wake up before your alarm and stare at the ceiling with the memory of his hand against your jaw still warm against your skin. it wasnât aggressive. it wasnât careless. it was deliberate for exactly half a second. and then it wasnât. you sit up slowly and press your palm against your cheek as if you can still feel the imprint of him there. maybe it was impulsive. maybe it meant nothing. maybe it meant something. you donât know. what you do know is that you havenât received a text. not a clarification. not a joke. not even a âsorry about that.â just silence. you tell yourself thatâs fine. you get ready anyway. heâs already in the study room when you arrive. thatâs new. jake barely ever arrives first. heâs sitting at the table with his laptop open and notes spread out with unsettling neatness. when the door opens he glances up. for a split second something flickers across his face. then itâs gone. âmorning.â jake says it like nothing happened. you stop just inside the doorway before replying carefully âmorning.â you wait. he doesnât say anything else. you walk to your seat and sit down slowly placing your bag beside you. the air feels heavier than usual. he doesnât look at you again before saying âwe need to restructure the funding risk section. your phrasing implies direct negligence.â you blink and answer âthatâs because it was negligent.â he counters immediately âit was strategic.â you stare at him. âyou were fine with that phrasing yesterday.â- âi reconsidered.â -âwhen.â -âlast night.â the words land heavier than they should. you hold his gaze. âyou reconsidered the phrasing?â -âyes.â silence. you wait for something more. he doesnât offer it. your pulse tightens slightly and you ask âare we going to talk about it?â he doesnât look up from his screen. âtalk about what?â you stare at him. he knows. âjake.â he finally looks at you with a carefully neutral expression. âwe shouldnât let personal things interfere with the project.â personal things. your stomach drops slightly. âso it was personal.â his jaw tightens. âthatâs not what i meant.â -âthen what did you mean?â he exhales slowly. âi meant it doesnât need to be a thing.â your chest tightens. âit doesnât need to be a thing?â - âit was impulsive. it doesnât have to mean anything.â the words are controlled. too controlled. you search his face for hesitation. there is none. only precision. âokay.â the word leaves your mouth steady. you look down at your notes and donât say anything else. he expected you to push. instead you nod once and open your laptop. âfine. then letâs focus on the project.â he feels the shift instantly. the softness from last night is gone. you are sharp lines and clean sentences again. he tells himself thatâs good. thatâs safer. âwe need to adjust the model.â he leans forward slightly. âyour interpretation overstates causality.â - âmy interpretation is accurate.â -âno, itâs aggressive.â you look at him, and respond âitâs honest.â -âitâs just risky.â the word sits there. you ask before you can stop yourself âso youâre afraid of risk now?â he freezes. you didnât mean it like that. but it lands anyway. âiâm not afraid of anything.â the lie settles between you. you push your chair back slightly. âthen what is this.â - âthis is me doing my job.â -âby rewriting my sections?â you say. âno y/n, by strengthening them.â -âyouâre undermining them.â he leans back and crosses his arms. âif you feel undermined thatâs not my fault.â that hits harder than it should. you stare at him. âyouâre being competitive.â -âwe are competitive.â -ânot like this.â his eyes flash slightly. âlike what.â - âlike youâre trying to win something.â he doesnât answer. because maybe he is. maybe if he wins this argument this structure this academic ground he can reestablish something solid. something defined. something that isnât a memory of your lips and the way you inhaled when he touched you.
he swallows. âyouâre reading into it.â you lean back slowly. âyou kissed me jake.â the words are quiet and direct. he goes still. âyes.â -âand now youâre acting like it didnât happen.â he looks at the ceiling and says âi said it was impulsive.â -âthat doesnât erase it.â -âit doesnât have to define anything either.â the word define catches in his throat. you study him carefully. âdo you regret it?â he hesitates for half a second too long. âno.â the answer is immediate. too immediate. you donât look convinced. he feels heat crawl up his neck. âi just donât think it needs to complicate things.â your expression shifts. âcomplicate?â - âthatâs not what i meant.â - âit sounds like you think iâm a complication.â. that landed. âno.â-âthen what am i?â he stops breathing for a second. because he doesnât know. youâve always been his rival. his equal. his benchmark. his reference point. last night you were something else. he doesnât have a word for that. âi donât know.â the admission is quiet and unpolished. the room falls silent. you look at him differently now. not angry. not victorious. just confused. âthatâs worse.â he nods once. âi know.â neither of you speak for several seconds. the air feels tight again. not electric like last night. fragile.
you close your laptop slowly. âiâm not trying to define it. i just donât want to pretend it didnât matter.â he swallows. it did matter. it mattered so much for him. thatâs the problem. he clears his throat. âitâs not that it didnât matter.â you look up sharply. he meets your eyes for exactly two seconds before looking away. âbut i donât know what it means.â there it is. not regression. not confession. just confusion. raw and exposed. you donât smile. you donât step closer. you wait for him to say something else, watching his face for any sign that he might soften again or elaborate on what he just admitted. he doesnât. instead he straightens in his chair like a switch has flipped somewhere inside him, and the softness that slipped through a second ago disappears as his shoulders square and his posture resets into something controlled. âweâre wasting timeâ jake says as he glances back at the document on his screen, his tone evening out into crisp efficiency. âwe need to finalize the revised model before friday.â you stare at him for a long second, the pivot so abrupt it almost makes you dizzy, before asking quietly, âdid you hear what i said?â without looking at you, he answers, âyesâ and when you press with a tight, âand?â he replies evenly, âand what?â your stomach tightens at the deliberate blankness in his voice. âjake.â you say, letting his name carry the frustration you are trying not to show. he exhales as if you are the one escalating things and says, âi told you it mattered. i just donât know what it means. that doesnât have to turn into a thesisâ and the phrasing stings in a way you canât quite hide. âyouâre shutting down againâ you tell him, leaning forward slightly as if proximity might force him to stay present. he shakes his head once and replies, âiâm focusingâ and he finally looks at you directly, his expression composed to the point of detachment as he says, âjust forget it.â the emphasis lands harder than the words themselves, and you blink at the subtle separation in that sentence, at the way he frames this as something individual rather than shared. âwhy are you acting like this?â you ask, and this time there is no accusation in your voice, only confusion. âiâm not acting like anythingâ he answers calmly, too calmly. you donât let him redirect. âyou kissed meâ you remind him, your voice steady despite the heat rising in your chest. âi know thatâ he says without hesitation. âand now youâre dissecting budget modelsâ you continue, watching for any crack in his composure. âbecause we have a budget model dueâ he replies, holding your gaze without flinching. the eye contact stretches, and it feels as though he is building a wall in real time, stacking controlled sentence after controlled sentence until there is no space left for anything messy. âi donât get youâ you admit finally, the words slipping out before you can filter them. something flickers across his face at that-irritation, maybe, or something more defensive-and he responds, âyou donât have to.â the words colder than he intends. you sit back slowly, absorbing the chill in that statement, and say, ârightâ because you refuse to let him see how much that landed. silence settles between you, thick and uncomfortable, the earlier fragility hardening into something structured and rigid, as if he is forcing everything back into a labeled box marked safe.
you close your laptop with deliberate care and tell him evenly, âi donât think this meetingâs going to work.â his jaw tightens almost imperceptibly before he asks, âwhy?â and you answer, âbecause youâre not here.â he gestures faintly toward himself and says, âiâm right here?â but you shake your head and reply, âno, youâre notâ and this time he looks away first. you stand and slide your bag over your shoulder, adding, âweâll review the edits laterâ and he nods once without lifting his eyes from the screen as he says, âsure.â you hesitate for half a second, waiting for something-an apology, an explanation, anything-but he doesnât look up. you turn toward the door. âheyâ he says suddenly, and the word stops you mid-step. you pause without fully turning around, and he keeps his eyes on the laptop as he says, âsee you tonight.â you frown slightly and ask, âtonight?â and he clarifies in a tone that aims for casual, âarcade night. youâre still coming, right?â the normalcy of it feels surreal, as if nothing fractured and nothing shifted and you didnât kiss him under streetlights less than a day ago. you swallow and answer, âyeah.â - âcoolâ he says, scrolling through the document like this is just another scheduling detail, before adding, âdonât be late.â there is a brief pause, and then he says, âbyeâ the word light and almost detached. you stand there a moment longer than necessary, hoping he might finally look up and undo some of the distance he just created, but he doesnât. so you leave. the door shuts softly behind you, and the quiet that follows feels louder than any argument would have. jake doesnât move for several seconds after youâre gone.
the cursor blinks on his screen, steady and indifferent. then he exhales slowly and drops his head into his hands, the composure slipping now that there is no one left to witness it. he hates that you said you donât get him. he hates that he doesnât get himself either. he knows what âyou donât have toâ sounded like. he knows it was colder than he meant it to be. but pushing feels safer than falling, and if he keeps everything inside clean lines and deadlines and due dates, then maybe he wonât have to confront the fact that when he kissed you, it didnât feel impulsive at all. it felt inevitable. you walk back to your dorm slower than you mean to. you tell yourself youâre annoyed. confused. frustrated with how impossible he is. thatâs easier to hold onto than the other thing - the way your lips still feel warm, like the memory hasnât fully faded. it was impulsive. he said so. it doesnât have to mean anything. he said that too. so why are you replaying it? why do you keep remembering the way his hand felt against your jaw, careful and steady? the way he hesitated for half a second, like he was giving you time to pull away? you didnât. thatâs what bothers you. you didnât pull away. you leaned into it. and now heâs built the distance back up like the kiss was a mistake he needs to contain, and you hate that you want him to undo it. you hate that you want him to look at you the way he did under the streetlights instead of the way he did this morning - guarded, precise, unreachable. maybe it didnât define anything. but it changed something.
you almost donât go, and that hesitation lingers while you stand in front of your mirror adjusting your jacket for no real reason other than needing something to fix. the kiss has been sitting under your skin all day, not painful and not pleasant, just present, and the way he acted that morning didnât help. you hear his voice again in your head saying âit doesnât have to mean anythingâ and your jaw tightens at the memory because if it didnât mean anything then why did it feel like that. but itâs okay, because tonightâs about having fun and before you can overthink it again you grab your phone and head out. the arcade is loud before you even step inside. neon lights flicker against the glass windows and reflect in sharp colors across the pavement, and music pulses through the doors in rhythmic bursts mixed with electronic beeps and the metallic clatter of tokens. when you walk in the air smells like soda syrup and electricity, and heâs already there. of course he is. jake is standing near the basketball game with jay and jungwon, his sleeves pushed up slightly as he laughs at something jay just said, and the neon blue light above the machine cuts across his face and sharpens his features. for half a second he looks up and sees you. the laugh falters just slightly before he smooths it over. you walk toward them before you can second-guess it. from across the room sunoo calls out dramatically âfinally i was about to file a missing persons reportâ and you reply as you approach âi was on time.â sunoo gestures at the clock above the prize counter and says âacademically socially questionableâ which makes eunchae rush toward you and hook her arm through yours while whispering âyou look goodâ as she scans your face like sheâs searching for emotional clues. you deadpan âi always look goodâ and jake lets out a soft snort that you feel more than hear. when you glance at him his posture is relaxed and his expression neutral but his eyes are sharper than usual, watching you in a way that feels measured.
jay claps his hands once and calls out âteams losers buy drinksâ and kazuha responds calmly âdefine losersâ while heeseung answers âlowest combined scoreâ and yunjin warns âyouâre not pairing strategically.â sunghoon suggests âpair randomly more entertainingâ and your stomach tightens faintly even though you canât explain why. niki claps once and announces ânames in a cupâ and within seconds chaos takes over as jay grabs paper napkins, sunoo insists on drawing twice because he âdoesnât trust fateâ and sakura laughs while chaewon tries to restore order. you stand still while jake stands across from you and neither of you mention the obvious. niki begins pulling names and reads them aloud as the group reacts. âjay and yunjinâ earns exaggerated groans. âheeseung and kazuhaâ draws a confident nod from heeseung. âjungwon and sunooâ makes sunoo protest loudly that he deserves a better fate. âchaewon and sakuraâ prompts sakura to bow theatrically. then niki pulls another slip and pauses before saying âsunghoon and y/nâ and you blink as sunghoon smiles faintly and says âguess weâre winning.â laughter ripples through the group, and when niki reads the final pairing âjake and eunchaeâ you feel the shift before you even look at him. itâs subtle. not anger. not irritation. just recalibration. jay grins and says âcuteâ while yunjin adds âstrategicâ and jake replies smoothly âi carry well.â eunchae elbows him and says âyouâre not carrying meâ which makes you laugh faintly without meaning to. his eyes flick toward you and then toward sunghoon who is now standing slightly closer to you as he leans toward the game list. the proximity is subtle but jake notices and doesnât react outwardly.
jungwon calls out âfirst gameâ and jay declares âair hockey classicâ and the machines light up in sharp red and blue neon that reflects across the polished floor. the arcade hums around you with laughter and flashing screens, loud enough that conversation feels close and almost intimate. you and sunghoon take your positions across from jay and yunjin while jake stands just behind eunchaeâs shoulder watching. you donât intend to be aware of that but you are. the puck flies fast once the game starts and you move instinctively, competitive focus settling over you naturally. when you block a shot sunghoon says quietly âniceâ and you smirk and reply âobviously.â from the sidelines jakeâs jaw tightens almost imperceptibly. itâs ridiculous and he knows it. sunghoon isnât doing anything inappropriate and you arenât doing anything different, but watching you laugh at something sunghoon says and lean slightly toward him while explaining a move feels different tonight and he doesnât like that even though he doesnât understand why. eunchae nudges his side and whispers âfocusâ and he answers âi amâ even though he isnât. heâs watching the way the neon light catches in your hair when you move and the way your hand brushes sunghoonâs when you both reach for the puck at the same time. itâs nothing. itâs normal. and yet it doesnât feel neutral. the game ends with your team winning by two points and jay groans âunrealâ while you say smoothly âyouâre welcomeâ and sunghoon adds with a grin âtold you.â jake claps once slowly and says lightly âimpressiveâ and the tone is easy and the smile is perfect but niki notices the slight tension in his jaw.
âbasketball nextâ niki announces quickly and the group shifts toward the next machine. you move with them and jake adjusts his position so that he ends up near you without quite stepping beside you. in a casual tone he says ânice reflexesâ and you glance at him and answer âthank youâ there is a pause that stretches just a second too long before you add âsunghoonâs not bad tooâ because it feels strange not to acknowledge your teammate. jake nods once and replies âheâs consistentâ and the word carries an odd weight you canât immediately name. you study him for half a second before asking quietly âyou okay?â and he responds immediately âiâm fineâ and this time you look away first. because whatever is happening behind his eyes tonight, he isnât letting you near it. the group migrates toward the basketball machines in a loud, shifting cluster, and the arcade swallows you back into its bright chaos.
neon reflections skate across the floor, laughter bounces off the walls, and the air is warm with the smell of syrupy soda and that faint metallic bite of tokens and electronics. jay is already declaring, âlosers buy drinks, and iâm not buying anythingâ while yunjin argues, âthat rule is authoritarian!â and jungwon is busy counting out tokens like heâs distributing rations. niki squeezes past you with a grin thatâs too knowing and says, âbasketball is where egos go to dieâ and sunoo immediately gasps and replies, âmy ego is immortal nikiâ and chaewon deadpans, âthatâs a medical concern.â you find yourself smiling despite the tension stuck in your throat, and you focus on the game list taped to nikiâs phone like it can keep you from thinking about the streetlight glow and the kiss youâre all pretending didnât happen. jake stands a few feet away, shoulder angled casually toward the machine, but his attention keeps flicking in your direction in a way thatâs brief enough to deny and frequent enough to feel. âokayâ heeseung announces, pointing at the row of machines. âweâre doing two rounds. highest score each team gets the points.â kazuha adjusts her sleeves with calm concentration and says, âiâve seen people take this too seriouslyâ and sakura laughs and replies, âwe are peopleâ and jay immediately says, âiâm notâ which makes eunchae snort. you and sunghoon end up at the machine nearest the entrance while jake and eunchae take the one beside you, and the proximity is not close enough to be intimate but close enough that you can hear jakeâs laugh when eunchae says something sharp and close enough that you can hear the rhythm of the balls hitting the rim and the low mechanical voice announcing time.
the arcade is loud but youâre hyperaware of him anyway, and you know you shouldnât be noticing the way his sleeves are pushed up again or the way he rolls his shoulders before the timer starts like this is something that matters. you definitely shouldnât be noticing the way his voice drops slightly when he teases eunchae. you tell yourself itâs just habit. the game starts and you shoot automatically, muscle memory taking over, but your focus is fractured because every time the ball leaves your hands you hear his machine next to yours, the sharp rhythm of his shots nearly synchronized with yours. you glance sideways once and catch him not looking at the hoop but at you, just for a second, before he looks away like he wasnât. your stomach flips in a way that has nothing to do with competition. beside you sunghoon murmurs lightly âfocusâ and you answer âi amâ though your voice sounds thinner than usual. the timer buzzes and the group cheers, someone groans dramatically about losing and jay shouts âlosers buy drinks, rememberâ while arguing that sparkling water should not count as a loss expense. you barely register the score but jake does, and you can tell by the way his mouth curves faintly when he sees his number, not smug but quietly relieved. itâs subtle yet you see the way he straightens slightly like heâs reclaimed something small and necessary, and you donât know why that bothers you. the group moves toward the drink counter in a loud chaotic cluster arguing about who owes what, and you drift with them until the crowd presses tighter than expected. sunghoonâs hand lands lightly at your waist to move you out of the way of someone rushing past, quick and casual and nothing more, but you feel jake go still before you even look at him. when you finally glance up heâs watching, not angry and not dramatic, just attentive, his jaw tightening slightly before he looks away and says something to jungwon that you donât catch. niki catches it though, and you see him clock the moment and smirk faintly before nudging jake with his elbow while jake mutters something under his breath and shakes his head. you tell yourself it shouldnât matter and yet it does.
at the counter plastic cups line up in a row beside a cluster of half-empty bottles someone definitely wasnât supposed to bring, the sharp scent of alcohol mixing with sugar in the air. eunchae points at the bright blue soda just before someone tops it off with something clear and says âthat one looks illegalâ while squinting at it dramatically, then takes a bold sip anyway and immediately coughs and laughs at the burn. sunoo insists on something pink purely for aesthetic reasons and carefully pours a generous splash of vodka into it while declaring it âbalancedâ even though it very clearly isnât, and after taking a long sip he winces, shrugs, and keeps drinking. sunghoon leans against the counter with a dark drink in hand, swirling it lazily before taking slow confident sips that are just frequent enough to matter. niki, who claimed he wasnât going to drink much, is already halfway through his second cup and noticeably louder than usual as he argues about nothing in particular with exaggerated seriousness. even eunchae, after insisting she only wanted âa tasteâ refills her cup with far less hesitation the second time.
you reach for a cup someone has mixed, something fizzy and deceptively sweet, at the same time jake does. his other hand already holds a drink and the ice clinks softly as he shifts it. your fingers brush, barely contact but it feels like electricity amplified by the faint warmth spreading through your system from the alcohol. you both freeze for half a second as the noise around you dulls and laughter grows brighter and more chaotic in the background, and the memory of streetlights and his hand at your jaw rushes back sharper than it has any right to. he pulls his hand back first though his movements are a fraction slower than usual and says lightly âyou can take itâ his tone normal, too normal, but thereâs the faintest flush high on his cheeks that wasnât there earlier. you pick up the cup slowly and reply âthanksâ then take a sip to steady yourself. it tastes stronger than you expected but you swallow anyway. lowering your voice, though sunoo is attempting karaoke in the corner loudly enough that no one would hear you anyway, you ask âare we just going to keep pretendingâ your words slightly softer around the edges from the alcohol. jake takes a sip of his drink before answering as if he needs the extra second and replies âpretending whatâ with less sharpness than usual. âthat it didnât happenâ you clarify while tightening your fingers slightly around your cup. youâre warm now, not just from the room but from the steady buzz settling into your limbs. he exhales slowly, the sound heavier than before, and says âwe talked about thisâ his gaze lingering on you a beat too long. you shake your head, the movement looser than you intended, and answer âno, you shut it downâ your words not slurred but more honest than you might have been earlier.
across the room niki bursts into loud laughter at something that absolutely isnât that funny and nearly spills his drink as sunghoon steadies him with an amused shake of his head, though sunghoon himself is smiling more than usual with alcohol softening the sharpness of his expression. jakeâs jaw tightens as he says âweâre not doing this hereâ though he doesnât step away immediately and his fingers flex slightly around his cup. âwhy notâ you press, taking another sip without thinking as the sweetness now masks the burn. he glances over your shoulder at the group where eunchae is dramatically explaining something with wild hand gestures, pink-cheeked and giggling, while sunoo clings to her arm and insists the floor is âtilting emotionally.â -âbecause this isnât the placeâ jake replies, his voice quieter and less guarded than earlier. you let out a breath that feels warmer than it should and tell him âitâs never the place with youâ and even tipsy you see it land. his composure slips just slightly. the alcohol has softened his edges and heâs not as controlled as he thinks he is. instead of stepping closer he steps back but only half a step and says âi donât want to make it bigger than it isâ though the words lack their usual certainty. you study him with your head tilted faintly, courage fueled by the steady buzz in your veins, and ask softly âor smaller.â for a moment he doesnât answer. the neon light above flickers across his eyes and thereâs a faint flush along his neck now that definitely isnât just from the room. he lifts his drink, takes another swallow like heâs buying time, then lowers it and admits âi donât knowâ and this time the honesty isnât pried out of him. it just slips free. there it is again, confusion rather than denial or rejection, and it would be easier if he said it meant nothing or easier if he said it meant everything but this middle ground feels unbearable. the group calls your name from across the arcade and jay waves while yelling about a two-player shooter game, and jake glances toward them before looking back at you and saying quietly âyouâre overthinking it.â you hold his gaze and reply âobviously, i have toâ because you donât kiss people impulsively and you donât lose focus like that and you leaned into it. he swallows before adding suddenly âi donât regret itâ which makes your heart stutter, but then he finishes with âi just donât know what it isâ and you hate that it sounds honest. you nod slowly and say âokayâ though it isnât okay, and you walk back toward the group before the silence thickens.
the next game blurs into laughter and competition, niki teasing jake about something, sunghoon standing close again, eunchae dragging you into a racing seat while you feel jakeâs attention like a current under your skin every time you laugh or someone stands too near or you donât look at him. at one point you glance up and find him already looking at you, not competitive and not sharp, just searching, and you look away first because if you donât you might do something reckless. later when the group is distracted arguing about who lost overall and who owes drinks next time you find yourself standing slightly apart near the edge of the arcade while jake stands across the room with neon lights cutting across his profile as he laughs at something heeseung says. he looks fine and composed like nothing has changed but you know better because you felt the hesitation in his hands and heard the crack in his voice when he said he didnât regret it and saw the way he went still when sunghoon touched your waist. youâre tired of guessing and tired of replaying one kiss and one half conversation in your head like a case study. you want data and certainty and to know whether what you felt under the streetlights was real or just adrenaline and proximity and unresolved tension. you watch him laugh again and think with a slow steady clarity that scares you more than the kiss itself that you need to know.
the arcade is louder than it was an hour ago, or maybe you are simply more aware of it now. flashing neon lights bleed across the floor in restless colors while music pulses near the rhythm machines. jay is arguing about lap times like it is a moral issue, sunoo is dramatically losing to a claw machine and blaming capitalism, and eunchae is laughing too loudly at something heeseung just said. jake is standing near the racing games with one hand resting casually on the back of a seat while nodding at whatever jungwon is explaining. he looks normal. too normal. like nothing happened under the streetlights. like nothing happened at the drink counter. like you did not just spend the last hour trying not to think about his mouth. you watch him as he laughs at something, the sound easy and controlled, and then his eyes flick up and land on you. there is no smile this time, only recognition and something unsettled beneath it. you do not think. you move. you cross the arcade floor without planning your steps, the noise fading in strange patches as you walk straight toward him. he notices immediately and his posture shifts slightly as he asks lightly but alertly âwhat?â you stop in front of him and say âcome outside.â he frowns faintly and asks âwhat? why?â - âjust comeâ you tell him, not giving him space to argue before turning toward the exit and pushing the door open into the cool night air.
a thin curtain of rain greets you immediately, droplets catching in the streetlights as they fall. he follows. the door shuts behind you and the sudden quiet feels almost shocking after the chaos inside, softened further by the steady patter of rain against pavement and rooftops. the campus is dimly lit with streetlights stretching in soft gold lines across the wet pavement, reflections rippling in shallow puddles, and the faint breeze moves through the trees carrying the distant hum of traffic beyond the gates along with the clean scent of rain. water beads along your jacket and dampens his hair within seconds. he stops a few feet from you, rain slipping from his lashes, and asks again âwhatâs going on?â you turn to face him, rain cooling your skin, your heart racing harder now not from nerves but from certainty. you do not know what this means. you do not know what he means. you just know you are tired of not knowing. âi have to do somethingâ you tell him over the soft hiss of rainfall. he narrows his eyes slightly, rain tracing down the line of his jaw, and says âthat sounds ominous.â -âitâs notâ you reply, blinking water from your lashes. âthen what is it?â he presses as thunder rumbles faintly in the distance. you take one step closer, shoes splashing lightly against the soaked pavement, and say âfor research purposes.â he stares at you through the rain and says âwhat?â you do not explain. you reach for him, your fingers catching the front of his rain-damp jacket as you pull him down toward you before your brain can retreat, and you kiss him.
it is deliberate. raindrops cling between you, cool against warm skin. you do not melt into it and you do not hesitate. you kiss him like you are testing a theory, your mouth pressing firmly against his while your other hand steadies at his shoulder, damp fabric beneath your palm. youâre not trying to be romantic. youâre trying to be certain. for a heartbeat he freezes, rain sliding down both your faces. then his hands move. one settles at your waist automatically, warm and grounding even through the chill of soaked clothes, while the other hovers near your side before gripping slightly as if confirming you are real. you deepen the kiss just slightly, rain falling steadily around you, not because you cannot help it but because you need to know. when you pull back first your breathing is uneven and his hands linger a second longer before dropping, droplets falling from his fingertips. the space between you feels charged despite the cold rain soaking through.
he looks at you, water glistening on his skin, and asks quietly âwell, youâre tipsy.â you blink because you did not expect him to put it back on you. âjake, youâre literally the one with a drinking problem.â rain runs down the side of your neck as you swallow. âthat was differentâ you admit, your voice softer beneath the rainfall. his brow lifts faintly as he asks âdifferent how?â a drop slides from his hair down his temple. you search your own reaction. it was not panic. it was not adrenaline. it was not accidental. it felt steady. âi think i liked itâ you say, the words dissolving into the rain-cooled night air between you. his expression changes, not smug and not teasing, just softer, rain catching on his lashes, and he answers without hesitation âi liked it too.â there is no deflection this time and no attempt to minimize it, just truth carried through the steady patter around you. âyou did?â you ask quietly, rain dripping from your chin. âyes.â he replies, and the way he says it makes your chest tighten in a way that is not confusion anymore.
he steps forward slowly, shoes splashing in a shallow puddle, lifting his hand in a way that gives you space to pull away if you want to. you do not. his thumb brushes lightly along your rain-cooled jaw and rests there the way it did the first night, but now there is no uncertainty in his touch, only warmth against the chill. âthis isnât researchâ he says softly, rain sliding between your faces, before leaning in to kiss you again. this time it is not measured or experimental. it is intentional. his mouth moves against yours slowly as rain falls steadily over you both, as if he is choosing every second of it, and his other hand slides around your waist to pull you closer, damp fabric clinging between you, not urgently and not possessively, just enough that the distance disappears. you feel the difference immediately. rain soaks your hair and trickles down your spine but you barely notice. this is not testing. this is wanting. your hands move to his shoulders without thinking and grip lightly, water slick beneath your fingers, as the kiss deepens, warm and undeniable despite the cold rain surrounding you.
when he pulls back his forehead rests against yours, rain tapping softly against your skin, and you are both breathing harder, mingling with the rhythm of the storm. âsoâŠâ he murmurs, voice low beneath the rainfall. âso-â you echo, rainwater slipping between your joined brows. a faint smile curves at the corner of his mouth before he says âcome back with me.â your heart skips as thunder rolls faintly overhead and you ask âto your dorm?â he nods slightly, droplets falling from his chin, and replies âniki and sunghoon arenât leaving anytime soon. theyâll stay.â he does not push. he just waits, rain continuing to fall steadily around you, pooling at your feet. you donât say yes immediately, but you donât say no either. you just look at him. the neon glow from the arcade sign flickers faintly against his rain-damp face while the campus beyond feels softer and quieter beneath the steady downpour, warmer somehow now that the noise from inside is muffled by the rain. it feels like the world has narrowed to this small patch of wet pavement and falling water. after a moment you ask âyouâre sure?â and he nods once, rain dripping from his hair, before answering âyeah.â thereâs something steadier in him now, less defensive and less sharp than he was earlier, even as rain traces the line of his jaw. you swallow, tasting rain on your lips, and finally say âokay.â
the walk to his dorm is quiet. not awkward exactly, but charged. your hands brush once by accident and neither of you comment on it. the silence between you feels thick, full of things you donât have names for yet. when you reach his building he opens the door and gestures for you to go inside. the hallway lights are dimmer than the arcadeâs chaos and everything feels calmer, more private. youâre suddenly aware of how close youâre standing to him again as he stops just inside his room. and suddenly itâs quiet. no neon. no friends. no noise to hide behind. just him. just you. for a second neither of you move and the air feels thicker here, heavier without distraction. he looks at you carefully and says softly âyou didnât really answer me.â you tilt your head slightly and ask âabout whatâ even though you already know. he steps a fraction closer and clarifies âwhether this was still research.â instead of replying you step closer, closing the remaining distance between you, and that is your answer. his eyes drop to your mouth for a split second and that is all it takes. you grab his shirt this time, not careful and not analytical, and pull him down toward you. the kiss isnât measured anymore. itâs hungry. he responds instantly like he was waiting for permission to stop holding back, his hands sliding to your waist and pulling you flush against him, not gentle and not rough, just decisive. your back hits the door softly but you donât care. your fingers tangle into his hair and he exhales sharply against your mouth, the sound sending heat straight through you. this isnât testing. this isnât curiosity. this is wanting.
his mouth moves slower now, deeper and more deliberate, and one hand drifts up your side with fingertips pressing through fabric as if he is memorizing you. you tilt your head to give him better access without thinking and your pulse feels like itâs everywhere. he pulls back just enough to breathe and his lips brush yours when he says quietly âthis isnât research.â you swallow and admit âno.â his thumb slides along your jaw and down the line of your throat, not pushing, just feeling, and the tension between you snaps fully. you kiss him again before he can think. your hands slide under the hem of his shirt and your fingertips brush warm skin, and he inhales sharply not from surprise but from the way your touch lingers. his grip on your waist tightens and there is nothing careful about it now. you donât feel confused.
you feel heat pooling low in your stomach and spreading slowly and deliberately. he shifts and guides you backward without breaking the kiss until your legs hit the edge of his bed. he pauses there not because heâs unsure but because heâs checking you. your eyes meet and you nod once. thatâs all he needs. he kisses you again, slower and deeper, and this time there is no pretending that either of you donât want this. when he finally pulls back you are both breathing harder and the room feels smaller and warmer. your hands are still in his shirt and his are still at your waist. neither of you step away. thatâs when it hits you. not a romantic revelation and not a safety epiphany but something sharper. you want him. not as a rival. not as a variable. not as a distraction. you want him. and that realization is terrifying because wanting means losing control. he brushes his nose lightly against yours and asks again in a lower voice âyou really sure?â your mouth having gone completely dry. so you gave a simple yet frantic nod. well, you tried to, because the second your head moved a mere inch, he dove in.
he was so eager that, at first, it was less of a kiss and more of him aggressively pushing his mouth onto yours. he quickly resolved this, parting his lips as to interlock with yours. already caging you against the wall, he grabbed both your wrists and held them beside your head. the action made you gasp, giving jake the opportunity to slip his tongue in. your tongue battled with his for a moment, but you put up a weak fight, as your mind was going completely blank, and let him take over. jake was moving his lips away from yours, in attempt to come up for air, when you lightly bit his bottom lip and pulled it. he growled, seemingly forgetting the need to breathe as he went back to your lips, intensifying the kiss, and not daring to pull away again. you whimpered into the kiss, the sounds going straight to his cock. as your noises grew, jakeâs erection continued to throb in an unbearable pain. he pressed his pelvis against your, at first moving to slowly rub it up and down. the friction made you moan, weakening his self control even more. the light grinding began to grow more aggressive, more pathetic as he was now dry humping you in entirety. he moved his hands to your hips, keeping them in place as he began to absolutely rut into you. he needed you to feel him, needed you to know how unbearably hard you made him. jake moved his lips to placed open-mouthed kisses along your jaw and neck, sensually moving his tongue over the skin as he lightly sucked. your mind was hazy, only being able to focus on the ache in your core, and the hard bulge which was repeatedly being rubbed against you. jake whined out of breath as he got off using you, burying his face in your neck. it sounded like a girl being dominated from behind as he whimpered in rhythm with his grinding.
he was so shamelessly needy in trying to rut into you like a dog, and it made your panties dampen even more. slowly, you grabbed one of his hands and lead it to your abdomen, sliding your hands down under the waistband of the shorts until his hand was right over your clothed mound. jake moaned at the feeling of getting to touch you over your soaking underwear. âyouâre so wetâ jake said more to himself than to you. âyeah, i was just in the rainâ you teased. you were about to say something else, when you gasped from the feeling of jakeâs hand going underneath your panties, keeping his hand still over your folds. âsmartassâ he snickered. he looked at you, his eyes softening as he asked, âis this okay?â-âyes, jake. i need youâ. he groaned, restricting himself from taking you right there. he wanted to make this last for as long as possible. âtell me whereâ you didnât say anything, just pushing your hand against his into your core, trying to get his hand impossibly closer. he wanted to tease you, but decided to give in, slowly sliding his finger into your entrance. he wanted to make you beg for it, but decided heâd have that kind of fun with you later. for a second neither of you register the sudden violent vibration against the desk. your breath is uneven and the air between you is still thick and charged, his body close enough that you can feel the heat of him through your clothes. the vibration stops and for half a heartbeat the world feels suspended again. then it starts ringing. sharp. insistent. impossible to ignore. jake freezes and you do too. the sound slices through everything that was building, everything that felt dangerously close to tipping past the point of return. across the room the screen of jakeâs phone lights up.
niki.
jake exhales sharply through his nose and mutters âare you fucking kidding meâ under his breath while his jaw tightens. the phone keeps ringing. you shift slightly, suddenly hyperaware of how close you are to the bed, to him, to what you were just doing. your pulse hasnât slowed yet but your mind is catching up fast. reality rushes in all at once. the phone stops, then immediately starts again. jake pulls his hands back like heâs been burned and steps away from you, running a hand roughly through his hair, irritation already surfacing. âof courseâ he says quietly, more to himself than to you. he grabs the phone on the third ring and answers without greeting, saying flatly âwhat.â on the other end nikiâs voice is loud and suspicious even through the speaker as he asks âwhere are you?â jake closes his eyes for a second before replying âdorm.â niki repeats âdorm?â and adds âsince when? weâre closing out. you still owe drinks.â jake glances at you while you fix your shirt and avoid his eyes. âsince like five minutes agoâ he says tightly. there is a pause before niki hums slowly and says âyou sound weird.â jakeâs jaw flexes as he replies âiâm not.â niki presses âyou sure? because jay says-â and jake cuts him off with âiâll be there in a bit.â niki asks casually âalone?â and jakeâs silence lasts half a second too long. you feel it. âiâll be there.â he repeats, sharper now, before hanging up. the room falls quiet again but it is not the same quiet.
the heat is still there but now it is tangled with awareness and with the undeniable realization of what you were about to do. jake tosses the phone onto the desk a little harder than necessary and mutters âthat was unnecessary.â you look at him and say âwhatâs up with you?â he answers immediately ânothing.â and when you raise an eyebrow he exhales and adds âhe doesnât need to know where i am every second.â silence stretches between you. your breathing has steadied but your thoughts have not. you start with âthat wasâŠâ and then stop. jake looks at you and waits. you search for something safer to say and finish with âwe were drunk.â the explanation hangs in the air like a lifeline. jake hesitates before saying âyeah. we were.â it is convenient. easy. a way to shrink what just happened into something temporary. you nod slowly and begin âit probably wouldnât have-â but he cuts you off quietly with âyeah. probably not.â the words feel strange. too final. he steps back another inch and the space between you widens. you feel colder immediately. âi should goâ you say. he nods and replies âiâll walk you.â you shake your head slightly and say âyou donât have to.â he answers simply âitâs fine.â the walk back is quieter than the one here. there is no teasing and no tension, just silence. your shoulder brushes his once and neither of you react. when you reach your dorm building you both stop automatically under the faint glow of the campus lights. âsoâ you say. âsoâ he echoes. neither of you mention the way his hands felt or the way you pulled him closer or the way neither of you hesitated. âgoodnightâ you say. âgoodnightâ he replies. you turn first and as you step inside you do not look back. jake stands there for a few seconds after the door closes, then drags a hand slowly down his face and mutters to himself âwe were drunk.â but he remembers everything. every second. you both do. and that is the problem.
you donât fall asleep so much as drift in and out of consciousness, and every time you close your eyes the same images replay in precise merciless detail. you see the arcade door shutting behind you, the campus lights looking softer than usual, and the way his hand slid to your waist without hesitation. sometime around three in the morning a single thought settles heavily in your chest: you werenât that drunk. you turn onto your side and pull the blanket higher even though youâre not cold. you replay it again, slower this time, dissecting it the way you would a problem set. you kissed him first. not impulsively and not by accident. you grabbed his jacket and pulled him down. you said it was for research. you deepened it. you went back with him. you said yes. you remember the exact tone of your own voice when you said it. steady. certain. that certainty unsettles you the most. your phone lights up on the nightstand and the glow cuts through the dark. you roll over to check it, your pulse quickening in spite of yourself, only to see the group chat lighting up the screen. jay is complaining about sunoo stealing his hoodie. niki sends a blurry photo of jungwon asleep on the bus ride back. eunchae is spamming emojis. there is no private notification. you stare at the screen longer than necessary. he hasnât texted. you donât know if you feel relieved or disappointed. you flip the phone face down and tell yourself you donât care. but fuck, you absolutely do.
morning feels too bright. you sit at your desk with your laptop open and a document you havenât actually read in ten minutes, your eyes skimming the same paragraph while your mind loops something entirely different. you hear his voice in your head asking âyou sure?â and you remember that you hadnât hesitated. you lean back in your chair and press your fingers to your temples. that is the second realization. if you had felt unsure you would have stopped it. if you had regretted it you would have pulled away. you didnât. a knock hits your door and doesnât wait for permission before eunchae walks in like she owns the space. she takes one look at your face and narrows her eyes before saying âyou look like you either committed a crime or didnât sleep.â without looking at her you reply âboth are dramatic assumptions.â she closes the door and crosses her arms. âyou left earlyâ she says. you answer âso did jakeâ and her eyebrows rise slowly. âohâ she says, then repeats more softly as she steps closer âoh. why did you leave with jake?â -âwe didnât leave togetherâ you say, keeping your gaze on your laptop. she tilts her head and asks âdid you go somewhere after?â silence answers for you. eunchae gasps loudly and exclaims âoh my god.â you wince and say quickly âitâs not a big deal.â she points at you and says âthat is exactly what someone says before itâs absolutely a big deal.â you close your laptop and explain âwe were drunk.â she studies you and asks carefully âwere you though?â you hesitate half a second too long and her eyes widen. âyou werenât.â she says, sounding almost impressed. you look away and admit quietly âno.â she drops onto your bed dramatically and asks âdid you kiss him?â you answer âyes.â she presses a pillow over her face and muffles a scream while you fight a small reluctant smile. lowering the pillow she demands âdid you like it.â you hesitate and try to analyze your reaction like it is a statistic. it wasnât awkward and it wasnât forced and it wasnât fueled by blurred judgment. it felt deliberate. âyesâ you say finally. eunchae drops the pillow and repeats âyou liked it.â you respond âi said yes.â she shakes her head and says âthatâs the same thing.â you argue automatically âitâs not.â she studies you and asks âdo you regret it?â
that question makes you pause longer. you replay not the intensity but the quieter parts, the way he paused to look at you, the way he asked if you were sure, the way he didnât push. you shake your head and answer ânot reallyâ that part is clear. you donât regret it. you just donât understand it. eunchae softens and asks âthen whatâs the problem.â you lean back in your chair and say slowly âthe problem is that i donât know what it means.â she shrugs lightly and says âmaybe it doesnât have to mean anything.â you look at her sharply and say âthatâs worse.â she blinks and asks âwhy?â you answer âbecause if it means nothing then it was just convenient.â you hate how that word feels in your mouth. âdid it feel convenient?â eunchae asks. you think about the way your pulse spiked when he looked at you, the way your body reacted before your mind caught up, the way you didnât want to stop. ânoâ you admit. she leans forward and says âthen it wasnât.â you stare at your desk and add quietly âbut he said we were drunk.â she points out âand you agreed.â you press your lips together because you did. you let that explanation settle because it was easier than dissecting the alternative. you think about the way you stepped back first, the way you said you should go, the way you didnât text. âi donât knowâ you admit, and that is the honest answer. you donât know what he is thinking and that is what unsettles you. the rest of the morning drifts by in a strange half focus. you answer messages and attend class and contribute to discussions. you donât see him anywhere, not in the hallway and not across campus. the absence feels louder than his presence would have. you catch yourself glancing at your phone twice during lecture. there is nothing. no text. you donât send one either. you tell yourself you are giving him space and being rational, but the truth is simpler. you donât want to be the first one to act like it mattered. because what if he didnât think it did. that thought lingers uncomfortably. you donât regret it, but you donât know if he does, and for the first time since the kiss that uncertainty bothers you more than the heat of it ever did.
jake didnât sleep either. he lay on his back staring at the ceiling with his arms folded behind his head like he could physically hold his thoughts in place. every time he closed his eyes he saw flashes of it, the wall, your hands gripping his shirt, the way you said yes without blinking. he wasnât that drunk, and that is the part that annoys him most. if he had been, this would be easier. across the room niki shifts in his bed and groans into his pillow before muttering thickly with sleep âyou left early.â jake doesnât answer. sunghoon rolls onto his side and squints at him before adding âyou didnât answer his calls either.â jake finally exhales and says âi was busy.â niki lifts his head slowly and repeats suspiciously âbusy. at the dorm.â jake grabs his hoodie off the chair and answers âyeah.â niki immediately asks âwith whoâ and jake shoots him a warning look as he says âdonât.â niki sits up fully with a grin spreading across his face and exclaims âoh my god.â sunghoon rubs his face, awake enough now to be entertained, and says matter-of-factly âyou went back with her?â itâs not really question. jake pulls the hoodie over his head and replies âyeah.â niki leans forward eagerly and asks âand...â jake shrugs and says ânothing.â niki stares at him like he just insulted his intelligence and repeats ânothing.â jake repeats firmly ânothing.â sunghoon studies him for a second before asking calmly âthen why do you look like that.â jake frowns and asks âlike what.â niki answers helpfully âlike someone unplugged you mid-download.â jake throws a pillow at him and niki catches it, laughing as he asks âso what happened.â jake runs a hand through his hair and walks toward the sink, deliberately avoiding eye contact, and says âwe talked.â niki gasps dramatically and repeats âyou talked.â sunghoon adds dryly âshocking.â jake splashes water on his face and says âwe were drunk.â there is a brief pause before niki replies slowly âyou werenât that drunk.â jake freezes for half a second before continuing to dry his face and mutters âyou donât know that.â niki immediately counters âi do. you were calculating claw machine angles. thatâs not drunk behavior.â sunghoon snorts quietly at that. jake throws the towel back onto the counter and says âit doesnât matter.â niki leans forward and asks directly âdid you kiss her?â jake doesnât answer and nikiâs eyes widen as he says âyou did.â sunghoon raises an eyebrow and asks âmore than once.â jake exhales sharply and says âwhy are you like this.â niki replies cheerfully âbecause youâre being vague.â
sunghoon tilts his head slightly and asks âdid you want to leave?â jakeâs jaw tightens and he says âwe got interrupted.â niki blinks and asks âby who.â jake shoots him a look and nikiâs mouth drops open as he says âme.â sunghoon stares at niki for a full second before saying flatly ânumber one cockblocker.â niki gasps in outrage and protests âi did not know.â jake groans and rubs his forehead as he says âcan we not.â niki points at him and says âi interrupted something.â jake snaps back âyou didnât interrupt anything.â niki immediately counters âthen why are you annoyed.â jake opens his mouth and then closes it again. sunghoon watches him carefully and asks âdid you want it to stop.â the room grows quieter. jake doesnât look at either of them and instead stares at the floor before finally answering âobviously not.â niki leans back slowly and says âdamn.â sunghoonâs expression shifts, no longer teasing but observant, as he responds âokay.â jake runs a hand through his hair again and says in frustration âitâs not a thing.â niki says evenly âyou say that like youâre trying to convince yourself.â jake glares at him and says âshe just left.â sunghoonâs eyes sharpen slightly as he asks âleft how.â jake replies more flatly now âshe said we were drunk. and then she left.â niki tilts his head and prompts âand..?â jake answers âand thatâs it.â silence settles for a moment. sunghoon leans back against the wall and suggests lightly âmaybe she just didnât want it to be awkward.â jake shrugs and says âor maybe she regretted it.â the admission is quiet and not dramatic. nikiâs grin fades slightly as he asks âdid she look like she regretted it.â jake thinks about it. you didnât look unsure and you didnât look nervous, but you stepped back first and said you should go and you didnât text. âi donât knowâ he admits. sunghoon studies him and says âyouâre overthinking.â jake huffs and replies âiâm not.â niki smirks and says âyou are.â jake grabs his phone off the desk and sees no notifications from you. he doesnât open your chat and he doesnât type anything. he locks the screen and tosses it back down before saying again âit doesnât matter.â niki exchanges a look with sunghoon and sunghoon says lightly âsure.â jake pushes past them toward the door and says âiâm going to class.â as he leaves, niki mutters just loud enough âaannddd heâs gone.â sunghoon replies calmly âfinally.â
for the next days you didnât really plan on avoiding him, and thatâs the problem. if it were intentional it would feel strategic, controlled, rational. instead it just happens. you take a slightly different path across campus in the morning without consciously deciding to. you slow down near the library steps longer than necessary. you pretend to check your phone when you normally wouldnât. you tell yourself itâs coincidence. it isnât. by the time you reach the lecture hall your pulse is higher than it should be for an eight a.m. class. heâs already there. of course he is. jake is sitting two rows down from his usual seat with his laptop open, posture relaxed in a way that looks effortless but isnât. heâs talking to jay about something academic and nodding along with a neutral expression. he doesnât look up when you enter. you donât look at him either. you choose a seat on the opposite side of the room. itâs not dramatic and itâs not obvious. there are plenty of seats. no one would think twice about it. except you know. you always sit closer. the room fills slowly with low conversation and the shuffle of backpacks. eunchae slides into the seat beside you and immediately glances across the room before leaning toward you to whisper âheâs here.â you murmur back âi can see that.â she studies your face and asks quietly âare we pretending.â you answer simply âyes.â she nods once and says âcool.â you open your laptop and force your attention to the screen while the cursor blinks in the corner of a document you arenât reading. you feel his gaze before you see it. it lands briefly, just long enough to confirm youâre here. you donât look up. you know if you do it will turn into something. on the other side of the room jake closes his laptop halfway and leans back in his chair. he didnât expect you to sit that far away. he tells himself it doesnât matter. there are empty seats between you. itâs normal. itâs fine. he avoids looking at you for a full minute. then he does. you arenât looking at him. youâre leaning slightly toward eunchae, saying something quiet with a thoughtful expression. you look normal. not flustered. not tense. just normal. his jaw tightens faintly. maybe you are fine.
the professor walks in and the room settles. the lecture begins. you take notes and when you ask a question midway through your voice is steady and analytical as always. the professor nods approvingly. jake listens. you donât stumble and you donât hesitate and you donât even glance in his direction. later he answers a question, tone confident and sharp. you donât look at him then either. now it feels intentional. halfway through class the professor announces a short paired discussion exercise and says âturn to someone near you.â you freeze. there are several people around you. none of them are him. jake glances sideways automatically. thereâs someone between you. he doesnât move. you donât either. you turn to the person beside you without looking across the room. he does the same. the discussion lasts maybe ten minutes but it feels longer. you can hear his voice from across the room, calm and controlled and articulate. it sounds exactly like it always has. that unsettles you. you thought something would feel different. but externally nothing has changed. internally your pulse spikes every time you hear him laugh at something someone says. you wonder if heâs thinking about it. you wonder if heâs relieved. you wonder if he regrets it. when the professor calls the room back to order you donât look at him once. as soon as class ends you close your laptop quickly and slide it into your bag before the room fully dissolves into movement. eunchae stands slowly and watches you with thinly veiled curiosity before asking quietly âyouâre not even going to look.â you reply âthereâs nothing to look at.â
across the room jake packs his things more slowly than usual and watches you stand. you donât glance over. you donât hesitate. you just walk toward the exit with eunchae beside you. he stays seated for a few extra seconds until sunghoon nudges his shoulder and says âyouâre staring.â jake replies immediately âiâm not.â sunghoon answers calmly âyou are.â jake grabs his bag and mutters âsheâs fine.â jake walks out of the lecture hall a few steps behind you, not close enough to look intentional but close enough to notice. youâre laughing at something eunchae says and you look completely unbothered. his chest tightens faintly. he doesnât know what he expected. maybe a glance. maybe a pause. maybe some sign. you donât give him one. at the doors you push them open and step into the hallway without slowing. for half a second your shoulders almost brush. almost. you shift slightly to the right and he shifts slightly to the left. itâs subtle but deliberate. the distance between you feels louder than any argument would have. neither of you speak. neither of you stop. you walk in opposite directions.
the hallway spills out into the central quad and the quad is alive with noise. music thumps from somewhere near the fountain. student clubs line the grass with folding tables and banners. someone is handing out free iced coffee while someone else shouts about exchange programs. eunchae tugs at your sleeve and says âoh wait, this is today.â you glance around and ask âthe campus fair.â she nods and replies âyeah. we forgot.â you scan the crowd and quickly spot the rest of the group gathered near one of the booths. jay is mid-argument about something academic. sunoo is holding two drinks he clearly did not pay for. kazuha and sakura are reading flyers like they are evaluating them professionally. heeseung stands near them and looks up with an easy smile when he sees you. âheyâ he says. you step into the circle and answer âhi.â                                                           the noise forces everyone to stand a little closer than usual because it is crowded and people brush past constantly. heeseung leans slightly toward you and asks âdid you understand that last example in lecture.â you reply âyeah. it was just misapplied.â he nods and says âthatâs what i thought.â someone squeezes past abruptly behind you and heeseungâs hand lands lightly at your waist to steady you so you do not stumble forward. it is automatic and his hand drops almost immediately. you barely register it because you are used to physical proximity in crowded spaces. across the quad jake does register it. he did not mean to look. he just heard your laugh and that is what pulled his attention. you look normal and relaxed and you are talking easily. then he sees heeseungâs hand at your waist. it is nothing. just a reflex. just balance. but jakeâs shoulders go rigid for a second. he tells himself it is nothing because it is. heeseung is not leaning in and he is not flirting and he is not hovering. he is just there. you laugh at something jay says and heeseung leans closer to say something near your ear so you can hear him over the music. jakeâs jaw tightens before he even realizes it has. âstopâ niki says quietly beside him. jake glances at him and asks âwhat.â niki tilts his head and says âyouâre doing that thing.â jake replies âiâm not doing anything.â niki gives him a look and says âyou are.â
jake looks back at the group just as someone bumps into you again from the side and heeseungâs hand briefly rests at your waist to guide you a step forward so you are not shoved into the table. and jake inhales slowly through his nose. sunghoon steps up on his other side and says quietly âokay, youâre overthinking.â jake replies âiâm not.â sunghoon answers calmly âyou are.â jake runs a hand through his hair, eyes still fixed on the group, and mutters âhe keeps touching her.â sunghoon looks over. heeseungâs hand has already dropped. âheâs steadying herâ sunghoon says evenly. âitâs crowded.â jake does not respond because he knows that. he knows it is crowded and harmless and that heeseung is not doing anything wrong. that does not stop the tight feeling in his chest. niki studies his expression and says âyou didnât care about that before.â jake exhales sharply and replies âi still donât care.â sunghoon looks at him for a long second and says âyou do.â jakeâs jaw sets. across the quad you glance up instinctively and for a second your eyes meet his. he looks away first, not dramatically but slightly too fast. your stomach tightens and you turn back to the group, though your awareness has shifted. you feel him watching. the conversation moves on and someone suggests grabbing food from one of the trucks. the group begins breaking into smaller clusters. heeseung walks ahead with jay and jungwon while you hang back for a second. jake does not approach you and he does not insert himself. he simply stands where he is. that almost makes it worse. niki nudges him lightly and asks âyou going to stand there all day.â jake shrugs and says âitâs fine.â sunghoon folds his arms and comments âyouâre acting like sheâs going to disappear.â jake answers more sharply than he means to âiâm not.â sunghoon studies him quietly and says âwhatâs up with you? you didnât react like this before.â jake swallows. before what. before the kiss. before the dorm. before the interruption. before you stepped back. he looks at you again. you are smiling at something sunoo just said and you look completely unaware of the way he is dissecting every movement. he feels stupid because heeseung did not do anything and you did not do anything and this reaction feels disproportionate. niki leans closer and says quietly âyou think she regretted it.â jakeâs head snaps toward him and he says âi didnât say that.â niki replies âbut you do.â you look normal, maybe too normal. âi donât know, she seems fine to meâ he adds. sunghoon nods slightly and replies âmaybe she is.â that lands wrong. jake exhales slowly while the fair continues around them with music swelling and people laughing and the group shifting further toward the food trucks. he does not move immediately. he stands there for a second longer than necessary, watching you and trying to convince himself he does not care.
niki watches him for another second before saying âokay, this is stupidâ and then starts walking toward the group. sunghoon follows without comment. jake stands still for half a second longer before he follows too. he is not rushed and not tense. he is simply composed. by the time they reach the rest of you his expression is neutral again, polished. jay is mid-story about something absurd that happened in lab and gesturing wildly. sunoo is holding two drinks and insisting he did not steal them while kazuha quietly points out that he absolutely did. you glance up when jake steps into the circle. your eyes meet for a second. he does not smile. he just nods once in a casual controlled way. you nod back just as casually. he stands slightly to the side of the group, not next to you and not far either. heeseung says something to jungwon and laughs easily. it is normal. there is no visible tension. jake does not react. he listens and waits for an opening in the conversation. when one appears he takes it. âsoâ he says lightly while looking at jay âdid you even finish the data corrections or were you too busy flirting with the ta.â jay scoffs and says âi finished.â jake tilts his head slightly and replies âdid you. because your logic in the second section didnât track.âthe shift is subtle but you feel it immediately. that tone. sharper. competitive. jay rolls his eyes and says âyouâre impossible.â jake shrugs and replies âjust saying.â then he looks at you briefly and adds âyou caught that too, right.â there it is. not aggressive and not accusatory but pointed. you blink once before answering evenly âyes. it was a bit inconsistent.â jay throws his hands up and says âtraitors.â the group laughs and jakeâs mouth curves faintly. he is back on familiar ground now. competence. precision. control. you watch him carefully. he is acting normal but there is a tightness around his shoulders. he does not look at you longer than necessary and he does not brush your arm accidentally. he does not stand close. he keeps a slight distance like he is recalibrating. sunghoon notices. niki definitely notices. Â the conversation drifts to the upcoming research panel and heeseung mentions it casually. âyou should both sign upâ he says while looking between you and jake. âyouâd probably destroy it.â jakeâs smile tightens slightly before he replies âweâll see.â you glance at him but he does not meet your eyes. instead he says âitâs competitive.â you answer before you can stop yourself âyou like competitive.â he looks at you then for a beat too long and says quietly âyeah. i do.â something in the way he says it makes your stomach tighten. the group starts moving toward the food trucks.
jake walks ahead this time, not next to you and not waiting. he falls into step with jay and jungwon instead, talking and analyzing and debating something minor like it matters. he looks fine. that is what it looks like. fine. you slow slightly without meaning to and eunchae notices immediately. she leans closer and says âheâs doing the thing.â you ask âwhat thing?â she answers âthe âi donât careâ thing.â you swallow. he really does look like he does not care. like last night did not shift anything. like you imagined the tension. across the quad jake keeps talking but his focus is not fully on the conversation. he is aware of where you are. he is aware that you are not beside him. he is aware that you did not try to close the distance. a thought settles more firmly in his mind: she did not actually want me. if you had, you would not be acting this normal. you would not be this unaffected. so he does what he always does when something feels unstable. he sharpens. he becomes precise. he picks apart jayâs argument and corrects jungwonâs phrasing and debates minor details with unnecessary intensity. control feels safer. control feels familiar. control does not leave. niki drifts up beside him and says quietly âyouâre overcompensating.â jake replies without missing a beat âiâm not.â niki says simply âyou are.â jake exhales slowly and says âitâs not a thing.â niki studies him and asks âthen why are you acting like it was.â jake does not answer because he does not have one. sunghoon watches him for another second before saying evenly âjust donât be weird.â jake replies automatically âiâm not being weird.â niki, sounding almost bored now, says again âyou are.â jake doesnât argue this time. he just looks away with his jaw set and starts walking toward the library. the rest of you drift in that direction too. someone mentions reviewing notes before the research panel deadline. someone else complains about being tired.
somehow everyone still ends up in the same study room an hour later. you take your usual seat near the center of the table. jake does not sit beside you. he chooses the chair directly across instead. Â laptops open. papers spread. the low hum of academic focus settles in. jay is mid-rant about formatting guidelines. sunoo is pretending to understand citations. kazuha is quietly correcting something on jungwonâs screen. you start first. âif we adjust the threshold earlier in the modelâ you say while angling your laptop slightly so the others can see âthe margin stabilizes without needing a secondary correction.â jay leans in and says âthatâs cleaner.â kazuha nods once and adds âit reads stronger.â jake looks at the screen and does not speak for a second. then he says calmly and evenly âthat doesnât work.â you blink and reply âit does.â he tilts his head slightly and says âonly if the secondary variable is already aligned.â you answer âit is.â he holds your gaze and says âyou didnât show that.â there is no teasing in his voice and no smirk and no warmth. just correction. you sit up straighter and say âitâs implied.â jake continues to hold your gaze and replies âimplied isnât enough.â the room shifts almost imperceptibly. jay glances between you. sunoo goes very quiet. you feel the difference. this is not your usual academic sparring. this does not feel playful. âi can clarify itâ you say evenly. jake nods once and responds âyeah, you should.â it is not loud and not aggressive but it lands harder than it should. you add the clarification without looking at him. across the table he does not look away. niki leans back slowly and watches jake with narrowed eyes. sunghoon finally says in a casual but pointed tone âenough, jake.â jake shrugs and replies âitâs for the panel.â but niki answers âit was fine.â it was not about the panel. it was about control and precision and something that happened against a dorm wall that he cannot categorize. you close your laptop a little too sharply and say âiâll adjust the whole section later.â kazuha adds gently âyou donât have to rewrite it.â you reply âi want to.â jakeâs fingers pause over his keyboard for half a second. he did not mean to push it that far. he just wanted something he cannot quite define. the room settles into a strained quiet until jay eventually breaks it by asking sunoo about something irrelevant. conversation resumes but softer and thinner. you keep your eyes on your screen for the rest of the time youâre there.
the days after that study session pass quietly. not dramatically. just⊠thinner. you donât see him much, or maybe you do, but only in passing-across lecture halls, at the edge of the quad, through the reflection of library windows. you donât sit next to him anymore. he doesnât sit next to you either. no one comments on it, but everyone notices. the group chat stays active with memes, complaints, and scheduling. he replies normally, and so do you. you donât text him privately. he doesnât text you either. and that silence sits heavier than it should. you tell yourself itâs fine. you tell yourself itâs easier this way. you tell yourself you donât miss the way he used to argue with you like it was a sport. you absolutely do. today, though, you donât have the option of avoidance. you have to meet him. the project deadline is close enough that pretending doesnât work anymore. you stare at the calendar reminder for a second longer than necessary before grabbing your bag. you donât want to go, not because youâre scared, but because you donât know which version of him youâre getting-the competitive one, the sharp one, the quiet one, or the one who was ready to fuck you like it wasnât theory anymore. heâs already in the study room when you walk in. of course he is. laptop open, notes spread neatly, posture straight-controlled. he looks up when the door clicks shut, and your eyes meet for half a second before he nods and says, âhey.â you answer, âhiâ and take the seat across from him, not beside but across. the distance feels intentional even though neither of you comments on it. silence stretches while you open your laptop until he breaks it by saying evenly, âi reworked the introduction. it was too repetitive.â you nod and reply, âokay.â he turns his screen slightly so you can see, and you lean forward just enough to read it. itâs good-precise, structured, cold. âitâs cleanerâ you say, and he nods once and replies, âyeah.â thatâs it. no teasing, no smug comment, no competitive spark-just agreement. you scroll through your section and say, âi clarified the model alignment.â he responds, âi saw.â you glance up and find heâs already looking at you, so you look back down as he adds, âgood.â something about the word feels smaller than it should. you both work in silence for a few minutes, the clicking of keyboards louder than usual. at some point, you say, âwe should probably tighten the transition hereâ and he doesnât argue but just nods and says, âyeah.â you blink, almost missing the way he used to challenge everything you said, almost missing the way youâd argue back without hesitation. now everything feels careful, measured, like youâre both avoiding stepping on something fragile.
he scrolls through your section again, slower this time, then says, âthis part could be stronger.â itâs not sharp, but itâs still a correction. you straighten slightly and ask, âhow?â he replies, âit reads safe. youâre usually more direct.â that lands. you look at him properly for the first time since you walked in and ask, âwhat does that mean?â he shrugs lightly and says, âit just feels⊠restrained.â you hold his gaze and reply quietly, âyouâve been restrained too.â the words sit between you, and he looks away first this time. âiâm just focusedâ he says. âso am iâ you answer. silence settles again, thicker now. he rubs a hand over the back of his neck. you notice the tension there, and he notices you noticing, so you look down at your screen again. across the table, something shifts in him. youâre not fighting him. youâre not pushing back. youâre not smiling sarcastically. youâre just calm, detached. youâre fine. youâre fine. iâm fine. you donât care. you didnât want-no. he swallows and looks at his screen again before saying, âletâs just finish this section.â you nod, and you both work for another ten minutes without speaking. when you finally close your laptop, itâs almost abrupt. âi have to goâ you say. he looks up quickly and responds, âoh.â itâs small, but itâs there. âweâre almost doneâŠâ he adds. âi knowâ you reply as you stand. you hesitate for half a second. he could say something. he doesnât. âsee youâ you say. âyeahâ he answers. you walk out, and the door clicks shut behind you. he stays seated, staring at the empty chair across from him. it wasnât better. it wasnât worse. it was just⊠distant. he leans back slowly. youâre fine. youâre fine without me. iâm fine. you donât care. you didnât want-no. thatâs not it. but he doesnât know what it is. you donât either.
the hallway outside the study room feels colder than it should. you adjust the strap of your bag on your shoulder and walk faster than necessary, like distance will make something settle. you replay the entire hour in your head: the way he didnât argue, the way he did argue, the way he called you restrained, the way he wouldnât look at you for too long. it wasnât hostile. it wasnât warm either. it was careful. and careful feels wrong. so wrong for some reason. you step outside into the evening air and spot sunoo sitting on the low stone wall near the entrance, scrolling through his phone with dramatic concentration. he looks up when he hears your footsteps and says, âyou look like you just finished a breakup.â you stop and reply, âthatâs aggressive.â he shrugs and says, âbut you doâ you hesitate before walking over and sitting beside him. âhow was it?â he asks casually. âproductive,..â you reply automatically. he gives you a look, and you correct yourself by saying, âawkward.â- âahâ he responds. you stare straight ahead at the quad, watching people cross between buildings in the soft evening light. âheâs being weirdâ you say finally. sunoo tilts his head and asks, âweird how?â- âdifferentâ you answer. âtoo controlled. or too distant. or both.â sunoo hums thoughtfully and says, âheâs been quiet.â you glance at him and ask, âwith everyone?â - ânot exactlyâ he replies. âjust⊠sharper. like heâs trying too hard not to be.â you frown slightly because that makes uncomfortable sense. âhe keeps correcting meâ you admit. âthatâs not newâ sunoo says. ânoâ you reply, shaking your head slightly. âit is. itâs not the same.â sunoo studies you more carefully now and asks, âdid something happen?â you look away. you could lie. you donât. âwe kinda kissedâ you say quietly. sunooâs entire posture straightens as he says, âyou what.â - âit wasnât plannedâ you explain. âwhen?â he presses. âafter the arcade.â his mouth opens slightly as he asks, âand?â - âand nothingâ you say too quickly. he narrows his eyes and says, âthatâs not how that works.â - âwe were drunkâ you reply. âwere you?â he asks. you pause. sunooâs expression softens immediately as he says, âoh.â you exhale slowly and explain, âhe said we were drunk. i agreed. and then heâs just⊠been like this.â- âlike what?â sunoo asks. âlike it didnât matterâ you answer. sunoo considers that before saying, âhe doesnât look like it didnât matter.â you blink and ask, âwhat does that mean?â - âhe looks like heâs overthinkingâ sunoo replies. ânot indifferent.â you look down at your hands. âhe feels distantâ you say quietly. sunoo nudges your shoulder lightly and says, âmaybe heâs confused.â- âgreat, so am iâ you admit. that hangs there. you replay the way jake looked at you tonight across the table, the way he paused when you stood up, the way he said, âoh.â it wasnât nothing. but it wasnât enough either. âi donât know what he wantsâ you admit. sunoo smiles faintly and says, âthat makes two of you.â you let out a small breath that almost feels like a laugh. the quad lights flicker on one by one as the sun lowers. you donât feel angry. you feel unsettled. because something shifted.
the days after that study session donât explode. they settle, which is somehow worse. you donât fight. you donât flirt. you donât fix anything. you just exist in the same spaces slightly apart. in lectures, he sits two seats away now. not directly across. not beside. just⊠offset, like neither of you are claiming anything. you catch him looking at you once in the reflection of the classroom window. he looks away before you can be sure. you stop checking after that. itâs easier. you tell yourself that. this morning feels heavier than usual. the sky is dull and overcast, the air cool enough that you pull your sleeves over your hands as you walk toward the building. the reminder about todayâs discussion still lingers in the back of your mind. the professor mentioned it last week: cold-calling, open floor analysis. jake thrives in those settings. he always has. you donât know why that thought tightens something in your chest. when you step into the lecture hall, heâs already there. that focused, controlled stillness he wears like armor. he looks up when you enter, just briefly. his eyes pause on you half a second longer than neutral, then he looks back down. you sit three seats to the side this time. not too far. not close. just enough to keep things unspoken. the room fills gradually. sunoo slides into the seat behind you and whispers, âyou look stressed.â- âiâm notâ you reply. he mutters, âyou say that like youâre auditioning for somethingâ clearly mocking jakeâs tone. you canât really laugh at that. across the aisle, jake closes his laptop for a second and rolls his shoulders back, like heâs bracing for something. you notice the movement. you shouldnât. but you do. he looks tired. not visibly. not dramatically. just⊠tight.
the professor walks in exactly on time, placing her bag on the desk with the kind of calm precision that signals today will not be passive. she scans the room and says, âi hope you reviewed the reading. weâre doing discussion differently today.â a ripple of quiet moves through the hall. she writes a question on the board. itâs layered, the kind of question that invites complexity but punishes overcomplication. you read it once. twice. your brain starts mapping an answer. before anyone else speaks, jake does. his voice is steady. confident. âit hinges on structural misalignment within the modelâs assumptionsâ he begins, leaning back slightly in his chair like this is familiar territory. you donât look at him immediately. you focus on the board. but you hear the shift in his tone. measured. calculated. heâs in control. he continues, dissecting the framework piece by piece. itâs articulate. logical. thorough. maybe too thorough. the professor tilts her head slightly. you notice that too. he keeps going, layering complexity on top of complexity, pulling threads from earlier readings and weaving them into something ambitious. the room is quiet. listening. he finishes with, âso the instability isnât accidental. itâs embedded.â silence lingers for a second. the professor nods slowly and says, âthatâs an interesting angle, but thatâs not what i asked.â the words land softly but clearly. a few people shift in their seats. you look up now. jakeâs expression doesnât change immediately. âi understood the questionâ he replies calmly. his tone is still composed, but thereâs something under it. thin. tight. the professorâs gaze sharpens just slightly as she says, âthen answer it.â the room goes still. you feel your pulse pick up. he adjusts in his seat and says, âi did.â- ânoâ she replies evenly. âyou reframed it.â thatâs when you see it. the smallest crack. his jaw tightens. he inhales. across the aisle, sunoo goes very quiet. you look at jake fully now. not because you want to. because you feel it happening. he straightens slightly, leaning forward this time, and says, âthe reframing is necessary. the premise is flawed without it.â the professor folds her arms lightly and replies, âyouâre avoiding the constraint.â the air shifts. this isnât playful debate. this is precision meeting resistance. jake doesnât back down. âyou canât isolate the variable without addressing-â- âthatâs not what i askedâ she repeats. silence. the kind that presses against your ears.
you watch him calculate. you see him choosing. he could pivot. he doesnât. âthen the question is incompleteâ he says. a few people glance at each other. itâs subtle. but itâs there. the professorâs expression doesnât change, but her voice lowers slightly as she says, âor you are.â that lands. the room holds its breath. you feel something twist in your chest. he doesnât look at you. he stares at the front of the room, posture rigid now. and for the first time in a long time, he looks⊠cornered. he opens his mouth to answer again. and you know, before he says anything, that this is where control starts slipping. the room is still. you can hear the faint hum of the projector above the board. you can feel everyone waiting. he leans forward slightly, his voice sharper now as he says, âthe constraint ignores structural dependency. if you isolate it without reframing-â- âthat wasnât the taskâ the professor interrupts. itâs not harsh. itâs worse than harsh. itâs calm. and final. a flicker passes over his face, too quick for most people to catch. you catch it. he shifts in his chair. you can see the choice happening, pivot or push. he pushes. âthe dependency mattersâ he insists. âyou canât evaluate the output without-â- âyouâre overcomplicating itâ she says evenly. âjust answer the question.â silence presses down again, heavier this time. you donât look at him, but you feel him unraveling. he exhales through his nose, barely audible, his fingers tapping once against the edge of his desk. he answers again, shorter this time, more direct, but itâs off, just slightly, not disastrous but not right. the professor pauses, then says, âthatâs incorrect.â the words settle into the room like dust. no one moves. you donât either. your eyes stay on your notebook, but your focus is gone. you know that tone. you know what that means. itâs not humiliation. itâs precision correction. but for him, itâs exposure. he doesnât respond immediately. he just sits there, still, then evenly says, âi donât think it is.â itâs quiet, but defensive now. the professor tilts her head and replies, âit is, jake. itâs wrong.â thereâs no anger in her voice, just certainty. a few people glance toward him. no one says anything. he doesnât look at you, not once, and that makes something twist tighter in your chest because you know he feels it. he hates being wrong publicly. he hates losing footing. he hates slipping. you tell yourself to stay out of it. he doesnât need you. he wonât want you. heâll think youâre-
you hesitate.
your fingers press against the edge of your desk. the pause stretches too long. he inhales again, sharper this time. âi see what youâre sayingâ he says finally, though his tone makes it clear he doesnât. âbut that interpretation assumes-â- âit doesnâtâ she replies calmly. âit assumes clarity.â the word clarity lingers. you look up now, really look at him. his jaw is set. his shoulders tight. heâs not going to pivot. heâs going to dig. and if he digs, this turns into something else. you shouldnât step in. you know that. heâll hate it. heâll feel exposed. you hesitate again. one second. two. the silence becomes unbearable, and then you say, steady and careful, âi think what heâs pointing toward is the instability in the output curve.â your voice cuts through the room softly, not loud, not abrupt, just enough. you donât look at him when you continue. âif you isolate the variable without reframing the dependency, the margin collapses. but if you assume the constraint holds, then the output stabilizes.â you keep your tone neutral, clinical. you donât frame it as correction. you frame it as translation. the professor turns toward you and asks, âand does the constraint hold?â- âyesâ you reply evenly. âbecause the instability heâs describing only appears under secondary alignment failure, which wasnât part of the original condition.â silence again, but this time itâs different. the professor nods once and says, âexactly.â the word lands cleanly. the room exhales. you donât. you keep your eyes on the front of the room. you donât look at him. you donât need to. you can feel it. across the aisle, he doesnât move, not immediately. then you hear it, the faint scrape of his pen against the desk, controlled, measured.
the professor moves on. discussion resumes. other students speak. the tension diffuses, but not for you and not for him, because you know what just happened. you stepped in. you reframed. you fixed it. you gave him an out. and he didnât look at you. he still doesnât. he writes something down too hard. the pen scratches louder than it should. you focus on your notes, but you feel the air shift between you. you saw that. you hesitated. you stepped in anyway. he didnât need any help. no. he swallows. he keeps his eyes on the board. iâm fine. you donât care.you didnât want to- no. thatâs not it. the professor calls on someone else. the room moves forward. but something in him has already slipped. discussion moves forward. other students offer comments. the tension in the room thins slightly, though it never fully disappears. you keep your focus forward. you donât look at him. you donât need to. you can feel him recalibrating, writing too hard, too straight, too still. a few minutes later, the professor circles back. âas y/n pointed outâ she says, glancing in your direction, âthe instability only manifests under secondary misalignment. thatâs why isolating the variable works within the original constraint.â the word she hangs in the air longer than necessary. a couple students nod. jay murmurs something like, âthat makes sense.â and thatâs it. but for jake, itâs the second hit. you donât move. you donât react. but across the aisle, something in him shifts. he straightens slightly in his chair, too abruptly. the professor continues, âwhich is also why reframing the premise isnât required in this case.â reframing. his word. his word used to dismiss the necessity of his answer. you feel it before you hear it, the change in his breathing. then his voice cuts in. âthat depends on how rigidly you interpret the premise.â itâs controlled, but thinner now. the professor pauses. âit depends on the questionâ she replies. âthe question was incompleteâ he says. there it is. not loud. not explosive. just sharper than it needs to be. a few heads turn. the professor studies him for a second and says, âit wasnât.â silence again. he doesnât let it go. âyou restricted itâ he says. âand you expanded itâ she counters calmly. âbeyond the scope.â the room is still. you can feel sunoo behind you tense. you donât turn around. you keep your eyes forward. jake exhales sharply through his nose and says, âthatâs not the same thing.â- âit isâ she replies. âand if you canât operate within constraint, youâll keep missing the point.â that lands harder than the first correction. missing the point.
you see it happen in real time. his posture shifts. his fingers curl around his pen. he doesnât look at you. not once. he looks at the board, then at the professor, then down at his notes. and then he closes his notebook too hard. the sound cuts through the room. no one speaks. he stands up. not dramatically. not with a slam. just sudden. âi need a minuteâ he says. his tone is flat, controlled, but his jaw is tight. the professor doesnât stop him. no one does. he grabs his bag, walks toward the door, and he doesnât look at you. not when he passes your row. not when the door opens. not when it shuts behind him. the room exhales after he leaves. the professor waits a second, then says, âall right.â discussion resumes, but itâs softer, thinner. you stare at the empty space where he was sitting. your chest feels tight. not because he was wrong. not because you were right. because he looked like he was unraveling. and he wouldnât let you see it. you donât take notes for the rest of the class. you donât hear the rest of what the professor says. you register words. you donât process them. your pen moves once or twice across the page out of habit, but the lines are useless, half-formed sentences that donât connect to anything. the seat he vacated feels louder than the discussion that resumes. he didnât look at you. not once. you replay that detail over and over like it matters more than everything else. when class finally ends, chairs scrape against the floor in staggered rhythm. conversations spark up in low, cautious tones, like everyone is aware something just shifted but no one wants to be the first to name it. sunoo appears at your side almost immediately. he doesnât say anything at first. he just stands there. you close your notebook slowly. âthat wasâŠâ he starts.- âyeahâ you answer before he finishes. you both look toward the door. heâs not there. of course heâs not. jay approaches next, more careful than usual. âis he okay?â sunoo asks. you donât know how to answer that. âheâll cool offâ jay says quickly, as if trying to reassure himself more than you. âhe just hates being wrong.â you nod once. but it wasnât just about being wrong.  sunghoon joins the small circle now, hands in his pockets, expression unreadable. âhe shouldnât have pushed itâ he says. âyeahâ you say quietly. âhe shouldnât have.â thereâs no satisfaction in your voice. no triumph. the hallway outside fills quickly as everyone filters out. you take your time packing up, even though thereâs no reason to. you could leave. you could pretend it wasnât personal. you could let him sit in whatever that was. but the thought of him spiraling alone irritates you more than it should. âheâll be outsideâ sunghoon says, almost like he read your mind. you glance at him. sunghoon shrugs slightly and adds, âhe doesnât go far.â
you hesitate. then you stand. you donât announce that youâre going after him. you just do. the hallway air feels cooler than the classroom did. students move around you in clusters, unaware of the tightness sitting in your chest. you scan the corridor. he isnât there. you walk farther down, past the vending machines, past the stairwell, and then you see him at the end of the hallway near the windows, standing still, hands on his hips, looking out over the quad like the world personally offended him. you slow your steps. for a second, you consider turning around. you donât. you walk up beside him, not too close, not far either. he doesnât look at you. âi didnât need helpâ he says. you hadnât spoken yet. âi didnât say you didâ you reply evenly. he lets out a quiet, humorless breath. âyou stepped in.â thereâs no gratitude in it. just tension. âyou were about to argue in circlesâ you say calmly. âshe wasnât going to let you.â - âi had itâ he insists. âyou didnât.â the words come out sharper than you intended. he turns his head slightly now, not enough to fully face you but enough. âyou think i canât handle it?â he asks. âthatâs not what i said.â- âitâs is.â- âi clarifiedâ you reply. âthatâs all.â his jaw tightens. âright.â the single word drips with something you donât recognize. you exhale slowly. âwhy are you acting like iâm trying to put you down?â he finally looks at you fully now, and thereâs something raw in his expression, not anger, not exactly, wounded pride. âyou arenâtâ he says. âthatâs not how youâre acting.â he runs a hand through his hair, frustrated. âyou made it worse.â you blink. âhow?â - âyou translated meâ he says. âlike i couldnât say it right.â the accusation stings more than it should. âi was trying to help.â - âi donât need your helpâ- âi know.â silence stretches again.
students pass behind you, unaware of the charged air between you. he looks away first. âiâm not incompetentâ he says quietly. you stare at him. âi never said you were.â- âbut you hesitatedâ he says. that stops you. you hesitate again now. âdonât bullshit meâ he continues, voice low. âyou waited y/n.â because you did. you waited. because you knew he wouldnât want you to step in. because you knew heâd take it personally. because you were trying to decide if helping him would hurt him more. âthat doesnât mean i think youâre incompetentâ you say. âit means you thought i couldnât recoverâ he counters. you swallow. âyou were pushingâ you say carefully. âand she wasnât going to bend.â he laughs softly, but thereâs no humor in it. âso you have to step in?â -âyes.â he nods once, slow. âi donât want you to do that.â the words feel loaded. âdo what?â you ask. âfix it.â - âi wasnât fixing youâ you say. âi was just finishing your thought.â - âthatâs worse.â you stare at him. âwhy?â you ask. âbecause it makes it look like i needed you to.â you donât know how to respond to that because the truth is you donât care how it looked. you cared that he was digging himself deeper. âi didnât do it for themâ you say quietly. âi did it because you were about to make it worse for yourself.â he looks at you again. something flickers in his expression, confusion, hurt, maybe even something softer. then it shutters closed. âi donât need your savingâ he says. âi wasnât saving you.â - âthen why do you care?â he asks suddenly. the question lands harder than anything else. you inhale. âbecause i do.â the words leave your mouth before you filter them. the hallway noise fades for a second. he stares at you, not defensive now, not sharp, just still. âi donât want you to careâ he says quietly. and thatâs what cracks something inside you. âyou donât get to decide thatâ you reply. his jaw tightens again. he steps back slightly, like the proximity is too much. âdrop itâ he says. âiâm not trying to fight you.â you answer. - âi know.â - âthen stop acting like iâm the problem.â he looks at you for a long second, then away. âiâm notâ he says. but he is. and you both know it. you donât say anything else because youâre not going to beg him to tell you whatâs wrong. you turn and start walking back down the hallway. he doesnât stop you. doesnât call your name. doesnât move.
the rehearsal room is mostly empty when you walk in, a standard seminar space with stackable chairs pushed against the walls and a long rectangular table cutting the center in half like a line neither of you are supposed to cross. the projector is already on, the first slide washed-out blue against the whiteboard. itâs early evening. the light outside the tall windows has turned that flat, colorless gray that makes everything look less defined. the fluorescent lights buzz overhead. the air smells faintly like dry erase marker and old ventilation. jake is already at the front. his laptop is open, sleeves pushed up, clicking through the slides slowly and deliberately, not reviewing, inspecting. a neat stack of printed notes sits beside him, edges aligned so precisely it looks intentional. he doesnât look rushed. he looks braced. when the door shuts behind you, he glances up just once and gives a small nod without smiling before turning back to the screen, as if the slide matters more than the timing of you walking in. you take the seat across from him without thinking about it, not beside, across. you set your bag down and open your laptop. the room hums with the projector, the trackpad, your breathing. it should feel routine. it doesnât. it feels like something is being held in place carefully and deliberately, and neither of you are testing how much pressure it can take. he clicks back to the first slide again, the one you have already run through twice. starting over will not fix what he is trying to fix. you begin anyway, delivering the same opening sentence in the same measured tone, the one you can summon even when your stomach feels too tight. three lines in, he shifts in his chair. you wait for the interruption. it does not come. that almost throws you more than if it had. you keep going through the dependency chain, the constraint behavior, the margin stabilization under the original premise. you gesture once to the graph without looking at him. you can feel his attention like weight, not casual, not analytical, heavy.
you finish the slide and click to the next one. he says nothing. you click again. still nothing. it is not that he agrees. it is that he is holding himself back. you can almost see it, the restraint, the effort not to correct you, not to adjust phrasing, not to sharpen something just to feel in control again. you reach the end of your section without being stopped. your hand lowers, the clicker still in it. you turn. jake is watching the screen, his jaw tight. not angry. contained. that is worse. you set the clicker down carefully. the sound is too loud in the quiet. âso, what now?â you ask in a neutral tone. he blinks once, like he forgot you were there and is recalibrating. ânow we run it togetherâ jake replies. âokayâ you say. he stands. you meet him at the front, not close enough that your shoulders touch, but close enough that you hear the subtle change in his breathing when you step into his space. he has always been good at presenting. he speaks like nerves do not exist, like words are tools and he owns the entire workshop. today it sounds the same, until you listen for what is not there. half a beat too fast in the middle of a sentence. a breath pulled in sharper than necessary when he transitions to the section he was challenged on in class. a pause, small, almost invisible.no one else would catch it. you do. you watch his hands instead of the slide. his fingers flex once at his side, then still. he gets through the section that tripped him up earlier, his voice steady, his pacing controlled, his precision intact. but something underneath it is bracing. when he finishes, he glances at you, brief and almost involuntary, then looks away immediately, like eye contact would confirm something he is not ready to name. âyour turnâ jake says, and you pick up from his slide, matching his tone automatically. for a moment, it almost feels normal. coordinated. familiar. then you reach the line he edited earlier. âwhen the constraint collapses-â you say, and the phrasing feels wrong in your mouth, not incorrect, just not yours. jakeâs gaze lifts immediately, but you keep going. you can feel him listening, not for clarity, not for argument, but for deviation, for control. you finish the slide and let the silence sit until he nods once and says, âgood.â it does not feel like approval. it feels like a checkbox.
you set the clicker down and ask, âare we done?â he glances at his notes and replies, âwe should run it again.â you lift your shoulders slightly and ask, âwhy?â jake answers, âtiming matters.â you reply, âweâre on time.â he says, âi want it clean.â you answer, âit was clean.â he meets your eyes and adds, âit can be cleaner.â you hold his gaze without raising your voice and ask, âwhy are you like this right now?â his jaw tightens slightly before he replies, âlike what?â you gesture vaguely at the slides, the edits, the way he is hovering over every sentence, and say, âlike youâre sanding everything down until it doesnât sound like me.â he answers, âitâs supposed to sound like the project.â you reply evenly, âit is the project and iâm part of it.â he says, âi knowâ too fast, and you study him before asking, âdo you?â his eyes flick away and he reaches for his notebook instead, saying, âwe need to tighten the conclusion.â you do not move. he flips a page like the paper can shield him and adds, âif we shorten the final section, we can emphasize the model alignmentâ still refusing to look at you. you watch him retreat into structure in real time and say, âjake.â he stops flipping pages but keeps his eyes down and answers, âwhat?â you ask quietly, âare you okay?â the question lands heavy. he does not look up when he says, âyeah. iâm fine.â there it is. you do not argue. you just nod and say, âokay.â the word shifts something. he glances up then, quick and searching, like he expected resistance, but you give him none. you sit back down and open your laptop. the room feels too large. he keeps writing, too deliberately.
you scroll to the final slide and notice something has changed. you point at the screen and say, âthis isnât what i wrote.â he finally looks up and says, âitâs better.â you reply, âitâs just different.â he holds your gaze and says, âdifferent isnât always bad.â you let out a breath that almost sounds like a laugh and answer, âitâs not just different.â his expression hardens as he asks, âwhat do you want me to say?â the bluntness catches you and you respond, âwhat?â he gestures at the room and says, âyou keep looking at me like iâm doing something. iâm rehearsing.â you stare at him and reply, âyouâre not just rehearsing.â his eyes sharpen as he asks, âthen what am i doing?â you hesitate because the real answer is not about slides and say, âyouâre controlling.â his jaw flexes and he replies, âiâm preparing.â you say more softly, âno. youâre controlling.â silence settles between you. the projector hum feels louder. he runs a hand through his hair, frustrated not at you but at himself, and starts, âcan we just-â before stopping. you do not help him. you do not fill the silence. you let the unfinished sentence sit between you. he swallows, and for a second his expression slips, not anger, not pride, something thinner, before he blinks it away and says steadily, âletâs run the conclusion.â you nod slowly and say, âokay.â you stand, pick up the clicker, and move back into the projector light. he joins you but not fully. he stays just outside the brightest edge, like he does not want to be entirely exposed. you start the conclusion, your voice steady. he does not interrupt. you reach the line you softened, the one about implications, about how the model behaves in real conditions, about what it suggests beyond the data, and you deliver it the way you wrote it. jake shifts, not an interruption, a recoil. you keep going.
when you finish, you turn to him and ask, âany issues?â he opens his mouth, then closes it. his eyes flick to your face, then away. âno. keep goingâ jake says, too flat. you do not move. âyou didnât like that partâ you say quietly. his shoulders stiffen. âitâs fineâ he replies. âapparently itâs notâ you answer. his eyes lift sharply and he snaps, âstop psychoanalyzing me.â you freeze. âiâm notâ you say. âyou areâ jake says, his jaw tightening. âyou keep asking if iâm okay like iâm-â he cuts himself off. the room goes still. you keep your voice low and say, âi didnât say anything.â- âyou donât have toâ he replies. silence stretches between you. you take a slow breath and say, âyouâre acting different.â - âso are youâ jake says. that lands harder. âhow?â you ask. he hesitates just enough. âyouâre distantâ he says. you blink once, slow, and keep your face neutral, like that will stop your throat from tightening. âyouâve been distantâ you reply. âiâm hereâ he says. âso am iâ you answer. he exhales through his nose, frustrated and cornered, and asks, âthen why does it feel like youâre not?â the question is not sharp. it is tired. you look at him carefully and say, âmaybe because you keep treating everything like itâs fragile.â his eyes narrow. âiâm notâ he says. âyou areâ you reply. âiâm trying not to let it slipâ he says. âwhat?â you ask. he does not answer. instead he says, âweâre wasting time.â you nod once and say, âwe are.â he glances at you, startled, like he expected resistance. you do not give it. you sit down and open your laptop.
he stays standing too long, like he is deciding whether to say something else. he does not. he sits back harder than necessary, posture rigid. outside, the campus darkens. streetlights flick on. the window reflects both of you in faint blue, two silhouettes separated by a table stacked with notes. you make a small edit to the conclusion. he watches your cursor move, then looks away quickly. silence again. he flips to the next slide. you have run it three times. he adjusts a bullet point, then another. you do not look at the screen. you look at him. he feels it. âtiming was offâ jake says without turning. âit wasnâtâ you reply. âit wasâ he says. âby how much?â you ask. âthree secondsâ he answers. you blink and ask, âthree seconds?â- âyesâ jake says. you stare at him. he is serious, the cursor hovering over the timeline like it personally offended him. âthatâs what weâre doing. three secondsâ you say quietly. âit adds upâ he replies. âwe wonât run longâ you say. âwe mightâ he counters. âthatâs not the same thingâ you reply. âit mattersâ he says. âitâs three secondsâ you answer. âitâs disciplineâ jake says. that word lands wrong. your shoulders stiffen. âdiscipline?â you repeat. âyesâ he says. âsince when is this about discipline?â you ask. âit always isâ he replies. ânoâ you say evenly. âitâs about control.â his head snaps toward you. âitâs about structure y/nâ he says. âyouâre hiding in itâ you answer. the air shifts. his jaw tightens. âiâm not hidingâ jake says. âyou areâ you reply. âiâm making sure we donât failâ he says. âwe wonâtâ you answer. âyou donât know thatâ he says. âi know youâ you say. the words leave before you can filter them. he goes still. âi know youâ you repeat, softer now. âyou donât need to grind this down to prove youâre in control.â something cracks, not loud but visible. âi donât get to lose control.â jake says. the admission is quiet. too honest. you stare at him. âwhatâs that supposed to mean?â you ask. he swallows. ânothingâ he says. that is a lie. you both know it. he looks away first. ârun it againâ he says. you do not move. ânoâ you reply. he blinks. âno?â he asks. âitâs goodâ you say. âwe donât settle for goodâ he replies. âmaybe you donâtâ you answer. that lands. he studies you like he is trying to see what changed. âare you pulling back?â jake asks quietly. you hold his gaze before answering, âiâm adjusting.â - âto what?â he presses. you hesitate, then say, âto you.â that lands, and his expression shifts, subtle but real. âthatâs not an answerâ jake says. âit isâ you reply. âyouâve been on edge. iâm not going to keep pushing if youâre going to treat everything like a threat.â silence stretches, his jaw tightening before he says, âletâs just finish.â back to structure. back to safety. âyouâre not tightening the timing,â you say. âyouâre suffocating it.â he doesnât answer immediately, his jaw flexing once before he says, ârun it again.â now the presentation argument feels connected to the emotional one. you donât move.
âjake,â you say. âwhat,â he replies. âyouâre obsessing,â you tell him. âiâm preparing,â he answers. âno. youâre obsessing,â you say quietly. his fingers tap once against the trackpad, controlled and sharp. âyouâre rushing the emphasisâ he says. âiâm notâ you reply. âyou areâ he insists. âiâve presented beforeâ you say. âso have iâ jake answers. âand?â you press. âand we donât hedgeâ he says. âiâm not hedgingâ you counter. âyou areâ he replies. âby breathing?â you ask. âby softening the lineâ he says. you stare at him. âyouâre hearing what you want to hearâ you say. he closes the laptop halfway, then opens it again. âyou didnât emphasize the model alignmentâ jake says. âi didâ you reply. âyou didnâtâ he says. âyouâre looking for problemsâ you answer. âiâm fixing themâ he replies. âthere werenât anyâ you say. âthere wereâ he insists. silence presses in. you set the clicker down slowly and ask, âwhy are you acting like i did something wrong?â the question is calm. that makes it worse. he doesnât look up. âiâm notâ he says. âyou areâ you reply. âiâm correctingâ he says. âyouâre dissectingâ you counter. âthatâs the pointâ he replies. âno. thatâs not the pointâ you say, your voice dropping slightly. he leans back. âyouâve been differentâ jake says. your grip tightens aroung the clicker until the plastic edge bites your finger. âwhat?â you ask. âsince heeseungâs partyâ he says. you keep your face neutral. âin what way?â you ask. âyou donât argue anymoreâ he replies. âi doâ you say. âbarely. you just agreeâ he says. âiâm choosing when to pushâ you answer. âyou never used toâ he replies. âyou never used to nitpick three secondsâ you say. his jaw flexes. âyouâve been carefulâ he says. âcareful how?â you ask. âlike youâre afraid to pushâ he replies. âafraid of what?â you ask. âyou tell meâ he says. the accusation under it is unmistakable now. âyouâve been sharpâ you say. âno, iâve been focusedâ he replies. âyouâve been distantâ you say. âyou haveâ he answers. âyou pulled back firstâ you say. ânoâ he replies. âyesâ you insist. he exhales, frustrated. âyou frozeâ jake says. you go still. âi didnâtâ you reply. âyou didâ he says. âi was thinkingâ you answer. âit didnât look like thinkingâ he replies. thatâs the first real hit. you hold his gaze. âyou donât get to rewrite itâ you say. âiâm notâ he replies. âyou areâ you insist. he runs a hand through his hair, this time not controlled. âyou hesitatedâ he says. âand you donât?â you ask. he goes quiet. âthatâs not the pointâ jake says. âit is if youâre bringing it upâ you reply. âiâm not bringing it upâ he says. âyou just didâ you answer. the room feels smaller now. âyouâve been different since that nightâ jake says again, lower. âyou keep saying thatâ you reply. âbecause itâs trueâ he says. âhow?â you ask. âyou look at me like youâre calculating somethingâ he replies. âmaybe i amâ you say. âwhy?â he asks.
you could say it. you donât. instead you say, âbecause you fucking cried in my car.â there it is. he stills completely. âand then you acted like nothing happenedâ you continue. his throat shifts. âi didnât act like nothing happenedâ he says. âyou didâ you reply. âi just didnât turn it into somethingâ he says. âit already was somethingâ you answer. âfor youâ he says. âfor both of usâ you reply. he looks away. âyouâve been careful with me. like iâm breakableâ jake says. you stare at him. âthatâs not trueâ you say. âyes, it isâ he replies. âyou think i see you as fragile?â you ask. âyesâ he answers. the answer is immediate. no defense. no delay.it hits. âyouâre always stepping inâ he says. âbecause you were spiralingâ you reply. âi wasnâtâ he says. âyou wereâ you answer. he pushes his chair back slightly. âi had itâ jake says. âand youâve been punishing me for it ever sinceâ you say. that lands. âiâm not punishing youâ he insists. silence again. heavy now. the fluorescent lights hum. outside, the sky is fully dark. âyou donât get to decide how i see youâ you say finally. he looks at you. âand you donât get to decide i needed savingâ jake replies. neither of you moves. âi donât need you to manage meâ he says. itâs not loud. but it cracks. âi wasnât managing youâ you reply. âit felt like you wereâ he says. you step closer without thinking. âit felt like you were pretending nothing matteredâ you say. his breath catches. âit does matterâ he replies. âthen stop acting like it doesnâtâ you say. the words hang there. he looks at you, really looks at you, and for a split second the control drops. not anger. not pride. fear. then itâs gone. âyouâve been weirdâ jake says, and you immediately reply, âstop saying it like that.â he tilts his head slightly and asks, âlike what?â you answer, âlike everything changed because of me.â he says simply, âit did.â you go still. âwhat?â you ask. âyou changedâ he says. âso did youâ you counter. âbecause you did firstâ he insists. âjakeâ you say, your voice sharpening. âyou fucking cried in my car.â he flinches, small and real, and you continue, quieter now, âand then you kissed me, and then you acted like it was just-â - âjust what?â he cuts in. âcircumstantialâ you finish. âwe were drunkâ jake says. âthatâs not the pointâ you reply. âthen what is?â he asks. âyou pulled away afterwardsâ you say. âso did youâ he answers. âi didnâtâ you insist. âyou frozeâ he says. âi hesitatedâ you correct. jakeâs jaw tightens as he answers, âsame fucking thingâ. ânoâ you say, your voice tightening. âi hesitated because i was trying to figure out if you were going to regret it.â that lands. he goes completely still. âi never said i wouldâ jake says. âyou didnât have toâ you answer. silence stretches. âi donât regret thingsâ jake says quietly. you look at him. âand thatâs not even what this is aboutâ he adds quickly, like he exposed too much. you say, âyouâve been acting like i embarrassed you.â - âi didnât,â he replies. âyou translated meâ he adds. âbecause you were digging yourself deeperâ you answer. âthat wasnât your jobâ he says. âmaybe i wanted it to beâ you reply. the words hang heavier than you meant them to. his eyes lift slowly. âyou donât have to fix meâ jake says. âi wasnât fixing youâ you reply. âit felt like itâ he says. âit felt like you were self-destructingâ you answer. he inhales sharply at that. âi really donât need you babysitting meâ jake says. âiâm not babysitting you. whatâs up with you? why are you acting like this?â you reply.
his jaw tightens. âi donât like feeling like i needed youâ he says. there it is. no anger. just stripped. you donât move. âi never thought you needed meâ you say quietly. âyou hesitatedâ he says. âand youâve been acting like that meant somethingâ you reply. âit didâ he says. he looks at you fully now. âit felt like you were deciding whether i was worth stepping in forâ he says. the room goes quiet. âwhat? thatâs not what i was doingâ you say. âit looked like itâ he replies. you swallow. âyou think i was evaluating you?â you ask. âyesâ he answers immediately. you shake your head once. âthatâs insaneâ you say. âitâs fucking obviousâ he replies. âto who?â you ask. âto meâ he says, and looks away the second he says it. you exhale slowly. âin classâ he says. âthatâs what youâre talking about?â you reply. he doesnât answer. âi paused because i knew youâd hate itâ you say. his eyes snap up. âso you knewâ he says. âyesâ you reply. âi knew youâd take it personally. i waited to see if you could turn it around.â- âand you decided i couldnâtâ he says. ânoâ you answer, leaning forward slightly. âi decided you were going to keep arguing and make it worse.â - âthatâs basically the same thingâ he says. âitâs notâ you reply. his gaze drops to your hands on the table. âyou donât get itâ jake says. âthen explain itâ you answer. he hesitates. you donât rescue him. he exhales, frustrated. âwhen you look at me like that-â he starts. âlike what?â you ask. âlike youâre measuringâ he says. the word lands heavy. âi wasnât measuring youâ you reply. âyou wereâ he insists. ânoâ you say. âyou do it when youâre trying to figure out if something is worth the riskâ he says. you go quiet, because thatâs not entirely wrong. his voice drops. âyou looked at me like i was a calculationâ jake says. the fluorescent lights hum. you stare at him. âi wasnât calculating youâ you say. âdonât bullshit me y/nâ he replies. silence again. thinner now. âyou think i donât know when iâm spiralingâ he says quietly. âi think you donât always see itâ you answer. his jaw tightens. âi donât need you watching for itâ he says. âi wasnât watchingâ you reply. âi was-â you stop. he catches the silence. âyou were what?â jake asks.
you hold his gaze. âi was trying not to lose you in front of everyoneâ you say. that one lands harder than anything else. he goes completely still. the control drops for half a second, then snaps back. âi wasnât lostâ he says. his voice sharpens. âstop deciding that for meâ he says. âstop pretending you werenâtâ you reply. silence. heavy. electric. then, quieter, âi donât need you to translate meâ jake says. âi knowâ you reply. âi donât need you to save meâ he says. âi wasnât saving youâ you answer. âi donât need you choosing when iâm worth stepping in forâ he says. that one almost breaks something. you stare at him. âi never once thought you werenât worth itâ you say. he looks at you, actually looks, and for a second the anger falls away. âi just didnât want you deciding i couldnât handle itâ he says. the admission is small. raw. sober. you step closer without meaning to. âi didnât think you couldnât handle itâ you say. âthen why did you hesitate?â he asks. your voice drops. âbecause i didnât know if youâd hate me for itâ you answer. thatâs the first fully honest line of the night. it hangs between you. neither of you moves. the projector flickers faintly. his breathing shifts. you can see the spiral building under his composure now. and he hates that you can see it. his mouth tightens like heâs biting back something sharper. you lean forward slightly. âyou want to know what i was thinking during that pause?â - âi already doâ jake mutters. âyou donât.â you say, not looking away. âi was thinking youâd rather argue yourself into a corner than let someone help you.â he flinches. small. real. âi was thinking youâd rather look stubborn than look vulnerableâ you continue, quieter now. âand i was trying to decide if stepping in would make you hate me more than being corrected would.â silence. his fingers curl against the edge of the notebook. âdonâtâ jake says. âdonât what?â -âtalk like you know me.â -âthen stop making me fucking guess.â that lands. he looks away sharply. his thumb presses hard into the edge of the table. âit was humiliating,â jake says, almost under his breath. everything stills. not about you. not about the kiss. about class. about being wrong. about losing control. âi knowâ you say. his jaw tightens. âyou made it worse.â- âhow?â you ask. âbecause you were right,â jake says, the bitterness in it clean. âand she said it like-â he begins, then cuts himself off. you wait. he doesnât finish. instead he says, âit made me look like i couldnât do it.â you answer, âyou were already being corrected.â - âi wasnât done,â he replies. âyou were digging,â you say. his eyes lift, hard now, and he says, âyou think you saved me.â - âi donât think that.â you answer. âbut you didâ he insists. âi clarifiedâ you reply. âyou always clarifyâ jake says, clipped. âyou always have the right words. you always-â he stops. âalways what, jake?â you ask, your voice comes out too calm. he rubs a hand over his mouth. âi donât know, you just you donât get itâ jake says. âthen explain itâ you tell him. he exhales sharply. âwhen you stepped in,â jake says slowly, âeveryone stopped looking at the model and started looking at you.â the words land heavier than you expected. âand i hated that i needed that.â you go still. âi didnât think you needed itâ you say quietly. he looks at you sharply. âyou did. thatâs  why you hesitated.â you frown slightly. âi hesitated because i knew youâd take it personally,â you say. ânot because i thought you couldnât handle it.â he doesnât answer.
and thatâs when it clicks. it wasnât about whether he could handle it. it was about the fact that you saw the moment he couldnât. you swallow. âi wasnât deciding if you were capable,â you say carefully. âi was deciding if youâd rather fall on your own than let me stand next to you.â that hits. he looks away. âand youâve been punishing me for that ever since,â you say. âi havenâtâ jake insists. âyou haveâ you answer. he stands suddenly, not violent, just too fast, and the chair scrapes loudly. âyou looked at me like i was fragile,â jake says. âno,â you reply. he says, âyou looked at me differently.â you hold his gaze. âi did,â you admit. that surprises him. âbecause i saw you differently,â you continue. the room goes quiet. ânot worse,â you add. âjust real.â he swallows. âyouâve been careful around me since that night in your car y/n.â he says again. âwe both know thatâ he adds quietly. âbecause you started acting like i shouldnât have seen thatâ you reply. âi didnât say thatâ he answers. âyou didnât have toâ you say. silence stretches thin. âi donât even remember what i saidâ jake admits quietly. âi just remember feeling-â he stops. âlike what?â you ask. âexposed,â he says, the word almost swallowed. you step closer before you can stop yourself. âjake, you were,â you tell him. his breath shifts. âbut youâre acting like that was a weakness.â, you add. âi donât get to be weak,â jake says. that line lands harder than anything else tonight. you stare at him. âyou do with meâŠâ you say. he looks at you like he doesnât know what to do with that. for a second, just one, the control drops. then it snaps back into place. he turns abruptly and walks to the front, clicks to the next slide, and says, âwe need to run it clean.â back to structure. back to safety. you watch his back. itâs almost painful how fast he hides. âthis is so ridiculousâ you say before you stand too. âfineâ. you move beside him, not close enough to touch, and start the conclusion again. your voice is calm. measured. he interrupts once. âpause,â jake says. you stop. âsay it again,â he adds. âwhy?â you ask. âthe emphasis matters,â he replies. you repeat it. he nods. no comment. no warmth. just control. you finish the last slide. the clicker lowers. he flips his notes even though there is nothing left to flip. you wait. he almost speaks. his mouth parts, then closes. he looks back at the screen instead. you swallow. âweâre done for tonight,â you say. âyeah,â jake replies. he doesnât look at you. you pack your laptop. the zipper sounds too loud. you pause at the door. he almost says your name. he doesnât. you leave. behind you, the projector hums for a few seconds longer before it shuts off, and the dark that replaces it feels heavier than the light ever did.
the classroom is already half full when you walk in, and the low murmur of voices and soft clacking of laptops make it look like any other day, which is the strangest part because the world looks normal even when you do not. you pause in the doorway long enough to take in the rows, the projector cart at the front, the professorâs bag slung over the chair near the desk, and then you move toward your usual area without letting yourself look for jake too obviously. he is already there, seated near the front with his laptop open and his notes laid out like he is about to sit an exam instead of do a preview presentation, posture straight, shoulders set, head angled down as he scrolls through the slide deck with careful, precise movements. the glow from the screen lights the underside of his jaw, his sleeve cuffs are pushed up, and his watch catches the overhead light when his wrist shifts. he looks composed, too composed, like if he holds still enough nothing can touch him. you pick a seat one chair away from him, not far enough to be obvious, not close enough to invite conversation, the space between you stupidly small and still deliberate. you set your bag down, unzip it quietly, slide your notebook onto the table, and hesitate on the zipper pull for half a second before forcing your fingers to move again because your body keeps trying to pause on moments that do not deserve attention. you open your laptop and the screen wakes with a soft chime that feels louder than it should.
jake does not look up, does not greet you, does not shift away either. his hand goes to his notes, and you watch without meaning to as he straightens the stack by tapping the bottom edge against the table once, twice, aligning the paper perfectly before tapping the corner and smoothing the top page like he is flattening invisible creases. you swallow and glance down at your own materials. you do not need to check yours. you know the slides, the points, the flow. last night proved you know the flow even under pressure, even with him pressing and pressing and pressing. your brain can still recite the conclusion in exact order without looking at a screen, but your body is still carrying that conversation like a bruise you keep touching accidentally. the professor walks in and sets a coffee on the desk, a few heads turn, the room shifts into quieter readiness, someone laughs in the back row and it fades quickly, chairs scrape, a phone vibrates then stops. jake clicks to the first slide, then back, then forward again. it is small, almost nothing, and you still notice it. he is checking the deck like it might change if he looks away. his jaw tightens subtly while he scrolls down the slide list on the left panel, pausing on the model alignment slide for a beat too long before the cursor moves away. he clicks to the conclusion slide, then back to the intro, then back to the middle as if tracing the path he is supposed to follow. you keep your eyes on your screen but remain aware of him in your peripheral vision like a heat source, present and constant. you adjust your chair slightly, the metal legs squeak, you wince internally and force your shoulders down. jakeâs fingers stop for a moment and he turns his head just enough to glance at you, not inviting, not pushing away, neutral and almost blank like he is confirming you are there. you keep your face flat and your posture calm as if last night did not happen, as if the air between you is not still carrying unfinished words. he looks away first. you exhale slowly through your nose. your own hands begin aligning your notebook with the edge of the table, tapping your pen once before stopping when you realize you are mirroring him. you do not want to mirror him. you want to be normal. you scroll through the slide deck once to give your fingers something to do. the text looks familiar, the graphs look familiar, the structure is solid. jake checks the slides again and you hear his trackpad click twice.
then you hear something else, quiet and under his breath, almost to himself, âif we frame it as variance, itâs cleaner.â jake murmurs without looking up. the words land like a small confession even though they are about nothing. you keep your eyes on your screen but your throat tightens because he is rehearsing beside you and it is proof he is nervous even if his face refuses to show it. he taps his notes again, straightening them like the paper might anchor him. you realize you have been bouncing your knee and force it still. stillness feels like control. you can do control. you can do contained. you glance up at the front of the room where the professor is setting up the schedule, students flipping through notes, someone whispering and laughing quietly. the normalcy makes your stomach roll faintly. jake reaches into his bag and pulls out a second set of printed pages, lays them on top of the first stack with deliberate care, lines them up again, edges perfectly aligned, turns the remote over in his hand, and sets it down exactly parallel to the laptop. he is organizing his environment like it can organize his head. you have seen him do that before during finals week. you have seen him do it when he is stressed. you did not realize how familiar the sight would feel. you close your laptop halfway and open it again, regretting the motion because it feels like you are copying him, then type an irrelevant placeholder line into the notes section just to give your fingers direction. jake glances at the clock, the second hand ticking, then back at the slides, lips pressing together then relaxing, fingers flexing once like he is shaking tension out of them. you wonder if he slept and hate that you wonder, hate that you care. you stare at the blank notes line until it blurs, blink and refocus, rub your thumb against your index finger under the desk in a tiny grounding motion. jake shifts in his chair, hoodie fabric dragging softly against plastic, leans closer to his laptop, shoulders tightening, scrolls to the slide where your section begins, cursor hovering over it before moving away, then clicks to the intro again. he is checking it twice, again, like he does not trust it or himself. the thought softens something in you for half a second before you crush it down. you look at his hands, short clean nails, a faint red mark on one knuckle, fingers tapping the edge of the paper once before stopping again. he is not shaking, not visibly anxious, just too still, too precise, too prepared. it looks like discipline. it feels like fear. you do not say that out loud.
the professor clears their throat and says, âalright, youâre preview presentations are coming up. weâll do the preview run-throughs today. keep it tight, treat it as practice, and remember youâre here to improve, not to impress.â a few students nod, someone sighs quietly, a couple exchange looks. jakeâs posture does not change but his fingers tighten on the remote. you inhale and count your breath. in. out. in. out. you glance sideways. his eyes are on the screen but his lashes lower for a second as if resetting himself before his gaze sharpens again. he leans closer and whispers the line again, quieter, âif we frame it as varianceâŠâ then stops mid-thought, jaw tightening as he swallows. you watch that swallow like it is louder than anything else in the room. your fingers curl lightly around your pen. you remember him in your car, voice cracking, words tumbling out, and now he is back to structure like it is the only thing keeping him upright. you shift slightly, shoulder almost brushing his, but you keep your distance. contained. not hostile. not warm. jake finally speaks to you, voice low and directed without looking over. âyou have your part memorized, right?â jake asks quietly. you blink once and answer evenly, âyeah.â he nods once and replies, âgood.â the word is flat, neutral. you almost respond but do not. the professor calls the first group, niki and sunghoon, to present and the room shifts again as students stand and gather materials. you feel jakeâs knee bounce once under the table before he presses his foot flat again. the professor glances at the time and says casually, âyou two will be after them.â jakeâs chin dips in acknowledgment and you nod as well, the simple fact of being next making your shoulders settle lower and your stomach roll faintly as your fingers align your notebook perfectly with the table edge. jake checks the slides one more time, clicking through the intro, the framework, the model alignment slide, the conclusion, then stopping and staring at the screen for too long while the professor laughs at something up front and someone drops a pen that clatters and rolls. jake does not move. then very quietly, like the words are meant only for himself, he mutters, âdonât fuck it up.â it takes you half a beat to realize he is not talking to you. your breath catches and you cover it by clearing your throat and adjusting your laptop. you do not look at him. you do not speak.
the group before you finishes to polite, scattered applause, and the professor nods while offering a few notes about clarity and pacing that you barely hear because you are already aware of jake standing before the professor even calls your names, aware of the way he slides his laptop into position and gathers the remote in one smooth motion like muscle memory. ânext,â the professor says, glancing down at the list before looking up, âjake and y/nâ and jake is already moving. you follow a second later, your pulse steady but present, not frantic, not slow, just there, stepping up beside him not too close and not too far as the projector light washes the front of the room in pale blue, flattening everything into clean lines and shadowed edges that make him look sharper somehow, more defined. he does not look at you, he looks at the class, and he begins evenly, âgood afternoon,â his voice calm, not too loud, not hesitant, just controlled. it is a good voice, measured and polished, the one he uses when he is certain, and something in your chest loosens slightly as he moves through the introduction without a hitch, the framing tight, his pacing deliberate but not rushed, glancing down at his notes once briefly before looking back up as if he only needed to confirm something minor. his hands are steady, the remote does not shake, and when he transitions to the problem statement he does it cleanly, saying, âwhat we noticed was that the inconsistency wasnât random. it followed a pattern tied directly to the third sample set,â while gesturing lightly toward the slide. you see the professor nod once, subtle but approving, and jake does not overplay it or linger on it, he simply continues, the structure audible in his delivery, introduction, context, data framing, everything in the order you rehearsed. he does not check the slides twice now, he trusts them or at least looks like he does, and your fingers rest lightly around the clicker you will use when it is your section while you keep your face neutral and attentive, tracking him in ways no one else is, the cadence of his breathing, the rhythm of his pauses, the slight shift of his shoulders with each new section. he moves into the methodology and explains with precision, âthis approach allowed us to isolate variance without overcorrecting the baseline. instead of adjusting for outliers immediately, we mapped the deviation across three cycles to see if the instability sustained.â it is good, more than good, and he sounds prepared and composed, like someone who did not spend the night before arguing about humiliation and hesitation and whether he is allowed to be weak. the class listens with quiet engagement, a few people typing notes, one student looking up more intently when he mentions the third cycle, the professor scribbling something on the printed rubric. you become aware of your own body beside him, your weight evenly distributed, your hands still, your breathing unconsciously matching his rhythm. the professor nods again, someone in the second row tilts their head in interest, and the room relaxes into the rhythm of it. you are supposed to be tense, waiting for something to go wrong, but there is nothing wrong as he clicks forward, does not overexplain, does not repeat himself, does not spiral, exactly as composed as he wanted to be.
jake clicks to the next slide mid-sentence, not by much, just a fraction too early, the graph flashing up before his words fully land. he does not stop. â-which is why we prioritized consistency,â jake finishes smoothly, but you hear the half-beat misalignment between thought and movement as he shifts his weight slightly and tightens his fingers around the remote. you notice the way his shoulders lift a little higher than before as he keeps going. âthis model holds under external fluctuation,â he says, the sentence solid and confident, but he says holds twice, the second time softer, like he is correcting himself without wanting anyone to notice. no one does. a student in the second row keeps typing. the professor watches with the same neutral attentiveness as before. jake inhales too quickly and moves into the comparison section, skipping the bridge line you both practiced until it felt automatic. he just jumps. âand when we tested alternative structures,â he says, voice a shade faster now, âthe deviation flattened in ways that looked stable but werenât.â it is not how you phrased it together. it is not wrong. it is just rushed. his jaw tightens, the muscle flexing once near his ear before settling, and he gestures at the slide, the motion sharper than before, less fluid, his hand cutting through the air instead of guiding it. he is still making sense, still articulate, but the rhythm is off. you feel it like a skipped stair. he swallows and keeps talking. âwhat this shows is that structural discipline matters,â he says, and the word discipline lands heavier than it needs to, like he is gripping it, holding onto it. he presses the remote again too early. the slide shifts before he finishes the sentence, a flicker of light crossing his face as the projector changes, and he pauses for half a second, not enough for anyone else to register, but to you it stretches. you feel your body react before your brain does, your fingers tightening around the clicker, your weight shifting forward as if you are already leaning into something. jake starts again. âwhat this demonstrates is-â he says, then stops. the silence is microscopic, but it is there. his eyes flick briefly toward the left side of the screen, to the slide list, checking where he is, and then almost involuntarily his gaze shifts sideways to you. it is not a request. it is not a plea. it is a reflex, and it disappears just as quickly. he looks forward again. âthis demonstrates that the framework absorbs variance instead of amplifying it,â he repeats, faster now. he did not need to repeat the beginning. he is buying time. his breathing has changed, the inhale slightly higher in his chest, the exhale a little too controlled. the class does not move. the professor does not react. no one is uncomfortable. but you are, because you can see the exact moment where control turns into strain. he is speaking too fast now, not dramatically, just enough that the pauses between sentences are shrinking. he is compressing, stacking, not letting the air settle. he gestures again, and this time his fingers flex mid-motion like he almost lost grip of the rhythm. your pulse ticks up. you know this pattern. he does not spiral outward. he spirals inward. he tightens until something gives. he clicks again and the slide changes. he is ahead of himself now, not lost, not confused, just running slightly faster than the structure he built.
you feel the decision forming in your chest. you could wait. you could let him correct it himself. you could give him space. but the space is shrinking. âand this consistency-â jake says, then stops again, his jaw tightening when the word does not land cleanly. it is small. it is nothing to everyone else. but you see it, the almost, the place where he might overcorrect and start explaining too much, the place where he might try to prove something instead of just say it. his thumb presses harder into the remote, and you realize you are already moving, not visibly, not dramatically, but internally stepping forward before your body does. jakeâs voice tightens just slightly on the word âconsistency,â and you feel it before you understand it. it isnât wrong. it isnât bad. itâs just off. the rhythm he had at the beginning, the calm, measured flow, has narrowed into something sharper, more compressed. he is speaking like he is outrunning something invisible. you donât let yourself think about last night. you donât let yourself think about hesitation. you donât let yourself calculate whether he will take this personally. you just move. âbuilding on what jake just explained,â you say smoothly, your tone steady and even, not louder than his, not softer, and you donât look at him, you look at the professor, gesturing lightly toward the slide as if this was always your cue. your heart is beating faster than it should, but your voice doesnât betray it. âthe reason we prioritized consistency is because the model doesnât collapse when pressure increases,â you continue, keeping your phrasing aligned with his rather than replacing it. âit adjusts without losing its shape.â you keep it simple, not dense, not layered, not corrective. you arenât fixing him. youâre finishing the line. you feel the room settle, not because anything dramatic happened but because the rhythm evens out again. the professor nods once. a classmate types something. someone shifts in their chair. no one reacts. you donât glance at jake to check if heâs okay. you donât soften your tone. you donât give him an out. you finish the thought and then, without pausing long enough to own the space, you turn slightly toward him and say, âand thatâs where the comparison becomes important.â you give it back not physically or ceremonially but by stepping half a pace back and letting the air return to him.
jake registers it immediately. he knows you just stepped in. he knows you didnât have to. he knows you didnât make it obvious. for half a second his mind blanks, not because he forgot what to say but because something in his chest shifts in a way he didnât expect. she didnât hesitate. that is the first thing that lands. she didnât wait to see if he would recover. she didnât measure whether he was worth stepping in for. she just did it. his throat feels tight, but not from panic this time. from something else. he nods once, subtle and almost imperceptible, and picks up the thread. âright,â he says, his voice steady again, the word coming easier than he expects. âexactly.â he continues without overexplaining, without stacking, without forcing, and his breathing evens out. the strangest part is that itâs easier now. he doesnât feel exposed. he doesnât feel corrected. he feels backed. the thought unsettles him, but he keeps talking. you focus on the screen so you donât focus on him. you can feel the shift even without looking. your pulse is still a little high, but your hands are steady. you donât feel embarrassed. you donât feel triumphant. you donât feel like you won anything. you just feel aligned. you didnât hesitate, and that matters more than you expected. jake moves into the next slide, this time clicking at the right moment. his tone regains its earlier control, but itâs softer at the edges now, not weaker, just less rigid. he finishes the comparison section cleanly, with no repeats and no compression. he feels the difference too. he doesnât know why it feels different. he expected stepping in to feel like exposure, like proof that he couldnât hold it together. instead it felt seamless, like you trusted him to keep going. his chest tightens again, but not from anxiety, from recognition. you didnât look at him when you did it. you didnât make eye contact to check if he was falling apart. you didnât lower your voice like he was fragile. you didnât translate him. you continued him. that is the part that sticks. he keeps speaking, but part of his brain replays the moment in real time. she didnât hesitate. you let him carry the next section. you donât hover. you donât prepare a second intervention. you stand beside him like a partner, not a guardrail. when your section comes, you step forward naturally, not rushed and not apologetic. you deliver your part with the same steady tone. you donât overperform. you donât compete. you just speak. when you finish, you donât look at him for approval. you just wait. jake watches you as you talk. he doesnât mean to. he tells himself he is listening for timing, for structure, for transitions, but he is watching the way you stand, the way your shoulders are relaxed, the way your voice doesnât waver. she didnât hesitate. the thought keeps looping. it collides with the memory of him saying, âyou paused,â with him accusing, with him insisting you weighed him, and now you didnât. the presentation winds down.
you finish the conclusion together, alternating lines the way you practiced. the last slide fades in at exactly the right moment. there is no awkward silence and no stumble, just a clean end. âthank you,â jake says, and this time his voice is fully even. the professor nods and says, âgood structure. tighten the comparative phrasing slightly, but overall, strong.â strong. jake nods once in acknowledgment. you both step back to your seats. your legs feel slightly lighter than before. you donât look at him immediately. you sit, open your laptop, and pretend to review the professorâs notes while your heartbeat catches up. you didnât save him. you didnât correct him. you didnât fix him. you just stood beside him, and somehow that feels bigger. jake sits down next to you with one seat between you again. he keeps his eyes on the screen in front of him, but his thoughts are louder now. she didnât hesitate. she didnât look embarrassed. she didnât translate me. she stayed with it. he swallows. he doesnât look at you. he doesnât know what to do with the shift in his chest. it isnât relief exactly. it isnât gratitude. it isnât pride. itâs something more unsettling, because if you didnât hesitate, if you didnât weigh him, then maybe he was wrong, and that thought lands heavier than the stumble ever did.
class resumes like nothing happened. the next group stands, the projector shifts decks, someone clears their throat, chairs scrape, and the room resets into ordinary noise so quickly it almost feels absurd how fast the moment dissolves into routine. you sit one seat away from jake again, and the space between you feels smaller now, not because it changed but because something did. you type a single line into your notes so you do not just sit there replaying the last ten minutes, your fingers moving automatically while your brain stays half at the front of the room, half at that half-second where he almost lost it. you didnât hesitate. the thought settles somewhere under your ribs, quiet but firm. beside you, jake closes his laptop more slowly than usual, not dramatically, just deliberate, aligning his printed notes again and tapping the edges together until they are perfectly straight. he does not look at you, but he is aware of you, too aware. she didnât make it obvious. that is the part that keeps replaying in his head. she didnât look at me first. she didnât lower her voice. she didnât step in like i was fragile. she just continued. the professor dismisses class, and the room fills with the sound of bags zipping, chairs dragging back, conversations picking up immediately like they were waiting for permission. you slide your laptop into your bag and stand. jake stands at the same time. for a second you are too close, your arms nearly brushing as you both adjust your bags, and you step slightly to the side, creating space without making it look intentional. you start walking toward the door and he falls into step beside you. neither of you rush and neither of you slow down. the hallway is louder than the classroom was, voices echoing, lockers closing, footsteps layering over each other, and you focus on the floor tiles ahead of you, counting the pattern without meaning to.
jake breaks the silence first. âthat workedâ jake says, his tone neutral and controlled, not proud and not dismissive, just factual. you nod once and answer, âyeahâ keeping your voice steady, not sharp and not soft, as you both keep walking. there is a pause while a few students pass you laughing about something unrelated, the world moving as if nothing shifted. jake adjusts the strap of his bag higher on his shoulder and glances at you briefly before looking away again. âyou didnât have to.â jake says, without elaborating, without saying thank you, without saying he needed that, just leaving the sentence there. you keep your eyes ahead as you respond, âi knowâ and the words land between you. you didnât have to, but you did. jake swallows. she just  knew. that part unsettles him more than anything. she knew she didnât have to and she did it anyway, not to win, not to prove something, not to translate me, just to keep it steady. you reach the steps outside the building, the afternoon light softer now, the sky edged with early evening gray as students scatter across the quad. you stop at the top of the stairs and say, âso, iâll look over the comparative phrasing tonight,â adjusting your bag strap. he nods once and replies, âi will too.â it is not competitive. it is not defensive. it just is. there is nothing else to add, no apology, no rehashing last night, no almost-confession, just the air between you changed in a way neither of you are naming. you start down the steps and jake turns in the opposite direction at the bottom. for half a second he almost looks back. he doesnât. you walk toward your dorm with your hands tucked into your sleeves, your thoughts quieter than they have been in days. he walks toward his with his jaw set, his mind replaying one thing over and over. she didnât hesitate.
the dorm room is loud in the way it always is at night, not chaotic and not quiet, just layered. sunghoon is half-lying across his bed with one arm behind his head and his phone balanced on his chest, scrolling with the distracted focus of someone pretending to relax. niki is sitting cross-legged on the floor near the coffee table with a controller in his hand, swearing softly at the screen every few seconds. the overhead light is off and only the desk lamp and the tv glow fill the room in uneven patches of yellow and blue. jake closes the door behind him a little harder than he means to. neither of them look up immediately. âhowâd it go?â niki asks after a second without taking his eyes off the game. âfine.â jake answers, dropping his bag beside his desk chair and keeping his tone even, flat, controlled. sunghoon shifts slightly and glances over at him. âpreview done?â sunghoon asks. âyeahâ jake replies without elaborating as he pulls his laptop out of his bag and sets it on the desk without opening it. he does not need to check the slides again. he knows them. he knows every line. he just stands there for a moment longer than necessary. niki snorts at something on the screen and says, âshe jumped in.â jakeâs shoulders tighten almost imperceptibly as he replies automatically, still facing his desk, âshe didnât jump in.â niki pauses the game and looks over. âshe did,â niki says casually. âmid-comparison.â jake exhales through his nose. âit was a transition.â sunghoon lifts an eyebrow slightly. âyou lost the bridge.â jake turns around at that and leans back against the edge of his desk. âi didnât lose it,â he says, a little sharper than he intends. âi skipped it.â - âsame difference,â niki shrugs. âitâs not,â jake answers too fast. niki studies him for a second and sets the controller down on the table. ârelax,â niki says. âit wasnât a big deal.â jake does not answer because that is the problem. it was not a big deal. no one noticed. the professor did not blink. the class did not react. he didnât even think niki would notice. and yet... sunghoon shifts upright now, more attentive. âyou didnât look pissed, you looked relieved,â sunghoon says calmly. jakeâs jaw tightens. âi wasnât.â- âyou wereâ niki replies lightly, not mocking, just stating. jake pushes off the desk and moves toward the small kitchenette area, grabbing a bottle of water from the fridge even though he is not thirsty. âyouâre reading into itâ he says as he unscrews the cap. âno,â sunghoon says evenly. âweâre not.â jake takes a sip he does not need and can feel the shape of that half-second in his chest even now, the slide flipping too early, the breath catching, the split-second where he thought not now. he swallows and screws the cap back on. âit was fineâ he says. niki leans back on his hands. âweâre not saying it wasnât.â jakeâs fingers tighten slightly around the bottle. âshe didnât make it obvious,â sunghoon adds. that lands. jakeâs gaze flicks up for a second. no one in the room is smiling. no one is teasing. they are just observing. âshe doesnât usually hold backâ niki says. jake lets out a quiet scoff. âshe just- she didnât hold back.â- âshe did,â sunghoon replies, voice steady. âyou know she did.â there is a pause. jake feels irritation flare up, quick and sharp. âyouâre making it sound like i needed saving.â no one answers immediately and that silence is worse. niki shrugs slightly. âyou didnât look mad,â he says. âthatâs all weâre saying.â jake feels his stomach drop in a way that has nothing to do with embarrassment. he runs a hand through his hair and pushes it back harder than necessary. âbecause i wasnât.â - âexactly,â sunghoon says. jakeâs eyes narrow slightly. âwhatâs that supposed to mean?â- âit means,â sunghoon replies calmly, âyou donât usually let stuff slide.â jakeâs mind jumps automatically to defense. âit wasnât worth fighting.â- Â âor,â niki says, âyou didnât want to.â jake feels something shift under that and does not respond immediately.
he crosses the room and sits down on the edge of his bed instead, elbows resting on his knees while the tv light flickers across his hands. âiâm not competing with her right now,â he says finally, the words feeling strange in his mouth. niki raises an eyebrow. âthatâs new.â jakeâs jaw tightens again. âweâre working together.â - âyouâve been working together all semester,â sunghoon says. that is not the same, jake wants to say. before it was tension. before it was edge. before it was something sharp that kept him alert. but now he does not finish the thought. niki picks the controller back up but does not unpause the game. âyouâre not mad she helpedâŠâ he says again, quieter this time. jakeâs head lifts. âiâm not-â he stops because he is not and that realization annoys him more than if he were. he looks down at his hands as the memory flashes in his mind without permission, the way her voice cut in steady and smooth, âbuilding on what jake just explainedâŠâ not correcting, continuing. he felt the panic ease immediately. he did not have to recover alone. he shakes the thought away. âit doesnât matter,â he says. sunghoon watches him carefully. âif it didnât matter, you wouldnât be thinking about it.â jake looks up sharply. âiâm not.â - âalrightâ niki says lightly, and there is something knowing in it. the room feels smaller suddenly, the air heavier. jake pushes himself upright. âiâm going outâ he says. niki glances at the clock. ânow?â - âyeah.â sunghoon does not argue. he just nods once. âdonât overthink itâ sunghoon says casually. jake huffs a quiet breath that is not quite a laugh. âiâm not.â but the moment he steps into the hallway and the dorm room door clicks shut behind him, the noise drops away and the quiet is louder than it should be.
he walks without a destination at first, down the stairs and out the front door. the night air is cooler than he expected and it hits his face and sharpens everything. he shoves his hands into his pockets. she didnât make it obvious. she didnât hesitate. he exhales slowly. she likes control. thatâs all. thatâs why she did it. not because she- but she did not look at me when she did it. she did not frame it like a correction. she did not make it about her. she just stood beside me. he feels the edge of something uncomfortable press against his ribs and he quickens his pace. this does not mean anything. it was a presentation. it was timing. it was discipline. that word echoes in his head. discipline. structure. control. he walks faster. the campus is mostly quiet now, streetlights humming faintly overhead, the pavement damp from earlier rain and reflecting the yellow glow in broken lines. his sneakers hit the pavement in a steady rhythm, each step measured and deliberate. walking usually helps. it gives his thoughts structure, direction, momentum. tonight they refuse to line up. she didnât make it obvious. the sentence keeps circling. he exhales through his nose and adjusts his pace, faster now, like speed might outrun it. it was a presentation. people interrupt. transitions get skipped. it happens. he has done worse before and recovered cleaner. this was not even a mistake. it was a minor slip. the professor did not react. the class did not react. it was fine. he repeats it internally, controlled, like he is rewriting a narrative. it was fine. but his chest tightens anyway because he remembers the half-second, the slide shifting too early, the silence microscopic but there, the split-second thought that hit before he could stop it. not now. he had felt it, the edge of exposure, the possibility of looking sloppy, of looking unprepared, of looking second. his jaw tightens at the memory. and then your voice, steady. âbuilding on what jake just explainedâŠâ he slows slightly without realizing it. she did not rush. she did not sound sharp. she did not emphasize the correction. she did not even look at me. she just continued. he replays the moment again. the panic had eased instantly, not vanished but softened. he had not had to fight the room back. he had not had to reclaim control aggressively. she had adjusted the rhythm and given it back to me. his steps falter slightly before he corrects them. that does not mean anything. it was teamwork. we are partners. of course she stepped in. he clenches his jaw. she always steps in. she is competitive. she likes control. that is all. but something about that explanation feels thinner now because you did not look competitive. you did not look satisfied. you did not look like you had scored a point. she just looked steady. he hates that word. steady implies intention.
he reaches the edge of the quad and slows, hands deep in his jacket pockets now, the pavement damp from earlier rain and reflecting the yellow streetlight in broken streaks. he tells himself this is distraction. he has been off since the ranking dropped, since the stupid decimal shift. that is what this is. pressure. nothing else. but the ranking does not explain the relief. that is the problem. he had felt it, clear and undeniable. relief. not embarrassment. not anger. relief. his breathing shifts again. he stops walking for a second, staring out across the empty lawn. relief means he did not want to fight it alone. relief means- he cuts the thought off. no. it just means she timed it well. it means she is good at reading the room. it means she is strategic. he nods once to himself like that settles it. then why did it feel different? the question lands without permission and he does not like it because it did not feel like strategy. it felt- he swallows and does not finish the word. he pushes off again, walking faster. he is overthinking. niki got into his head. that is all. âyou looked relieved.â he huffs under his breath. he was not relieved. he was just- he does not have a clean word for it. the memory shifts slightly in his mind, your hand moving toward the clicker, your tone steady, the way you did not frame it as correction, the way you did not soften it either. she treated it like it was normal, like i was still in control. he slows again because that is the part that does not fit. she did not translate him. she did not fix him. she did not protect him loudly. she adjusted beside me. he exhales slowly, his breath visible in the cool air. that should not matter. but it does, and he does not know why. he stands there for a second too long, staring at nothing. something shifted, and he does not like that he cannot name it. he pushes himself back into motion again, jaw tight. it does not mean anything. it was just a presentation. but the thought follows him anyway, stubborn and quiet. it felt better standing beside her. it follows him like it has weight, like it is something physical he cannot shake off, and he hates that immediately.
jake keeps walking anyway because walking is what he does when something does not fit, because movement makes things make sense, because movement turns chaos into sequence, but the thought does not fall into sequence and does not belong to any category he trusts. it was one preview. a half-second slip. he recovered. it was fine. so why is it still in his chest? he exhales through his nose, jaw tightening, and forces his pace faster across the damp pavement while the streetlights above hum faintly, their glow breaking into reflected fragments on the wet ground. a couple of students cross the quad in the distance laughing about something that has nothing to do with him, and he does not listen because he does not need to, their voices fading behind him like static. he tries to dismiss it again. jake digs his hands deeper into his jacket pockets and keeps walking as if the pressure of fabric against his knuckles will anchor him. he can still feel the plastic remote in his palm even though it is not there anymore. he can still feel the moment the slide flipped too early, the flicker of light across his face, the micro-pause that only he and she would have noticed, and only she did notice. that is part of it. it hits him again, sharp and inconvenient: you noticed. he does not like that his brain uses you like that, like it is automatic now, like your existence is a reference point in his head, and he pushes it away. of course she noticed, she always notices, she always tracks, she always pays attention to details other people miss, and that is what makes her good, what makes her annoying, what makes her dangerous.
his pace slows without him meaning it to and he corrects it immediately, walking faster again, because he hates losing control of his own body and hates the way his thoughts are dragging him sideways. it was not the normal satisfaction of a clean recovery. it was not even about being right. it had been something else, and he hates that he cannot name it. he reaches the edge of the quad and slows near the steps, staring out across the open grass, the campus at night looking almost staged like it was designed to feel calm, path lamps glowing at regular intervals, trees swaying lightly in the wind, air smelling faintly like rain and cold stone. he stands still for a second too long. something shifted, and he does not like that he cannot name it. he pushes himself back into motion again, jaw tight. it does not mean anything. it was just a presentation. but the thought follows him anyway, stubborn and quiet. it felt better standing beside her. his mind flicks to the ranking board without his permission. midterm day. the decimal. down by one. yours up. he remembers the heat in his neck - and the way you werenât smiling. you werenât celebrating. you were watching him. jake remembers walking up like it did not matter. he told himself it didnât matter. one decimal. a stupid fucking decimal. yours up. his down. and you werenât smiling. you were watching him. you were not celebrating his slip. you were just looking at him differently. not smug, not victorious. softer. but he hated it. hated it because it felt like pity. hated it because pity is for people who lose. hated it because he could not afford to be someone who loses. he had played it off, joked, smiled, acted like the decimal did not matter, but he had felt it like a bruise. and then later, when the campu had emptied, when the noise had faded, when it was just him and you and the air between you still carrying that weird tension, he had done something he still could not explain. he had not meant to- except he had. and that contradiction is the part that makes his stomach tighten now. he had leaned in. he had closed the space. he remembers the moment with brutal clarity, not because it was romantic but because it was the first time in a long time he did something without running it through strategy first. he leaned in. he could have stopped. he didnât. no hesitation. no strategy. it didnât feel like rivalry. it felt inevitable. the word lands in his head again and he hates it. inevitable implies a pattern. inevitable implies it started earlier. inevitable implies he did not choose it, except he did.
he stands still again near a lamppost staring down at the wet ground, his reflection broken in the puddles into pieces distorted by light, and he flexes his fingers inside his pockets like he is trying to wake them up. he is not supposed to feel inevitable about anything except success. he moves again, taking the long path around the quad as if distance will untangle his thoughts, and arcade night flashes next, not the games or the laughter or the noise but the walk back, the way the air cooled after the arcade heat, the way the night felt quieter than it should have been with so many people around, the way you kept glancing at him like you were checking something you did not want to admit you were checking. then the door closing. the shift. the quiet that fell like a heavy blanket. he remembers the dorm hallway light harsh and yellow, the way his pulse was too fast, the way his head felt slightly fogged, the way he kept telling himself it was just alcohol, just tension, just the night, and then the feeling that followed, not drunk chaos, not blurred impulse, deliberate. that word again. deliberate is worse than inevitable because deliberate implies choice. he remembers how close it got and does not let his mind linger on physical details. your breath changing, his hand not pulling away, you not pulling away, the moment where everything could have stopped and did not, not because you could not but because neither of you wanted to. he swallows, throat tight, and turns his head sharply like he can shake the memory out physically, walking faster now, the rhythm of his steps turning almost aggressive. he does not like that those memories do not feel messy. he does not like that they feel chosen. chosen means he let you in. chosen means he lost control. chosen means he wanted something that was not strategic. he hates that the thought makes him feel exposed even though no one is here. the campus path curves toward the library, the building dark except for a few lit windows on the lower floor, probably students studying late, silhouettes moving inside, and he feels a familiar tightening in his chest. an old pressure that has always driven him. be exceptional. donât be second. donât let anyone see you struggle. and that pressure is comforting because it is predictable. but now another thread is weaving into it, something he did not ask for. you. he thinks about your face during the preview presentation, the way you did not look at him before you spoke, the way you did not soften your voice, the way you did not announce that you were helping, and the way you did not even make it about him. you just continued.
he cannot stop replaying the way the relief hit his body before his brain could argue it away, can still feel it, the tension in his shoulders loosening, the breath coming easier, the rhythm returning, and relief is a word he hates because relief implies need, need implies weakness, weakness implies second place. he stops again near the steps of the library and stares at the railing like it has answers, hearing his own breathing, the faint buzz of the streetlights, a distant door opening somewhere and then closing. proximity. that is all. you are working together, of course it feels different. it is stress, midterms, rankings, the project, it is tension, rivalry turning sideways. it is habit. iâm is used to her being there. used to pushing against her. but the explanations do not stick and slide off the truth like water off glass, because if it were just rivalr, relief would not feel like safety. because if it were just tension, it would not feel steady. because if it were just ego, he would not care that you stepped in without making him look weak. the problem is not that you helped. the problem is that he wanted you to. that thought lands and it does not land softly, it lands like a weight. he does not move, not even a step, not even a shift of his shoulders. his hands stay in his pockets, his jaw locks, his breathing slows, not because he is calming down but because his body has gone into a weird still mode where it is bracing for impact. he waits for a counterargument, waits for the defensive voice that always shows up with a clean answer. and nothing comes, because his brain is running images without permission now. not explicit and not romantic. just devastatingly simple. you not smiling when he dropped that decimal. you watching him instead of celebrating. you stepping in during the preview. you walking away after he snapped. not because you did not care, but because he made it impossible to stay close without getting cut. he has been telling himself you pulled back because you regretted something. telling himself you froze because you did not want it, telling himself your distance was rejection. but what if it was self-protection? what if you withdrew because i hurt you? what if you did not hesitate today because you never hesitated about me in the first place? his chest tightens again, not with panic exactly but with fear. because if that is true then he has been wrong. and if you werenât his enemy, then who was he fighting? he stands there still as the thoughts stack up like blocks he cannot rearrange. i donât want to beat her. the sentence forms slowly in his head and it feels like it breaks something just by existing. i donât want to beat you. i wants you beside me. that is worse- because wanting someone beside him implies partnership, partnership implies trust, trust implies vulnerability, vulnerability implies losing control. he swallows again but his throat stays tight. i donât want to lose her. the thought comes next, sudden and blunt, like it was not filtered through his ego at all, and he goes even stiller as if that is possible, his brain stalling. why? the word is almost angry. it canât be-
shit. he exhales slowly, breath fogging in the cold air, and stares out across the empty quad again, path lights humming, grass dark, the campus a still image. for the first time since freshman year he is not thinking about rankings, not thinking about decimals, not thinking about being first. he is thinking about you walking away. and that possibility, quiet and simple and not dramatic, feels worse than losing. he does not move. he does not reach for his phone. he does not text. he does not call. he does not fix it. he just stands there in the middle of the night with the streetlights humming overhead and the awareness sitting in his chest like something irreversible
the campus looks ordinary in the morning light, students moving between buildings in loose clusters with coffee cups and backpacks and low conversation, everything predictable, structured, familiar. you spot him at the long wooden table outside the economics building before he sees you, already there with his laptop open, notes spread beside it, a pen balanced neatly across the margin of a printed draft. you slow down slightly without meaning to and approach. he glances up when your bag touches the bench. âmorningâ he says, without a smirk, without a dry remark about punctuality. âmorningâ you reply, and your eyes drift to the screen automatically. slide 14. you pause. âthatâs differentâ you say. he nods once. âyeahâ he answers, offering no explanation, and when you wait he turns the laptop slightly toward you. âi adjusted the transition after the model comparison.â he says, just that, no performance, no claim of credit, no subtle implication that he caught something you didnât. you blink. âyou adjusted it?â you ask. âit was clunky,â he says simply. âthe shift into limitations felt abrupt.â you stare at the new wording. he split the bridge into two steps, tightened the language, removed one of your longer sentences. it reads better. you hate that it reads better. âyou didnât have toâ you tell him. he shrugs lightly. âit flows cleaner this wayâ he replies, no edge, no satisfaction. you sit down slowly, aware of the strange absence in the air, like a missing note in a chord youâve gotten used to hearing, and you open your laptop. ârun it from the top?â you ask. he nods. you begin with your section, moving through the regression framing controlled and precise, leaving space deliberately in your explanation, a minor phrasing vulnerability, a statistic that could be challenged if someone wanted to. he usually would. you reach the end of the segment. silence. you glance up. heâs listening, chin resting lightly against his knuckles, eyes steady, not calculating, not waiting to interject. âthatâs it?â you ask before you can stop yourself. he tilts his head slightly. âyeah?â he says. âyouâre not going to push back?â you press. a small pause. âif i disagree, i willâ he answers, no sarcasm in it. you feel your shoulders tense. âthatâs not what i meantâ you say. he studies you for half a second longer than necessary. âi knowâ he replies, then gestures toward the next slide. âcontinue.â you do, but your rhythm is off, prepared for interruption, for debate, for the sharp back-and-forth thatâs become instinct. without it your words feel slightly unanchored. you finish again. he nods once. âgoodâ he says. you stare at him. âthatâs all?â you ask. âdo you want me to argue?â he asks, no challenge in his tone, just a question. you hesitate. ânoâ you answer. he accepts that immediately and leans forward to adjust the font size on one of your bullet points. âitâll read better from the backâ he says, his hand hovering over your section not possessive, not dismissive, just precise. you watch him make the change. he doesnât narrate it, doesnât draw attention, doesnât look at you afterward for approval. he just continues. âyou want to run the q&a simulation?â he asks. âyesâ you reply. you switch roles. he presents now, structured, controlled, smooth. when he reaches the variance explanation you instinctively lean forward, ready to cut in, ready to refine his wording before it slips. it doesnât. he tightens the phrasing himself. you blink. he finishes the segment. âthoughts?â he asks. you open your mouth automatically, almost say something sharp out of habit, but instead you say, âitâs clear.â he nods once, polite grin, no subtle victory, no teasing comment about how generous that was of you, and he just clicks to the next slide. the air feels strangely neutral, not hostile, not warm, just even. you didnât realize how much the friction structured things until it disappeared.
you try again. âin the second example,â you say carefully, âyouâre assuming the panel will accept the sampling frame without challenge.â he considers that. âthey wonât,â he replies. âbut iâm not going to escalate it unless they do first.â you blink. âyouâre not?â you ask. âno,â he answers and folds his hands loosely in front of him. âitâs cleaner if we donât force the tensionâ he says, and the sentence sits between you. cleaner. you donât know why that word unsettles you. youâve always associated him with controlled chaos, sharp improvisation, strategic provocation. now he sounds deliberate, measured. something shifts under your ribs, not panic, not irritation, just displacement. the rivalry had a rhythm. push. counter. refine. correct. you knew your place in that rhythm. if he steps out of it, youâre not sure where you stand. ârun it again.â you say a little too quickly. he nods. this time you listen more than you speak, tracking his phrasing, his tone, the way he transitions between sections. thereâs no defensiveness in his voice, no subtle competitiveness woven into his inflection. he doesnât perform the debate. he performs the work. you notice the small things: he references your model without framing it as separate from his, he says âour projectionâ instead of âyour estimate,â he adjusts one of his own sentences mid-delivery when it sounds too sharp. you didnât even ask him to. he just does. and when he finishes, he closes the laptop halfway. âthat was solidâ he says. you stare at him. âyouâre so calmâ you observe. a beat passes. âwhy wouldnât i be?â he replies. heâs right, why wouldnât he â itâs not like he had the biggest breakdown since high school last night.
students pass behind you, someone laughs too loudly, a door slams somewhere in the building, the world continuing. you look at him again, trying to locate the edge youâre used to. itâs not gone. itâs just quieter. you fold your arms lightly. âwhy are you not trying to win this rehearsal?â you ask. he meets your eyes evenly. âiâm just trying to get it right.â he answers immediately, uncomplicated. you donât know what to do with that. you look away first. he doesnât. you feel it, the absence of competition as pressure, not dramatic, not loud, just different. you close your laptop slowly. âsame time tomorrow?â you ask. âyeah, sureâ he replies. he gathers his notes, stacks them neatly, and slides them back into his bag without flourish, without careless stuffing. youâre still holding your laptop half-open when footsteps cut across the concrete behind you, too fast and too coordinated to be random, and you already know itâs going to be someone you canât ignore. jayâs voice hits first, bright and shameless. âoh my god,â jay says as he, jungwon and kazuha slow down beside the table, âlook at you two. studying in daylight. i feel like iâm interrupting a very serious documentary.â you blink once and set your laptop lid down a little harder than necessary because you were about to leave and now youâre not, and you hate that the timing makes you look like you were lingering. jake doesnât seem bothered, which is worse. he just shifts his bag strap onto his shoulder and looks up at jay with the expression he uses when someone is talking too much and heâs deciding whether itâs worth responding. âweâre doneâ jake says evenly, and thereâs no bite in it. jay grins like thatâs an invitation. âyeah, sureâ jay replies, dragging the word out as he drops into the seat opposite you anyway. jungwon doesnât sit, but he leans against the edge of the table with his hands in his pockets, scanning the open screen like heâs clocking the slide deck without meaning to, while kazuha sets her bag down on the bench with a quiet thud, polite but unapologetic, as if this table has always been communal property. you shift your weight slightly, adjusting the strap of your bag higher on your shoulder, and you can feel how your body is already preparing for the old rhythm. someone jokes. jake deflects. you sharpen. he counters.
the conversation snaps into place like a familiar mechanism. jayâs eyes flick from you to jake and back with exaggerated curiosity. âso,â jay says, tapping the table once, âare you guys in a truce era or are we still doing the whole academic enemies thing because i miss the tension. it was entertaining.â heat rises faintly up your neck at the word tension, not because itâs new but because itâs not accurate anymore, not in the way people mean when they say it. you keep your face neutral and say, âweâre just workingâ because thatâs safe and factual and boring enough to end the subject. jake doesnât contradict you, which is the first sign something is off in a way you donât have language for. he just reaches down and nudges his bag with his foot, pushing it closer to the bench like heâs anchoring it. jungwon tilts his head and asks, âpreview went fine?â and you open your mouth to answer out of habit, but jake answers first, calm and concise. âit was fineâ jake says, and itâs not dismissive. itâs not cocky. itâs just a statement. jay makes a face like heâs offended by how uninteresting that is. âjake saying âfineâ is terrifying,â jay says, pointing at him like heâs presenting evidence, âbecause that means heâs either lying or about to win something.â you expect jake to smirk or toss something sharp back, because thatâs what he usually does when jay turns him into a caricature, but jake only lifts one shoulder in a small shrug. âweâre not winning,â jake says. âweâre presenting.â the words are mild, but they land with an odd firmness, and you watch jay blink like heâs recalibrating.
kazuha slides into the seat beside jay, crossing one leg over the other, and looks at you with a small smile. âyou look tired,â kazuha observes lightly, like itâs casual and not a diagnosis. you hate that sheâs right, and you hate that your first instinct is to deny it, so instead you adjust your grip on your bag strap and say, âiâm fineâ because thatâs what you always say when you donât want to explain anything. jay makes a sympathetic noise thatâs mostly fake. âweâre all fine,â jay says dramatically, âweâre just slowly dying inside as midterms approach again.â you feel jakeâs gaze flick toward jay for half a second at the mention of midterms, then away, so fast you almost miss it, and you donât know why that tiny movement sticks in your mind. jayâs eyes drop to jakeâs bag, then to the corner of the printed draft peeking out of it, then back to jakeâs face with obvious delight. âwait,â jay says, leaning forward, âhold on. jake has paper.â he says it like heâs caught a rare animal in the wild. âjake has printed paper.â jungwon lets out a quiet laugh through his nose, and kazuhaâs eyebrows lift. jay turns his head toward you like youâre supposed to confirm it. âhe doesnât even look like he studies,â jay declares, voice loud enough that a couple of passing students glance over, âhe just shows up and wins. itâs sick.â you glance at jake automatically, expecting him to laugh it off, to smooth it over, to keep the persona intact. jake doesnât laugh. jake doesnât even smile. he just says, âi do jay.â three words. flat. final. itâs not defensive the way it would be if he said it too quickly. itâs not performative either. he says it like itâs a fact that doesnât require debate, like heâs done pretending the myth is convenient.
the silence that follows is small but real. jayâs grin falters just enough to show surprise, and jungwonâs gaze sharpens with quiet interest like heâs watching a crack form in glass. your fingers tighten around your bag strap, then loosen when you realize youâre gripping it too hard. jay recovers first, because jay always does, and he laughs. âokay, damn,â jay says, âsorry, didnât know i was touching a nerve.â jakeâs eyes stay on jay, steady and unamused, but not hostile. âyou werenâtâ jake replies, and something about the calmness of it makes the air feel different. you swallow, your throat suddenly dry, and you canât decide if the discomfort is because jake just corrected the narrative out loud or because a part of you feels exposed, like your old assumptions are standing in the sunlight. more footsteps approach, familiar and quick, and you donât have to turn to know who it is because nikiâs voice carries like he was built for interruptions. âwhy do you look like someone just insulted your entire bloodline?â niki asks as he drifts toward the table, and sunghoon follows half a step behind him, hands in his pockets, expression unreadable in the way that means heâs clocking everything. nikiâs eyes flick over the group, then land on jake, and his mouth twists into a grin. âwhatâs up man-â niki says, dragging the word out. jay points at jake like heâs proud. âi said he doesnât look like he studies,â jay admits, âbecause itâs true.â nikiâs grin widens, but thereâs something sharper under it than joke, like heâs enjoying the chance to poke at the myth because he knows exactly how false it is. âyou should see him during midterms,â niki says, tone teasing but edged, as he drops into the chair closest to jake like he owns the place, âman goes ghost.â he says it like itâs funny, like itâs casual, like itâs not also a confession that jakeâs calm is curated. jay laughs too loudly. âghost?â jay repeats. âjake?â niki nods like heâs confirming a fact everyone should already know. âyeah,â niki says, glancing at you briefly and then back to jake, âlike youâll text him and heâll reply three business days later with one word, and then youâll realize heâs been in the library basement pretending he doesnât need oxygen.â sunghoon makes a quiet sound that could be agreement or warning, then adds, âhe forgets food exists,â in that same calm voice he uses when heâs stating something obvious, and you feel your chest tighten again because theyâre saying it like a joke, but jake isnât smiling, and neither are you. jake exhales slowly, his gaze dropping to the table for half a second like heâs counting his reactions. he doesnât deny it. he doesnât deflect it. he doesnât snap at niki to shut up. he just says, âyouâre exaggeratingâ and itâs the closest thing to a protest he offers. nikiâs eyes brighten like heâs been given permission to push. âam i?â niki asks innocently, leaning forward with his elbows on his knees, and sunghoonâs gaze flicks to jake in a silent check-in. jakeâs jaw tightens once, barely, then relaxes.
âweâre leavingâ jake says again, not to the group but to the situation, and itâs not angry. itâs controlled. itâs him trying to reclaim the exit he was going to have before jay arrived. you shift again, adjusting your stance like youâre preparing to follow him, and you realize with a jolt that youâve been aligning yourself with him instinctively, physically, without deciding to. your stomach twists at the realization, and you force your expression back into neutral. jay is still grinning, oblivious to the subtle tension because heâs not the one living inside it. âwait,â jay says, âso youâre telling me jake is actually human?â niki laughs. âbarely,â niki answers, and sunghoonâs mouth twitches like he almost smiles. kazuha looks at jake with softer curiosity now, like sheâs seeing him from a new angle. âyou really study?â kazuha asks, and itâs not mocking, itâs just genuinely surprised. jake meets her gaze briefly. âyes,â jake says, and then, because he doesnât seem to know what to do with that kind of attention, he adds, âi just donât like to talk about it.â the sentence is plain, but it lands harder than anything else heâs said today, and you feel it hit somewhere low in your chest like a weight shifting. you remember the times he disappeared during midterms. the gaps where he wasnât at group meetups. the way he always showed up afterward looking normal again, like heâd simply been out having fun. you remember how easy it was to assume the reason for his absence was comfort. privilege. safety. a faint sting settles behind your ribs. jay misses the complexity and barrels forward. âokay,â jay says, âbut like you still make it look easy.â nikiâs grin fades slightly, not fully, but enough that you notice the shift. âlooking easy doesnât mean it isâ niki says, still casual, still teasing, but the edge is sharper now, like heâs warning jay without turning it into a confrontation. sunghoon doesnât say anything, but his gaze holds steady on jay for a second too long, and jay finally lifts his hands like heâs backing off. âalright, alright,â jay says, laughing, âi get it, you guys are sensitive about your golden boy.â jakeâs eyes flick up at that, quick and cold, and for a second you see the edge you were trying to locate earlier, the one you know. itâs there. itâs just been kept on a leash today. he doesnât snap, though.
he just slings his bag higher on his shoulder and says, âokay, weâre doneâ like heâs closing the conversation with the same precision he stacks paper. you should feel relief, but you donât. your mind keeps snagging on the same points. jake is not effortless. jake is not careless. jake is not coasting. jake is private. privacy doesnât fit neatly into your rivalry logic. you can compete with arrogance. you can compete with talent. you can compete with ego. but you canât compete with someone you donât fully understand, and the thought unsettles you more than it should. niki stands and stretches, bumping jakeâs shoulder lightly with his own as he passes. âdonât forget to eatâ niki says, half-joking, and jakeâs mouth tightens like heâs refusing to react to the softness hidden inside the tease. âi will.â jake replies, and you donât know if he means it, but you do know he didnât roll his eyes. he didnât joke. he didnât brush it off. he just accepted it. jungwon checks his phone and says, âweâre grabbing coffee,â and kazuha nods, already pulling her bag strap up. jay points at you. âyou coming?â jay asks. you open your mouth to say you have class because you always have an excuse ready, because leaving is easier than sitting in discomfort, but you hesitate, and the hesitation is physical before itâs mental. your fingers shift on your bag strap. your weight rocks back on your heels. âi have class,â you say finally, because itâs true and because you need the escape. jay groans dramatically and waves you off. âof course you doâ he says, already turning away as the group begins to drift.
kazuha gives you a small smile and jungwon nods once, and then theyâre walking off, their conversation fading into normal campus noise like nothing happened. but something did. the table feels emptier even though you and jake are still standing there. you look down at the closed lid of your laptop like it can give you structure, like it can give you the familiar certainty you like living inside. jake doesnât move right away. he adjusts the strap on his bag again, fingers tightening once on the fabric, then releasing. you watch the motion and realize youâre tracking him the way you track data points, like youâre trying to find a pattern that explains him cleanly. you hate that your first instinct is to soften toward him. not in a romantic way. not in a sweet way. in a pity-adjacent way you donât trust, because pity is a trap. pity changes the power dynamic. pity makes you careless. pity makes you misread people. and yet the idea of him going ghost during midterms, of him disappearing not because he doesnât care but because he cares too much, presses uncomfortably against your old assumptions, and a quiet heat rises behind your eyes like irritation that has nowhere to go. you clear your throat, not because you need to but because you need sound. jake glances at you. âwhat?â he asks, neutral. you almost say, ânothing.â you almost say, you couldâve told people. you almost say, i didnât know. instead you say the safest thing you can find. âare you really going to eat?â a beat passes. then jakeâs mouth twitches, almost a smile, but it doesnât fully form. âyes,â jake replies, his tone still calm but softer at the edges. âiâm not trying to die before presentation day.â you huff a quiet breath that could count as a laugh if you let it. âgood,â you say. jake studies you for half a second, like heâs trying to read why you said it that way, and you feel that familiar pressure building in your chest. the pressure of being seen not as a competitor but as a person who cares enough to ask. he looks away first, as if he doesnât want to sit in that recognition. âsame time tomorrow?â jake says, not a question. âyeahâ you answer. he starts to walk, then slows, matching your pace without commenting on it, and you hate how natural it feels for your steps to align. you walk toward the building together, not touching, not close enough for anyone to comment, but close enough that you can feel the heat of him when the wind shifts. jake stops at the entrance of your lecture hall and nods once. âsee youâ he says. âyeahâ you reply. you turn toward the door, and you feel his gaze on your back for a second longer than necessary, not intense, not possessive, just present. you donât look back. you tell yourself you donât need to. but your fingers tighten around the strap of your bag anyway as you walk inside. you thought he was effortless. now youâre not sure what he is. but you know this in a way you donât like admitting. itâs harder to compete with someone you canât reduce. itâs harder to feel victorious when you start noticing what it costs them.
the week before midterms always does something to campus, like the air gets thinner and everyone pretends theyâre fine while quietly unraveling. you tell yourself youâre not going to a party. you tell yourself you have too much to do, too much to lose, too many reasons to stay in your dorm with a highlighter and a spreadsheet. you tell yourself you donât need loud music and sweaty rooms and cheap alcohol to cope with pressure. you tell yourself all of that right up until eunchae is standing in your doorway with her arms crossed and a look that says sheâs not leaving until you move. âyouâre coming,â eunchae says, and she says it like itâs a fact, not a suggestion, while chaewon leans against the wall behind her with that calm, unimpressed expression she gets when sheâs already planned your entire evening for you. sakura is sitting on the edge of your bed scrolling through her phone like she owns your room, and yunjin is already halfway into a jacket, grinning like sheâs about to have the fun of her semester. kazuha, quietly lethal as always, offers you a hair tie like sheâs bribing you into compliance. âyouâve been staring at the same page for an hourâ chaewon points out, and her tone is too gentle to argue with. âthatâs called focusâ you reply automatically, but eunchae cuts in immediately, rolling her eyes. âthatâs called spiralingâ eunchae says, and she doesnât even sound mean, just certain, like sheâs observed you long enough to know the difference. you open your mouth to protest again, but yunjin steps closer and bumps your shoulder with hers, warm and insistent. âitâs one night,â yunjin says, and her grin turns softer for half a second. âyouâre not gonna lose your scholarship because you danced for forty-five minutes.â sakura looks up and adds, âalso, weâre not letting you sit here and stress-cry aloneâ and the fact that she says it so casually makes your stomach tighten, like youâve been caught doing something you didnât want anyone to name. you hate that it lands, and you hate that theyâre right, and you hate that your chest loosens a fraction anyway like your bodyâs already giving in before your pride does, so you stand up with a sharp exhale and grab your jacket, muttering, âif i fail my midterm because of you, iâm haunting all of you.â eunchae beams like sheâs won something. âdeal,â eunchae says, already turning toward the hallway, and kazuha slips her arm through yours in a quiet, grounding way that makes you feel less like youâre being dragged and more like youâre being escorted.
the party is on campus in one of those apartments that somehow always ends up being the center of whatever social event happens before everyone collapses into exam mode, and you can hear it before you even reach the door, bass vibrating through the walls like a heartbeat that doesnât belong to you. the hallway smells like perfume and cheap cologne and something sugary, and someone you donât recognize stumbles past laughing too loudly, nearly knocking into you until sakura shifts smoothly and blocks you with her shoulder like sheâs been doing this her whole life. âbreathe, itâll be fun.â kazuha murmurs near your ear, and you do, because her voice is calm enough to make your nervous system listen even when your brain doesnât want to. eunchae knocks once and then doesnât wait, pushing the door open with the confidence of someone who has never questioned whether she belongs somewhere. warm air rushes out immediately, heavy with sweat and alcohol and heat from too many bodies in one space, and the sound hits you like a wall: music, laughter, someone yelling over the song, glass clinking somewhere in the kitchen. chaewon steps in first like sheâs unbothered, sakura follows with a smile thatâs too practiced, yunjin looks delighted, and you hover half a step behind them for a second longer than you should, because you already want to leave and you havenât even fully entered. eunchae turns back and catches your wrist lightly, tugging you in with a grin. âwelcome back to being a personâ eunchae says, and it makes your face heat because you donât know whether to laugh or be annoyed, so you do neither and let her pull you inside.
you clock the room fast because thatâs what you do when youâre uncomfortable: you inventory. a cluster of people near the couch, someone perched on the armrest with a red cup, a couple making out in the corner like they forgot walls exist, a line forming toward the kitchen where the drinks are. you recognize heeseung immediately because heâs tall and loud and somehow always looks like heâs having the best time even when heâs doing nothing, and heâs leaning near the counter with a grin while sunoo stands beside him, laughing with his whole face like the world isnât currently built to stress him out. jungwon is there too, shoulders relaxed, eyes sharp like heâs watching everything at once, and jay is mid-story, hands moving dramatically as he talks, the kind of person who can turn midterm dread into a joke if he tries hard enough. then you see niki, and heâs already got that gleam in his eye that means heâs about to cause problems purely for entertainment, and heâs standing in a loose circle near the kitchen island like heâs holding court. and then jake is there. you spot him before you can pretend you didnât. heâs leaning against the edge of the counter like he belongs there, one hand holding a shot glass, sleeves pushed up, hair slightly messier than usual like he didnât bother making it perfect. the light in the kitchen makes everything look warmer than it should, and it catches the line of his jaw when he tilts his head back to laugh at something heeseung says. he looks easy. he always looks easy. thatâs what makes him infuriating, and itâs what makes a part of you go tight with something you refuse to name. heeseung nudges him with his elbow and says something you canât hear over the music, and jakeâs mouth curves into that lazy, controlled grin that used to feel like a weapon when it was aimed at you in class. niki lifts his shot glass like heâs toasting the concept of poor choices, and jake mirrors him without hesitation, like the motion is automatic. heeseung claps his hands once and calls out, âokay, okay, pre-midterm therapy shotsâ and his voice cuts through the noise just enough to carry. jake tips his head slightly and says something back with a calm confidence you canât hear, and the fact that you canât hear it makes you want to move closer, listen. and also makes you want to turn around and leave immediately.
eunchae notices your stillness because eunchae notices everything, and she leans in close enough that her hair brushes your cheek. âdonât,â eunchae says softly, and she doesnât even have to specify what she means, because you know. donât glare. donât overthink. donât turn this into a war in your head. you swallow and force your shoulders to relax, and you let kazuha tug you toward the living room like itâs no big deal, like your pulse didnât just spike. sakura says something cheerful to someone passing by, chaewon accepts a drink with a polite nod, yunjin laughs at a joke that barely registers in your ears, and you try to make yourself match their energy because you donât want to be the person who ruins the night with your tension. but your eyes flick back to the kitchen anyway, because youâre not made of stone, and because jake is still there, tipping a shot back with heeseung and niki like heâs immune to consequences, like midterms arenât going to chew everyone up next week. he wipes his mouth with the back of his hand and looks up-just briefly-and for a second you think heâs looking at you. your stomach tightens. then he turns to heeseung again like nothing happened, like he didnât just shift your entire nervous system with one glance youâre not even sure was real, and you hate that youâre standing here calculating him while pretending you came to relax.
you take a drink from the cup kazuha presses into your hand, the plastic warm from someone elseâs grip, and you tell yourself this is fine. itâs just a party. itâs just noise. itâs just one night before midterms start to swallow the campus whole. and yet, when another round of cheers erupts from the kitchen and you hear heeseung shout, âagain!â you find your gaze drifting back like it has its own gravity, because jake is laughing at him again, head tipped slightly, eyes bright, and niki is already pouring another set of shots like heâs committing to the bit. the music is louder in the kitchen. of course it is. it always is, because thatâs where the shots are, where the counters are sticky and the floor vibrates slightly from too many people shifting their weight at once. eunchae is the one who pulls you closer without asking, because she lives for this exact chaos, and chaewon follows with the calm composure of someone who can drink and still remember formulas the next morning. sakura slips into the circle smoothly, smiling at heeseung like sheâs amused before he even says anything, and yunjin is already hyping someone up about midterm âsurvival shots,â while kazuha stays half a step beside you, steady and quiet. you donât intend to end up next to jake. you just do. heeseung is laughing mid-sentence, one hand thrown over nikiâs shoulder, the other pointing dramatically at jake like heâs narrating some grand victory, and jake is leaning back against the counter with a shot glass in his hand, sleeves pushed up, hair slightly messy like he ran his fingers through it one too many times. he looks easy. he always looks easy. it makes your jaw tighten before you can stop it.
niki finishes pouring and slides a glass toward jake. âpre-midterm cleanseâ niki declares with a grin thatâs already too sharp to be innocent. heeseung claps jake on the back. âjaeyun,â heeseung says loudly, proud and teasing at the same time, âi heard you killed that preview, dude. professor kim mentioned it in office hours. said it was âimpressive.ââ jaeyun. the word lands wrong. not for the room. the room just laughs. someone whistles. sunoo leans in with an exaggerated âof course he didâ and jake goes still, small and brief, half a second you wouldnât see if you werenât watching him. his fingers tighten around the shot glass. his jaw locks. then he says, flat and immediate, âdonât.â heeseung blinks. âwhat?â he asks, and jake doesnât smile as he tells him, âyou know i hate that.â heeseung laughs like itâs a joke. âhate what? itâs your name,â he says, and jakeâs eyes flick up for just a second, not defensive, not embarrassed, just sharp. ânot here.â jake says. the music swells again and someone shouts from the living room, and the moment almost gets swallowed whole. heeseung lifts both hands in surrender. âalright, alright. jakeâ he corrects lightly, still grinning, but youâre still watching, because that wasnât embarrassment, and it wasnât annoyance, and jake lifts the shot glass and tips it back without breaking eye contact with the counter before setting it down harder than necessary, the sound clicking sharp against the granite. niki notices, of course he does, and he mutters under his breath, âdamn, touchyâ not loud enough to escalate it. jaeyun doesnât belong here. jaeyun belongs to professors mentioning him in office hours. to expectations. to quiet admiration. to something polished and impressive and untouchable. jake belongs in kitchens that smell like tequila and lime, and the fact that he separates the two so instinctively makes something shift in you. heeseung pours another round. âokay, redemption shot for over-praising!â heeseung laughs, and jake doesnât protest as he reaches for the glass again. you step closer without meaning to and tell him, âmaybe slow downâ leaning in just enough so the music doesnât swallow your voice. jake glances at you and asks, âwhy?â and thereâs something steady about him, not sloppy, not even that tipsy yet, just a little looser than usual. you fold your arms lightly and say, âwe have rehearsal tomorrowâ and jake tilts his head slightly as he answers, âand?â you reply evenly, âand iâm not covering for you if you show up hungover.â and the words are simple, but the air changes as niki goes quiet and jake doesnât look away. âi didnât ask you to.â jake says, calm and controlled, but with an edge under it, and you answer, âyou donât have to.â and that lands harder because you both know what it means. you stepped in before. you adjusted. you smoothed it out. you made it seamless. jake sets the second shot down untouched this time and says, âyou donât get to manage me.â not raising his voice, not sneering, just stating it like a boundary. your jaw tightens as you reply, âiâm not managing you. iâm being realisticâ and jake asks, âabout what?â with something sharper in it now. you say, âabout the fact that this project doesnât just affect youâ while the music pulses through the cabinets and someone shouts your name from the doorway and you donât look.
jake studies you like youâre an equation heâs not sure he wants to solve and says, âof course iâll show upâ and you reply before you can stop yourself, âthatâs not what iâm worried aboutâ making his eyes narrow slightly as he asks, âthen what are you worried about?â you donât say what youâre actually thinking. you say, âthat you think this doesnât matter,â and jake lets out a quiet, humorless breath as he says, âit matters.â you tell him, âthen act like it,â and thatâs when it snaps, not loud, not explosive, just clean, as jake says low, âi donât need you to supervise me.â. you shoot back, âand i donât need you to pretend youâre invincible,â and thereâs a flicker in his expression at that, not anger, something else, as he asks, âyou think this is pretending?â you donât hesitate when you tell him, âyou always try to make it look easyâ and the words hang between you.
the room stays loud around you. people laughing, someone bumping into heeseung and apologizing, yunjin dragging sakura toward the living room, chaewon saying something dry to jungwon that makes him grin, but the space between you goes quiet. jake holds your gaze and then says, very quietly, almost too quiet for the room heâs standing in, âjaeyun doesnât get to screw up.â it isnât dramatic. he doesnât look at anyone else. he doesnât elaborate. he says it like itâs obvious, like itâs fact, and you donât respond because suddenly you understand, not fully, not perfectly, but enough. j
aeyun is the version people brag about in office hours. jaeyun is the one professors mention by name. jaeyun is the golden one. jaeyun doesnât drink too much. doesnât hesitate in presentations. doesnât need help. doesnât misstep. jake does. and jake hates when the two get confused.
he picks up the untouched shot and slides it back toward niki instead. ânot that one,â jake says flatly, and niki raises an eyebrow but doesnât comment, just sliding the extra shot back toward the bottle with a little clink like heâs filing it away for later. you should step away and you should let the moment dissolve, but jake is standing there, jaw tight, gaze fixed somewhere between the counter and the floor like heâs forcing his thoughts into a straight line, and you canât not say it when you tell him, âdonât do thisâ your voice low enough that it shouldnât carry even though the way his attention snaps up makes it feel louder anyway. his eyes flick to yours as he asks, âdo what?â and you fold your arms lightly because if you donât put your hands somewhere youâll fidget and if you fidget youâll look like you care too much, replying evenly, âdrink like you donât have consequences. rehersal is tomorrow.â his mouth twitches like heâs about to make a joke, but he doesnât, instead exhaling slowly through his nose and saying, âiâm not getting wastedâ and you point out, âyouâre doing shotsâ only for him to answer, âso is everyone elseâ and when you tell him, âthatâs not an argumentâ his gaze sharpens as he says, âitâs not supposed to be.â irritation flares, quick and familiar, and it would be so easy to slip into the old rhythm, but youâre not trying to win right now and youâre trying to keep tomorrow from collapsing, so you say, âjake. we have rehearsal. we have the dataset response. we have q&a framing. if you show up hungover, iâm not doing this alone.â and something flashes in his expression fast enough that anyone else would miss it, not anger but offense at the idea underneath it, as his shoulders square like heâs bracing and he says, controlled, âyouâre not doing it alone y/n.â while you lift your chin and tell him, âthen act like it.â his eyes narrow and for a second itâs like the room blurs and itâs just you and him and the edge between you that always seems to sharpen when you least expect it as he replies, âi am acting like it.â and you say, âyou were literally about to take another shotâ and he looks at the counter and back at you and says, âbecause weâre at a party,â and when you press, âand?â, he answers, calm but strained anyway, âand i can handle it.â and you say before you can stop yourself, âi donât care about that.â he pauses, a small, dangerous pause, and then asks too evenly, âwhat is it about then?â and you donât answer immediately because the truth sitting behind your teeth is messy, because you saw him flinch when heeseung said jaeyun and you saw him go still like someone had grabbed him by the throat with expectations and you donât know what to do with the fact that it made you want to step closer instead of away, so you pick the cleanest version and say, âitâs about tomorrow. iâm not risking this because you want to âlet looseâ tonight,â and he gives a short laugh that doesnât match his eyes as he says, âyou think this is me letting loose?â and you blink and ask, âwhat else would it be?â.
his jaw flexes and he looks like heâs about to say something and stops himself, the silence filling up with all the things you both keep circling without naming. he asks,says, louder than you expect and louder than the music, âyou think i donât care about tomorrow?â as it cuts through the room like someone yanked a cord and the kitchen doesnât go silent but it shifts, people pausing mid-laugh, mid-sip, mid-sentence, heeseungâs grin faltering, jayâs eyebrows lifting, jungwon straightening slightly, and even sunooâs smile dropping into something curious while your stomach drops, not because of the words but because of the volume, because jake doesnât do loud unless heâs cornered. heeseung leans across the island sensing tension like a shark sensing blood and grinning like he lives for drama that isnât his. âyo, are you guys arguing about regression models right now?â and jay laughs and says, âplease tell me you areâ while jungwonâs gaze flicks between you and jake, calm but alert, and niki stays beside jake watching him with that sharp, almost-too-aware expression he gets when he knows exactly where the line is and is waiting to see who crosses it. you keep your expression steady even though your pulse jumps as you reply, âthatâs not what i said.â and he steps half a pace closer, not aggressively but enough that you feel it, saying sharper than the first, âstop supervising me.â and thatâs the one that gets everyoneâs attention because now it isnât just a disagreement and itâs personal, heeseungâs eyes widening slightly like heâs just realized he walked into something real, jayâs mouth opening like heâs about to make a joke and then shutting, jungwonâs gaze staying fixed on jake, measuring. niki moves, not dramatically and not like heâs body-blocking, just a casual step closer to jakeâs side with his shoulder brushing jakeâs like heâs inserting himself into the orbit before the gravity gets too strong, and he says lightly with a warning under it like a leash tightening, âokay. donât be weird,â while jake doesnât look at niki and keeps his eyes on you as he continues, still loud enough to carry and still controlled enough to not sound drunk, âyouâve been acting like iâm irresponsible. like iâm going to blow this up.â you inhale slowly to ground yourself and repeat, âyouâre doing shotsâ because itâs the only factual thing you can cling to without falling into whatever this is becoming, and he shoots back, âand youâre acting like iâm not going to show up,â
you say, already regretting the wording because fix is the wrong word and fix is the trigger word and fix makes it sound like you think heâs broken, âiâm acting like i donât want to have to fix itâ and jakeâs eyes flash as he says, âthere it is. that.â and when you ask, âwhat?â he says, âthat tone. like youâre already planning to cover for meâ while niki taps jakeâs shoulder once as a quiet signal and murmurs, âbro,â trying to pull him back without making it obvious, but jake doesnât move. heat rises behind your ribs as you say, steady, âbecause i have. i have covered for you. you donât get to act like thatâs not trueâ. niki steps between you, âokay, okay, time-out. this is a kitchen. not a therapy circle,â and jay snorts, relieved at the escape route, adding, âyeah, take your academic trauma somewhere else.â
the tension doesnât dissolve, it just gets pushed aside like furniture, and niki uses the moment, leaning in closer to jakeâs ear with concern masked as annoyance as he says, âyouâre getting heated. chill,â while jake replies automatically, âiâm fineâ even though the words donât match the stiffness in his shoulders, and niki mutters, âyouâre not,â before straightening and raising his voice just enough to sound casual as he says, âcome on. breathe. youâre gonna start arguing about dataset framing in the tequila zone,â drawing a couple laughs as jake exhales through his nose and, like his body finally remembers the room is full of eyes, lets niki steer him backward, not because heâs weak but because heâs choosing control. before jake turns away fully, he looks at you again. the music is loud enough to blur edges, the kitchen lights too bright, and when someone bumps into the counter behind you tequila sloshes dangerously close to the rim of a plastic cup, the party keeps moving like nothing just cracked open in the middle of it. youâre still standing exactly where the argument stalled, and he studies you for a second, not long enough for anyone else to clock it but long enough for you to feel it land, his jaw tight, not angry, not defensive, just braced, and you donât even know what you wouldâve said if niki hadnât stepped in. you donât know what you were about to accuse him of. jakeâs mouth moves before he can stop it as he says, âyou really think i donât care?â not shouted but loud enough to cut through a dip in the music, and a couple heads turn while jay lets out a low, amused âokayyyâ like he thinks this is still a bit. heeseung lifts his brows, grinning, waiting for a punchline, and nikiâs hand tightens on jakeâs shoulder as he says under his breath, âdonât.â while jake doesnât look at him and keeps his eyes on you, and then, softer, so soft it barely survives the bass vibrating through the cabinets, jake adds, âyou think iâd care this much if it wasnât you?â.
 it isnât performative or dramatic, sounding almost irritated, almost exasperated, like heâs frustrated you donât already know. no one reacts because no one heard, and the world doesnât pause, but you do, because the sentence doesnât feel like a joke or ego or rivalry, it feels like something that slipped past his filter. jakeâs expression shifts a fraction, not regret, not exactly, more like awareness, like he realizes the line crossed some invisible boundary heâs been pretending isnât there, and niki doesnât push it, only leaning in again as he says low, âokay. thatâs enough.â you stare at jake trying to translate it into something safe, because it could mean he cares about the project because you care and it could mean he cares about being seen by you and it could mean-
but before you can answer or even breathe properly, sunoo shouts from the living room, âjake! come drink like a normal person!â and niki tightens his grip on jakeâs shoulder as he says louder with his grin back in place like armor, âyeah. come on, romeo. stop fighting in the kitchen,â and jake turns toward the noise and then back to you one last time, not regretful and not taking it back, just aware, before letting niki pull him away into the living room where bodies and music and laughter swallow him like nothing happened, but something did. youâre left standing in the kitchen with your drink untouched in your hand, the plastic cup warm against your fingers, the bass vibrating through your bones, and the sentence replaying in your head like a glitch you canât close out of. across the room jake is on the couch with niki leaning in close to his ear and saying something that makes jake run a hand through his hair like heâs trying to reset, and he looks up and your eyes meet for a second, and you donât know what to do with the fact that he doesnât look away first, so you look down at your cup and back up. but heâs still there, still watching, not competitive and not amused and not careless, just steady, like that sentence didnât belong to the party noise and like it belongs to something else. something youâre not ready to name. and you hate it because you canât tell whether it was nothing or whether it was the first real thing heâs said to you all semester.
the rehearsal room is too bright, not warm-bright, not late-afternoon gold, just fluorescent and unforgiving, the kind of light that makes everything look sharper than it feels, and you get there early, telling yourself itâs because you want one uninterrupted run-through before the final presentation, because timing matters, because transitions matter, because if you shave three seconds off slide seven the conclusion lands cleaner. it totally has nothing to do with not wanting to walk in at the same time. the room is empty when you unlock it, the projector humming faintly as it warms up, and you set your bag down, plug in your laptop, pull up the deck, click through slide one. slide two. slide three. your reflection flickering briefly across the white screen before the first title loads, and you stare at it longer than necessary because the party sentence replays anyway
you think iâd care this much if it wasnât you?
itâs not even the full sentence every time. sometimes itâs just care this much then again if it wasnât you- you swallow as the door opens, not turning immediately because you hear him first. the soft click of the handle, the measured steps across the floor, no rush, no hesitation. and he drops his bag in the chair near the back wall and says, âmorning,â in a tone that is completely normal. you click to slide four and reply, âmorning,â just as normal, and thatâs the problem. he moves to stand beside you instead of across from you, close enough that you can feel the residual cold from outside clinging to his jacket but not close enough to touch, and without looking at him you ask, âdo you want to start from the methodology or the intro?â and he answers easily, âintro. timing felt slightly off last timeâ slight, not wrong, not flawed, just slight. you nod once and begin, moving through the introduction smoothly, pacing measured, voice even, and he doesnât interrupt, doesnât adjust your wording, doesnât correct emphasis, and when you finish the opening section and glance at him out of habit he nods once and says, âgood,â and thatâs it, no tighten the transition, no slow down on that statistic, no raised eyebrow, no subtle challenge, just good. you move into the framework section and he takes over on cue, clean, no stumble, no hesitation, no improvisation, efficient, too efficient, and you wait for him to cut you off when you overlap slightly on slide six, but he doesnât. when you reach the conclusion the room feels wrong, you click to black and silence fills the space where debate should have been.
he checks his watch and says, âthree minutes underâ and you answer, âthatâs fineâ and he nods and says, âthatâs goodâ and you hate how agreeable that sounds. you cross your arms without meaning to and say, âyou didnât interrupt once.â and he looks at you with mild curiosity and replies, âyou didnât need interruptingâ and you answer, âthatâs not the pointâ and he tilts his head slightly and asks, âwhat is the point then?â and you open your mouth, close it, look back at the blank screen instead of at him as the fluorescent lights hum, and after a moment he says, âyou adjusted slide eight. the transition is cleaner,â and you respond, âi know,â and he adds, âi noticedâ and when you look at him and say, âokayâ itâs just another calm acknowledgment, no spark, no competition, no ego, smooth, too smooth, and that unsettles you more than last night did. you pick up the remote just to have something in your hand and say, âthis feels weird.â and he replies, âbut the presentation looks fine?â and you say, âi know.â and he studies you a second longer than necessary and asks, âyou want to focus on delivery?â and you answer, âthatâs not what this isâ and he asks again, neutral, controlled, open, âwhat is it y/n?â and the sentence from last night presses against the back of your throat because he said it like it meant something and now heâs standing here like it didnât. you turn fully toward him and ask, âwhat did you mean?â no build-up, no softening, just direct, and he doesnât pretend not to understand, doesnât ask you to clarify, doesnât deflect to slides, just meets your eyes and says, âyou knowâ and you hold his gaze and tell him, âdonât do that.â and when he asks, âdo what?â you gesture vaguely between you and say, âthat. answering without answering. avoiding.â and his expression stays steady as he says, âiâm not avoiding itâ and you reply, âit feels like youâre actingâ and after a pause he says evenly, âiâm not.â and the phrasing lands heavier than it should because heâs right, heâs not acting different, heâs acting normal, and thatâs whatâs wrong. you almost pivot, almost reach for the laptop, almost say this is stupid, almost redirect to slide transitions, old instinct telling you to hide in structure, hide in competence, hide in measurable things, but you donât, you stay where you are as the silence stretches and the projector fan hums quietly behind you, and he waits, not impatient, not pushing, just there, and thatâs worse, because now you have to decide whether youâre going to say it or pretend you didnât hear it at all. and you donât pretend, not this time.
âyou donât get to say something like that and then act normal.â you tell him, the words steadier than you feel. jake doesnât look surprised when he replies, âi told you iâm not acting.â you shake your head and insist, âjake, you said it like it meant somethingâ, and jake holds your gaze as he says, âit did.â you hesitate, then push forward. âthen why are we standing here like we didnât just-â you stop yourself before finishing and amend, âwhy are we standing here like this is just rehearsal?â jake answers evenly, âbecause we have a presentation in a week.â - âthatâs not what i meanâ you reply, and when he says, âi knowâ without softening, it only sharpens your frustration. âyou said it,â you continue. âyou wouldnât care if it wasnât me.â - âyesâ jake says. you take a step closer and tell him, âthen donât stand there like you didnât.â jake responds, âiâm not saying i didnâtâ and you counter immediately, âyou are acting like it didnât shift anything.â he studies you, then says, âiâm just not turning it into something chaotic.â - âit already is chaoticâ you argue. jake corrects you quietly. âitâs chaotic for you.â you look away, jaw tight, and say, âyou act like none of this costs you anything.â he stills and asks, âcosts me what?â - âenergy. focus. whatever this isâ you answer, gesturing between you. âyou act like you can compartmentalize it and move on.â after a brief pause, jake says, âwhen you look at me like iâm effortless, it makes me feel invisible.â you frown and respond, âthatâs not what iâm doing.â- âi didnât say it was intentionalâ he replies. âinvisible how?â you ask. jake inhales and answers, âlike i donât have to try.â-âthatâs not fairâ you say. âwhy?â he asks. âbecause i never said you donât try.â jake answers quietly, âyou donât have to.â you open your mouth, then shift your wording. âyou make it look easy.â- âthat doesnât mean it isâ he says. âi know thatâ you insist. jake meets your eyes and asks, âdo you?â you hold his gaze for a second too long, because you donât. not really. you know he studies. you know he prepares. you know he isnât coasting on instinct. but youâve always framed his control as natural, like composure is something he was born with instead of something he built. you think about the way he never looks rushed, the way he never looks unsure, the way youâve used that steadiness against him in arguments like it proved he was less affected.
you swallow. âi-â you start, but the word stalls before it can turn into defense. he watches you closely, not accusing, not smug. just waiting. and for the first time it occurs to you that maybe youâve mistaken his restraint for indifference, and the realization doesnât settle gently-it shifts something, sharp and destabilizing, and you inhale slowly as it rearranges the ground under your feet. âand the kiss?â you ask, not softening it or circling it, and the words hang between you like something thrown too hard to retrieve. jake doesnât blink or laugh or reach for a safer angle. he just says, ânot strategy.â clean and final. you stare at him. ânot-â you begin, then stop, because your mind is still trying to file it under something controlled, something tactical, and you swallow before asking nothing at all. jake adds evenly, âi donât kiss people iâm competing with.â as if that should settle it. your chest tightens and you demand, sharper than intended, âwhat are you even saying?â he holds your gaze and replies, âyou think iâd complicate this if you didnât matter?â the calm certainty of it lands harder than raised volume ever could, and you struggle to categorize his expression-no smirk, no defensiveness, nothing easy to dismiss. he watches you think and says, with the faintest edge, âyouâre thinking too hard.â- âiâm notâ you answer automatically and force yourself back to something concrete. âyou said it didnât mean anything.â he corrects you without flinching. âi said we were drunk.â- âi wish i knew what you were thinking.â you reply, quieter now. jake nods once. âi know.â you press further. âand the night at your dorm. the-â your voice falters, but he doesnât make you finish. âthat wasnât nothing either,â jake says simply. your pulse jumps. he continues, measured, âi didnât want to reduce it toâŠthat.â- âto what?â you ask. âto a mistake,â he answers. you swallow and say, âbut you acted like you did. after.â his jaw tightens slightly as he admits, âbecause it was easier.â- âfor who?â you challenge. âfor both of us.â jake replies immediately. the truth of it stings, and you try to steady yourself. âso what,â you say, âyouâre saying it wasnât to throw me off?â his eyes narrow, in quiet offense. âyou think iâd need that?â you freeze, realizing the implication. jake holds your gaze and says, level and deliberate, âi donât do things like that to win. not with you.â heat rises behind your eyes, but you keep your voice even. âthen what was it?â he doesnât look away. âit was me not stopping,â jake says. your breath catches. after a beat, he adds, quieter, âand it was me letting you see that.â the room feels too bright as you try to process it.
you just stand there, stunned, as he meets your gaze steadily, like heâs been waiting for you to understand. and something in you finally stops fighting for an explanation that keeps you safe. he watches you and repeats, softer but no less certain, âyou think iâd complicate this if you didnât matter to me?â because the truth is too clear to ignore. he didnât lose control. he chose exposure. he chose- oh.
OH.
of course. of course thatâs what it was. of course thatâs why the silence after the phone rang felt like grief. of course thatâs why the âwe were drunkâ excuse tasted wrong in your mouth even as you used it. of course thatâs why the smoothness today feels worse than any argument. because he wasnât treating it like nothing. he was treating it like something he didnât know how to hold, and he still came back, he still showed up, he still stood beside you. your throat goes dry. you almost laugh, not because itâs funny, but because itâs absurd how long youâve both been circling the same obvious truth like it was dangerous. you almost say something sharp, almost turn it into a joke, almost protect yourself with cleverness. you donât. you just stand there, stunned, your heart beating too hard in a room that is too bright, looking at him like heâs a new variable you didnât account for, and he looks back like heâs been accounting for you the entire time. jake steps closer, not quickly, not like heâs trying to corner you, just one measured step that makes the air shift, and your body reacts before your pride does-you step back automatically, heel catching the leg of a chair as you steady yourself with one hand on the table, fingers splayed against the cold surface, that sharp flare of panic igniting under your ribs. not because you donât want him but because you do. because wanting him has already proven it can turn your brain into static. because you remember the dorm hallway and the dim lights and the way you let yourself slip before pretending you hadnât.
he steps close enough now that you feel his warmth, not touching, just there. âiâm sure,â jake says. âabout you. about this. and iâm not going to make you guess. not anymore.â you stare at him, stunned by the simplicity, your fear not gone but reshaped into something smaller, something survivable, because heâs cutting off the pretending and the uncertainty right here, with certainty, with choice, with you standing in a room thatâs too bright and finally not pretending you donât want whatâs in front of you. heâs close enough now that you can feel the warmth of him. not touching, just there. âyou donât have to overthink this,â jake says quietly, not teasing, not challenging, just steady. you swallow and answer, âthatâs a big askâ and a faint, almost private smile touches the corner of his mouth before jake replies, âi knowâ. the silence stretches between you but it isnât sharp anymore, it isnât defensive. itâs something thicker, waiting. his hand lifts slightly-not reaching yet, just hovering like heâs giving you one last exit he wonât take and never has. your heart pounding hard enough youâre sure he can hear it. âfor once,â you say, breath uneven but voice sure, âi donât want to fight this anymore.â and his eyes soften. not weak, not gentle, just certain. jake answers, âthen donât.â without closing the distance, without forcing it, simply waiting, and this time you donât step back.
the air feels heavier now. thicker in your lungs. you can feel his warmth without touching him, like your body already knows what it wants before your brain catches up. jakeâs eyes drop to your mouth again. slower this time. deliberate. your breath shifts first. then his follows. you step into him. his hand comes up carefully. his fingers brush along your jaw, then slide to the back of your neck. his touch is controlled, grounded. like heâs steadying both of you. you donât give him time to reconsider. you kiss him. it starts soft- it doesnât stay that way. his lips move against yours with quiet certainty that makes your knees feel weaker than they should. he exhales into your mouth, warm and unguarded. your hands slide up his chest automatically. your fingers curl into his shirt like you need something solid. he pulls you closer firmly. your bodies line up. thereâs no space left between you. you feel his breathing against your own. you feel the tension in his shoulders where heâs trying to stay composed and failing. the kiss deepens. your mouth parts and he follows. slower now. more deliberate. his hand tightens at your waist. his other hand slides into your hair. his fingers thread gently but possessively at the base of your skull. it isnât frantic like the dorm. it isnât restrained either. itâs hungry in a quieter way. your pulse spikes when his tongue brushes yours, enough to make your breath hitch. he makes a low sound in his throat. it goes straight through you. you tilt your head and press closer. the control slips a little. the kiss turns deeper. warmer. slower and more consuming at once.
his hands slide from your waist to your hips. he holds you there like heâs afraid youâll disappear if he lets go. you break for air. he doesnât move far. his forehead rests against yours. his breathing is uneven. his lips hover close. he kisses you again. not your mouth this time. the corner of it. slow. then along your jaw. your pulse jumps when his mouth trails lower. he presses kisses beneath your ear. then down your neck. âjake-â you breathe. thereâs no real protest in it, just surprise. his lips curve faintly against your skin. âyou remember,â jake murmurs near your collarbone, kisses inbetween his voice, low and rough, âhow that night ended?â your fingers tighten in his hair. âi remember a phone call-â you manage. he huffs softly against your neck. âi remember you pulling me down like youâd already decided,â jake says quietly and kisses your neck again âi remember you telling me it wasnât research,â heat floods your chest. he presses another slow kiss to your skin. âand i remember not finishing it.â the words land low and clear. his hand slides slightly higher at your waist. he doesnât cross a line. he just reminds you how close you are. âso,â jake says, lifting his head enough to look up at you, eyes darker but steady, âshould we finish what we started in my dorm?â your face burns. you push lightly at his chest, while grinning at him. âjake.â you warn, but youâre smiling. he raises a brow. âwhat?â jake asks. âyouâre unbelievable.â- âyou were pretty committed,â jake replies smoothly. âagainst the wall. on the-â you press your palm to his mouth before he can finish. âpresentation first.â he kisses your palm lightly before lowering your hand. his grin widens. âyouâre ruthless.â- âfocused.â you correct softly. you glare at him, but itâs playful. he leans in once more and brushes his lips against yours. shorter this time. lighter. a promise instead of a culmination. âfine,â jake says, stepping back half a pace. âslides.â you inhale slowly and steady your breathing as he moves beside you again. close. not touching. your shoulders brush. neither of you pulls away. you click to the next slide. he leans closer to look at the screen. his voice is lower now and a bit awkward. âslide seven transition still needs tightening,â jake says. you glance at him sideways. âprove it.â he smirks. the room feels different now. not too bright. not too quiet, just charged.
presentation day arrives a week later with sunlight too bright to ignore. the campus feels sharper this morning. colder almost. the air is crisp in a way that makes everything feel like it matters more. youâre already in the rehearsal room when jake walks in. not because youâre anxious. just because you like the quiet before everything starts. the projector hums softly. slides are open. your laptop glows against the dimmer walls. you hear him before you see him. measured steps. no rush. the door closes behind him. you donât turn immediately. âyouâre earlyâ jake says. you click to the title slide without looking up. âso are you.â a beat passes. then warmth at your side. his hand slides lightly to your waist. he leans in and presses a slow kiss to your temple like itâs something heâs been doing for months instead of six days. your pulse still jumps. âmorning,â jake murmurs against your hair. you try not to smile. âmorning.â he lingers half a second longer than necessary before stepping back. thereâs no awkward checking of boundaries. itâs just easy. you glance at him. heâs wearing a button-down you havenât seen before. sleeves rolled once at the forearm. hair slightly messy in a way that looks accidental but isnât. âyou changed the shirtâ you say. jake glances down. âitâs presentation day.â - âyou had a perfectly good one yesterday.â he raises a brow. âthis oneâs better.â- âfor who?â you ask. âfor meâ jake replies. you narrow your eyes. he steps closer without asking. his fingers brush the edge of your collar. he adjusts it carefully. âyouâre crooked,â jake says. âi am not.â you roll your eyes but let him fix it. the contact is brief and intentional. he steps back and scans you like heâs reviewing a final draft. âbetter,â jake says. âyouâre insufferable.â- âyouâre welcome.â
the door opens again. niki walks in mid-yawn and stops. he looks at you. then at jake. then back at you. ââŠwow.â niki says slowly. you stiffen slightly. jake doesnât. âwhat?â jake asks mildly. niki gestures between you. âyou two are-â- ârehearsing,â you interrupt. niki squints. sunghoon appears behind him, already dressed like heâs heading into a boardroom. he clocks it immediately. âfinally.â sunghoon says under his breath. your cheeks warm. jake doesnât deny it. he just picks up the remote. ârun-through?â jake asks you calmly. like nothing has shifted. like everything has. you nod. sunghoon watches for another second and then smirks. âdonât let it make you sloppy,â sunghoon says. âit wonât,â jake replies. âit makes us efficient,â he adds. niki makes a face. âgross.â but you both ignore him as the room settles. slides advance. you begin. your voice is steady. jake transitions seamlessly. it feels familiar but different. thereâs no edge now. no attempt to outpace each other. when you pause, he fills the space smoothly. when he emphasizes a point, you support it instead of challenging it. it feels less like a duel. more like rhythm. after a few minutes jake cuts in gently. âslide eight transition.â you glance at him. he smirks slightly. you narrow your eyes. âstill think itâs weak?â- âhardlyâ jake says. you step closer so your shoulder brushes his. âhow hard?â you whisper. niki groans. âplease do not flirt over regression analysis.â jake leans in and lowers his voice so only you hear it. ânot now.â you glance at him. âfocus.â he smiles faintly. âi am.â you try not to think about last night. the way his voice sounded when he said your name. the way he held you like he had nowhere else to be than on top of him. you swallow. jake notices immediately. âyouâre pacing,â jake says quietly. âiâm not,â you cross your arms. âiâm preparing.â -âare you nervous?â -âiâm not.â he steps closer again.âyou donât need to be,â jake says. you look at him. he doesnât look nervous. of course he doesnât. âare you?â you ask. he shrugs lightly. ânot really.â- âthatâs suspicious.â a corner of his mouth lifts. he leans closer. âlast night helpedâ jake murmurs near your ear. heat shoots up your neck. you elbow him lightly. âjake.â- âwhat?â he asks innocently. âwe are about to present.â- âiâm aware.â you try to glare but fail. he straightens.
down the hall the auditorium door opens. your names are called. itâs time. jake looks at you. not competitive. not challenging. just steady. âyou ready?â jake asks. you inhale. the nerves are still there. but theyâre different now. âyeah,â you say. he holds your gaze for half a second longer and nods once. âletâs go.â he doesnât grab your hand. not yet. but as you walk toward the stage together, your shoulders brush.
the lights on stage are warmer than the rehearsal room but just as exposing. you step forward when your name is called. the clicker feels steady in your hand. you donât look at jake when you begin because you know heâs exactly where he needs to be. âgood morning,â you say, your voice carrying clearly across the auditorium, and the introduction unfolds smoothly as you outline the core question, the scope, and the limitations of the institutional dataset without rushing, your pacing deliberate and controlled. when you reach the final line of your opening, you glance at him briefly and jake steps in seamlessly. he doesnât shift the tone. he builds on it. his explanation of the methodology is concise and precise as he walks the audience through the regression model without overcomplicating it. he gestures toward the slide and highlights only what matters. the transition between you feels natural, not stiff with rehearsal. you step slightly aside to give him space. when he finishes, you move back in without hesitation and guide the audience into the comparative analysis. on slide seven your mind blanks for half a second. the statistic you intend to cite slips just out of reach. jake fills the space smoothly. âas reflected in the secondary regression output,â jake says, supplying the number without breaking rhythm. you nod once. âexactly,â you continue, reclaiming the flow as if the pause never happened, and the presentation keeps moving. you reach the section where the supplementary dataset appears on screen and a subtle shift ripples through the room because it isnât part of the original brief. you explain the expansion clearly. âwhile the university-provided dataset offered strong internal validity, it lacked longitudinal depth beyond the institutional sample,â you say. jake continues without missing a beat. âwe integrated an external dataset to test whether the observed pattern held under broader conditions,â jake explains. you advance the slide and the comparative visualization appears. âit strengthened the predictive consistency.â you conclude. the presentation moves toward the final section and you and jake stand closer now, not alternating distance but occupying the space together. the conclusion lands cleanly. you summarize the implications and jake reinforces them. the final sentence is delivered in alignment, not overlapping and not forced. you both stop speaking at the same time. applause follows, stronger than you expected.
the q&a begins. a judge leans forward. âyou chose to incorporate an external dataset that was not included in the original materials. why take that risk?â the judge asks. you answer first. âwe wanted to test whether the trend we identified was institution-specific or structurally consistent,â you say. jake adds, ârelying solely on the provided data would have limited the robustness of the conclusion.â you continue, âthe supplementary dataset allowed us to evaluate predictive stability across a broader sample.â the judge nods slowly. âand youâre confident in the reliability of the external source?â she asks. âyes,â jake replies calmly. âitâs peer-validated and publicly archived. we verified the methodology before integration.â the judge leans back. âambitious,â she says. âbut well defended.â when the final question ends, the moderator thanks you and you thank the panel. as you walk off stage, the noise of the auditorium softens behind you. your hand brushes jakeâs at your side and this time neither of you pulls away immediately. âyou recovered slide seven,â you say quietly. âyou set it up,â jake replies. you glance at him and he looks back. the competition isnât gone. it just feels different now. and for the first time all semester, you know exactly why.
the hallway outside the auditorium feels strangely quiet once the doors close behind you, the applause fading and voices blurring into background static so that for a second itâs just the two of you under harsh overhead lights with adrenaline still buzzing through your veins. your hands warm and your pulse unsettled as jake exhales slowly and rolls his shoulders like heâs releasing something heâs been holding for weeks. âyou were annoyingly good,â you say before you can stop yourself, and jake glances at you with calm amusement before replying, âyou werenât badâ which makes you narrow your eyes and repeat, ânot bad?â and he tilts his head slightly and corrects, âimpressive. if weâre being honestâ and you fight a smile and fail because the energy between you feels lighter now, not tense or sharp, just charged differently.
from inside the auditorium you hear sunghoon begin his introduction and you turn toward the sound automatically and say, âtheyâre startingâ and jake follows your gaze and answers, âyeahâ and you lean back against the wall for a moment, letting the adrenaline settle enough to think clearly before adding casually, âthey still have to present,â and jake looks at you and asks, âand?â but you donât answer right away, instead pushing off the wall and stepping closer, not rushed or dramatic, just enough to shift the air as you continue lightly, âand that means weâre technically free for the next hourâ and his expression changes almost imperceptibly, his eyes sharpening as he says quietly, âoh-â while you pretend to consider something important and then tell him, âyou did well. better than i expectedâ and he raises a brow and replies, âthatâs concerningâ and you continue evenly, âyou should be rewarded,â. and when he asks, âfor the presentation?â you correct him, âfor being composed. itâs rare.â and he steps closer so you can feel his heat again. his gaze locked on your eyes and asks, âand what exactly does that reward look like?â. you glance toward the auditorium doors before answering, âyour dormâs closeâ and the silence that follows is charged rather than awkward as jakeâs jaw tightens slightly and he mutters, âyouâre for real?â and you reply, âit would be efficientâ and he lets out a short laugh and says, âyou realize iâm going to remember thisâ and you answer, âi hope so â and for a second neither of you moves until his hand finds your waist and pulls you half a step closer, natural and unhurried, and you donât resist as he looks down at you and says softly, âyou were so nervous,â and you answer, âi wasnât.â and he insists, âyou were,â and you donât argue as his thumb brushes lightly against your side and he adds, âyou didnât need to be,â and you admit, âyou filled my gapâ and he smirks faintly and says, âi always will.â which makes your stomach flip in a way that has nothing to do with adrenaline. applause breaks out again from inside and you tilt your head and say, âtheyâre going to be good,â and jake replies, âprobablyâ and you add, âbut not better,â and he studies you and observes, âyouâre still competitive?â and you respond, âiâm still winning.â and he leans closer and asks quietly, âare you?â and you meet his gaze and answer, âyes.â and after a long second he slides his hand more firmly around your waist and pulls you fully in before pressing a slow, deliberate kiss to your cheek, affectionate and certain, and you let your hand settle against his chest as he steps back and his hand lingers a moment longer before you say lightly, âwalk faster,â. he raises a brow, âis that an order?â and you answer evenly, âitâs a suggestionâ. he steps in just enough to shift your breathing before murmuring, âcareful. youâre being very brave for someone whoâs about to be alone with me.â and you tilt your head slightly and reply, âthen donât let me win.â which makes his grin slow and deliberate as he says, âyou know i donât lose,â and then adds smoothly, âafter you.â you turn toward the exit with sunlight spilling through the windows as you pick up your pace, hearing his footsteps behind you, unhurried and certain. you reach the doors first because you like the head start, but he reaches you a second later. he always closes the gap.
DONâT FORGET TO INTERACT AND LMK IF YOU LIKED IT THX- tagging a few of those who interacted with my last college jake fic â let me know if youâd like to be removed or added for future fics ⥠@yazziiyy @jaehyunluvsnct127 @mid0risims @moonxjake @mortallynumberonecoffee @heavejae @marigold55 @meowieshibal @heartsski @psjelee @evxnsbae @jjongsies @hii01mii @nshmriki @en-chantedtomeetyou @inspiredchaos @aheewonenthusiast @heesuengswife @allinitformofusand @yourgirlyoi @moonlitmyg @marghe-22 @aeryyr @pinkmaciej @slut4riki @vampjaeyun2 @tmtxtf-library @yoiiaoki
‷ WC - 3.1k
‷ Smut | dom!lee know x afab!reader
‷ CW - Pet play, anal sex/play, oral (m & f rec), spit play (barely), light themes of humiliation, d/s dynamics
‷a/n - I have no clue how to summarize this. it's smut, straight smut.
âïœĄâ§ËÊ Masterlist ÉËâ§ïœĄâ
âC'mere.â Minho doesn't look at you when he says it. He knows he doesn't have to. He's busy messing with something you don't care about. His watch, maybe. You aren't paying attention.Â
He hears your bare feet slide over the carpet. He steps to the side, glances at you. âSit.âÂ
The bell around your neck jingles when you do. It hits your collarbone like a soft reminder. You watch him. Eyes wide and glistening in the warm evening light spilling in through the blinds.Â
Minho doesn't praise you. Not when you do exactly as he expected. You have to earn it.Â
He turns to you, slowly, tracing every inch of you from the bottom up. He clocks the way your toes press into the carpet, the way your pretty puffy tail shifts against the sofa when you squirm. Then there's your eyes, you're begging with them. He sees it.Â
âHungry, baby?â You whimper, swallow hard, you're not allowed to speak. Kitties don't speak. âWhat was that? Hm?â
He tips your chin up, just a touch. âChirping fâme?â his thumb brushes over your bottom lip. Slow, soft, your lips part like you can't help it.Â
âShe is hungry.â The tip of his thumb wedges gently between your lips, you part them wider with every inch he feeds you. âWider.âÂ
The pad of his thumb presses firm over the center of your tongue for a second, then he lifts it. âStick it out.â You do.Â
Minho cups your chin with one hand, fingers a little cold to the touch. He takes his pointer and middle on his other hand, and slips them over your tongue. His eyes are dark, watching every swallow, every blink.Â
He slips his fingers in further, and further, so slowly that you press your knees together in anticipation. You need something. Something more.Â
He slips in to the knuckle, tips of his fingers at the back of your throat. Your eyes flutter shut, you try not to choke. He presses, and you can't help it. âThere she goes.â He presses in until he can't anymore. âPurring f'me.â
He pulls out faster than he went in. Spit following his fingers from your lips. He smears it over the corner of your mouth, squishing your cheeks just a little. âHead back. Mhm, open.âÂ
You keep your tongue out, eyes watering while you watch him pucker his lips right above you. He spits into your mouth slowly, letting it drip onto your tongue. âSwallow it.â he watches you, moves his other hand down to feel the bob of your throat.Â
âGood girl.â You nearly moan, you want to. You don't. âc'mere, on your knees.â You slip off of the couch, legs and cunt bare under an oversized tee. Your ass presses into your heels, the tail settles between your legs. The shift makes you clench around the plug, stuffed snug inside.Â
Minho turns away from you, he walks slowly, like he's got all the time in the world and he knows you'll be waiting for him every second of it. He takes a saucer from the counter, brings it back and sits it in front of you.Â
It's milk. You blink down at it, then back at him. âIt's oat milk, if that's what you're worried about.â he smirks, amused by himself. âYou were hungry, right?â
You whimper again, he smirks a little wider. âGo ahead, drink some.â
You look back down at it, shift on your knees then press your palms to the floor and lean over it. Minho sits on the edge of the couch, watching you lean in and lick. Once, twice, your hair falls around you, he holds it back in a ponytail. The cat ear clips shift where he pinned them, still secure for now.Â
âThat's it. Drink it all, jagi.â he coos, sweet and deceiving, but you listen. Your tongue darts out just how he likes it toânot too fast, not too slow, just enough for him to really see it. The bell around your neck jingles.
Minho's lips are parted. His breathing is quiet but you know him well enough to know it's shallow. He likes this too much. He likes seeing what you'll do for him, and what he can do to you.Â
âAll done?â He tugs on your hair gently, prompting you back. Your eyes find his in an instant, a rivulet of milk trails down your chin. He could fuck you right then and there, but he stops himself.Â
âI don't think that filled her, did it?â He picks up the saucer and slides it onto the coffee table. âMm mm, I think she wants a little more.âÂ
You perk up, hopeful. Minho catches on, just barely smiling. âCome.â He points to the spot between his knees, just enough room for you to settle. You crawl over on all fours, it makes the plug press right where it feels too good, it shows on your face before you can help it.
âPoor thing.â He doesn't mean it, and you like that. âThis'll take your mind off of it.â
The sound of his zipper hits like relief. You clock how slowly he does it, track the way he pushes his jeans down just enough to free himself, then decides to go all the way.Â
He kicks them to the side, lifts his shirt up just a little. âStill hungry?â You moan this time. You can't help it. Minho's brows raise, he hums like he's deciding if he should correct you.Â
âVery hungry, huh?â He spares you, you breathe a little easier. âGo ahead, have some. No paws.âÂ
He presses his cock towards you, just two fingers pressing at the base to make it a little easier, but not enough. You lean forward, hands balled into fists and pressing into the sofa, you nearly take him, and he moves last second.Â
âC'mon, kitty, you can do it.â you try again, tongue out, you lick him just barely. âLook at her trying so hard.âÂ
Your cheeks burn, humiliation hot under your skin as he makes you chase his cock with an open mouth. His words are cooed, each one more condescending than the last.Â
You try again, angle your head just right, and he lets you have it. âAh, there we go. That's my pretty girl.â
You sink down on him, tongue flat on the underside. He's a mouthful, just enough for you to take him all the way down and stay there, choking a little just how he likes it. You swallow around him, his lips part with a heavy breath.Â
âThat's it, that's it, slow like that. Just like that.â Breath punctuates every one of Minho's words, like he can't catch his breath with your mouth on him like this. His moans are quick, pushed through clenched teeth.Â
Each drag gets messier, spit pooling, running down over his balls, running down your chin. âMessy little thing.â His voice is rougher now, it almost doesn't sound like him. Almost.Â
âTake it all the way down one more time. Mhm, one moreâmhm.â Minho presses his lips together, head falling back against the couch just for a second. âStay.â You whimper, eyes watering, throat working around him.Â
His hips buck up, just barely, just a little. âYou sound so pretty when you purr for me.â the sound you make in response isn't one you recognize. You stay down for another ten seconds, tears streaking your cheeks.Â
âUp.â You gasp for air, spit following you in thin strings when you pull up. Minho finally takes a full breath, looking up to watch you catch yours too. Something is different in his eyes now, loose.Â
âC'mere.â You pause, unsure what he wants. He waits three seconds before reaching down and grabbing your wrist. âHere.â He pulls you up into his lap, his bare wet cock pressed against your bare wet cunt.Â
Your teeth sink into your bottom lip, you settle over him gradually, sinking into the warm pressure. One of his hands is on your hip, the other coming up to flick your bell with his thumb. He leans up for a kiss, slow and lingering, sweeter than he looks like he wants to be.
âHow is she?â He pulls back enough to look at you, asking gently, but thereâs still something loose behind his gaze. âSpeak. What's your color?â
You swallow, taking a breath like you forgot how your voice works. âGreen. I'm okay.â It breaks on the last word, you clear your throat. Minho reaches over to the side table, picks up a bottle of water and unscrews the cap for you.Â
âDrink enough.â He brings it to your lips, watches you swallow, then again. He sips after you. âGood?â
âGood.â He discards the bottle, looks back at you. He really looks, eyes darkening in real time.
Then, he presses up against you. âDon't make a sound.â Your lips press together, hard. The tip of his cock bumps your clit. He does it again, hands on your hips now, moving them for you.
âSounds sticky down there.â he groans, watching the hem of your shirt darken with the mix of slick and spit. Your tail is fluffy against his knee, each grind shifts it just right. âMâ gonna eat now.â
He doesn't wait for you to react. He lays you down, hands sliding right behind your knees and opening you up for him. A sound punches out of you, he ignores it. Your knees fall apart by themselves, he doesn't have to hold you. You know.Â
âStay still.â he's just looking, inspecting. His thumb comes up, presses right at the top and glides through your folds. âJagiââ he says it like he can't believe it.Â
Minho takes two fingers to spread you open, a v that puts every pretty slick part of you on display. One finger dips inside, you puff a heavy breath. âPretty tail.â he murmurs, fingers trailing down to your ass. The plug sits pretty, snug between your cheeks. He tugs at it just a little, eyes flicking up to catch your expression.Â
You moan despite yourself. Brows furrowing, lips parting. Minho tsks, then tugs again. âQuite, kitty.â You press your lips together, clenching where it feels too good. âLet's see how you did.â He tugs one more time, a pitiless quiet chuckle follows when you squirm.Â
Then comes gentle pressure, Minho slips the plug out slowly, watching the way your body moves around it in awe. It releases with a pop and Minho's palms press flat against your ass, spreading you open to see better.Â
The sound he makes tells you everything you need to know. His thumb rims you slowly, you clench around nothingâthen something in him breaks. Whatever was loose behind his eyes before is lost all together now.Â
His mouth is on your cunt in an instant. Warm tongue pressing against you, licking then sucking with an obscene slurp and repeating. The tip of his thumb dips into your other hole, the rest follows easily.Â
Your eyes cross, heart beating in your ears and breath heavy. You feel light and heavy all at once. Too good. His lips wrap around your clit, sucking then adding his tongue. His eyes are open, lids drowsy with greed, but open. Minho pulls back, just for a second.Â
âSpeak.â You do. God, you do. It's loud and rough, something between a curse and a groan. You drag a breath in then let out another, higher this time. Minho keeps eating, tip of his tongue teasing your clit while his pointer and middle slip into your other hole.Â
âIâI'm, please please. Please, I'mââ it doesn't make sense. You don't care.Â
He spits on your clit, and watches it run down, down, to where his fingers stretch you open. He pulls out, spreads it then dips back into your ass slow enough to watch you clench around him. He presses flat wet licks to your cunt, moving in time with every shallow thrust of his fingers.Â
âYouâre ready for more, arenât you, kitty?â you nod, the bell jingling along with your movement. He pulls his finger out, nice and slow, spits down onto your hole and rims it with the tip of his tongue. You shudder, he goes deeper. His tongue fucks into you in short shallow pulses, then licks up to your cunt and kisses your clit.Â
He does it one more time, then he pulls back, sits up. âFlip over, on your stomach.â You scramble to your knees, eager in a way thatâs humiliating by itself. Minho pumps himself while you settle, reaching over you for the lube and applying generously. The sound it makes is teasing.Â
âBehave,â he adjusts you, hands on your hips, arching your back himself, posing you. âand Iâll let you come.â
âYes, sir.â Minho scoffs at the honorific, amused that you used it by choice and not order. He likes it more than heâll ever admit.Â
He murmurs something soft and rough, âready?â or something like it, you don't hear him, but you feel him. The head of his cock rubs over you, getting it wet, warning for a second before pressing in.
The stretch feels brand new every time. His thumb rubs slow where his hand is splayed over your hip. The other helps feed his cock into you inch by slow inch.Â
âMin, âs tight.â You moan together, he starts to say something then stops, fingers pressing into your hip a bit harder.
âHalf way there, take it fâme.â You breathe, melt into him, open up for him. âThat's a goodâgood girlâÂ
You gasp, it cracks in your throat. He bottoms out. It feels full and perfect, it takes the hunger right away.Â
âWhere do you feel me?â He leans over you, kissing slow over your shoulders, then your neck. He moves, just barely, just testing. âShow me.âÂ
Your mouth is open, but sounds don't exist for you. Words don't make sense. You manage to bring a hand back, unsteady until it finds his wrist and slides his hand low on your stomach, right where he'd bulge if he showed your cunt some attention.Â
Minho presses, just enough to have you really feel him. His hips pick up, âright here?â He holds the plush of your tummy, teeth skimming over your shoulder now.Â
âMinââ your hand falls away from his and grips a pillow. âPlease, faster, please.âÂ
It's a slow build, faster and faster until the sound of skin on skin drowns out your collective moans all together. He shifts sitting up straighter, hands holding tight at your hips to pull you back onto him.Â
You clench, Minho moans through clenched teeth, eyes glued to where he disappears into you. Tight and hot. You're gripping the armrest, the pillows, nothing grounds you enough.Â
âSounds so pretty.â He goes a little faster. âSuch a good girl, she's such a good, good girl.â and faster, fucking into you like your made of something lighter than flesh.Â
âCreaminâ and moaninâ and taking me so fuckinâmm, mmhm.â Your cat ear clips are falling out, he wraps his fist in your hair and makes it worse. The bell around your neck jingles like a faulty doorbell.Â
âMâ gonna, gonna come, please, please please.â He doesn't answer, doesn't give permission, he just leans in, reaches around and makes it worse. He presses two fingers to your clit, rubbing in time with his thrusts. Deeper now, slower.Â
âDon't.â You squeak, whine, beg without words. âIf you come I take it all away, you hear me?âÂ
It's impossible and he knows it. He gets off on it, fucks you better at the thought of it. âWait.â
âI can't.â you're sobbing, tight in places you never knew you could be and loving it more than you should. âI can't, I can't.â
âYes, you can.â He pulls your hair back, arching you deeper, thrusting and staying deep inside. âYou will.â
He lets go of everything at once, then starts again. Not slow, not gentle, he fucks a sound out of you that you've never heard but you do it again. He spits onto his cock, watches it disappear, then groans.Â
Then again, making noise like he's allowed to now. Louder, looserâcloser.Â
âGive it to me in five.â Your face is wet with tears, drool, âfour.â You're floating, you swear it. Somewhere in between the pleasure and something else entirely.Â
âThree.â Minho's no better, watching, listening, balls tight and ready. âTwo.â He palms your ass, pulling into you one more time, then again, then again. ThenâÂ
âOne.â It rips through you. Washes over your nerves like a chill then restarts. You clench, moan and moan and forget to breathe, until it all falls silent. Minho manages one off center thrust before he breaks. Hot and sticky inside you, he moans with it, panting and thighs shaking.Â
He moves with it, slow and shallow, pulling out inch but slow inch until he pops out and watches it spill over.Â
âFuck.â One hand is on his cock, the other on your ass, opening you up just enough to watch. âStay right there.âÂ
You couldn't move even if you wanted to. You stay, still floaty, still trying to catch your breath when warmth presses in slowly.Â
âMinho.â He groans against you, tongue licking flat over you. âMin.â
The tip of his tongue rims, presses in, cleans up the sticky mess he left behind. He dips down low, low, low, until he's tasting your come too. The sticky sound of him fisting his own cock mixes with your moans.Â
You press back into him, pressing your cunt into his tongue and shaking when he sucks. âCome on my face, one more time, jagi.âÂ
ââS so much.â He hums, you shudder. Â
It sounds wet, feels warm, the press of his tongue against the aching pulse of overstimulation. You clench when he's rimming you, he moans when you press your ass backâand you come harder this time.Â
Your knees give, Minho doesn't catch you, he follows you, one hand spreading you while he eats your ass through it. His hand never slows around him. He keeps it up until his own orgasm follows. He makes a choked sound before falling into a fit of overstimulated moans.Â
Quiet follows. Stillness that feels foreign. You're still floaty, still living in between now and then when he touches you. Softer than before, coaxing you closer to him. He settles you against him, arms wrapped tight.Â
âColor?â He drapes a blanket over you, grabs the water from before.
âGreenâ you mumble, tongue too heavy to do much better. âMâ okay.â
âMm. Have some.â He brings the bottle to your lips. âGood girl. Good job.â
He drinks some, settles deeper into the couch, then hugs you tighter, guiding your cheek to rest against his chest. âBreathe. Take a second.â you hum, your breath falls in sync with his, your eyelids droop, heavy now.Â
Minho kisses the crown of your head, you lean into it, and the bell around your neck jingles.Â
a/n - I never write for Minho, did I do okay? I'm nervous asf.
â„Thank You For Reading! Please Reblog or Comment to let me know how you liked it! It makes my day! đ
(where the ex-boyfriend who broke your heart shows up as your new coworker after 4 years)
pairing: lawyer!chan x lawyer!fem!reader
genre: lovers to exes to coworkers to ?? | angst, fluff, smut
rating: explicit, minors DNI
wc: 20.1k
warnings: aged up chan (he and reader are about 29), this story vaguely uses the american legal system, some flash backs/time jumps (for the lovers to exes part), they were both kinda idiots, poor communication, ambiguous relationships (reader), eating, drinking, soooo much kissing, teasing, fingering, oral sex (f. rec), nipple play, implied/kinda fade-to-black sex, that's it i think
a/n: endless thanks to @haologram for her patience with me because i really don't know why this took me so long. this is part of her amazing don't hate, litigate collab. i love you so much alta! we'll call this a happy birthday month present. thank you to my bby @joshujin for creating this amazing banner (and 6 other options because she's insane).
Your assistant knocks on the frame of your office door and pokes her head in. Sheâs got a concerning smile on her face that instantly makes you nervous about whatever sheâs about to say. You and her had connected the second you hired her and you can read her facial expressions well. Right now, itâs giving news thatâs going to make you mad. She, on the other hand, doesnât look apologetic about the news at all.Â
âWhy do I feel like Iâm about to hate whatever youâre about to say to me?â you ask, leaning back in your chair.Â
âBecause youâre good at reading me,â she offers without any apology.Â
âI swear to god if you tell me that client rescheduled again, I will fling myself from the roof,â you say with a sigh, pinching the bridge of your nose.Â
Taylor lingers in your doorway without losing her smile. Which is a good indicator that whatever sheâs about to say isnât that. âNo, but it might be worse. So, the stairs to the roof are down the hall, second door on the left.âÂ
âFunny,â you bite. She comes into your office and closes the door behind her.Â
âWeâve got a new hire starting on Monday,â she carries on without you asking.
âAnd that concerns me, why?â you ask, returning to your computer and falsely figuring she got this one wrong. The closed door seems like overkill for a new hire, but what do you know?
âBecause heâs going to be in our division. Everyone is whispering about him. About how good he is at closing cases and how attractive he is,â she offers, still keeping at least something to herself.
You fix her with an unimpressed stare. âDonât tell me youâre already drooling over another attorney that you havenât even met yet.â
âNo, I know we have a no-datingâŠâ she starts and you roll your eyes.
âI could not possibly care any less about that. Date whoever you want,â you say without looking up at her. âBut, dating an attorney is exhausting. 0/10, would not recommend.âÂ
âYou know, Iâm so interested to learn more about why you feel that way,â she says. This, finally, makes you wonder where sheâs going and makes you meet her eyes again.
âItâs been a long week, Taylor, Iâm going to need you to start connecting some dots,â you relent.Â
âOh, you know, I was just thinking you always talk about how youâd never date another attorney and I just think itâs soâŠinteresting that we have someone else from your law school starting at the firm on Monday,â she says.
Thatâs enough to make your eyes go wide and your blood run cold. âWhatâs the name of the new hire? The partners never mentioned it.âÂ
âLee Chan,â she says with a knowingly sympathetic look. For a second, you think you forget how to breathe. And then youâre a million miles away.Â
What the actual fuck is Lee Chan doing accepting a position with your firm after all these years? What kind of game is he playing? It seems cruel to be doing this now. Or maybe youâre overthinking it. Maybe it doesnât have anything to do with you. After all, isnât it a bit conceited to think that Chan coming to one of the best firms in the country has anything to do with you? What you do realize is that you have a lot of unresolved emotions to get over. There are probably just as many unanswered questions.
Of course, this would all be a lot easier if the person joining your firm wasnât the same one you still thought about. Your hypothetical one who got away.Â
This definitely makes work a lot more complicated.Â
Offers are starting to come in for all the 3Ls and everyone is nervous. Everyone wants to know that theyâre going to have something lined up for after graduation. Everyone wants to get their top choice. Itâs competitive, but so is everything else about law school so it doesnât really feel surprising. You and Chan manage to navigate it as well as two people in a relationship during a stressful time can. Neither one of you really talks about how you both applied to some of the same places. Or how the two of you are competing for your top option. What you do talk about, though, is how you plan to navigate the potential distance.Â
âWhat happens if we get jobs that put us on opposite sides of the country?âÂ
The question makes you look up sharply at your boyfriend. Youâre lying on the couch with your feet in his lap, reading a book for fun. A welcome change for the law books youâre normally reading. His book sits discarded on the arm of the couch and heâs watching you intently. You mark your own page and sit up so that you can have an actual conversation.Â
âI thought we were mostly applying in the same areas,â you begin, dipping that toe into the water.
He frowns for a second. Like somehow this is a test and you donât have the right answer. âWell, we did. But, we both need to take the best options before us, right?âÂ
âIâm not asking you to put me above your career, Chan,â you say with exasperation.Â
âWhat does that say about our relationship if youâre not asking that?âÂ
âThat we both understand whatâs at stake in the next few years of our lives. That we both know how important our placements are in the first year after finishing law school.âÂ
âOr that itâs not built to last,â he says under his breath.Â
Thereâs no malice in the statement and you can hear it for what it is. Apprehension. Nerves. Heâs worried about your future, both together and individually, as professionals. Youâve watched the way other relationships between law students have played out during your first two years at school. Itâs easy to bond over shared experience. But, the reality remains. Everyone in law school is competitive or you wouldnât be there. Everyone is at least a little bit Type A. In a field that is, theoretically, built on compromise, sometimes compromising in personal relationships is the hardest part.Â
Itâs not time to get quite that serious, though. Not in your eyes. You slide over on the couch so that you can cross your legs and have them press against Chanâs thigh. With one of his hands in yours, you give him a look full of feeling.Â
âI love you, Chan,â you say and watch the way some of the tension melts away. Like he needs to hear that reassurance. Even though the pressure of the program should feel familiar, itâs still nice to remember that you have each other.Â
âI love you, too.âÂ
âI know everything is kind of up in the air right now, but weâll figure it out.âÂ
âBut, what if that means that thereâs a countryâs worth of distance between us?âÂ
The unsaid words are plain as day behind the question. Your law school classes arenât small, but itâs also not like university. You know everyone. Hear everything. Have too many stories of former classmates in the years ahead of you. The first year after graduating is tough. Important. Thereâs just over two months between graduation and sitting for the Bar exam. Then, you have to actually figure out how to practice. Depending on your area, that can mean insanely long hours as the lowly first year associate. Thereâs barely enough time to sleep or eat a balanced meal. Add in long distance and, well, you can see why Chan looks the way he does.Â
âCan we cross that bridge if we get to it?â
âYeah, of course,â he says, but you see some of the tension return. You run your thumb along the back of his hand youâre still holding.Â
âWhatever happens, weâll figure it out,â you assure him, speaking more to his hand because the emotions are hard. âYouâre my best friend. I never thought I would feel this way. Itâs like you slid into my life so quietly I didnât realize. Weâll figure this out because weâre us.âÂ
âI knew youâd fall for me,â he jokes. When you look up, his eyes sparkle in that way you love. In the way that makes the worries slip away, even for just a second.Â
âYouâre persistent,â you concede with an eye roll.Â
âCome here.âÂ
He pulls you into his body. You settle into his side like you have countless times before. At least for the time being, things feel like theyâre going to be okay. Like you really can figure it all out as long as you have each other. The road ahead may be difficult. It may have cost countless relationships before. Maybe itâs naive, but you feel like youâll be the ones who really can figure it out.Â
Some of the initial optimism about you and Chan fades once the offers start to trickle out. Everything about your future depends on where you end up after graduating. At least, thatâs how it feels when youâre in the thick of it. When you hear from your top choice and itâs the equivalent of being put on the waitlist for a university, it crushes you. Itâs competitive, you know that. Yet, you felt so sure. Your summer positions and letters of recommendation are top notch. Itâs also in the exact right area that you and Chan think would be perfect for post graduation.Â
Of course, you have other options. Youâve worked your ass off in classes, sacrificed free time. All the while knowing that the end would justify the means. Now, you have to decide if you should wait to see if you end up getting an offer or just accept another choice. Itâs everything you want and part of you thinks that itâs worth waiting. But, you also know that if you wait, you risk losing out on a guaranteed position. Itâs hard to talk it out with Chan, too, because he says that he hasnât heard from your top choice at all. You know he applied. Know that heâs an excellent option for them to hire as well. It feels cruel to talk to him about something that he wanted as well. If the positions had been reversed, you try to wonder what you would tell him. Try to wonder if you could be happy for him getting your dream position. You want to think you could.Â
Ultimately, you do talk to Chan about it because heâs your best friend and your biggest confidant. You want to know what options he has heard from and he wants to know the same as you. It makes your heart drop to know that one of the best offers heâs gotten really is across the country from your dream firm. Not that you didnât know he applied, because you did, but he didnât seem to think he would get it. Things feel even more real when he encourages you to not make any immediate decisions. He knows you canât wait too long. Just thinks that itâs worth really thinking things through. Surely, people will be making their own decisions soon and maybe it means that your dream spot opens up.Â
It ends up being eerily prophetic. Two days later you get a call offering you the position. You know that you should tell them you need to consider it. Know that you shouldnât make it obvious this is what youâre waiting for. Know that you should remember you werenât the first choice.
You donât.Â
Everything goes out the window and you accept the position right then and there. At least the person on the other end of the phone seems friendly. Not overly judgmental at your enthusiasm. Itâs probably a good thing, after all. Youâll get your formal offer via email and more information closer to graduation.Â
Chan has his computer on his lap when you get back to your shared apartment. Itâs still a bit of a weird feeling, sharing a space with him for your last year of school. As soon as he hears the front door shut, he looks up. Sees your face and itâs like he knows. Only smiles and asks if you got it. All you have a chance to do is nod enthusiastically before he jumps up and collects you into his arms. Peppers kisses all over your face and declares that the two of you need to celebrate. Everything feels light and easy again. Like you really can take on the world.Â
Thereâs another bump in the road when the high of getting your top choice wears off. Chan talks to you about which firms heâs gotten offers from and you realize what post graduation is going to look like. You encourage him to accept the position that puts him a plane ride away from you with a smile. With assurances that youâll be fine, which youâre not sure either of you really believe. One thing is certain, though. Although he has options that put him closer to you and your firm, he canât take them. Canât even think about them. Because if he takes one of them, itâll only be so he can stay close to you. It might seem fine at first. Maybe it seems fine forever. You just canât take the chance it ends up causing resentment.Â
So, you have the conversation you didnât want to have earlier. Realize just how much better life is with each other than it is separate. Itâs going to be tough, but people survive distance in their relationships all the time. Thereâs FaceTime and you can plan trips. Can even do a lot of work remotely. Thatâs one thing you can thank the pandemic for. And before you actually start the positions, you can be each otherâs support systems while studying. The prep courses all have online options. Who better to watch your mental breakdown over studying than someone else going through the same thing?Â
It all feels cautiously optimistic. Itâs going to be hard, but youâve already been together since your second semester of your first year. Going on two years already. And you have until the summer to be together every day. To iron out any of the details. To make plans for after graduation. And, most importantly, just enjoy the time where itâs easy to be by each otherâs side.Â
You spend your last weekend before Chan becomes unavoidable wondering how to move forward. Although you donât work with anyone else you graduated with, the legal community is small. Everyone knows where you went to school and what year you graduated. Even your assistant is able to put it together that you know Chan. Admittedly, she does know you better than most at the firm. At times sheâs kind of like a diary. Still. Nobody at the firm knows about your history.
Four years ago, at the end of your final year of law school, Lee Chan took away a future for the two of you that seemed all but certain. Thatâs why you avoid being anywhere that he is at all costs.
Whoever says that time heals all wounds obviously doesnât know what theyâre talking about. Dulls them, sure. Teaches you how to get on with things. Teaches you what to look for in the next relationship. Youâre not sure youâre healed, though.
Proving she knows you far better than she should, your assistant guesses correctly. Chan is the reason you donât date other attorneys. Yes, itâs an ex relationship from law school before becoming attorneys. Still, the rule applies. After all, school isnât what caused things to fall apart. You canât help but think about when things were still good. Full of that cautious optimism that you could face whatever comes next together. Itâs funny, in hindsight, how typical it all feels now.Â
As they say, though, the only way out is through. You try to keep hold of that energy as you prepare for a new week where youâll get (re) acquainted with a new coworker. Try not to overthink that heâs going to be joining your team. Really, how else could it go? Itâs not like the universe could take it easy on you and at least send him to another team. Not like you can fault him for wanting to come to a firm with so much name recognition. A firm, you remind yourself, that he also wanted four years ago.
When you wake up before your alarm, you figure you might as well do something with the nervous energy that wonât leave you alone. You donât usually put a lot of effort into getting ready on the days you know youâll just be in the office. Itâs also the first Monday of the month, which means that the day starts with a team meeting run by your senior partner. Youâll be seeing Chan first thing in the morning. Thatâs definitely not the reason you take a little extra time picking out your outfit and doing your makeup, though. And definitely not the reason you woke up early.
Another positive about waking up a little earlier is that you have plenty of time to go to the good coffee shop. Itâs not out of the way. Itâs just popular. While youâre waiting in line, you fire off a quick text to your assistant telling her that coffee and a treat is on you, but sheâll have to wait to see what it is. You at least bring her coffee frequently, a fact that apparently makes some of the other assistants envious. Unfortunately, thereâs not much you can do about the other attorneys beyond encouraging them. Taylor saves your ass on a weekly basis and you would be completely lost without her. Coffee seems like the very least you can do.Â
(When you actually get to the office and find her desk, youâre regretting your decision a little. Taylor wouldnât be the best assistant imaginable if she didnât know you inside and out. Of course itâs too much to ask that she let you live. No. Instead, sheâs roasting you for looking so nice for the monthly meeting before she even thanks you for the coffee and pastry. Doesnât actually thank you until youâre turning around to go into your office.)Â
Once itâs time for the meeting, you head over to the big conference room with Taylor since the first part is for the full staff before just the attorneys meet to catch up on the month ahead. You can feel Chanâs presence when you walk into the conference room before you see him. Or maybe itâs that you can feel a different energy. Others on the team are interested in meeting the new addition, which makes it easier to just quietly grab your seat. Taylor, thankfully, keeps her face impassive. For all the times she clowns you privately, she never does it when others could be involved. Itâs part of why you love her so much.Â
You canât stop yourself from glancing over at Chan, though. He looks exactly the same and somehow entirely different. His warm eyes still light up in the same way you remember when he smiles. Older though. Maybe a little bit wiser. But, his eyes still crinkle in the same way when he laughs. Heâs still got that smile that makes everyone around him want to smile. His style is still mostly the same, just more expensive. Designer suits replacing something off the rack. Yet, he does it in a subtle way. Something unassuming that makes him seem quietly confident rather than arrogant. His hair isnât dyed anymore, which makes sense in the situation. Youâre just glad to see that he hasnât cut it too short either.Â
It takes a moment to clock that he notices you looking at him. You spare him a small smile. One that would only seem forced to someone that knows you. Then, you cast your eyes down at the agenda on the pretense of finding it interesting. Ignore the way Taylor shifts from her position next to you. You can do this. There isnât a choice. Youâre going to get through this meeting and then continue to get through it all one day at a time.Â
The first part of the meeting is the same as always. Nothing remarkable. Nothing worth noting. Well, except for the senior partner praising Taylor for stepping up to help with a few cases. You had already taken her out to say thank you (on the firmâs dime), so this just feels like a way to boost her confidence even more. The next month doesnât seem to be out of the ordinary, all things considered, so the first portion of the meeting runs quickly.Â
The second half is a little more difficult to get through. Once itâs only the attorneys, itâs harder to ignore Chanâs presence. Especially given that a large part of the meeting focuses on him stepping into his new case load. Heâs replacing another associate, Henry, that decided to quit the legal field entirely out of the blue. Too burnt out. Not enough work-life balance. Just not his speed. Itâs the usual list of reasons. He had, at least, stayed on long enough to tie up loose ends enough for the firm to find a replacement. Thatâs where Chan gets to come in. If he minds, he doesnât show it. Only seems eager to prove himself. Your senior partner seems delighted. You wish that you had someone to turn to for support.Â
By the time the meeting winds down, you think that you might have managed to get out relatively unscathed. You still have to work with your ex. His office is still going to be right next to yours. But, you donât have to interact with him beyond the niceties. Then, the senior partner calls your name as everyone gathers their things and your heart sinks.
âYes?âÂ
He turns to Chan with almost a fatherly smile. Of course. Thereâs always a familial smile when another man joins the team. You almost bite the inside of your cheek to help keep a neutral expression. To turn off the subtitles that your face comes with, as Taylor would put it. Itâs a perfect mask when your boss turns back to you.Â
âI hear you and Chan were in the same class,â he starts and you feel the forced smile slip into place.
âThatâs right,â you say in a falsely cheery tone.Â
âWhy donât you show our new ace around?âÂ
âOh, IâŠâÂ
âI wouldnât want to be a burden,â Chan interjects and throws you an unreadable look. âIâm sure everyone here is busy.âÂ
âOh, nonsense. Nobody here knows Henryâs case files better than her. Those two were always putting their heads together. My best duo on the team.â the senior partner says. âHis assistant will be able to get you to a point, but itâs good to have another set of eyes. What do you say?â
âOf course,â you answer after a moment. âAnything for the team.â
âGreat,â he says and claps Chan on the back. âIâll just leave the two of you to catch up.â
âSo,â Chan says as soon as the door closes. Sticks his hands into his pockets and looks down. Like heâs the one whoâs got the right to feel anything here.Â
âHenry kept things really organized and his assistant is actually great if you want to keep her,â you say.Â
âOh, yeah. Well, I said I would.âÂ
âGreat. Your new office is this way.âÂ
You walk past him without a second glance and trust that heâs following you. A moment later, he falls into step and you point out the different areas he might need. Conference rooms, a room with physical law volumes and past case law if he wants hard copies, one of the break rooms thatâs closest. He nods along, but doesnât say much.Â
When you reach his office door, you push it open and indicate for him to step in before you. Itâs relatively sparse since Henry moved out of it. He left behind the desk, chair, and wooden cabinet that the firm paid for, as well as his own couch and coffee table.Â
âIâm sure the partners spoke to you about a budget if youâd like to replace anything,â you say, casting your eyes over the space. It feels empty, cold. Henry kept so many personal touches and reminders of life outside the office that you werenât surprised when he shared that he was leaving. Your boss also hadnât been lying. Itâs hard to make friends at work, but Henry definitely qualified.Â
âThey did,â he confirms as he looks around. His eyebrows knit together and he frowns a little. âI like whatâs already here, actually. It feelsâŠâ
âFunctional?â
âFamiliar.âÂ
âOh.â Â
He turns to look at you and itâs the first time you realize youâre not the only person struggling in this situation. You take a deep breath before you can meet his eyes again.Â
âI, uh, I helped him pick it out,â you say and Chan raises his eyebrows. âThe furniture.â
âMakes sense why it feels familiar.â
Part of him looks uncomfortable at the conversation and it takes you a minute to realize why. Youâre speaking before you can even consider why it matters for him to know you were only friends.Â
âHis partner absolutely vetoed taking it with him when he quit. Said they didnât need reminders of the office,â you say with a fond laugh. Watching Henry meet his partner and fall in love had been wonderful.Â
Chan seems a little lighter, yet still unsure. âSounds like he found what he was looking for.â
Your final year of law school hasnât been easy, by any stretch. What they say is true, though. Your first year scares you to death. Second year works you to death. And third year bores you to death. So it hasnât been easy, exactly. But, you feel like youâre sitting well with a job locked in (as long as nothing crazy happens with final grades), classes that feel more manageable, and a boyfriend that you love more than anything by your side. Every once in a while, you get a nagging feeling in the back of your mind. Like thereâs something you should know or something you missed. You chalk it up to nerves about the future. As someone who likes a plan and likes to know whatâs coming, itâs a little unnerving at times. Even with as prepared as you are. Itâs impossible to plan for everything.
That becomes painfully obvious when youâre meeting with your advisor at the end of the year. Sheâs been a pillar of support for you over your time as a student. Itâs been a different relationship to the ones youâve had with previous advisors. Probably because she knows that youâre about to be an equal and treats you like one. Thatâs how all three years of school have been.Â
Just as youâre finishing up lunch, she turns the conversation to post graduation plans. Something youâre expecting, but not quite prepared for.Â
âAre you getting excited about getting into the legal world?â
âI think so,â you say. âNervous and I hate that Iâm going to be so separated from Chan, but I feel really fortunate to have gotten my top choice firm.âÂ
âIt was incredible that he did that for you,â she says and your brow furrows. Chan has been an incredible help throughout school, but youâre not sure what he has to do with you getting an offer. Your confusion must be plain on your face because your advisor continues. âI heard about him turning them down. He found out if he turned it down, then youâd get the call next.â
âHeâŠwhat? He turned down the position so I couldâŠâ
Your brain is spiraling out of control trying to process the information. A million thoughts fight for dominance at the speed of light. Why would he do something like that without even telling you? Did he think that you couldnât get a good position without his help? Did he think you would try to talk him out of doing it? He would probably have been right about that, at least. Thereâs no way you could have let him turn it down if it was something he wanted as well just so that you could have it. Not only because itâs not fair to him, but also because now it feels tainted to you. Undeserved. Like something you almost want to turn down even though you canât this late in the year. Not now when plans are in place and you donât have a fall back option.Â
Then, thereâs the fact that you feel betrayed by the person you love the most in the world. Maybe thatâs not fair. Itâs still how you feel. Heâs kept this from you for months. Told you that he didnât get the position at all and focused on a position across the country. Didnât even discuss what would make the most sense for the both of you as a couple. He decided something that impacted both of you. If he hadnât turned it down, he could have accepted. Sure, part of you would have been envious. The other part of you knows you had another offer waiting that would have kept you both in the same area. It feels like the walls are collapsing in on you.
âIâm so sorry. I thought you knewâŠâ she begins and you just shake your head. Try to blink back the tears of too much information pouring in at once.
âItâs fine. I have to go.âÂ
The only thought you have is to get back to your apartment to find Chan. He should be home because heâs got the afternoon off from classes and he doesnât like staying on campus if he doesnât have to any more than you do. Too much tension. Too much stress.Â
He clocks that somethingâs wrong as soon as you come in the door. At first, he assumes itâs just that youâre sad about the end being so close and saying goodbye to your advisor. When he tries to offer a hug as comfort, you shrug out of it. Hurt flashes across his face and it makes your heart constrict. Heâs the last person in the world you ever want to hurt. The last person in the world you ever thought would hurt you.Â
He did, though. Whatever his intentions were, he hurt you and has been keeping a secret for nearly the entire school year. It throws all your trust issues right back into the forefront of your brain. One-sided conversations chase each other around. Each worse than the last. Only one thought breaks through, though. And itâs probably the wrong decision. Yet, youâre going to make it anyway.
âI canât do this,â you say to him without meeting his eye.
âCanât do what? Graduate? Study for the bar exam?âÂ
âNo, this, Chan. You and me. I canât do it.âÂ
Itâs obviously the last thing he expects. He steps back from you like heâs been slapped. And thereâs the downside of knowing someone as well as you know him. You watch as the gears turn in his brain and he cycles through a million thoughts or feelings. Feel everything along with him.Â
âWhat?â is all he manages to say.Â
âI think weâre just fooling ourselves,â you say. A lie. A total and complete lie. Youâre a coward. Itâs easier for you than the truth, though. Easier than giving him a chance to justify a decision he made for both of you without asking you.Â
âI donât understandâŠâ
âWeâre going to be so far apart. This first year after school, itâs so important. Weâre going to be killing ourselves to make an impression. Thereâs no way weâre going to be able to figure out once a month weekends and working remote. I donât even think weâll be able to commit to regular FaceTime calls with the time difference.â
âWhere is this coming from? Weâve talked aboutâŠâ
âI know what weâve talked about,â you cut through. It comes out sharper than you intend and you take a breath to steady yourself. âI know. I just also know how this could go. One of us misses a call from the other. Texts get more staggered. Itâs harder to hold space for someone whoâs not there while trying to make connections in a new position.â
âIâm not saying itâs going to be easy, but we love each other.â
âIs that enough?âÂ
Itâs the second time he pulls back like heâs been slapped. If only you could tell him that youâre hurting yourself just as badly, maybe worse, than youâre hurting him.Â
âI think itâs enough. Weâll never know until we try though.âÂ
âYou took the position across the country.â
âBecause you encouraged me to take it!â
âOf course I did!â you shout back, tears spilling over now. Chan goes to wipe them away before pulling his hand back. The tension hangs thick as you gather your thoughts. âI wouldnât ever ask you to sacrifice your career or mine. I couldnât.âÂ
You see it. Just for a second. Know heâs wondering about a double meaning to your words. He shakes his head. Clears the look off his face.Â
âI didnât see anything as sacrificing my career. We knew this was going to be complicated and I just figured weâd work through it together. If Iâd have known the distance would be a deal breaker, I never would have accepted that job.âÂ
âAnd I never could have lived with myself if you missed that opportunity,â you say softly. Itâs an impasse. Youâre picking a fight on an issue you know heâll believe because itâs easier. Cleaner.Â
âIt would have been my choice,â he says, eyes trying to convince you of the things he canât say.Â
âI donât want to end up hating you, Chan. I donât want to end up resenting you because the distance is too hard.â
âSo youâre going to break up with me instead?âÂ
The question is a little derisive and the emotion looks all wrong on his face. Thatâs not the soft, kind, caring face you know. But, youâre the one that put that look on his face. Maybe itâs your punishment for being too scared to have the real fight.
âI know how it sounds. I still have love in my heart for you. I just think this is whatâs best for us so that we canâŠI donât know, save some of this.âÂ
âSome of what?âÂ
âThis. Us,â you say and he just shakes his head.Â
âI donât get you,â he admits and that hurts more than anything else. How could he feel that way after all this time?Â
âI just thinkâŠâÂ
âI heard you,â he says sharply. And then he looks at you with another face you donât recognize. One thatâs hard and cold. âIf you donât think this is going to work, I know better than to try and change your mind. Youâre one of the most stubborn people Iâve ever metâŠâ
âIâm not stubborn.â
He smiles despite himself at that. So on brand for you. âItâs always been one of the things I loved most about you. But, because I love you as much as I do, I canât pretend to be less than this with you. I canât go back to some semblance of a friendship when I know what itâs like to love you and be loved by you.â
Your heart stops for a second. Even though you started this, youâre not sure you want to finish it. Canât imagine a life that doesnât contain Chan at all, even though youâre so hurt by him. âAre you saying itâs all or nothing?âÂ
âYes.âÂ
The simple answer says far more than you expect. You look down so that he canât read the conflicting emotions on your face. It doesnât matter. He still closes the distance, finally, and puts a finger under your chin to lift it up. Wipes the tears away from your face so gently. Presses a kiss to your forehead that only makes you hurt more. For a second, you reconsider everything.Â
âI donât understand, but if this is what you want. What you really want. Then, okay. I just canât go back to only being your friend. I need to protect my heart, too.âÂ
Thereâs nothing left to say. You just wrap your arms around Chan and consider itâll be the last time you feel his warmth enveloping you. Itâs somehow the most dramatic and least dramatic break up that you can imagine. It feels both settled and unsettled. Thatâs probably what happens when you donât have the strength to have the real fight. When you pick something thatâs still real without being the whole picture.Â
Itâs a little frustrating to watch Chan charm literally everyone in the office so quickly. Especially because his office is right next to yours and you can see the stream of people that pop in and out. Especially your coworkers who go to him to talk through cases now. Instead of you. Which is extra annoying because youâve been here longer. Worked your ass off to prove yourself from being a junior associate to now. Whereas Chan benefits from a good reputation right off the bat. Granted, itâs not entirely the same thing. Heâs new to the firm, but not the practice of law. So, it tracks that he doesnât need to go through the same things you did joining straight out of school. The rational part of you knows he probably dealt with that at his original firm. Doesnât make it any less annoying, though.Â
Everyone just instantly likes him. And thatâs not really that surprising, either, is it? In so many ways, heâs still exactly the person you knew and loved in law school. The person that could make anyone feel comfortable. The one that liked to be at the center of things. Always happiest surrounded by people. Itâs no different now, which makes it hurt that much more. So much of him still feels so familiar to you years later. It makes the memories harder to keep tucked away in a little box. Heâs grown, sure, like you know that you have as well. Heâs still inescapably Chan, though. The time since school hasnât hardened him. Hasnât made him jaded. Wiser, maybe. A little more cautious in things, sure. Still upbeat despite that. When you put aside all the pain it brings back to the front, you can admit that you understand why people accept him so immediately.Â
After a day filled with too many meetings and phone calls, you decide to stay late to catch up on some cases. Even though you know you can also work from home, sometimes it just feels easier to stay at the office. You know yourself. Once you settle down on your couch with your laptop and the TV in front of you, youâre far less likely to be productive. Far more likely to scroll or talk to friends or watch something. So, you close your door, put some headphones on, and get to work.Â
By the time you look up again, itâs just after 8 oâclock and youâre not sure when it got so late. If not for the grumble of your stomach, you may have just kept working. As it is, you consider if thereâs anything in the break room that can hold you over. Youâre so close to feeling caught up that it feels like a shame to go home and break the flow. You stretch out your limbs and stand to go on what feels like a pointless mission. Thereâs so rarely anything worthwhile in the breakroom because it gets snatched up immediately. What youâre not expecting, though, is to open the door to your office and nearly run into a very surprised looking Chan.Â
His eyes go wide and he steps back, hand falling to his side. It seems like he was about to knock on your door. The surprise of not being alone in the office turns into surprise at seeing him outside of your office. Thereâs a bag in his other hand that looks like some kind of takeout. You pull your headphones off your head and the silence of the office washes over you. That same silence stretches awkwardly between you and your ex.Â
âSorry, I didnât mean to scare you,â he starts.Â
âItâs fine. I didnât realize anyone else was still here,â you say. Awkward. Itâs so awkward and stilted between the two of you now.Â
âAh, yeah, I still feel like Iâm trying to get a handle on some of these cases,â he says. He rubs the back of his neck with his free hand. Itâs a stark contrast to the confident Chan you know and see around the office. âI saw your light on under your door.â
âI was just catching up on some cases. Itâs always something,â you say and he chuckles a little in agreement.Â
He holds up the bag of food and you finally realize itâs from a place around the corner that you love. âI figured you probably hadnât eaten either and thereâs nothing good in the break room.âÂ
âThatâs where I was headed.â
âI ordered something for you when I was ordering for myself and I was just gonna drop it off so I didnât bother youâŠâ
You sigh in resignation and step to the side to make room in the doorway. âCome on in. We can eat together.âÂ
âReally? I donât want toâŠâ
âItâs fine,â you say and cut it off before he can make it more awkward. Canât fully resist making a joke. âI know how much you hate to eat alone, anyway.âÂ
âWhich is very reasonable,â he retorts and you roll your eyes. He sits down at the small table you have and you put your headphones on your desk. Then you settle down at the table with him.
âThis place is good.âÂ
That makes him look up from his task of pulling containers out of his bag. Seems to surprise him a little. âYou eat here?âÂ
âNot all the time. Itâs just close so Iâll order it sometimes for lunch or if Iâm staying late.â
âHuh. Iâve only had it once so far, but figures itâs a place you like,â he says and chuckles. It puts you a little on edge, though.
âWhat does that mean?â you ask, more bite than you intend. He looks like a deer in headlights for a minute and you remember being 1Ls together. Fight the urge to apologize.Â
âOh, just, nothing,â he says and quickly regains his composure. âI just meantâŠnever mind.âÂ
âNo, sorry,â you say. Let the tension go from your shoulders. âItâs just that this isâŠâ
âHard?âÂ
âAnd a bit weird, yeah,âÂ
âWe work together now and I get itâs weird. Iâm not going to bring personal stuff into work, but I also canât pretend I didnât know you better than anyone in the world when itâs after hours like this and weâre the last two here,â he says and you look down into your lap.Â
âI didnât realize everyone else had already left,â you say because itâs easier than whatâs on your mind.Â
âSeems like weâre the only hard workers,â he jokes and you roll your eyes. At least it feels like you can look up again to take in the food.
âWhat did you order, anyway?âÂ
In response, Chan pushes some of the food over to you. Of course, itâs one of your go-to orders on the menu. Something youâre not sure you can admit to the ex sitting across from you. Some things really donât change.Â
âIf you donât want that, I also gotâŠâ
âNo, itâsâŠexactly what I usually get.âÂ
You pull the food towards you, realizing that you are kind of starving now that youâre sitting down to eat something. Once again, Chan seems to follow your lead. Lets you set the pace and tone. The two of you eat for several minutes in silence that doesnât feel that comfortable. Once upon a time, it would have felt as natural as breathing. Now, for all the ways heâs the same, heâs also a stranger to you. When you meet his eye, you wonder if heâs thinking all the same things as you. Wonder if heâs thinking about your relationship and when it all fell apart. Wonder why he came to this firm when he probably could have gone anywhere. Wonder how youâre going to get through all of this.Â
âWe canât keep acting like we donât know each other,â he says softly. So much for the silence.Â
âIâm not acting like I donât know you, Chan,â you say. Tired. This whole thing takes up entirely too much space in your brain.Â
âNo?âÂ
âOf course not. Everyone knows we went to the same school. Iâm not pretending we didnât know each other. Iâm just pretending we werenâtâŠâ
âIn a relationship?âÂ
Same old Chan, you think. Thereâs just something about him that always cuts through everything to the point. Which, of course, makes a good lawyer. But, he also manages it in a way that doesnât sound arrogant. Makes it sound like he just cares about the answer.Â
âI guess, yeah,â you admit. âI donât really need the partners clued into my personal life like that.âÂ
âIs that the reason?âÂ
Thereâs something unreadable on his face. Something you canât place no matter how hard you try. Maybe itâs a hardness. A sense of the walls going up. It feels foreign when he still looks so much like the person you loved.Â
âI donât really want people to know that the person who broke my heart now has the office next to me. So, yeah, Iâd say itâs the reason,â you say and watch the shock take over his face. Maybe itâs too honest. Maybe you shouldnâtâŠ
âThe person who broke your heart?â he asks and it stops your spiral short.
âYes?âÂ
âI broke your heart?âÂ
âThatâs what I said.âÂ
âThatâs some bullshit revisionist history youâve got going on there.âÂ
That brings you up short as well. Revisionist history? For saying he broke your heart? It occurs to you, then, that you didnât ever give him the real reason. Surely, though, after all this time he must know. Must have worked it all out. Heâs always been one of the smartest people you know.Â
âIâm not sure howâŠâ you start.
âYou broke my heart. Thatâs how I remember it. And Iâm still here trying to follow your lead and bringing dinner because I know you forget to eat when you get too focused,â he says and your eyes widen.Â
âI am sorry that I broke it off so suddenly back then. I guess I just figured after all this time that youâdâŠâ
âBe over it?âÂ
âHave figured out why I really broke up with you.âÂ
Now itâs his turn to look a little surprised. You hate it though because it makes him look younger. Reminds you of the person you fell in love with. âYou could have talked to me about whatever was going on.âÂ
âFunny, I could say the same of you.â
âWe talked about everything.â
âYeah, I thought so too,â you say and hate that it still comes out sounding bitter.
âWhat are you talking about?âÂ
For his part, he does look confused. Does genuinely seem like heâs not sure what you mean. Youâre not sure if that makes it better or worse. Probably worse, you think. Maybe he doesnât dwell on the relationship the way you do. Or maybe he didnât know you as well as you thought to be able to work out your thought process. Maybe you just should have had the real fight.
Enough. Itâs been long enough. One of you needs to bridge this gap and itâs long past time for a candid conversation. Even if nothing else changes, the two of you need to clear the air. âI thought we talked about everything. I thought things were good.â
âThey were,â he insists. âIt came totally out of the blue when youâŠâ
âDid you think I would never find out?â you ask suddenly, cutting across him. You look around the office and take in all the signs of your hard work over the past four years. Before he can answer, another thought escapes. âI thought this firm was everything I wanted back then.âÂ
âI know,â he says softly and you look back at him.Â
âHow could you do that without talking to me? How could you think I wouldnât find out?â you ask and see the realization hit him. Watch the moment that his whole body slackens. Watch the way his mouth opens and closes. The way he frowns in thought. The way he leans back in his chair like heâs buying time to figure out what to say. There was a time, years ago, that he would just say something right away. This new, more thoughtful version of him is a sign that youâre both older now.Â
âWhat was I supposed to say? You would have tried to talk me out of doing it,â he says as if thatâs a valid reason.
âOf course I would have!âÂ
âSee?âÂ
âHow is that a âseeâ moment?âÂ
âBecause it was your dream position and you wouldnât have let me make this decision if you had known.â
You frown. Take a beat to collect your thoughts. If youâre having this conversation, it needs to be right. You need to say the things you should have said back then. It takes you a moment to gather your thoughts, during which Chan is, thankfully, silent.Â
âI know I wanted it, but you wanted it too. It shouldnât have been something you decided without me,â you say and hold up your hand when he opens his mouth. He falls silent again. âIt was a conversation. If you still decided to give up the offer, then that would be your decision. I still deserved to know, though. I had other options I was nearly as excited about close by. You didnât.âÂ
Chan waits for a moment. Probably to see if youâre done speaking. Or possibly to weigh his next words. âAre you telling me that you would have let me give this firm up if I had told you?â
âI donât know,â you say with a shrug. Itâs honest, at least. âI just know you canât make decisions like that on your own. We were supposed to be a team. Then to just get blindsided with the information at the end of the yearâŠâ
âYeah, how did you find out?â he asks and you give him a withering stare. He throws up his hands. âSorry, Iâm just curious.âÂ
âMy advisor mentioned it in our meeting and that was another whole level of feeling betrayed because there were all these people who apparently knew. Who thought that I knew.âÂ
âI am sorry for causing you to feel betrayed,â he says after a moment.Â
âIt was justâŠa lot,â you admit. âLike, I felt like you didnât trust me. Then, I felt like you thought I couldnât get in here without a leg up from you. And I felt like our relationship wasnât that important because by giving up this offer, you took one that took you clear across the country.â
âI donât think there was a right answer to that, honestly,â he says and you raise your eyebrows. âEven if I had talked to you, Iâm not sure if there was any right answer. If I took the position and you took one of your backups, I would worry you resented me for getting it over you. If I still ended up turning it down, Iâd worry you wouldnât feel like you could enjoy deserving it. Or we would still break up because of the distance.âÂ
âI guess thatâs a fair point,â you concede.Â
âI am sorry,â he reiterates. âI didnât stop to consider how you would feel if you found out. I just wanted you to have everything you deserved.âÂ
âI appreciate that,â you start. Take a deep breath because you know you have something to say as well. âIâm sorry, too. I was so hurt that I never stopped to consider that I was also hurting you by not talking to you.âÂ
âWe kind of fucked that one up, huh?â he asks and you chuckle.
âWe really did,â you agree.Â
âSo, friends?â he asks, eyes hopeful. You roll your eyes again, though thereâs less irritation behind it now.
âDonât push it.âÂ
Things mostly feel easier after clearing the air with Chan. Outwardly, nothing really seems that different apart from the two of you working together more. Then again, most of the firm doesnât know youâre also exes. Taylor notices the shift in interaction, of course, but doesnât comment on it beyond giving you a look when she clocks that youâre being nicer. Itâll probably be one of those things that she keeps in her back pocket until the right time. A complete demon and yet you know thereâs nobody better out there.Â
The following weeks pass in kind of a blur. Work carries on. Cases move forward. Itâs actually kind of nice to be on speaking terms with Chan again because heâs an incredible sounding board. One that knows how your brain works. One that can point out the flaws in your thought process without you ever voicing them because heâs seen you work through countless case studies before. And one thatâs equally willing to reassure you when youâre already on the right track with handling a case. Itâs not that you really question it often. Sometimes, one little detail throws the entire plan off and it can be difficult to tell if that detail actually matters or if itâs just something to downplay.Â
Thatâs when other attorneys on the team start to notice what they assume is a growing friendship with you and Chan. Without knowing the history, it looks like the two of you bond quickly. Sure, most reason it away. Assume that you must have at least hung out sometimes going to the same school. A couple wonder if thereâs something else going on. Something Taylor assures you that she shuts down quickly. According to her, it comes from a couple of the other assistants and paralegals that find him attractive. Canât fault them for something that is obvious and, objectively, true. You still have eyes even if youâre trying to navigate a friendship with your ex in very unusual circumstances.Â
The man in question pops his head into your office one Friday afternoon. Youâre expecting the usual case question. Although, sometimes he does switch it up and say something just entirely off the board. Every few days he seems to just come up with something ridiculous to ask you to catch you off guard.Â
âAre you going to the happy hour after work?â he asks. Apparently, today it isnât either of the usual suspects. It makes you look up from your computer. âJoshua just asked if I wanted to come and he said youâre usually hit or miss.â
âOf course he did,â you say with a shake of your head. Joshua is the team lead for your group and probably on track to be a partner down the line. Despite that, heâs still incredibly easy to be around. The kind of guy you probably wouldnât realize is an attorney without knowing. Heâs also perpetually trying to get everyone out together to unwind outside of work. Thankfully, he also keeps everything within the team and never repeats it to the partners. Too good for a place like this, you think. âNo, Iâm not going. Not this time.â
âOh is itâŠis it lame?â Chan asks after he steps into your office so he can drop his voice.Â
âWhat?â you ask, surprise evident. âNo, not at all. I really like Joshua. He just loves to gossip within the team when I donât show up for the happy hour.âÂ
âAh,â Chan says and smiles. He looks behind him and then drops his voice again. âSo, itâs safe to go, then?â
âOh, definitely,â you say softly in return. âHonestly, you can trust going whenever he invites you because heâs intentional about it.âÂ
âGood to know,â Chan says and straightens back up. âWhy arenât you going then?â
âOh, uh,â you say. Hesitate. The actual reason is that youâre going on a date. Is that something you share with your ex, though? Probably, if youâre trying to navigate a friendship. Itâs not like heâs waiting for you to give him another chance. Youâre coworkers and working back to some kind of friendship. Itâs the kind of thing you would share with Joshua if he asks.Â
âSorry, I wasnât trying to pry.â
You shake it off and put on a smile. âNo, itâs fine. I just have a date tonight.â
âAh,â Chan says and it sounds different from the earlier one. That face that was once an open book is unreadable now. Then, a bright smile. âFirst date?â
âUh, no, actually. Weâve been out a few times,â you say and Chan nods along. Youâre not sure why you carry on. Thatâs really all he needs to know. âItâs tough with our schedules, though, you know?â
âYeah, dating is hard. I havenât been on a date in ages,â he says and then seems to cringe a little. Maybe a little unsure why heâs sharing that with you of all people.Â
âMaybe youâll meet someone at happy hour,â you say awkwardly. Chan looks at you for a moment to process the last comment and you want to kick yourself.
âYou never know,â he says with a falsely bright smile and a shrug. âMaybe Iâll see you at it next time.â
âYeah, for sure,â you agree.Â
Just like that, heâs out of your office and you want to crawl under your desk to die. No such luck when Taylor walks in and shuts the door behind her under the guise of talking through the upcoming schedule. Itâs not unusual. In fact, itâs something you do multiple times a week. Itâs not her reasoning this time, though. This time, she informs you that she heard the entire conversation with Chan (because she was intentionally eavesdropping outside the door). Naturally, she shares her thoughts after hearing you call her a demon for the hundredth time.Â
Then, because the universe is fair, Joshua pops his head into your office just after Taylor leaves to mention happy hour. Itâs a small comfort that he doesnât know you have a date because it means that Chan isnât talking about it. But, you have to share the date news with Joshua as well and deal with all his teasing over it. At least itâs good natured. Joshua seems to accept this excuse for not going without missing a beat. Even wishes you luck and commiserates that dating sucks. It really reinforces why you think heâs such a good guy.Â
After that interruption, the rest of the day thankfully passes without any other awkward moments. It feels like a small victory that you wrap up your day without falling through a hole in your office waiting to swallow you (and any ensuing embarrassment). Briefly, you consider popping your head into Chanâs office as youâre locking up your own. Can see his door is still open, meaning he probably hasnât left for the happy hour yet. But, Joshua comes around the corner with his signature smile and you settle for calling out a generic wish for a good weekend. Once he gets a little closer, you jokingly tell him to behave himself at happy hour and not to get the team too drunk. Because things arenât entirely fair, Chan appears in his doorway during this and gives you another smile. You tell them to have fun again and make as quick a departure as possible without it being more awkward.Â
Once you leave the office, you know you cannot focus on anything going on there. Cannot consider the happy hour or whoâs going to be there. Itâs hard enough to date as it is and the last thing you need is to let yourself get distracted from a genuinely good person. Parkerâs a nurse in pediatrics and he actually cares about kids. Doesnât get hung up the way some doctors seem to with some kind of God complex. All he wants is to help kids feel healthy and safe. And more than that, he actually cares about people. Wants everyone to have the same access to basic human rights like food, housing, education, safe conditions, opportunities, etc etc etc. He listens when you speak and actively seeks out your opinion. If this is how he approaches you after only a handful of dates, you wonder what heâll be like down the line?Â
Even though Parkerâs schedule can be crazy, it feels like heâs intentional when he sees you. Keeps his phone tucked away and gives you his full focus. Only a true work emergency could interrupt your time, something he stresses as a non-negotiable for him. How can you know if itâs something serious if you donât give it a chance? Each new date shows that he does actually listen and tries to put a little of each of you into the plans. And you love his philosophy of not going out to dinner on the first date because it can force awkward conversations or even worse silences. By the time the second date comes around and he takes you to dinner, it does feel so much easier. Parker seems like he checks off all the boxes on the list you insist doesnât actually exist.Â
Thereâs only one problem. Well, can you call it a problem if youâre not sure what the problem actually is?Â
Parker is perfect both on paper and seemingly in person. A great match for you. Someone who respects you and everything that you want. Someone who makes you laugh and is considerate and kind and smart and insanely attractive. Yet, despite all the reasons you know that heâs perfect, you still feel like something is missing. Thereâs something thatâs justâŠnot there. Heâs not the guy you settle for. Nobody who dates him could ever consider it settling.Â
So why does that feel like what youâre doing?
By the time you end up back at work on Monday, youâve mostly put any weirdness from the end of the previous week behind you. Itâs amazing what a good therapy session (read: brunch with your closest friends) on a Sunday can do. Youâre just feeling a little off having your ex working on the other side of your office wall. Itâs to be expected, really. Everything is going to be fine. Your relationship with Parker will keep growing. Seeing Chan will get easier. You repeat it to yourself all the way to work and believe it by the time you get there. You walk into your office and offer smiles on your way.Â
This is going to be a good week.Â
Or, is it? You consider a lot of things for the upcoming week. Your team lead coming into your office in the first hour of new week doesnât make the list. Yet, there he is. Looking as put together as always. Eyes alight with some kind of concealed mischief. The kind he only lets those he actually trusts see. That sight actually makes you relax back into your chair. Which is likely the opposite of a normal reaction. But you know it means that heâs here to gossip. Probably, at least. Definitely not to talk about work.Â
âYou missed a fun happy hour,â he says and you nearly snort. Of course.Â
When itâs early in the day (and on a Monday, no less), itâs safe enough to chat. People are so worried about getting the week started that they donât bother with other peopleâs conversations. Well, people other than Taylor. But, you trust her and so Joshua does, too.
âYou say that every time,â you point out. Because he does.
âThis was different.â
He says that every time, too. You donât need to point it out. Instead, you just play along. It feels like the least you can do for a lead you actually like. âOkay, Iâll bite. Why was it different?â
âChan, obviously. I cannot believe I havenât invited him out yet! Why didnât you tell me?â he asks. Gives you a look of mock betrayal and you actually let out a small snort while trying to cover your laugh.Â
âTell you what, exactly?â
âThat heâs a magnet for attention. Heâs so attractive that they just couldnât stay away.â
It makes your heart constrict for a moment to hear that. You donât give yourself time to think about why. Not in front of Joshua. You like him a lot, but youâre not ready to talk about that. And he will definitely notice something is up. So you do the only thing that you can think of to disarm him.Â
âJoshua,â you say, fixing him with a look, âyou are an incredibly attractive guy that people canât stay away from.â
It works. At least enough to cover you for a moment. For all his confidence, he does get shy when you give him compliments. Maybe because he knows you donât give them out as easily. Or because he knows that you mean it. Youâre not prepared for the pout that follows, though you should be.
âNot attractive enough for you to come to happy hour more often, apparently,â he says and you actually roll your eyes.Â
âI was on a date,â you remind him and he puts a hand to his heart.
âAnd not with me. You wound me.â
âThis is harassment. Iâm going to call HR.â
âAnd say what? Marjorie loves me.âÂ
Heâs got you there. She does love him. Everyone loves him, honestly. Itâs kind of hard not to with that easy air about him. Itâs more impressive knowing how cutthroat he can be on a case.Â
âYou know, Joshua, it kind of sounds like you were just looking for a wingman,â you say and he shrugs, that sparkle back in his eyes.
âMaybe I was,â he admits and leans in. âI donât think we paid for any drinks after the first one.âÂ
âDo you mean to tell me that you let those poor women buy you drinks?â you ask incredulously.
âWhy not?âÂ
âJoshua, I know what you make!âÂ
âNow what kind of a feminist would I be if I told those women how to spend their money?âÂ
âUnbelievable,â you say through a laugh. He laughs along with you before settling down.
âI did actually try to cover it, but they insisted,â he says and you smile along. You know, even without him telling you. Thatâs just the kind of person he is.Â
âMaybe I will have to come to the next one. See you in your element,â you say, though the idea fills you with mixed emotions.Â
âIt was nice to get to know Chan, though,â he says after a moment. âI was a little surprised that he didnât strike up a conversation with anyone. But, I guess we were doing a lot of talking.âÂ
âItâs good for you to get to know a new member of the team,â you say noncommittally.Â
Joshua looks around and you know that look well. It worries you for a moment. When he determines the coast is, evidently, clear, he leans in and drops his voice. âHe actually told me he had a serious girlfriend from law school that took him a long time to get over. That they broke up just before graduating. It seems like he regrets whatever happened. Did you know her?âÂ
At least itâs easy to mask your reaction here because he gives you the perfect out. âJoshua, you are so nosey.âÂ
It doesnât determine in the slightest. Heâs unabashed. âCome on, do you? You were in the same class. You must know who he meant.â
âSure, I know who he meant,â you say with as much neutrality as you can manage. âThe school wasnât that big. But, Iâm not telling you. Thatâs his business. And itâs been 4 years since we graduated. Iâm sure it was just the alcohol talking.âÂ
âI donât know,â Joshua says, more contemplative for a moment. âIt seemed like heâd been thinking about her recently.â
You only hum in response and make a show of looking back at your computer when the ding from Teams lets you know that you have a new message. You roll your eyes. âI swear to god.â
âThat looks promising,â he says with an amused chuckle before rising to his feet. He turns back to you at the door. âWere you friends?âÂ
âHm?â you ask, tearing your eyes away from the screen to look back up at him.
âYou and Chan. I know you were in the same graduating class, but were you friends?âÂ
The answer comes quicker than you expect. And comes out sounding neutral, to your surprise. âIâm not sure if friends is quite the right word.â
Itâs not a lie. Not exactly. You and Chan were a lot of things to each other, friends certainly being one such thing. But, to say that you were only friends doesnât feel honest, either.Â
âAh, well, glad you seem to be working together now. Donât forget, weâre doing a team lunch tomorrow so make sure you have your order in before you leave tonight.â
âGot it,â you say and he waves before heading back to his own office.Â
Another two weeks pass at work. Things donât feel quite the same as they did with Chan after having that dinner and talking. Youâre still getting along well, for the most part. Itâs just that he keeps it more professional. Doesnât act like he knows your mind quite as well. Instead, he gets closer to other members of the team again. It shouldnât irritate you and yetâŠ
When Joshua tells you that heâs going to kidnap you so you donât miss the next happy hour, you just agree without issue.Â
Which is how you end up sitting at a hightop in the bar area with Joshua, watching how some of the other team members interact. Itâs actually kind of nice, being out like this. Something you donât want to admit to Joshua, though he can likely see it on your face. You follow his gaze and see Chan standing at the bar getting another round of drinks with a gorgeous woman trying to get his attention. Try not to let it twist your stomach. Of course, you know that he dates. He should date. But, itâs very different to see someone actively hitting on him.
âSee what I mean?â Joshua asks, unnecessarily calling your attention to Chan.Â
âHeâs charismatic,â you say, voice surprisingly even.
âI need him as a wingman.â
âYou know what probably isnât helping you?â
Joshua turns back to you and raises an eyebrow. âWhatâs that?â
âSitting here with me. People might get the wrong idea,â you say and smile as he barks out a laugh.Â
âWe both know youâre way out of my league,â he says and you laugh harder. âWhat? You are?â
âOh, please,â you say between laughs. âHow many times have we gone through this?âÂ
âOne more doesnât hurt,â he says, that demonic twinkle in his eyes.Â
âYou wear me out,â you say.
âI could if youâd let me.âÂ
âStop!âÂ
âI know, I know,â he says, throwing up his hands. âI know the rule.â
âOh, yes, thatâs the only reason,â you retort sarcastically, but youâre smiling.Â
Nobody else can get away with saying shit like that to you. At least, nobody else that you work with. Joshua gets special privileges, though. Which, unfortunately, he knows all too well. Itâs mostly because you know he doesnât mean it, not really. Maybe, on some level, you would both consider it in another life. Not this one. The two of you work so well as friends and there just isnât anything more there. No spark. No interest. An appreciation that youâre both attractive. Because, yes, you have eyes and heâs definitely gorgeous. Thatâs where it ends.Â
Chan approaches the table, balancing drinks carefully in his hands, and sets them down before either of you notice. When you do, you give him a smile.Â
âWhat did I just walk into?â he asks cautiously. Joshua turns to him with that winning smile.Â
âOh, just me teasing her,â he says. âI saw you over there getting hit on and had to point out that this one here is way out of my league.â
Your cheeks flush a little. Itâs not that you donât want Chan to realize the way you and Joshua tease each other. Itâs just that, well, you donât want your ex seeing you interact like that with someone else you both work with. Itâs awkward. Chan, for his part, seems to feel more awkward about the first comment. Interesting.
âAh, she wasnâtâŠâ he starts and Joshua cuts him off.
âMan, I saw her. She would have left with you right then and there,â Joshua says.Â
Awkward. Itâs so awkward. Chan slides back into his seat with the two of you and shrugs.Â
âIâm not interested,â Chan says.Â
âI know last time you saidâŠâ Joshua starts.
âWell, what about you?â Chan cuts across.
âI was just saying that!â you agree. âHeâs never going to get any numbers if heâs just sitting here with me.âÂ
âThatâs why I said she was out of my league,â Joshua shares with Chan.Â
âSheâs right, though,â Chan says with a shrug.Â
âEh, I donât really come out looking to get numbers, anyway,â he says and you laugh at the surprise on Chanâs face.
âWhat do you come out for, then?âÂ
You and Joshua share a look before you both start laughing. Youâre the first to regain your composure. âThe chaos.âÂ
âNice,â Chan says with a snort.
âConsider yourself lucky. He doesnât let everyone in so quickly,â you tease.
âNo, thatâs true,â Joshua agrees easily and then his eyes catch on something. âOh, hang on. Iâll be right back!â
And then heâs gone. Just like that. Just like so many other times. It feels a little awkward, even with the help of some liquid courage. Youâre not really used to being around Chan yet. Not sure if you ever will be.Â
âIs he always like that with you?â Chan asks after a moment when it becomes clear that Joshua isnât going to rush back.
âLike what?âÂ
âI donât know. Saying things like youâre out of his league.âÂ
You laugh and then realize Chan is at least partly serious. It makes you pull up a little short. âYeah, pretty much. He doesnât mean anything by it, so it doesnât really bother me.â
âAre you sure he doesnât mean anything by it?â
You fix your ex with an unimpressed stare that makes him throw up his hands in defense. âYeah, Chan, Iâm sure he doesnât. Weâre just friends, as much as you can be working together like this.â
âThat makes sense,â Chan says and takes a sip of his drink. âHe does seem like the kind of person that youâd be friends with.â
From anyone else, that might sound a little passive aggressive. Or like it means something else. You know what he means, though. Joshua is exactly your kind of friend. Serious when he needs to be, chaotic all other times. It just flows easily. Never feels like work. And somehow, Chan making that observation, makes things feel a little less awkward. At least for the time being.Â
The night descends further into chaos, in a way that it doesnât usually when you go out for happy hour. Maybe thatâs because happy hour turns into apps. Which turns into more drinks. Which turns into more apps. It even includes a change of scenery from one place to the next when you realize that you all might need to put a little more food into your stomachs. By then, only Joshua, Chan, and you are left. Which actually feels kind of nice. Somehow having Joshua has an unknowing third wheel makes any remaining awkwardness with Chan melt away. Of course, it could also be the alcohol and the light atmosphere.Â
Eventually, you do all realize that you need to head home and start the process of paying your bills. When you and Chan both go to pull out your phones to order Ubers, Joshua gives you a quizzical look. One youâre not sure you like. Thankfully, he clarifies immediately.
âWhy wouldnât you both just share one?â he asks and your eyes go cartoon character levels of wide.Â
âUh,â Chan says and gives you a look.
âYou live in the same building,â Joshua carries on and that only confuses you more.
âNo we donât,â you contradict like itâs the silliest thing in the world.
âYes, you do,â he insists. âChan told me where he lived last week when we went to happy hour. Skyline Grove?â
âOh,â you both say at the same time like itâs brand new information.
âI havenât run into you around,â you say and Chan shrugs. âWeird.â
âItâs a nice building,â Chan says.
âAnd massive. I shouldâve mentioned it, but I figured youâd realize,â he says. âAnyway. Why waste money when youâre going to the same place?â
Itâs such a simple suggestion and yet it sends your stomach lurching all the same. The two of you look at each other for a moment, but this is a crossroads. It doesnât make any sense at all to say no. You and Chan are going to the same place. Of course, you could lie and say youâre actually going somewhere else. Except happy hour went way longer than expected and itâs clear you donât have other plans. Youâre justâŠnot really sure you wanna be alone in a car with Chan when youâre a little buzzed.
âThis oneâs on me, then?â Chan asks, giving you a surprisingly nonchalant look.Â
âWhat a gentleman,â Joshua says and claps Chan on the shoulder. He pulls out his own phone. âThatâs usually my title.â
âBecause you gave it to yourself,â you mutter, putting your phone away.
âI heard that.â
âI meant you to.â
Thankfully, the Ubers come quickly. Chan opens the door and lets you slide in before him. Something that Joshua doesnât seem to notice since heâs getting into his own car. You settle into one side of the car and try not to look over to the side next to you. Donât realize that Chan is having just as much of an internal struggle as you are.Â
âI didnât realize we lived in the same building,â he says after the silence starts to feel too heavy.
âI guess I shouldnât be surprised. Itâs one of the nicest places in the area,â you say.
âAnd there was one of those corner units available. The views are so nice,â he says and you laugh.
âUp on the 18th floor?â you ask and watch the way his brows furrow.Â
âYeahâŠâ
âThey offered it to me when the last tenant decided not to renew because Iâd mentioned wanting to possibly move to a higher floor. But, Iâm all settled now,â you say. Then, like you canât help yourself, you tell him where you live. âIâm in that same unit but on the 10th floor.âÂ
âWell, we always did have similar taste in apartments,â he says with an ironic laugh.Â
âGuess so,â you say.Â
âThanks,â he says suddenly and you turn to look at him. His face is mostly in shadow with it being so dark outside, but your brain fills in the blanks without even realizing it.Â
âFor what?â
âNot making it weird to just share a car.â
âOh, well, weâre going to the same place.âÂ
âDoes he know?âÂ
âWho?âÂ
Chan sighs and fully turns his head towards you. You can read the look in his eyes even in the low light. Or maybe itâs just another thing you remember. âJoshua. Does he know aboutâŠâ
âNo,â you say immediately. âNo, Chan, nobody at the office does. Well, apart from my assistant, but she guessed. Joshua isnât so cruel that he would do that if he knew.â
âYeah, sorry, I didnât meanâŠâ
âNo, I know you didnâtâŠâ
Itâs awkward again. Thankfully, youâre nearly at the apartment building now. Itâs also nice that the Uber driver doesnât comment on the situation. Heâs probably seen worse in the city on a Friday night, though. Once he pulls over in front of the building, Chan opens the door and slides out. Holds it open for you to do the same so that you donât have to get out on the side with traffic.
Youâre not really sure what to do now. So, you step forward to scan into the building and hold the door for Chan behind you. The two of you make your way to the elevators in silence. Itâs a little surprising to find the lobby so quiet on a Friday night. But, people are probably either waiting until itâs a little later to go out or already wherever they plan to be. Itâs that weird in between time. That means that itâs just the two of you in the elevator. Chan presses your floor and then his own. When the door opens, you turn to him and try to find the words. He only smiles.
âSee you at work on Monday,â he says and you only nod before heading out. Donât look back to see the way he watches your back down the hallway.Â
The whole night just feels a little surreal from the safety of your apartment. You toe off your shoes and set your things down on the table by the door. Only grab your phone and head into the kitchen. Even though you know you should just grab a glass of water, you also pour a small glass of wine. A lot of your buzz has worn off and all you can think about is the car ride. Or the way that Chan looked all night. Or the way that women just seemed to flock to him. Not that the last bit should matter when youâre seeing someone.Â
Parker. You need to think about Parker. Maybe even check to see if you have any messages from him. Not that you owe him a play-by-play of your whereabouts. Itâs one of the things you like about him. That and the freedom that he agrees to so easily. You both have the same philosophy when it comes to dating in your late 20s. Donât put pressure or labels on something when youâre only a few dates in. But, also donât leave things lingering without an actual conversation. You know youâre probably getting close to that point of needing to talk. Which is fine, heâs great.
So, why is your brain still wandering back to the way Chan looked at the bar? The way his shirt looked a little tight in places or the way his pants fit. Heâs always had a good fashion sense, butâŠ
No. You cannot do this to yourself or youâll drive yourself crazy. This is a door that needs to stay firmly shut. Youâre considering if you should pour yourself a bigger glass of wine when thereâs a knock at the door. It at least serves to pull you out of whatever dangerous path your brain wants to go down.
You get up, set the wine glass down on the table, and walk slowly to the door. Forget to check who it is through the peephole before just opening the door. A mistake, obviously, because there he is. The man you canât seem to get off your mind. The one you know you canât revisit the past with. Heâs wearing a t-shirt and sweat pants. Like he couldnât wait to change after getting home.
âSorry, I justâŠâ he starts and the rational part of your brain shuts down completely.
No thoughts, just desires, as you reach forward and grab him by the shirt. Pull him over the threshold and against your body. Surprise flashes over his face for the briefest moment before he collects you against his chest and kisses you. Hard. Desperate. Like you canât remember him ever kissing you before. You nip at his lower lip and he responds by squeezing your ass. Distantly, you register that your door is still open. It seems Chan also realizes it because he crowds further into your space and uses his foot to close the door behind him. Doesnât break the kiss, though.Â
It isnât even really clear which one of the two of you is in control. That, at least, feels normal. Familiar. Even though everything else feels new. He spins the two of you around and backs you up into the door. Claims your mouth as his own over and over. Each kiss more demanding than the last. You slide your hands up under the hem of his shirt and run your hands up his back. Appreciate the way he shivers under your touch. Itâs so easy to fall back into this pattern. To remember all the things that drive him crazy.Â
Seems like itâs just as easy for him to remember. He uses one hand to anchor your hip against the door behind you while he pulls away from your lips. Trails his mouth along your jaw. Tilts your head back with his free hand to give himself better access to your neck. Presses further into you so that he can reach just the right spots there. The ones that make you moan just from the contact. You seek purchase the only place you can: on his body. Digging the tips of your finger into where you hold onto him.Â
âChan,â you whine out when he moves down to your collarbone and moves your shirt out of the way.
âMmmm?â he hums into your skin without stopping.Â
âThis is a terrible idea,â you mumble. Gasp as he reaches for the hem of your shirt.
âProbably,â he agrees, still keeping his lips against your skin. He pulls back to look at you for a moment, pupils dark with desire. His hands are on the hem of your shirt and the question is plain as day in his eyes. âDo you want to stop?â
Heâs not asking if you want him to stop. Heâs just asking if you want to stop. Because he knows that this is as much on you as on him. Maybe more. You shake your head and move your hands over your head.
âAre you sure?âÂ
âYes,â you say softly.
Then, heâs pulling your shirt over your head and unfastening your bra. Casts both to the side without a care. And you know that you should move somewhere else, but youâre not sure you can. Not when Chan dips his head to leave sloppy kisses across your collarbones. Not when he kisses down the valley between your boobs. Not when he swirls his tongue around your nipple. Your entire brain goes a little fuzzy. Some things never change. Chan still seems just as obsessed with your chest now as when you dated in law school. And youâre happy to let him give you all of his attention. He can be so singularly focused. In times like this, you certainly donât mind.Â
It gets to be too much. You need something more. Makes you pull him back and appreciate the confusion on his face for approximately 2 seconds before you pull his shirt over his head. Not everything about him looks exactly the same. Heâs always been someone who took pride in staying in shape. This new, more mature Chan is something different. When he tries to step back and pick up where he left off, you hold him at armâs length with a hand gently splayed over his chest. Want to just drink him in.
âYou can look at me later. I want you now,â he says, voice low and full of desire.Â
âShould we go further into my apartment, orâŠ?â you start to ask and he shakes his head before you even finish.
âLater,â he says and reaches for your pants. Unbuttons them while he kisses you again. Slower this time. More deliberate. Heâs kissing you with purpose. He pulls your pants and panties down in one motion and you step out. Pull his mouth back to yours so that you donât have to think.Â
He pulls back again and you pout at him. Doesnât he know that you donât want all this in between time? You give him a look that he doesnât immediately answer, prompting you to ask. âWhat?â
âTurn around,â he says.Â
Itâs a familiar dynamic between the two of you. A constant push and pull about who gets to be in control. You would give in and then he would and it went on. This feels like falling back into that old pattern. Yet, you agree without questioning it. Just turn around against your front fucking door, like some desperate, horny college student. Feel him slot his body against your back. Feel that heâs hardening. Definitely not hard yet, but you can feel the way he pokes into your ass. Chan brushes your hair over one shoulder and kisses behind your ear. Works down to your pulse point and sucks your skin between his teeth. Thankfully, you donât have to tell him to be careful. He just is.Â
And then you see what heâs doing. Get how desperate he is for you. He pushes your legs apart as he continues kissing down your neck. Presses his fingers into your mouth and you suck on them without thinking. Swirl your tongue around his fingers and earn a satisfied hum in response. It vibrates against your skin. Chan winds his hand down your body and between your legs. Presses his spit slick fingers into your entrance.Â
âChan, fuck,â you hiss when he presses his first finger in.Â
âSo wet for me, sweetheart,â he whispers into your skin. âDid you miss my fingers?âÂ
âMmmm, IâŠâ you start, only to moan when he starts pumping into you. Hooks his fingers just the way he remembers you liking it.
âDid you miss this?â he asks, free hand roaming up your body to take one of your boobs into his hand again. Squeezes it a little roughly as he keeps pumping his finger into you.
âYouâre a shit,â you manage to hiss out through a moan.
âIâm not sure I heard you,â he says and presses a second finger into you. Alternates between scissoring his fingers inside you and picking up the pace.Â
âFuck,â you moan out. He jerks his hips into your ass and you feel that heâs getting harder. Youâre not the only one losing yourself here. âGod your fingers!â
âThatâs what I thought,â he whispers, right into your ear. Moving his lips from your neck just for a moment. You miss the feel of his lips on your skin.Â
âOh my god,â you whine and then he does the worst thing imaginable. He pulls his fingers out. You whip your head around to look at him over the shoulder. âWhat the fuck?â
âEasy, sweetheart, turn around again for me,â he says. Soft and sweet. Totally at odds with the fire burning in his eyes.
You comply even though you donât want to. You were so close to coming all over his fingers and you donât want to lose that. The disappointment is short-lived. He drops to his knees in front of you. Right in your hallway. With your back pressing into your front door. He hooks one of your legs over his shoulder and looks up at you. Presses his tongue flat against your core and you might actually cum just from that. Nobody should be allowed to look that good. That sinful. Itâs too much. And thatâs before he actually licks into your cunt for the first time.
Itâs enough to have you throw your head back against your door. Not too hard, though. Chan doesnât waste his time. Doesnât tease you anymore. Just focuses on fucking his tongue into your waiting pussy like heâs been waiting for this chance for years. Uses a finger to tease your clit and hums appreciatively in response to each moan. Thereâs so little for you to anchor yourself to in this position. Not that you really care. Itâs impossible to stay standing, but it would be unimaginably worse to have him stop. Not right now. Not when youâre this close. When Chan brings a finger back up, youâre gone.Â
âChan, fuck, no, Iâm gonna - fuck!â you shout out as you feel that coil about to snap. He doesnât stop. Doesnât even slow down. If anything, he picks up the pace. Does everything that he can to push you over the edge. It doesnât take long before youâre coming all over his face. He laps it all up. Doesnât waste any of it. Just works you through your high and pushes you just past.Â
Heâs not completely demonic, though. He does pull back. Gently helps you get your leg off his shoulder and back on the floor. Slowly picks himself up to slot against your body again. Grabs at your hips possessively to pull you into him. Kisses you fiercely and you taste yourself on his tongue. Itâs not nearly enough. Not by a long shot. You pull back without creating any space.
âCome on,â you say, finally pushing him a little away from you so that you can step away from the door, âletâs go take this to the bed.âÂ
And itâs easy to fall back into these patterns, too. Easy to grab his hand and pull him into your apartment. Easy to push him back onto your bed after stripping off his remaining clothes. Easy to wrap your fingers around his cock and look at him just the way he likes. Easy to remember just how much he loves your mouth wrapped around him. Easy to bring him just to the edge before pulling off. Easy to see the desire mixed with adoration when you climb on top of him to ride him. Hard and fast. Too needy for anything else.Â
Itâs just so easy to carry on until the early hours of the morning, until youâre both spent, in the dark of your apartment.Â
Things always feel a little different in the light of day. After a late night, a much later one than anticipated, itâs well into the morning before you wake up. Youâre kind of groggy and your body is sore. Tentatively, you start to stretch, only to realize thereâs an arm around your stomach. Itâs then that you register the feel of a body behind you. Of course Chan is still there. And of course you remember everything from the night before. Thereâs just a part of you that figured he might have left before you woke up. The steady sounds of his breathing bathe over you. Itâs such a familiar sound and it almost feels comforting, just for a moment. At least, until you really stop to think about what all of this might mean.Â
Gently, you pick up his hand and slide out of your bed. Somehow manage to not wake Chan up. Tiptoe over to the door and slide out of the bedroom. You take a moment to lean back against your closed bedroom door to collect your thoughts. Itâs fine. This is all fine. You can definitely figure it all out. Not if you keep standing against the door, though. So, you quietly head into the kitchen. Put on a pot of coffee and retrieve your phone from the living room.Â
Youâre in the midst of scrolling, totally lost in your world, when arms wind around your middle. It startles you for a second before you remind yourself itâs just Chan. He presses a kiss to the side of your face when you turn it slightly. Still makes you feel a little tense. Something he doesnât seem to pick up on given that he doesnât move his arms.
âMorning,â he says, voice still thick with sleep.Â
âMorning,â you repeat. He kisses you again and then untangles himself from you so that he can step around you.Â
âSo, should we dive right in, orâŠ?â he asks.
âAt least let me have some coffee first,â you say, only a little exasperation.Â
âAh, right. I forgot,â he says and then drops his voice with a smirk. âDoesnât seem like I forgot much else.â
âI will throw you out,â you threaten.Â
Chan throws up his hands in surrender, but the look on his face tells you that heâs not sorry. Not really, at least. A moment later, the coffee maker beeps. You reach for a couple of mugs and Chan goes into your refrigerator to get milk and creamer. You pour two mugs and he finishes them off, exactly the way each of you likes. Without another word, you both head into the living room and sit down on the couch. He lets you take a couple of sips before broaching the conversation again.
âSo, now that we have coffee,â he starts and you sigh.
âI guess I canât avoid it,â you agree.
âAvoid it?â he asks, brow furrowing. âDo you regret it?â
âOh, no, Chan,â you say softly and reach out to him. âNo, of course I donât. Itâs justâŠâ
âJust?â
âComplicated.âÂ
âIt doesnât have to be,â Chan offers and you search his face. For a moment, heâs just the boy you fell in love with in law school. Open and honest and impossibly easy to read. That makes it a little more frightening, though.Â
âI think the hardest part for me is that you believe that,â you say carefully. Watch the way his face morphs before returning to something more neutral.Â
âI mean, why wouldnât I believe it?â he asks.Â
Youâre not even sure how to answer that. Thereâs so many reasons. Youâre exes. You work together. For the most part, nobody you work with knows Chan is your ex. There are still a lot of unresolved feelings, clearly. Youâre technically seeing someone, though not exclusively. It is the easiest direction to go in, though.
âIâm still seeing someone,â you point out and his face falls a little.
âOh, I just kind of thoughtâŠâ
âI mean donât get me wrong. Itâs casual. Weâre not, like, committed. But, stillâŠâ
âWell, if itâs not even serious, then I donât really see the issue.â
âThere are a lot of issues, Chan. Weâre justâŠus. Iâm only just getting to know you again.â
âI guess I just kinda figuredâŠâ he starts and frowns.Â
âFigured what?âÂ
âI figured thatâŠI donât know. I figured when you pulled me in and kissed me last night it might mean that you want the same thing as I do,â he says. Your eyes go a little wide at the admission.
âAnd what is it that you want?â you ask. Chan gives you a look that youâre not quite used to anymore. One that says youâre a step or two behind and heâs just waiting for you to catch up.Â
âYou,â he says simply and then sighs. Runs a hand through his hair. âItâs always been you. Itâs always going to be you. It hasnât worked with anyone else in the last four years because I just canât get over you. And then thisâŠâ
âChanâŠâ
He shakes his head and stands up. A little sad. Maybe a little defeated. A little resigned. âIâve said what I need to say. I know you well enough to know that weâre not in the same place. So, I donât know. I guess figure out where you are and let me know.â
âChan, please, just give meâŠâ you start and he shakes his head.Â
âIâm not an idiot. I know weâve got a lot of things to talk about if weâre going to try again. But, I canât sit here and act like I donât love you or last night didnât mean something different to me. I canât,â he says, voice wavering ever so slightly.Â
âLast night meant something to me, too, Iâm justâŠâ
âI get it. Iâll see you at work on Monday,â he says and heads off towards your front door without another word. All you can manage to do is sit in the awkward silence that settles around you in his absence. Well, fuck.
You have a lot of things to think about. What to do about Chan. What to do about Parker. That should probably be the first thing that you address, honestly. Itâs not serious, but you also donât want to waste his time. If you can fall back into bed with your ex so easily, then you probably donât see forever with him. Something you probably already knew, on some level.Â
Itâs all too much and so you do the only thing that any reasonable person can: call your best friend to go out to brunch. At least he can give you so much needed perspective. And from someone whose love life is significantly less messy than yours.Â
After lunch, and at least partially hearing out your bestieâs advice, you do go ahead and break things off with Parker. Your friend suggests it because, according to him, at least, youâre not over Chan. You decide to go ahead and do it because it seems clear that you and Parker are on different pages. Like the truly great guy that he is, he just accepts it. Appreciates you letting him know and not continuing on if you donât feel like youâre on the same page. Honestly, heâs the perfect guy for someone, but definitely not for you. All you feel after the conversation is relief. You donât feel any clearer about Chan, though. Which you point out to your friend, who only seems to think itâs you avoiding it. Whatever.Â
Your biggest issue is that youâre not sure if Chan is serious. Not sure if you can let your walls down to let him in again. It just all seems kind of sudden to you. After near radio silence for four years, heâs not only back in your life, but at your firm as well. Heâs quietly slipping into areas where itâs a little hard to ignore him. Your friend points out that leaving a good job to come to the exact firm you work at doesnât exactly seem sudden. It doesnât seem like this is just all on some whim. It also doesnât seem like itâs driven by you having another relationship, especially given how casual it was. And, sure, itâs scary to take a leap like this. Even scarier when itâs someone you used to know so intimately. Doesnât that make it kind of worth it, too?Â
What you donât admit to your friend, though he can obviously tell, is that youâre scared. Chan is that one person. The one always somewhere in the back of your mind, even when you donât realize it. Possibly even your one that got away, if you could stop being too stubborn to admit it. In those quiet moments, you also kind of thought of him as your right person at the wrong time. Which is exactly the type of person you should give a second chance to. Things are different now. Youâre both older. More established in your careers. Maybe even both able to admit making mistakes.Â
Itâs scary. Giving Chan a chance means risking breaking your heart all over again. And how do you go about picking up the pieces this time?
âDid you and Chan get home okay?â Joshua asks, plopping into his chosen chair across from you in your office on Monday morning. Your brain short circuits for a minute trying to catch up. Does he know what happened? Could he? Thankfully, he mistakes your confusion for being too deep in case prep. âDid you already put the happy hour behind you? I canât believe you didnât know you lived in the same building.âÂ
âOh, yeah,â you say and give a light laugh. Turn back to your computer. âYeah, itâs crazy. We got home fine, though.âÂ
âWhere is he this morning?â he asks and you give him a look.
âHow should I know?â
Joshua gives you a kind of knowing look that you definitely do not like. It looks like heâs up to something and youâre not sure you want to know what it is. âYou live in the same building. I just figured youâd start carpooling now.âÂ
You roll your eyes, hoping thatâs all heâs going for. âYouâre annoying.â
âI just like it when my team all gets along.â
âWeâre not going to get along if you donât leave me the fuck alone.âÂ
âIs that any time to talk to your boss?â
âYouâre not really my boss.âÂ
âThis is a hostile work environment,â he says and stands up, pretending to be serious. He almost pulls it off too.
âThis is my office,â you point out.Â
âFine, Iâll go bother someone else,â he says and walks towards the door.
âYou could also work on your cases,â you call after him.Â
You know that heâs only like this because itâs a quiet day in the office. The partners are all out, either on vacation or at offsite meetings. Itâs that time of year when people try to get little breaks in before things pick up again. Itâs also one of your favorite times of year because itâs quieter. Maybe Chan is doing the same thing. Against your better judgment, you click over to the shared calendar and see the first half of his day is blocked off. It makes you panic until you notice that itâs an existing meeting. Something on the schedule from before he even started at the firm.Â
Then, Joshua sends a text to the teamâs group chat (the one without the partners), saying that he hopes Chan feels better soon. Itâs clear from the message that they talked privately and that Chan is going to be working from home the rest of the day. Something that Joshua suggests since it is quiet in the office. And, really, there isnât much that you canât do at home unless you have in-person client meetings or have to go to court. Everyone sends their well wishes and you include your own so that nothing looks suspicious. Your mind wanders, though. Is he really not feeling well? Or is it because of you? It seems kind of conceited to think that you could have that level of impact on him. Still, you worry. Realize that you care more than you thought.
By the time you leave the office, surprisingly on time, you know what you want to do. At least in part. You swing by a pho place that you love and pick up a couple of bowls to go along with some appetizers. All the things that you remember Chan liking from when you were in school. By the time you make it to his door, youâre questioning if this is really a good idea. Maybe he really doesnât feel well. Maybe he doesnât want to see you. Or maybe heâs not even home. Before you can send yourself down another mental spiral, you knock on his door. Almost hope that heâs not home.Â
Then he opens the door and your heart stutters a little.Â
Heâs not this adorably confused look on his face when he sees you. A mix of disbelief and something else. Heâs got his glasses on and his hair is a little messy. Like maybe he mightâve been laying in bed. It should not be doing something to you the way that it is. For all you know, he might really be sick and youâre making it weird. His eyes travel down to the bag in your hand. Finally, he clears his throat.
âWhat are you doing here?âÂ
You hold up the bag like some kind of peace offering. âI brought pho. Thought you might need something to eat if youâre sick.â
He snorts lightly. Rolls his eyes, yet there isnât much heat behind it. âIâm not sick. I just didnât want to come in and see you yet.â
âOh.â
âCome on in,â he says after a moment. Another sigh. Like he canât really believe what heâs saying. You have the good sense to look a little sheepish as you slip in behind him. Set the food down for a moment to toe off your shoes and then follow him into the kitchen.
The two of you are quiet as you move around each other to get the food ready. Though he doesnât say anything about you staying to eat with him, he pulls out utensils and gets you something to drink from the fridge. Warms up your bowl first before doing the same to his own. Helps you set his little table so that the two of you can sit down to eat. Canât totally help the appreciative look on his face when he opens his bowl and the smell hits him.Â
âIâm sorry, Chan,â you say when the silence starts to feel like too much.
âThat could be about a lot of things,â he says, eyes meeting you hesitantly.Â
âThatâs fair,â you concede. Set down your spoon and give him your full attention. âIâm sorry for Saturday morning. I could have handled that so much differently.âÂ
âI couldâve handled it a lot better, too,â he says after a beat. âOr, you know, not thrown it all on you that way.â
âDid you mean it?â you ask, pushing around the remaining contents of your meal to avoid looking up at him. He pauses long enough that you look up. And itâs justâŠChan. Soft smile that makes you want to smile back. Gentle eyes. Open face. The person you remember loving more than anything in the world.Â
âThat itâs always going to be you?â he asks and you nod. âYes, I did.âÂ
âIâm not sure what to do with that,â you admit.Â
âWhy donât you just start with how it made you feel?âÂ
âScared?â you venture and sigh. âNervous. A little tense. Excited. Homesick.â
That makes him laugh. âHomesick?â
You chew on your bottom lip for a moment. âYou always felt like home. And then you said that and it was justâŠI donât know. I missed the feeling of you being my home.âÂ
âIâve missed it too. Every day for the last four years.â
âChan,â you say and laugh affectionately. âI know you have not been just pining after me for years.â
âAnd if I have?âÂ
âThat might be scarier.â
âWhy?âÂ
It takes you a minute to formulate your reasoning. âWhat if it doesnât work? What if weâre just risking ending up in the same place again? What if I canât live up to the version in your head? And now we work togetherâŠâ
There it is again. Chan. Your Chan. The way he looks at you makes you think you could fly if you tried. âWhat if it does work? Are you really going to tell me youâre too scared to take the chance and get everything weâve ever wanted? Whereâs the girl I fell in love with in law school? She wasnât afraid of anything.â
âOf course I was,â you disagree, smiling so fondly.Â
âItâs okay. Iâll hold your hand if you get scared this time,â he says. Confident. Sure. ready to take the leap yet again.Â
And itâs not the same. Not really. Youâve both had four years to think about everything that happened then and everything that might happen now. To figure out what you want and what you donât. To figure out how to have the hardest conversations. To take risks because youâre not students anymore. To take a second chance. How often in life do people really get those? Do you really want to turn it down because youâre scared? Do you really want to wonder?
âI justâŠâ you start and he shakes his head. Rises out of his seat and holds his hand out to you.Â
âLetâs just try something. Without the happy hour or anything else,â he says and you give him a look. But, you want to trust him too. You nod.
Chan closes the remaining space between you. Runs a finger along your forehead to brush a hair off your face. Meets your eyes and thereâs this look of intense vulnerability there. Like he means that he can be brave enough for both of you. At least for now. And then he pulls you into him and kisses you. Sweet. Soft. Searching. The kind of kiss that two friends might share if theyâre trying to see if there are deeper feelings there. Or maybe itâs the kind of kiss that tests where each of you is now.Â
Whatever the case, you feel it. Almost instantly. You wind your arms around his neck and pull yourself tighter against him. Deepen the kiss and take the lead. Let your tongue tangle with his. Grasp at him to erase any space. He hums into your mouth as he holds you close. You break the kiss long enough to guide the two of you back to his couch. Urge him to sit down and immediately straddle his lap. Chan looks a little smug as you settle and he grabs your hips. A little like heâs getting exactly what he wants. You might be too, though. You lean in to kiss him again and he meets you hungrily. Not just letting you set the pace, but actively chasing it with you. Chanâs hands grip your hips tightly as you roll against him. Feel the way he groans at the friction.Â
Honestly, you kind of want to fuck him right here on the couch and donât even know if you can wait. Would too, if not for the doorbell suddenly ringing through the apartment. You give him a look and find heâs just as confused as you are. Clearly not expecting anyone.Â
âWill youâŠâ he starts as you shift to get off him.
âAre you expecting anyone?â you ask and he shakes his head.Â
âJust give me a minute. Iâm going to go into the bathroom,â he says.Â
Itâs your turn to nod. You try and smooth down your clothes. Take a couple breaths. As soon as you see him get to the bathroom, you move towards his front door. Mentally prepare to make some excuse to whoever it is. Nothing prepares you for the person on the other side.
âOh, hi.âÂ
Your brain immediately short circuits because what the actual fuck is Joshua doing on the other side of the door looking at you like that. Suddenly, youâre wishing that you had checked your appearance in a mirror before answering.Â
âJoshua.â
âI was coming by to see Chan,â he says and looks at the door. âIâm pretty sure this is his apartment and not yours.â
âNo, yeah, it is. I just stopped by to bring him some food since he was sick,â you say and Joshua looks entirely unconvinced.
âRight,â he says, drawing out the word.Â
âHeâs just in the bathroom if you wantâŠâ
âI was just bringing by some case files that werenât scanned yet in case he wanted to work from home again tomorrow,â Joshua says and holds out the folders.
âDid you want to come in?âÂ
âNo, why donât you just give them to him?â Joshua asks. That smug smile makes you want to burrow into the floor and die.Â
âLook, Joshua,â you start and take a deep breath. âItâs justâŠwell, I said some things after happy hour that I shouldnât have and I just wantedâŠâ
Joshua holds up a hand. âYou donât owe me an explanation for why youâre here. Thereâs no rule against hanging out.â
âRight, butâŠâ
âYou might owe me an explanation for why you didnât tell me that you were, you knowâŠâ
âComing over?â
The look he gives you says that he knows a lot more than you realize. Thankfully, a moment later he puts you out of your misery. âThat you were the ex he couldnât get over.â
Your jaw drops open. Youâre usually so much better at maintaining composure. Then again, thatâs not really true when youâre close to someone, is it?
âI donâtâŠâÂ
He waves you off. âThereâs been a million signs for someone that knows you as well as I do. Be careful and for once in your life, donât worry about the damn rules.â
âThanks, Joshua,â you say earnestly. He gives you his real smile. That one thatâs soft and kind and reserved for people he also cares about.
âWork from home tomorrow. Iâll see you Wednesday,â he says and turns to leave before you can respond. After a moment, you walk back in to find Chan peeking out from the bathroom.
âWho was it?â he asks and steps towards you.
âWell, I guess that catâs out of the bag,â you say with an uneasy chuckle.
âWhat do youâŠ?âÂ
You hold up the files that Joshua brought by. âThat was Joshua dropping these off in case you wanted to work from home again tomorrow.â
âOh, shit.â
âYeah.â
âAre youâŠupset that he knows?âÂ
You study Chanâs face for a moment. Realize that he is just letting you set the expectations. Set the tone and the speed and everything else. âNo.âÂ
âSo?âÂ
âIf you can forgive me for not responding in the best way the other morning, then I guess we try again?âÂ
The smile that breaks across his face nearly takes your breath away. So soft. Genuine. Full of affection. Like heâs in his first year of law school again. All bright eyed and full of optimism. A second later, he closes the space between you and pulls you into his body. Peppers kisses all over your face, making you laugh in a way you havenât in years.Â
âWait,â he says, pulling back. You frown at him. âYou did break it off with that guy, right?â
Of all the things to ask right then, you cannot believe this is what he asks. It pulls another genuine laugh out of you. Makes you swat at his arm. âYes, you idiot.â
âWhen?â
âWhat?â
âWhen did you do it?âÂ
For some reason, the question makes you hesitate. Do you admit how deep in this you already are? âSaturday.â
That pulls him up short. âThen whyâŠ?â
âI was scared, Chan. And I didnât want to break off whatever it was with him just because of you. If Iâm being honest, itâs been a while coming,â you say and sheepishly look away. Take a breath and meet his eyes again. Time to be brave. âI knew it was wrong after that date I went on. The one that I missed happy hour for?â
âSo I wasnât crazy,â he says triumphantly.Â
âI mean, you are, but not for that reason,â you say and earn your own swat. âI donât know, I was just on the date and something wasnât clicking. It wasnâtâŠâ
âWasnât so perfect?â Chan asks, a little smug.
âNo, he really is perfect. On paper, at least. But, heâs not you. And youâre all my heart seems to want now that youâre back in my life,â you admit. Brave. Keep being brave.
âYou could have had me way earlier,â he says. The barest pout makes an appearance.Â
You shake your head. âIâm not sure it wouldâve worked then. I needed to grow. To realize what I wanted and what I didnât. I think we both needed it.â
âMaybe,â he concedes and then looks over at you again. âCan I go back to kissing you?â
âOh my god,â you exclaim. Itâs so like him to break up a heavier moment with something light. Still, you do want to kiss him.Â
Itâs nothing like a few nights prior. No frenzy, no desperation. The kiss starts straight off being deep and intense. The kind of kiss that makes you wonder why you ever bothered dating anyone else in the world. The kind that claims you, body and soul. The kind that seals promises into your lips. The kind where you could agree to absolutely anything and know it still would be okay.Â
Maybe it had to fall apart before so that it could work now. Maybe itâs not so scary to try and figure it all out.
summary: seungcheol has a crush and maybe a tiny a secret (or a big one) but when he finds out his princess peach doesn't care...life is suddenly good
tags/genres: college!au, friends to lovers, didn't know they were dating, virgin!cheol, mingyu is a lwk menace
word count: 2.3k
warnings: mdni | nsfw (specifics under cut)
warnings: masturbation, oral (m receiving)
Seungcheol didnât necessarily like parties. They were loud. And there were always too many people.Â
And it was too hard to talk to anyone else. Even when he wanted to talk to them.Â
So it was obviously perfect that he was sharing an apartment with guys who liked hosting parties roughly every single weekend.Â
It made total sense.Â
But heâd been friends with Mingyu and Soonyoung since they were kids. So he didnât really have an option.Â
Besides, the one perk of rooming with Soonyoung was the fact that y/n was his stepsister. And she was always around.Â
Like always.Â
Even though that meant that she and Soonyoung were constantly bickering over every stupid detail, right down to who was actually going to win Season 6 of Top ChefâŠdespite the fact that Season 6 of Top Chef was like 12 years old and had a clearly googleable winner.Â
Seungcheol didnât care for the very sensible reason that whenever y/n was around (always), she literally treated him like furniture - she sat in his lap, played with his hair, and always knew what menu he preferred from the places they ordered food from.Â
And she never judged him for playing as Yoshi when they played Mario Kart. He was not trying to argue with Mingyu or Soonyoung for âMario privilegesâ that inevitably led to some kind of literal fight.Â
He was too tired for that.Â
Instead, y/n would toss him a controller and quietly take a second one, and sit in his lap, and they would play through a game while Mingyu and Soonyoung fought it out.Â
Her Princess Peach game was actually really good. Better than Mingyu or Soonyoung.
And when it came to parties, she always appeared and made it less awkward for him. Especially when everyone was coupled up.Â
Because Seungcheol was never coupled.Â
Not officially, anyway.Â
He didnât even try, actually. Because why when y/n was there and âŠ
And if he were going to ask someone out, it would be her.Â
It would definitely be her.Â
Heâd thought about it for ages. But it kind of freaked him out because she knew him. Like knew that he definitely had a phase where he thought the girl from Team Rocket was really hot.Â
And none of that bothered her - not his dorkiness, or the fact that he got too nervous in groups, or the way he was just quiet sometimes.Â
She never seemed to care.Â
Other girls definitely cared. Seungcheol had been dragged on enough double dates with Mingyu to know that he was not a universally accepted flavor of âboy.âÂ
Mingyu had drunkenly called Seungcheol an âacquiredâ taste, and heâd also said for Seungcheol to forget anyone who didnât like him for him.Â
It was a sweet and slightly derogatory conversation with a guy who could pull any girl he wanted.Â
Seungcheol just wanted to pull y/n.Â
But there was one thing that kind of gave him pause. And it wasnât just social awkwardness.Â
It was the very real fact that Seungcheol was a virgin.Â
He thought about fucking. He thought about hooking up.Â
And it was like dating, because why spend time at loud parties when he knew who he liked? And it wasnât just that he knew who he liked, it was like who else would he even try to fuck, like meaningfully, anywayâŠ
Y/n was the only irl girl Seungcheol really thought about. Even when he was jerking off, and his mind wandered, it always kind of landed on her and the way she sometimes left little braids in his hair and how soft her skin was and how perfect her lips were and the way her shampoo reminded him of something warm and sexy. And the way she sometimes basically climbed into his hoodie to take a nap on the sofa with him.Â
She was better than porn when he needed to come.Â
He would lie there, breathless, fingers sticky, staring at the ceiling, wondering vaguely if she ever fingered herself. And if she did, did she ever think about him?Â
Heâd gotten far enough with girls to have squeezed tits and felt a few pussies.Â
So he wasnât working purely from imagination when he imagined y/nâs perfect tits and how they would feel in his hands. Or when he imagined her pussy being tight and wet and needy for him.Â
And then he would shower and go to study and probably end up next to her in the library.Â
âąâąâą
But tonight was kind of weird.Â
She looked annoyed with everyone at the party.Â
She kept sighing.Â
And drinking.Â
And watching Mingyu.Â
Seungcheol didnât love that. He hated it, actually, the way her gaze kept shifting away from him and landing on someone else.Â
âYou okay?â he asked, leaning in, wanting to touch her chin.Â
She sighed and nodded. But her gaze drifted again.Â
He watched her for a moment longer. âYou look annoyed,â he whispered.Â
âDo I?â she asked and grabbed his sleeve, pulling him upstairs.Â
Seungcheol wasnât expecting to be pulled into his own room and have the door locked.Â
He also wasnât expecting the sudden press of her lips against his.Â
His eyelids fluttered closed. He thought it would stop suddenly, but it didnât.Â
After a moment, his hands went to her waist, pulling her close. Her fingers carded through his hair, and her hips rolled lightly against his.Â
She sighed softly and pulled away just enough to look at him. âMingyuâs a dick,â she murmured.Â
Seungcheol blinked slowly. âWhat? Why?â he asked.Â
She flushed slightly. âHe said that I should stop flirting with you if Iâm not going to do anythingâŠâ she trailed off.Â
Seungcheol immediately felt his face warm. âWhat?â he asked again.Â
âStop saying âwhat?â,â she whispered, hitting his chest lightly.Â
âFine, but youâre like 14 steps ahead in a conversation I wasnât part of,â he said quickly.Â
She sighed and nodded. âI know, okay, just he said I cock block you and if Iâm not going to make a move then Iâm being a dick,â she said it all rapidly in her âfucking-Mingyu-knows-NOTHINGâ voice while she walked around Seungcheolâs room, picking up a tennis ball and throwing it against the ground a few times.Â
Seungcheol sat on the edge of his desk. He was fully aware of her angry tennis ball tossing. She did it when the one econ professor she had this semester kept drilling her on partial derivatives.Â
He waited for her to make a few loops before he reached out and caught the edge of her shirt, pulling gently, wanting her closer.Â
She folded easily against him, sitting in his lap. She sighed. âYou know, just because he fucks everything with a pulse,â she muttered.Â
Seungcheol snorted. âShit, thatâs â kind of accurate,â he laughed.Â
She nodded, still looking angry. âItâs just not his business,â she murmured, leaning on Seungcheolâs shoulder. âBut youâre my Yoshi and Iâm your Princess Peach and Mingyu is pretending heâs having an MMA match with my idiot stepbrother because MARIO BRO, so fuck him,â she whispered, nuzzling closer to Seungcheol.Â
Seungcheol was quiet for a moment. âSo, in this scenario, Princess Peach likes Yoshi and Mingyu is a prick?â he asked, voice soft.Â
She nodded. âYes, but itâs, you know, all the time - Princess Peach likes Yoshi all the time, and fucking Mario needs to shut up,â she muttered, her lips brushing Seungcheolâs throat. Â
Seungcheol nodded, kissing the top of her head, smiling to himself.Â
She stayed there for few minutes, her fingers tracing slightly against his shoulder. And then she sighed and leaned up - her warmth going with herÂ
Seungcheol watched.Â
She turned back to him. âSo do you - do you want to make out?â She asked, voice soft, gaze going everywhere but him.Â
He nodded. âYeah,â he answered.Â
She hummed in response and slid off his lap. He watched her go to sit on his bed. He swallowed tightly, seeing her actually there, literally on his duvet. Not based on friendly pretexts but because she wanted to make out.Â
He moved.Â
His brain was slightly mushy.Â
He didnât sit next to her.
He somehow moved so he was straddling her, and she was leaning back, his hands tracing along her thighs, pulling them around his waist while he ducked down, lips finding hers easily. She moaned sweetly, her fingers catching in his hair.Â
He felt the way her hips pressed against his. He let go of her thigh, fingers tracing up to her hip, along her side, and to her breast.Â
Her thighs squeezed his waist as she licked into him.Â
She gasped when he pinched her nipple. He felt the way she arched into him - the way her hands started to trace down his back and under his shirt.Â
He kissed her harder, wanting her. When he leaned back, breathless, he stared at her for a moment. âGood?â he asked.Â
She nodded. âYeah, you?â
He blinked slowly, nodding and leaning into her again, renewing the kiss, licking into her, tasting her.Â
He was very good.
Everything felt slow. Slow and good and sweet.Â
He let her pull his shirt off. She dropped it off the edge of the bed and topped him easily. He leaned back into the pillows, watching her pull her shirt off, the way her hands went to her tits, squeezing them while she watched him.Â
He was already so hard - too hard. The soft rocking of her hips against him was almost evil. But then she caught his hands with hers and guided them to her breasts.Â
âTouch me,â she whispered.Â
He gave a small nod, biting his lip. A tiny part of his brain almost registered that this was all thanks to Mingyu and his big fucking mouth. But Seungcheol was quick to shut that part of his brain down. So quick.Â
Instead, he leaned up, keeping her balanced against his thighs while he kissed and sucked her left breast and then her right one, listening to her moan his name softly, feeling her pull his hair gently.Â
And when he pulled back, he was surprised to see the way she looked at him, her pupils blown, her lips bitten red and slick with spit.Â
âStill good?â he asked.Â
She nodded. âMhmm, perfect,â she murmured, leaning down to him, kissing him again, her tongue hot against his.Â
He felt her press him back, and he followed along, lying back, letting her shift from his mouth to his throat, down his chest.Â
And then his stomach.Â
Her fingers were already unbuttoning his pants when he felt her lips ghost the waistband of his underwear. He felt the small kisses and the warmth of her mouth over him, through his boxers.Â
He groaned, his hand catching in her hair, winding in the soft tresses. He tried to control his breathing.Â
He didnât want to come too fast.Â
He didnât want to be obvious.Â
But her lips were so fucking soft against his skin. And the way she worked his pants and underwear off, the way his dick sprang free, and the fact that she bit her lip and moaned when she saw him was maybe more than he could handle.Â
The way she kissed the side of his cock was delicious and obscene. And more than Seungcheol had imagined.Â
He closed his eyes tight, grasping the edge of the pillow with his left hand, his right hand still winding softly in her hair.
Her mouth was so warm, he gasped hard. He closed his eyes tighter, trying to stay focused.Â
He was surprised when she leaned up. âToo much?âÂ
He let out a breath. âNo,â he mumbled.Â
She shifted up, close, leaning over him. She leaned in carefully, her lips brushing his, and then she kissed him gently, her fingers circling his dick.Â
He moaned into her as she jerked him off. Her grip was good, better than his. He closed his eyes tight again.Â
It was like she knew. Because she paused again, pulling away. âJust come,â she whispered against his cheek.Â
âYou barely touched me,â he mumbled. Shame had apparently exited his brain along with everything else that wasnât her.Â
She smirked, kissing his temple. âAnd then youâll get hard again, and Iâll go down on you again,â she whispered.Â
She worked his cock again. And this time he didnât worry about lasting, he just felt his orgasm and the way she worked him through it.Â
And then she sat up, grabbing tissues from a shelf and wiping him clean.Â
She sighed and traced her hands down his chest. âFuck, youâre really hot,â she murmured.Â
He smirked. âYeah, I just came from like you looking at me, soâŠâ he trailed off.Â
She rolled her eyes. âAnd?â
He managed to avoid enumerating the times heâd heard Mingyu through the wall with a girl, and the way it lasted for like an hour.Â
Instead, he just squeezed her hips, letting his gaze shift along her torso.Â
âYou really donât care?â He asked, softly.Â
She shook her head. âNo, Yoshi,â she sighed, âPrincess Peach was very clear earlier - and if Princess Peach wanted a different dick without all the cute, sweet things that she associates with Yoshi, she would be pursuing a different dick,â she answered, brows slightly raised in anticipation of further commentary.Â
Seungcheol couldnât help the grin he felt forming on his lips. âRight,â he mumbled.Â
She nodded, glancing up at him. âRight.â
âąâąâą
They didnât fuck.Â
She borrowed Seungcheolâs clothes, grabbing a tshirt that was apparently her âfavoriteâ to pair with boxers, and then she snuggled next to him while they watched Howlâs Moving Castle.Â
And when Mingyu started fucking someone against his desk at approximately 2:45 AM, she sat up, rapped on the shared wall and shouted, âShut the fuck up Kim Mingyu! Your ancestors are watching!âÂ
Seungcheol couldnât help but giggle as she dove under the covers to hide against him. He snorted and pulled her close.Â
They both listened to the resounding silence, which only made Seungcheol grin because heâd never been able to get Mingyu to shut up.Â
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PAIRING:Â Hitman!Junhui x Spy!Reader
SUMMARY:Â You and Junhui have the perfect life together. Sure, you've failed to mention you're a spy for Clockwork and he never mentioned being a hitman for Protocol, but what couple doesn't lie? The lies work - until Junhui is tasked with killing you, his perfect wife who has secrets he never dreamed of.
TOTAL WC:Â 15,647
AU:Â 1920s Era, Action
GENRE: Established Relationship, Angst, Smut, Romance
RATING:Â 18+ Minors are strictly prohibited from engaging in and reading this content. It contains explicit content and any minors discovered reading or engaging with this work will be blocked immediately.
WARNINGS: General violence, fighting, action sequences, shootouts, illegal activities especially for the 1920s, attempted assassination between spouses, mild depictions of blood and gore and death, mild bullet wounds and stitching, a lot of internalized guilt and shame, both characters are lying to each other about the same thing, some angst throughout, explicit sexual content including oral (f. rec), unprotected vaginal sex, mild overstim, mild praise kink, vaginal fingering, lil bit possessive during sex, multiple orgasms, multiple positions... I think that mostly covers it.
AN: I am so excited to be releasing this today! I hope that Junhui's debut on my blog is as good as the people deserve and lives up to the hype! More Junhui to come soon, but for now, enjoy my Mr. and Mrs. Smith inspired world :) This is not beta-read sorry :/
A/N 2: This is for the Puttin' on the Ritz collab by @studiosvt and I could not be more honored to be apart of this project.
MAIN M. LISTÂ |Â ASKÂ | PUTTIN' ON THE RITZ COLLAB
JUNHUI ALWAYS SAYS YOU'RE A GOOD WIFE, BUT YOU KNOW YOU'RE NOT. Junhui excuses a lot of your behavior though, because he is a good husband. He is everything a good husband ought to be - hard working, intelligent, kind, strong, and doting. Better even, is that he's not exactly a traditional husband, which might make the neighbors think he isn't a very good one. He doesn't ask questions, he doesn't chastise you when you keep unexplainably strange hours and business travels, and he doesn't get mad at you.
Ever.
You know you're not a good wife. You're a decent cook and you cook meals as often as you can. You always send holiday cards to his coworkers. You make sure to pack him lunches. You kiss him when he goes to work. You sit through tutoring sessions with him, letting him think he's teaching you Mandarin. You show up for all of the neighbors party's on his arm, and you leave him to his hobbies without pestering him to clean up the house or do chores.
But you're a liar and good wives don't lie to their husbands.
Outside, the city that never sleeps is wide awake. The cab rattles up Fifth Avenue, the horn blaring as a Model T Ford roars past, the chrome reflecting under the glow of the streetlamps. Overhead, the skyline is filled with shadowy outlines of the buildings, the Woolworth Building tallest among them, watching over the city. Your eyes snag on a billboard for Lucky Strikes, bright and bold against the night sky.
Glancing at the slim watch on your wrist, you realize you're late again. Your business meeting had run long, and though Junhui thinks you were off in Brooklyn selling medical equipment, it's a far cry from your real job spent tangled in coded messages and back-alley assassinations for Clockwork.
Your agency demands perfection. Your husband does not, thank the Lord. He had agreed to meet you at the Harringtons' holiday party in their Upper East Side townhouse - probably because he expected you to be late - and he was probably fending off back-handed compliments and inquiries about where is your slippery wife?
Junhui wouldn't mind. He never did.
That was because he was the perfect husband. Your perfect husband that you lived with in your perfect home, a graceful brownstone on East 77th Street. It was a late-Victorian building made of warm brown sandstone, flanked by wrought-iron gates and a manicured front stoop. It was the perfect home inside and out, with parquet floors and walls paneled in dark walnut and decorated with the perfect art.
It was a perfect home for a perfect couple. You'd chosen it together three years ago, shortly after your wedding when Junhui's investments in radio stocks and automobile companies began paying well. He traveled nearly as often as you did - Chicago, China, Paris, London - but the house waited in its perfect little shadow.
Pretending to be perfect was a requirement. Junui didn't have to play the part, though. You did.
The taxi pulls up to the curb and you pay the driver with a crisp bill. The air has a chill bite to it when you step out, the faint scent of coal smoke drifting from nearby chimneys. Your heels click on the pavement as you hurry up the steps, the fur stole around your shoulders scratching against the silk of your dress as you go.
You briefly touch the necklace at your throat to ensure it's there - a gift from your husband when he had visited his parents in Shenzhen. You'd changed in a hurry at an agency safe house downtown, but you made sure to look every bit the part of a dutiful wife to a successful financier, including wearing the beautiful and often thoughtful gifts he showered you in.
As you reach the door, it opens. You startle when you see Junhui smiling at you, as though he had been waiting by the window for your arrival to time welcoming you just right. Which he had been. You'd seen his familiar silhouette on the second floor, but you hadn't expected him to beat you.
"There you are," he says softly, smiling.
He's dressed in a tailored black dinner jacket that pulls tight across his broad shoulders, a crisp white shirt with a wing collar underneath. The silk bow knotted at his throat is knotted with precision, but you reach up to tweak it anyway, just because you can.
Junhui's hair is slicked back, the lamps in the hallway turning his skin gold. Your heart skips a little as he escorts you inside, a strand of dark hair escaping his slick back to brush endearingly over his brows. You can't help but stare a little at his face - handsome and expressive, and a large part of the reason you'd noticed him at a gala five years ago.
A little flare of possessiveness goes through you. You wonder if he has any idea how all the wives of his friends wish they were married to him instead, the handsome and mysterious businessman from overseas.
As always, he doesn't ask where you've been. He never does. Instead, he reaches for your hand and leans forward, pressing a light kiss to your forehead. "You look stunning, tiÄnshÇ. The Harringtons will be envious. Mrs. Harrington was asking about you - said she missed your deviled eggs at the bridge club."
You force a smile, the guilt twisting like a knife. "I'm sorry I'm late. The client in Brooklyn was particular."
He waves it off, helping you out of your stole before hanging it in the hall closet. "No need to say sorry, my love. I finished up early at the office today. Seungcheol was in a mood about the margin calls, but nothing a good lunch at Delmonico's couldn't smooth over."
Your heart squeezes when he chuckles and shuts the closet door. If your husband had any idea how often your business dealings brushed against the very financial world he navigated, he'd be dizzy and confused for days.
Junhui is intelligent, which makes your role as his wife more challenging than most people of your profession were willing to take on. He dissected market trends, turning modest inheritances through calculated risks in utilities and aviation stocks. He's the kind of husband who notices things but doesn't say anything, and you love him for it.
You shouldn't love him. You do anyway.
It's hard not to. He's unwaveringly kind, always tipping waiters generously, remembering birthdays for neighbors and secretaries, volunteering on the weekends to tutor kids in English and Mandarin alike. And doting - flowers delivered just because, notes tucked into your pockets, evenings spent rousing you from the couch to move you to bed.
And he is stuck with you for a wife. He calls you a good wife, but good wives don't lie. Spies do, though.
The Harringtons' part waits, full of jazz and bootleg champagne. Another evening of playing the perfect couple. Another evening of secrets.
Inside the Harringtons' home glows bright against the December night. The air is thick with the scent of pine from the massive Christmas tree in the corner, cigar smoke, and sweet perfume. A jazz trio plays in the corner of the parlor where Junhui escorts you, his hand steady and warm at the small of your back.
The moment you step into the room, heads turn. Not dramatically, but you feel every eye flicker to you - you're trained to know that kind of thing - every gaze appraising.
"There she is!" Charles Harringtonâs voice booms from across the room. "The elusive Mrs. Wen at last. We were beginning to think you'd been kidnapped!"
The small circle around him chuckles quietly. You smile but he has no idea that you have been kidnapped. Thrice, in fact, when you were younger and less experienced with the agency. Once recently on purpose as part of an interrogation.
"What a ridiculous notion, Charles," you laugh back, approaching with Junhui. "Only delayed by a very stubborn client. I'm afraid Brooklyn doesn't keep the same hours as Manhattan."
Junhui laughs that low, easy sound of his, dispelling tension before it can gather. "She's braver than most."
You think your husband would make a good spy. He works the room without even trying, nodding here and shaking hands there, dipping to compliment women appropriately and warmly. People like him because he makes them feel seen without ever making them feel studied, which is important in crowds like this.
You accept a teacup from a passing tray and sniff lightly. It's bootleg gin with a twist of lemon and when you take a sip, you wince. It's not very good gin, but with the laws around alcohol, who really can get good gin? You sip while Junhui drifts toward a knot of brokers near the fireplace,
Caroline tucks her arm through yours, steering you toward the buffet. "Come, let me show you what everyone's been raving about. The oysters came in this morning straight from the Sound. By the way, your deviled eggs were the talk at bridge club last week - which you missed. You'll have to give me the recipe."
"It's nothing special. Just a little paprika and too much mustard."
"Nonsense." Caroline flutters her fingers at you. They're covered in rings, a mix of antique and new. "Everything you touch turns gold, it seems. Junhui is a lucky man. And so patient, too! Most husbands would be positively feral if their wives were running around Brooklyn."
You feel the comment for what it is - a gentle probe. You're used to the women trying to ferret out your secrets, all of them more eager than the last to unwrap the mystery that is Junhui's wife. You meet her smile like you always do, unwavering as you sip your gin.
"He's very understanding," you reply. "I'm the lucky one."
She hums, agreeing but not liking your dodging of her question. She won't press until she's had more cocktails, at least. Caroline is not the boldest woman in the circle of people you tentatively call friends, but after a few drinks, she'll be demanding answers you won't give.
Across the room, Junhui catches your gaze. He tilts his head slightly, a silent question - are you alright? You nod once and he gives you a small, private smile. You smile back, heart still racing a little.
Stupid, traitorous heart.
The music shifts and turns the energy in the room, couples dancing. One of Junhui's friends - Chan, as you recall his name - offers you a dance. Junhui winks at you and you sigh, letting the younger man pull you into a dance.
You don't like dancing, but the muscle memory kicks in. Clockwork had you trained in all manner of skills, including dancing. It was a useful skill when you were at galas and parties, using it to move about the room as another form of surveillance.
When the song ends, your partner bows to you and you thank him for the dance, drifting toward your husband as he turns to you with another cup of gin. You step close to him and he leans down, breath fanning your ear as he murmurs, "Why is it you always look ready to start a coup?"
"It was only a small one."
He smiles and kisses your temple. "And this is why I don't play bridge with you."
"You don't know how to play bridge, Jun."
"I'd learn for you."
There he goes again. You don't know what to do with him. This song and dance is both familiar and strange. You'd married Junhui because you could and because it was allowed within your line of work. Marriages made people of your skill set seem normal. Harmless. And Junhui had been vetted and cleared, as normal as they could get.
You hadn't intended to marry him because you liked him, but you certainly did. Which is why you felt rotten guilt every time you thought too much about it, how he had no idea that his wife had an entire double life eliminating people that a secret agency deemed too dangerous to continue living.
Because that's mostly what Clockwork was about. World advancement and keeping humanity in a forward propulsion was Clockwork's main goal, which meant that the agency had its fingers in all manner of realms: political, financial, corporation, social, casual, cultural, environmental. There is no shortage of influences across the globe that your agency doesn't have, and you are only one of its thousands of agents.
You sip your gin, letting the burn ground you. The party swirls on, louder and looser now. Someone has opened the French doors to the terrace and cold air rushes in, carrying the scent of snow and distant coal smoke. A few brave souls venture into the cold to smoke, the acrid smell of cigarettes drifting in with their laughter.
Junhui eventually sets his cup on a side table, turning to face you with a soft grin.
"What?" You ask, laughing as he pries the cup from your hand to set it down.
"Dance with me?"
It's not really a question but you nod anyway as he takes your hand to draw you into the slow sway of the next song. His palm is warm at your waist, his other hand cradling yours, fingers rough. You always thought it was strange that he had such rough hands for a financier. You ignore it, resting your cheek against his shoulder, breathing in the bay rum and the faint trace of cigar smoke.
"You're quiet tonight," he notes softly, switching to his native tongue. You smile. It feels like you get a part of him no one else does. "Are you alright?"
"Long day."
It was. You'd killed a man today, but you can't tell him that. So you settle for this, swaying against him with the steady beat of his heart pumping underneath your cheek. He doesn't push you - he never does.
You look up at him - really look. The soft glow of the chandelier turns his eyes warm and dark, the single escaped strand of hair still brushing his brow. For a single, reckless second, you want to tell him everything. You want to tell him how you'd been recruited right after you turned eighteen to an agency more secret and elusive than the CIA. You want to tell him sometimes your weeks on trips are spent overseas hunting people down. Extracting information. That even when you're halfway around the world, you hope your gentle husband is reading a book in his study.
You don't tell him. You can't.
Resting your head against his chest again, you think how nice it is to have the perfect husband and how sad it is that he has a rotten wife.
-
The clock strikes midnight as Junhui stands in the alley behind the speakeasy on Mulberry Street, a siren wailing in the distance. The air smells like the rotted garbage coming from the flowing bins and the metallic tang of the rusted fire escapes above him.
His gloved hands are steady, keeping his hands dry from the warm blood that flows from the neck of the man in his clutches. The Clockwork agent gurgles, wet and desperate before he sags forward. Junhui lets him crumple against the cold brick wall, blood spattering as he goes. The body hits the ground soundlessly - no noise, just how Junhui prefers it.
Silence is Protocol's highest priority, and tonight, he is very much that.
He wipes the blade methodically on the man's coat, noting that it's a nice make from Paris. He only knows fashion because you like fashion, and he thinks that maybe the next time he's in Paris he should grab one himself. You'd like that, he's sure.
Junhui tucks the weapon back into the hidden sheath at his ankle and stands. His pulse is even and his breathing is controlled despite the adrenaline rushing in his veins. He scans the hallway, but the only witness to the murder is a stray cat prowling near the dumpster with luminous eyes.
As usual, it was too easy. Clockwork operatives are often arrogant, too reliant on their skills and their agency's aura of inevitability. They always were. Junhui stares down at the man with a flicker of irritation. The self-righteous architects at Clockwork think they're better than everyone, molding the future and the world to their vision of engineered perfection.
Sighing, Junhui straightens his tight, the silk smooth under his fingers. You'd bought him this tie for Christmas a few weeks ago. He makes sure to wear it often and to make sure you see that he's wearing it. He likes when you buy him things, even though he certainly deserves nothing for you. You're the perfect wife buying her seemingly perfect husband gifts, but if you had half the idea of the rot inside of him, you might not spoil him so much.
He steps out into the alley, merging into the foot traffic on Mulberry, the chill January wind whipping at his overcoat. Horns blare from taxis on Canal Street and the faint sizzle of chestnuts from a vendor's cart reaches him as he walks, hands shoved in his pockets to keep the cold out.
The walk to the subway is brisk. Businessmen stagger from speakeasies, ties askew, breath fogging in the cold. Junhui pauses to buy a newspaper from a newsboy, tucking it under his arm as he goes. Blending in is as important as possible. No one knows there's blood on his gloves and a murder weapon hidden at his ankle.
Protocol had trained him well. They'd recruited him early at university as an economics theory major, his mind and intelligence surgical - exactly the type of agents they like. His background in martial arts through his childhood proved lethal as well, making him the perfect blend of already dangerous and easy to teach.
He'd risen quickly, specializing in clean hits that required little glamour or grandeur. Being unnoticed was his preference, and he was good at it.
Except when it came to you. You had noticed him at that art gala five years ago, wandering over to him and asking him what he thought of the art. He'd recited something rote from his flashcards he had looked at in case someone had asked him his thoughts, but he hadn't expected to need them. You surprised him like that all the time, and he surprised himself by wanting to see more of you after that night.
Surprised himself even more when he asked you to marry him.
Junhui's life isn't exactly fit for marriage, but it works. You're busy as a medical supplies seller, traveling around the boroughs and often other cities. It's a strange job for a woman to have, but he doesn't care. It keeps you happy and out of the house when he's gone, which is really all that matters.
He boards the uptown train, finding a seat in a half-empty car that rocks northward as it takes off. The lights buzz overhead, casting harsh shadows on the faces around him. He takes it all in with a single sweep, a habit that he will never let go. No one here pays attention to him - there's a pair of young lovers murmuring in the corner and a single hotel worker asleep, his head against the window.
Junhui leans back against the vibrating window, the cold glass pressing through his coat to his shoulder. There's no one here who can give him any trouble, so he shuts his eyes for a bit and lets his mind wander back to you.
You're probably asleep by now, curled under the heavy quilt in the brownstone you share together. The image brings a faint smile to his face. You're a good wife, despite the whispers from the neighbors about your erratic schedule and why you have a job at all. Women don't need jobs.
But your job makes you happy, and Junhui is in the business of keeping you happy.
On more than one occasion Charles Harrington has told Junhui he should be asking more questions about a woman who travels around Brooklyn at night. Junhui doesn't ask questions, though. He never does. You don't ask questions about why a financier needs to come home after midnight from meeting with a private client, so shouldn't he return the favor?
Sometimes he wonders if you have affairs. He can't help it. He wouldn't blame you if you did. You say and do all the right things - and yet Junhui isn't around nearly as much as he should be. Plus, you're not very intimate. Junhui's guilt doesn't let himself touch you often, too afraid to kiss you the way he wants and breathe you in like he desires, knowing that it's the ultimate betrayal to do so while lying to you.
Husbands shouldn't be liars.
But no, Junhui dismisses the idea of you stepping out on him. It's not in your character. You're loyal and steadfast, and you like to pack notes in his lunches. You send holiday cards to his invented coworkers, let him delve into hobbies without a word of complaint, even if it's piano sessions that stretch into the night. You never complain about the lack of intimacy, never push for more.
You're just you. Perfect.
The train jolts to a stop at 77th Street, the doors opening with a hiss. He exits into the quieter residential part of the city, the wind carrying the promise of snow and the gas lamps lighting the way. Your home waits at the end of the block, the windows dark save for a single gold glow of the hall lamp you always leave on for him.
He smiles. It's a small thing, but it tugs at his heartstrings as he ascends the stairs. Coming home to you is far too easy when his marriage to you is mostly supposed to be a cover up. It makes him look normal in a world full of couples - that's what he told Protocol, anyway. It wasn't out of some silly attempt to make a normal life or anything beyond that except⊠he does like you.
Inside the house is dark. His shoes click on the parquet floors and he can smell lavender that you'd probably been burning again. He hands his overcoat in the closet and shuts it as silently as he can before he moves upstairs like a shadow.
The bedroom door is ajar, a sliver of moonlight spilling through. He pushes it open gently and sees you asleep on your side, one arm draped over his empty pillow, the quilt pulled to your chin against the winter chill. You look ethereal, your lips parted faintly, the tiniest snore leaving you.
Fondness surges through him. He has no idea how he ended up with someone like you, how he, with hands forever marked with violence, ended up with someone as kind and patient as you are. He creeps over to you and gives you a brief kiss on the brow, unable to help himself. It rouses you from sleep immediately but he hushes you.
"Y'okay?" You mumble.
"I'm fine, I'm sorry I'm home late. I'm going to shower."
"Okay."
He smiles at you. "Go to sleep, my love."
"Mhmm."
You thud back against the pillow and he smiles before heading over to the adjoining bathroom. He waits to turn on the light until he has the door shut behind him, unwilling to wake you again. He avoids looking in the mirror - he knows what he'll see: young, handsome, incredibly manicured. The perfect man who seems unassuming. It's all an act, the sins hidden beneath the curated surface.
Junhui strips methodically: jacket over the hamper, shirt unbuttoned to reveal the faint scar from a botched hit a few years ago. Thankfully it had happened before you, and he was able to use the excuse of surgery when you asked about the scar.
Steam billows when he turns the shower on as hot as he can get it. He feels like it's important to burn away the sin of the kill when he comes home to you, too afraid to get into bed like you'll smell the blood on his skin or sense the darkness in his shadow.
As he lathers soap, he thinks about the Clockwork agent briefly - the surprise in his face, the bubbling sound he'd made when the knife went in. Another life ended, another contract closed.
Protocol owns him. They have since they recruited him. Junhui never expected it to matter, but as the lies pile up, he feels worse and worse about it. You're as safe as can be with him, but sometimes he wonders if it would be a better life to give you over to someone who can be there for you more often.
When the shower is over, the silence is deafening. He rushes to pull his pajamas on, itching to be in the bed that smells like you and near your warmth. He exits the bathroom, letting his eyes adjust to the dark bedroom, smiling when he sees you're still sleeping.
He gets into the bed and you murmur incoherently in your sleep, shifting closer to him. He wraps an arm around you without thinking and your warmth seeps into him, chasing the alley's chill away.
For a fleeting moment, he lets himself forget the blade and the alley, pretends the kill didn't happen. Here in this bed with you, he's just Mr. Wen and you're Mrs. Wen. He's your husband, the financier, nothing shady, nothing nefarious.
It won't last long. Tomorrow morning he has to find an excuse to tell you he has to leave for Paris in two days. The assignment had come before he'd even completed his hit tonight, a terse telegram in one of the many safe houses assigned to him.
Two days to prepare for a hit isn't much, but he's used to it. It isn't a lot to go off of either, which meant it is a high profile hit. They hadn't even given him a name or affiliation, and he isn't sure what look for the flower meant. Junhui is smart though, and he has a feeling he'll know what it means when he sees it.
Tomorrow, he'll tell you over breakfast. Apologies, love. It's off to Paris. You'll nod and kiss him easily and pack his lunch without question. The cycle will repeat.
Junhui closes his eyes and pulls you closer, pressing a gentle kiss to your temple. You sigh and melt into him, and for now, it's enough. But tomorrow, the lies resume like clockwork.
He smirks at the joke before finally giving into sleep.
The wind coming off the river is sharper than he expected, the damp chill of water and the faint rot of algae wafting to him. Below, Rue du CloĂźtre is a churning river of people. Parisians in heavy coats hurry past the cathedral's facade while tourists cluster together and snap photos with box cameras.
It's hard to hear anything up here with the wind, but the clatter of hooves on cobblestones and the shrill honk of a black car trying to navigate the narrow bridge echoes to him as he finishes his set up, adrenaline pumping already.
He's set up on the flat roof of an old ecclesiastical residence, the kind of old and rotted place no one looks at. He wishes he had an overcoat, the thin shirt doing very little to keep him warm. Warm is a luxury he can't afford today, dressed in grey to blend in with his surroundings with a compression scarf pulled up to cover his lower face.
A rifle rests steady on its bipod, a sleek prototype from Protocol with a silencer and a modified Berthier with a German-made telescopic sight that lets him count the threads in a jacket on his victim if he needs to. It's obscene in its precision, and it required him several forged and real documents to get it through security and onto the private plane he took to get here.
Junhui watches below, shivering in the early morning. He's been here since first light, watching the cathedral steps, the parvis, the bridge. The crowd thickens as the morning wears on, and he watches a priest in a black cassock moving with purpose toward the side door.
No flower though. He's not sure what exactly it means, other than he'll know when he sees it. Not even the women here are dressed in floral, but the fleur de lis is everywhere. Somehow, he thinks that's not what the message meant, though. So he waits, mind straying errantly to you on occasion.
He'd felt his usual stab of guilt when he told you he was going to Paris. You'd simply smiled and told him to bring you back something pretty. The perfect wife, letting him disappear like always. He doesn't deserve you. He thinks he never has.
Sighing, he moves the scope, strafing right and then left. A flash of gold flints in the sun, small but unmistakable. He thinks nothing of it first, adjusting the scope to fix the focus. He's got the scope on a woman's throat, the delicate chain of her necklace glinting in the light. The lotus pendant on the thin chain shifts as she walks and Junhui's blood turns cold.
The pendant looks exactly like the one he'd purchased you in Shenzhen. For my wife, he'd told the jeweler, smiling because you remind him of a lotus - pure and resilient. He adjusts the scope again, heart pounding as he zooms out.
And sees you.
His stomach drops. The rifle trembles for the first time in years and he readjusts, hoping his proximity to the church lends him a miracle as he prays that it's a trick of the light, that a stranger is wearing the same necklace. But the profile sharpens and he sees the line of your jaw, the way you tilt your head, the small scar on your chin you'd told him was from a childhood fall.
You're here. In Paris. At the exact coordinates that Protocol had given him, at the exact time. With a flower he gave you.
You stop in the middle of the parvis, suddenly still. The crowd flows around you like water around a rock, a vendor bumping into your shoulder. You don't react, though. Your head turns, sweeping the crowd like you sense danger. Junhui's heart is hammering, his hands shaking as he watches you through the scope until you suddenly lift your eyes, sweeping the rooftops.
Your gaze lands impossibly on his position. He knows you can't see him - there's no way. He's three stories up with the sun at his back, and his in shadow. But he recognizes the look on your face, a predator suddenly aware there is something bigger and scarier than them hunting. Your shoulders go stiff and he tracks the way your hand twitches toward your coat pocket.
Panic slams into him. Not you. Not the woman who kisses him goodnight, who leaves notes in his lunch, who makes the brownstone feel like home instead of a safe house. The rifle is suddenly too heavy in his hands. How can you be the target? And why are you here? Only a single answer makes sense, and he cannot even think the words, lest they come true.
Suddenly, you bolt. It makes Junhui lurch, jerking the scope to track your movements but you immediately blend into the crowd. He curses and tears the rifle away, shaking as he breaks the weapon down and shoves the pieces into its satchel with frantic speed.
Gravel scrapes under his boots as he bolts for the stairwell, heart hammering. The stairs are dark and narrow but he takes two at a time, bursting onto the street level and startling a flock of doves. The crowd is thick, bodies pressing close. He weaves through them, shouldering the satchel as he scans for you.
Terror grips him. What if you disappear? What if Protocol has a backup for you? What if you're here to kill him?
He cuts through a narrow passage off Rue du CloĂźtre. He spots you up ahead, your coat flashing as you turn into a shadowed courtyard entry. He accelerates, boots splashing in shallow puddles, his hand slipping into his pocket for the concealed gun on instinct.
He steps into the courtyard mouth just as you whirl, a gun in hand pointed directly at him. His heart squeezes painfully, both of you freezing. A thousand emotions flit across your face in that second, the gun trembling in your hand as you stare at him, open mouthed. You look as terrified as he feels.
"Junhui?" Your voice is barely above a whisper, voice cracking.
A patch of sun hits you between roofs. You don't squint in the light, trained to stare at him. The light catches on your necklace, the lotus looking right back at him. Find the flower. He sure has, he just hadn't expected it to be his wife.
"Hi, love."
-
You circle the parvis of Notre-Dame slowly, the cobblestones uneven beneath your low heels. The cathedral looms above, its twin towers dark against the pale sky. Gargoyles leer down at you, watching you as though they know what you're here to do. Perhaps they do. You're not particularly religious, but the marvel of Notre-Dame inspires a healthy respect for religion as you eye the stone facades.
The air is sharp with the smell of the Seine, the damp stone and river mud serving as a faint undercurrent to the coal smoke from barges sliding past on the water. Tourists cluster together near the main facade, collars turned up against the wind. You duck your head as you walk, your necklace swinging with every step.
Clockwork's instructions had been simple, delivered through the encrypted telegram in your hotel room: enter the cathedral, eliminate the woman in the blue coat near the altar, no witnesses, vanish.
Bone-deep anxiety has clung to you since you docked in La Havre. Junhui had mentioned his business trip was in Paris as well, though you know he's off doing finance deals or something in the Bourse. He's somewhere buried in tickers and ledges and here you are walking toward a holy place to will a stranger.
Still, the feeling won't leave you.
The anxiety gets worse, turning to a sharp prickle at the back of your neck, the same instinct that has saved you in back alleys and safe houses over the years. It's the instinct that tells you someone is watching you.
You pause near a vendor cart selling postcards of the rose window, pretending to browse. Your eyes sweep the crowd, but there's no one obvious or lingering too long. You move again, circling as the wind picks up, carrying the scent of chestnuts.
The prickle sharpens.
You stop in the middle of the parvis, the crowd flowing around you. A vendor bumps into your shoulder and murmurs a quick apology in French, but you don't listen to him. You tilt your head, eyes lifting slowly as you scan the rooftops across the way. There's a bunch of old ecclesiastical buildings, their grey roofs slick with frost and chimneys.
Sunlight catches something - metal bright and brief. Your heart lurches when you realize it's the unmistakable flash of a rifle scope glinting from a high vantage point.
A gunman. Your stomach drops. Clockwork hadn't mentioned backup, which means this is opposition. Protocol, most likely. Their agents have been trying to kill you for years, but the paid thugs aren't nearly as refined as they think they are.
Without thinking twice, you bolt.
You weave through the tourists, shoulder clipping a man, apologies lost in your flight. The parvis gives way to a narrow street and you fash down it, your breath coming out in short gasps as you run, coat flapping. You hear nothing but your own pulse as you turn right and then left, ducking under an archway and past shuttered shops with faded signs.
What you need is a dead end, somewhere to wait and eliminate whoever follows. The gun in your pocket is loaded with two shots - enough to get the job done.
The alley narrows further, the walls high and mossy, sunlight barely reaching you. You spot a courtyard up ahead, a small and forgotten space behind an old residence, the iron gate half opened with ivy crawling over it. Perfect. You slip inside, drawing your gun and turning, ready.
Footsteps echo, fast and deliberate. You ready yourself, widening your stance as a shadow appears at the gate and -
Your husband stands there in a gray shirt, compression scarf pulled down around his neck, pistol in hand but low. His hair is mused from the wind, strands falling in his eyes that widen when they see you - shock, followed immediately by something raw and pain.
You freeze.
"Junhui?" The word comes out cracked, a million thoughts racing through your mind.
He doesn't move closer, gun still raised. "Hi, love."
The courtyard feels too small, the walls pressing in. The damp air is thick in your throat, and the lotus necklace burns against your skin like a brand. You stare at him - your husband - the man who kisses your forehead, who plays piano in the parlor, who never asks where you've been. Here. In Paris. With a rifle bag on his shoulder.
The pieces crash together.
"You were on the roof." Your voice was shaking. "That was you."
He nods. "Assignment."
The word turns your stomach to acid. Assignment. Not finance, not stocks. Assignment.
"Protocol?"
He swallows, gun lowering a little as he nods. "Clockwork?"
Understanding hits you like a physical blow. His agency has hated yours and vice versa for years. Clockwork's vision of controlled progress doesn't quite match with Protocol's military pragmatism, and somehow despite both agencies vetting, the two of you have married enemies.
Or have you? Has he known all along? You're not sure, but the horror on his face is either well practiced or genuine. You don't lower the gun just in case, despite the fact that he sags, defeated.
"You're here to kill me," you tell him. It isn't a question.
"I didn't know it was you. Until I saw the necklace. The flower." You don't move. "I'm not going to kill you."
"How do I know that?"
"I guess you don't." He puts his gun in his coat pocket and holds both of his hands up, a white flag. "Kill me if you wish."
His words hit like a slap. You recoil physically, your arm dropping as you lower the weapon. He seems a little relieved, but you're horror stricken. Kill him? You don't think you could, even if your life was on the line. Which it is, the two of you facing each other, breath misting the air.
"What about you?" He asks, drawing you from your whirlwind thoughts. "Why are you here?"
"Assigned to some woman. I obviously didn't complete it." You tuck your gun away carefully, eyeing him carefully. "I saw the flash on your scope."
He frowns. "The sun was behind me." You lift a shoulder. You're unsure what reflected off his scope, but perhaps it had been divine intervention after all. "We have to get moving. They're expecting confirmation. If we don't, they'll send someone else."
"We?"
He nods, checking a watch. "You're my wife."
"I'm⊠I'm Clockwork. You're Protocol."
He lowers his wrist and looks at you - really looks at you. You study him, your heart hammering, a dull ache in your chest blooming. He's still Junhui - at least he looks like it. He's your husband with warm brown eyes, who speaks softly and loves to kiss you on the forehead, who is patient and kind and steady.
And apparently he's a contract killer. But he didn't kill you. You hope it means something.
"You're my wife," he says again, softer this time.
Junhui extends his hand, slow and careful. He's wearing gloves but you take a few tentative steps toward him, placing your hand in his. His fingers close around yours, and even through the leather, they're warm. You step closer and he pulls you through the gate and into the alley, keeping you close.
"We're going to need to run," he murmurs looking down at you. "Just trust me enough to get us somewhere. Then we can talk. Can you do that?"
You think about it. Your training is telling you to kill him and run, to save yourself. But every instinct you have that is not the rained spy is looking at him - the man you married, the man who has rubbed your back when you were sick and warmed your hands in his pocket - is looking at you with nothing but honesty.
It's stupid. You know it is. Protocol isn't known for their spies as much as they are for their hitmen - Junhui would have been taught to blend in and run, but they're not an intelligence agency the way Clockwork is. They aren't taught to manipulate to the degree you are.
So you nod. You see the relief pass on his face as he tugs you gently, both of you breaking out into a run.
The city presses in, the narrow passageways smelling like damp stone and yesterday's rain. Your breath syncs with his, footsteps matching, the panic there but shared now. Not once does he let go of your hand, tugging you out of the way of a passing bike and into the safety of his arms for a brief moment.
Junhui leads you to a small doorway behind a boulangerie, the scent of fresh bread wafting out. He pulls out a compact telegraph key from his pocket, and for a second you think he's going to notify Protocol he has you in his hands. Your heart starts to slam in your ribcage, realizing that the love you have for him - that you're not supposed to - has been your undoing. Still, you don't reach for your weapon, unwilling to kill him even if-
He catches your panic. "I'm telling them you're dead," he notes, voice dry.
"Oh."
You do the same, tapping out a coded message to your operatives at Clockwork. It'll only buy you hours - maybe a single day. You're not sure.
"We need to get out of Paris," he says. "Home will be dangerous, but if we're going to survive we need to go there first." You hate that you agree. "Le Bourget? Private flight?"
"Yes."
Junhui hails a taxi near the river, the water dark and choppy under the bridges as an afternoon storm rolls in. You sit close to Junhui as the driver navigates the city, but not touching, the space between you heavy. Your mind spins - the brownstone waiting back home, its walnut panels, the piano - a life of mutual lies catching like tinder and burning down around you.
-
Le Bourget airfield is bustling with activity in the afternoon gloom, hangars looming like metal beasts under the gray sky. The smell of fuel hangs heavy in the air and the hum of propellers whirring buzzes in your ears as you cross the wet tarmac.
Junhui's hand hovers at your elbow as you walk, not quite touching. You feel the loss of his touch acutely, a small ache at the sudden distance between you. You don't know where you stand now, the man you've known for the last five years suddenly a complete stranger.
Somehow, you feel it only serves you right.
Junhui leads you to a waiting plane, the engines warming with a low rumble that vibrates through you. The plane is small, the cabin cramped with leather seats worn from use, the air inside tinged with tobacco. You climb aboard, settling into a seat by the window, rain streaking the glass like tears. Junhui sits across from you, the space between your knees too close in the small plane, knocking awkwardly.
Tension threads your shoulders as the plane readies for takeoff. You feel exposed and out of control - it was Junhui who arranged the flight, assuring you that he could do it discreetly and safely. Still, there was no guarantee there were Clockwork or Protocol agents already working on knocking your plane out of the sky and into the Atlantic.
The thought unsettles you as the plane taxis and takes off, your ears popping as the city falls away below Paris, a patchwork of stone and river. You watch it shrink, the Eiffel Tower a distant spike on the horizon.
Your mind whirls like the propellers, skipping between the flash of his scope and your agencies turning you against the other. But mostly your thoughts are on the man across the way from you. Your husband. The man you thought was perfect, who called you tiÄnshÇ and kissed your forehead. The man who is Protocol, a killer like you, but from the opposite side.
You weren't supposed to, but you'd fallen for him along the way. You wonder now if that was on purpose, if he had lured you into his arms to act as a shield of normalcy. Your intention had been to seem normal and married, but you'd fallen for the way he smiled at your broken Mandarin, the way he kept the notes in his lunches, the quiet evenings where he'd play piano.
But now? Doubt creeps in, cold and insidious. Was any of it real for him?
The plane levels out, the rumble steady now. You turn from the window and look at him. He's watching you already, expression unreadable.
"How'd you charter this without Protocol?" You ask. "Sounds difficult."
He hesitates, then nods. "Someone in Interpol owed me a favor. From a job a few years back. Clean flight, no records."
Interpol. It shouldn't surprise you - he's Protocol after all, with connections in shadows you never imagined. It's another small layer peeled back, revealing the man you didn't realize was your husband all this time.
The cabin is silent for a long moment, just the hum of the plane and the rain on the fuselage. Finally alone, the questions he seems to be holding bubble to the surface.
"Can we talk?" He switches languages, watching you dubiously.
"Of course we can. You first."
His lip twitches. "So you do speak it fluently." You flush, caught. "You learned way too fast. I'm a good teacher but your accent was always good."
"I speak seven languages."
"I speak eight."
"Show off."
He leans back, the smile fading as he looks you up and down. "It started in college," he tells you. "I did study economics at Columbia. I was good at it. Money was tight with my family in Shenzhen and me in school. Protocol approached my senior year and said I had potential. Offered training, pay, and a way to send money home." He pauses, fingers drumming. "Martial arts from childhood helped. I specialized in going unnoticed."
You listen, heart aching. The man he describes is the one you married - intelligent, steady. But now this one is darker. Something else.
"And me?" You ask. "At the gala?
"I was there for a job," he admits. "You approached me and asked about the art and I recited flashcards but⊠I didn't anticipate you. You were smart and funny, and I liked you. After I checked that you were safe - which was wrong, I should add - the agency realized marrying you made me look normal. Protocol approved."
The words land like a punch even though you saw it coming. Cover. Normal. Not love. Not the way you'd fallen for him, piece by piece. You'd thought maybe it was real - that despite your lies, he loved you. But for him, it was a necessity. Fondness? Sure. But you were a tool to appear harmless.
It serves you right, you suppose, but sadness swells. You've been in love with him for years - or were, before this. The man who called you angel, who never pressed for intimacy despite your guilt keeping you from touching him most nights. And here you are expecting him to love you when he did the very thing you were supposed to do.
He's succeeded where you have failed.
It breaks something in you and you cross your arms over your chest, suddenly needing it like armor. If he notices, he doesn't say anything.
"Your turn," he urges.
You swallow, nodding as you start, your throat tight. "Clockwork recruited me when I turned eighteen. Right after high school. Saw potential in my test scores or whatever. Trained me in everything - codes, killing, covers." You pause and look at the wedding ring on your hand. "The gala was a surveillance job. You stood out - handsome, different. I approached on impulse, which was rare for me. Didn't intend to keep seeing you until I did, and Clockwork thought a husband would help me blend in."
He nods, absorbing it. The plane dips slightly, turbulence rattling the cabin. You grip the armrest, mind still spinning. Three years of marriage, built on agency approvals. Lies on lies. And now, exposed.
Neither of you speak for a while. You watch out the window at the clouds, the grey Atlantic stretching below. Your stomach is in knots, the truth between you doing nothing to seal the gap. It only pushes you further apart.
Finally, Junhui breaks the silence. "I don't want to kill you."
"I don't want to kill you either."
"The agencies won't stop. We're loose ends now."
You nod, the reality settling like lead. They'll hunt. Aggressively. No mercy for traitors.
"I fear we're at a deadlock."
He nods. "We have to escape their reach."
"How?"
The urge to reach for him is strong. You don't, though. Not now that you know it's not the same, that this isn't the same for him as it is for you.
"Collect what we need. Cash, papers. Then go our separate ways. Safer that way and harder to track."
The words slice through you. Separate ways. It breaks your heart, a sharp, quiet pain that steals your breath. You'd imagined - stupidly, perhaps - a life together, even now. Running away as one. But he's right. And perhaps it's better for him to be fond and not in love so it makes this easier, to be at a deadlock in which no progress can be made.
"Agreed," you nod.
He looks at you, something unreadable in his eyes, but you turn to the window, watching the clouds. You reserve the part of you that wants to beg him to stay, knowing you don't deserve it and he doesn't want to.
The flight drags, hours of tension and unspoken words. You land in New York under cover of night, sleet slashing the tarmac. When you step out of the plane and he hails a cab, you know nothing will ever be the same.
-
The plane touches down with a jolt. Junhui looks at you but you're staring out of the window, face turned away. The cabin feels too small, air thick with the tension of unspoken words and the faint scent of fuel seeping in from outside.
Junhui stands first, offering a hand to help you up. You stand up on your own, movements reserved, eyes not quite meeting his. It makes his heart squeeze, knowing now that everything was a lie.
He'd fallen in love with you slowly and unintentionally. He'd thought maybe it was mutual - always felt guilty for it - but now? Doubt poisons everything. You're Clockwork - were Clockwork. The marriage was a cover. He was convenient. Safe. Normal.
The sadness twists in him like a blade, even though he was supposed to be doing the same thing to you. But for him it had turned real. Foolish, really. But he's glad there's enough fondness in you to let him live, to part ways.
He'd suggested separate ways not because he wanted it, but to save what little pride he had left. If you didn't love him, better to let you go without begging. Without admitting how much that it hurt.
The pilot nods as you exit, no questions, just like Junhui had paid for. Outside, the sleet stings Junhui's face, wind whipping through his coat as you both rush through customs and back out into the wind to hail a cab. The driver is an older man that complains about the weather, but he takes the cash as you both slide into the back.
Despite the small space in the back of the car, there's a chasm between you. He wants to bridge it - wish he could. He wants to reach for your hand and pull you close, to tell you that it was real for him. That he had been lying, but not really. Not all the time. But he doesn't. You're reserved now, words sparse, gazed fixed outside of the window.
The silence stretches, broken only by the slosh of tires on wet roads and the driver's occasional cough. Junhui's mind races, replaying every moment over the last five years with you - the gala where you'd approached him, your smile bright and charming. The proposal he'd made because he couldn't imagine life without you. He night's he'd held back from you, guilt over his lies making him afraid to take more than you offered.
He'd thought you were content, that what you'd had was enough. But it was all a facade for you. Cover. The word echoes, bitter. He loves you - fiercely, achingly - but it was never real for you. And he doesn't blame you one bit. He cannot hold you to trial for a crime he was also committing.
Sadness swells, a silent grief that makes his chest tight. He will miss you more than you know. It's the right call, despite the fact it makes him want to fall to his knees.
The brownstone appears like a ghost in the sleet. He helps you out of the cab and you let him this time, though you step away from him the moment you're outside. The stoop creaks under you both as you hurry inside, the key turning into the lock with a familiar click.
You head upstairs without a word, movements quick. Junhui follows, heart heavy, watching you rush into the bedroom to start packing. He stands in the doorway for a moment, the reality hitting him. This was his home, a perfect life that he'd clung to, even if it was built on lies. Now it's ending and you're eager to go.
He moves to his side of the closet, packing his own things - cash from a hidden safe, false papers tucked into a book spine, weapons from certain shoes. His fingers linger on the tie you'd given him for Christmas, silk smooth, a reminder of you. He keeps it, wanting to hold on even when you're gone.
In the middle of folding one of his shirts, something prickles at the back of his neck. It's the same instinct he's had before ducking before being shot at. The house is too quiet, the sleet outside rhythmic. He glances up, drawn to the window where your back is turned as you pack, the curtain half-drawn. A red dot appears on your bag, small and steady.
His blood turns cold.
"Get down!" He yells, lunging across the room.
You startle, but he tackles you to the floor just as the window shatters, glass exploding inward. Bullets spray through the bedroom, thudding into the walls, splintering wood. Junhui's body covers yours, shards of glass raining down on you both. Pain blooms in his shoulder - glass or a bullet graze, he doesn't know - but adrenaline surges.
"They know," he gasps, rolling off of you. He pulls a pistol from the nightstand.
You nod, gun drawn as you both turn. Another spray of bullets rips through, punching holes in the wallpaper, the chandelier downstairs crashing. The house shakes with the assault, sleet cutting in through the broken windows, cold and stinging.
Junhui crawls to the edge of the bed and looks over to see shadows moving outside. There are three figures in black downstairs advancing on the stoop, rifles up. He fires twice through the window, the suppressed pops lost in the chaos.
"Back stairs," You tell him, already moving.
A bullet whines past your head, embedding in the walnut paneling. Junhui's heart lurches but you don't flinch as you return fire, turning into a woman he doesn't know at all. He follows, shoulder burning still, pistol steady as he shoots at a figure bursting through the front door below. The man jerks and falls, but more come in, footsteps thundering.
The back stairs are narrow and dark, the air thick with fust. You descend first, sweeping the landing as you clear it while Junhui covers you, exchanging fire. A shadow appears at the bottom but you fire once, the man crumpling. Junhui is suddenly thankful that you're trained and lethal.
The kitchen explodes into view. Bullets shatter the window over the sink as Junhui grabs a knife from the block, hurling it at an assailant charging through the door. The blade hits the man in the throat, blood spraying in a crimson fan as he falls. You snatch a revolver from a hidden drawer - Junhui realizes it's his - and fire at another in the hall.
"How did you know that was there?" He asked, stupefied.
"I thought you were just trying to protect the house," you admit. "I assumed you didn't know how to use it. It was sweet."
He doesn't have time to be offended as the kitchen erupts into chaos, men pouring in through the door from the garage. They're dressed in tactical gear like the rest, faces masked, rifles swinging to take aim.
You're too close for guns. Junhui shoves you around the island cojunter top as the first gunman shoots at you, the bullet pinging off the fridge. You squeeze the trigger of the revolver as you duck, feeling the click of the rotating chamber as you unload the full round into the first man, his vest catching them before you catch him in the throat, red spraying.
Chamber empty, you grab the cast iron skillet off the stove as another man charges Junhui. Your husband doesn't hesitate, ducking under the barrel of the rifle as twisting as he drives his elbow up into the assailant's ribs. You hear bones crack but Junhui doesn't stop, slipping behind the man and kicking out with a foot directly in his back, sending him forward.
The third man comes for you, dropping his rifle in the closed space to grab your arm. You swing the skillet hard, catching him across the temple. He goes stumbling, blood trickling from a gash. He recovers quickly, tackling you against the cabinets.
Pain flares in your back as things shatter, the drawers rattling behind you. You knee him in the groin, buying a second to scramble for a knife from the butchers block. His hand snaps out, iron clad on your wrist as he tries to keep you from the weapon. You snarl and throw your head forward, pain exploding behind your eyes as you use your head to crunch his nose.
Across the room, Junhui has turned into a weapon. His strikes are blindly fast, driving his palm up into his opponents nose before bring the knife down across the chest, the arms, the neck. He drops down and spins, sweeping the man's feet from under him as he goes down in a wet gurgle, vanishing on the other side of the island.
The man grappling you pins you to the counter and you scream, reaching for the knife, fingers slipping as his grip locks around your throat, squeezing tighter than anything you've ever felt. Panic flickers in your chest, air cutting off, vision spotting. You stomp on his instep and elbow him hard in the gut but he ignores it, dragging you across the counter and toward the garage door.
Then he's gone, thrown to the side as Junhui yanks him, chest heaving with rage. The violence in his face is raw as you choke down gasps of air, mouth wet with spit as you suck in breaths.
"Do not," Junhui growls, slinking forward. "Touch my fucking wife."
He collides with your attacker, sending them both into the wall. Plaster cracks under their weight as Junhui lands a series of strikes to the mans face, middle, ribs. The man gasps and Junhui grabs his head in both hands and twists violently, a loud crack echoing before the man goes limp to the floor.
Panting, Junhui turns to you, his shoulder wound seeping through his shirt, glass shards glittering in his hair. His eyes scan you frantically, rage morphing into panic. He storms over to you, cupping your face gently, turning your head side to side. "Are you hurt?"
"No," you rasp, voice hoarse from the choking. "Thank you."
He lingers a moment longer, something flaring in his face before he nods, hands dropping reluctantly. "Let's go."
You both plunge into the garage and you bolt for the motorcycle that Junhui never uses. It's a sleek, black Indian Scout. You'd never asked to ride it and he never really bothered with it, only using it on the summer nights when you were out of town. He assumed you didn't like motorcycles, but now you don't hesitate.
"Come on."
"Are you serious?"
"Get on," you demand, moving toward it.
You reach the bike first, swinging a leg over the seat without pause. The engine is cold, but the key is in the ignition. You twist it, thumb the starter, and the bike roars to life.
"You can ride?" He asks, as you kick the stand up and rev the throttle. "Since when?"
"Since I was twenty, get on."
Junhui swings on behind you, arms coming around your waist automatically. His grip is tight and he feels your hammering heart as he presses his chest to your back. You drop the clutch and twist the throttle, the scout lunging forward.
The acceleration is brutal, the front wheel lifting a bit before you muscle it down. He lets out a startled breath against your neck as you peel out onto the street, the bike fishtailing. You learn into it and the bike straightens, rocketing down the block as gunfire pops behind you.
Sleet and wind sting his eyes. Neither of you are dressed for this but he clings to you as you flick the bike through the street, taking the first corner harder, nearly laying it down. He lets out a shriek and a curse as you straighten out, gunning it.
"Where the hell did you learn to drive like this?"
"Clockwork," you yell. "Some of us learned more than guns!"
He laughs, the sound vibrating through him. He doesn't know what to think as the wind screams in his ears, biking roaring under him.
You weave through the late night traffic on Fifth, dodging Model T's and taxes, the bike's headlight cutting a white blade through the sleet. He turns to see a sedan following you and he curses. You steal the breath from his lungs again when you cut left onto a side street, narrow and barely wide enough. You downshift and fishtail as you come out of the side street and onto the road, swerving around a car.
Junui's arms flex around you, one hand sliding up to brace against your shoulder. "You're insane!"
You don't respond, but the admiration sings in his veins, nearly warm enough to fight off the bitter cold as you drive through back roads. He gives you directions as you drive, the two of you shivering as you lose your pursuers, cutting through the city.
His hands stay firm on you. He feels you shiver and he pulls you tighter, trying to keep you warm. At least, that's what he tells himself. He knows he's doing it to keep you a little longer, anchoring himself to you like he can keep you. He wonders if you feel the same fracture he does.
He wonders if it matters.
Dawn is grey and cold when you finally slow, the Scout's engine ticking as it cools. You're both shivering as you kill the engine and pull up in front of a farmhouse with a sagging porch and oaks surrounding it.
Junhui slides off first, offering a hand. You take it, shivering and shaking. You look up at the house, tears frozen on your face, lips swollen with cold. "What is this place?"
"Friend of mine. Not Protocol. From college. He's in Milan."
Minghao's place is cold as you step in. Junhui bolts for the fireplace, knowing it's dire to get it going. You stand in the threshold of the living room, trembling and freezing as he manages to get the dry wood lit. He turns and gestures you over. You come wordlessly, nearly collapsing as the orange flames lick over the logs.
Both of you hold your hands to the fire, trembling. It almost hurts to feel heat again, both of you shivering in silence as the fire roars to life. Slowly, you both sit, unwilling to move from the flames.
"We're safe," Junhui murmurs, tired, switching languages on instinct. "We rest first. Then plan."
You nod, slowly getting up to move to a chair, the distance between you vast.
-
You step out of the shower, steam curling around you. You dry off quickly and change into pajamas Junhui has given you - they're not exactly your size, but they work. Everything in this house belongs to Minghao who hadn't been preparing for you to stay, but Junhui swears he won't mind anyway.
Reentering the bedroom, you stop short. Junhui is standing in front of the small dresser mirror, shirtless. He's turned around, trying to look at the injury on his shoulder, the lamplight carving shadows across the muscles of his back, the narrow taper of his waist. He prods at the graze, wincing as he looks at it.
He sees you reflected and straightens, hand dropping. "Sorry, it's the only mirror in the house."
"Let me help," you say, setting your things down and rushing to him.
He nods as you riffle through the bathroom for medical supplies. Minghao thankfully has a simple one and you make Junhui sit on the edge of the bed as you wet cotton with antiseptic. He smells clean like the shower he took immediately before you, his skin warm as you near him, heart hammering.
Suddenly, it feels too intimate. You shake off the feeling - he's your husband. So you kneel on the bed, mattress dipping under your weight. Up close, the graze looks a little worse thank you though, jagged and angry. You feel a pang in your chest. He didn't complain once during the ride, didn't mention the pain. Just held on to you on the bike, arms tight around your waist.
Carefully, you start to dab at the wound. He doesn't hiss or make a sound, but his muscles twitch under your fingers. He turns his head to watch you, dark eyes intense. You swallow, feeling the tension crackle to life as you watch. You're close enough that you can feel his breath on your face, your fingers nimble and careful as you clean the cut.
"When did you get this?" You ask, voice quiet.
"The glass."
You realize what he means. A piece of jagged must have caught him while he was shielding you - protecting you - from the spray of glass and bullets that moment he saw the sniper before you did. It makes you feel guilty immediately. How stupid of you to turn your back to the window, even for a moment. You're lucky he was there - lucky he still cares.
The heat of him radiates toward you and you fight a shiver as he watches, eyes half-lidded. You could count every single one of his lashes this close, but instead you put down the pink-tinged cotton and exchange it for a needle and thread.
"It's not deep," you murmur. "But I think it needs stitches."
Carefully, you pierce the skin and pull the thread through. He doesn't react. Instead, he says, "You're pretty good at this. How many times have you done it?"
"Oh? Are we exchanging work stories?"
His mouth curves. "Indulge me."
It makes your stomach flip when he says it. You pause as you think about all of the times you've stitched someone or yourself. It feels weird to think of a story to tell him, the barriers between you suddenly gone.
"I've done it a lot," you admit. "Sometimes on myself, but mostly on other people. One time in Vienna a partner I was working with was shot in the leg during an extraction. I had to stitch him up in an awful basement with almost no light. He lived but Joshua literally never forgave me for the scar."
"Well Joshua should mind his tongue when speaking to you."
Your mouth twitches as you pull another stitch through. "What about you?"
"Botched hit in Berlin. The one on my chest."
You pause, narrowing your eyes. "You told me you got that in surgery."
"I'm a bit of a liar, love."
Your heart races from the nearness of him, his knee brushing your arm as you shift to tie off another stitch. You've been this close before, but never like this, vulnerable and exposed, everything tripped away.
"I had to patch myself for the first time in Shanghai," you continue. "It was in an opium den. Could barely figure out where the hell I was from the contact high."
"I've been there." You give him a look. "Protocol sends me to a lot of places, angel."
The nickname makes your heart trip over itself. He's called you that since the early days of your relationship when you were pretending not to speak Mandarin and letting him teach you, the warmth and fondness for him just as strong as it is now, despite the lies.
"I'm sure you had lots of pretty girls to stitch you up." You don't know why you say it, but it's out before you can stop it.
"None as pretty as you."
You don't know how to respond, your fingers shaking. You tie the last stitch, snipping the thread, your hand lingering for a second too long, craving the warmth. He's quiet, watching you with an expression that you can't read.
"There," you whisper. "Done."
He flexes the shoulder, looking away from you to the injury. You use the break in tension to shift away from him, sucking in air, wishing you felt cooler than you did.
"Thank you," he murmurs.
You stand, suddenly too aware of the charged tension. "I'm going to start dinner."
Junhui nods, but his eyes follow you as you head out the door, clicking the bedroom shut behind you.
In the hall, you lean against the door, heart pounding. The closeness - the heat of his skin, the shared stories - it's too much. You love him, but you know that your marriage wasn't built on love. It was built on deceit and versions of yourself you never really let the other have, and now you don't know what to do with it.
The kitchen is sparse, but the cupboards are filled with canned goods and a variety of spices. You light the stove, flames flickering to life as you rummage for potatoes, onions, and spices. Stew is the only answer for dinner tonight, and you're thankful there's at least chicken stock in the pantry.
Your hands move automatically, chopping, stirring, but your mind is on him. The graze, his quiet admission of jobs, the way he let you help without protest. Footsteps creak and you flinch, turning with the knife raised. It's Junhui, shirt on and hands up.
"Sorry," he notes and you drop the knife, sighing. He watches you for a moment before walking toward you. "Let me help."
You nod, handing him the knife for the onions. He stands too close, his arm brushing yours as he chops. The space is small, the stove's heat warming the room as you work together. It feels normal, almost, the two of you working in perfect tandem that you've built over the years. You stir the pot, making room for him as he leans for salt, arm brushing yours.
Junhui is different now - quieter, more intense - but he's still him. His mouth curves when his eyes flicker to you, something fond and understanding. It makes you nervous, the desire and sadness gnawing at you. You itch to touch him but you're unsure you can.
When the food is done, you eat at the small table, stew steaming in bowls. The fire crackling from the living room is the only sound as you both eat quickly, avoiding his gaze that keeps finding your face from across the table.
After, you clear the plates, doing anything to put space between you, thoughts spinning and full of him. You don't know what happens now - where to go or how to leave him. You watch him as he grabs blankets from the hall closet, intending to sleep on the couch - away from you, away from everything you've built.
You feel the fracture in your heart widen, the separation between you looming and wider than ever. The question falls from your lips before you can think twice, unable to stop yourself from asking any longer.
"Did you ever love me?" The words hang there, Junhui freezing. "Or was it just a cover all the time? I assume the latter, since we were fond but never very intimate, I guess. But I just - did you ever?"
Junhui freezes, the folded blanket clutched in his hands. The firelight paints him in flickering orange and gold, catching the way his composure cracks. He sets the blanket down slowly, moving toward you as he shakes his head."
"I loved you from the start," he murmurs. "Before I even married you. Marrying you was convenient, but I fell in love with you at that stupid gala. You asked me about that painting and I panicked and recited an entire catalogue of notes memorized the night before and you laughed - not at me, in delight. Like you found something unexpected and wonderful. And I remember thinking that I was the worst thing that could happen to you."
He laughs once, a small, broken sound as your heart hammers in your chest, breaths coming fast.
"You made it worse by being you," he admits, softening as he takes another step toward you. "You did small things for me, made my life perfect in ways that mattered. You never asked anything of me, you just⊠were there for me. I thought if I stayed gentle, if I stayed careful, if I never asked too many questions, maybe youâd never realize what kind of monster was sleeping beside you. I thought the guilt would be less if I never took more than you offered. So I kissed your forehead and pretended that was enough.â
Junui's palm is warm when he cups your face and turns you to look up at him. His thumb swipes across your cheek and you realize you're crying. His face is pained as he looks down at you, freehand snaking around your waist to pull you chest to chest with him, warm. His heart beats in time with yours as he looks down at you, gaze searching.
"It was never enough," he admits. "I love you so much it makes me sick with it. Every time you came home late I wanted to pull you into my arms and ask where youâd been. Every time you smiled at me across a crowded room at one of those awful parties I wanted to drag you into a coat closet and kiss you until neither of us could breathe. I didnât. Because I thought it would make me evil to take what I wanted and lie to you at the same time."
You hiccup a sob. "I thought you didn't want me. You said you wanted to go our separate ways on the plane."
"I suggested it because I thought it was what you wanted. Because I thought letting you go was the kindest thing I could do for the woman I love."
"You absolute idiot!" Junhui blinks as you hug him, pressing your face to his chest. He laughs, a little confused as you squeeze him. "I took the forehead kisses and the gentle hands and the soft words and tried to convince myself it was enough, because I thought that was all you wanted from me and all I thought I deserved!â
"Really?"
"Yes, you oaf! I was so guilty for lying to you that I accepted what love you offered and felt grateful for it. Asked no questions. Thought I was awful."
He laughs squeezing you tighter, arms warm and secure and home. The arms of your husband, the Junhui you've always known.
You pull away from him a little, looking up at him. "When you said separate ways on that plane, I thought my heart was going to cave in. I agreed because I thought thatâs what you needed. Because I thought you didnât love me the way I loved you. And I was going to let you go. I was going to let you walk away because I thought it was the kindest thing I could do for the man I love.â
He cradles your face again, eyes dark as he looks down at you. Tears cling to your lashes and you sniff unceremoniously. He smiles, fond - in love - fingers pressed to your cheeks.
"What do you want, tiÄnshÇ?"
You reach up slowly, fingers trembling as you brush the hair from his face, his eyes shining.
"I want my husband," you tell him, heart racing. "All of him. The man who tutors neighborhood kids on weekends. The man who remembers birthdays and tips too generously. And the man who comes home with blood on his hands. The man who shielded me from bullets tonight. The man whoâs been carrying the same guilt I have for years.â
For a single heartbeat, the world narrows to just the space between you. Then he moves, pulling you in - not gently or careful like you're used to - but desperate, with half a decade of starvation. He kisses you like he's starved, his mouth warm and wet and tasting of the salt from your tears.
You kiss him back, fisting his shirt in your hands, the years of things you've held back crashing through you - guilt, longing, terror, the stupid, vicious love you have for him. He makes a sound in the back of his throat and pulls you in closer, desperate for you.
When you finally break apart, his mouth doesn't go far, his lips ghosting across yours as he murmurs, "WÇ de TiÄnshÇ."
"LÇo xiĂ ng hÇo."
He stares down at you, snorting, unbelieving. "We really need to talk about how you pretended not to speak Mandarin."
"Yeah?"
"Yes, but right now I have other things on my mind."
You raise your brows, heart skipping a beat. "Like what?"
His lips curve into a slow, predatory smile, one you rarely see. It's possessive and hungry, your stomach knotting as he knocks his nose against yours. "Making love to my wife."
The words hang in the air, sending a shiver down your spine. Before you can respond, he scoops you in one fluid motion, his arms strong and sure beneath you. You gasp, instinctively wrapping your legs around his waist, your hands clutching his shoulders as he carries you toward the bedroom.
He moves effortlessly, body honed from years of training, muscles shifting under your touch. He kicks the door open with his foot, the wood creaking in protest, as he enters and throws you on the bed. You laugh, the breath escaping your lungs as he smiles at you while pressing you backward into the mattress, leaning over you.
Junhui shrugs his shirt off in a swift pull, revealing the scars you now know the stories to - the stitches on his shoulder fresh and delicate. There's no pain on his face now, just unrestrained hunger as he presses his waist to yours, leaning to kiss you again.
"You have no idea how often I've wanted this," he murmurs. His hands find your hips, fingers digging in just enough to make you arch toward him. "To claim you all the time. Often."
You reach for him, sliding your fingers through his hair as he kisses you again, teeth clashing. His weight on you is comforting, the mattress dipping under you both. He braces one knee between your thighs, breaking the kiss to trail hot, open-mouthed kisses along your jawn and down your throat. He nips the skin there, soothing the sting with his tongue. It makes you whimper and he groans in response, the flat of his tongue sweeping up your neck.
"Jun," you whisper, shivering.
He pulls away just enough to strip away your top, his eyes darkening as he takes in the sight of you bare. "So beautiful," he growls. "My wife. Mine."
Junhui's hands roam, calloused palms skating over your ribs, thumbs brushing the undersides of your breasts. You arch into the touch, heat pooling low in your belly as he lowers his head to catch a nipple in his mouth. The sensation makes you writhe, his tongue swirling, teeth grazing just enough to send sparks of pleasure-pain shooting through you. You gasp, hips bucking instinctively, making him chuckle.
"Patience, my love," he teases.
His free hand slides down your stomach, hooking into the waistband of your pajama bottoms and panties, tugging them off in one rough motion. The cool air hits your exposed skin, but it does nothing to cool the fire inside of you. He tosses them aside, gaze fixed between your legs where you're wet and aching for him.
"Look at you," he breathes. "Have you been waiting for this too? Waiting for me to take you apart like you deserve?"
"Yes." His fingers trace the inside of your thigh, teasing higher but not quite touching where you need him most. "God, yes."
He hums in approval, shifting down the bed until he's kneeling between your legs, his broad shoulders forcing your knees apart. You feel exposed, breaths coming in quicker as he looks up at you, pupils blown and fucked out when he hasn't even touched you.
"I want to taste you first," he murmurs, pressing a wet kiss to your knee. He kisses your inner thigh, your muscles twitching. "Want to make you come on my tongue. Can, I love? Will you let your husband devour you?"
"Please," you laugh, breathless and desperate. "Please, Jun."
He doesn't need more than that. His hands grip your thighs, holding them open as he leans in, his tongue flattening against you in one long, slow lick from entrance to clit. The sensation scrambles your brain, his tongue hot and wet. Your back arches off the bed as you suck in a harsh breath, his mouth closing against you as he groans. The vibration goes through you, making you squirm. He holds you harder, tongue diving in deeper before circling your clit lazily.
"Shit," you gasp, the curse leaving your lips before you can stop it.
Junhui laughs as you twist your fingers in the sheet, his mouth lethal against you. He switches between broad strokes and pointed pressure, sucking your clit into his mouth gently before releasing it with a pop that makes your toes curl. You feel the way you melt in his mouth, arousal and spit dripping from your cunt to the curve of your ass. He chases it, tongue hungry and greedy and you let out a broken sound.
He's relentless, possessive in a way he has never been with you all this time, tongue fucking you in shallow thrusts that have you grinding against him. One of his hands leaves your thighs, drifting to slide two fingers into your heat, curling upward to press against your front wall. Stars burst behind your eyes, one of your hands going to his head, fingers twisting in his hair.
"So tight," he murmurs, words muffled against you. "So perfect."
He suctions his mouth on your clit, sucking in time with the thrust of his fingers. Pleasure curls in your stomach and you feel yourself teetering on the edge, squirming in his hold.
"I'm - shit I'm gonna-"
"Come for me," he pants. "Let me taste you."
His fingers thrust harder, tongue circling your clit until you shatter. Your orgasm crashes over you, body convulsing, thighs clamping around his head as you ride it out. He doesn't stop, licking you through it, drawing out over sound until you're shaking and oversensitive. Only then does he pull back, lips and chin glistening with your release, grinning.
"You taste like heaven," he rasps, leaning up to kiss you deeply, letting you taste yourself in his mouth. You moan into it, nails dragging down his back.
Junhui's fingers drift back between your legs, pressing in again. You whine and he hushes you with a kiss, stretching your cunt around three of his fingers, thrusts gentle.
"You can take it," he whispers. "Want you ready for me, yeah? You can do it, my love."
You nod as he pumps them slowly at first, scissoring to open you up. It feels so good, the edges of your vision blurring while his thumb circles your swollen clit in lazy strokes. The overstimulation borders on pain, but it melts into pleasure, your body singing.
"You've been holding back too, hm?" He asks. "All those nights I could have had you like this writhing for me."
"Yes," you pant. "Wanted you so badly but didn't know how."
Cur curls his fingers again, hitting that sweet spot over and over again. Sweat beads on your skin and it feels like your heart is going to pound out of your chest, slamming in your ribcage as you arch, head pressing backward into the mattress.
Junhui attaches his mouth to your throat, sucking the tender spot underneath your ear as he works you toward another orgasm. The slide of his chest against yours, the way he groans - it all makes you come again, squeezes his fingers hard as you flood his hand, making him curse.
"That's it," he praises. "Just like that, love."
He withdraws his fingers with a wet slide, bringing them up to this mouth, sucking them clean with a hum of satisfaction. You look at him, dazed as he grins and kisses your forehead. You press your hands to his shoulders, anchoring your knees to his hips and he only has a second of warning with your grin as you roll, flipping him under you.
Junhui looks up at you with stars in his eyes as you lean up on your knees, panting. His hands automatically go to your hips, squeezing as you catch your breath, looking down at him. His mouth is swollen and covered in spit and slick but you don't care - he's the most beautiful creature you've ever seen.
With shaking hands, you help him out of his pants, only making room so he can kick them down before you have him pinned under you again, letting you grind against his leaking cock. He groans and you grin, watching as his eyes squeeze shut as you tease him, the heat of your cunt nearly unbearable.
You reach between you, grabbing his hard cock, pumping a little before you line him up at your entrance, the thick head pressed tight against you. He hisses, watching as you sink down slowly, taking him inch by thick inch. It's a lot and you feel the air punch from your lungs until you're ass it flush to his thighs, stretched so tight you can barely breath.
"Fuck," he bites out. "You are fucking perfect. I love you."
You grin. "I love you, even though you were going to leave me."
"I'm an idiot."
"Yes," you agree, gasping as you start to move. "You are."
It's slow at first, your hips rolling in languid circles. The friction feels so good, his cock dragging against your walls, hitting deep. His hands roam, squeezing your ass, thumbs digging into your hipbones to urge you a little faster.
"That's it," he rasps. "Use me."
Emboldened, you pick up the pace, bouncing now. Every thrust feels like it knocks the sense out of you, sweat slicking down your body as you try to catch your breath, thighs trembling. His hips thrust up to meet you, driving deeper, and you lean forward, nails raking down his chest.
"Mine," he murmurs, wrapping his arms around your back to hold you to him. "No more holding back." You whimper and he thrusts up harder, gasping. "You're going to come on my cock, aren't you?"
You nod, unable to find the words, the angle letting him hit that spot inside of you that renders you useless. He takes over, banding you to his chest as he thrusts up hard and fast. It's too much, making you clench around him as you come with a scream, body sliding against his.
In one smooth motion, he rolls you, pressing you into the mattress. He's buried deep till, the weight of him pressing into you makes you delirious. He uses a hand to pin yours above your head, his hips grinding into yours, public bone pressing your clit as you whimper his name.
"One more," he begs, his thrusts turning deeper and slower. You nod as his free hand slides between you, gently circling your clit. "One more for me, love. My perfect fucking wife."
The overstimulation is torture, your body on fire, every nerve singing as he pulls you toward another high. You wrap your legs around his waist, pulling him closer, hands squirming in his grasp as he pins you.
"That's it," he whispers, pace faltering as he starts to fall apart.
You come together, vision whiting out as you squeeze around him. He lets out a broken sound, burying himself to the hilt, spilling inside of you as he twitches. You can barely breathe, both of you tangled together, hearts pounding in sync.
He presses gentle kisses to your shoulder, murmuring in Mandarin, all the things he's always wanted to say - everything you needed to hear. You hold him close, never wanting to let go, uncaring that you were never the perfect wife and he was never the perfect husband. You're perfect for each other, two congruent pieces of a puzzle.
"I love you," he says again, voice rough. "From the moment I meant you."
"I love you," you whisper. "Before I even approached you."
-
The sun hangs low over the Aegean, painting the whitewashed walls of the stone house in gold. Naxos is beautiful this time of year, the sun painting the small kitchen with cracked blue tiles in the perfect light.
It's a simple thing - two bedrooms with a terrace overlooking olive groves that slope down to the sea. Junhui stands on the terrace now, sleeves rolled to his elbows, nursing a cup of coffee from the beans you'd found in Chora. You watch him from the doorway, arms crossed loosely, still wearing the faded linen dress you'd thrown on after your morning swim.
He glances over his shoulder and catches you staring. A smile curves his mouth, the same one he used to give you at flashy New York City parties.
"What are you staring at?" He asks.
"My very beautiful husband." You step closer, slipping your arms around his waist from behind, cheek pressed to the warm plane between his shoulder blades. "You know the ladies in Chora love you?"
He chuckles, the sound vibrating through you. "Do the ladies in Chora know I am desperately in love with my wife? And also that she could kill them without a second thought if she got jealous?"
Junhui turns in your arms, careful not to spill the coffee on you as he sets it down on the railing. He cups your face with both of his hands, warm from the mug. The callouses on his hands are the same calllouses you've always known, his thumbs brushing your cheeks.
"I'm retired," you tell him, squeezing him tighter. "No more killing for me." You pause. "Unless they keep staring at you, then perhaps."
Warnings: mdni 18+, sub!dk, dk down bad, pussy drunk, shooting blanks, messy creamy pies, praise, name calling (baby, slut, etc.), begging, dk gets off on you getting off, using dk for your pleasure, overstimulation, milking dry, etc. pwp, maybe I guess breeding kink but eh-
Synopsis: You ride loser!Dk to tears
WC: 1.3K
A/N: I am still hung up on loser!Hoshi, and just had to do a loser!dk when I got requested for a sub!dk
It's messy.
The wet squelches of your pussy echo in the dorm room as you slide down Seokmin's painfully hard cock. Your pussy welcomes the intrusion, slurping your gummy walls to his wide circumference, making the pretty boy underneath you whimper. His brain is melting, thighs shaking, as you sit all the way down to the thick base of his cock. He's never felt something so good. Your pussy renders him into a stuttering mess. "Oh my god, oh my god- s'too much-"
If you had told anyone you planned to ride Dokyeom's cock until he was a shaking mess. They wouldn't believe you. You're so popular around the college campus, in a highly acclaimed sorority, and Seokmin was the president of the drama club. In the hierarchy society seemed adamant to abide by, you were out of Dokyeom's league. And it was one of the many reasons why you liked him so much. He was the sweetest boy you came across one day while looking for a book in the library for your latest assignment.
And you knew, the moment he flashed you a smile that warmed you like the sun, that it would always end up like this.
Your walls squeeze around his shaft, sinfully. And he moans, wrecked and high-pitched, his cock jerking inside you for the nth time. Your gummy walls throb around his large girth, slurping his cock deep inside until Dokyeomâs jaw slacks open in awe. He doesnât know how many times heâs cum now, filthy globs of his creamy seed stuffing farther into your wet channel, adding to the obscene squelches your pussy makes as you bounce in his lap.
You've been doing this for what feels like hours to Dokyeom. Swirling your hips in such an intoxicating way. Forcing his weeping bulbous tip to smooch your cervix with filthy kisses that made you see stars. You're so warm, so wet, squeezin' him so tightly his eyes gloss over. Pretty tears form on his long eyelashes, and his fingers dig into the bedsheets underneath him.
He whines, broken, hiccuping as the wet âplap plap plapâ of your addictive pussy smacks down onto his tender cock visciously. He sniffles, "P-please, shit-slow down - ngh - iâm gonna cum again-â His head tilts back, his eyes rolling to the back of his head as his hips buck up into your drooling cunt. A filthy mixture of your combined cum pools from your puffy folds, coating his cock with the sweet slick until it forms a ring around his thick base.
So messy.
So wet.
And your lips curve into a smug grin, your hand moving up to cup Seokminâs cheek softly as you swirl his cock inside you. You're grinding slowly and steadily, your thumb wiping away his tears that stream down his blushing cheeks. You pout with fake empathy. âDonât you wanna cum inside? Paint my pussy white over and over again?â Honestly, he feels too good to stop. His fat cock is stirring your insides so deliciously that you can feel your mouth water.
And when you feel his cock twitch at your words, a whine slipping from his spit-slicked lips, you coo. He looked so pretty when he cried. Looking so fucked out, eyes squeezing shut as you ride him like your personal dildo. Your walls clamp around his length, milking the life outta him, forcing gooey hot sperm out of his weeping tip with each bounce you did on his thick cock.
And Dokyeom is fucked. Obsessed - it hurts so good that he doesnât know if he can handle what happens if heâs pushed to the edge again. But heâ still blabbering between sniffles. âYeah, grind on my cock..just like thatâŠplease, jusâ like that, jusâ like that!â
He cries out loudly, his arms straining, biceps flexing. His fingers clutched the pillow next to him as his other hand pushed on the headboard above him. The muscles in his thighs tensed, drool slipped past his lips, and he cums again, a raw sob shaking from his chest as you continue to rock up nâ down, up nâ down on his big cock.
He stuffs you full so well, filling you up so thoroughly, the veins that run down his length throb and rub all the sweet spots inside you. You canât get enough, feeling his cum splurt rope after rope of his seed until it overflows from your pretty cunt. Itâs filthy how the mixture of both of your previous orgasms seeps past your soaked folds, smearing on Dokyeomâs pelvis and dripping down to his heavy balls.
And Seokmin doesnât know if heâs actually breathing; his body shakes under you as you still fuck him filthily. Your pussy slurps greedily on his cock, and more tears fall from Dkâs pretty eyes. âI-I canât- nothinâ-â he sobs, and you cup his face with both hands as you roll your hips in stomach-clenching swivels. âNothinâs left, given you âverything, no more, no more for you.â
But his body betrays him. His balls are still heavy, and they smack against your plush ass each time you slam down on his cock. Heâs still rock hard, and youâre cooing at his cute sniffles. âYou say you canât? But whyâre you still hard, Baby?â Your thumbs wipe his tears, your lips pressing into his for a loving but messy kiss. âSuch a pretty slut crying while you fill my pussy up over and over.â
Dokyeomâs whine ends in a mewl, his head shaking back and forth, heat crawling up his neck until his ears burn red at the top. He tries to defend himself, his mind glitching with how good you're riding him, literally fucking him dumb. His tongue feels heavy in his mouth, his tears staining his cheeks as the familiar knot in his stomach builds back up, and he can only babble. âYes, yes, ngh- â
Through blurry vision, Dokyeomâs watches as you lean back, moving your hands from his face to slide over your soft body, sitting still on his twitching cock. His eyes are heart-shaped, burning intensely as you move one hand to your breast, pulling your nipple between your fingers as your other hand moves between your thighs. You rub your puffy clit, deciding to give him some mercy by pausing your delirious bounces to play with yourself.
But it just brings new tears sliding down his cheeks. With his orgasm halting, you make him watch while you play with yourself. Your breathy moans increase in tempo as you rub your clit faster, and the bundle of nerves pulsates against your fingertips as you knead your breasts with your other hand. You donât have to move to cum on his cock and Dokyeomâs watches in awe as your body tenses up, your jaw slacking as you easily work yourself into an orgasm with a pleased whine.
It ruins him. Something snaps in his mind. And while your pussy convulses around his cock, gushing your sweet, slick juices around his length, he grabs your waist forcefully. Using strength that surprises you, he moves you sloppily up nâ down on his cock. He plants his feet on the bed and pushes his hips up to meet each one of your nasty bounces with a grunt.
His head falls farther into the pillow under him, exposing his pretty throat as he feels his cock swell one more time. âMâgonna cum, mâgonna cum, oh fuck, m'gonna cum!â His balls tighten up, and the gasp he exhales sends goosebumps down your entire body.
He cums with a wrecked sob echoing in the bedroom as he shoots blanks inside you. He had meant it when he said he had given you everything. His overstimulated cock jumps and jerks against your gummy walls and helps you ride your orgasm until you're slumping over Seokminâs wrung-out body.
âYou did so- wait, whatâre you doinâ?â You yelped when he rolled you both around, so youâre the one now lying on your back. Dokyeomâs eyes are glossed over, his tongue lolled out, drooling as he ruts his hips mindlessly into your pulsing cunt. His cock is oversensitive but still hard, and his mind is complete mush. He canât stop even if he wanted to; itâs too good. It feels too good. And he grinds meanly into your pretty pussy as he babbles between tears.
âCanât stop- donâ wanna- isnât this what you wanted, right? Right?â
You knew loser dick was better.
A/N: As always, comments, kudos, and feedback are greatly appreciated!
Side note: I would like to say nothing is wrong with being in drama club lmao it was just for the little bit of plot hahaha
synopsis: your dating history had been nothing but bad sex and even worse goodbyes. he showed you a patience and certainty that silenced every doubt, proving that you werenât hard to love; youâd been loved by him all along.
wc: 10.5k
warnings: 18+, explicit sexual content | oral (f. receiving), unprotected sex, dom!mingyu, sub!reader, soft power play, heavy praise kink, multiple orgasms | best friends to lovers, swearing, fluff, aftercare.
authors note: iâve been wanting to post a mingyu fic for ages now, and as i was going through some of my older fics, this one gave me insane mingyu energy and i had no other choice but to rewrite it for him! this is a rewrite of my fic âtearsâ, and yes, the plot is based on the sabrina carpenter song! i hope that you all enjoy this as much as i do, and as always, please feel free to let me know what you think! âĄ
you werenât heartbroken; that wouldâve implied there was something left to break.
youâd been on dates.
enough of them to know when there wouldn't be a second one before the drinks even hit the table.
enough to hear the same compliments repeated back to you like a script.
enough to recognize the tone men used when they were trying to impress you without actually learning anything real.
youâd slept with some of them, too.
sometimes because you wanted to. sometimes because you were desperate for relief. sometimes just to prove to yourself that you could still feel something, even if it didnât last.
you werenât bitter. you didnât walk around openly hating men or rolling your eyes at every couple on the street.
you just didnât have it in you anymore.
the hope. the performance. the energy it took to pretend someoneâs bare minimum was enough.
so when you got home from yet another date that left you completely drained, you didnât even bother with the lights.
you left your bag by the door, kicked your shoes aside, and sank onto the kitchen floor with a box of cookies at your side.
you werenât heartbroken. you werenât even sad. it was quieter than that; almost like resignation.
maybe it wasnât that love never came; maybe it was that you were never the kind of person people stayed for.
being alone didnât scare you.
what scared you was how much work it always seemed to take to avoid it.
every man felt like a mirror you kept wiping down, but no matter how clean you made it, the image was never your own.
it was smudged with their ego, clouded by their expectations, and warped by the way they looked at you like you were a puzzle they were entitled to solve.
you were tired of carving yourself down. of softening your edges. of apologizing for being too much or not enough.
tired of folding yourself smaller and smaller until there was nothing left of you at all, except whatever version might finally be enough to make someone stay.
your phone buzzed against the counter, a small sound that cut through the stillness and broke the spiral of your thoughts.
you kept your focus on the cookies in your lap, thumb working over the cardboard as though the solution to all of your problems might appear if you traced it long enough.
until it buzzed again. then again. and again.
you let out a weary sigh and reached for the phone, answering blindly, not bothering to see who it was before lifting it to your ear.
mostly because you already knew who was on the other end of the line.
âhi,â you said, voice low and a little scratchy from disuse.
âyou sound like shit,â mingyu replied, warm and easy.
you smiled without meaning to. âthanks.â
fabric shifted on his end, a soft thud like he was throwing himself deeper into a couch.
âyou didnât text me today,â he spoke, not accusing, just noticing.
âmm,â you agreed quietly. âdidnât really feel like it.â
a quiet hum of understanding slipped out before his voice turned lighter. âhold on. didnât you have that date tonight? with moustache guy?â
you shut your eyes. âunfortunately.â
âsoâŠhow bad was it?â he asked, already seeming to know the answer.
your head tipped back against the cupboard, the cool surface steadying you for a moment. âhe called me dramatic,â you muttered, eyes fixed on the ceiling.
âouch.â he made the sound like a real wince. âwhatâd you do, insult his shirt?â
despite yourself, you let out a small laugh. âno. i just didnât want to sleep with him.â
the quiet that followed was brief, but you felt it; he was biting back his first thought and thinking of something more appropriate to say.
âah,â he said finally, voice dry. âgod forbid you make a decision about your own body.â
you snorted, the sound sharp in your throat. âright? how dare i.â
âso you blocked him?â he asked, though it sounded more like certainty than a question.
âwhile he was walking me home,â you admitted, reaching into the box for another stale cookie.
his laugh rolled through the receiver, low and warm. âbrutal and efficientâŠi respect it.â
the sound pulled a laugh out of you too, small and worn around the edges, before it faded back into quiet.
his voice softened in the pause. âyou doing okay, though?â
you hesitated, not because you didnât want to tell him, but because you couldnât figure out how to shape the heaviness in your chest into words.
âiâm tired,â you said at last, the words too small for what you actually meant. ânot just tonight, though. itâs the kind of tired that sleep doesnât fix.â
âmm,â his agreement was soft, a sound that told you he knew exactly what that felt like, and that heâd been there more times than he could count.
his breathing stayed steady in your ear, present in a way that made the silence feel less empty.
âhow did you even know it went badly?â the question slipped out before you could stop it.
âbecause you picked up,â he answered simply, as if that explained everything.
you frowned at the ceiling, not satisfied. âthat doesnât even make sense.â
there was movement on his end again, the soft rustle of fabric and a dull thud in the background, though his voice never faltered.
âyou never pick up during good dates,â he reasoned. a pause stretched, just long enough for the smile in his voice to be obvious. ânot that youâve ever actually had one.â
your mouth fell open, half offended, half amused. âyou are such an asshole.â
âtell me iâm wrong,â the grin in his voice was obvious, even without seeing his face.
you opened your mouth, ready to argue, but nothing came out. you knew he was right.
âyeah. thatâs what i thought,â he said, his tone dripping with satisfaction.
âyouâre insufferable,â you muttered.
âand correct,â he shot back without missing a beat, the faint shuffle of noise still bleeding through the line.
you squinted, suspicion tugging. âseriously, what are you doing? it sounds like youâre losing a fight with your furniture.â
âiâm coming over,â he said easily, the kind of casual certainty that came from years of getting away with it.
âgyuââ you started, fully ready to argue with him.
âdonât even start,â he cut in. âyouâre not winning this one.â
âyou donât have to come,â you mumbled, curling tighter on the kitchen floor. âmy apartment is a disaster, and i look like iâve been hit by a bus.â
âcool,â he said, not missing a beat. âand?â
you blinked. âand i donât want you to see me like this?â
his laugh slipped through, low and amused. âplease. iâve seen worse. like that night you got super wasted, missed the bathroom stall completely, and made me hold your hair while you cried into the toilet about how you were âtoo pretty to suffer like this.ââ
you let out a dramatic groan, dragging your palm down your face. âyou swore youâd never bring that up again.â
âi lied,â he said, sounding far too pleased with himself. âmessy hair and a graveyard of takeout boxes donât even crack your top ten. iâve watched you full-body sob during tangled.â
âthat was emotional,â you defended.
âit was,â he agreed easily. âyour eyes were swollen for hours afterwards.â
âyouâre actually unbearable,â you muttered.
âmaybe,â he said lightly, âbut iâm still coming over. you donât get to argue with me about it, either. iâm already out of the house.â
you shook your head, pressing the phone tighter to your ear. âthis feels like harassment.â
his laugh came easy, smug enough to make your chest tighten in spite of yourself. âyeah, yeah. file a complaint when i get there. iâll see you in ten.â
he ended the call before you could get another word in.
you stayed on the floor a little longer, the kitchen tiles cool against your legs.
your bra strap had slipped down your arm, the dress from earlier felt too tight, and the lingering scent of ramen from your date was starting to make your stomach turn.
eventually, you peeled yourself off of the floor and padded toward your bedroom, tugging at zippers and straps as you walked.
you made it to your room without bothering to flick on the light.
the soft outline of mingyuâs hoodie was easy to spot in the dark, still draped over your desk chair like it had been waiting for you.
you slipped it on and tugged a pair of cotton shorts from the drawer without bothering to check which ones they were.
you were already turning back towards the kitchen before youâd fully registered the choice; like your body had already decided for you.
the only light came from the lamp in the living room and the soft glow above the stove, casting a dim warmth over the mess you said youâd clean hours ago.
piled up boxes. dirty dishes. the garbage you should have changed yesterday.
none of it was catastrophic; just enough to be annoying.
you lingered in the doorway, taking it all in. like maybe, if you stared hard enough, the mess would clean itself.
you thought about moving. picking up a box, rinsing a dish, doing the bare minimum to prove that you weren't completely useless.
you stood there long enough to accept it wasn't going to happen.
you couldn't help but laugh at how pathetic it all felt.
it was a five minute job at best, yet you still allowed yourself to sink back down to the floor, because avoidance had always came easier than effort.
the apartment was quiet for all of thirty seconds before his voice crashed through it, loud and certain, like heâd been waiting for the perfect moment to make an entrance.
âyo,â mingyu called out. âsorry iâm lateâtraffic was actual hell, and your street is like a one-way to satan. also,â he paused, mostly for dramatic effect, âi brought some noodles and that weird mango drink you like. worship me accordingly.â
you leaned off the cupboards to glance toward the entrance. âyouâre not late,â you said flatly. âi told you not to come.â
âand yet,â he replied, already kicking off his shoes. âhere i am.â
he crouched down to fix them; heel to toe, perfectly aligned with yours like it was second nature.
it was just shoes. nothing more.
except most men youâd gone out with wouldâve kicked them halfway across the floor, expecting you to deal with it later.
the care he gave to something so small shouldnât have meant anything, but the heat that flickered low in your stomach said otherwise.
you dismissed it just as quickly as it came, telling yourself it was just the bad date making scraps of effort look bigger than they actually were.
with a groan, you tipped onto your back, landing against the tile with a quiet thud. one arm draped across your eyes, the other one splayed out like youâd officially given up. âgod, you're annoying.â
âlove you too,â he muttered, easing the bags onto the counter, careful not to knock over the leaning tower of unopened mail.
he turned and pulled the fridge open with one hand, already bracing himself. âwow. shredded cheese, expired oat milk, andâŠranch? youâve really outdone yourself.â
âoh my god,â you peeked out from under your arm to glare at him. âi literally had ramen earlier.â
he glanced at the takeout container still sitting on the counter; unopened and untouched.
âthat from your date?â he asked, already tugging off the lid. âwhat, was the guyâs moustache so gross you lost your appetite?â
âcan you not,â you sighed, laughter sneaking into your voice despite your best efforts.
he barely reacted. âyou didnât even eat this. the broth has a film.â
you rolled your eyes, not even bothering to argue. âstop inspecting my trash like a raccoon.â
âstop living like a raccoon,â he shot back. âand sit up. this is getting depressing.â
âno,â you said. âmaybe i like the floor.â
âmy bad,â he said, stepping over you without hesitation. âiâll leave you two alone, then.â
he picked up your container of ramen you'd abandoned on the counter, emptied the broth into the sink, and scraped the noodles into the trash.
there was no hesitation. no second thought.
only quick, deliberate movements carried out with the kind of ease that came from knowing exactly what needed to be done.
if it were up to you, the container would have gone straight into the trash, broth and all.
yet for some reason, it stayed in his hands.
he held it under the stream of hot water, and watched it spill over the sides until the cloudy film began to dissolve. he made it look so natural, as if rinsing it had always been the obvious choice.
without breaking his rhythm, he crouched down and tugged open the cabinet beneath the sink. his hand slipped inside, bypassing the clutter you usually shoved in there, until his palm landed on the caddy tucked against the wall.
he didnât fumble or search. his fingers closed around the sponge instantly as he pulled it free in one smooth motion.
you stayed frozen on the floor, eyes locked on the way he worked it over the container.
the water slid over his veins as if it had chosen that path on purpose, dragging your gaze there and daring you to keep staring.
every drop seemed designed to make you notice the strength in his hands and each flex of his fingers, until you couldnât stop imagining what else they could do if they turned their attention towards you instead.
before you could spiral any further, he rinsed the last of the bubbles away and placed the container neatly into the drying rack, never once glancing in your direction.
he wasnât doing it for praise. he wasnât trying to make a point, either.
he simply noticed what needed to be done, and instead of judging you or making you feel guilty for letting it sit, he took care of it himself without needing a single thank you.
it shouldnât have made your stomach drop. it shouldnât have made your mouth go dry.
yet the heat was already there, rushing low until you felt the dampness pool against the cotton of your shorts.
you pressed your thighs together, trying to convince yourself it wasnât as obvious as it felt, but there was no denying it.
your body didnât care about the logic. it only cared about the way his hands moved, sure and unbothered, as if caring for the mess youâd left behind came easier to him than just leaving it.
your eyes followed him as he moved towards the garbage. he gathered the bag in his hands, twisting it into a knot with an easy strength that made his forearms flex, his muscles shifting with every pull.
it was quick and efficient; the kind of movement that never asked to be noticed.
he placed it by the door, not just to move it out of the way, but with the unspoken intention of taking it out later. the kind of small, thoughtless promise no one else had ever made you.
when he stepped back into the room, you told yourself he had to be finished by now, though every part of you already knew he wasnât.
the fabric of his sweats pulled tightly across his thighs as he crouched again, reaching for the cabinet.
a new bag rustled open in his hands, his fingers working with quiet certainty as he slipped it into the bin. each edge was pressed down carefully, tucked into place until it held exactly the way you liked it.
a task that shouldâve looked mundane somehow carried weight in his hands. your pulse climbed in uneven beats, chest tight, as if the air in the room had turned heavier just because he was in it.
there was nothing seductive in what he did, yet every precise movement drew the heat higher until your body responded as though heâd touched you directly.
too many bad dates had taught you to not expect this kind of care.
you were used to men who thought effort stopped at sending a text, and who never lifted a finger unless it benefited them.
the guy from tonight hadn't even bothered to hold the door open for you, so the thought of him replacing a garbage bag was almost laughable.
most men had always treated care as an obligation; something only performed because they felt they had to.
with mingyu, it was instinct; as natural as his next breath.
something in you gave way the longer you watched him.
it became too easy to let your mind wander, to twist the steady rhythm of his hands into something else; something meant just for you.
suddenly, his hands werenât cleaning anymore. they were gripping your hips, sliding lower until his fingers pressed between your thighs, stroking through the damp heat heâd already put there without even trying.
you could almost feel them pushing inside, filling you with the same easy certainty he carried into every small thing he did.
the realization of what youâd just imagined made your eyes snap shut, mortified at your own mind and yet powerless against the pulse it left thrumming through you.
by the time you found the courage to open them again, he was drying his palms against his sweats, shoulders rolling back as if heâd just wrapped up a shift.
âalright,â he said, stretching with a groan, joints popping as his hoodie slid higher. âtime to get up, princess.â
you didnât budge. your cheek stayed pressed to the tile, knees pulled in close, hair half-in your face.
he tipped his head at you. âhello? earth to y/n.â
you blinked. âwhat?â
âi said itâs time to get up,â he repeated, flat like it was obvious. âweâre not eating dinner with you laid out like a crime scene.â
âiâm fine here,â you muttered into your arm.
he gave your hip a light kick with his socked foot. âi know i look sexy doing dishes,â he smirked, already catching the eye roll you tried to hide. âbut come on. pull it together.â
your head tipped just enough to glare at him. âyouâre delusional.â
âand youâre dramatic,â he shot back without missing a beat, crouching just enough to extend his hand toward you. ânow get up before i drag you to the couch myself.â
your lips twitched, but you refused to give him the satisfaction of a smile. âiâd like to see you try,â you mumbled, even as your hand slipped into his.
he tugged you up in one smooth pull, steadying you with a hand at your back until your feet found the floor again.
the touch was brief, casual, but your skin still burned under it.
you shook him off a little too quickly, ducking your head like maybe he wouldnât notice. his brows lifted anyway, but he let it slide.
âcome on,â he said, already reaching for the takeout bags on the counter. âi didnât bring all of this food over just so you could mope on the floor.â
you trailed him into the living room, trying not to stare at the way his shoulders shifted under his hoodie as he carried the takeout.
he collapsed onto the couch, bags spread across the table like he owned the place.
you hovered for a beat before sitting beside him, close but not too close, hoping he wouldnât feel the heat radiating off of your body.
âso,â he started, tearing open the first container, âsoonyoung threw a tantrum when i told him you werenât coming to rehearsal today.â
your lips tugged at one corner. âdefine tantrum.â
âlikeâŠfully rolling on the floor,â he said, chopsticks already clicking into place. âclaimed he couldnât get through practice without his number one fan watching.â
âsounds about right.â you said, easily picturing his dramatics in your head.
âseungkwan even backed him up,â he went on. âgot all serious about how youâre âthe glue that holds us together.ââ he mimed quotes in the air, rolling his eyes.
your laugh slipped out before you could stop it.
he turned his head upon hearing the sound, like heâd been waiting for it, then reached for another container. the lid snapped open, steam spilling up between you.
âtheyâre ridiculous.â you said, shaking your head.
âit gets worse,â he assured, âseokmin told everyone in the studio that you were cheating on him.â he said casually, as if it wasnât the wildest thing to say.
your brows shot up. âcheating? he and i arenât evenââ you cut yourself off with a disbelieving laugh, shaking your head again. âmy god, heâs actually insane.â
mingyuâs smirk tilted, like he wanted to say more, but he just went back to portioning noodles.
you watched him work. how his hands moved quick and precise without thought. the crease in his brow when the chopsticks slipped.
the way his shoulder brushed yours when he reached for another box, like he didnât even register the contact.
even if he didnât, it still left you warm and restless, your shorts clinging tighter as your pulse tripping over itself.
you forced yourself still, arms wrapped tightly around your stomach, hoping he couldnât read what was written all over your body.
without any warning, he slid the plate onto your lap, already reaching for another.
you glanced down ready to thank him, only to freeze.
every bite was exactly what you liked; no stray toppings, no sides bleeding into each other. even the noodles sat neat, twisted in their own space like heâd portioned them with care.
your brows furrowed. âwaitâŠthis is for me?â
âyeah?â his tone was flat, chopsticks already busy over his own plate.
âno, butâyou separated everything.â you gestured vaguely at the plate, thrown. ânone of the foodâs even touching.â
he shrugged like it wasnât worth noticing. âyeah. you hate it when it does.â
your mouth opened, stalled. âsince when do youââ
âsince always.â his smirk tugged faint, eyes still on the food. âi just pay attention. relax, itâs not that deep.â
you sat there, pulse loud in your ears, trying to pretend it wasnât.
your shorts clung even tighter when you shifted, and the heat crawling up your neck made the plate almost too warm to balance on your lap.
by the time he leaned back with his own food, your eyes still hadnât left him once.
his brows drew together, catching it instantly. âwhat?â
you blinked, caught off guard. âwhat?â
âyouâre staring,â he said, chopsticks frozen midair like heâd caught you red-handed.
âam not,â you muttered, keeping your eyes locked on the plate in your lap.
âare too,â he shot back, smirk tugging as his chopsticks hovered. âseriously, whatâs your deal?â
you shifted slightly, tugging your knees in closer as the words spilled out before you could catch them. âyouâre justâŠway too thoughtful.â
he blinked, deadpan. âthatâs a crime now?â
âno, itâsââ you waved a hand at the table, trying to find the words. âyou cleaned, you set everything up, you made my plate exactly right without even askingââ
he glanced up mid-bite, chopsticks pausing. âuh-huh.â
âand you didnât even hesitate, you justââ your voice pitched higher, flustered. âyou just did it, like it was nothingââ
he reached for his bottle of water, lifting it toward his mouth, eyes narrowing with a half-smile. âbecause it is nothing.â
âitâs not nothing, gyu!â you shot back, heat crawling up your neck. âitâsâitâs hot, okay?â
he choked mid-sip, coughing and laughing all at once, nearly spraying water across the table as his shoulders shook.
at the same time, you slapped your hand over your mouth, instantly mortified. âoh my god.â
he was still coughing through a laugh, sleeve dragging across his mouth as his grin broke wide. âhot?â his voice cracked, half-raspy. âyou think me scrubbing your dishes is hot?â
ânope,â you blurted through your hand. âyouâre hearing things.â
his eyes lit like heâd just been handed blackmail material for life. âunbelievable. years of friendship, and this is how i find out your kink isâŠchoreplay?â
âshut up,â you groaned, dragging your hands down your face.
âno fucking way,â his hand patted at his sweats like he was checking his pockets. âwhereâs my phone? the boys have to hear thisââ
your stomach dropped, panic snapping through you. âdonât you dare.â
his grin only widened, his hands now patting down the front pocket of his hoodie like he was already halfway to victory. âoh, i definitely dare.â
you scrambled to shove your plate onto the coffee table, causing the chopsticks to clatter against porcelain in your rush. ânope. no. absolutely notââ
heâd barely gotten his fingers inside of his pocket before you launched yourself across the couch, tackling him sideways into the cushions.
he landed flat on his back with a thud, and you climbed over him, straddling his hips while reaching desperately for his hoodie pocket.
âthis is an invasion of privacy!â he gasped, twisting under you, but his laugh broke through every word.
âyou donât need privacy!â you shot back, breathless, hair falling in your face. âyou need to shut up!â
his free hand darted to your side, fingers digging right into the spot he knew would make you squeal.
you squirmed against him, shrieking through your laughter. âstop, you asshole!â
he was laughing so hard his voice cracked, words tumbling out between breaths. âyou picked the fightâiâm just defending myself!â
you finally slipped your hand into his pocket and yanked his phone free.
âmine!â you yelled triumphantly as you tossed it gently onto the carpet, way out of reach.
he burst out laughing, head sinking back into the cushion, chest shaking under you. âunreal,â he wheezed, grin splitting wide. âyou just committed straight-up theft.â
âit was self-defense,â you corrected, still straddling his hips as you tried to hold him down. âyou were about to ruin my life.â
his hands came up half-heartedly, bracing against your thighs as his laugh cracked again.
âyou literally said i was hot when all i did was rinse a bowlââ he bucked his hips just enough to throw you off balance, making you squeal. âimagine if i started mopping the floors.â
âstop talking.â you slapped your hand over his mouth, desperate to stop the teasing.
he looked at you with mock innocence, then dragged his tongue across your palm.
you yanked it back with a yelp. âgross!â
he laughed so hard it broke into hiccups, chest still shaking.
your forehead pressed into his hoodie, both of you still caught in the aftershock of laughter.
the sound trailed off in little bursts, until it faded completely. silence settled around you, thicker than it had any right to be.
you lifted your head without meaning to, hair falling forward, your fists still bunched in the fabric of his hoodie.
he was right there; flat on his back, smile softening into something slower that tugged at your ribs.
the awareness of it all seeped in slowly, until every place your body touched his became impossible to ignore.
your thighs hugged his sides. your hips were pressed flush against his. his palms rested warm and steady on your bare legs, fingers splayed like he didnât trust himself to move.
your faces hovered only inches apart from one another, the remnants of his grin fading as the air thickened between you.
the echo of laughter still hummed in your chest, but it was drowned beneath the heavy thud of your heartbeat.
the ache youâd been pushing down all night came rushing back, hot and relentless, flooding every nerve until there was no disguising it.
every slight shift of your hips made it worse. your slick heat pressed directly against him; betraying just how badly you wanted more.
his eyes held yours, steady and certain, as if he could read every thought you were trying to bury.
a quick flicker down to your lips slipped past his control; small enough to deny, but impossible for you to miss.
the second his gaze lifted to yours again, the tension snapped.
you closed the gap in a rush, kissing him with all the want youâd been choking down.
he answered immediately, almost as if heâd been holding back just as much. the kiss was deep from the start, his mouth moving against yours with a kind of certainty that stole your breath.
his palm skimmed up your bare thigh until it fit at your waist, while his other hand curled behind your neck, coaxing you closer, unable to bear an inch of distance.
the pressure of his hands anchored you as he shifted beneath you, pushing up from the cushions until he was sitting.
the movement never broke the kiss; it only dragged you closer, chest to chest, your legs tightening instinctively around his hips.
his mouth worked over yours hungrily, lips parting like he couldnât get enough. you clutched at his hoodie, fingers knotted tightly in the fabric, pulling harder to erase whatever little space remained.
every brush of his mouth made your pulse spike harder. every drag of his lips left your lungs aching, but neither of you were willing to stop long enough to breathe.
his lips moved against yours like he already knew every secret youâd been hiding. each shift was deliberate, practiced without practice, pulling raw sounds out of you before you even realized you were making them.
his hand left the back of your neck first, dragging slowly over your skin before slipping down to join the other at your waist.
his hands slipped lower in a slow drag, following the natural curve of your body until both palms curved around your ass, pressing you down against the growing buldge in his sweatpants.
the press of him right against your center dragged a moan from your throat before you could stop it, hips rolling down on instinct, desperate to feel more of the friction youâd been aching for all night.
âbreathe,â he murmured against your mouth, voice steady even through his own ragged breath. âiâve got you.â
your hips rolled again before you could stop them, chasing more of the thick heat beneath his sweats. the noise he made vibrated through your chest, deep and broken, sending sparks racing down your spine.
you clenched around nothing, thighs tightening at his sides, every nerve screaming for more.
âgyu,â you whispered, voice trembling. âplease.â
his thumb brushed slowly over your side through your hoodie, grounding you even as his mouth swallowed your plea.
âi hear you,â he said, rough and certain. âbut weâre not doing this here. not on a couch.â
the protest tangled with want on your tongue, but you gave a shaky nod. âokay,â you breathed.
his grip tightened, both hands already firm at your ass, and in one motion, you were lifted off the couch.
your legs wrapped around his waist before you even thought about it, a startled laugh breaking from your chest as his mouth chased yours again.
he carried you like heâd done it a thousand times, steady even with your legs locked tight around him.
your back met the mattress before you even realized you had made it to your bedroom, the mattress dipping under your shared weight as he laid you down without once breaking the kiss.
he hovered above you, his weight balanced on one arm, while his other hand found your jaw. his thumb traced lightly along your skin as his eyes searched yours. âstill with me?â
âstill with you,â you whispered.
he brushed a strand of hair away from your lips, fingers lingering for a second longer than necessary before adjusting the pillow under your head.
he caught the details no one else ever did; every small adjustment only served as proof that he knew exactly what you needed before you said a word.
his hand drifted lower again, pausing at the hem of your hoodie. âcan i?â he asked, eyes locked on yours.
âplease,â you breathed, the word spilling out before you could catch it.
he pulled the hoodie over your head in one smooth motion, leaving you in nothing but your bra and shorts.
the air hit cool against your skin, though it was nothing compared to his stare, heavy with years of memorizing every detail; knowing you in ways no one else ever had.
âfuck,â he murmured as his hand lifted to your cheek, tucking your hair behind your ear. âyouâre so beautiful.â
your breath hitched, chest pressing up into his. heat rushed over your skin, your body giving you away as your hips shifted closer, chasing him without thought.
his lips moved with purpose, each kiss a quiet claim as he trailed them along your jaw, across your cheek, down the line of your throat, and back up to your lips.
his mouth traced you in reverence, each touch tugging another tremor loose, stoking the ache already clawing at you.
his hands followed the same rhythm, palms sliding over your sides, dragging heat everywhere they lingered.
he touched you like he already knew what your body was asking for; steady where you needed grounding, firmer where you were aching for pressure.
he moved with purpose, mapping you in ways that left no part of you untouched, and no ache unanswered.
your fingers slipped to the hem of his hoodie, tugging at it clumsily, more desperate than precise. you werenât subtle about it, trying to work it up his torso without breaking the kiss.
his mouth curved against yours in a half-laugh, half-groan. âyou know you can just ask, right?â he murmured, amused even through the rasp of his breath.
you rolled your eyes, breath catching anyway. âjust take it off,â you whispered, impatience clear in your voice.
he rocked back onto on his heels, and tugged the hoodie off in one smooth pull. the shirt beneath stretched across his shoulders, while his sweats slouched low on his hips like an invitation.
your gaze slipped down, dragging his with it, until you were both staring at the obvious wet mark stamped across his lap.
your stomach flipped, eyes flying wide before you could stop them. his laugh cracked out, caught somewhere between disbelief and delight.
âwow,â he said, brows shooting up. âi rinse one bowl and you baptize my pants?â
you slapped a hand over your mouth, laughter already breaking through. âoh my godâno! that is not from me!â
his grin only widened, mischief written all over it. âno? so what, i pissed myself?â
you let out a choked laugh, shoulders shaking. âmaybe you did!â
he leaned closer, laughter still shaking out of him, his hands warm and steady at your hips. âmm. want me to check your shorts, just to be sure?â
you shifted in his grip, laughing helplessly even as your face burned. âabsolutely not!â
his grin turned smug, laughter still ghosting in his voice. âthatâs what i thought.â his thumbs pressed deeper into your hips, steady and sure. âguess initiative really does go a long way, huh?â
you rolled your eyes, though the smile tugging at your lips gave you away. âapparently.â
he hummed, pleased, leaning in closer until his nose brushed yours. âgood answer,â he mumbled.
his mouth found yours again, the trace of a smile still there, though it melted quickly into something hungrier.
his knee slid between your thighs, nudging them a little further apart, while his hands tightened at your hips, keeping you close.
you gasped into him, the sound breaking into a whimper when he angled himself lower, kissing along your jaw.
âthere she is,â he murmured, voice brushing warm against your pulse before his lips dragged down your neck.
your breath caught as your hands slipped to his chest, sliding lower, reaching for the hem of his shirt. he caught your wrists easily, pressing a soft kiss into your open palm.
ânot yet,â he whispered, steady and certain. âthis is about you.â
his mouth trailed down slowly, lingering against your collarbone before sinking down the curve between your breasts.
his lips lingered like he had all the time in the world, and every deliberate pause only made your need claw harder, trembling for the next touch.
he knew exactly what you needed without you ever having to say it.
he caught it in the way your legs tightened, in the way your hips tipped towards him, in the twitch of your hands gripping the sheets.
he noticed everything, always had, and now he was using it to unravel you piece by piece.
âiâve been dreaming about this for so long,â he breathed against the lace of your bra, voice low like he almost couldnât believe you were real.
his hand slid beneath you, guiding your back into a soft arch. the clasp of your bra gave way under his fingers like it had been waiting for him, undone without him ever breaking from your skin.
the straps slipped down your shoulders, one after the other, and his mouth followed their path in slow devotion.
every new inch of bare skin was met with his lips, each kiss a quiet vow that nothing about you would be left unseen. he traced you with patience, as though to prove that you were worth memorizing in full.
his lips found the swell of your breast, his hands steadying you against the tremor of your own breath.
his lips lingered wherever they touched, tracing the faint lines that marked your skin as though they were meant to be cherished, never concealed.
âso beautiful,â he said, voice quiet but unshakably sure, like the words had been waiting years to fall out of him. âevery inch of you.â
his tongue flicked over your nipple and the moan that tore from you was answered instantly by his own; muffled against your breast, like the taste of you undid him as much as his touch wrecked you.
your thighs shifted restlessly, helpless in their search for relief.
âyouâre already trembling,â he breathed, kissing down over your ribs, following the soft curve beneath your breast. âand iâve hardly even touched you.â
your voice broke apart on his name. âgyuââ
he didnât look up, lips still moving like prayer, heat spilling across your skin. âno oneâs ever touched you like this, have they?â
the truth of it broke you open, unraveling you from the inside out. your breath faltered, stuttered, until it was nothing but gasps and moans, your hips tilting into his hands without thought.
âiââ the attempt at words dissolved into moans, âfuckâoh my godââ
his palms slid down, fingers tracing the edge of your shorts, stopping just above where you needed him most.
âyeah,â he said, already knowing the proof had been in your body all along. âi figured.â
instead of giving in right away, he bent to your waist, his lips dragging heat over the skin just above your shorts.
âthey never earned this,â he said, voice quiet but edged with conviction. ânever learned you like this.â
âoh god,â the sound tore out of you, thin and desperate, your fingers curling around his wrist with no strength behind them.
he took your weak hold as encouragement, not resistance.
âthey didnât take their time,â he whispered, lips tracing slowly over the softness of your stomach. âdidnât listen.â
your fingers found his hair, tugging softly, guiding him closer without words.
âp-please,â you pleaded, the word breaking before it even left your throat.
his head lifted just enough to meet your eyes, steadying you in an instant.
âoh, baby,â his voice softened as one hand left your waist, reaching for the pillow beside you.
he slid it close, eyes never leaving yours. âlift up for me, princess,â he coaxed gently. âjust a little.â
you obeyed, lifting just enough for him to slide the pillow breath you. his hands adjusted it with care, easing your hips down until he was sure you were comfortable.
âthere we go,â he muttered, brushing his thumb over your skin. âthatâs better.â
his thumb traced idle circles at your hip, grounding you while the other hand slid lower. when his fingers brushed the band of your shorts, he lifted his gaze, catching yours with a question he didnât need to voice.
the quiet in his eyes made your chest ache; knowing he would wait if you asked him to. your body answered before your words could, hips tilting up in silent permission.
his lips tugged into a soft smile, eyes fixed on you as he drew the fabric down.
he shifted your shorts and underwear down slowly, guiding the fabric over your hips with deliberate care; every motion unhurried, every detail handled with care.
he gently lifted your leg, his hand steady at your calf. his lips pressed to your ankle first, soft and lingering, before traveling upward in slow succession.
each kiss trailed higher â the curve of your calf, the dip at your knee, the inside of your thigh â like he was intent on worshipping every step closer to where you ached for him most.
your nails dug into the sheets as his palms splayed over your thighs, easing them apart.
âbreathe for me, sweetheart,â his voice was strained, as if he was holding himself back just to guide you. âjust breathe.â
your body obeyed his words before your mind could, chest lifting with a shaky breath.
he didnât let you finish it.
his mouth found you the next second; no hesitation, no warning. just him, warm and certain, like heâd been holding back only for as long as you could bear.
the pillow lifted you right into his mouth, every inch of you exposed to the slow drag of his tongue. his mouth worked with a patience that burned, each movement a vow to remember every detail of you.
your fingers threaded into his hair, desperate for something to hold on to.
âoh myâfuckââ the words tore out half-formed before collapsing into a moan you couldnât contain.
he groaned in response, the sound reverberating against you as his grip tightened on your thighs, steadying you when your body tried to jolt away.
the way he moved against you was unhurried, and devastating in its precision. every swipe of his tongue felt like he already knew what would break you apart.
your chest heaved, breath shattering into pieces. you tightened your grip in his hair, dragging him closer without thinking.
he let you guide him, humming low like the taste of you was everything heâd ever wanted.
heat rushed through your stomach, twisting tighter with every pass of his mouth.
you were soaked. aching. unraveling with every second he stayed between your thighs.
âfeels so goodââ you choked out, hand fisting in the sheets now. âi canâtâitâsâgyu.â
he paused just long enough to glance up at you, eyes dark and blown wide with need. âyouâre doing so fucking good for me, baby.â he praised, voice filled with honesty.
he found you again without pause, urgency written in every motion. his lips tightened over you, his tongue pushing deeper than before.
your head tipped back, voice spilling out like prayer. âdonâtâplease donâtâdonât stopâplease.â
another groan broke free from his mouth, vibrating through your every nerve.
pleasure ripped through you so fast it stole the air from your lungs, leaving you clinging to him as though he was the only thing keeping you tethered.
âthatâs it,â he whispered against you, voice low, almost reverent. âlet it happen, baby.â
your thighs quivered around his shoulders, hips twisting helplessly.
his hold only tightened, dragging you deeper into every surge of pleasure until you had no other choice but to give in.
âgyuâfuck,â you gasped, tears stinging from the intensity of it all.
he slowed his pace, pressing soothing kisses as his thumbs circled your skin.
âthatâs it, sweetheart,â he murmured. âyou did so good for me.â
your chest heaved, lungs struggling to catch up with the aftershock.
when his gaze lifted, the change was immediate; eyes softening on sight, like tasting you had only deepened the reverence already written into him.
your lungs were still searching for air when he started climbing back up your body, mouth brushing every inch along the way.
your thigh. your stomach. the underside of your breast. your collarbone.
each kiss softer than the last, like he was pulling you back into yourself piece by piece.
by the time he found your mouth, you were already leaning into him, reaching before you realized it.
his lips lingered, smiling faintly against yours. âfelt good, huh, beautiful girl?â
a broken laugh slipped out, shaky as you tried to catch your breath. âgood?â you asked, head shaking in disbelief. âgyu, no oneâs everââ you paused, voice breaking, ânot like that.â
his grin tugged at the corner of his mouth, soft but smug, like he couldnât help himself.
âyeah?â he teased gently, eyes searching yours. âthatâs because they were all idiots.â
he leaned in, brushing his nose against yours before kissing the corner of your mouth. âyou deserve more than theyâll ever know how to give.â
his words sank deep, leaving you trembling all over again. you tried to laugh, but it broke halfway when his lips caught yours, sealing the truth of his words right into you.
what began tender turned restless in seconds.
his mouth moved against yours, only you couldnât help but deepen it, chasing him like you couldnât get close enough.
his chest pinned you down as his hips dragged slowly between your thighs. you felt him, hard and thick through his sweats, sending another wave of heat to rip through you.
it didnât matter that youâd already fallen apart once; your body lit up for him all over again.
a whimper caught in your throat, swallowed by his kiss as your hands scrambled higher, clawing at his shirt.
you tugged like you were frantic; like the thin barrier of fabric was the only thing keeping you from breathing.
âoff,â you rasped against his lips, desperate, the word breaking. âpleaseâtake it off.â
âyes, maâam.â he said, a smirk tugging at his lips, but it vanished the second your fingers brushed his waistband like you couldnât wait a second longer.
you shoved his sweats down with shaking hands, boxers going along, nearly knocking him off balance in your urgency.
he huffed a laugh, his eyes catching the hunger in yours. âgreedy, are we?â he chuckled, sounding more undone than smug.
âshut up,â you shot back, no patience for his teasing.
your eyes had already landed on him; thick and already slick at the tip.
heat rushed hot up your chest, a grin tugging weakly at your lips despite yourself. âso thatâs what i do to you?â
he groaned, dragging a hand down his face. âyou know what you do to me.â
âstill,â you whispered, tugging him closer, âitâs nice to have the evidence.â
a rough laugh slipped from him, cut short as his mouth slammed back onto yours, heavy with need.
your legs wrapped around his waist without thought, but he held himself back; grinding his hard length through your slick folds with a patience that felt merciless, his lips still on yours like he needed to drink down every sound before giving you more.
âturn over for me, baby.â his voice was rough at the edges, but his touch stayed soft, guiding you onto your stomach like he was handling something precious.
as you shifted, the pillow resting underneath your hips slipped slightly.
before you could react, his hand was already there, sliding it back beneath your stomach with quiet care; making sure the angle favoured your comfort more than his own.
âthere we go,â he muttered, like he was admiring a work of art. âjust like that, angel. fuckâlook at you.â
you could feel the heat of him behind you, hovering close, and the way his hands coasted up and down your sides; thumbs pressing in like he was trying to memorize every inch.
âyouâre unreal,â he whispered, mostly to himself. âmy fucking dream girl.â
his palms settled at your waist, urging your hips higher before gliding up your spine, pressing lightly between your shoulders until your chest sank into the mattress.
âfuck, baby,â he groaned as he lined himself up. âyouâre gonna kill me.â
the blunt press of him at your entrance had you gasping, nails twisting in the sheets.
âgyuââ your voice cracked, the sound nothing but a plea.
âi know, i know.â his hand smoothed down your side, soothing you. âjust breathe, beautiful. iâve got you.â
he slid in with agonizing slowness, every inch a stretch that stole the air directly from your lungs.
a broken sound escaped you, and his groan followed fast, spilling into the space between your bodies.
âf-fuckââ your cried helplessly, âitâsâoh myâfuckââ
he bottomed out with a shudder, his hips pressed flush against you, both of you shaking with the effort it took not to fall apart right there.
his forehead dropped between your shoulders, breath hot against your skin.
âjesus christââ he groaned, the sound rough and reverent all at once. âyou feelâfuck, baby, you feel insane.â
your back arched, body clenching around him, another helpless moan tearing through you. âtoo muchâno, itâsâgod, gyuâitâs so good.â the words spilled broken, tumbling past your lips before you could catch them.
his hand slid to your stomach, pulling you up into him, grounding you through the dizzy stretch. âthatâs it,â he murmured, kissing along your shoulder blade. âyouâre doingâf-fuckâyouâre perfectâfucking made for me.â
your thighs quivered, but the need to feel him move was stronger than the ache. you shifted back against him, desperate. âpleaseâŠmoveâi needââ
he groaned again, like your words undid him. âfuckâyeah, baby, i know.â
he slowly eased his hips back, dragging himself out until you thought youâd break, then pushed in again, steady and deep.
the rhythm was unhurried but merciless; every stroke deliberate, every thrust angled like he knew exactly how to pull you apart.
after a few slow strokes, his pace quickened; each thrust sinking deeper, chasing every sound that spilled from you.
âthere it isâfuck, yeah. thatâs it,â he breathed, forehead tipping down for a beat before he straightened again, eyes locked on the way your body yielded to him.
your moans spilled raw into the mattress, high pitched and broken, your hips rocking back into him without thought. âoh my godâdonât stopâplease, gyu, donâtââ
he answered with another thrust, sharp enough to punch a cry straight out of you.
ânever,â he panted, jaw tight, reverence spilling through every word. âyou feel too fucking goodâi could stay here forever.â
your walls clenched tight around him, the build snapping faster than you could process.
âgyuâiâm gonnaâfuckââ the cry tore out of you as your whole body bowed into the mattress, release ripping straight through you.
he groaned at the feel of you breaking around him, hips stuttering once before he forced himself to steady, dragging it out for you instead of chasing his own end.
âfuckâyeahââ his voice cracked. âthatâs it, angelâŠlet go for meâjust like that.â
your thighs shook uncontrollably, but his hands steadied you; one gripping your waist, the other pressing into your stomach, keeping you grounded as you unraveled.
the sob that followed buried itself in the sheets, your release hitting so hard it fractured every breath into ragged pieces.
he bent over you, lips trailing soft kisses along your spine, his hips still moving but gentler now, easing you down instead of pulling you higher.
âiâve got you,â he whispered into your skin, kissing your shoulder like a vow. âjust breathe for me, angelâŠthatâs all you need to do.â
he eased out of you slowly, the sudden emptiness pulling a broken whimper from your throat before you could stop it. âgyuâw-whyâŠwhat are youââ
âshh, i know, sweetheart,â he soothed, palms steady as they skimmed your sides, guiding you gently. âjust needed to see you. fuckâlook at you. you think i could stop now?â
desire threaded through his voice, yet his hands remained careful, guiding you as if you were fragile in his hold. he eased you onto your back, settling your hips back onto the pillow with a care that made it clear he wouldnât let you feel anything but comfort.
you let him move you, pliant in his hold, your body trembling as you blinked up at him. his hand cradled the back of your neck, thumb tracing lightly like he needed to feel you breathe.
he kissed your temple first, lingering there, before trailing down to your cheek.
his mouth wandered unhurriedly across your skin; tracing over your brow, brushing the bridge of your nose, grazing the corner of your lips.
âhi, beautiful,â he whispered against your skin, words cracked but full of awe.
your smile barely surfaced, dazed and weak, but it was there. âhi,â you breathed back.
his forehead tipped to yours, lips brushing in a fleeting kiss. âyou okay?â he asked, though the look in his eyes said he already knew the answer.
your breath caught, a soft laugh tumbling out with your words. âmore than okay.â
the corner of his mouth curved into a soft smile before he slid his hand down to steady your hip.
he lined himself up and pushed back in with one long, steady stroke. the stretch tore a gasp from your throat, your body clenching around him so hard it forced a groan straight out of him.
âjesusââ his voice cracked, forehead pressing to yours again. âbaby, you feelâfuckâyouâre so tight.â
your fingers tangled in his hair, tugging him closer, mouth falling open on a sound you couldnât swallow down.
âgyuââ his name slipped from your lips, almost a sob. âitâsâs-so deepâoh my god.â
his palm pressed firm to your stomach, making sure you felt every inch of him. âthere we go,â he rasped, kissing your jaw through ragged breaths. âyouâre taking me so well, beautiful. youâreâfuck, youâre perfect.â
his hips pulled back, just enough to make you feel the loss, before he drove in sharper. the force knocked the air from your chest as your nails clawed down his shoulder blades.
âeyes on me,â he mumbled, catching your gaze. âdonât look away, babyâwant to see you fall apart.â
your gaze clung to his until the next thrust stole it away, lids fluttering shut as another cry tore loose from your throat.
âno, noâlook at me,â he urged, groaning when you blinked back up at him, glassy-eyed and trembling. âthatâs it. good girl.â
your moans came fractured, tumbling past your lips with every push. âpleaseâgyu, please, just like thatâf-fuckâfeels so good, so goodââ
âfuckââ his voice cracked, hips driving harder, the sound of you begging ripping the control straight out of him.
âoh my godâiâm gonnaââ the words broke into a sob, your voice splintering. âmingyu, iâfuckâi canâtââ
his thrusts faltered, a groan tearing from his chest as he forced himself deeper. âyes, you can, angel. just a little moreâfuckâi can feel you. youâre right there.â
you broke apart around him, crying out his name like it was the only word left in you. âgyuââ
âthatâs itâoh, fuckâthatâs it, baby,â he gasped, forehead dropping to yours as his own rhythm fell apart. âcome with meâyeah, just like thatâfuckââ
your third release tore through you, carrying his first with it. your body squeezed around him, causing him to let out a wrecked moan as he came inside of you.
he stilled for a moment, chest pressed to yours as both of you trembled through the last shreds of release.
there was no detachment. no instinct to turn away. he hadnât looked anywhere but at you.
when his breathing finally slowed, he pressed a soft kiss to your jaw. âare you okay?â he asked.
you nodded, unable to trust your voice.
he gave you a moment longer before easing out, slow and careful, drawing a broken whimper from your throat.
his mouth followed the loss; kissing the inside of your thigh, the curve of your hip, and the hollow below your ribs; each one gentle and deliberate in their own way.
âstay here,â he said softly. âjust rest, baby.â
your head fell back against the pillow in the faintest nod, eyes glassy with exhaustion.
he lingered a second longer, his thumb brushing your cheek in a touch that felt reluctant, before finally pushing himself to stand.
he bent down to grab his boxers from where theyâd been tossed, sliding them on around his hips.
the quiet between you stretched thin, filled only by the sound of his breathing and the faint creak of the floor.
by the time he reached the door, your chest was already tight. you stayed where you were, staring up at the ceiling, the fan turning in lazy circles above you.
the longer you watched, the more the quiet shifted.
at first it was just silence, but eventually, that silence turned into space, which slowly turned into panic.
you werenât naĂŻve. you knew the script.
sex that good, that messy, that consuming, usually ended the same way.
a roll to the side. maybe a muttered âthat was funâ. the scrape of denim. the excuse about an early morning.
sometimes the door would shut before youâd even pulled the sheets over yourself.
your heart sank.
what if this was that moment?
what if youâd just traded years of friendship for a few hours of wreckless, selfish pleasure?
what if youâd just ruined everything?
before the thoughts could spiral any further, the door creaked open again.
âhey,â he spoke softly, not wanting to startle you.
you blinked towards him, body still draped exactly where heâd left you.
his boxers hung low on his hips, hair damp and sticking to his forehead, chest still flushed from the heat of you. a towel was slung over his shoulder, two water bottles gripped in one hand, and a warm cloth in the other.
your throat went tight. âyou came back,â you whispered, the words slipping out before you could catch them.
his face softened immediately, something tender breaking through. âof course i did,â he said, stepping closer. âwhatâdid you think iâd just disappear after that?â
you tried to smile, but it wavered.
âhey,â he said again, lowering onto the edge of the bed. âdonât go quiet on me now, pretty girl. not after you already woke all of the neighbors up.â
a soft, broken laugh escaped your lips.
he bent to press a soft kiss to your knee. âscoot up a little, sweetheart. let me take care of you.â
his hands moved with quiet certainty, every touch measured and unhurried. patience lingered in everything he did; a tenderness you werenât used to.
you felt the difference in your chest before you even felt it between your thighs.
no one had ever done this for you before.
the most youâd ever been given was a half-hearted towel tossed your way, like it was your job to deal with the aftermath alone.
but here he was, treating you like you were something worth handling with delicacy.
âi kept the pillow there,â he said quietly, ââcause i figured youâd be sore. didnât want you shifting too much.â
he finished with quiet care, dropping the cloth and towel into your hamper before reaching for your hoodie on the floor.
he eased it over your head, guiding your arms through the sleeves, tugging it down until you were completely covered.
as he climbed back into the bed, you reached for him without thinking twice.
he was already leaning into you, arms sliding around your waist, pulling you against him like it was the only place you belonged.
âyou still with me?â he asked, lips brushing your hair.
you nodded, eyes still shut until his voice pulled you back.
you blinked up at him as he dipped his head, catching your gaze. âyou scared me for a second.â
your voice was small. âi justâŠwasnât expecting you to come back.â
his brow furrowed, a little hurt, though his tone stayed soft. âcome on. you really thought iâd leave you like that?â
you huffed out a laugh. âit wouldnât be the first time someone did.â
his chest rose on a sigh as he shifted to really look at you. âbabyâŠwhat kind of assholes are you fucking?â
the bluntness startled a laugh out of you. âyouâve heard all the stories,â you reminded him.
âunfortunately.â his hand stayed warm at your spine, steadying you. âand i hated every single one of them.â
you froze, but he continued nonetheless.
âyou donât understand,â he said, shaking his head. âlistening to you try to laugh off how some guy left before you could even breathe againââ he paused, exhaling hard through his nose. âi swear, prison stripes nearly sounded worth it.â
âyou never said anything,â you said, genuinely surprised at his words.
his lips lifted into a small smile, but the weight in his eyes gave him away. ânever felt like my place.â
âgyuâŠâ you whispered.
he shook his head gently, already seeing where your thoughts were headed.
âyou really donât get it, do you?â his voice softened, a little rough at the edges.
âget what?â you murmured as your eyes searched his face for any clues on what he could be referring to.
his hand came up to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear, so tender it made your chest ache.
âhow easy you are to love.â
you froze, lungs stuttering like theyâd completely forgotten how to work.
âiâve wanted to do this right for so long,â he whispered, leaning his forehead to yours. ânot just the sex. all of it. making you laugh. holding you when you cry. being the one who never leaves. giving you the kind of love you shouldâve had all along.â
your lips parted, but no sound followed. the weight of his words pressed down until all you could do was hold his gaze, completely undone by the gentleness in his voice.
âand if i ever have to hear about one more guy who made you feel like you were too much, or too emotional, or not worth sticking around forâŠâ he shook his head again, softer this time. âiâll lose my fucking mind. because youââ
he swallowed hard, trying to find the courage to continue. âyou deserve someone who worships the ground you walk on. someone who thanks god every night that you chose them.â
you blinked hard, tears threatening to fall as a soft laugh escaped you. âyouâre not supposed to make me cry after sex, idiot.â
âi meant what i said, you know,â he told you, his lips curving into that same boyish grin youâve adored for years. âand i know my feelings arenât one sided, either, ms. choreplay.â
tears slipped down your cheeks as you let out a shaky laugh, swatting weakly at his chest. âyou are such an asshole, kim mingyu.â
âam i wrong?â he smirked. âbecause youââ he paused, tapping your thigh, ââbasically had tears running down your thighs from me washing, like, two dishes.â
you groaned, burying your face in his chest. âplease never phrase it like that again.â
he laughed, the sound warm against your cheek. âdonât act like you didnât whimper when i changed the garbage bag.â
you pulled back just enough to glare at him. âmy god, youâre always so full of yourself.â
his grin only widened, cocky and unbothered. âwait till you find out i sort my laundry by whites and darks.â
With the new year coming, we also have a new collab for all of you guys!!
BLOCKBUSTER brings you the opportunity to join the carat writers community and make new friends while diving into the joy of making stories.
Yes! You read that right! This collab is for our dear readers who have been wanting to start writing for seventeen and just never had the chance to. Whether it were your doubts about the plot holding you back or just creative hurdles in general, we're here to help you get out and over it and help you write a story of your own.
Well, this is your chance!
BLOCKBUSTER is a video store where you can find all kinds of shows from How I met your Mother, The Office, Suits, Grey's Anatomy, to movies like Spider-man, Parasite, 10 Things I hate about you, He's just not that into you written for no other than the boys we all love so much!
There is a variety of cassettes for you to pick from, so if you'd like to be a part of our watch party, drop a message to my or @jakedustry or @nerdycheol's inbox or DMs and let us get to know you â€ïž
Part of the Light's Out collab hosted by @studiosvt!
pairing: Kim Mingyu x f!reader
total wc: 22k/?
part 1: 7.5k | part 2: 14.4k | part 3
synopsis: Itâs hard to dislike Mingyu, an acknowledgement he risks his modesty for. So when he approaches you with rose tinted glasses, clad in the team kit of his dreams, heâs ready to build a rapport of a lifetime with his brand new race engineer.
Until, the brakes screech loud enough for the entire paddock to hear.
Itâs hard to dislike Mingyu, but you make it look easy.
contains: f1driver!mingyu, race engineer!reader, fluff, angst, coworkers to lovers, annoyances to lovers, beloved by all mingyu, detailed descriptions of a car crash, smut in future chapters [minors dni]
NOTE: please pay attention to the chapter headings as they are important to understand the timeline <33
[a/n]: been a minute but we're here!! thank to everyone who sent such nice things about part 1 in the reblogs, in my DMs, and in my inbox, this one is for all of youuu. huge thank you to @sailorsoons for beta reading this for me love u queen.
masterlist
BAKU 2025
James Calicoâs apprentice recovers quickly from Mingyuâs jab. Mouth opening like it was ready to suck his entire being into the abyss.Â
âThereâs only been one headline overtaking your name in the past weeks,â Selina Thatcher continues. It was going to take more to hear her say it outright, of course, a tactic sheâd learnt from the best.Â
Mingyu however, has also learned to be stubborn from the best, and manages to hold his ground while at ease, âI will repeat, and ask you to be specific.â
Mingyu refuses to break eye contact with her artificially coloured irises, the bright blue boring into his eyes like they were meant to hypnotise. With the way that she operates, he wouldnât put the thought behind that decision past her.Â
He sees her closed mouth move, like she's thinking. Before finally, she lets it go.Â
âRumours regarding your race engineer."
MELBOURNE 2025
Mingyu waking his doctor in the middle of the night as he attempts to refrain from throwing up on the hotel carpet wonât be part of his finer moments, but he jests in having a story to tell from his first race weekend as a Ferrari driver. Of course, it was only media day, but the prospect of officially laying himself out in front of reporters in red was a thought that troubled his dinner.Â
The world had already witnessed his brand new uniform in his official photoshoots and all the pre-season trailers heâs been made to shoot, but he discerns the weight of being face-to-face with a sea of Tifosi staring back at him from the chemically fragrant toilet bowl. Despite the precious seconds of sleep he loses, he does not take these nerves too heavily upon himself.Â
Mingyu wouldnât see the internet aftermath of his strut across the paddock till later, but that was hardly what concerned him.Â
He sits on a cream couch, laid back and relaxed as he dares in a room full of stationed reporters with cameras on him. Sunghoon, his former teammate, is on his left, and Jun on his right.Â
Sunghoon is currently chuckling through an answer about his old teammate, pretending he wasnât right there next to him.Â
âReal piece of work,â Sunghoon chortles into the mic.Â
Mingyu is inclined to pick up his own and give his two cents, âHeard the horror stories.â
He finds himself appreciating having two people he considers friends next to him for his first conference of the season, even as they begin to tackle the more carefully worded questions.Â
âFirst of all, congratulations on the Ferrari seat, the red suits you.â
Mingyu murmurs a âthank youâ into his mic as he continues, âSpeaking of past and present, Ferrari will also be debuting their first ever female race engineer this weekend, how would you say you and Ms. _____ have been melding on the track?âÂ
Mingyu brings the mic back up to his lips, like it was the easiest answer in the world. âWeâve been doing great! We work together quite well and weâve been able to get some really good progress with the car, rest of the team involved as well, of course.â
âSo do we expect to see a better season out of Ferrari than last year?âÂ
Undeniably, Ferrari had been riding Mercedesâ coattails in the last season, a demotion to the clean one-two championships theyâd been winning year after year. They were yet to see Mingyuâs performance, so the question is ladled with genuine curiosity. Â
âObviously I canât compare from last year, but the teamâs been working hard to turn out a winning car. I have faith we can get there. The season will tell.â
Mingyuâs response would echo in his ears as he slipped into the car that Friday, a repeating mantra going along the lines of donât fuck this up donât fuck this up donât fuck this upâ
Your voice cuts through the static of the radio, asking him about brake quality.Â
âItâs alright,â he grunts as he forces a turn. âMaking a racket though.â Mingyu can hear the distinct screeeeech when he brakes, even above the piercing roar of the engine.Â
âCopy.â
Itâs silence from you till you pop back in to tell him to pit, and disconnect completely when he makes it to the garage. He reports back on the brakes, feeling optimistic about the mechanic's response assuring him it's a quick fix.Â
The mechanic was right, as Saturday morning, the final practice session goes as smooth as they could ever want. Your voice over the radio, however, remains as clipped as ever, and Mingyu has to look past it and attempt to focus on the car.Â
Mingyuâs about to walk into his final practice lap when your radio comes on, a quick âradio checkâ in his ear.Â
He likes to think it was his good mood that urged him to do this, similar to his ways with Derek. But later, he might attribute it to simply wanting to grease the one creaky cog that just would not let upâyou.Â
So Mingyu, his attention mostly on the track, begins to lightly rap Fergalicious into the radio, naturally, since it was the first thing that pops into his head, âAll the time I turn around brothas gather 'round always looking at me up and down, looking at my uhââ
He does not realise a potential error in his ways till he hears no response from you. It isnât important for you to respond, considering you called for the radio check, but Mingyu suddenly feels a pang of doubt. He doesnât know why, since this is probably the least noteworthy thing heâd done on track.Â
He lets the practice session end, parking in the garage and pushing himself out of the seat. He has no notes this time, and lets the team crowd the car as he unclips his helmet, ripping off his balaclava and walking towards his room to have a good lie in before Qualifying begins.Â
Heâs forgotten about what happened on the track in his haste to be horizontal, and is physically jolted when he runs into you blocking his door.Â
It takes him by surprise that youâd want to speak to him when not necessary, but even more so, the downright livid expression on your face. Mingyu is forced to a stop in front of you, hoping for an explanation.Â
âWhat was that?â you hiss, and Mingyu has to fight from physically cringing at the venom in your tone.Â
âWhat?â Mingyu gapes.Â
âThey could fine you for copyright violations, what were you thinking?â Arms crossed over your chest, your shoulders are so high up they nearly touch your ears.Â
â...That the FIA canât force me to cough up because I rapped four seconds of Fergalicious on radio?â
âThis comes onto me too, you know?â
âI canât imagine it would, no.â Mingyu is frowning now, utterly confused as to why he's being chewed out for something heâd done his entire career.Â
He watches as you close your eyes, and he can almost see the steam slowly begin to subside, the cooldown operations of your system working overtime.Â
âJustâŠpick something else to check in with.â
Mingyu moves his head back in sarcasm as he suggests it, âWhat, should I list the lower classification of shark breeds?â
âThatâs fine,â you air into his space, leaving him dumbfounded. You donât care to elaborate or refute his obvious sarcasm, because youâre already walking away like he's a waste of your time.Â
It takes a lot for Mingyu to not hurl his helmet into the room as he finally walks in, now too adrenaline flushed to consider his previous plan of lying down. Despite his anger, he finds it within himself to put your apparent lack of rationality to his emotional state, wondering if heâd messed up somehow and he canât see it.Â
Regardless, he hoped you would be able to form a courteous relationship if not a friendly one, considering you were his only point of contact when heâd be an inch from death on the race track. If he wasnât sure of your obvious dislike for him before, he was sure now.Â
That Sunday, when heâs geared up for his first ever race in a Ferrari, he refuses to be troubled by the connotations when you call for a radio check. A deep breath, and Mingyu begins to recite, exactly as you asked, âWhale shark, megalodon, great white, hammerhead, basking, bull, shortfin mako, nurse, tiger, zebra, thresherââ
You interrupt his list of lower classification sharks, rudely, might he add, âThatâs all.â
âSure? I have more,â Mingyu asks on purpose, and hears no reply. He wonders if the paddock is hearing this, which heâs sure they are, as are people at home, and everyone else whoâd tune in to hear the compilation eventually.Â
Mingyu isnât sure if this is going to get him another dressing down, or perhaps youâd choose to simply ignore him even harder, but he feels a very thick sense of satisfaction trickle into his chest.Â
When he snaps back into place on the track, heâs maintained his P3 position for most of the race, but notes the looming threat of the McLaren behind him.Â
âGap?â he asks.
âTwo seconds.â
Fuck. Mingyu watches the turn come up after the straight, realising he needs to brake as late as possible to keep the McLaren at bay.Â
âWhoâs behind me?â
âGrant.â
The answer satisfies him, grateful it isnât Choi, who would not have been as easy to fend off. But he doesnât lower his guard, making the turn. He slows down more than needed, currently more occupied with zigzagging the track to prevent an overtake. Picking up speed on a straight, he floors it faster than he has all day.Â
âGap?âÂ
â3 seconds.â
A second is better than nothing, continuing to push without needing to be told. Heâs holding Grant off for the next four laps in complete silence, waiting for his tires to give out, to make a mistakeâanything.Â
The adrenalineâs reached a point where he hardly feels a thing, reacting on pure reflex as Grant continues to maintain the three second gap. He wants to tune in and ask you for the hypotheticals, but he knows itâs risky if the McLaren team hears and know heâs struggling to keep pace. With no knowing of when the driver was going to pit, he resolves with simply sticking it out.Â
âLaps?â he asks simply, too focused to blurt any more words at 200 kilometers per hour.Â
âFour left.âÂ
Mingyu needs to get on this podium. Nobody is expecting it of him, first race of the season in a car considered outside his caliber, but he did not make it to P3 by pure chance. He doesnât know how long heâs been holding Grant off, but as he comes out of the corner and into the straight, his last three laps are glistening like stars in front of his eyes. That might also be spots of fatigue, but he cannot ponder on it in the moment.Â
The only other car in his rearview for so long was just Grant, but he sees it, the distinct blue of a Williams making its way onto the straight as Mingyu is about to make a sharp turn.Â
Along with two laps left to go, Mingyu also now has two cars on his tail.Â
He enters the second to last lap, no sign of you in his ears, but enough of Grant in his mirror. Mingyuâs pushing as much as he can, full throttle without a care of the very peculiar sounds his engine is making.Â
The track is all that consumes his vision, eyes dry with how long he's gone without blinking, hands and feet numb from nothing that has to do with weather.Â
The last lap. You finally tune in to do your job, a small, âFinal lap, final lap.â
âCopy,â Mingyu says, but it comes out as a soundless breath.Â
Because he sees it, the final turn and the back of Minghaoâs car as it passes the checkered flag in front of him.Â
And in seconds, Mingyuâs there where he once watchedâin red, on the podium. Prevailed.Â
As the Mclaren turns into just Philip Grant and not his competitor, even your icy tone cannot bring him down at this moment.Â
âGreat job, everyone,â he huffs into the mic, a little starstruck.Â
He parks right up front the big number 3, pushing himself out of the car. The cooldown room is Minghao and Seokmin, both of whom are immediately congratulating him through desperate sips of water, pats on the back and bright faces.Â
Once theyâve all caught their breaths, heâs suddenly very aware heâs being filmed, but chooses to ignore it as he combs his hair back with his hands and puts his team hat on.Â
âHeard Grant gave you a tough time,â Seokmin starts. He won the race, Mingyu doesnât know by how much, but with the way he had time mid-race to ask his engineer for otherâs statuses, he assumes it mustâve gone a lot easier than Mingyuâs.Â
âYeah,â Mingyu hummed. âPushed through though.â
âLost sight of you at some point,â Minghao notes as he fidgets with his race suit.Â
âYeah, he was too busy staring at my rear end,â Seokmin adds, which earns him a smack against the chest from Minghao, whoâs smiling all the same.Â
Trophies are paraded, champagne is sprayed, and Mingyu is taking in every second like it might never happen again. But he knows it will, because every time he catches the crimson of Minghaoâs attire, he knows itâs his too, that his life has changed.Â
When heâs in the garage, he takes a moment to let everyone who is left to congratulate him, taking the time before finally reaching the technical aspect of the day before he can leave.Â
You sit in the meeting room with Seungcheol, waiting for him as he enters. Seungcheol already congratulated him earlier, but heâd be lying if he wasnât expecting something from you too. The room is freezing, like someone left the air conditioner on while the place was empty.Â
Itâs catching up to Mingyu that you never said a thing when heâd passed the checkered flag, not a peep of a congratulations, a sliver of remarkability in anything at all. There's time before he finally comes down from the race adrenaline, but he already knows itâs going to irk him.Â
âGrant was putting up a fight,â Cheol says.Â
Before Mingyu can reply, youâre butting in, âTelemetry says you were going full throttle for a lot of the stalemate but the engine wasnât giving as much as it should have. Did you feel anything different?â
Heâs thrown off by the direct question, but answers regardless, âI wasnât paying much attention while avoiding him, but it didnât sound right. Like there was no bass in the sound.â
Mingyu knew enough about the manufacturing of the cars to explain himself, but he realises this isnât something he fully understands, especially since the deterioration occurred so slowly.Â
âWeâll look into it. Anything else?âÂ
âI think that was it.â
Youâre click clacking away on your laptop, while Seungcheol sits with a hand running over his mouth. His brows are not quite relaxed. Finally, he speaks up into the silence. âI think thatâs all from us for now. You go rest up, you had a big day.â
Later on, when Mingyu has bid his goodnight, you continue typing out emails to the responsible people to hop on a call as soon as tomorrow morning. Seungcheol is staring lasers into you, not saying a word.Â
âWhat do you want?â you ask quietly, not a hitch in what youâre occupied with.Â
âDo you need to be that way?â
âWhat way?â
âLike that. With him.â
âWhat have I done to him?âÂ
âNothing. That might be the problem.â
âIâm doing my job Seungcheol, I donât know what you want from me.â
âYou treat him like an inconvenience. Heâs the essence of your job and youâve hardly spoken to him.â
You donât reply, slowing down your typing, still staring at the blinking bar that taunts you. âThis has nothing to do with you.â
âMingyu could make peace with a hyena if it came to it, but thereâs only so much heâs gonna take before it starts becoming a problemâ
Ripping your eyes from your screen, your fists clench atop your keyboard, pressing down so hard you send a flying line of ellipses across the email draft.Â
âIâm trying to imagine a situation where my professionalism becomes a problem, Seungcheol.â
âThis isnât professionalism. You're being professional when you talk to me, Hao, Charlotte, Hugh. Youâre not professional when youâre talking to Mingyu.â
âIâm tired,â you announce, slamming your laptop shut on your unsent email. âLetâs just go.â
Seungcheolâs own professionalism mustâve kicked in because he doesnât refute, choosing to leave you as you are.Â
Of course, it wasnât that he was wrongâyou are acting differently around Mingyu. On purpose.Â
The news was presented to you on a bright sunny morning, a day you were convinced was going to go very differently than it had.Â
There wasnât a thing you didnât love about the industry, and perhaps that was an overextension, but anytime youâre graced with plans and blueprints of developments and corrections of cars, it urges you to believe the statement true. Times were rare when you expressed this, met with scoffs and taunts of âyouâve clearly never done this", your own colleagues hardly being able to imagine being married to their job in the way you are.Â
The excitement was jittery, it made you need to suppress a jerky reaction, it filled your chest with warmth and comfort and the thrill of all the possibilities. Youâd managed to crawl your way up to an engineer, working on the cars that needed the most rapid rebrands, lightyears faster than other road cars.Â
But even then, as youâd mentioned to Carter plenty of times, there was something else you wanted. Something only the CEO could give you.Â
Carter promised heâd talk to him, but that was months ago. So when you woke up one day with a sparse meeting request in your email from none other than Carter himself, you had truly convinced yourself that this was it.Â
The Research and Development department of Scuderia Ferrari was an operation you caught glimpses and glances of like a forbidden love affair, windows not quite as big as other offices, but big enough for you to catch rare sightings of prototypes you couldnât understand, drawing paper and computers pulled up with charts you couldnât make out from where you stood.Â
You wanted to be in the eye of the hurricane, work on cars that defied the impossible, work that made you feel like you did something instead of sitting in a corner and pushing some buttons. It was embarrassing to admit just how much you longed for it, even more so when you realise youâd done everything to make sure you got there in the end.Â
Carter sat across from you with an unreadable expression, and the words to describe the feeling were not known to you, because what would regurgitate from his mouth next could only be described as nonsense wrapped in wet soil. The deep sinking weight in your chest plunged to depths unexplored, leaving a gaping black hole where there was once hope.Â
âWeâve caught wind that Cho is planning to Irish goodbye us altogether,â he gruffed out. âThat would leave us with a vacancy for race engineers, and weâd really rather keep it quiet.â
You donât remember how he explicitly asked you, but you remember asking him plenty of questions.Â
âHow can he just abandon his contract?!â
âHow much does this put me in the public eye?â
âHow am I supposed to drop everything and fly to a new country every week?â
And finally, the question youâd been wrestling down since the moment he uttered the dreaded words, you asked, âWhat about the position I said I wanted?â
Brayden Carter, a composed, professional man, simply interlaced his fingers on the table, âI can try, really try, if you can get through this season, and be available to us when we need you. Which, I know we will.â
âAre you bartering?â It came tumbling out before you could contain it. Entirely unprofessional, almost accusatory, but it wasnât not true.Â
âThink of it more asâŠa deal. I canât confirm that youâre what that department needs, or if HR would be intent on it, but I can promise you Iâll try. They donât need new personnel right now, and you going through them yourself wonât get you far. Iâll talk to Vigna and we can vouch for you.â
You wanted to ask the hard hitting questions, Whatâs the collateral?Â
But you donât. Quiet, unmoving, sitting back in your chair with fists on the armrests, deep within thoughts that take you everywhere and nowhere. Sitting there, you let his words imprint. He wasnât wrong, Choi Minho was winning championship after championship until last year, when Mercedes rolled in and turned all of Ferrariâs shine into coal covered relics. Itâd pushed them back more than they ever anticipated, R&D was packed to the brim with the best money could employ.Â
You needed Braydon Carter, and you needed Benedetto Vigna.Â
So you look up, blank faced, and with a tone that resembles an even emptier slate, you announce, âFine.â
The night you caught wind of Kim Mingyuâs potential onboarding onto Ferrari, your stomach knotted so hard you nearly threw up right then and there.Â
It wasnât that you were so repelled by him, more than the connotations ofâwell, everything else.Â
Your position as a reserve was quickly bumped up to upcoming as soon as Cho abandoned ship and left Carter and Co. with too much paperwork than they could afford with the time they had. You were the first female race engineer at Ferrari, but not the first in Formula One as a sport. The headlines and social media chatter was still quite at the forefront of your mind, of everything that went down beyond the track and paddocks in the supposed private lives of employees.Â
Human nature is to talk, about whatever the universe could bestow upon them as fodder. And arguably, there was nothing better to snicker about than people who arenât themselves. So when the very conveniently placed male driver / female race engineer combination first became available to the general public, it did not go down well.Â
You distinctly remember a female engineer at McLaren being switched out entirely, mid season when the rumours got out of hand. In hindsight, it was nothing but friendly banter, platonically intimate, but not nearly enough to be crossing professional lines. The very public aspect of your job was not lost on you, the prospect of stepping into the shoes you once watched from the sidelines loomed over your head. You needed to plan for this, airtight and foolproof, make sure you draw every line your job description would let you.Â
In an absolute heartbeat, you wouldâve preferred to be paired with Minghao. Quiet, reserved, kept things surface levelâas they should be. On the other end of the spectrum, you didnât need to dig to find out what entailed Mingyuâs paddock personality.Â
He was a firework bottled into a human body, light and sunshine followed him everywhere, leaving traces behind as the people who interacted with him beam like theyâd just been lit from within. Perhaps your perception was simply too left-brained to understand how a person could operate in this way, but you realised his overt friendliness was a threat to the lines youâd drawn in soldered iron.Â
You donât know the moral or ethical integrity of the decision you ended up making, but it was all you had. Avoid Mingyu like the plague, just enough to establish you wanted nothing to do with him, but not so much it hindered you or him from doing your jobs.
It seemed simple enough in theory. Get through the season, get results, and keep your mouth shut while youâre at it.Â
Seungcheolâs nagging did nothing but confirm what it looked like from the outsideâcold and direct. Just like it should be.Â
Even as Mingyu makes his way through the crowd in the garage, the same everlasting beam of sunshine on his face, now impossibly elevated with his podium, you remain standing in a corner where you canât be seen.
For a cursory, electrifying moment, you find yourself considering walking up to give him a brief congratulations.Â
Catching yourself before you could delve into the thought further, your back straightens up like someoneâs inserted a rod into your spine, rigid and at attention. Gripping the laptop and clipboard with a force definitely not recommended, you find yourself ripping your eyes away from the merrymaking, and about-turn into the nearest empty meeting room.Â
Passing up on pictures, you stay in the empty meeting room for minutes you donât count, watching the icicles form on every strand of hair on your body, letting the cold seep into your skin and muscles, pulling them so taut you can feel every fibre. Thereâs ice on everything you touch, cold, slippery and unforgivingly numbing.Â
The clock ticks in your ears, the only everlasting sound in the room.Â
IMOLA 2025
âLee in the pits, we can push this lap.â
Mingyu doesnât need to be told twice as he floors it. His first goal this weekend is to make it to Q3, which heâs evidently managed, as his second goal is to now somehow make it to pole. With Seokmin in the pits, he can forget about the twisting and turning he needs to do around him, gearing up as he approaches the starting line to race a lap like heâs never ever before.
Nothing could have prepared him for the vigour of a Ferrari fan in Imola, no matter how much heâd witnessed it in the past. It was electric, the way they reached for him to affirm their trust in him, the potency of their passion.Â
Even now, as Mingyu attempts to make this the fastest qualifying lap of his career, he simply canât go fast enough. The stands are no doubt loud, but nothing compares to the anarchy in his ears, the pounding possibility of this one, this is the lap.
He blanks out when the lap is over and he slows down for the subsequent one, tuning in to ask you the fated question.Â
âTime?â Ideally, he shouldnât have to ask, considering heâs attempting to focus on the track ahead and not logistics, but heâs too impatient to test you on that.Â
â1:24. Thatâs pole.â
It takes everything to not slam his fists into the steering wheel in celebration, choosing to simply shake his fists in the air in barely controlled exhilaration as he drives. âYes!â
âPit on the next round,â you say, and he considers himself retired from the qualifying session.Â
âHow long left on the clock?â Anything over a minute heâd argue to stay on track and defend the position.Â
âWeâre clear for P1.â
Despite the air of elation, your answer irritates him. âI asked how long left on the clock.â
âEnough to not worry. Pit on the next lap.â The reprimand in your tone does nothing but add fuel to the fire. Momentarily, Mingyu forgets the pressing fact that the entire world can hear the radio exchange, a powerfully worded retort on the tip of his tongue fighting its way out. He holds himself back as he forms the syllable on his lips. It takes him a moment, before finding himself to utter nothing else but this;
â_____.âÂ
Itâs a warning. Nothing but your name, which he realises heâs hardly ever uttered before. Itâs hard on his tongue, a forceful addition to his vocabulary. He doesnât understand it, like heâs introducing an enemy into the sanctuary of his spoken wordâa bad omen.Â
His voice is met with nothing but silence, not a crackle of an open line on the other end of the radio. Just when he thinks youâve chosen to completely ignore him on the air, he hears the static come back in.Â
âThirty seconds.â
How hard was that? Is what heâd like to ask, but he nips the thought at the bud, choosing to file into the pits in silence after that.Â
As heâs slowing down, his garage in sight, he chooses his next words carefully. âCongratulations, _____.â
He waits, as he parks his car in his garage, watches in his peripheral as hands he cannot count begin to pull at the car, pushing it into its space. He waits as he unlatches himself from his seat, feeling the clicks through his gloves, pressing down for longer than necessary. He waits as he rips the velcro off his gloves, freeing his hands from the damp den, flexing his fingers in the air. He waits as he heaves himself out of the car, standing as he reaches for the strap of his helmet.Â
He waits as he unlatches his helmet, pulling the helmet and HANS device with it. He waits as he yanks his balaclava off, staring at nothing as he finally moves his hand to his ears. He waits, his fingers hovering over his in-ears that connect him to the paddock at all times. He stares ahead, at where the pit wall is hindered by the hustle and bustle of the pit walk now that Qualifying is over.Â
Mingyu waits; 1, 2, 3, 4, 5⊠ears straining to hear the static, to hear you say something, until finally, he pulls out his in-ears, disconnecting himself from you.
The wire hits his chest, and he exhales. Looking around, he finds Hugh at his shoulder, smiling so wide it ripples at his dimples and strains his neck. He offers Mingyu a hand which he takes, pulling himself to step out of the car.Â
The gravity of the situation is losing its effects. Heâd made history, given the Tifosi something to look forward to come Sunday, but he feels nothing but ire.Â
Nightfall blinks its stars in the windows of Mingyuâs hotel room that night. Heâs scrubbed himself down twice, meticulously folded his dirty clothes and slipped them into a laundry bag, did his skincare for the first time in weeks, and picked off every last piece of loose thread on his pillow.Â
All to avoid looking at his phone.Â
But as he stares at the ceiling, knowing full well he has to reach for his phone to set his alarm for the following morning, he realises he has to come to terms with it. His lockscreen presents him with a message from Minseo.Â
[Old raisin]: meeting with carter on monday
[Mingyu]: For what
[Old raisin]: didnt say
Mingyu only huffs, exiting the app to set his alarms. Heâd deal with whatever it was later, for now, the only thing occupying his mind was the race he had to win.Â
He manages to avoid his phone all night and all morning, turning his alarms off and forgetting the device existed as he got ready. Chan is in the room while Mingyu splashes the sleep out of his eyes one last time, exiting to find his agent with furrowed brows at the small desk in the room, staring into his laptop screen.Â
âWhat?â asks Mingyu, reaching for his socks.Â
Chan shakes his head, emitting a small noise of dismissal. He looks up to see his driver nearly ready, and begins to pack up. By the time they get to the circuit, heâs noticed his agentâs diverted attention all the while. Staring at his phone scrolling, eyes darting across the screen, typing periodically.Â
Mingyuâs beginning to feel the nausea creep up, so he doesnât ask. Thereâs a prickly kind of heat all over his arms and neck, like heâd moved to a faraway place amidst the bustling garage. It was an odd feeling, and he canât say heâs felt like this before. Heâs self aware enough to know this was a myriad of factors swirling in his consciousness, but he isnât quite sure how to snap out of it.Â
Hugh is talking to you over Mingyuâs detached steering wheel. Heâs suddenly dizzy.Â
Turns out Mingyu didnât need to worry too much, considering the second heâs dipped into the driverâs seat, his nerves reset. Perhaps heâs conditioned himself to feel nothing but rapt attentiveness when his vision locks into the familiar landscape, but heâs grateful for the temporary nature of his cold feet.Â
âI donât have my steering wheel,â he speaks into the radio, strapping his gloves on.
Thereâs no response from your end, but seconds later, a mechanic is handing it to him.Â
He doesnât have time to ponder on your lack of response, again, because the garage is clearing out before his eyes, and he watches the raised hand walking backwards in front of him, before giving him the motion to exit.Â
Driving up to the grid at pole position after the formation lap, he lets out an exhale he knows the radio can hear. All of a sudden Mingyuâs forgotten where he is, whoâs counting on him, and what could come out of not delivering. All he can see are the lights above him that are going to flash bright red, and that the only rear end of a car heâs going to see is when he laps them all.Â
The lights ignite in a row, one by one by one, before going out altogether. And then Mingyuâs world is nothing but a roaring engine.Â
He pushes the first three laps as hard as he could, making sure the gap between him and Seokmin is as stretched as it can get. Seungcheol briefed him on strategy, that Minghao from P3 would keep him as occupied as possible in attempts to overtake that heâd eventually need to prioritise.Â
Mingyu is counting on it.Â
While Seokmin is on the opposite end of the aggressive spectrum off the track, he brings out the bear the second he's behind the wheel.Â
Mingyuâs glad for it, because this might be the most focused heâs ever been. So much so, that he doesnât realise how far heâs come till the radio crackles in, â33 laps in, 30 left to go.â
âCopy,â he utters as his first word inâŠhe doesnât know how long.
Seokmin is beginning to catch up behind him, both his livery and Minghaoâs in tandem in his mirror. Minghao remains hot on Seokminâs heels, but the Mercedes remains unrelenting.Â
Mingyu realises heâs going to have to start pushing again, so he takes his chance at the straight and goes full throttle. Minghao is beginning to wear the car down, catching gaps in Seokminâs guard as best as possible.Â
âBox box.â
âWhat?!â Mingyu sputters at the command.Â
With Seokmin hardly a few seconds behind, a pit stop was practically offering the lead to him on a silver platter. Mingyu doesnât think of the consequences when he lets the pit lane blur right past him as he continues on the track.Â
âMingyuââ
âIâm not pitting. Ten laps left, thatâs suicide!â He canât recognise the sound of his own voice, coming out grating and harsh from disuse, but laced with outrage.Â
Itâs empty on the other end as Mingyu does everything to ignore your request, knowing he couldnât just pit on the next lapconsidering the entire paddock heard your call. Mingyu attempts to put aside the irrational burst of anger for after the race, but he realises his ire is only gunning him to do better.Â
His ears ring as he whizzes past a lapped Aston Martin, finally, bringing a barrier between him and Seokmin. He realises itâs only a matter of time before the Aston has to give way to the other cars, and uses the delay to his advantage.Â
Heâs suddenly a lap away, still going full throttle to leave no room for error. A quick glance at his mirror and he realises Minghao is behind him now, having overtaken at some point along the way.Â
Mingyu crosses the checkered flag with the noise of his own blood rushing into his ears, reality slow to trickle in.Â
âThatâs a win,â he hears your flat voice over the noise, the confirmation that heâs done it. âCongratulations.â
Thatâs a win.Â
He doesnât remember any of the hollering that escapes him after that, because he realises heâs relaxing into his seat out of his own accord for the first time, and not from the influx of G forces pushing his organs into a centrifuge.Â
His victory lap is a blur, the roaring of the Tifosi a blended streak of red in his vision, the track a swallowing pit of dark grey. But maybe that was just the tears in his eyes.Â
âGreat job, Mingyu,â Braydon Carterâs voice is in his ear on the radio. âThis side of the paddockâs proud of you.â
Later on, heâll look back onto the pictures and realise he doesnât remember smiling that wide. Because in the moment, all Mingyu felt was an overwhelming, all-consuming sense of relief.Â
He seems to have forgotten the weight of his win, because as he walks out of the cooldown room and into the blue skies of Imola, the winning podium gives him the best view in the house; of the ever-stretching ocean of red thatâs taken over the track. A flag that could span an entire highway depicts the prancing horse like a winning emblem, reddish smoke wavering over the crowd like a haze.Â
Mingyu feels like heâs been punched square in the chest, the wind knocked out of him. Which is saying something considering the weight of ten elephants was laid on him in his car not even twenty minutes ago.Â
By the time Mingyu is back in the garage, stripped of most of his clothes and dipped to his neck in the ice bath, heâs letting his emotions slowly wither down to something manageable. Chan sits next to him on a chair, and Mingyu takes a moment to notice his agent still has his phone in his hands as he talks his ear off.
âAnd then I thought Hao was gonna ram into SeokminâŠâ he trails off as he watches him. His brows are furrowed and his mouth downturned. He hums in response to keep Mingyu talking, but his attention is anywhere but on him.Â
âYouâve been glued to your phone all day,â he says. âWhatâs going on?â
Chan snaps his head up to look at him, shaking his head with more force than necessary, locking his phone and slipping it back into his pocket. âNothing. Press should be waiting soon, dâyou think youâre done?â
Mingyu isnât buying it, but begins to rise out of the freezing water into the comparatively warmer air. Chan is setting towels down for him to step his pooling feet onto, but something tells him heâs busying himself to keep from making eye contact.Â
âChan, am I walking out there blind?âÂ
âBlind about what?â he asks. But Mingyu knows him well enough to hear the breathiness of his voice, the nerves laced behind his smoothing laughter.Â
âChan. If Iâm going to be asked about something out there, I wanna know.â His voice is sterner now, fully convinced heâs being kept from something.Â
When his agent doesnât respond, he only huffs. âFine, Iâll look myself.â Mingyu doesnât care heâs only in his drenched boxers, leaving puddles of water in his wake as he reaches for his phone with wet hands.Â
âOkay, justâ!â Chan snatches his phone away and forces a towel into his hands. âDry off and Iâll tell you.â
Mingyu sits down and runs the dry towel over his arms and chest. âPeople areâŠnoticing, that your race engineer isâŠâ
âA grump?â Mingyu answers for him.Â
âA little,â he cringes. âItâs mostly just memes and the usual jokes but some are saying she ruined the win.âÂ
âRuined it?â
âYou didnât say much on radio.â Chanâs arms hang limp at his sides. âThatâs not very like you.â
Mingyu looks down as he dries his legs. âNot much to say on a ghost line.âÂ
âThere isnât much we can do when most of the talk is lighthearted. But people are confused.âÂ
And they have the right to be. Mingyu isnât exactly the quiet type, his silence right after the biggest milestone of his career so far was bound to be noticed.Â
âYou were bouncing off the walls once you were out of the car, so it kindaâŠâ
âMade them think she was the problem,â Mingyu finishes. He sighs loudly, and thinks of the hoard of press waiting for him outside.Â
Chan looks as uncomfortable as ever, and he knows itâs not because of Mingyuâs lack of modesty.Â
It wouldnât be entirely right of him to badmouth Mingyuâs race engineer; and the possibility of the problem worseningâŠitâs weighing on him. It doesnât help that Mingyuâs popularity has rocketed to the stars since the season began.Â
âIs she?â Chan asks.Â
âHm?âÂ
âIs she a problem?â
Mingyu opens his mouth only to close it again. He runs a cold, pruned hand over his face. âI donât think she particularly likes me, but Iâd hoped she wouldnât let it get in the way of her job.â
âIf itâs affecting your drive you need to talk to Carter,â Chan pushes now that Mingyuâs brought the subject to light.Â
âI canât be making demands this quicklyââ
âYouâve given them a win seven weekends in,â Chan cuts him off. âThat has to account for something.â
âListen, Iâve been managing fineââ
âAnd when you canât? Sheâs your only point of communication on the track and she refuses to talk to you, thatâs a disaster waiting to happen! She was making you lap while Seokmin was only three seconds behind youâwith ten laps left to go!â
Mingyu doesnât have an answer for him, because he knows heâs right.Â
The win is fresh hanging over all of their heads, but a corner of his heart canât help but feel like an intruder on this team. Like heâs somehow gotten here through pure uncut luck and nothing more. That he needs to tread with paramount caution or else theyâd take it all away from him.Â
Mingyuâs scared, an irrational fear that he recognises. But it sits buried deep inside him, and you only seem to stoke that fire.Â
âIâll think about it for a week or two,â Mingyu finally says. Chan opens his mouth to refute but heâs cut off. âNow get out, I have put on dry underwear.â He flicks his damp towel at him, pushing him out of the small room.Â
Mingyu attempts to calm his nerves, now fully clothed amidst a panel of Minghao and Seokmin, staged before a room full of press representatives.Â
He musters the most natural of smiles, the easy pull of his mouth and the calm on his face that he doesnât feel. âItâs a bit! Sheâs funny like that.â
The reporter who asked the fated question stares like he mightâve told him you were an automation, and he sees it in his face. Heâs not buying it.Â
Mingyuâs dread hits the pedal.Â
Carter picks out a nonexistent piece of lint off his dark sweater. You ponder for a moment how much the plain piece of clothing cost, but are interrupted when he begins to speak.Â
âWe had a deal,â he reminds you. âYou fill in for Mingyuâs race engineer for this yearâand this year aloneâand Iâd help you get to R&D. Maybe I didnât make it clear enough, but we expected at least an above average job.â
Irritation you cannot describe ignites within you, rationality leaving you for a moment. With tense muscles and a hard look, you know deep down youâre being unreasonable. But you cannot seem to care.Â
âArguing on radio?â Heâs beginning to lose a bit of his composure. âAnd about whatâthe time?â
Thereâs nothing you can say.Â
âI canât vouch for you in front of Vigna when heâs called me five times in the last hour to tell me to put my race engineer in line.â
âI get it,â you say through grit teeth and a concealed sigh. âIâll fix it.â
âYou donât have a choice. The internetâs in the beginning stages of a riot and your face is smack center of the dart board.â
That is news to you. âWhat?â Itâs easier to look him in the eye now, genuinely confused.
He throws his hands in the air in a half-hearted yield, the lines on his face still ever present. âYou cannot wrong a driver this beloved by the public and not expect people to lash out, honestly I thought you were smart enough to know that. Granted itâs only a few jokes but thatâs always how it begins. You havenât just been inadequate at your job, youâve been utterly unprofessional!â His voice pitches higher by the end of the sentence, hands flying as he speaks.Â
He shakes his head, not quite done. â_____, if you cannot convince me, you cannot convince Vigna. And you cannot convince me until youâve convinced the public.âÂ
The inordinate feeling of whiplash stays with you all the way back to your hotel room, operating entirely on instinct as you wash up and finally slip under the covers. Your phone is untouched beside you, and you decide to steel yourself and pick the damn thing up for the first time in hours and hours.Â
At the very least, if you need to cry, thereâs enough to run the reservoir dry before tomorrow morning.Â
The first thing that glares at you is a suggested post, practically shoving reality in your face for the part of you that believes Carter was exaggerating.Â
KIM MINGYU WINS IN IMOLA!Â
The breath you take is shaky, pressing onto the comment section with hesitancy like it was prone to combustion.Â
[@_xy__z]:Â AAAAAAAA SO DESERVED!!!!! had potential to be his bestest win but ofc, thats not his fault
[@zx__y]:Â somebody needs to put his race engineer in check
[@yzx__01]:Â hottest man on the grid won in a ferrari in italy and was still met with radio silence đđđđ what of us common folk
[@x__zy]:Â yeah congrats and everything but wtf was happening on that radioÂ
[@yy01zx]: just when i thought i could be excited about another female race engineerâŠ..girl get a grip
Youâre grinding your teeth so hard you can hardly feel the pain in your jaw. Another scroll takes you to another still of Mingyuâs godawful face thatâs beginning to cost you, at the post race conference you had no desire to wait on or look out for.Â
âItâs a bit,â he says into the mic. Nothing in his expression to suggest a lick of an otherwise, nothing tentative in his smile. Itâs revolting to you how easy it looks, how easy the lie came to him. Not a hair out of place.Â
You close your eyes on instinct, and take a moment to regroup before you resort to kicking and punching at hotel grade bedsheets and thin air.Â
Itâd gotten that far.Â
Youâd never meant for it to get this far.Â
The utter weight of your emotions pushes you into a sitting position, vision blurring from the frustration. This is the opposite of what you wanted.Â
Itâs sickening as the thought begins to coagulate, the full bodied realisation of whatâs happened. It was obvious, in the comment section thatâs meant to be full of his praise but isnât, in the silence you gave in response on radio, to every time you talked yourself out of being even remotely near his vicinity, in your vehement denial of the fallout.
In your attempt to become unseen, youâd ended up thrusting yourself into the limelight anyway. Front and center.Â
And you donât know how to fix it.Â
MONACO 2025
Mingyu is bitter. And he doesnât think heâs entirely wrong to be so.Â
But he remains as though not a brick is out of place on the Monaco paddock. He finds repose in the one time during the season he gets to do it, getting to the paddock from his home and not a sterile hotel room. Itâs been a couple weeks since heâs set foot on a circuit, but hardly feels the detachment despite the break.Â
He tries and fails to not think about it when he gets to his tiny room in the garage to get into full battle dress, prepared for whenever he needs to get into the car for the first Practice session. Media day had been better than heâd expected, but he feels Minseo might have had something to do with the lack of questions aimed at the obvious.Â
Minghao is speaking to you at the opening of the garage when Mingyu emerges, his suit undone to the waist. Minghao is yet to change, still in jeans and sunglasses as you converse with a neutral expression. Your back is turned to Mingyu, but youâre nodding your head along. Mingyu is spotted as Minghao looks up and sees him walking towards the pair.Â
He says something to you before heâs moving to pat Mingyu on the back. âIâve gotta run right now, but let me know when we can talk. Wanted to catch up.âÂ
Mingyu nods, âYou can come over after the session.â
âSounds good,â he nods at you as well. âIâll see you.â
Mingyu is busy watching him walk away to his side of the garage, so much so that he hardly notices that you're yet to walk away from him.Â
Alarmingly, youâve instead turned around to face him in full. Itâs enough to startle him when he eventually looks over, an embarrassing spring under his feet. Thereâs an odd look on your face he canât quite place, which is already beginning to bother him. He braces himself for a sharp tongued demand from you, but all you look is a littleâŠpained?
Your mouth is doing a strange thing, tight lipped and stretching. âGood morning,â you say, in an equally odd voice heâs never heard from you.Â
And then you walk away, about-turned and marching towards the meeting rooms in the back.Â
Mingyu gapes.Â
You just greeted him. And he quickly realises that it was something akin to a smile on your face (more of a grimace than anything), and a ghastly attempt at a pleasant tone.Â
Mingyu doesnât know what to do with himself.Â
Heâs sure he looks stupid standing there with a dazed expression on his face, but heâs too occupied with his attempts to register the situation. Good morning.
A harsh slap on the back of his head lurches him forward, but reels him back into the world. Wonwoo stands there, brows furrowed and a concerned look in his eyes.Â
âHello?â
âWhat?â Mingyu asks sharply.Â
âWhy are you staring at the door like Jesus is about to walk out?â
âWhat do you want?â Mingyu asks rather rudely.Â
âTo know why you went momentarily deaf? I called out for you like ten times.â
He shakes his head in response. âItâs nothing.â
âDid she say something?â Wonwoo asks the censored question, but Mingyu doesnât need him to fill in that blank. You did say something, but it wasnât what anybody in their vicinity would expect.Â
Mingyu locks eyes with his friend, who has his headset over his shoulders and his hands in his pockets, and tells him: âShe said good morning.â
âTo who?â
âTo me.â
âLikeâŠsarcastically?â
âNo! She looked like she was smiling.â
âSardonically.â
âNo! Like she was trying to be pleasant.â
Wonwoo is silent for a moment, before asking again, âShe said good morning, to you, while smiling pleasantly?â
âIt wasâŠan attempt.â
âAt what?â
âLooked like it pained her to be nice to me,â Mingyu folds his arms over his chest.Â
Wonwoo similarly looks like heâs trying to absorb what heâs being told, cocking his head to the side. âAnd all it took wasâŠ?â
Mingyu shrugs with dazed eyes.Â
Wonwoo looks like he already knows, â...a couple mean internet jokes?â
âI meanâŠif thatâsâŠâ Mingyu closes his eyes and trails off. âI donât know. Itâs throwing me off, I donât like it.â
âIf sheâs trying to be nicer thenâŠlet her.â
âShe looks like she wants to vomit at the thought of speaking to me politely. Iâd rather her cuss me out.â
Wonwoo raises his eyebrows and looks like he wants to say something, but his eyes flit over his shoulder. Mingyu looks behind him instinctively and sees you and Seungcheol walking out of the meeting room.Â
Your hair is in a ponytail, itâs earlier in the day so thereâs less pieces that are falling out to frame your face. The strands shine in the reflection of the sun, pouring in through the open garage. Youâre wearing the red team kit and a dark pair of trousers, tablet in hand as you strut towards the outside, weaving through mechanics and engineers pouring over the car that parks between you.Â
Squinting eyes in the sunlight, he watches a shadow come over your face as you bring a hand up to shield your vision. The sun pours through the gaps of your fingers, illuminating parts of your face.Â
Mingyu stares blatantly as you walk up to the pit wall, like it will give him an answer. All it does is make him queasy.Â
Wonwoo pats him on the back, gentler this time, âThatâs your cue. I gotta get back too.â
Mingyu is on the track, in the middle of accelerating on a straight when he finally admits the fact that your tone is still hesitantly agreeable.Â
âDo your tires feel okay?â you ask him over the radio, strange micro-pauses between words that donât sound natural in the slightest. The question itself is a doozy, considering you speak an average of fifteen words to him over the radio during the entire weekend. Youâve exhausted that number and more, and itâs only Friday.Â
âYeah, theyâreâtheyâre fine.â Itâs distracting enough that heâs begun to slow down on the straight.
âYouâre slower, do we need to note an issue with the engine?â
âNo, I need to push.â
âNoted.â
Mingyu feels like heâs been knocked off his rocker, still deciding if heâd rather you revert back to the way you were. But he has no say in that, nor did he have one in your apparent change in attitude.
Itâs when he takes the turn and lands behind Seokminâs black Mercedes, he realises he doesnât have the choice to slack off from shock. Especially not at this point of the season.Â
Itâs only a Practice session to tweak the reconstructed car, but Mingyu feels his tunnel vision seep in, suddenly hellbent on overtaking the man and leaving him to floating dust. Even then, as he takes his turns, brake checks the car, pushes to full throttle, he canât shake it offâat least not entirely.
Especially not when your voice continues to crackle into his ears more times than heâs ever heard before, more care for his status updates than youâd ever shown. Perhaps, you are even going beyond whatâs required.Â
Mingyu hops out of the car at the end of the session, bartering Minseo for no more sit down interviews or hands he has to shake with a promise of fixing her shower head during the week. His home calls for him, and so does Minghao when he feels the familiar buzz of his phone in his pocket.Â
Minghao insists on no dinner when they get to Mingyuâs apartment, but allows him to scoop a bowl of dressed salad as they sit on the floor over his coffee table. In all honesty, Mingyu never has much of an appetite the night before Qualifying or Race Days, but he admits it feels easier with Minghao joining him at the eve.Â
Minghao was never the talkative type, not nearly as much as Mingyu at the very least, but heâs found himself growing closer to his teammate over the past months. It was easy to talk to him, especially when it came to the unceasing case of imposter syndrome that would grip Mingyu like a vice at the worst times.Â
Although it looks a little bit like Minghao is skirting around the actual topic, their small talk never quite transitioning. Until it does.Â
He puts his fork down into his almost finished bowl, moving it to rest at the coffee table. He sighs, and thatâs Mingyuâs only indication before he begins to speak. âSoâŠ,_____.â
It shouldnât shock him, but Mingyu does find himself shifting uncomfortably on the carpeted floor at the sound of your name, your unusually pitched voice ringing in his ears all over again. Mingyu can only sigh in response, repositioning to brace for impact.Â
Minghao chuckles at his shift in behaviour, âAlright, whatâs going on with that?â
âWish I knew.â
âWonwoo said sheâd been different,â he raises his brows.Â
âSnitch,â Mingyu mumbles under his breath. âYeah she has. Itâs obvious why, but I wouldâve thought sheâd want to talk about it first.â
Minghao's mouth is in a tight line. âSheâs not always like this.â
âThatâs the whole problem, isn't it?â Mingyu downs his water glass. âShe doesnât seem to have an issue with anyone else.â
âAnd now?â
âLike sheâs convincing herself I'm not repulsive.â
âIf you think itâs bad on air, youâre in for a shock.â
Minghao is silent for a minute, taking in Mingyuâs face. âIâve never seen you this bothered.â
Mingyu runs his tongue over his teeth, âItâs affecting how I drive. I thought it wasnât, but I keep thinking about it and itâs distracting. And sheâs trying to be nicer for the world to see but itâs doing nothing but distract me even more. And I justâŠ.I can't figure out what I possibly could've done.â
âYou,â Minghao starts, âhave a horrible need to be liked.â
Mingyu blinks.Â
âWhat?â
âItâs what I said.â
âI know Iâm liked.â
âThatâs not what I said.â
âYouâre saying Iâm more annoyed she doesnât like me than the fact that itâs affecting my driving?â
Minghao only shrugs, âMaybe itâs both. Iâm not saying she isnât in the wrong, but maybe you need to try being okay with however she is. Itâll stop bothering you as much, thatâs for sure.â
âButââ
âSheâs trying to be more communicative. Sure, it sounds grating to the ear but maybe you need to take the progress as is.â
Mingyu listens, not knowing how to respond.Â
âMeet her where she is. Better than fighting it.â
He thinks about it. He hasn't been seeing the change as progression, linking it as another facet of your existing odd behaviour emitting from the same anomalous place it always had. Thereâs an echo of effort in the way you spoke to him, something changed in the two weeks he hadnât seen you. Whether it came from a place of vexation or adjustment, he doesnât know. He wonders if he should take it as the latter and run with it. For his own sake.Â
âThink about it. It wonât hurt. And if it willâŠyouâre better at hiding it than she is.â
âIs this some sick form of sabotage?â he shoots at his friend in jest.Â
Minghao only raises his hands in defense, âCanât do a nice thing anymore.â
When Mingyu sees you bright and early on Saturday, he forces himself to smile.Â
He isnât sure why heâs shocked, but he watches as you smile back. Youâre getting better at being natural about it, but thereâs still a lingering hesitancy in the pull of your mouth.Â
When heâs in the car, about to make it into Q3 in the nick of time, you speak into his ears, âDouble checked everything on my end, you can push for this one.â
And then, miraculously:
âYouâre doing great, Mingyu.â
If Mingyu wasnât in the middle of Qualifying, he wouldâve driven right into the gravel. Minghao is in his ears again, words resounding as he steels himself.Â
And when he makes it to P2 by a hair, he canât even bring himself to be disappointed. Not when youâre speaking encouragement in his ear.Â
âThatâs P2, good place to start.â
And in the meeting room, mechanics and engineers all crowded at the table, Mingyu finds himself hearing a side of you heâs only seen from afar.Â
âI think we need the engine to have another once over before tomorrow but I think both car and driver are doing alright.â Your tone is light, airy, easy, at least exponentially more so than before. Nobody else in the room looks remotely moved by the alteration, but Mingyu has to stop himself from ogling like heâs seen a ghost.Â
When Sunday rolls around, despite the mere 24 hour difference, he feels it a little less burdensome to muster a smile at you, but is still finding it difficult to tamp down the blow when you send a little âgood morningâ his way.Â
Mingyu steps up to the second plate by the end of the race, right before Minghao jumps up onto the first. Most of the race was Mingyu defending his rear from the incessant Mercedes. Seokmin who claps good-naturedly all the same on the third plate as Minghao accepts his trophy with head held high.Â
When the roar dies down, and Mingyu makes his way back with slow steps, he takes his time waving at fans when they spot him despite the end of the race. The sun is setting, the Monaco glow making its way over to the pit lane. He finds you at the opening of his garage. Normally, you would lock yourself in a meeting room with an array of staff post-race, and normally, heâd be confused to find you anywhere but there. Almost like you were waiting.Â
âCongrats,â you say as soon as heâs within earshot. Mingyu briefly wonders if the insurmountable awkwardness is as apparent to you as it is to him. Nobody can tell though, because Mingyu hides it as best as possible and gives you a âthanksâ in return.Â
The garage is impeccably loud, the weekend coming to a close and a million parts of his car drilling out of their fixed places to be transported. Itâs impossible to not adapt when heâs surrounded by similar (and louder) sounds on the regular, but as he watches the hesitancy in your face, he has to focus to realise you have something to say.Â
He watches as your mouth opens, but he hardly catches it. Something about Carter. He thinks you mention Seokmin but he hasnât fully caught it.Â
Instinctively, Mingyu leans in closer. Thereâs little thought of how close his ear is to your mouth, not until you start speaking. âYou did a good job defending, Carterâs been worried about Lee.â
Your breath hits his skin as you speak, arms folded and face clear. He sees it when he faces you to respond. He doesnât think before he says it, slipping into his usually banter on instinct, âTheyâve been feeding him telemetry reports in his downtime, heâs been a pain this season.â
He thinks that was a smile. Less coerced, less laboured. Maybe even real.Â
"We're expecting it to get harder, Toto seems adamant on no mistakes."
In the newly turned tides of different gravel in a different country, yet sustained essence, it feels almost ironic to say. But that doesn't stop him. "So are we."
Not a question, but it hangs in the air like it just might be.Â
Mingyu isn't sure himself if he meant it as a test, but the way he watches you absorb his words is calculated. Every twitch in your face, every tremble of your mouth. Until you respond. Assured.Â
"So are we."
Minghao is attempting to put up a fight in the squash court, conspicuous with the sweat that glistens on his skin under the harsh lights. Mingyu does not doubt he appears to be faring worse, his sweating abilities notorious and excessive.Â
Mingyu's managed to break his racket twice already, less of an expense at the center's supply store but more-so at his dignity. Minghao makes sure to nag, but not before laughing at the cracked racket hanging limp in his hand.Â
Minghao sends the rubber ball straight into the wall as Mingyu prepares to maneuver. Squash is loud, in a significantly more echo-y way than the roar of an engine. It reverberates in Mingyu's skull with every slammed ball, the beginnings of a headache making its way to his temples.Â
Minghao seems to be faring similarly, because he calls quits first. Both of them are massaging their heads as they walk to their bags.Â
"Forgot how horrible that gets after a while," Minghao groans, the heel of his hand over his brow bone. He plops down next to the bags, reaching for the water bottle as Mingyu does the same.Â
"Ice pack?" Mingyu pants, but is met with a shaking head. He wouldn't know where to find one anyway. When he's done chugging his water, he plops down right beside him, digging into his duffel bag for his phone.Â
For the hours he hasn't checked it, he's shocked he's gotten no notifications, his homescreen empty.Â
All except for one.Â
[Old raisin]: you have to get home now
[Old raisin]: dont make me call you
Dread floods into his stomach almost immediately. He's sitting up straighter, not even bothering to reply.Â
He scrambles to open the first social media app he can navigate, scrolling to the search bar.Â
Sports - Trending
MINGYU
84.7k PostsÂ
CALICOÂ @jamescalico - June 1
Ferrari Driver Mingyu Kim & Ferrari Race Engineer _____ _____ on the Monaco Paddock. May 19th 2024.Â
Mingyu thinks it's wallpaper at first. It's a glowing ember of a picture, the sun radiating a vivid orange that feels impossible. It's behind the camera, shining down on the unmistakable crimson of the Ferrari garage, half shadowed by the shelter, the other half on fire. It almost hurts to look at.Â
You stand so close to one another you're almost touching. The bend of Mingyu's head shields his face from the camera, but it's rotated to face you completely. You stand on tiptoes he doesn't remember, to speak to him in your learned tone over the loud machinery.Â
Except it looks anything like it. Because the mortifyingly beautiful image convinces him you stand there sharing something more than words. It looks like Mingyu's dipped his head down to kiss you, and you seemed to have leaned up to kiss him. Right there, on the Monaco Paddock.Â
MONTREAL 2025
It's in the bathtub of a hotel you can't remember the name of, in the middle of the foreign Montreal city center that you realise you've ruined it all.Â
The briefing room flashes before your eyes with every blink, the sterile white haunting you like a ghost in the bathroom. You do your best to avoid it, staring directly at the yellow of the sconce. The horrid scene swims into your visions anyway.Â
Carter sat with his hand cupping his face, stormy eyed as he listened to Vigna over the speakerphone like he held all the answers in the world. You sat on the opposite end, listening in as your situation was laid out in front of you.Â
"âthe angle, Benedettoâ"
"Look at the photo Braydon, it's unmistakable."
"We can let it blow over, there's no point in responding."
"We have a race in three days we cannot put these two on the same radio!"Â
You forgot to distinguish who's saying what at some point, because you know it's your head reeling far worse than any other man in the room. It's a blur, the tense phone calls to Vigna, to marketing, to every other department in the damn company that seems to be obligated to have an opinion.
You're tired. So very tired.Â
The water in the bath is running cold, or perhaps you're just losing feeling.Â
Carter had his head in his hands by the end of it, sitting in an empty meeting room as the rest of the damage control leaves. A pen here, a blaring yellow sticky note there. It was silent, and you'd hardly said a word once you'd said your initial piece.Â
But what was there left to say? No spacey sound of the telephone with Maranello on the other end, no furiously typing assistant in the corner, no PR person with a million ways to fix it all.Â
There was no space for words in the barren room, not from Carter, and certainly not from you.Â
The puddle of water on the floor of the hotel bathroom makes you want to dip right back into the tub. You forgot to turn the air conditioning off, and the blistering air flows inwards to your naked dripping body.Â
Forever, you'll pride yourself for keeping it in for that long. The sob that finally breaks out of you shakes your entire body, your wet hands are in your damp hair as you crouch onto the bathroom floor. Your forehead touches your cold, bare knees, face hot as you dig your nails into your arms.Â
Huddled in that bathroom, shivering but nowhere near cold, you wish you'd said no to Carter all those months ago. No to leaving your perfectly comfortable position in Maranello, no to the cloudy promise of something more, no to believing there was more for you if you'd just tried.Â
It stares at you as if you needed the reflection, as if the consequences of your actions aren't raking through your body. Like if you cried hard enough, if you regretted it horribly enough, it would all undo itself.Â
The thread meant to take you to the other side was unfurled, yanked by your own hand. But you find yourself tangled in it instead, knotted and inevitably stuck.Â
Your fingers itch for the scissors.Â
BAKU 2025
Chan beats around the bush while attempting to give Mingyu a pep talk, but he doesn't need to be told to know that this might be the worst track on the calendar to be as distracted as he is.Â
Mingyu skips media day, a decision made for him, but he wonders if it's made things all the more worse. Less regarding the very hefty fine it's resulted on his tab, but more so the blatant avoidance of it all.Â
It's all the way to Sunday, and Mingyu is yet to physically see you around the paddock. Hugh and Seungcheol take his meetings and debriefs, his complaints and notices. He's constantly surrounded by people, someone's always speaking to him about something or the other. He isn't entirely sure if it's deliberate, but he swears he's always had his choice of minutes to sit down and breathe. Everyone is around, everyone he can see. All but you.Â
But he knows your there. Because as soon as he sits in the car, your voice is very real in his ears.Â
It seems you've finally learned how to sound normal when speaking to him, because he hears the very obvious lack of strain in the way you talk. Suddenly there's no pause that makes him cringe, no misplaced comment that does too much or too little.Â
The irony of it isn't lost on him. Of course you'd pick now to fix it, when it's all too late.Â
Mingyu misses out on pole by a hair, Seokmin in his eyeshot as they wait inevitably for the lights to finally go out. He's staring at the rear end he'd be fighting for the next two hours when he hears you.Â
"Radio check."
Mingyu's voice catches in his throat. His helmet is closing in on his nose when it's anything but, his visor blurring while the screen remains spotless.Â
He opens his mouth, his tongue too dry.Â
Does he make his list of obscure shark breeds? Does he throw all good sense to the wind and start rapping? Nothing seems to be appropriate.Â
"Mingyu, can you hear me?"
Inevitably, he opens his mouth. "Yeah. Testing, can you hear me alright?"
"Radio check complete."
Mingyu doesn't remember the lights going out, but his body reacts for him. The strain of his focus is apparent, but he can't help but feel like he's driving on autopilot. The first couple laps are close, he thinks he might be able to overtake Seokmin, but is humbled very quickly by the sharp Baku turns.Â
Seokmin stays trailing in front of him, closer and then farther away, the most frustrating game of push and pull. Mingyu had to learn to be patient, his carting days riddled with disappointing results in the beginning, all because he let his frustration have at the wheel.Â
He remembers a particular race where he'd sent his helmet flying across the garage, angry tears in his eyes only adding to his humiliation. He was so close, so, so close. If only he'd waited till the turn to overtake, he wouldn't be two places behind where he'd started. Of course, the element of being thirteen years old in a high adrenaline sport was partial to the rash decision making, but he learned quickly the wonders of having a level head after that.Â
Mingyu's managed to keep to the regime for the years that followed, to curb his frustration when he could feel it holding the wheel instead of his own two hands.
He's gotten close to Seokmin again, a frantic "Gap?" as you tell him "2 seconds." Mingyu's nearly there, hot on his heels as he makes it so his front tires are parallel to Seokmin's rear. He's pushing, till he realises the turn is going to hinder him almost immediately.Â
And then he feels it. An itchy feeling in his blood, one he hasn't felt for so long. Mingyu feels the irritation shoot into a rolling boil, all before the simmering warning can register. His annoyance costs him a few seconds; he doesn't need to ask you, Seokmin's farther away than he's been all race.Â
The shaky feeling evaporates as soon as he registers the excess of tarmac in front of him, at least he thinks it does.Â
Mingyu's back on Seokmin's tail, he's gotten close enough before, now he needs to finish the job. The opening comes when Mingyu's redeemed himself on the straight and the next turn is coming their way. Seokmin makes the fatal mistake of slowing a fraction of a second before Mingyu, and suddenly, their tires are parallel as they make their turn.Â
There's a moment where Seokmin's wheel touches Mingyu's, the contact eliciting sparks he cannotnot see, but most definitely can feel with the tremor inside the car. He curses under his breath, but remains diligent on the pedal.Â
The outcome of the turn is in sight, but unfortunately for Mingyu, so is Seokmin's car in his peripheral vision. Mingyu's on the inside, sacrificing much of his grip to keep up with Seokmin's luxury of space on the outside. For a wild moment, Mingyu thinks he's being pushed off the track, the realisation urging him to move as much to the right as physically possible.Â
And then, when the turn ends, there's less of a dark figure in the corner of his eyes, receding smoothly but slowly. Mingyu's gonna make it.Â
His rear tires are now parallel to Seokmin's fronts, the overtake one of the slowest he's ever done, but he cannot complain when it's working. He needs to keep pushing, keep his hands and feet exactly where they are till he can come out the other side.Â
Soon, they're approaching their next turn, and it's one Mingyu quickly realises he should be dreading.Â
Turn 15 looms within eyeshot, and Seokmin just hardly out of it. Mingyu braces, keeping one eye on his rearview where Seokmin is getting too close for comfort.Â
Every bone in his body screams at him to slam on the brakes, the wall taking over his vision with every passing millisecond. The high buildings of Baku shield his vision, and for a fraction of a second, he feels claustrophobic. The Baku track is taking over his visual field, the blaring wall becoming bigger, bigger, bigger.
Mingyu's eyes snap to see the rotating tires of Seokmin's car, the feeling that he's finally begun to brake. That's when Mingyu decides it's his turn, the wall inexplicably close as he slams it, turning his wheel despite the G force working entirely against him.Â
His steering wheel is turned, his car is turning, Mingyu can feel the turn make it's way around.Â
Till he doesn't.Â
Mingyu doesn't realise what's happened in that moment, all he knows is that Seokmin has surpassed him, and he's watching the sleek, speeding Mercedes whizz past, as Mingyu's Ferrari is sent directly into the barrier.Â
All within a second, Mingyu has his epiphany, and brings out all he has left in him to brace for impact.Â
His eyes are closed as the crash around him surmounts the roar of the engine, surmounts every piece of engineering that made his car, surmounts the friction of the cars that continue to speed past the catastrophe.Â
Mingyu thinks he passes out for a moment, because the next time he opens his eyes the car is stationary, and there's nothing he can see beyond the dark of debris and the thin sliver of sunlight seeping from above. He's breathing heavily, the sound loud in his ears.Â
It doesn't take him long to realise what happened, but he still feels slumped against his seat, head lolling forward before hitting the rest again. The steering wheel in front of him is multiplying by threes before returning to just the one, a sudden bout of vertigo engulfing him.Â
His own blood rushing into his ears is all he can hear for a while, till the real world slowly begins to trickle in.Â
The sound of his name echoes in the hollow of his ears. It's calm, collected, stable, all opposed to the hurtling of his heart and mind. The buzz surrounding the voice is slow to dissipate, but steady.Â
"Mingyu. Mingyu, can you hear me? Answer if you can hear me. Mingyu, do you copy?"
Your voice registers in his mind, and he can muster the effort to keep his eyes open to the spinning world around him. It's there again, his name, your voice. On repeat.
"Mingyu, answer me if you can hear me."
His mouth is dry, but he makes it. "I'm okay."
"Safety car's there, they're gonna get you out."
Mingyu manages to pull himself out when the debris and broken wall is lifted off of his car, marshals in jumpsuits helping him up. He takes his helmet off, and then his balaclava. Still as suffocated as he was when he was stuck in his car.Â
Reality snaps him back into place in a way he can only describe as vile.Â
The piercing roar of an engine cuts its way through the turn, slower because of the crash and the safety car, but taunting nonetheless. Someone is pulling him, a medic with his hands on him that asks him too many questions, flashlights in his eyes and water bottles shoved in his face.Â
Mingyu's back to working on autopilot, all the way back to the garage.Â
Mingyuâs head feels like an anvil.Â
He isnât sure if the hat that hinders half his vision is helping or not, but he makes no move to remove it. The back of his eyelids are reprieve from the lights of his room on the paddock, only to turn into a canvas for his racing thoughts.Â
A knock on the door is a sledgehammer to his brain, a grimace making its way onto his tired face as he braces himself to perceive the empty room. His sisterâs voice filters through the door, quiet and guarded.Â
âTheyâre ready for you,â she says. Timid, transposed for the usual abrasion she directs at him.Â
The acid in his chest feels like it could burn a hole through him. But he gets up, a difficulty in his joints as they protest the move. Minseo says nothing as she takes him in, silently leading him to the hoard of press that sits before a table, ready to grill him on the events of today.Â
Mingyu wants to go home.
Thereâs a chorus of greetings as he enters the room, cameras already flashing. Heâd long suppressed the irate impulse of shoving cameras away from his face, but he might be regressing.Â
He responds with a mild acknowledgment of the reporters that gather round the table, shifting into the chair set out for him. Itâs crowded, too many people in a secluded area of the Baku paddock, huddled with too big cameras and microphones around a round coffee table.Â
The post race conference had presumably wrapped up, but Mingyu was not one of the three podium standers to grace that particular hall.Â
Somebody from behind him lets them know they can begin hounding Mingyu with questions.Â
âIâm gonna start by asking how youâre doing?â one of the closest ones to him asks. His face is blank, tone monotonous.Â
âIâm alright. Looked worse than it was,â he responds plainly, nodding.Â
âThatâs good to hear.â The reporter pauses, like heâs attempting to phrase the obvious. âSo, would you tell us what exactly happened at turn 15?âÂ
âWhat seems to happen at turn 15 a lot," Mingyu responds matter-of-factly. âThe Mercedes was on my tail and I thought I could risk a delayed brake. Wheels lock up and then Iâm suddenly in the wall.âÂ
âDo you think it couldâve been a podium for you if it werenât for the crash?â another asks.Â
âWho knows.â
âWould you classify this as a mistake or a gap in skill?â
Mingyu hopes they donât catch his jaw tightening, but they probably did.Â
âIt was a lapse in judgment. Itâs a difficult turn and I let myself get cornered. Couldâve been better off taking the risk of Lee overtaking me but thatâs not how it turned out.â
âMingyu, youâve appeared to have high morale since joining Ferrari this season, will this incident be affecting future performance?â
Another one pipes up. Someone in the corner with eyes like a hawk. âAnd what of the rumour thatâs been circulating in the press in recent weeks?â
Mingyu is not moving, or else they would catch the way heâd halted entirely. A sour taste fills his mouth, metallic and uncomfortable.
Mingyu had known this would happen, the only question was whenâheâd gotten his answer. He sits there attempting to gulp inconspicuously, to dry his mouth before opening it.Â
âWhat rumour?âÂ
Mingyuâs voice is gravelly as he answers, and he has to hold back a curse.Â
The reporter is too slow, because without proper conference guidelines restraining him (or ethical considerations entirely), someone interjects.Â
âThe rumours talking about the possibility of the car beingâŠtampered with.â
Mingyu exhales in lieu of a sigh of relief. âIt was human error, canât tamper with that.â
The person whoâd initially asked the question seems to have recovered, because sheâs now stepping in closer.Â
âAnd what of the other rumours?â she asks, pressing.Â
At that moment, it clicks.Â
The blonde woman heâs never seen before, steps forward with a mic thatâs unmarked. But he knows who she is.Â
The question is left open-ended on purpose, to catch him in a slip. His mind is ablaze, uncharacteristic anger coursing through him as he attempts to steel himself. He will not relent.Â
âItâs been a long weekend. And Iâd really appreciate it if you could refrain from vague questions. Thereâs a million and more rumours about me, the team, my past, my future, more that I probably wonât ever hear.âÂ
She pushes her tongue into her cheek, visibly irked. Satisfaction blooms in Mingyuâs chest.Â
But it remains short lived as he watches her open her mouth. Spearlike.Â
James Calicoâs apprentice recovers quickly from Mingyuâs jab. Mouth opening like it was ready to suck his entire being into the abyss.Â
âThereâs only been one headline overtaking your name in the past weeks,â Selina Thatcher continues. It was going to take more to hear her say it outright, of course, a tactic sheâd learnt from the best.Â
Mingyu however, has also learned to be stubborn from the best, and manages to hold his ground while at ease, âI will repeat, and ask you to be specific.â
Mingyu refuses to break eye contact with her artificially coloured irises, the bright blue boring into his eyes like they were meant to hypnotise. With the way that she operates, he wouldnât put the thought behind that decision past her.Â
He sees her closed mouth move, like she was thinking. Before finally, she lets it go.Â
âRumours regarding your race engineer," she says. "More specifically, regarding you and your race engineer."Â
Mingyu does not relent as he continues to stare into the horrid woman's face.Â
When Mingyu had read the name James Calico in that squash court, he could not bring himself to be awfully surprised. At best, the man was a pap with the instinct of a shark out for blood. At worstâŠhe'd rather not think about what happened the last time Calico decided he wanted to cause a scene.Â
He's smart though, he deserves that much, sending his apprentice moles out to stir the already boiling pot. Thatcher's face is disgustingly smug, and Mingyu's lingering vertigo wants nothing more than to throw up his breakfast all over her pristine coat.Â
But he settles for words, because he knows it's all he has.Â
He makes sure he's locking eyes when he says it. "Is that an appropriate question to be asking me."Â
[19:46]
[Old Raisin]:Â medias on fire
[Old Raisin]:Â idk if i should hit you or congratulate you
[Mingyu]:Â neither preferably
[Old Raisin]:Â why did you say thatÂ
[Mingyu]:Â You can put it up to post crash brain fog
[Mingyu]:Â Anything
[Mingyu]:Â I dont careÂ
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You are now entering Carats Ridge, a little place tucked away from the hustle and bustle of the city, filled with familiar faces and small town charm. @starlightkyeom, @100vern and I, imnotshua, welcome you to join us and our wonderful committee members for our Winter Festival!
Why don't you take a rest in our exemplary Inn, visit our quaint independent stores and eateries, and celebrate the holidays with us? After a few nights in Carats Ridge, we guarantee, you'll never want to leave!
Carats Ridge Winter Festival starts December 15th right through until 31st March. To be notified, comment TAG ME on this post, and I will tag you in a reblog as our vendors open.
Please remember, some of these establishments are for ADULTS ONLY, please check with the owner before entering.
âïž Vendor: you can't wash that here by @imnotshua
đ Destination: The diner, with landlord!Choi Seungcheol and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Seungcheol needs money fast, or he'll lose his parent's diner. Moving in with his cousin isn't ideal at thirty-two, and the money you're paying in rent for his beloved apartment is only juuuust about covering the shortfall, but needs must and it'll have to do. Thankfullyâ surprisinglyâ you've got some other ideas up your sleeve.
đ Adult themes + drug use/dealing (weed)
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: want u around by @wqnwoos
đ Destination: The daycare, with firefighter!Choi Seungcheol and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Everyone knows Seungcheol flirts his way through life. Youâve brushed him off so many times it's practically routine. He never pushes, so you've always taken it as harmless fun â until something shifts, and you realise he's not as simple as you've convinced yourself he is.
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: the first taste by @minisugakoobies
đ Destination: The dealer's house, with dealer!Yoon Jeonghan and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: You canât stop thinking about your neighbor. really, youâre super curious about the number of people you see coming and going from his house at all hours of the day. one summer night, courtesy of a terrible heat wave and a broken air con, you discover why jeonghanâs so addictive. Your neighbor is more than happy to provide, but just remember - only the first taste is free.
đ Adult themes + drug use (THC, ecstasy)
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: Mistletoe Festival by @coupsalchemy
đ Destination: The boutique, with Joshua Hong and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: One spot, two competitors. Joshua Hong, the new addition to your hometown, your rival, is competing for the spot at Mistletoe Festival, which has always been yours. He stole your customers, sanity and peace of mind, you wonât let him steal your one last hope in keeping your business afloat.
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: coffee, black by @woncheolisms
đ Destination: The coffee shop, with hitman!Joshua Hong and coffee shop owner f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: A small coffee shop owner is the only thing stopping a crime boss who wants to expand his empire when she refuses to sell her shop to him, no matter what tactics of intimidation he might use. When he has finally had enough, he hires a hitman to finish her off. But Joshua Hong doesnât work that way. He has principles, even for a hitman.
đ Adult themes + mentions of death, violence, threats and intimidation, vigilante action
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: the end of july by @kkaetnipjeon
đ Destination: The pet store, with Wen Junhui and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Your grandmother died and bequeathed her crumbling eyesore of a house in the countryside to you, and you give yourself three months to fix it up before selling it and moving back to Seoul. Unfortunately, the local pet store owner and his cats seem hell-bent on making you stay.
đ Adult themes + mental health themes, quarter life crisis
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: better than sex by @haologram
đ Destination: The yoga studio, with Kwon Soonyoung and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: New in town and actively going through too many changes at once, Kwon Soonyoung finds comfort in many a flirtatious advance. However, when his shop is finally christened by your presenceâŠall the flirting feels futile and his eyes are set on you â despite the very gaudy wedding set resting on your finger.
đ Adult themes
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: the second time around by @wonuwoe
đ Destination: The pre-school, with Kwon Soonyoung and reader
đȘ§ What's on?: At your sickly aunt's request, you've agreed to go home for the time being. That means leading the family from now on â including taking over her job temporarily as a pre-school teacher. At pure happenstance, you're not the only one returning to your little town. Soonyoung, who was once your kindred spirit is also back for the reasons you're not so sure of.
đ Adult themes + mentions of illness
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: sealed by fate by @mylovesstuffs
đ Destination: The post office, with Jeon Wonwoo and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Carats Ridge has always had its own way of tying people together. Some call it fate, some call it tradition, some refuse to call it anything at all. But when a cute hot man apparently returns to the town with a child, youâre drawn to him for reasons you canât say. And he seems to recognize you for reasons he wonât say. But the truth doesnât stay hidden for long in a town like yours.
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: Spin Cycle by @hannieoftheyear
đ Destination: The laundromat, with Jeon Wonwoo and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: The laundromat is all you've ever known, your past, your present, and your close future. And it could all end because of some stupid, modern crap of a new laundromat that takes all your clients away. So, when your parents send you across town, just a few blocks away, to find out what it's so special about Wonwoo's place, you can't refuse. He might be charming and objectively handsome, but you won't stop until you find out any dirty secret that can save your family's legacy from closing.
đ Adult themes
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: This Town by @aeristudios
đ Destination: The music store, with Lee Jihoon and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: You swore you would never come back to this foggy town. It reminded you of the past you longed to forget, the cozy small town aesthetic being a facade for how it really isâ connections and influence get you far, and if you were born on the wrong side of the tracks, good luck. You fell in love once, with the boy from the sunny side of this place, who gave you the best summer of your life. But a scandal forced you to break up and you left, and now years later, you're back to handle family business and he's still there, at the music store, where you first met.
đ Adult themes + violence/gangs, mention of murder
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: all my heart can say by @seungkw1
đ Destination: The grocery store, with Lee Jihoon and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Carats Ridge, 1991 â In a small town deep in the heart of the Pacific Northwest, a new resident in town causes a stir when he moves into the long-vacant house up on Hemlock Hill. The old superstitions surrounding the house and its history begin to resurface, leaving a town full of people who already don't trust outsiders uneager to give the newcomer a warm welcome â but Jihoon seems nice, so you decide to befriend him anyway. Soon, though, you realize you've gained something much more than just friendship: you've gained a new perspective on what love can mean, and â for the first time â you learn what it means to truly be loved.
đ Adult themes + mentions of minor character death
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: inn by the hollow by @starlightkyeom
đ Destination: The inn, with Lee Seokmin and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Your move to Carat Ridge was supposed to be simple. take a step back from fast-paced city life to run a small town inn. Doesn't hurt that it also lets you put your life in the rearview mirror. You don't account for the fact that everyone knows everything in a small town. And you definitely don't account for your new assistant manager. He seems all sunshine and smiles at first. but, there's much more to him than meets the eye.
đ Adult themes + discussion of past traumas
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: Final Level: Win His Heart by @nothoughtsjustfic
đ Destination: The arcade, with Lee Seokmin and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: The day Lee Seokmin first steps foot into your familyâs arcade in all his beautiful DILF glory, he immediately steals your attention with nothing more than a friendly smile and a shy wave. In that very moment, you decide that you want him in very not publicly appropriate ways, even if you donât know how to achieve that. Still, youâre always up for a new challenge.
đ Adult themes + age gap (Seokmin aged up), side character drug use and injury
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: too sweet to me by @straylightdream
đ Destination: The bakery, with Kim Mingyu and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Back in college the golden boy from high school was the perfect summer fling. You went off to pursue your career in a different city, and he stayed in Carat Ridge and opened a bakery. Now youâre both pushing thirty and Mingyu has made it clear he wonât let you slip away again.
đ Adult themes + mentions of body insecurities
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: Chaser by @yoongihan
đ Destination: The pub, with bartender!Kim Mingyu and pub owner f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Better Business Bureau should heap praise upon your decision to hire Kim Mingyu and Jeon Jungkook as bartenders for your Carats Ridge pub, Circles. Itâs never slow, beer and liquor always flowing, and the food is good. Your main bartenders bring in the crowds, and youâd praise yourself if you could just keep it professional. Because surely, with how good-looking they are, both of them are fuck boys, right? No matter how much Mingyuâs big brown eyes try to convince you otherwise.
đ Adult themes + power dynamic imbalance
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: KITSCHY by @gyuswhore
đ Destination: The museum, with Xu Minghao and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Most of Minghao's adult life has been spent dodging emotional blackmail and direct demandsâall to avoid going back to his hometown. The result of his incessant refusal now stares back at him in the form of the impossibly kitschy town museum, and every other sight he'd have to bear for the next month. Although, none more awkward than the uncomfortable stance of your Chanel slingbacks, the first thing he spots from across the gravel.
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: when the dust settles by @miniseokminnies
đ Destination: The antique store, with Xu Minghao and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: No town this small should have two of anything, maybe not even one of some things. But of course, your business is one of few in town that has a direct competitor. You've never been one to see the other antique store in town, owned by one Minghao Xu, as a threat. Only seeing him as another person in town that shares your passions. he seems to think the exact opposite.
đ Adult themes
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: the municipal code by @imnotshua
đ Destination: The town hall, with Boo Seungkwan and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Town Selectman, Boo Seungkwan, was challenged numerous times at last night's town meeting. The newcomer (name yet unknown, but she's supposedly bought the old Emerseon house over on Maple Street) had thrown off Boo with incessant questions about the abandoned barn off Winders Road. Boo was undeniably perplexed by her unusual questions, and subsequent heckling, though it could be said the crowd found the interruption somewhat entertaining. As the townspeople left the village hall, sources say the newcomer could be heard muttering "next time I'm bringing my whiteboard." Whatever that means.
đ Adult themes
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: totally clueless by @100vern
đ Destination: The auto repair shop, with Vernon Chwe and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: It was only supposed to be an oil changeâuntil you discover that somehow the only mechanic in this town doesn't actually have a license. To drive. The only mechanic in this god-forsaken, postage stamp-sized town doesn't know how to drive a car.
đ Adult themes
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: out of the stillness by @joshujin
đ Destination: The farmers' market, with Lee Chan and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Between deadlines, responsibilities, and your recent divorce from your sleep schedule, your relationship with Chan has been roasting to a crisp on your backburner. But youâre both on holiday break now, and youâre intent on enjoying your time with him⊠even if that means being stuck in a car for 12 hours⊠and spending time with his horrible, stuck-up parents⊠and being severely under-caffeinated through it all. You will have fun, and you will give your boyfriend your undivided attention, and you will save your relationship⊠even if that means reliving the same day over and over and over again.
đ Adult themes + witchcraft
đ« Opening soon
âïž Vendor: sweetener by @sailorsoons
đ Destination: The pizza and ice cream shop, with coworker!Lee Chan and f!reader
đȘ§ What's on?: Instead of working at your fatherâs flashy law office, you pick up shifts at the local pizza parlor just to prove you can. And if you convince them your up-to-no-good coworker is your boyfriend to pour salt in the wound⊠even better.
đ Adult themes
â synopsis: you and mingyu have been broken up for a year, and yes, it was over something as stupid and trivial as you'd imagine - something where nuance is important. will you thrown caution to the wind when he's calling you drunk from halfway across the world to beg for you back?
â genre: exes to lovers, angst, fluff. slightly suggestive.
â pairing: ex-boyfriend!kim mingyu x fem!reader
â word count: 8k
â rating: 18+. minors do not interact.
â warnings: swearing, alcohol, food mentions/eating. reader is very stupid. they have a semi-nasty breakup. they fight a bit. but they're lovers who gives a shit. i also don't know how airports work so whatever!
â what to listen to: who knew - p!nk ; i don't know - notd, astrid s ; please don't leave me - p!nk ; fast car - luke combs ; so beautiful - dpr ian.
â author's note: mingyu brainrot is so bad that i wrote this overnight and i'm running on no sleep, so i don't care about typos. thank you to @/saradika here on tumblr for these cutie beaded star dividers. as always, dedicated to thee gyuldaengie ever @gyuswhore (i hope you get some rest soon, emberly âĄ. read this whenever!)
VOICEMAILS ARE THE BANE OF YOUR EXISTENCE.Â
Heâd been there when you set yours up. New phone after heâd accidentally dropped yours in a lake after your date, and thereâs a stupid laugh at the end of your message that makes your teeth clench with embarrassment.Â
He loves that laugh.Â
Or he did.Â
Hey, itâs Y/N. Sorry I missed your call, leave a message and Iâll get right back to ya!Â
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 | 11:09AM, SEOUL.Â
(1) Missed Call â Kim Mingyu.Â
(1) Voicemail â Kim Mingyu.Â
Hey, itâs me. Â
Well, you know itâs me...right? [LAUGHTER.] God, I miss your voice. Even if itâs just your outgoing message...and your laugh. I miss that laugh. I miss you, baby.Â
Iâm getting drunk in Chicago with Seungcheol, but Iâm thinking about you and I know I shouldnât. I know I should have some shame, but Iâve never done this. The...breaking up over something small. Well, itâs not small, because it means something to you. It meant something to you, the reason you dumped me, and it means something to me because I love you and everything that matters to you matters to me. I just donât know how to function without being able to talk to you everyday, and thatâs selfish of me. Itâs selfish of me to even leave this voicemail...but I canât help it. I know my job kept me so busy, and I know youâre still probably so pissed at me but I still love you â even when Iâm in Chicago and youâre all the way back home, getting pretty for work. Even when Iâm back home, I love you and I think about you. Iâm not drunk, before you say that. Iâve only had one beer and it was straight ass, but I think Iâll have just a few more so I can excuse the fact that your name is all over my call log in the morning.Â
I love you.Â
I miss you.Â
Iâll see you whenever you want me back. Â
When you think about it: not-drunk, not-sober Mingyu has a point.Â
You did break up over something very small, but in the moment...it meant something to you. It meant so much to you â and it was only by a few minutes. He was late, again â only by a handful of minutes but you will always stick to your guns and say itâs serious, and he knows it is. Youâd told him at the start of your relationship that you hate being late and you hate it when people are late to any event they may have planned with you; and Mingyu had been understanding for the most part. He was rarely late and if he was, he had a good excuse prepared the moment he got in your face for his kiss in greeting. Â
You tried to settle your own stomach about it â he'd been in Chicago for work the week before your breakup, and you were convincing youreslf that he was just adjusting to the time difference. The whites of his eyes were pink with fatigue, and you felt the urge to run your fingers through his hair as he rested his head in your lap just for five minutes before he fell asleep.Â
But this had been the third time in one week. Heâd been late by twenty minutes to dinner on Monday, arriving with nothing but a breathless sorry falling off his lips as he pressed them to your hairline. Heâd been sweaty, like he ran to your apartment â but you let it go, because you also told him that your building elevator was under maintenance.Â
You still expected him to plan accordingly and arrive punctually â you'd told him that at nine in the morning, and dinner was at six in the evening. He should have planned ahead.Â
The second time was on Wednesday. Your friends had hosted a quick game night, one youâd invited Mingyu to with their permission and they asked you to stop for a bottle of wine. Youâd gotten the wine on your way home from work to save time, and texted Mingyu three times within your arrival at your apartment â reminding him that he was driving, reminding him at the game night started at eight, reminding him that you do not like to be late.Â
He arrived at your apartment five minutes to eight, and your friend that was hosting the game night lived thirty minutes south. You couldnât even dream of getting there by the start of it, and you got two text messages letting you know that they were starting a game of Monopoly and theyâd start over when you got there. Mingyuâs jaw was as tight as yours was as he drove you both in silence, only for you to shoot a text off in the group (that had Mingyu in it) that you wouldnât be making it. You made Mingyu pull over five minutes away from your friendâs apartment and handed him the bottle of wine, telling him youâd get a rideshare home.Â
It was the first real fight the two of you got into, and in the middle of a gas station parking lot. You were embarrassed as people peered through his crystal clear windshield at your frustrated attempt to make him understand, only for him to tell you he tried. That you knew he was busy, that he was doing the best he could to show up for you and you werenât cutting him any slack. Youâd scoffed, asking him if heâd ever cut you slack when you attended his work events with him, when youâd go to dinners with him and his friends.Â
âYou donât have to, and thatâs because I plan accordingly! I tell you everything down to the minute and you canât even give me a tapback reaction so I at least know you saw the message? Why are you acting like Iâm being irrational for asking you to communicate with me?âÂ
Mingyu turned his read receipts on after that fight. The drive to your apartment was silent, and you held in your frustrated tears until he pulled into his visitor parking spot in the garage of your complex. You pushed your own door open and slammed it shut, your heels clicking against the asphalt of the garage â but you didnât get very far as Mingyu rounded the side of the car and grabbed your arm gently, pulling you into him with a very soft whisper against the shell of your ear.Â
âIâm sorry.âÂ
You ignored it, turning your face away as he held you close to his chest â the soft smell of his cologne filling your nose and making your knees stupidly weak. Â
You donât remember much about that night, but you do remember the way heâd hoisted you over one shoulder and carried you to your apartment. You remember the way he apologized on his knees inside your apartment, before pinning you under him on the couch and kissing you fervently. You remember how easily your anger melted away as he pulled your dress off, as he kissed down your body, as he sank his teeth into the flesh of your soft thighs before he made you forget why you were even mad to begin with.Â
The bottle of wine was empty by the end of the night, and you had a horrible hangover that made you call in sick to work â only to lift up your blanket and see your legs littered with nips of your boyfriendâs teeth.Â
Then, Saturday came.Â
Date night. Starting at four in the afternoon and ending at eight in the morning on Sunday.Â
Mingyu loved date night and he was never late to date night. He brought flowers, heâd kiss you stupid on your couch for a good hour before your plans took effect. Sometimes it was dinner, a walk, a movie. Other times it was staying in and snuggling together after a long week of being apart and bitching about your work schedules. Â
Other times, though rare...Mingyu was all over you the entire night. From the moment he stepped foot into your apartment, his lips were on yours and his hands roamed any and every part of your body you allowed. It was, admittedly, one of your favorite types of date nights â and you always made it a point to wear a cute little set under your outfit just in case he was feeling froggy.Â
Four came and went. Â
Five in the afternoon, six in the evening.Â
Seven rolled around and you stared at the new bottle of wine youâd gotten to share with him on your way home from work on Friday. A nice Merlot, bitter on the back of your tongue as you finished your second glass. You took the pretty clips out of your hair, tossing them onto the coffee table and doing the same with all your jewelry before grabbing the bottle by the neck. You tucked your legs beneath you as you grabbed your television remote, clicking around the screen before some boring news segment crossed the screen and you tossed it into the couch cushions. Â
You drank from the bottle for a total of fifteen minutes â the news segment ending and a broadcasted dating show taking over before your phone buzzed on the kitchen counter. It buzzed twice, before it started ringing. It rang, and rang, and rang â and you felt tears prick at your eyes as you glanced down at your dress. Picked by Mingyu ages ago at a department store, one that heâd practically manhandled you into the dressing room over.Â
You turned the television off at ten to nine â just  as Mingyu pulled your apartment door open. You could see the lines of sleep against his cheek, his eyes bloodshot as an apologetic look coated them. Youâd pressed your lips together, before a laugh of disbelief fell from your mouth as you sighed. You shook your head as he toed his shoes off, guilt crossing his features as you slid the bottle onto the coffee table and grabbed your accessories in one hand. You didnât care if your necklaces tangled â they had all been gifts from him anyway.Â
You stood on wobbly legs, kicking the heels youâd planned to wear that day out of the way as you moved to stand in front of him. His fingers flexed at his sides, itching to touch you as you gave him a wavering smile.Â
âSlept well?â You tilted your head, before holding your hand out and dropping the accessories in his hand, âyou can have those back.âÂ
âBaby.âÂ
âThatâs not my name.âÂ
You shrugged, smiling wider still as you skipped to your bedroom. You pulled the dress over your head, tossing it onto the floor before pulling open all your dresser drawers and pulling out every article of clothing heâd ever given you and dropping it on top of the very same dress. Shirts, skirts, even a couple pairs of his sweatpants and a pair of his socks youâd stolen at the beginning of your relationship because youâd worn open-toed heels in winter.Â
He stood in the doorway of your bedroom as you tugged on a pair of pajama pants, his lower lip trembling as you pulled a shirt that wasnât his over your head. You beelined back out of your bedroom, grabbing a garbage bag from your kitchen and prying it open before shoving everything inside it.Â
âDrive safe, Mingyu.âÂ
âBaby, let me explainââÂ
âI waited like an idiot for five hours. I donât do late. You know I donât. You knew my one rule, and this week has just been a shitshow. Go home, get some rest and Iâll pick up my stuff next week.â You were fighting tears the entire time, covering your face with a trembling hand as he knelt in front of you, âstop! Go home, Mingyu!âÂ
âPlease. Please, baby, donât do thisââÂ
âGo! Get out!âÂ
You were crying by the time Mingyuâs arms wrapped around your hips, burying his face in your shirt as he begged you to let him explain. You couldnât hear him over your tears and the frustration festering in your belly, and you managed to twist yourself out of his hold despite wanting to melt right into him.Â
He left reluctantly â his face blotchy with tears and his shoulders heavy with fatigue. You knew he was tired. You knew he had this trip to Chicago every year and it was hard on him.Â
You had one rule. Donât be late.Â
However...as you laid in your bed that night, barely able to breathe through your tears â you came to the conclusion that you had been a jerk. You knew you had been a jerk, but you had pride and you werenât going to beg him to come back.Â
And now youâre sitting in your cubicle, a year later â wiping silent tears from your cheeks as you play his voicemail over and over.Â
I miss you.Â
I love you.Â
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 | 12:19 PM, SEOUL.Â
(4) Missed Calls â Kim Mingyu.Â
(1) Voicemail â Kim Mingyu.Â
Hi, baby. Itâs me again! I miss you.Â
Just realized I said I was drunk in that last message and then said I wasnât, but it doesnât matter anyay because Iâd tell you all of this sober. Did you know I got a promotion? I didnât get to tell you, but I had meant for it to be news that night we broke up. I was going to tell you but everything just crumbled and I shouldâve said more. I shouldâve fought you on it, I think.Â
You didnât really look like you were ready to let me go.Â
Sometimes, I wish you hadnât. But, Iâm still here. Kind of like an anchor, I guess, and youâre the ship. I guess thatâs why they call boats she, right?Â
Iâm just waiting for you to pull me out of the water again and say you love me like you used to. Maybe kiss me, too. I miss your voice. I miss your lips, too, and your cherry lip balm. God, I miss you. I canât sleep without you, and Chicago fucking sucks. I hate Chicago because all I can think about it you when Iâm here. Three years strong, thinking about you when I see the damn Bean and eat deep dish at Lou Malnatiâs.Â
[MUFFLED NOISES] Anyway, Seungcheol wants to take off. Iâll talk to you later. This is call number...four? I think, yeah. Oof, bad luck, huh? [SOFT LAUGHTER] Â
Iâm six beers in, baby. Still in Chicago, still missing you, still loving you and still yours. Iâll see ya, sweets.Â
Again, he was right.Â
God, you hate when heâs right.Â
Heâs so smug about it sometimes, Kim Mingyu. Heâs insufferable when heâs right â when he guesses something correctly, when he figures something out before you can, when he beats you at a damn game of Scrabble. Youâd learned to roll your eyes at him, and really â it was endearing. Kim Mingyu was a champion, a master of all trades â and heâd won your heart over and over again.Â
You hadnât wanted to let him go. Â
Your swollen eyes had been hidden behind a clunky pair of sunglasses and glued to the ground as you dropped off his last box of things on his stoop the following Monday, but he didnât answer the door. You knew he was home â his car was parked in front of his apartment and the Ring camera clicked on and off. You knocked on the door for five minutes before groaning.Â
âGive me my stuff, Mingyu!âÂ
He didnât open the door, opting to talk to you through his camera like a coward.Â
âYouâre insane if you think weâre breaking up.âÂ
âWe are breaking up! Give me my shit before I break your door down.âÂ
Heâd laughed through the camera, clicking it off before you heard the locks on his front door coming undone. He barely cracked the door open, holding a singular purse out to you and something about it made your gut churn.Â
âMingyu, let me in.âÂ
âNo, you said give you your shit. This is all youâve got here. I know, I looked.âÂ
You shoved the door open further, only to see a mess of boxes in the living room piled up. Everything was labeled with your name, clothing of yours folded neatly on his couch â books you left there carefully wrapped in newspaper and pairs of your shoes neatly held together by black zipties. Your stomach hurt as you let your eyes scan over it, the room far too dark with your sunglasses on but you had too much pride to take them off and let him see that you knew you were making a mistake.Â
â...You donât have to be so nice about it.âÂ
âStop being a douche and take your sunglasses off, then. Youâre indoors, itâs bad manners.âÂ
You hadnât looked at him yet, but the thickness of his voice told you everything you needed to know. He was near tears and your shoulders tensed as your heart clenched in your chest, and you peered over your shoulder to see him thumbing at the strap of your purse in his hand. You pried it from his hands swiftly, your fist tight around it as he sniffled, blinking back tears as he shoved his hands in the pockets of his sweatpants.Â
âAre you gonna help me load this in my car or what?â You muttered, shoving the purse over your shoulder as he chuckled dryly.Â
âIâll just drop it off. Itâs too much for you to carry back alone and I canât let you do that.â He shook his head, and your ears picked up on the music playing in his living room. You looked around, before spotting his television on YouTube â playing I Donât Know Why by NOTD and Astrid S. You trilled your lips them, shoving your hand under your sunglasses as hot tears spilled over. Your shoulders shook as you cried inwardly, and he tentatively slid his hands over them, making you jolt against him.Â
âDonât.âÂ
âIâm sorry, Y/N. Please.âÂ
âStop! Stop telling me youâre sorry, Mingyu!â You exclaimed, stomping your foot as you shoved yourself away from him then. You pulled the sunglasses off your face, haphazardly wiping your hand across your face as more tears spilled down your cheeks. You heard a crack in the plastic of the glasses from how tight your grip was, and you simply shoved them in one of the open boxes before facing him and blinking rapidly. He was blurry in your vision, but he was a mirror of you â splotchy eyes, pleading, begging...Â
Donât leave me.Â
Fight for me.Â
For us.Â
âPlease, Y/N.âÂ
âI donât even know what youâre asking for, Mingyu. Just...drop my things off with the doorman. And leave your key with him, too.âÂ
You sighed, running your hands over your face and feeling the warmth of your swollen eyelids beneath your fingers as you tried to walk past him. Your fingers urged to touch him, to feel him close and breathe in his scent â but he caved first, grabbing your hand and pulling you into him. He kissed you then, too â his lips chapped but you cared nothing of it as you melted into him like a fool. Your hands clutched at his sweatshirt like you needed him to stay grounded as he held you against the front door, his own hands gripping your waist like you were going to disappear.Â
âStop, stop.â You pulled back, your eyes staring into his. So full of love, adoration and hurt â a perfect image of you engrained in those molten brown irises. His pupils were dialated as he peered at you, but he blinked and let you go, pushing himself away as he cleared his throat with a mumbled apology.Â
âDonât make this harder than it has to be, Mingyu.âÂ
Those had been your last words to him as you slammed out of his apartment â booking it to your car with tears in your eyes and the taste you missed on your tongue.Â
Him, him, always him.Â
Youâre still sitting in your cubicle as you listen to this voicemail â your eyes probably just as swollen as you poke around a bowl of oxtail soup youâd packed for lunch from your leftovers the night before.Â
It doesnât taste as good as when he used to make it.Â
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 | 2:11Â PM, SEOUL.Â
(9) Missed Calls â Kim Mingyu.Â
(1) Voicemail â Kim Mingyu.Â
Caller number nine! Claim your prize, me!Â
Hi, babe. Iâm still in Chicago, but Iâm in a different bar. Cheol is sick of me talking about you but I canât bring myself to give a shit. This bar has a really nice plum blossom syrup they put in their lemon drops, youâd love it.
Do you remember our first kiss, actually? In Japan? Â
It was under all those plum blossoms and I put one in your hair, and you were so nervous that you didnât kiss me back for a good three seconds. I know thatâs probably a bit embarrassing for you but itâs one of my favorite memories of us...of you. God, I miss you.Â
I made you dinner that night, too, and we had that nice gin that I canât remember the name of. But, I do remember that you told me youâd never been in love and I didnât know what to say because I didnât think I had ever been in love, either. Looking back, though, I think I was in love with you, even then.Â
Pft, wait. No. I know. I know I was in love with you. I know because your perfume was still lingering on my pillowcase, and I remember begging you not to go back to your room because we werenât together yet. Do you remember that? Mingyu, donât book one room! Weâre not together yet!Â
Ugh, but that âyetâ hit me so hard. It was such a huge risk for us to go on that trip together when we werenât together, and that âyetâ really told me everything I needed to know. That I was for you, and you were for me, endlessly. Timelessly.Â
So...I think, no. Fuck. I donât think, I know you were in love with me, too.Â
I am currently...six beers, one plum blossom lemon drop and three shots in the hole. Tequila, too. Horrible, I still hate it...but I miss you.Â
Iâm still in Chicago, and hopefully...somewhere in your heart.Â
Later, winner winner. I love you.Â
You do remember your first kiss, and youâre sitting at the cafeteria at your job with your hands wrapped around a mug of coffee with seasonal plum blossom creamer in it. Youâre done with meetings, your coworkers worriedly patting your shoulders at the swelling in your eyes, your lips bitten raw from holding back your sobs in the ladiesâ room.Â
Youâd been dating Mingyu for a few weeks at that point. Dating, not his girlfriend â you'd been on six dates and something about him made your skin prickle with excitement. His smooth words paired with clumsy movements, pouted lips that brought you to a steaming hot blush every time they brushed your cheek as he dropped you off to the door of your apartment...Â
Hands that snaked around your waist every single time he tried to go in for the kiss, and you turned away. Â
âYou can wait a little longer,â youâd roll your eyes as he brushes his nose to yours, and youâd crinkle it as you patted his chest. He would wait, heâd been open about it â he'd wait as long as you needed him to...because Mingyu was absolutely smitten with you.Â
It didnât take a genius to figure that out, or to figure out that if he insisted just a bit more â he'd be in your bed before the word girlfriend even followed his introduction of you to his friends.Â
You wanted Mingyu just as bad, if not more.Â
He proposed the trip to Japan on the sixth of December, to leave by the eight and be back home by the fifteenth. Six days and seven nights, and heâd book you separate hotel rooms.Â
âI just want to spend time with you...uninterrupted. God, that sounds perverted but I donât mean it that way, I swear!âÂ
Youâd only laughed then, and threw caution to the wind, accepting his invitation with a shy smile. The eighth came fast â and you were buckled into your seat on the plane next to him as he told you all the things he had planned for the two of you to do once you landed. You tried to argue that youâd need to take a power nap, only for him to roll his eyes and say there was no way you were going to waste time sleeping in Japan of all places.Â
âWeâll have plenty of time to sleep, beautiful. Just trust me.âÂ
And you did. So blindly, so willingly.Â
He took you all over Osaka, and youâd spent the ninth of December with your fingers intertwined between your hips and walking around an indoor arboretum, a giant greenhouse of sorts. Plum blossom season in Japan wasnât for another handful of weeks, but heâd insisted heâd been to this garden before and they had them in December â and he was right. Â
Again.Â
âI havenât kissed anyone in a while,â youâd admitted quietly, your hand rubbing your neck nervously as he shook his head, pulling you closer as the area seemingly cleared out of couples and families. You both stood looking at the trees surrounding you, his thumb tracing gentle circles on your skin before he pulled you slightly closer, âMingyu.âÂ
âI heard you, honey.â He nodded, pressing a kiss to your temple as he picked a blossom off the tree, tucking it carefully into your hair. âYouâre so pretty.âÂ
âShut up.â You muttered, leaning your cheek against his bicep as he peered down at you. His fingers carefully pinched your other cheek between his knuckles, making you scoff as he leaned slightly into your space. Your eyes had darted down to his lips, pink and plump and smelling of cherry lip balm youâd given him on the train ride there...Â
And you didnât kiss him back for three seconds when you felt him press his lips to yours carefully. Your eyes were wide, before you squeezed them shut and kissed him back carefully. Youâd both broken into giggles not even five seconds after, but he held your face in his hands gently and peppered chaste kisses all over it before asking if you wanted dinner.Â
It was one of the first times heâd made dinner for you, and one of the absolute best to date. A beautiful white fish with roasted lemon and brown butter served over a bed of creamy risotto and broccolini. Youâd both eaten in silence and on the floor, and youâd been amused at how much heâd been able to whip up on a two-burner hot plate heâd brought from home. He turned his nose up at you as you laughed at him, but smiled smugly as you were rendered speechless by the dishes heâd plated for you.Â
You were both laying on his bed with the balcony doors thrown open when the words fell from your lips without thinking.Â
âIâve never been in love.â You blurted, and he stilled next to you. You'd cautiously peered at him out of the corner of your eye, only to see him deep in thought before he turned to look at you.Â
âI donât know if I have, either.â He offered, almost as if to soothe anything you maybe have disturbed. He furrowed his brows, folding his hands on his stomach as he hummed, âI have no idea what thatâs like, but...Iâm willing to find out.â Â
Youâd felt your face grow hot then, and you sat up abruptly, âwith me?âÂ
âIf youâd allow it.âÂ
âWeâre not together yet.âÂ
He smiled, his cheeks tinging pink as he grabbed the pillow youâd been laying on and covered his face with it, âstop saying that! It makes me nervous and then I canât stop smiling like an idiot and I lose my cool guy demeanor.âÂ
âYou have zero inkling of a cool guy demeanor, Kim Mingyu.âÂ
âNuh uh! You told me I looked cool when we met at that tangsuyuk place! That you liked my jacket.âÂ
Youâd snickered then, crawling over him as his eyes widened. His fingers on the pillow tightened as he looked up at you through his lashes, lips parted as his ears burned bright red. You leaned down, pressing your lips to his carefully. He kissed you back almost immediately, his hands finding your hips just as you pulled back.Â
âI said your jacket looked cool, not that you were cool. And you tripped after asking for my number, so I say that knocks a couple points off,â you murmured against his lips, only for him to pout as you laughed in his face. You pressed a chaste kiss against his mouth before patting his hip, âIâm going to my room. Iâll see you in the morning, Mr. Kim.âÂ
âYouâre such a tease.âÂ
You only smiled as you climbed off him, holding a finger up as you made your way to the door and looking over your shoulder with a scrunch of your nose.Â
âWell, I suggest you learn to love it!âÂ
You stare down at the cup off coffee in your hands as the voicemail plays for a fifth time in your headphones. Your lipstick is on the edge of the ceramic cup, the very same lipstick youâd worn the day he kissed you. Â
If you flipped the tube over, itâd say Plum Blossom Baby.Â
And youâd remember every single time he kissed it off you like a man starved.Â
âI miss you, too.â Â
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 | 4:46Â PM, SEOUL.Â
(12) Missed Calls â Kim Mingyu.Â
(1) Voicemail â Kim Mingyu.Â
Hi, baby! This is call number...twelve! Yeah!Â
Thatâs our anniversary date, by the way. December 12th. Mark your calendar, âcause itâs almost here!Â
Can you believe we broke up a year ago today, though? Well, itâs barely the seventh here in Chicago, but the seventh is almost over for you. Do you miss me? I miss you. Maybe thatâs why the alcohol isnât as bitter as it usually is, though. Â
Anyway, I know Iâm probably not super intelligible right now because Iâm now six beers, one plum blossom lemon drop, three shots and two whiskey sours in. Because of this information that Iâve just bestowed upon you, my love, Iâm just gonna be honest, yeah? Â
Again.Â
I miss you.Â
You know, I probably wouldâve introduced you to my parents this Christmas. I had it planned for last year, but then...well, you know. But, I wanted to bring you home, âcause thatâs what you do when things get serious enough, right? When things feel right and you wanna pop the question, right?
I wanted to bring you home because then that means the future holds that big ass ring you deserve. The ring and the beautiful dress and the nice house I want to buy you and maybe some kids, right? You still want kids with me, right? I wouldâve been such a good husband. Iâd never be late, either, because Iâd be your house husband, too. I would have given up everything for you, even when you tried to say you were just kidding, I know you. I know that glint in your eye...I know you and I love you and I wouldâve given up everything to make you happy.Â
I still would.Â
I still want to, just like I still want you. I still need you, Y/N.Â
[SLURRED WHISPERING]Â
Cheollie wants me to hang up, but I had to tell him youâre not even talking back! God, youâre not talking back and I miss your voice so fucking bad, Chicago feels like Hell right now. I miss you so much it pains me. My stomach hurts, actually, thinking about you right now and missing your voice. Missing you.Â
I think...IÂ think this will be my last call.Â
It has to be.Â
I miss you...so much. Even in Chicago, especially in Chicago. I feel it worse when Iâm here, and Iâm positive itâs because I was in Chicago the week before we broke up. You looked so pretty in all the outfits and selfies you sent me when I was gone on my trip...God, and you were so beautiful in that little red set you got. Fuck, I canât think about that. Itâs not right.Â
[SILENCE]Â
Oh, I never gave you the snowglobe I got you when I was here last year! I got it personalized, it had a picture of you and me the day I asked you to be my girlfriend! Itâs still in the trunk of my car, though, and itâs buried inside one last box of stuff I couldnât bring myself to give you when I dropped it all off with Myungjae. How is that guy, by the way? Still flirting with you? Dipshit.Â
Sorry.Â
God, I miss you. I miss kissing you...holding your hand and making fun of you for crying at Shark Tale when Angie confesses to Oscar that she was in love with him when he was nothing.Â
You loved me when I was nothing, too.Â
Iâd be nothing without you.Â
...Do you think youâll miss me too, someday? Maybe as bad as I miss you? Ever?Â
[SILENCE]Â
Bad question to ask. Iâm sorry. I miss you.Â
Well.Â
My name is Kim Mingyu. Iâm 28, and I am drunk in Chicago, Illinois. I am desperately missing you, I am irrevocably in love with you and Iâll see you as soon as you want me.Â
Iâll catch ya when I can, baby. December 12th, donât forget. I love you.
God, I love you.Â
Bye, baby.Â
Youâre thankful that youâre sitting on your couch when that voicemail comes in. Â
Youâre so grateful no one can see your trembling fingers as you press play on it, or the way you burst into tears the moment the word baby crosses his lips. You can hardly hear him speaking, but you turn the volume up as high as it will go and sob into your throw pillow. You cover yourself with one of the blankets youâd thrown over the edge of the couch that morning, and you feel your chest ache as you get a whiff of his cologne.Â
You know Mingyu wanted to marry you.Â
Youâd seen the velvet box in his dresser a few months before the breakup. It wasnât at all the reason behind it, and you were confident in that. You wouldâve married him in a heartbeat, he wouldnât even have to ask you. Heâd have to do nothing of the sort like he did when he asked you to be his girlfriend â no fancy rented restaurant, no engraved bottle of gin, no begging to go down on you after finishing inside you for the very first time.Â
You think it scared you, though.Â
God, it scared you so much.Â
To be Mingyuâs forever â it terrified you to know that youâd fallen so deeply in love with him that he wouldnât even have to ask. Youâd give him anything he wanted, anything he needed at the drop of a hat â just a kiss to your lips and youâd seal his fate forever. House husband, the kids, the house, the stupid fucking wedding that heâd talked about for a few weeks before he left for Chicago last year...Â
Youâd give it all to him.Â
Every. Single. Thing.Â
âI love you, Kim Mingyu.âÂ
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7 |Â 7:15 PM, SEOUL.Â
INCOMING CALL â Kim Mingyu.Â
You watch the phone ring from your couch. Youâre still in your work clothes, your pantyhose torn at the knee from picking at it. Waiting for another call.Â
Hoping for another call.Â
It rings, and rings...Â
And it starts going to voicemail before you grab it and slide the toggle to answer it, pressing it to your ear. Your skin prickles as you hear the crunch of snow under his boots, and a sigh from his lips â likely paired with tears beginning to coat his lashes. Seungcheol is hollering in the background, singing something about a girl from Ipanema.Â
âOkay, I lied. This is the last callââÂ
âMingyu, you have to stop doing this.â You blurt, and silence follows your sentence. You dare yourself to peek at the screen, but he hasnât hung up. He clears his throat, and you hear him stop walking.Â
âWhat the hell? Baby?âÂ
âMingyu, stop calling this number.âÂ
You feel your throat tight, burning as you hear him sigh painfully on the other end, and a soft thud follows. Heâs likely on the floor, sitting on a curb in the middle of Chicago....at almost five in the morning.Â
âI love you, Y/N.âÂ
âI know. I know you love me, Mingyu. Thatâs why you need to stop.â You feel a rush of hot tears spill down your cheeks, and you donât bother wiping them away as you sniffle, âBecause I canât promise you that I donât love you back, and then weâre fucked. Weâre in a mess if I canât tell you that I donât love you.âÂ
âThat just means that you do love me.â Heâs pouting, and Seungcheol has switched songs to Iâm Your Baby Tonight by Whitney Houston. âYou know we can be together. Iâll drop everything for you, right now. I need to be yours or I wonât understand the meaning of life.âÂ
You snort, the amusement feeing cynical as you shake your head, âwe canât.âÂ
âWhy?âÂ
âBecause I have pride.âÂ
âFuck your pride. Love me like I know you fucking do. I know you love me.â His voice grows soft despite the strong start, and you hear the ping of metal on metal. Heâs probably leaning against a lamp post, âLove me, please.âÂ
âMingyu.â You groan, your voice thick as you sink into the cushions. He hums as you sigh, âI shouldnât have answered. I gotta go, Mingyu. Get back to your hotel safe, okay?âÂ
âWait, wait. Donât hang up, please. I miss your voice...so much.â He whines, before the sound of snow jostles around him, âWhat if I send you a ticket to Chicago right now? Iâll send you a ticket right now if you promise me youâll come. Come see me. Love me.âÂ
âMingyu, why would I do that? I work...I have commitments. Youâre just drunk.â You hate how close you are to caving, to calling in sick and using your PTO to go rescue him. A twenty-hour flight over a drunken confession of completely and utterly missing you that youâre sure heâll regret.Â
âFor closure, I guess. To prove you donât love me. Iâll send you a ticket right now, and if you donât love me...â Something akin to a sob rips through him, and you feel your lower lip tremble as the same burn settles in your chest, âif you donât love me, donât tell me. Just donât get on the flight.âÂ
âYouâre wasting money, Mingyu.â The waver in your voice betrays you, and his response lets you know that he knows heâs got you. Hook, line...Â
âI was made to spend my money on you. My time. Give you all my love until I canât anymore and when I canât thatâs when my time is up. But loving you...God, I'd never fucking die. Iâll love you in this lifetime, in the next one. Iâll love your lips and your face and your heart in every single time and space continuum, the Gods would be fucking sick of my ass yearning for you. Thatâs what this is. Iâm yearning for you to love me from across the world while Iâm drunk on a curb in Chicago and all the stars in the sky look like your eyes when you tell me you love me, too.âÂ
Sinker.Â
âGood night, Mingyu.â You breathe out, and he hums again, his voice thick as he replies softly.Â
Carefully.Â
âGood night, Y/N. I love you...so much.âÂ
He hangs up before you can, and you look at your phone with a weight in your stomach.Â
You stare at it for five minutes, your thumb hovering over the PLEDIS app your company had to put in paid time off or sick leave.Â
NEW! 2 Messages from:Â Kim MingyuÂ
[7:31 PM] [1 Attachment]Â
[7: 31 PM] check your email. come to me. please.Â
Your email pings as you press the photo. A screenshot â one first class ticket to Chicago through OâHare, taking off at seven in the morning your time. A non-stop thirteen-hour flight, because you canât stand waiting around an airport for a connection.Â
NEW! 1 Message from:Â Kim MingyuÂ
[7:32 PM] i love you.Â
You open the company app without a second thought.Â
MONDAY, DECEMBER 8 | 5:34 AM, CHICAGO.Â
Mingyu is nauseous as he paces back and forth in front of your gate, his hand nearly crushing the flowers heâs got gripped in his palm.Â
Heâs still hungover as fuck, and he has absolutely no idea what came over him the night before â but he doesnât care, either. If you got on that plane...youâll be here.Â
Any minute now.Â
Seungcheol scolded him the entire ride to the airport. He went on and on about how he canât do things like that when heâs drunk, that he canât just drop over two grand to get you to Chicago because he misses you â when Seungcheol had done the same thing the year you and Mingyu met, but for Jeonghan.Â
Seungcheol argues he and Jeonghan have been in love longer than Mingyu has even known how to wipe his ass. Offensive, gross and not true...but slightly endearing as the older man flushes at the mention of his long-term boyfriend.Â
Mingyuâs collar is too tight as he nibbles on his lip, watching people start trickling out the gate. Families, a couple. Another couple, elderly and wobbly as they hold hands tightly and carry light backpacks â a young girl screaming from behind him and running up to them. He stops pacing, standing next to a man obviously waiting for someone â maybe a her. A girl, a woman.Â
Heâs just as nervous as Mingyu is, holding flowers just like Mingyu. Lips bitten red, cheeks flushed...and Mingyu reminds himself to take a deep breath. He keeps looking over heads of people â more couples, more families...Â
You.Â
In a pink hoodie that belonged to him in college, with a black pair of his sweatpants tugged over your hips and almost too long. Wearing cable headphones, eyes swollen and sunglasses perched on your head. Your hands are stuffed in your pocket, and youâre chewing on your lip the way you always do when youâre nervous as you walk cautiously; your eyes slowly raking over everyone waiting before you drop them to the ground.Â
Mingyu feels glued to the goddamn floor, and the guy next to him nudges his arm.Â
âThatâs your girl?â He utters, and you duck behind a couple, almost like youâre embarrassed. Like youâre not aware heâs there, and you donât want to look like an idiot.Â
âYeah,â he breathes out, âthatâs my girl.âÂ
The guy pats his arm, and Mingyu feels adrenaline start coursing through him like a wave swallowing him whole as your name leaves his mouth.Â
âY/N!âÂ
Your head darts up, eyes wide as you look all around. You spot him, covering your face immediately as your lip juts out in a pout and he bolts to you. He almost knocks you over as he wraps his arms around your waist, clutching the flowers to your back as he holds you close. Your hair smells like the same perfume thatâs haunted him for the last year without you, and your tears are soaking through his shirt as he kisses the side of your face.Â
âYouâre here. Youâre here...a-and I love you. I love you so much.â He stutters between kisses, your fingers gripping his jacket tightly as you sob into his neck. âI love you, God. Itâs so good to see you, baby.âÂ
âEven when I broke up with you over something stupid?â You blurt, haphazardly wiping at your eyes as his hands come to hold your cheeks carefully. Your eyes are still as starry as ever, glossed over with tears as your fingers pull at his jacket, âI love you.âÂ
He smiles softly, nodding, âI know, baby. I know you love me.âÂ
He feels his eyes sting with tears, your face growing blurry as he pulls you into him. He buries his nose in your hair, inhaling deeply as his arms practically crush you in his embrace. Your arms wrap around his waist, your fingernails dragging lightly up and down his back as your sobs subside slowly. He kisses the crown of your head, âyouâre really here?âÂ
âIâm really tired.â You whisper back, pulling your head back slightly to look up at him. His thumbs wipe the corners of your eyes gently, and you seemingly hesitate before glancing at his lips. Â
A kiss.Â
âLuckily for you...my hotel room has two beds.âÂ
âDonât tell me youâre sharing with Seungcheol.âÂ
âHeâs a fucking cheapskate if itâs not about Jeonghan,â Mingyu jests, making you roll your eyes before they not-so-subtly land on his lips again. He nuzzles his nose to yours, âyouâre mine, right? This, you coming. That makes you mine, right?âÂ
âLeave a message,â you shrug, before pressing your lips to his abruptly, your hands cupping his jaw carefully as you pull him to you. He kisses you back softly, pulling away after a few seconds as his hands hold your hips tightly. He smiles against your lips, giving you another chaste kiss before leaning near your ear and pitching his voice up.Â
âHey, itâs Y/N. Sorry I missedââÂ
âMingyu, I'll get right back on that damn plane.âÂ
He laughs, grabbing your hand and pulling you flush to his hip as he shows you the flowers. Your eyes widen as you smile inwardly, holding them to your chest as you peer up at him through your lashes, â...thank you for leaving all those voicemails.âÂ
âThank you for listening to them. And picking up...and getting on that flight.âÂ
âI love you, Mingyu.âÂ
He canât bite back his smile as his cheeks tinge pink, his skin hot as his fingers tighten around yours and you both step out into the cold Chicago air. He rocks on his heels for a moment, before spotting Seungcheol down the pick-up area. He leans down slightly, pressing a kiss to your temple before clearing his throat.Â
âHey, itâs Y/N. Sorry I missed your call, leave a message and Iâll get right back to ya! Hehehe.âÂ
You shove him away, beelining for Seungcheol as he snickers. The older man looks pleasantly surprised to see you, opening his arms to embrace you. You allow it, before he opens the passenger side door as Mingyu opens his mouth to argue.Â
You both stick your tongues out at him, turning your noses up at him as you climb into the passenger seat while Seungcheol takes your carryon. Â
âI told you sheâd come.â Seungcheol scoffs, and Mingyu scrunches his nose, âno you didnât, idiot.âÂ
âBe nice, Kim Mingyu. Weâre kicking him out of his room later, we need to be in his good graces.âÂ
âNo way you guys are just getting back together and already fucking.â Seungcheol gapes, and Mingyu feels his face grow even hotter as he just scrambles into the driverâs seat. Seungcheol scowls as he slips into the backseat, too tired to fight it. You reach your hand across the center console for Mingyu to hold as he peels out of the pick-up area, your lips pressing to his knuckles.Â