DAEMCNES.⠀ - ⠀ 1x1 nsfw lit rp & 𝄒 01⠀! 🪽 ⠀ ' ⠀⠀ • ೀ⠀⠀ ft. @tsvetck⠀𖹭⠀ ݁⠀ ׅ #𝐃𝐎 𝐍𝐎𝐓 ⠀ 𝑐𝑜𝑚𝑒 𝑡𝑜 𝑚𝑦 𝑡𝑜𝑤𝑛⠀ ── . ༒︎⠀

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DAEMCNES.⠀ - ⠀ 1x1 nsfw lit rp & 𝄒 01⠀! 🪽 ⠀ ' ⠀⠀ • ೀ⠀⠀ ft. @tsvetck⠀𖹭⠀ ݁⠀ ׅ #𝐃𝐎 𝐍𝐎𝐓 ⠀ 𝑐𝑜𝑚𝑒 𝑡𝑜 𝑚𝑦 𝑡𝑜𝑤𝑛⠀ ── . ༒︎⠀

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𝑎𝑐𝑡 𝑖 — 𝑡ℎ𝑒 𝑔𝑙𝑖𝑡𝑐ℎ | arin & seokmin ft. @tsvetck
scene : post-job, off-grid city loop — long after midnight
The alley retained the scent of brake dust and overheated copper, a residue that clung to the air long after the noise had drained from the street. Fog lay low along the gutters, thick where it gathered around the storm drains and thinning only slightly where the pavement rose to meet the lot’s uneven incline. It was the kind of fog that didn’t move, didn’t drift — it simply settled, as if waiting for something to end before it would permit itself to lift.
The job had gone smoothly enough to be called a success, though that word, like so many others in their line, had begun to lose its shape. The data was secured. The trace trails were minimal. Jihae’s team moved with the kind of quiet efficiency that only came from repetition: cases folded, optics shielded, fingerprints scrubbed from surfaces no one would think to check. There was no urgency, but no idle movement either. They worked like a tide pulling back.
Arin stood at the edge of the lot, one hand resting against the flank of her vehicle, the engine still warm beneath her fingers. From a distance, nothing seemed wrong. No smoke. No visible damage. But something had shifted in the last stretch of road — a subtle change in the mechanical rhythm, not loud enough to be called failure, but unmistakable to someone who knew how the machine was supposed to breathe. It wasn’t a sound, not exactly. It was sensation — a dissonance in the feedback loop, a hesitation in the way the frame responded under strain, like a held breath that never quite released.
Her entry into the lot had been quiet. No abrupt stops, no dramatics. But when she’d stepped out of the driver’s seat, the way her hand lingered against the doorframe, the way her posture held — it all carried a weight that had nothing to do with physical exertion. Her silence, though unspoken, took up space.
One of Jihae’s techs passed nearby, glancing up from his handheld as he moved toward the van. His tone was easy, unbothered, as if the hour and the tension and the city’s breathless quiet weren’t pressing in from every side.
“Telemetry’s clean,” he said. “Probably just heat lag in the suspension loop.”
Arin didn’t acknowledge him. Her eyes were fixed on the wheel well, and her fingers traced a slow arc along the frame, not inspecting so much as communing — an instinctive motion, searching for the place where the machine’s rhythm had faltered.
Footsteps approached behind her, deliberate and unhurried. When Jihae spoke, her voice was even, measured — the same practiced detachment she used when delivering assessments that would be impolite if they were any less accurate.
“You overloaded the differential on that turn. Rear assembly isn’t rated for the stress you dumped into it.”
Arin exhaled through her nose — a sharp breath, controlled, not quite annoyance but not submission either. “I’ve made that turn before.”
Jihae didn’t argue. She took another step forward and crouched slightly to examine the clearance beneath the wheel, her gaze intent but not intrusive. When she answered, her voice carried no judgment. Only fact.
“Not with me setting the lead angle.”
That earned her a glance, brief and narrow, but whatever Arin was going to say, she withheld it. The fog shifted slightly as a gust of wind pushed down the alley — warm, thick with the sour tang of concrete and engine oil. Jihae’s coat stirred around her legs. She didn’t move.
“Seokmin's about two blocks east,” she said, tilting her head toward the far end of the lot. “Lift’s clear. We can take a look.”
It wasn’t framed as an offer. Nor was it an order. It simply was — something that would happen unless stopped.
Arin stood motionless for a long moment, her gaze still on the vehicle, her hand unmoving against the metal. Then, without urgency, she peeled the glove from her right hand, slow and deliberate, as if the gesture might reveal something previously hidden. The skin beneath bore the residue of the road — not damage, but trace.
“If your team touched the drivetrain during integration,” she said, her voice low and stripped of performance, “I need to know.”
Jihae’s expression didn’t shift, though the shape of her smile emerged gradually, small but unmistakably hers — a quiet kind of confidence, sharp at the edges, too precise to be mistaken for charm.
“I don’t waste sabotage on people I intend to keep,” she said, as if it were the most obvious thing in the world.
There was a pause, brief but unbroken. Then Arin gave a single nod — not assent, not trust, but a conditional forward motion — and followed her down the alley, into the city’s sleeping dark.
༘˚⋆𐙚 all the stars remember our name ᥫ᭡ daehyun & winona / @tsvetck
Blacklist had always smelled like a memory. Lemon oil, worn oak, the smoke that spiraled from old brass fixtures — sweet and dark as burnt vanilla — and something fainter beneath it all, something ghosted. The breath of citrus from long-scrubbed surfaces. The copper sting of once-spilled whiskey. The residue of her perfume, half-forgotten, buried in velvet dust. It was a sanctuary built from wreckage, a reliquary for the living, and tonight it waited without ceremony — its doors locked, its hush devout, its light like communion. Outside, winter pressed against the panes like a held breath. Inside, stillness ruled.
Daehyun entered like a man stepping not into a room, but into a life he once survived.
He didn’t wear grief like armor — something built to guard or gleam. He wore it like a second skin, close and breathable, worn in all the joints. Grief that moved with him. That whispered in his collar and stiffened his knuckles. That hummed like marrow remembering warmth. Beneath the arch of backlit bottles, he walked slowly, reverently, his fingertips brushing the edge of the bar they’d built together. Not figuratively — built with their hands, board by board, finish by finish. Winona had chosen the stain, a shade darker than her hair. He remembered how it glinted in the morning light before they’d opened their doors for the first time — like spilled ink, like soil still wet.
The wood was cool now beneath his hand. Oiled. Treated. The bar top as smooth as scripture, every grain a litany. Here, they had knelt in old jeans, staining and sanding, her laugh echoing in the gutted room like joy in a cathedral stripped bare. Here, she’d played records when the jukebox still sputtered and he’d offered her whiskey for lunch because they were young and in love and nothing had teeth yet.
Now the jukebox was silent. Now the laughter was a relic. Now the silence had a shape.
Winona didn’t flinch — not outwardly, at least — though everything in her had begun to unravel the moment his voice threaded through the heat-heavy air. It wasn’t just the word, though it had landed with the precision of a blade unsheathed in private. It was the entire litany of memory he dragged behind it: the way he lingered in doorways like a sin she hadn’t yet confessed, the velvet-slick cadence of French twisted around half-spoken truths, the impossible ease with which he peeled back the moment — and her composure — like he already knew what lay beneath. Every syllable carried the residue of last night, and he wielded it without hesitation, like someone too familiar with the shape of her undoing.
It was crude — not elegant, not veiled in metaphor — but delivered with that infuriatingly boyish charm he wore like a second skin, the kind that made sin sound like a private joke told too close to her ear. There was no artifice in the way he said it, no polished edge. Just raw, shameless implication slouched into syllables and tossed at her like a match still burning. And yet, somehow, that only made it worse — or better. She couldn’t decide. Maybe she didn’t want to.
The rhythm of his voice thrummed low through her, deep as bass, as steady as the memory of his mouth pressed to her throat — each word a lazy, knowing caress that skimmed along the ridges of memory until her pulse quickened in places she hadn’t meant to remember so vividly. He wasn’t painting around the act. He was naming it. Owning it. Making her relive it with every slow drag of consonant against vowel. And she felt it — in the flush crawling high up her neck, in the way her thighs subtly shifted like they could hide the ache building between them.
Daehyun stood motionless in the fractured light, long after her voice had faded into the room’s quiet, a hush that felt more sacred than awkward. The moment held itself taut, like a held breath. As though the air had altered in the wake of her words — not in sound, but in weight, in density. The sun slanted in through high, broken windows, painting the room in soft ruin. Dust turned golden in the beams, a kind of quiet magic made visible. Time hadn’t moved, and yet everything had shifted.
He let the silence stretch, not to fill it, but to honor it.
There was something holy in how she stood there, hand grazing the old piano like she wasn’t touching an object, but invoking a memory. Like the wood could remember the music, and the room remembered her. Her fingertips moved with reverence — not of ownership, but of recognition. She knew this place. Had bled for it, likely. Cried into its cracks. Dreamed over its bones. Treated the decay not as a death, but as an intermission.
Even in disrepair, this place carried breath. Not just hers, but someone’s —something’s. A memory pressed into the floorboards, etched into plaster, folded into the very air. And Daehyun could feel it. Not as an outsider, not exactly. More like a man standing at the edge of someone else’s sacred fire, feeling the heat and wondering if he’d be invited in.
He moved then — slowly, deliberately — his hand trailing the lacquered top of the piano, fingers ghosting over it like he was listening for something only skin could hear. Like the instrument might speak to him if he touched it right. If he were quiet enough. Open enough.
"이게 핵심이에요?" he asked finally, voice low, threadbare. "아니면 뼈만?" “This the heart of it?” / “Or just the bones?”
He didn’t look at her when he said it. He didn’t have to. The answer had already taken shape in the way she held the bar, her hand sliding across the edge as if rediscovering something she’d almost forgotten how to love. There were ghosts here, yes — but they didn’t scare him. They lived with them. And he could see it in how she stood: steady, shoulders drawn back, eyes full of history.
She didn’t speak. She didn’t need to. So he rolled up his sleeves.
❛ ﹒ ⋮﹒ 𝐝𝐚𝐞𝐡𝐲𝐮𝐧'𝐬 𝐜𝐚𝐦𝐞𝐫𝐚 𝐫𝐨𝐥𝐥 — ft. @tsvetck ` ˑ ִֶ 𓂃⊹

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The threshold welcomed her like a well-rehearsed lie, silent and exact, a breathless pause before the first line of a script she hadn’t agreed to recite. Elenora stepped inside with the kind of grace that felt borrowed from another time, another version of herself — back when control had been something she could wear like a perfume instead of something she clung to with white-knuckled desperation. The air inside was warm and as she moved past the frame, the scent hit her first — soft detergent, bergamot, the faint trace of jasmine that clung to her linens back home, a familiar undertone of aged paper and tea leaves that always made her apartment feel like a refuge.
But, beneath it all, there was a note she had come to loathe. Subtle, expensive, and entirely wrong. Jonghee’s cologne — something sharp beneath the surface, gunpowder wrapped in something faintly woodsmoked. She knew it now. after hours of forced proximity, could pick it out like rot beneath perfume — staining the walls with a presence she hadn’t invited.
Patent leather heels clicked once against the dark wood as she finally stepped inside. And then again — slowly, deliberately, like a woman trespassing in her own life. Umber hues flicked over the interior, hairs at the nape of her neck rising as the familiarity of it all began to wash over her. Her sharpened gaze fixated first on the kitchen, where chrome glinted beneath the soft glow of underlighting, countertops gleaming with clinical perfection.
The room seemed to stretch, impossibly so, as though the walls themselves recoiled from the weight that thickened in the space between them. Silence pooled like smoke at their feet — not empty, not still, but charged with something unnameable. She moved across the room in slow, deliberate steps, her movements quiet, almost reverent, like a dancer beneath cathedral arches. Her fingers grazed the backs of books and the softened folds of old fabric, as though memory might be coaxed from the objects left behind.
Jonghee did not move. He stood like something carved from dusk — motionless near the entryway, eyes fixed, body poised, every line of him sharpened by restraint. He didn’t speak. He didn’t need to. The very shape of his stillness spoke louder than words could. His silence was a skill, a language forged in fire and refined in rooms like this — rooms where people learned to question themselves under the sheer weight of being seen.
He had long understood the violence of silence. How it stripped the noise from the world until only one’s heartbeat remained, too loud in the chest. How it could erode certainty, turn thoughts into static. It was not that he lacked things to say. It was that he had mastered the art of withholding — of letting the tension rise like water against the walls of a dam.
INTRODUCING ... 𝑷𝑨𝑹𝑲𝑬𝑹 𝑪𝑯𝑶𝑰 ᵎ!ᵎ 귀신⠀ ﹚⠀⠀𝐈𝐈.⠀⠀⠀귀신 "𝐆𝐇𝐎𝐒𝐓"⠀⠀:⠀. 1969 𝑑𝑜𝑑𝑔𝑒 𝑐ℎ𝑎𝑟𝑔𝑒𝑟⠀⠀⠀⌯⠀⠀⠀ ✧ 𝐑𝐀𝐂𝐄𝐑⠀⠀⠀—⠀⠀⠀INFJ⠀⠀⠀&⠀⠀⠀𝑒𝑥-𝑠𝑝𝑒𝑐𝑖𝑎𝑙 𝑓𝑜𝑟𝑐𝑒𝑠⠀⠀⠀| ⠀ @𝐬𝐢𝐱𝟗𝐠𝐡𝐨𝐬𝐭
❝ 𝑖 𝑑𝑜𝑛’𝑡 𝑏𝑒𝑙𝑖𝑒𝑣𝑒 𝑖𝑛 ℎ𝑎𝑝𝑝𝑦 𝑒𝑛𝑑𝑖𝑛𝑔𝑠. 𝑖 𝑏𝑒𝑙𝑖𝑒𝑣𝑒 𝑖𝑛 𝑓𝑎𝑠𝑡 𝑒𝑥𝑖𝑡𝑠 ❞
INTRODUCING ... 𝑨𝑹𝑰𝑵 𝑩𝑨𝑲 ᵎ!ᵎ 연옥⠀⠀ ﹚⠀⠀𝐈.⠀⠀⠀칼 "𝐊𝐀𝐋"⠀⠀:⠀⠀⠀𝑝𝑜𝑟𝑠𝑐ℎ𝑒 944 𝑡𝑢𝑟𝑏𝑜⠀⠀⠀⌯⠀⠀⠀ ✧ 𝐑𝐀𝐂𝐄𝐑⠀⠀⠀—⠀⠀⠀ENTP⠀⠀⠀&⠀⠀⠀𝑡𝑒𝑐ℎ 𝑏𝑎𝑑𝑑𝑖𝑒⠀⠀⠀| ⠀ @𝐚𝐫𝐢𝐧𝐯𝐱
· .˳⁺⁎ 𝐁𝐔𝐒𝐀𝐍 kissed the pavement tonight. she kιssᥱd back. ⌯
The door closed behind her with a soft weight of finality, not a slam but a sealing — as if something dangerous had just locked into place. Elenora remained still, breath held in a careful, shallow rhythm, as the dim interior of the SUV folded around her like dusk pulled tight over glass. Outside, the rain painted the city in streaks of halogen and shadow, but within the car, the world shrank down to leather seats and silence, to the faint impression of a presence no longer there. Not oppressive. Not unwelcome.
She had been a stranger by every definition, yet one that she had not come to resent in the short time she’d known her. Winona had been the single breath of air during a suffocating journey — calm, poised, unshaken by the cold authority of the two men who’d flanked her like sentinels.
It hadn’t been desperation that pulled conversation from Elenora on the plane — it had been something far more disarming. Winona had spoken in low tones designed not to pry, but to offer refuge. Her English was clean and elegant, her humor subdued but deft, and somehow, across the twelve-hour flight and the brittle hush of high altitude, she hadn’t extended pity, only presence. Spoke little, but enough to remind Elenora that she still existed — not as currency, not as consequence, but as a woman.
But it wasn’t just her warmth that lingered now. It was her presence — composed, confident, utterly undiminished by the intimidating man who sat beside her like a monument. He had spoken rarely, only to her, and always in tones that suggested power, danger, history. And yet Winona had not been overshadowed. She hadn’t shrunk beneath the weight of proximity. She occupied her seat like she belonged to the storm they flew through. She reminded Elenora, with the smallest gestures, that a woman’s power didn’t always have to be loud — sometimes, it was in how you refused to be reduced.
Something about the way she carried herself had settled beneath Elenora’s skin like the memory of light: not warm, exactly, but clarifying. That clarity lingered now, even as Jonghee took his place beside her like gravity deciding where to fall.
𝑦𝑜𝑢 𝑙𝑜𝑜𝑘 𝑙𝑖𝑘𝑒 ℎ𝑜𝑚𝑒, 𝑏𝑢𝑡 𝑖 𝑏𝑢𝑖𝑙𝑡 𝑦𝑜𝑢 𝑡ℎ𝑎𝑡 𝑤𝑎𝑦 ・ .˳⁺⁎
Jonghee didn’t speak as the car came to a slow stop. He didn’t feel like it. The wheels crunched softly against the gravel as he killed the engine, the sounds of the world outside pushing in like distant waves, cold and muted. He exhaled the smoke from his cigarette slowly, his gaze lingering on the dark silhouette of the house ahead. The faint glow of the porch light flickered in the periphery of his vision, casting long shadows over the landscape.
He didn’t move immediately. The air outside the car was cool, damp, thick with the last whispers of rain, but he didn’t care. There was no rush, no need to hurry. In his world, time moved slower, lingering in pockets of space where things were just, his.
He glanced sideways at her — the stillness of her presence felt like the final breath before something significant shifted. She didn’t yet know what she was walking into, but he could feel it.
“This is where you’ll be,” his voice barely above the noise of the engine dying in silence. “It’s yours for now.” The words were calm, even, as he held the cigarette to his lips, his fingers turning it idly between them. He never looked at her, not directly. His eyes were trained on the distant glow of the house. “Oh, and the lock listens to me,” he added in a murmur, a quiet statement of fact — not a threat, but a reminder of how deep his influence ran.

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Unbothered
half of her beauty is brains
His grading had long since become a pantomime. Fountain pen grazed the page without meaning, tired eyes skimming paragraphs he’d read twice already — the words no longer forming arguments so much as abstractions, a blur of half-formed theses and misused citations that might’ve once stirred his attention, but now barely held the shape of thought.
Somewhere around the third paper, he’d realised he’d written the same marginal note twice in a row — clarify this point — and that he couldn’t even quite recall what point he’d meant. Perhaps it had been the point he was trying to make to himself; that this was a dangerous line he danced along as he found himself leaning into the waft of her perfume as she brushed past him — something faint and yet familiar, neither sweet nor sharp, but elusive, like a memory of warmth on skin.
The scent of her lingered somewhere between the vaulted bookcases — their pages soaking up each stroke of a deft hand as she returned them to their shelves with reverent ease — and the windows where golden dusk spilled through, gilding her skin in a light so soft it seemed the sun itself a worshipper.
He didn’t lift his head. He couldn’t. Because he knew — with the quiet certainty that came from the bone-deep recognition of beauty — that if he let himself look at her now, it would be over. Her image would root itself behind his eyelids, vivid and impossible to shake, waiting for him in the stillness of his bedroom, haunting the margins of his study, slipping into the pause between breaths. She moved like silence dressed in grace, like something that belonged to the hush of a cathedral or the curve of a dream — and he stayed bowed over his page, feigning focus, all while knowing she was what blurred the words before him.
The room hadn’t changed, but something in it had softened — in the angle of the light against the shelves, in the stillness that followed his voice like an afterthought. Dalia felt it first in her spine, in that brief, weightless second before response, when everything inside her stilled not from hesitation but recognition. Not because the question surprised her, but because it hadn’t. Because she had known — with the strange certainty reserved for scent, for silence, for the feel of a name unspoken — that he would say something like this. Something careful. Something kind. She moved slowly, not out of caution, but reverence — a small, unhurried rise from the chair she’d long since melted into, her limbs unfolding with the fluidity of someone who’d grown up learning how to move without disturbing the air around her. She didn’t rush to fill the quiet, didn’t reach for it like something that needed to be answered. Instead, she let it bloom between them for a breath longer. She had always trusted silence to carry what words couldn’t, and this one — this moment, suspended in dusklight and the loosened edge of his collar — felt like something she didn’t want to startle by speaking too soon. As she stepped toward him, her coat folded loosely over one arm, and let herself look — really look — at him in this softened shape: the undone knot of his tie, the faint, thoughtful crease between his brows, the faint warmth lingering in his voice. She wasn’t being coy. She wasn’t being careful. She was simply paying attention, and it wrapped her like warmth, this sense of being in the right place, with the right person, at exactly the right time.

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The space between them had thinned to something perilous, stretched so taut it seemed as though the very air itself might shatter if she so much as breathed too deeply, when Jonghee closed it without hurry, without the mercy of hesitation — the slow, inevitable gravity of him pressing into the last trembling inches she had guarded for herself like a secret she could not afford to lose. He moved not as a man seeking permission, but as something far older and far more certain, stepping into the narrow hollow between them with the silent surety of a crown laid upon a bowed head. Before Elenora could gather enough breath to steady the frantic, skittering drumbeat of her heart, before she could fasten the battered silk of her composure into something presentable, his fingers brushed against the curve of her shoulder — so light, so exquisitely light, that it might have been mistaken for a trick of the wind had it not struck her with the terrible precision of a blade sliding between the gaps in carefully constructed chainmail.
The contact was no more than a whisper, softer than the mist curling cold and spectral against her throat, but it cleaved through the delicate lattice of her restraint with the savagery of something born not of cruelty but of her orchestrated nemesis, severing the taut threads that had kept her upright with a touch so gentle it left no would — only the molten scorch of duplicity blooming low and furious beneath her ribs. Her body betrayed her instantly, the blood in her veins igniting against her will, her nerves thrumming with a heat she despised for its helplessness, the primarily, ugly recognition that rooting herself here was power clothed in patience, danger dressed so beautifully that even her most stubborn instincts paused to admire it before sounding the alarm.
The rain hadn’t stopped since the wheels met the tarmac — not a violent kind, but something slow and certain, as if the sky itself were whispering in a language no one else could hear. It fell in a silver curtain over the runway, catching in the orange rim-lights and pooling between the cracks in the asphalt like oil. Somewhere behind the thin cloud of jet exhaust, the gull-wing shadow of the plane still loomed, its engines ticking down like the last breath of something vast. She descended second — behind Winona, who always moved like she’d just won something — and the hem of Elenora’s coat lifted fractionally with the breeze, rain clinging to the threads like moths. He watched the fabric dance around her legs, the heels of her boots catching on the metal stairs in a rhythm that echoed louder than it should’ve, sharp and solitary, like a sentence being punctuated mid-thought. Her hair was pinned up with the kind of precision that suggested ruthlessness rather than vanity. It wasn’t the kind of thing a woman did unless she expected to be observed.
And she did. She always did.
He adjusted the cuff of his sleeve with the kind of deliberateness born from ritual, watching the storm bead against his watch face — not caring whether the water slipped past the leather band, or whether she caught the slight turn of his head as she stepped down to the tarmac. Jonghee didn’t rush. He never had to. The world moved around him, not the other way around. Daehyun passed by with a wordless nod, rain sliding off his collar, his hands tucked into his coat pockets like secrets. “She’s taller than I thought,” he murmured offhandedly to Jonghee, his voice light with that lazy irreverence only someone who’d seen too much could carry. Jonghee gave him nothing in return — not because he wasn’t listening, but because the rest of the world had already gone dull at the edges. The moment she stepped off that final stair, something tightened.
She didn’t seem to look at him. Not at first. But she knew.
The silence unfurled like a shroud, not a void but a presence — dense and deliberate, the kind that settles in cathedrals after the final note of a hymn dies against stained glass and vaulted ceilings, in burial chambers just before the earth remembers its hunger. It clung heavy to the stones, the breathless air, and rang out not with noise but with the echo of everything left unsaid. Woojin did not stir, not at first — he merely breathed, shallow and too measured, the breath of a man who stood before the monument of his own undoing.
Within that breath — suspended, brittle and trembling on the cusp of collapse — he looked at Seoktae. Not as one might look at something fragile, nor with the detachment of a sovereign to his subject. Rather, he looked with the aching eyes of a man who had mastered distance but not desire, who had crafted his silence into armour — only to find it made him no less vulnerable to beauty when it stood with its back to him, trembling and unguarded.
As trembling fingers sealed the Codex shut, the buckle snapping into place with a finality that reverberated through him, Woojin watched — knowing that somewhere inside him, somewhere deep and ruinous, that a regret began to stir. Not the kind that ached deep in the cracked marrow of his bones, but the kind that sharpened their teeth on the pang of longing that sat heavy behind his teeth. He had let him walk away — watched him turn without protest, allowed the space between them to bloom wide and devastating, the silence now devouring what he could have shattered instead with a single, desperate step.
And now, as eyes drifted to Seoktae’s retreating form — catching the slight tremor that shivered through him like the barely-contained collapse of someone who had stood too long on ground that never stopped shifting beneath him — Woojin found himself aching, not with restraint, but with the dawning horror of his own cowardice.
he doesn’t flinch when Woojin touches him. that, already, is its own confession. Seoktae has flinched from every kindness before it could find a place to stay — shrinking from gestures as though they might cut. but this time, when Woojin reaches for him and guides his hand, Seoktae lets it happen. no question. no sound. it isn’t softness that stilles him. it’s reverence. something older, hungrier, and far more cruel.
his palm lands over Woojin’s heart, that cursed and endless wound, and Seoktae forgets how to move. there is skin under his hand. warm. living. steady. and that, more than anything is what undoes him. it should not be steady. it should not welcome him. yet here he is, Seoktae with his blistered silences and all his disobedient blood, touching something so still and certain it feels like sacrilege.