Were trying a new thing because I'm tired of being a PUSSY.
I follow so many amazing creators on here and I have like two moots (who i love very much❤️) but I want more cause its def gonna kick my ass into actually posting the bullshit I've been writing. (Im just a little guy three apples tall dont bully me.)
So this is me, letting you know if you get a message or ask from me please know that I probably religiously read your work and am desperately in love with it and probably think you're really fucking cool and also ,you are not required to respond I just want to make friends and I am incredibly out of my autistic comfort zone Release me from this hell 🫠
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chan is a tough one to read at first when it comes to stuff like this. normally, he's the most patient, understanding guy you could ever meet. he’s the leader of a massive group, so he’s used to managing people, setting boundaries, and keeping his cool. he trusts you completely, and honestly, that’s where his baseline sits.
he isn’t the type to get mad just because you’re talking to another guy or because you have male friends. he’s too mature for that, and he respects you way too much to act like you’re his property.
but chan is also fiercely protective. it’s built into his DNA.
if you’re out together at a busy venue, maybe a post-concert afterparty or a crowded lounge where people are drinking, his eyes are always on you. he’ll be in the middle of a conversation with a producer or a manager, nodding along and laughing, but he always keeps you in his peripheral vision. it’s not because he’s keeping tabs on you; it’s just a habit. he wants to make sure you’re safe, that you have a drink, and that you aren't stuck in an awkward conversation.
the shift happens the second he notices someone crossing a line.
say you’re standing near the bar waiting for a drink, and some guy slides up next to you. at first, it’s just normal small talk, and chan watches from a distance, totally relaxed. but then the guy steps a little too close. maybe he puts a hand on the small of your back, or maybe you do that specific little lean-back you do when you’re feeling uncomfortable or crowded.
chan’s internal switch flips instantly. the easygoing smile vanishes, and his protective side takes over.
he won't storm over and start a physical fight. he’s too smart for that, and he hates unnecessary drama. instead, he walks over with this completely calm, unbothered expression that actually feels way more intimidating than someone yelling. he’ll slide right into the space next to you, his large frame completely cutting off the other guy's access to you.
"hey, doll," he’ll say, his voice deep and smooth, completely ignoring the other person. he’ll drop an arm heavily around your shoulders or loop his fingers tightly through yours, pulling you flush against his side. "ready to go? i got our coats."
he’ll look at the guy then, giving him a very polite, very fake smile that doesn't reach his eyes at all. it’s the kind of look that says i am being nice right now, but you need to walk away immediately. usually, just his presence and the sheer size of his shoulders are enough to make the person mutter an apology and disappear into the crowd.
once the threat is gone, chan relaxes a bit, but that possessiveness lingers for the rest of the night. he becomes incredibly physically affectionate. he’ll keep his hand firmly on your waist while you walk, thumb rubbing slow circles against your hip through your clothes. if you’re sitting down, his hand is on your thigh. it’s his way of regulating his own spikes of adrenaline and reminding himself that you’re right there with him.
if you tease him about it later in the car on the way home, saying something like, "channie, were you jealous?" he’ll just let out that quiet, breathless laugh of his and look out the window.
"i wasn't jealous," he’ll say, his voice dropping into that quiet register he only uses when it’s just the two of you. "i just don't like people making you uncomfortable. and i don't like sharing your attention when we're supposed to be out together."
he’ll reach across the console, grabbing your hand and bringing it up to his lips to kiss your knuckles. he won't admit to being possessive because he thinks it sounds toxic, but the truth is, he likes knowing you're his. he works so hard and gives so much of himself to his job, his members, and the fans, that when it comes to you, he wants to hold on tight. you're his safe place, his reward at the end of a chaotic day.
── ℳINHO : 9/10
minho is the type to notice everything before anyone else even realizes what’s happening. he doesn't do big, dramatic reactions, and he definitely won't start a loud argument in public. his jealousy is quiet, sharp, and entirely focused. he has very clear boundaries, and he expects people to respect them. if someone doesn't, minho doesn't get flustered—he just gets cold.
if you’re at a crowded gathering or a work event, minho won't hover over you. he’ll let you do your own thing, mingle, and talk to people. but his eyes never really leave you. he’ll be standing across the room, swirling a drink or leaning against a wall, looking totally bored, but he’s tracking exactly who is talking to you and how close they’re standing.
there's some guy who decides to try his luck. he walks up to you, starts flirting a little too boldly, and maybe reaches out to touch your arm while laughing at a joke.
from across the room, minho’s expression hardens instantly. the relaxed demeanor drops, replaced by a heavy, unblinking stare. he doesn't wait around to see how it plays out. he walks over, his footsteps deliberate, and slides into the space right next to you.
he doesn't look at the guy at first. instead, he hooks his fingers into the back of your belt loop or puts a hand firmly on the nape of your neck, his thumb brushing against your hairline. it tells everyone in the room exactly who you came with.
"you're ignoring me," minho says, his voice quiet but perfectly clear. he looks down at you, a tiny, sharp smile on his lips that doesn't match the look in his eyes.
"i was just talking to—" you start, but minho cuts your gaze back to the other guy.
his eyes slide over the stranger like he's looking at a piece of annoying dust on his shoe. he doesn't introduce himself. he doesn't shake hands.
"we're leaving," minho says directly to the guy, his tone perfectly polite but incredibly threatening. "she has better places to be."
before the guy can even stutter out a response, minho is already turning you around, his hand moving down to grip your waist firmly as he guides you toward the exit. he moves with purpose, not giving you a chance to look back or make polite small talk to ease the tension.
once you get outside into the cool night air, the rigid tension in his shoulders starts to bleed away, but he doesn't let go of you. he pulls you closer to his side as you walk down the sidewalk.
"minho, you were being kind of scary back there," you say, looking up at him with a half-smile, trying to lighten the mood.
he stops walking under a streetlamp, turning you so your back is against the brick wall of a building. he steps right into your space, crowding you slightly, his hands coming up to rest on the wall on either side of your head. he looks down at you, his eyes dark and completely serious.
"i don't like other people touching what's mine," he says bluntly. there’s no teasing in his voice now, no sarcasm. it’s just honest. "and i don't like the way he was looking at you. you're too polite sometimes."
"i was just being nice," you whisper, your heart doing a little flip at how he's being.
"don't be nice to them," he mutters, leaning down until his forehead rests against yours. his breath is warm against your skin. "be nice to me. i'm the one who has to take you home."
behind closed doors, minho’s possessiveness turns into a demand for your absolute attention. he’ll sit on the couch and pul you right onto his lap, burying his face in your neck and holding you so tightly you can barely move. he won't talk about the guy again, and he won't bring up the event.
he’ll just stay glued to your side for the rest of the night, reminding you in his own way exactly who you belong to.
── 𝒞HANGBIN : 8.5/10
changbin’s jealousy isn’t the quiet, brooding kind. he is a loud, warm, and naturally affectionate guy, so when he feels like someone is hovering around you too much, he doesn't hide it. he doesn't get mean or aggressive, either. instead, he just turns up his own volume, physically and socially, making himself pretty fucking hard to ignore.
you’re at a lively barbecue with a big group of acquaintances, sitting on a bench with a plate of food. some guy you don't know very well sits down next to you and starts up a conversation. he’s leaning in a little close, laughing very loudly at everything you say, and trying a bit too hard to get your attention.
changbin is across the yard by the grill, holding a plate of tongs and talking to the host, but he’s been watching the whole time. he doesn't stew in it or get a dark look on his face. he just grins, sets the tongs down, and walks straight over with too much energy.
"hey! what are we talking about?" changbin says, his voice booming as he slides right onto the bench on your other side.
he doesn't wait for an answer. he immediately throws his arm over your shoulders, his forearm resting heavily against your collarbone, pulling you so hard into his side that your shoulders bump. he looks across you at the guy, flashing a big, confident smile that is entirely genuine but also acts like a massive wall.
"oh, we were just talking about the music lineup for next weekend," you say, adjusting your plate so it doesn't spill.
"nice, nice," changbin nods enthusiastically, his hand dropping to squeeze your upper arm. he looks directly at the guy. "i'm changbin, by the way. her boyfriend. we're dating. because i'm her boyfriend."
the guy blinks, a little startled by how suddenly this human brick wall just inserted himself into the space. "oh, hey. nice to meet you. i was just saying how much i liked her skirt."
"right? she looks amazing in it," changbin says proudly, his chest puffing out a little bit. he leans forward, cutting off the guy’s view of you entirely. "i actually helped her pick it out. so, you live around here or what?"
changbin completely takes over the conversation. he is polite and friendly, but he drives the discussion so aggressively that the other guy can barely get a word in edgewise. within five minutes, the guy realizes he’s completely outmatched by changbin, mutters something about getting a drink, and stands up to leave.
the second the guy walks away, changbin’s loud persona drops instantly. he turns his whole body toward you on the bench, his bottom lip jutting out into a massive, dramatic pout.
"you were letting him talk to you for way too long," he grumbles, burying his face right into the crook of your neck, his arms wrapping tightly around your waist.
"changbin, he was just being nice," you laugh, trying to shift so you can look at him, but he just holds on tighter.
"he was flirting," changbinn mutters into your skin, his voice muffled. "i could tell from all the way over by the burgers. he kept leaning in. i didn't like it."
"are you pouting?" you tease, running your fingers through the hair at the back of his neck.
"yes," he says honestly, pulling back just enough to look at you with wide, demanding eyes. "i'm your boyfriend. you're supposed to look at me like that, not some random guy. feed me a piece of your chicken to make up for it."
you shake your head, giggling, and pick up a piece of food with your fork to feed him. he takes it happily, a smug, satisfied expression replacing the pout. for the rest of the afternoon, he doesn't leave your side. he keeps his hand locked in yours, or his arm wrapped around your waist, completely proud to show everyone exactly who you're with.
── ℋYUNJIN : 9.5/10
hyunjin... doesn't really know how to hide what he's feeling. everything shows up on his face instantly—the slight furrow of his brows, the way his bottom lip sticks out, or how his eyes get suddenly dark and focused. because he’s someone who feels everything so intensely, his jealousy isn’t a slow burn. it’s a sudden, sharp, and completely shifts his mood.
you’re at a gallery opening for a friend, standing in a brightly lit room surrounded by artwork. hyunjin is a few paces ahead of you, completely absorbed in a large canvas, tilting his head as he studies the brushstrokes. you step back a bit to let him look, and within a few seconds, an older guy with a wine glass approaches you. he starts asking you about your opinion on the piece, but his gaze keeps drifting from the art down to your face, his smile lingering too long.
hyunjin notices immediately. he doesn't even finish looking at the painting. he turns his head, his long hair catching the light, and his eyes lock onto the guy standing beside you.
he doesn't stay back to observe. he walks over right away, the heels of his boots clicking quietly against the polished floor. instead of joining the conversation or making small talk, hyunjin steps right up behind you. he wraps his arms completely around your waist from behind, resting his chin heavily on your shoulder. it’s a dramatic (for lack of better bigger words) gesture that completely disrupts the guy's train of thought.
"jagiiii," hyunjin murmurs right against your ear, his voice low and a little raspy. "i'm bored of this room. let's go look at the sculptures downstairs."
the guy at the gallery clears his throat, looking incredibly awkward as hyunjin keeps his arms locked tightly around your midsection, pulling you to his chest. "oh, is this your friend?" the man asks, trying to save face.
hyunjin finally looks up from your shoulder, staring the guy dead in the eyes. he doesn't smile. "i'm her boyfriend," he says bluntly. his tone isn't loud, but it’s incredibly heavy, leaving absolutely no room for misinterpretation.
the man nods quickly, backing away with a polite excuse about finding his colleagues.
the moment the guy is gone, hyunjin doesn't let go. instead, he buries his face into the side of your neck, letting out a long, dramatic sigh that feels warm against your skin.
"hyune, everyone is looking," you whisper, laughing a little as you try to turn around in his grip. "you're being so dramatic."
"i don't care," he grumbles, his voice muffled against your neck. he finally loosens his grip just enough to spin you around so you're facing him, his hands resting on your hips. his bottom lip is trembling slightly in a full pout. "he was looking at you for too long. and he was standing too close to you. i hated it."
"he was just asking me about the painting," you say, reaching up to smooth down a stray lock of his hair.
"he wasn't looking at the painting, he was looking at you," hyunjin insists, his eyes wide and completely serious. he leans down, pressing his forehead against yours, his hands squeezing your hips a little tighter. "you're mine. i don't want to share your space with anyone else today. i wanted this to be our date."
"it is our date, silly," you grin, kissing the tip of his nose.
that instantly breaks his sulky mood, a soft, beautiful smile spreading across his face, though his eyes stay focused on you. for the rest of the night, he doesn't leave even an inch of space between the two of you. he holds your hand so tightly, interlacing them completely, and makes sure anyone who even glances your way knows that you're his, and he's yours.
── ℋAN : 8/10
han’s jealousy isn’t about being the biggest or toughest guy in the room. for him, it’s entirely an internal spiral. he’s naturally anxious and overthinks everything, so when someone else starts taking up your attention, his brain immediately jumps to worst-case scenarios. he doesn't get aggressive; he gets incredibly needy, dramatic, and desperate for your reassurance.
because it's not that he doesn't trust you, he just doesn't trust everyone else.
you’re sitting at a booth in a quiet, dimly lit café, waiting for your food. jisung had stepped away to use the restroom, and while he was gone, the barista—a guy with a nice smile and a friendly demeanor—came over to slide a complimentary pastry onto your table. he leaned against the edge of the booth, chatting you up about your weekend plans and making you laugh.
when jisung walks back into the dining area, he freezes. his eyes dart from the barista to you, then down to the pastry. you can practically see the gears turning in his head, his imagination running wild.
he doesn't walk over and puff his chest out. instead, he shuffles over with his hands buried deep in his oversized hoodie pockets, his shoulders hunched. he slides into the booth right next to you—not across from you where he was sitting before—and wedges himself into the tight space, pressing his entire side against yours.
the barista notices, rubbing the back of his neck awkwardly. "oh, hey. just making sure your order was good," the guy says, stepping back a bit.
jisung doesn't look at him. he just grabs your arm, clinging to it like a koala, and buries his face directly into your shoulder. "it's great. thank you," jisung mutters, his voice muffled by your shirt.
the guy gets the hint pretty quickly, offering a polite nod before heading back behind the counter.
the second the barista is out of earshot, jisung lets out a long, exaggerated whine. he pulls his face away from your shoulder but keeps his arms locked around your arm, looking up at you with wide, glassy eyes and a massive pout.
"who was that? why was he talking to you? why did he give you a free donut?" the questions tumble out of his mouth in a fast, panicked rush. "do you like him? is it because he works here and knows about coffee? i can learn about coffee. i can buy a machine."
"jisung, breathe," you laugh, shifting slightly so you can cup his cheek with your free hand. "he was just being nice because the kitchen took a long time with our food. that's it."
"okay, yeah, sorry. ...but he was smiling too much," jisung mumbles, leaning his face into your palm but keeping his pout firmly in place. "and you were laughing at his joke. was it a good joke? i'm funnier than him, right?"
"don't be sorry, hanji, it's cute. you're way funnier," you reassure him, wiping away a stray crumb from his lip. "and you're the only one i came here with."
"promise?" he asks, his voice dropping into a quiet, vulnerable register. he hates feeling insecure, but when it comes to you, he’s just so terrified of losing your focus. "because i was gone for literally two minutes and suddenly there's a guy offering you baked goods. i can't leave you alone for a second."
"i promise, drama queen. now eat the free pastry with me."
a small, relieved smile peek through his pout, and he eagerly takes a bite of the food you offer him. but for the rest of the time you're at the café, he stays glued to your side in the booth, his hand resting firmly on your knee under the table, occasionally shifting closer.
── 𝓕ELIX : 5.5/10
felix is usually the most relaxed person in any room. he loves people, he loves seeing you socialize, and he is naturally incredibly trusting. it takes a lot to get him to a point where he feels any sort of jealousy because his default mode is literally just pure sunshine and sweetness.
when he does get a little possessive, it doesn't come from a place of anger or suspicion—it’s just a soft, sudden realization that he’s being left out, and he wants his spot back.
you’re at a casual rooftop gathering with a bunch of friends and new acquaintances. the music is loud, the weather is perfect, and you’ve been caught up in a conversation with a guy who went to the same university as you. the two of you are trading stories about old professors, laughing loudly, completely locked into the nostalgia.
felix is a few feet away, talking to a group and holding a drink, but every few seconds his eyes drift over to you. at first, he’s just smiling, genuinely happy that you’re having a good time. but as the minutes stretch on, and you’re still completely focused on this new guy, felix’s smile goes a little soft around the edges. he feels that tiny, unfamiliar pinch in his chest.
he doesn't interrupt or change his posture. instead, he politely excuses himself from his circle and walks over, his movements fluid and easy.
rather than standing next to you, he slides right into your space from the side, putting his arm around your shoulders and letting his fingers rest against the back of your neck. he leans his head down, his deep, rumbling voice cutting right through the noise of the party.
"hey," he says, flashing a warm, bright smile at the guy you're talking to. "i'm felix. sorry to interrupt, i just wanted to check on her."
the guy blinks, a little taken aback by the contrast between felix’s sweet smile and the incredibly deep pitch of his voice. "oh, hey! no worries at all. we were just talking about our old college campus."
"that's cool," felix says, his thumb starting to brush slow, soothing circles against the skin of your neck. it’s a gentle gesture, but it’s completely unyielding. he looks down at you, his eyes big and soft, but there's a clear look of longing in them. "are you having fun, baby? do you want me to get you another drink?"
"i'm okay, 'lix," you say, smiling up at him.
felix doesn't drive the guy away with sharp comments or a cold shoulder. instead, he just stays right there, keeping his arm draped heavily over you, leaning his weight into you slightly. he joins the conversation, but every time he speaks, he makes sure to tighten his grip on your shoulder just a fraction, or he’ll look down at you to make sure you’re looking at him too.
eventually, the conversation naturally winds down, and the guy waves before walking away to find someone else.
the moment it’s just the two of you, felix’s confident posture melts. his head drops onto your shoulder, his nose burying into your hair with a soft, quiet sigh.
"felix?" you laugh, wrapping an arm around his waist. "what's wrong?"
"nothing," he mumbles against your neck, his voice extra deep because he’s hiding his face. "you were just talking to him for a really long time. i missed you."
"we were just talking about school, you jealous boy," you tease, nudging him with your hip.
felix pulls back just enough to look at you, his bottom lip sticking out in a very genuine, cute pout. he doesn't try to deny it. "maybe a little bit. you were laughing a lot at his stories. i wanted to make you laugh instead."
"you make me laugh every day," you say, reaching up to pinch his cheek gently. "besides, i was talking about you. i think he knows how much i love you."
he melts instantly at the affection, his bright smile returning like it never left. he grabs your hand, locking his fingers firmly with yours, and pulls you toward the edge of the rooftop to look at the view. he isn't going to make a scene or stay sad, but for the rest of the night, he keeps your hand clamped tight in his, completely content as long as he's the one holding onto you.
── 𝒮EUNGMIN : 6.5/10
seungmin don't normally get loud or make a big scene. he's usually very calm, and uses sarcasm as his main defense mechanism. if he feels a little jealous, he won't admit it out loud right away. instead, he'll use his wit to handle the situation, making jokes that carry a bit of an edge to let everyone know exactly what's going on.
you're at a casual dinner party with a few people from your university class. you're sitting at a long table, and a guy from your study group sits down right across from you. he starts talking to you about a project, but then he changes the subject to your weekend plans, leaning over his plate and trying to get you to agree to hang out outside of class.
seungmin is sitting right next to you. he's quietly eating his food, looking completely relaxed, but he is listening to every single word. he doesn't interrupt right away. he just watches the guy with a calm, unreadable expression.
when the guy says, "we should definitely catch a movie sometime, just the two of us, to celebrate finishing the exam," seungmin finally sets his chopsticks down. the click of the wood against the table is quiet but deliberate.
"a movie sounds great," seungmin says, leaning forward slightly. he has a polite smile on his face, but his eyes are totally sharp. "can i come too? i love movies. especially when i get to sit right between my girlfriend and random guys from her class."
the guy across the table freezes, his face turning a little red. "oh, i didn't mean—i just thought—"
"it's fine," seungmin cuts him off smoothly, his tone perfectly pleasant but completely unyielding. he reaches over and wraps his fingers around your hand under the table, squeezing it firmly. "she's pretty busy anyway. she usually spends all her free time with me. right, pup?"
you look over at seungmin, hiding a smile at how stubborn he's being. "yeah, my schedule is kind of full."
"see? full," seungmin nods at the guy, his smile widening just a fraction. "but good luck with the exam."
the guy nod and quickly turns to talk to the person sitting next to him, completely backing off.
once the dinner is over and the two of you are walking back to his car, the quiet night air settles around you. seungmin is walking a little fast, his hands shoved deep into his jacket pockets.
"so," you say, nudging his shoulder with yours. "what was that back there?"
"what was what?" he asks, looking straight ahead, trying to play it cool.
"you were being a little mean to my classmate," you tease, pulling on his sleeve to make him slow down.
seungmin stops walking and turns to look at you. the teasing, sarcastic look is gone, replaced by a quiet, stubborn expression. he sighs, reaching out to pull your hands out of your pockets so he can hold them.
"he was trying too hard," seungmin says bluntly. his voice is low and honest now. "he knew i was sitting right there, and he still tried to ask you out. i didn't like it."
"are you jealous, kim seungmin?" you smile, looking up at him.
"obviously," he grumbles, rollng his eyes a little bit but keeping his grip tight on your hands. "i don't like other people trying to take up your time. you're mine to complain to, and you're mine to take to the movies. so don't smile at them like that."
"i was just being nice, seung," you say softly.
"well, be nice to me instead," he mutters, pulling you in closer by your hands and pressing a quick, firm kiss to your forehead. "let's go home. you can pick the movie tonight."
"really? maybe i should get you jealous more often."
"oh, shut up."
── 𝒥EONGIN : 5/10
jeongin's pretty relaxed about stuff like this. he doesn't start flexing his muscles to prove a point. he likes his own space and he respects yours, so he doesn't hover over you when you're out. he's confident in the relationship, which means it takes a lot to actually get under his skin. but when he does notice someone trying a bit too hard with you, his reaction is more amused and quietly stubborn than angry.
you're at a crowded arcade bar with a big group of friends, standing near one of the racing games. while jeongin is a few feet away changing some cash into tokens, a guy walks up to your machine. he's acting flashy, leaning against the side of the console, and offering to show you how to actually beat the high score. he's being harmless, but he's definitely lingering and trying to flirt.
jeongin walks back over with a handful of tokens. he stops right next to you, looking at the guy, then down at the screen, and then at you. he doesn't frown or look mad. instead, he just gets this little grin on his face, like he finds the whole thing kind of funny.
"hey," jeongin says, dropping a few tokens into the machine slot right under your hands. "you want me to play the next round with you, or are you letting him take over?"
the guy looks at jeongin, noticing how casual and unbothered he is. "oh, i was just giving her some tips. she's doing okay, but her drift is a little off."
jeongin lets out a short, quiet laugh. he leans his hip against the machine, crowding you just enough to put his arm around the back of your waist, his hand resting lightly on your hip. "her drift is fine. she beats me at this game every time we play at home."
he looks directly at the guy, his eyes curving into a smile that looks friendly, but it's really a little cold. "we've got enough tokens for the rest of the night, so we're good here. thanks, though."
the guy rubs the back of his neck, realizig he's completely hit a wall with jeongin's attitude. "right. cool. have fun," he mutters, slipping back into the crowd.
the second the guy leaves, jeongin takes his arm back, but he steps closer into your space to watch the game over your shoulder.
"you took a long time getting those tokens," you say, steering your virtual car around a sharp turn. "were you just standing back there watching?"
"maybe for a minute," jeongin says, a small grin on his face as he rests his chin on your shoulder for a split second before pulling away. "he was being kind of annoying."
"so you were a little jealous," you tease, looking away from the screen to catch his eye.
jeongin shrugs, his cheeks turning a tiny bit pink under the arcade lights, though he tries to keep his cool expression. "i wasn't worried or anything. he just didn't need to stand that close to you, babe. and his advice wasn't even good."
"sure, innie," you laugh, hitting the brakes on the game.
"i'm serious," he grumbles, pulling another token from his pocket and tapping it against your knuckles. "now focus on the race. if you lose to the computer after i just told that guy you were a pro, it's going to be embarrassing for both of us."
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Summary: Han likes you and you can’t believe it. Harsh words from the outside lead to extreme measures to feel worthy. Spoiler alert: you always were.
Warnings: MDNI suggestive language, reader develops an (implied) eating disorder, so much angst, poor mental health, reader has very unhealthy self-talk. PLEASE DO NOT INTERACT IF YOU WILL BE TRIGGERED.
Word count: 11.2k.
a/n: this was my first ever request, and it was from the lovely @ilovesungie! Sorry Aish, I took your request and ran with it until it became it's very own full length fic! Even though it's full of angst, I tried to make the ending as beautiful and authentic as I could!
You’d always been on the larger side, ever since you were a child. Whilst boys were crushing on your friends, you fell easily into the role of the funny one, the one there to break the ice. As you grew up, you got used to watching from the sidelines as girls got the guys they liked, and you didn’t.
It wasn’t that nobody ever liked you. At least, that’s what your friends insisted.
“You just don’t notice it.”
“You’re intimidating.”
“People assume you’re already taken.”
The excuses changed depending on who was saying them, but none of them ever felt true. The truth was much simpler. You weren’t the girl people noticed first. So eventually, you stopped expecting them to notice at all… Which was why meeting Han felt so ridiculous.
People like Han weren’t supposed to exist in your life. He was famous, and not to mention beautiful - the kind of beautiful that made people stop walking when he appeared on a screen. Even before he debuted, before the awards and world tours and screaming fans, he’d been attractive. The cameras only amplified it. You, meanwhile, worked a normal job, lived in a normal flat, and spent most evenings convincing yourself that takeaways counted as cooking. Your worlds should never have crossed. Yet somehow, they did.
It started when your company partnered with his agency for a promotional campaign. You’d been assigned to help coordinate schedules. It was nothing glamorous - mostly emails, spreadsheets, and trying not to scream whenever deadlines changed at the last second.
The first time you met him in person, you’d expected arrogance, or at least indifference. Instead, he walked into the conference room, immediately bowed to everyone present, and introduced himself as though nobody knew who he was.
“Hi, I’m Han.”
As if he wasn’t one of the most recognisable idols in the world.
The room practically melted around him, colleagues flocking to meet his every whim (not that he had any, he was too humble for that). You remained determinedly professional… For approximately seven minutes. Then he ruined that professionalism you were striving for by making a joke. A joke that your brain found funny enough to snort out loud at. Before you could die of embarrassment, Han was grinning and chuckling at your reaction.
Before long, he was sitting beside you instead of across the room. The whole thing felt suspicious, especially when he was even more kind than he had first appeared.
Months passed as the campaign continued. You had expected to work quietly in the background, taking notes and turning them into ideas for him to pitch to his management. Han, however, seemed to have other ideas. It started with him constantly finding reasons to talk to you, about both work and you. He’d stop by your desk, drinks in hand for both of you, like he was the employee. You were mortified the first time he did it, telling him that it should have been the other way around, but he’d simply smiled and carried on each day like he hadn’t heard you the first time.
The time at your desk coincided with evening text messages about work-related questions that absolutely could have been emails. The conversations developed into an easy friendship when he’d ask how your day was or remember details from previous conversations.
The first time he brought you a snack without asking what you liked, you nearly accused him of witchcraft.
“You remembered my favourite snack?”
He looked genuinely confused and slightly offended. “Of course I remembered.”
He said it like it was obvious, as though remembering things about you wasn’t unusual.
You spent weeks convincing yourself he was just friendly - months, actually - because the alternative was absurd. The alternative was believing that someone like Han, who was handsome, talented, and adored by millions, might actually enjoy your company. So, whenever your colleagues raised their eyebrows, you ignored them. Whenever he sought you out in a crowded room, you dismissed it. Whenever your stomach fluttered, you told yourself it meant nothing.
Then came the night everything fell apart. Or rather, everything changed.
The team had gone out after a successful event. Most people were drinking, and music played softly in the background. You’d shaken your head and smiled softly to yourself as you realised it was Han’s music playing, before slipping outside for air, enjoying the peace and quiet.
A few minutes later, the door opened behind you, and Han stepped onto the balcony. You immediately sighed and turned back to the view, avoiding his gaze.
“There are like thirty people inside.”
“And?”
“Yet somehow you found me.”
He smiled. “I was looking for you.”
Your heart betrayed you with a violent thud, and you shifted on your feet, ignoring the warmth his simple words brought to you. The city lights stretched endlessly beneath you, and you found yourself wanting to know-
“Why?”
The question came out before you could stop it, and you regretted asking when Han went quiet, face solemn when you glanced at him quickly from the corner of your eye.
“Do you really not know?”
You laughed - a short, humourless sound. “No.”
He stared at you, and for the first time since you’d met him, he looked frustrated.
“Why is it so hard for you to believe someone could like you?”
The words hit harder than they should have, and you tensed at his directness. Years of being overlooked surfaced instantly, and you crossed your arms over your chest in an attempt to put a barrier between yourself and the awkwardness you felt as you replied.
“Because that’s not how my life works.”
Han’s expression softened immediately, and you hated how close his pity looked to kindness.
“You think I haven’t noticed you making yourself smaller in every room you walk into?” he asked quietly.
Your throat tightened enough that you couldn’t answer. For years, without realising it, you’d learnt to make yourself small, to blend into the background rather than risk standing out and attracting attention.
Han took a step closer, and your breath hitched as he started talking, taking another step towards you with every compliment he gave you.
“You make everyone laugh.”
“You’re kind.”
“You’re smart.”
Your eyes burned, and you felt the need to interrupt him, not knowing how to process what he was saying.
“Han—”
“And you’re beautiful.”
The words stole every thought from your head, and you actually laughed at the impossibility of the situation; at the fact that this man had come into your life months ago and was now calling you beautiful when no one else ever had before.
Han didn’t laugh with you; he simply looked at you. His gaze was steady, his eyes certain. His expression showed that he couldn’t understand why you were questioning it, as though it should be the most obvious thing in the world to you.
The silence stretched between you before Han closed the final distance between you, reaching to slide his fingers between your own gently before asking:
“Do you know how long I’ve been trying to get you to notice I’m flirting with you?”
Your jaw dropped at his words, and Han groaned dramatically and covered his face.
“See? This is exactly what I mean.”
Despite yourself, another laugh escaped - a real one this time - and when Han peeked through his fingers and saw you smiling, his own grin returned instantly. He leaned against the railing, tilting his head at you as he spoke again.
"So."
"So."
He rubbed the back of his neck awkwardly. "Now that we've established what I think about you..."
Your heart began hammering. "Right."
His eyes met yours, and suddenly this felt very real. You could no longer tell yourself that he was just being nice, no longer write off his seeking you out.
"I like you," he said quietly.
The words settled over you, no room for misunderstanding, and it felt even scarier than all the flirting you’d missed.
You looked down at where your fingers were still laced together. "I don't really know what to say."
"That's okay."
"No, it's not."
You laughed nervously. "I should probably have a normal response."
Han's expression softened. "There's no normal response."
You took a breath, then another, trying to shift the heavy sensation in your chest. It was something you'd been carrying for weeks – months, maybe – without ever properly acknowledging it.
"I think..." you started.
The words immediately disappeared, doubt catching your tongue and forcing the words back. Han waited patiently, though, face calm and eyes understanding.
You tried again. "I think part of the reason I didn't realise you were flirting..."
Your fingers twisted together as you forced the second part of your sentence out, your face heating at your own honesty.
"...was because I couldn't imagine why you'd flirt with me."
His face fell slightly, but you hurried on. "I know you must hate it when I say things like that."
"I do."
"I know." You smiled weakly, barely holding eye contact. "But it's true."
The confession tasted awful. It was embarrassing, leaving a new feeling of vulnerability, but you had to be honest. Han remained quiet, listening to what you had to say.
"Every compliment just got filed under 'Han is nice.'"
A small laugh escaped him. "That explains a lot."
"Right?"
"A concerning amount, actually."
You laughed, but your smile faded just as quickly as it had appeared. "Because if I admitted you might mean it..." Your voice softened. "I'd have to admit that I wanted you to."
Han froze, expression shocked. The words hung in the air, and your heart immediately tried to evacuate your body.
"Oh, God." You covered your face, releasing his hand as you did so. "I wasn't planning on saying that."
Han's eyes widened. "You weren't?"
"No."
"You just accidentally confessed?"
"Apparently."
A grin began spreading across his face, and you groaned.
"Please don't look so happy."
"I can't help it."
"Han."
"You like me."
Your entire face burned. "You already knew that."
"I suspected." He pushed himself away from the railing. "But hearing it is different."
You peeked through your fingers and smiled at the look of pure delight on Han’s face.
"You really had no idea?" he asked.
You lowered your hands. "No."
"Not even a little?"
"No."
Han shook his head. "Incredible."
"Thank you."
"That wasn't a compliment."
"I know."
The two of you laughed, and as it faded, you realised that he was suddenly standing closer. Not close enough to overwhelm you, just enough that you could see the warmth in his eyes and the way he looked at you. Like he genuinely couldn't believe this was happening either.
"You know," he said softly, "I've liked you for a while."
Your stomach flipped. "How long?"
Han winced. "Long enough that your colleagues threatened intervention."
You burst out laughing, but you felt your face flush bright red at how oblivious you must have really been.
"Seriously?"
"Seriously."
"Oh, my God."
"They were tired of seeing me all the time."
You shook your head and giggled. For a moment, neither of you spoke. The city lights still glowed around you, and music still drifted faintly through the doors, but it felt different now than a few minutes ago. Like maybe the lights were that little bit brighter, the music that little bit sweeter.
You swallowed before reaching out and taking his hand once again. His eyes immediately dropped to where your fingers intertwined, and you were over the moon to see a smile tug at his lips.
"Hi," you said softly.
Han laughed. "Hi."
"I like you, too."
His smile grew. "Yeah?"
"Yeah."
His fingers squeezed yours, and for a second, he looked so ridiculously happy that you couldn't stop smiling back.
The second you walked back into the party together, every coherent thought vanished from your head. Han was still smiling - not his usual bright, mischievous smile – but a softer one. The kind that kept appearing every time he looked at you (which was constantly). The noise of the party washed over you as people greeted you both.
Someone called Han’s name from across the room, and he answered without taking his eyes off you. You tried not to notice, but you failed. Completely.
“Are you alright?” he asked quietly.
You looked up, and his expression immediately softened.
“Why wouldn’t I be?”
“You look overwhelmed.”
“Maybe because you confessed your feelings to me ten minutes ago.”
His ears turned pink; the sight made something warm bloom in your chest.
“Fair.”
Before you could react, his hand settled gently against the small of your back. The touch wasn’t possessive or demanding. It was almost hesitant, as if he were checking whether you would pull away. You didn’t, and Han visibly relaxed.
“Come on.”
You followed him farther into the room and quickly discovered that, now that he’d admitted his feelings, he apparently had no intention of pretending otherwise. At all. When people spoke to you, Han drifted closer. When the crowd became busy, his hand found your waist. When somebody squeezed between you, he immediately moved back beside you again. You weren’t even sure he realised he was doing it. It seemed instinctive, natural even. As though being near you was simply where he wanted to be.
The longer the evening went on, the bolder he became.
At one point, you were standing beside the drinks table listening to a story from one of your colleagues. Han appeared beside you, close enough that your shoulders touched. You tried (and failed) not to react as his hand brushed yours. Once. Twice. A third time. Until eventually his fingers hooked loosely around yours.
Your entire train of thought derailed as you stared at your joined hands, Han following your gaze.
“Oh.”
He sounded completely unashamed. “Sorry.”
He made absolutely no effort to let go.
You looked up. “Han.”
“What?”
“You aren’t sorry.”
A grin spread across his face. “No.”
You laughed despite yourself.
The colleague speaking to you rolled their eyes dramatically. “Are we interrupting something?”
Both of you froze, and Han looked delighted. You, on the other hand, wanted the floor to swallow you whole. The colleague laughed and wandered away before either of you could answer. The moment they disappeared, Han leaned closer.
“I think they know.”
“You think?”
His shoulders shook with quiet laughter. God. You were never going to survive this.
As the evening continued, more people joined conversations and drifted away. Han never strayed far. Not once. If he were talking to somebody else, he somehow remained beside you. If someone pulled him into another conversation, his hand would find your arm before he moved away. There was always a brief touch, always a silent reassurance that he’d be right back.
And every single time, he came back.
You were standing with a small group near the balcony doors when somebody asked Han a question. His answer was automatic, distracted, because he was looking at you. Again.
You finally shook your head. “What?”
His smile appeared instantly. “I like looking at you.”
The conversation around you stopped dead. Your eyes widened at the same time that Han realised what he’d said, tips of his ears turning red.
The group immediately erupted into laughter. “You are down catastrophically.”
Han groaned. “I’m aware.”
“You said that out loud.”
“I’m aware.”
You covered your face, but he gently pulled your hands away, murmuring, “Don’t hide.”
“I’m hiding.”
“No.”
“Han.”
His grin softened, and for a brief moment, with everyone else fading into the background, he squeezed your hand. Just once. A quiet little gesture that somehow felt more intimate than all the flirting. The party continued around you, yet somehow, the two of you seemed caught inside your own little bubble. One where every smile lasted too long, every glance lingered, and every accidental touch became deliberate.
Hours passed far more quickly than they should have. Eventually, you checked the time and realised how late it was.
“I should probably head home.”
Han looked disappointed immediately. The expression appeared so quickly that you almost laughed. “Already?”
“It’s late.”
“You’ve become incredibly responsible.”
“Someone has to be.”
“Certainly not me.”
You rolled your eyes, but he smiled. Then, without thinking, his hand found yours again, his thumb brushing over your knuckles. The tiny movement made your pulse stumble.
“Can I walk you home?”
The question came out quieter than everything else he’d said all evening. For the first time since his confession, he actually seemed nervous.
You looked at him, at the way his fingers tightened slightly around yours, at the hopeful expression he was trying and failing to hide. Suddenly, the answer felt easy.
“Okay.”
His entire face lit up, and the smile that followed was so bright it was impossible not to smile back.
“Okay?”
“Yes, Han.”
He laughed before he squeezed your hand once more and reached for your coat.
"Wait here for a minute?"
You nodded.
The work party was beginning to wind down. People were collecting coats, finishing drinks, and exchanging goodbyes.
Han smiled. "I'll just say goodbye to your colleagues before they think I've kidnapped you."
You laughed. "Very considerate."
"I know." He leaned down slightly. "Don't disappear."
The warmth that had become so familiar over the last few weeks spread through your chest.
"I won't."
Satisfied, Han headed across the room, immediately getting intercepted by three different people. You smiled to yourself and wandered towards the front door, eyes on his face as he laughed at what one of your colleagues had said.
It still felt surreal - the fact that Han liked you, that he held your hand without hesitation, that he looked at you the way he did.
You were so distracted by your thoughts that you almost didn't notice someone approaching. A woman stopped beside you. She was pretty, beautiful even. She looked like every inch of her was perfectly styled, an expensive-looking dress adorning her perfect figure. She was the kind of woman who seemed effortlessly put together.
She smiled, and at first glance, she seemed friendly.
"You must be Y/N."
"Oh." You smiled politely. "Yeah."
"I'm Ara."
You didn't recognise the name. "Oh, nice to meet you."
Her smile remained in place, though something about it felt slightly forced. "I've known Han for years."
"Oh." You brightened immediately. "Really?"
"Since before all this."
You nodded. "That's nice."
Ara glanced across the room to where Han was talking, then back at you. "So, how did this happen?"
Something about her tone made your stomach tighten.
"What?"
"You and Han."
She gestured vaguely between you.
You laughed awkwardly. "I don't know."
"No, seriously." Her smile sharpened. "I genuinely don't understand."
The warmth in your chest began cooling. "Oh."
Ara folded her arms. "I mean, Han's always had options."
You stared at her. The comment landed heavily, and you instantly started doubting yourself yet again. Maybe she didn't mean it badly? Maybe—
"He usually dates models."
Never mind.
Your stomach dropped, and you looked away, from both her and Han. "Oh."
Ara gave a small shrug. "Not that looks are everything."
The classic phrase people said right before making looks everything. You suddenly felt very aware of yourself - of your dress and the body contained in it, and of every insecurity you'd managed to ignore tonight.
"I just think everyone's surprised."
She said it casually, like she was discussing the weather. As if she wasn't twisting something sharp directly into your ribs.
Your throat felt tight. "Right."
"Like genuinely shocked." Ara laughed lightly, continuing. "I mean, when he first mentioned you, I thought he was joking."
The words hit harder than you wanted them to, because they sounded suspiciously similar to things you'd told yourself. Things you'd believed. Things you were still trying to unlearn.
She tilted her head. "Don't you think it's strange?"
You frowned. "What?"
"That someone like Han would suddenly be interested in someone like—"
She stopped, looking you up and down, her perfectly manicured eyebrow arching in thinly veiled disgust. The unfinished sentence somehow hurt more than if she'd said it.
For a second, you couldn't speak. Your chest felt hollow. This was exactly what you'd always feared everyone was thinking. Exactly what the cruel voice in your head whispered whenever Han looked at you. The only difference was that now someone had actually said it aloud.
Ara sighed dramatically. "I'm just looking out for him."
Your jaw tightened. "Looking out for him?"
"Of course." She smiled again. "I'm his friend."
Friend.
The word felt ridiculous. Friends didn't speak about people like this.
"You know," she continued, "I just think he's getting caught up in attention."
Your eyes snapped back to hers. "Attention?"
"Well." She shrugged. "People like being needed."
The implication hit immediately - that Han pitied you, that he was rescuing you, that whatever existed between you couldn't possibly be real. Your stomach twisted painfully, and for a moment, you couldn't think of a response. You couldn't figure out what to say, because part of you hated how much it hurt, how easily her words found every insecurity you'd ever had.
By the time she walked away, your stomach felt sick. You hated how much her words hurt, hated that a stranger had managed to find every insecurity you’d spent years burying.
Han appeared across the room, smiling as he looked for you. For one awful second, relief had surged through you. Until he reached her, and she smiled up at him. Until he pulled her into a hug and kissed her cheek. It was a normal greeting between close friends, a completely innocent interaction. But through the lens she’d handed you? It looked devastating.
She fit beside him, looked right beside him. They looked like celebrities did in magazines and couples did in advertisements. Ara looked like a girl who always got chosen. And suddenly you were fifteen again, standing against the wall at a school dance, watching somebody prettier get everything you’d secretly wanted.
The ache in your chest became unbearable, and you made the quick decision to leave. You slipped out before Han could reach the door, before he could find you. Before you could embarrass yourself any further.
The cool night air hit your face immediately. You walked faster, then faster still. As though distance could somehow stop the hurt. Your phone buzzed once in your pocket, but you ignored it. You ignored it the next four times they buzzed, too.
By the time you reached your flat, your eyes were burning. You kicked off your shoes and immediately headed for your bedroom. Your phone was buzzing nonstop now, and you finally gave up, pulling it out of your pocket with a frustrated groan.
Han: Where did you go?
Han: I can’t find you.
Han: Are you okay?
Han: Did something happen?
Han: Please answer.
You stared at the screen, reading the messages again and again. Your thumb hovered over the keyboard, then locked the phone instead, because what were you supposed to say?
Your friend pointed out everything I’ve spent my entire life believing about myself, and now I think you’re going to realise she was right?
The thought was pathetic, humiliating even. So instead, you curled up beneath your duvet, fully dressed, and tried not to cry. Your phone rang again and again, the screen lighting up over and over until eventually it stopped. Silence settled over the room, only broken by your uneven breathing. You stared at the ceiling, willing yourself not to cry or to think. Willing yourself not to imagine Han laughing with her right now, no doubt looking at her the way someone should.
Your phone buzzed one final time, and you froze at the voicemail notification.
Han.
You knew it would be him, just like you knew you shouldn’t listen. The sensible thing would be to delete it, to ignore it. Pretend it didn’t exist. Instead, ten minutes later, you found yourself staring at the notification like it had personally offended you. Then another five minutes passed, followed by another. Eventually, you decided that you couldn’t avoid it any longer and, with a shaky breath, you pressed play.
For a second, there was only background noise – music, voices, the sounds of the party. Then Han sighed, and your chest tightened instantly.
“Hey.”
His voice sounded breathless, like he’d been moving around looking for you.
“I don’t really know if you’re listening to this, but I’m hoping you are.”
There was more muffled noise followed by a door opening somewhere in the background. The music became quieter, and you realised that Han had clearly stepped outside.
“You disappeared.” His voice softened as he continued, “And that’s not like you.”
You squeezed your eyes shut.
“I’ve checked every room in this building.”
A small laugh escaped him, but it sounded tired.
“I even checked the bathrooms.”
His tone changed to a more serious one. “I know something happened. Maybe I’m wrong, but you looked different before you left.”
There was a pause, and it was long enough that you could hear him exhale.
“If somebody said something to you…” His voice faltered. “…I need you to tell me.”
Your throat tightened painfully because somehow, he knew. Not what, but that something had happened.
The recording crackled slightly as he shifted the phone, and his voice came through the phone again, quieter this time.
“I know you don’t see yourself the way other people do.”
Tears immediately blurred your vision. You hated how quickly they came, and you hated how accurately he’d hit the wound.
“But I wish you could see yourself the way I do. Because every time you laugh, I want to be the reason. Every time something good happens, you’re the first person I want to tell. And when I walk into a room…”
His voice softened even further.
“…you’re the person I look for.”
You couldn’t breathe. The room felt too small, too warm. The voicemail continued regardless.
“No matter how many people there are. No matter how famous they’re supposed to be.”
He paused again at the end of the phone before letting out a soft sigh.
“I don’t care about any of that. I care about you.”
The words landed directly in the centre of your chest. There was no hesitation or embarrassment, just certainty in his voice, as though they were the easiest truth he’d ever spoken.
The recording went quiet for a moment, and when Han spoke again, his voice sounded smaller somehow. More vulnerable.
“I don’t know why you left. I just know that you looked upset… And I hate the idea of you sitting alone somewhere thinking you have to deal with that by yourself.”
Your vision blurred completely at his words, and you were struggling to hold back your sobs as you finished the message.
“If you want space, I’ll give you space. But please don’t think you have to disappear.”
The final words came softly, almost hesitantly.
“As much as you don’t seem to believe it… I really, really like you.”
There was a brief silence from the other end of the line before he huffed out a small, nervous laugh.
“God, that sounded awful.”
Despite everything, a watery laugh escaped you. The recording ended a second later, and your room fell silent once again. You stared at your phone through tear-filled eyes. No matter how hard you tried, no matter how loudly that cruel voice echoed in your head, you couldn’t stop replaying one thought.
Han had spent the entire evening surrounded by some of the most beautiful people in the industry. And yet when he’d realised you were gone…
You were the person he’d looked for.
The following morning, your thumb hovered over Han’s contact. You should call him; you knew that. You should tell him what happened, what she’d said. Give him a chance to explain.
Instead, you scrolled past his name, past the missed calls and the messages. And stopped on another contact.
Sarah.
You hadn’t spoken properly in months - years, maybe – not beyond birthday messages and the occasional comment on social media. But she’d been there for all of it: school, college, the endless years of being overlooked. If anyone would understand why you were spiralling, it would be her.
So, you called her.
The line rang twice before she answered.
“Hey, stranger.”
Her cheerful voice almost made you cry.
“Hi.”
Immediately she paused. “Oh.”
You heard concern enter her voice.
“What’s happened?”
The words poured out before you could stop them, and you found yourself telling her everything. You told her about meeting Han and working together. About the flirting that you’d mistaken for kindness until the confession. Your voice had cracked as you told her about the party and Ara, about the comments that had left you cut up inside.
Sarah listened quietly throughout, only making the occasional noise to show she was still there. By the end, your throat hurt, and you sat anxiously as silence stretched between you before she finally spoke up again.
“Can I be honest?”
Something in her tone made your stomach drop, and you sat up straighter in preparation.
“Sure.”
A sigh crackled down the line before she started talking. “I think that girl was harsh.”
You nodded immediately. “Exactly.”
“But…”
The word hit like ice water. Your grip tightened on the phone as you waited for her to carry on.
“Sarah?”
She hesitated long enough that you already knew you weren’t going to like what came next.
“I kind of understand what she meant.”
The room suddenly felt very still.
“What?”
“I’m not saying she’s right,” Sarah said quickly. “I’m just saying…”
She trailed off, then tried again.
“Han’s a celebrity.”
You stared at the wall, feeling the pain creep back into your chest, into your heart. “And?”
“And look at the women around him.”
Your chest tightened because you knew where this was going. You hated that you knew.
“Sarah—”
“They’re gorgeous.”
There it was. The familiar ache, the familiar humiliation. The same thing you’d heard your entire life. They were different words, but the message was always the same.
Sarah laughed awkwardly before continuing. “You’ve always been insecure about this stuff.”
The comment stung because she sounded so certain, like she’d always known. Like everyone had.
“I mean…” She hesitated but decided to continue. “You remember school.”
Your stomach dropped because, of course, you remembered school. You remembered everything. Every dance. Every crush. Every time a boy wanted one of your friends. Never you.
“You were always the funny one.”
Funny. Always funny, but never pretty. Never desirable.
Sarah continued speaking, oblivious to the emotional turmoil she was causing for you. “People loved you because you were easy to be around.”
The words landed wrong, terribly wrong. People loved you because—
Because what?
Because you made them look better? Because you were safe? Because nobody had to compete with you?
A memory surfaced suddenly from when you were sixteen. You were sitting at lunch, listening while your friends complained about boys asking them out. You’d laughed along, making jokes, playing your role as the harmless one. The funny one. The one nobody worried about.
Sarah sighed, bringing you back to the present.
“I’m just worried you’re getting your hopes up.”
You swallowed hard. “What do you mean?”
There was another pause as Sarah debated what to say.
“What if he likes the attention?”
The words hit like a slap. “What?”
“You know how kind people can accidentally lead someone on.”
Your heartbeat thundered in your chest. “He told me he likes me.”
“He might think he does.”
You closed your eyes, a horrible feeling growing in your chest now. It wasn’t sadness but recognition, because suddenly you weren’t hearing Ara anymore in your head. You were hearing Sarah. And the more she talked, the more something felt wrong.
“Look,” Sarah continued gently, “you’ve never been the type guys go for.”
The room went silent, and your mind ground to a halt. She’d said it so casually, so naturally, as though it were an established fact. As though she wasn’t saying something devastating. As though she’d always believed it.
You thought back over years of friendship, or what you’d assumed was friendship. You thought about all the jokes she’d made. The compliments that never quite felt like compliments. The way she’d introduce you with a “This is my friend. She’s hilarious.”
Never beautiful, or gorgeous.
Never anything else but funny.
The realisation settled slowly, painfully. You’d always thought that Sarah understood your insecurities, but maybe she hadn’t. Maybe she’d helped build them.
Your eyes burned, but on the other end of the line, Sarah kept talking. “You can’t be too proud about these things.”
The phrase caught your attention immediately.
“You’ve got to be realistic.”
Realistic.
Another word you’d heard your entire life. Realistic meant knowing your place, meant expecting less. Realistic meant understanding that some girls got chosen and others didn’t.
You stared at the dark screen of your television at your reflection, and for the first time, another thought crept in. A horrible one. One that hurt more than Ara’s cruelty.
Do they keep me around because I’m safe? Because standing next to me makes them feel prettier? Because I’m useful?
You remembered every time you’d laughed at yourself first. Every joke you’d made at your own expense. Every moment you’d made yourself smaller so everyone else could shine.
Sarah was still speaking when you realised you hadn’t heard a word she’d said for nearly thirty seconds.
“…are you there?”
You blinked. “Yeah.”
Your voice sounded distant, even to your own ears.
“We’re just worried about you.”
We - not I -as though there had always been a group discussion you weren’t part of.As though everyone had reached the same conclusion about you years ago.
You swallowed hard, then looked down at your phone. At the unanswered messages waiting from Han. The voicemail you’d listened to three times already. The man who had spent months choosing your company, looking for you, remembering things about you, caring about you. As you sat there, a question popped into your mind about Sarah.
If someone genuinely cared about you, would they be speaking to you like this? Or had you spent years mistaking familiarity for friendship?
The answer sat heavily in your chest, because for the first time, Sarah sounded an awful lot like the girl at the party.
And neither of them sounded anything like Han.
The first day after the party, you told yourself you just needed time - time to think, and to calm down. To get your head straight before you spoke to Han again.
When the receptionist called to tell you he was downstairs asking for you, you took a shaky breath and said you were in a meeting. It was a blatant lie; you sat at your desk staring blankly at an unopened spreadsheet while your colleague went down instead.
You hated yourself for it.
But not enough to stop.
The second day, he came back. The third day, too. By the fourth, people in the office had started teasing you about it. They weren’t malicious in their teasing; they just walked around with knowing smiles, jokingly asking questions about why a world-famous idol kept appearing at the reception, looking disappointed.
You laughed it off, tried to change the subject. You avoided looking out the window whenever he arrived. But every evening your phone still lit up.
Han: Hope your day wasn’t too awful.
Han: You looked after yourself today?
Han: I miss talking to you.
Han: Did I do something wrong?
That one sat unread for nearly an hour before you finally opened it.
Did I do something wrong?
The answer was no, because Han really hadn’t done anything wrong. That was the problem. If he’d hurt you, this would have been easier, or if he’d lied or mocked you or revealed himself to be cruel, you could have walked away angry. Instead, he’d been kind, but every cruel thing anyone had said about you had started sounding louder than his kindness.
By the end of the week, you were exhausted. Mentally. The constant battle in your head was becoming unbearable - one side replaying Han’s voicemail, the other replaying what Ara had said, the way Sarah had agreed. You were assaulted with every school memory you’d spent years trying to forget.
“Be realistic.”
“Look at the women around him.”
“You’ve never been the type guys go for.”
At some point, the fear stopped being about whether Han liked you and turned into something much uglier. It became about what would happen when he stopped liking you, because he surely would. Sooner or later, once the excitement wore off, he’d realise. Once he looked around and saw all the women who fit naturally into his world - the women who didn’t have to worry about angles in photographs, the women who looked effortless.
The women who belonged.
You found yourself standing in front of your bathroom mirror one morning, staring at every part of yourself. All you could see was your every flaw, every softness, every insecurity. The comments echoed again and again in your skull, poisoning your mind and your eyes and twisting your own body into a source of disgust so profound that you felt sick to your stomach.
By lunchtime, you’d convinced yourself there was only one solution.
Change.
Immediately.
Drastically.
At first, you were just skipping meals. It was nothing major in your mind, just breakfast becoming coffee and lunch becoming “I’m not hungry.” Dinner became something small, easy to control from the safety of your own flat.
The first day of your new routine felt awful; the second was worse. By the third, hunger had become something you almost welcomed. It was a strange sort of punishment. Proof you were trying, fixing yourself. Every ache in your stomach became evidence that you were finally doing something. You were finally becoming better, more worthy of Han’s attention and a place in his world. The scale became the first thing you checked every morning, the number determining your mood for the entire day. If it dropped, relief flooded through you, and if it didn’t, panic followed.
Soon, your entire life began revolving around it. It was an ongoing mess of calories, numbers, and portion control. Excuses became second nature. You stopped meeting friends after work, stopped accepting invitations, and stopped doing things you enjoyed. Everything became secondary to becoming someone who belonged beside Han. It’s all that mattered to you. In your mind, you needed to be the kind of person that nobody would question or laugh at. Someone nobody would pull aside at parties and warn away.
A few weeks after the party, you were sitting alone at your kitchen table when your phone buzzed again.
Han.
You almost ignored it until your eyes landed on the preview on your screen.
Han: I’m worried about you.
Your chest tightened painfully, so you locked the phone, setting it face down as you tried to focus on anything but the man waiting at the other end for a reply.
A few seconds later, more messages arrived. Guilt mixed with panic, and you froze when you read his words.
Han: If you need space, I’ll respect it.
Han: But please stop pretending you’re okay when you’re not.
Your throat burned with emotion because he wasn’t supposed to notice. Nobody had ever noticed. Sure, people noticed when you were funny or when you were useful, and they definitely noticed when you were making everyone else’s lives easier.
They just didn’t notice when you were quietly falling apart.
Yet somehow Han had.
And that made ignoring him infinitely harder.
You pushed away from the table and headed for the bathroom. The scale sat waiting in the corner, calling out to you. You stepped onto it immediately, heart pounding, and watched the numbers settle slightly lower than they had been the day before. It was a tiny amount – barely anything – yet relief flooded through you so intensely that it was almost embarrassing.
There.
See? It was working!
You just had to keep going. Keep trying. Keep fixing yourself. Then maybe one day you’d be the kind of person who deserved someone like Han.
The thought felt comforting for all of three seconds before another memory surfaced of Han’s voice from the voicemail.
“I wish you could see yourself the way I do.”
You stared at your reflection in the mirror. At the tired eyes and the dark circles sat underneath them. The tension in your shoulders made you look small, a perfect manifestation of the way you’d spent the last week shrinking your entire life down to a number on a scale.
For the first time, a quiet, uncomfortable question appeared.
If Han walked through the door right now and saw what you were doing to yourself, would he think you were becoming someone worthy of him? Or would he be heartbroken that you believed you had to?
The wine had been a mistake; you’d known that when you’d poured the second glass and became certain by the third. But for the first time in days, your thoughts had felt quieter. Not gone, just blurred around the edges.
The scale hadn’t given you the result you’d wanted that morning. You’d spent the entire day carrying that disappointment around with you, letting it grow larger and larger until it consumed everything else. By the evening, your flat was silent except for the television playing something you weren’t really watching.
The Sharpie had appeared almost absentmindedly. One moment, it was sitting in a drawer. The next, it was in your hand.
You stood in front of the mirror wearing only a robe, slightly open at the front. You were staring at yourself as you had weeks ago, eyes critical and expression judgmental. The same way you had every day for the last week.
Only this time, you’d started drawing.
It was just a few marks at first – lines, shapes, outlines. An impossible version of yourself sketched directly onto your skin. You drew a body that took up less space that nobody would question. A body that belonged beside Han. The alcohol made it easier to pretend, to stand there and imagine everything outside those lines simply disappearing.
As though life could be that simple.
As though years of insecurity could be solved with a marker pen.
You were so focused on your reflection that the knock at the door nearly made you jump out of your skin. Your heart stopped when it was followed by another, this time louder. You dropped the Sharpie immediately, and panic surged through you because nobody visited unannounced. Nobody.
You fumbled the robe closed and tied it so quickly your fingers slipped twice. There was another knock, and you called out this time.
“Coming!”
Your voice sounded strange, even to your own ears. It was too high, too breathless. You hurried to the door, mentally running through the possibilities of who it could be. Maybe it was your neighbour, or a delivery? Anyone but-
“Han?”
You’d opened the door and froze. Han stood on the other side, and for a second, neither of you spoke. His hair was slightly windswept, jacket hanging open. He looked as though he’d come straight from somewhere else, straight to you.
Your stomach dropped as you realised that this was the first time you’d seen him in weeks, and you weren’t ready for it. It hadn’t been long enough, you hadn’t dieted enough yet. Hadn’t lost enough weight to belong at his side.
“What are you doing here?”
The words came out sharper than intended, a consequence of your inner panic.
Relief flashed across his face despite your tone, like he’d genuinely been worried you wouldn’t answer.
“Hi to you too.”
You tightened your grip on the door. “Han.”
“I got your address from your colleague.”
Of course he had. You made a mental note to murder that colleague later.
“What are you doing here?” you repeated.
His smile faded slightly, realising you weren’t happy to see him, even now. “You’ve been avoiding me.”
You immediately looked away. “No, I haven’t.”
The lie was pathetic, and you both knew it.
Han sighed. “You have.”
An awkward silence settled between the two of you; you didn’t know what to say, how to get out of this without admitting the truth. The hallway suddenly felt too small, too bright. You felt too exposed. Every second he stood there increased your awareness of what was hidden beneath the robe - the marker pen lying abandoned in the bathroom, the lines still covering your skin.
Your pulse hammered. “I’ve just been busy,” you tried.
Han stared at you, then snorted. “You’re a terrible liar.”
Despite everything, a tiny laugh almost escaped you. His expression softened, concern replacing frustration.
“You disappeared.”
Your throat tightened. “I know.”
“You stopped answering my messages.”
“I know.”
“You won’t see me.”
“I know.”
The quiet honesty seemed to catch him off guard. For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then Han took a careful step closer.
“Talk to me.”
The gentleness nearly broke you. You looked down at the floor, hiding the glassiness in your eyes.
“I can’t.”
“Why not?”
Because if you started talking, everything would come out: Ara, Sarah, the dieting, the spiralling. The fact that every time you looked at him, all you could think was that eventually he’ll realise they’re right.
Your eyes burned, and you shook your head. “Please just go home.”
Han’s face fell, and the sight hurt more than you expected. His gaze drifted down from your eyes, and panic sealed your throat shut as it stopped at your neck. You already knew what he’d see but prayed that it was something – anything - else.
A dark line of marker was visible above the collar of your robe, just enough to be noticeable.
Han frowned. “What is that?”
Your stomach dropped. “Nothing.”
His eyes narrowed as you lied again before they moved lower to where another black line disappeared beneath the robe near your ankle.
The colour drained from your face. “No.”
Han’s voice was careful now – confused, concerned when he asked, “What happened?”
You instinctively pulled the robe tighter, trying to hide the lines from view, even though it was too late. “It’s nothing.”
The concern on his face deepened. It was the kind of concern that comes from realising something is very wrong. Not physically, but emotionally… Mentally. The silence stretched, and for the first time since arriving, Han looked genuinely frightened.
Not of you; for you.
“Can I come in?”
You opened your mouth, closed it, and opened it again. Because suddenly all your excuses felt exhausted, all your energy gone. Standing there under his worried gaze, you realised something.
For weeks, you’d been trying desperately to become someone worthy of Han. Meanwhile, Han had spent those same weeks trying desperately to reach the person he already cared about.
The person standing in front of him now.
Not some future version, or some smaller version.
Just you.
The realisation hurt enough to make the tears in your eyes finally spill over, and Han’s expression immediately crumpled.
“Oh.”
His voice softened.
“Oh, sweetheart.”
The endearment shattered what little composure remained. You looked away, embarrassed by the tears, but Han didn’t move, and he didn’t judge or look disgusted. He simply stood there, waiting, like whatever was hidden beneath the robe wasn’t what mattered. Like the thing he cared about was the fact that you’d been hurting alone.
The moment you stepped aside, Han entered the flat without hesitation. The door clicked shut behind him, and for a second, neither of you spoke as you stared at the floor, and he watched you carefully. The silence felt fragile, like just one wrong word could shatter it entirely. You stood awkwardly in the hallway, arms wrapped tightly around yourself, terrified of saying the wrong thing. Terrified of saying anything at all.
Han looked at you for a long moment, then quietly said, “Come here.”
And somehow that was your undoing – not because of the words, but because of the gentleness. The patience. The fact that he wasn’t angry. You crossed the distance before you could stop yourself, and the second his arms wrapped around you, a sob tore from your throat.
Han held you immediately, firmly. You felt safe in his arms as one hand slid to the back of your head, the other settling around your shoulders. You buried your face against him, and for the first time in over a week, you stopped trying to hold yourself together. Everything hurt - your chest, throat, head – from the exhaustion of carrying so much shame around every second of every day. Han just held you through it, asking no questions and making no demands, just providing a steady warmth that you could sink into.
Until that horrible voice slithered back in.
He can feel you.
You froze.
He can feel how big you are.
Your stomach dropped.
He can feel every fat bit of you.
Immediately, panic flooded through you, and you pulled away so suddenly that Han nearly stumbled.
His hands fell away instantly, confusion crossing his face. “Hey—”
You took another step back, then another. “No.”
Your breathing became uneven. “I can’t.”
“Can’t what?”
You shook your head violently. Han looked completely lost now, concern replacing confusion.
“What happened?”
“Nothing.”
His eyebrows rose. “You’ve been avoiding me for over a week.”
You looked away. “Nothing happened.”
“That’s obviously not true.”
You started pacing. The energy felt trapped beneath your skin, like if you stood still for even a second, you’d explode. Han watched carefully, waiting for you to speak. The patience only made it worse, because eventually there was nowhere left to run. Nowhere left to hide.
“It was that party.”
The words came out suddenly, surprising even yourself.
Han straightened, though, latching onto your sudden outburst. “What about it?”
You laughed miserably because if you didn’t laugh, you’d cry. “Your friend.”
Immediately, understanding flashed across his face. You could see that he didn’t understand fully, but enough to help. Enough to get to the bottom of what had been affecting you for weeks.
“Who?”
Ara’s name left your mouth, and Han’s expression darkened instantly.
“What did she say?”
The question was a catalyst to your pain, and everything came spilling out. You told him about the comments she’d made, the implications. You mentioned the warnings that she’d given and explained the way she’d looked at you and how she’d made you feel. You sobbed as you recounted the way you’d watched him hug her afterwards and suddenly felt fifteen years old again, watching prettier girls get everything while you faded into the background.
By the time you finished, your eyes were burning, and Han looked furious. You laughed shakily and dragged a hand through your hair.
“You know the worst part?”
His jaw tightened, eyes narrowing. “What?”
“I believed her.”
The confession hung in the room, raw and ugly. You swallowed hard, knowing that you needed to continue. You wanted him to finally understand after hiding for so long.
“Then I called Sarah.”
Han frowned, confused. “Is that your friend? The one from school?”
You nodded, feeling sick as you admitted, “She agreed.”
The silence that followed was deafening, because saying it aloud somehow made it real. Han stared at you, mouth hanging open, as though he couldn’t quite believe what he was hearing. Meanwhile, the words you’d spent all week swallowing came rushing out.
“I’ve spent my whole life being the funny friend. The one everyone likes but nobody wants.”
You winced as your voice cracked when tears blurred your vision again, but you had to finish now that you had started.
“And maybe they’re right.”
Han immediately shook his head. “No.”
“Maybe they are.”
“No.”
You laughed bitterly. “Han, look at your life.”
His expression hardened. “I’m looking at you.”
The tears spilt over once again, quieter this time, more resigned. “You don’t understand.”
“Then help me understand.”
The desperation in his voice caught you off guard. You were expecting frustration, maybe anger, but instead, he seemed to genuinely want to know. So, you told him everything, the words tumbling out between sobs.
“I’ve… drawn out in Sharpie - where I’d take the scissors. If that’s what it took for me to look in the mirror.”
Han’s face drained of colour, and your chest hurt at the horror on his face.
“I’ve done every diet to make me look thinner.”
A tear rolled down your cheek as you asked the question that had plagued your mind your whole life.
“So why do I still feel so goddamn inferior?”
The room went completely silent. For a moment, Han didn’t move, didn’t speak. He just stared at you. You could see that he was heartbroken by your words, by your pain. It looked like hearing your words caused him his own physical pain. Then, his gaze slowly dropped. To your robe. To the marker visible at your collar, your wrists, and your ankles.
Realisation dawned on his face, and you let out a shaky laugh.
“There.”
Your fingers twisted into the fabric.
“That’s what’s under here.”
Han closed his eyes briefly, a muscle in his jaw jumping. When he looked at you again, his eyes were shining with grief.
“You’ve been carrying this by yourself?”
The question broke something inside you, because even after all of that, he wasn’t disgusted or judgmental. He hadn’t confirmed that the girls had been right. He was just sad that you’d been hurting.
You nodded, a tiny movement, but Han still saw it. His shoulders fell, as though the answer hurt him, before he slowly crossed the room. He was giving you enough of a chance to stop him, you realised. But this time, you didn’t want to.
He stopped in front of you, close enough that you could see the moisture in his eyes, hear his uneven breathing. When he finally spoke, his voice was barely above a whisper.
“I wish you could see what I see.”
Fresh tears rolled down your cheeks because after weeks of starving yourself and hiding while you tried to become someone else, Han wasn’t looking at you like you were a problem to solve. He was looking at you like your pain was the thing breaking his heart.
For a long moment, neither of you moved. You stood in the middle of your living room, tears drying on your cheeks, arms wrapped tightly around yourself. Han was close enough to touch, to see every flicker of doubt crossing your face.
“You don’t have to do this,” you whispered.
His expression softened. “I’m not doing anything you don’t want me to.”
You swallowed. The shame was still there, sitting heavy and familiar in your chest, but for the first time all week, there was something else alongside it.
Trust.
Slowly, Han reached for your hand. His fingers threaded through yours, warm and steady, as he gently pulled you towards the mirror hanging in your hallway.
He stopped in front of the full-length mirror, tugging on your hand with a gentle “Come here.”
You hadn’t looked in this mirror for weeks, preferring to restrict your view of yourself with the mirror in the bathroom. That one already gave you enough to critique, without bringing your whole body into view.
Immediately, your stomach twisted. “No.”
Han squeezed your hand gently, eyes imploring you to trust him. “Please.”
You took a deep, steadying breath before you stepped in line with the mirror, eyes slowly raising to land on you both in the reflection. You could see your red eyes. Your tear-stained face. His worried expression.
“I hate it.”
“I know.”
His voice was so quiet it almost hurt. For a moment, neither of you spoke. Then, carefully, giving you every chance to stop him, Han loosened the belt of your robe. His eyes never left your face, checking. Waiting to see if you were okay with this.
When you didn’t pull away, the fabric slipped from your shoulders, leaving you in a simple vest and underwear. You immediately wanted to hide, to cross your arms and curl in on yourself until you disappeared. Han gently caught your wrists before you could, gently stopping you in your tracks.
“Don’t,” he murmured.
Your eyes filled again. “Han—”
“Please.”
The look on his face stole the rest of your words. He wasn’t looking at you with revulsion, or with judgment, but with an almost desperate need for you to see yourself differently. For you to appreciate yourself as he did.
Slowly, he turned you towards the mirror, and you tried looking at the floor. He noticed immediately, gently bumping your shoulder.
“Look.”
“I can’t.”
“You can.”
“I hate what I see.”
The words came out broken, raw from their honesty. Han’s jaw tightened, and he stepped behind you. You couldn’t help but tense as one arm wrapped loosely around your waist, the other lifting to your shoulder. His touch was gentle, reassuring, and you found yourself relaxing into his grip more.
“You see flaws,” he said softly as you stared stubbornly at the floor. “Because they’re there.”
The hand resting on your shoulder squeezed softly.
“I see somebody who always takes care of everyone else.”
A tear slipped down your cheek at his words, and his fingers traced lightly along your arm as he carried on softly.
“I see somebody who makes people feel safe.”
You shook your head, but his grip tightened slightly around your hand. He wasn’t letting you retreat or disappear. His gaze met yours through the reflection.
“Look at me.”
Slowly, reluctantly, you did. The emotion in his eyes nearly undid you.
“I love your smile. The real one that you try to hide when you’re embarrassed.”
Your throat tightened, a shaky laugh escaping you. His own lips twitched in response to the noise.
“There it is.”
You rolled your eyes weakly, immediately looking down again. Han sighed, before gently tilting your chin upwards.
“Stay with me.”
The plea in his voice was unmistakable.
Stay with me. Believe me. Please.
His hand settled against your side, warm through your skin, and instead of criticism, instead of the catalogue of faults you’d expected, he spoke with a kind of reverence that made your chest ache.
“I love how soft you are.”
You immediately tried looking away, and Han caught your eye again.
“No.”
The word was gentle but firm.
“You don’t get to run away from that one.”
Fresh tears filled your eyes because he wasn’t saying it despite your body. He was saying it because of it.
As though softness wasn’t something shameful.
As though it was something worth loving.
His forehead creased. “You spend so much time being cruel to yourself. Would you ever speak to somebody else the way you speak to yourself?”
You didn’t answer because you knew the answer.
Never.
His hand squeezed yours. “You are kind.”
Another squeeze.
“Funny.”
Another.
“Beautiful.”
Your eyes closed immediately, and Han made a quiet sound of frustration. Not at you, but at the wall of disbelief you’d built around yourself. When you opened your eyes again, he was already looking at you. His eyes hadn’t left you since you’d stepped in front of the mirror, watching you with nothing but patience – like he would have stood here all night if he had to.
“You keep waiting for me to change my mind.”
The words landed directly in your chest. You’d been waiting for it since the moment he confessed. Waiting for reality to catch up, for him to realise he’d made a mistake.
Han’s eyes softened. “I’m not going to.”
Your breath caught, but he carried on regardless. “I’m not looking at you and wishing you were somebody else.”
Another tear rolled down your cheek, and he wiped it away gently. “I’m not standing here imagining a different version of you.”
His voice cracked slightly. “I’m standing here looking at you.”
The room felt impossibly quiet as you stared at your reflection, at the woman you’d spent years criticising.
Years shrinking.
Years apologising for.
And for the first time, you weren’t seeing her entirely through your own eyes. You were seeing her through Han’s - through the eyes of someone who had searched an entire party looking for her. Who had shown up at her workplace every day. Who had tracked down her address because he was worried. Who looked at her now as though she was worth every bit of that effort.
Han brushed away another tear before he moved to rest his forehead on your own. “You don’t have to become somebody else.”
His eyes searched yours, begging you to believe him.
“You never did.”
That night, after all the tears and confessions and raw honesty, the distance between you and Han felt smaller than it ever had before. You were still standing in front of the mirror, still emotionally exhausted and feeling vulnerable in a way you weren’t used to. But this time, you had Han next to you, brushing a final tear from your cheek. Neither of you said anything. There was nothing left to say right then, and the silence wasn’t uncomfortable. It was warm and safe in a way that you only felt with him.
His eyes drifted briefly to your lips before returning to your eyes, giving you the chance to pull away.
You didn’t.
Slowly, he lifted one hand to cradle your face. The touch was impossibly gentle, as though you were something precious or breakable. His other arm wrapped around you, drawing you closer until there was barely any space left between you.
And then he kissed you.
The kiss wasn’t desperate or urgent. It was soft; the kind of kiss that felt like a question and an answer all at once. You melted into it almost immediately. All the months of uncertainty, the weeks of pain and days of spiralling seemed to quiet down for those few moments. Han kissed you like someone who wanted you to understand something, like he was trying to communicate every reassuring thing he’d said that evening without using words.
When you finally pulled apart, his forehead rested against yours, and a small smile touched his lips.
“There you are.”
Your eyes immediately filled again, and Han laughed softly.
“No more crying,” he said.
“I’m trying.”
“You are terrible at it.”
A reluctant laugh escaped you, and his smile widened.
For the first time in a long time, you believed him when he looked at you like you were beautiful.
After that night, things didn’t magically become perfect. Years of insecurity don’t disappear overnight, but they become easier to carry when you aren’t carrying them alone anymore.
Han remained stubbornly, consistently present. The following week, you were there when he confronted Ara. You’d tried to avoid the conversation, but Han hadn’t allowed it.
“You’re coming.”
“Han—”
“You’re coming.”
And so, you had.
The woman looked uncomfortable the second she realised why she was there. Han wasn’t cruel - that wasn’t who he was - but he was firm. Disappointed. Protective in a way that made your chest ache. By the end of the conversation, there was no confusion about where he stood.
He chose you.
Openly.
Without hesitation, embarrassment or apology.
Talking to Sarah was harder - far harder - because, unlike Ara, Sarah had been part of your life for years. You’d spent so long believing she was your friend that accepting the truth felt almost like grief.
Han sat beside you before the call, supportive in his silence with his hand resting over your own. He was a quiet source of strength in a painfully illuminating conversation. For the first time, you noticed things you had overlooked for years. The dismissiveness, the backhanded compliments, and the subtle ways she’d always encouraged you to expect less from yourself.
By the end of the call, your hands were shaking. You stared at the blank screen afterwards feeling strangely hollow.
Han immediately pulled you against him. “You okay?”
You nodded, then shook your head before laughing. “I don’t know.”
“That’s fair.”
His arms tightened around you, and for the first time, ending the friendship felt less like losing something and more like putting down something heavy you’d been carrying for years.
The first time Han told you he loved you was six months later.
You were sitting together on his sofa, neither of you doing anything particularly interesting. A film was playing in the background, and your head was resting on his shoulder.
It happened so casually you almost missed it.
He kissed your forehead, smiled, and just… said it.
“I love you.”
As natural as breathing, as saying good morning.
You froze instantly, and Han immediately noticed. Panic surged through you, your brain racing.
Too fast.
Too much.
What if he means it now but not later?
What if I don’t deserve it?
What if—
“Hey.”
Han’s voice interrupted the spiral immediately. You looked up, and he was smiling softly. He wasn’t offended by the hesitation, or upset, or frustrated. He was just patient like always.
“You don’t have to say it back,” he explained.
Your throat tightened. “What if—”
“Don’t.”
His hand found yours.
“What if I scare you away?”
His expression melted completely. “You won’t.”
“What if—”
“You won’t.”
The certainty in his voice made your eyes sting. Han kissed your forehead again, then your cheek, then the tip of your nose. You laughed in spite of yourself, and Han grinned at you fondly.
“There she is.”
You rolled your eyes, and Han smiled.
“I love you,” he murmured.
The words felt less frightening the second time. Less like pressure and more like a promise.
And eventually, when you said it back, his smile was so bright it looked painful.
As your relationship deepened, intimacy became another place where Han’s patience showed itself.
When you were physically intimate together for the first time, he seemed far more focused on making sure you felt safe, wanted, and comfortable than anything else. Every hesitation was met with reassurance, every moment of insecurity was met with kindness. The same man who had stood beside you in front of the mirror was still there, still looking at you with the same affection, still treating your body as something worthy of care and admiration.
Afterwards, wrapped together beneath blankets, you found yourself tracing patterns across his arm, feeling content in the silence that enveloped the room. Han pressed a kiss into your hair, then another, and another, until you laughed and shoved his shoulder.
“Stop.”
“No.”
“Han.”
“No.”
You groaned, and he grinned before pulling you closer, as though even after everything, he still couldn’t quite believe he was lucky enough to have you there. And for once, lying safely in his arms, you found yourself thinking something that would have seemed impossible a year earlier.
Maybe you weren’t the only lucky one.
Maybe you were worth someone feeling lucky enough to have you.
a/n: so I think this is the angstiest, yet realest, fic I've written yet? what do we think? lmk in the comments bcos I love hearing all your thoughts xo
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