requests: open! please drop them in the “ask me” box.
sana. she/her. tae biased. bangtan. my id ✿.ᐟ
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Monterey Bay Aquarium
Misplaced Lens Cap

Discoholic 🪩

blake kathryn

if i look back, i am lost

gracie abrams
hello vonnie

ellievsbear
occasionally subtle
will byers stan first human second
Fai_Ryy
🩵 avery cochrane 🩵

bliss lane
macklin celebrini has autism
Today's Document

pixel skylines
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I'd rather be in outer space 🛸
Sweet Seals For You, Always

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@jeonsdeerbaby
requests: open! please drop them in the “ask me” box.
sana. she/her. tae biased. bangtan. my id ✿.ᐟ
★ navigate ─── mlist › rules › no ai
© JEONSDEERBABY, all rights reserved.

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
𝄀𝄁𝄃𝄂𝄂𝄃ˊ˗ ㅤֺㅤܓܮ ’ 𝟫𝟩 ⠀ ฺ ⠀ ╋ ⠀鏡 ˙ ⠀. 𐝃ْ
best notification actually.
𝄀𝄁𝄃𝄂𝄂𝄃ˊ˗ ㅤֺㅤܓܮ ’ 𝟫𝟩 ⠀ ฺ ⠀ ╋ ⠀鏡 ˙ ⠀. 𐝃ْ
you are SUCH A GOOD WRITER AGHGHGHGGHGHGHH never stop pls i adore ur way with words smmmm
if possible could you please write a jimin fic /drabble (whatever its called im sorry) where reader + jimin are coworkers and jimins always on the readers nerves with how much he shamelessly flirts with them, and this eventually leads to them kissing in the back room of their workplace, but then they end up getting caught by their boss or something? u of course dont need to write this if you aren't comfortable with it or simply don't want to, however tysm for accepting my request!!!
first of all, i wanna apologize to you for replying so late to your request. i don’t even know if you remember sending me this ask 😭
also, thank you so so sooo much! i’m so glad you enjoy reading what i write and my writing style. i love you anonie! 🥹💞
now for the request, ofc i have no problem writing one. i’ll work on it asap! i’m so sorry again, i hope you’ll be back here when i finally post! thank you so much for trusting me! 💞
a bts 8th member fic?
ohhh i would love to! do you have any specific ideas you want to share that you’d like to see? please lmk! :D

Anya is live and ready to show you everything. Watch her strip, dance, and perform exclusive shows just for you. Interact in real-time and make your fantasies come true.
Free to watch • No registration required • HD streaming
and tbh, i’m genuinely appalled by the sheer audacity some writers have here to think they can be the judge to try and look for writers who supposedly use ai.
like y’all have got to be wayyy too free to be doing this lmao.
critique is one thing, but publicly accusing writers of using ai based on what you and your lil team of ‘real writers’ think sounds ai-generated is another.
unless you have a concrete evidence, you’re not exposing anyone—you’re making a very serious accusation based on your own subjective opinion.
this can affect how readers see that writer and even discourage many writers who truly put in a lot of hard work into what they write.
writers spend weeks, months, sometimes even years creating stories for free because they love doing it. reducing all of that to a public “ai-generated” label without proof isn’t ‘protecting the community.’ it’s discouraging people who make it what it is.
by all means, call out plagiarism, call out people who knowingly pass off someone else’s work as their own, call out someone who is desensitising real world issues for fanfics. those things deserved to be talked about because we know the truth.
none of us should be treating ourselves like we’re the final authority on someone else’s creative process.
⊹ ࣪ ˖ a (not so) small note regarding my writing.
— hi everyone! ♡
i wasn’t planning on making a post like this, but recently i found out that one of my fics was publicly labeled as “ai-generated” by some account. since some of you may come across those posts, i’d rather address it myself than let assumptions speak for me.
i want to make one thing very clear:
every story i’ve published has been written by me.
i do not use ai to write my fics. every idea, outline, chapter, conversation, emotional scene, plot point, etc. comes from me.
— a lil more context:
i’ve been writing since 2021.
i first started posting on instagram, where i spent years writing and sharing my work. in 2024, i stopped writing there, and throughout 2025 i became more active as a reader on tumblr instead. i spent that year reading countless fanfics (here on tumblr and also on wattpad) discovering new authors, and experiencing a different style of storytelling than i had before.
when i eventually created this blog in 2026, naturally my writing had evolved.
i learned from the writers whose work inspired me. i paid attention to pacing, atmosphere, characterization, dialogue, and the way stories flowed. basically, i learned a lot by reading.
my writing is heavily inspired by many incredible tumblr authors, my favourite wattpad writers, and the books i’ve read over the years. inspiration has always been part of creativity. that’s how writers grow.
over time, i developed my own habits too.
if you’ve been reading my work for a while, you’ve probably noticed them already.
⤷ i love slow-burn interactions and quieter character moments.
⤷ i tend to describe settings because i enjoy creating an atmosphere readers can immerse themselves in.
⤷ i often use pinterest references while writing, especially for outfits, locations, or room aesthetics, which is why those descriptions can sometimes be very detailed.
► exhibit a (from chp two of sots):
this is the outfit image i found on pinterest and took inspiration from and you can also see me mention/describe it time n again in the story.
⤷ i enjoy recurring motifs, callbacks, and emotional progression rather than rushing relationships.
those are simply parts of my writing style.
— now, i completely understand that not everyone will enjoy my style.
you’re absolutely allowed to think my pacing is slow, my descriptions are too detailed, or that my writing simply isn’t for you. that’s called having different preferences, and i genuinely respect that.
what i don’t think is fair is publicly labeling someone’s work as ai-generated without concrete evidence.
those are two completely different things.
being inspired by books or other writers doesn’t make someone’s work ai-generated.
using familiar romance tropes doesn’t make someone’s work ai-generated.
writing polished prose or cinematic descriptions doesn’t make someone’s work ai-generated.
those are choices that thousands of human writers make every single day.
— one thing i’d also like people to think about is this.
if i genuinely relied on ai to write my stories, why would it take me three months to update this series?
i posted chapter one on 8th april of sots and only managed to publish chapter two on 8th july. between that, i went through one of the biggest writer’s blocks i’ve ever had. i also received three fanfic requests from readers that i still haven’t written because i simply wasn’t able to. in that entire gap, i only made one writing-related post on 7th may.
if writing with ai were really as simple as giving it a prompt and letting it do the work, i could’ve easily uploaded more chapters, fulfilled those requests, and stayed consistent with updates. but i didn’t, because that’s not how i write.
my stories take time. i rewrite scenes, change dialogue, delete paragraphs, get stuck, leave drafts untouched for weeks, and come back only when i’m genuinely happy with what i’m creating. i’d rather make you all wait than post something that doesn’t feel like my best work.
my longest fic is 8.8k words, and both chapters of my current series average around 7k words each. throughout those thousands of words, i intentionally carry recurring themes, callbacks, small character habits, and details from earlier scenes into later ones. i genuinely enjoy paying attention to those little things because i know some readers notice them too.
— every chapter i publish goes through hours of outlining, drafting, rewriting, editing, deleting scenes, rewriting them again, fixing awkward dialogue, changing descriptions, and obsessing over tiny details that probably nobody else notices.
► this is my editing time on microsoft word after i make a draft on google docs.
that’s part of my process and it’s also why these accusations are genuinely hurtful.
when someone’s work is publicly labeled as ai-generated without proof, it doesn’t just affect one chapter—it questions the time, effort, creativity, and passion they’ve poured into something they created themselves.
writers already put a vulnerable part of themselves online every time they hit “publish.” so having that work dismissed with a label can be incredibly discouraging.
— due to storage issues, i unfortunately had to delete many of my older draft documents over time. however, i still have parts of my writing process saved, and i also do have my old work on my now closed instagram account (they’re so embarrassing lmao 😭).
► here are some proofs tho:
you can also read a bit of my old work from these screenshots!
if anyone who genuinely supports my work ever has concerns or questions, i’d much rather you ask me directly. i’m always happy to have an honest conversation.
and, to everyone who has spent time reading my stories, left kind comments, shared theories, reblogged my work, or simply supported me over time—
thank you so much 🥹
whether you’ve been here since my instagram days or only found my writing recently, i’m grateful that you’ve chosen to spend your time with stories i’ve worked so hard to create.
i hope you’ll continue reading them knowing that every chapter comes from the same place it always has:
my imagination, my experiences as a reader, and my genuine love for writing.
thank you so much for reading and understanding. i love you guys sm! ♡
getting lost on an island wasn’t part of jungkook’s plan. he only came to jeju to escape the noise of the city for a while — no schedules, no expectations, no people who knew his name. just the sea, the wind, and quiet roads that stretched along the shoreline. meeting you wasn’t part of the plan either. but somehow, between tangerine orchards, late sunsets, and the salt in the air, leaving the island starts to feel harder than staying.
✧ genre/pairing : jungkook × reader · city boy × country girl · strangers to lovers · slow burn · fluff · eventual smut · a little angst
✧ tags/warnings : island romance · vacation au · teasing dynamics · emotional vulnerability · jealous jungkook · soft intimacy · late night beach walks · eventual smut
✧ series notes : a story about finding quiet in unexpected places, falling in love slowly, and learning that sometimes the sea brings people exactly where they’re meant to be.
✧ taglist : @yufawnz @inthelow @junqive @ynkksbb @jkxlvrr @lovingkoalaface @livelaughlovejoon @joonjulyagust-d @xtrataerrestrial @bluewintersocks @ggukamor @ggukkieslvttttt @bangatanily @oopscoop @silverozy @koosluvss @bo-rimmy @missdumpling190811 @sky-23s-world @mikrokookiex @mimi1097 @jggui @rubyybabyy @prettymoles @tatamicc @satisfied18 @megamatt43 @raez1ee @cherryminie95
✧ wc : series (7k)
series masterlist | masterlist | chp one | chp two | chp three | chp four
the first thing jungkook registers is that he’s not in seoul.
it’s not the bed that tells him—though the bed is different, softer, with pillows that smell faintly of lavender instead of the unscented ones he uses at home. it’s not the light either, though the light is different too, softer and greyer, filtering through sheer curtains he doesn’t recognize.
it’s the sound.
or rather, the lack of it.
no traffic. no sirens in the distance. no neighbor’s tv bleeding through the walls at an volume. just the ocean. a low, constant hush that he can hear even from the top floor, even through the glass of the balcony door. waves pulling in and pulling out, over and over, like the island itself is breathing.
he opens his eyes.
the ceiling above him is white and high and bare. no cracks, no water stains, no cheap light fixture with a missing bulb. just smooth, uninterrupted white. the kind of ceiling that belongs in a room that cost more per night than most people’s rent.
he blinks at it for a long moment, waiting for his brain to catch up.
right. jeju. the hotel. the driver and the broken car and the girl with the grocery bags.
he turns his head toward the window. the curtains are thin enough that he can see the sky beyond them—pale, washed-out, the kind of grey-blue that comes just before sunrise. or maybe just after. he doesn’t know what time it is. doesn’t want to look at his phone and find out.
he’s tired.
not the kind of tired that comes from a bad night’s sleep. the kind that comes from no sleep at all. because he didn’t sleep. not really. he’d lain in this bed for hours, staring at that white ceiling, listening to the ocean breathe. he’d closed his eyes and counted backwards from a hundred. he’d fluffed the lavender pillows and turned onto his side and then onto his stomach and then onto his back again.
nothing.
his body is exhausted. his bones feel heavy, his eyelids heavier. but his brain won’t shut up. it keeps spinning, looping, replaying the same thoughts over and over.
his father’s voice on the phone two days ago.
you need a break, jungkook. you’re no good to anyone like this.
like a break was something you could schedule, like a meeting.
i’ve made some arrangements. just go. relax. see the island.
arrangements. his father’s version of relaxation involves reservations. schedules. itineraries. there’s a list somewhere—on his phone, probably, or in an email he hasn’t opened yet—of places his father has already decided he should visit. museums. galleries. restaurants that require reservations three weeks in advance.
it’s thoughtful, he knows. his father is trying. but the thought of following another schedule, even a vacation schedule, makes something in his chest tighten.
he came to jeju to escape.
but you can’t escape a life you never chose by running to a place someone else chose for you.
he sighs, pushes himself up, and swings his legs over the side of the bed. the sheets are cool against his skin, the floor cool under his bare feet. he stands, stretches, feels his spine crack in three different places.
the suite is still dark. the living area, the kitchenette, the bathroom with its marble counters and rainfall shower. he walks past all of it, barefoot and shirtless, and pulls open the balcony door.
the morning air hits him immediately—cooler than yesterday, with a breeze that raises goosebumps along his arms. the ocean is right there, grey and vast under the pale sky, stretching out until it disappears into the horizon. the sun hasn’t fully risen yet. the world is quiet.
he leans against the balcony railing and just breathes.
the salt is still there. the green is still there. but there’s something else too, something sharper. seaweed, maybe. or the mineral smell of wet sand. it’s not unpleasant. just unfamiliar.
he stays there for a while. five minutes. maybe ten. long enough for his fingers to go cold and his hair to get damp with sea spray. long enough for the sky to shift from grey-blue to something paler, something closer to morning.
when he finally steps back inside, he grabs his phone from the nightstand.
7:43 am.
three missed notifications. an email from his father’s assistant with the subject line jeju recommendations - please review. a text from his brother asking if he’s alive. a weather alert about high winds in the afternoon.
he ignores all of them.
instead, he showers. the water is hot and the pressure is good and he stands under the spray longer than necessary, letting it wake him up. he brushes his teeth. pulls on black jeans and a grey t-shirt. runs his fingers through his damp hair and decides it's fine.
he’s hungry.
that’s something, at least. an appetite. he hasn’t had much of one lately, but the sea air must be doing something, because his stomach is actually growling.
he picks up his phone again and calls the front desk.
“good morning, mr. jeon. how can we help you?”
“breakfast,” he says. “where should i go?”
there’s a pause. he can hear the receptionist typing. “the hotel has an excellent breakfast buffet on the second floor, sir. or there’s a café attached to the lobby that serves coffee and pastries. would you like me to—”
“no. i mean somewhere local. not the hotel.”
another pause. longer this time. “of course, sir. one moment.”
he waits, tapping his fingers against his thigh. the receptionist comes back on the line with a few recommendations—a café near the beach, a bakery that opens early, a place that serves traditional jeju porridge. he writes none of them down.
he calls his driver instead.
“morning, sir. ready to head out?”
“yes. i need breakfast. somewhere local. not fancy.”
the driver hums, thinking. “there’s a place,” he says slowly. “small. family-owned. been there for years. it’s not fancy, like you said. but the food—” he pauses, like he’s searching for the right words. “the best seafood stew on the island, sir. very simple. but very good.”
jungkook considers this. “what’s it called?”
“dolharu, sir. after the stone statues. dol hareubang. you’ve seen them, maybe? the big stone grandfathers.”
he hasn’t. but he nods anyway, like the driver can see him. “send me the address. i’ll meet you downstairs in ten.”
“yes, sir.”
the call ends. jungkook sets his phone down and looks at himself in the mirror across the room. dark circles under his eyes. hair still damp. a face that looks younger than twenty-four and older at the same time.
he doesn’t know what he’s looking for on this island.
but right now, all he wants is a good bowl of stew.
he grabs his wallet, his key card, and his phone, and heads for the door.
the restaurant is not what he expected.
he’s not sure what he did expect, exactly. maybe something polished. something with a sign in english and a host stand and menus with pictures. the kinds of places his father usually recommends.
dolharu is none of those things.
it’s small. smaller than he imagined. tucked between a neighborhood grocery store and a house with a tiled roof, the kind of building that’s been standing for longer than anyone can remember. the exterior is simple—white walls, a blue wooden door, a sign hanging above the entrance with 돌하르방 painted in black letters.
there’s a small stone statue next to the door. one of those dol hareubang the driver mentioned. big eyes. a long nose. a hand resting over its stomach. it’s weathered, worn smooth by years of wind and rain, and someone has tied a small ribbon around its base. a faded orange one, the color almost gone.
jungkook stares at it for a moment longer than necessary.
the driver parks the car and turns around in his seat. “this is it, sir. i’ll wait here.”
“you’re not eating?”
the driver shakes his head, smiling slightly. “i had breakfast at home, sir. my wife. she doesn’t let me leave the house without a full stomach.”
jungkook nods. opens the door. steps out.
the air is warmer now than it was on the balcony, the sun higher, the breeze lighter. he can smell the ocean still, but there’s something else too—something savory. garlic, maybe. or sesame oil. it’s coming from the restaurant, drifting out through the cracks around the blue door.
his stomach growls again.
he walks to the door, pulls it open, and steps inside.
the interior is small. maybe six tables, all of them wooden and worn smooth from years of use. the floors are concrete, swept clean.
the walls are lined with old photographs—black and white images of jeju from decades ago, stone statues like the one outside, families in traditional clothing. there's a counter at the far end, and behind it, a window that looks into the kitchen.
he can see someone moving back there. a man, maybe. older. with grey in his hair and an apron tied around his waist.
the restaurant is mostly empty. just one other customer, an elderly woman sitting in the corner, slowly eating a bowl of rice with a spoon. she doesn’t look up when he walks in.
he stands there for a moment, uncertain.
then a door at the back swings open, and someone walks out.
for a split second, jungkook doesn’t register who it is. he sees movement—someone carrying a small stack of napkins, someone wearing pink, someone moving with the kind of ease that comes from knowing a space well.
his brain catches the details in fragments: an oversized sweatshirt in a soft, dusty pink, the kind that hangs loose off one shoulder. a grey camisole underneath, the thin strap just visible against the collarbone. cream-colored sweatpants, wide-legged and soft-looking, with a foldover waistband that sits low on the hips.
your hair is different from yesterday—down, not pulled back, falling in waves that look like they haven’t seen a hairbrush in a few hours.
and then you turn, just slightly, and he sees your face.
his step falters.
there’s a moment—barely a second, really—where his brain scrambles to place you. the grocery bags. the footpath. the sandals. the baby blue phone case. the way you’d stood there with your crinkling plastic bags and your teasing smile, waiting for him to say please. it’s all there, somewhere in the back of his mind, but it takes a beat too long to surface.
then it clicks.
you.
you look up at the same moment, your eyes landing on him as you set the napkins down on the nearest table. your expression shifts—not surprise, exactly, but recognition.
a small lift of your eyebrows, a tiny quirk at the corner of your mouth.
like you’re not shocked to see him, but you’re not entirely expecting him either.
you straighten up and walk toward him. not quickly, not slowly. just.. casually. the way someone walks when they’re not in a hurry and never really are.
the restaurant is quiet around you. the elderly woman in the corner is still eating her rice. from the kitchen, he can hear the soft clatter of a pot being set on a burner, the low murmur of someone humming.
you stop a few feet away from him, close enough that he can see the small mole on your left cheek, the way your sweatshirt keeps slipping off your shoulder no matter how many times you probably pull it back up.
“looks like you found the sim card, i see,” you say.
your voice is light. casual. like running into him here is the most ordinary thing in the world.
jungkook blinks at you. his mouth opens. closes. opens again.
“are you stalking me?” he asks.
he doesn’t mean it to sound as accusatory as it comes out. it’s more disbelief than anything else—the kind of knee-jerk reaction that happens when your brain can’t quite process a coincidence.
he’s been on the island for less than twenty-four hours. he’s run into you twice.
twice.
at the airport and now here, at some small restaurant his driver had to recommend because it wasn’t even on his father’s carefully curated list.
what are the odds?
you don’t look offended by his question. if anything, your smile grows just a fraction, your eyes crinkling slightly at the corners.
“stalking you?” you repeat, drawing the words out like you're tasting them. “in my family’s restaurant? on my home island?”
he feels heat creep up the back of his neck.
“i didn’t mean—”
“you really think i followed you from the airport,” you continue, tilting your head, “found out where you were staying, woke up early, and came to work just so i could run into you again?”
“no,” he says quickly. “that’s not—i just—”
“because that would be a lot of effort,” you say, and there’s that teasing edge again, the one he remembers from yesterday. “especially for someone who couldn’t even say please without being asked.”
he opens his mouth. closes it. runs a hand through his hair, which is still slightly damp from his shower.
“i said please,” he reminds you, because he needs to win at least one point in this conversation.
“eventually,” you agree. “after i made you.”
he stares at you.
you stare back, completely unbothered, your weight shifted to one hip, your arms loose at your sides. the sweatshirt slips another inch off your shoulder and you don’t fix it.
“you’re not going to let me live that down, are you?” he asks.
“probably not,” you say cheerfully. “but don’t worry. i’m sure you’ll do something else embarrassing soon, and then i’ll have new material.”
he should be annoyed. a few hours ago, on the footpath outside the airport, he would have been annoyed. but something about the way you say it—the warmth underneath the teasing, the way your eyes are bright and not unkind—makes it land differently.
he exhales, and it comes out somewhere between a sigh and a laugh.
“i’m not stalking you,” you say again, softer this time. “my family owns this place. i work here when i’m home.”
“you said you were on vacation,” he says, frowning.
“i am. but helping out at the restaurant doesn’t feel like work. it just feels like..” you glance around the small room, at the worn tables and the old photographs and the stone statue he can see through the window. “like being home.”
he doesn’t know what to say to that. he’s not sure he’s ever had anything that felt like that.
you seem to sense something in his silence, because your smile gentles slightly. “are you going to stand in the doorway all morning, or do you actually want breakfast?”
his stomach chooses that moment to growl. loudly.
your eyebrows shoot up.
“was that you?” you ask. “or is there a small animal hiding in your jacket?”
“it’s been a while since i ate,” he admits, and his ears are definitely red now. he can feel them burning.
you laugh—not a mean laugh, not even a teasing one. just a genuine, surprised laugh that crinkles your nose and makes your shoulders shake a little.
“okay,” you say, gesturing toward the tables. “come on. sit down before you pass out. my dad will never let me hear the end of it if a customer faints in the doorway.”
you turn and walk toward a table near the window—a small one, meant for two, with a wooden top and two simple chairs. you pull one out and look back at him expectantly.
jungkook hesitates for just a moment.
then he walks forward, past the elderly woman who still hadn’t looked up from her rice, past the counter with its old-fashioned register, past the window into the kitchen where he can now see an older man—your father, probably—stirring something in a large pot.
he sits down in the chair you pulled out for him.
the wood is solid beneath him, the table smooth under his hands. there’s a small vase in the center with a single flower—white, maybe a daisy, a little wilted around the edges. a menu stands upright in a metal holder, laminated and slightly sticky from years of use.
you don’s sit across from him. instead, you round the table and stand beside it, reaching for the menu and sliding it in front of him.
“here,” you say. “breakfast menu is the first page. lunch starts at eleven. but honestly, everything is good. you can’t really go wrong.”
he looks down at the menu, then back up at you.
you’re standing there with your hands on your hips, the oversized sleeve of your sweatshirt slipping down to your elbow. the grey camisole underneath has a thin line of lace along the neckline, barely visible but there. your sweatpants are so wide that he can’t even tell what shoes you’re wearing—probably sandals again, he thinks. or maybe just socks.
“you’re really not going to ask why i’m here?” he says.
“you mean at the restaurant?” you tilt your head. “you’re hungry. you like stew. someone told you this was the best place on the island.” you pause. “am i close?”
“my driver mentioned it.”
“mr. park?” you ask, and something in your expression softens. “he’s been coming here for years. brings all the hotel guests who want ‘authentic jeju food.’” you make air quotes with your fingers, and he notices your nails are bare—no polish, just clean and short.
“i didn’t catch his name,” jungkook admits.
“that’s okay. he’s been bringing people here since i was in middle school. he’s practically family at this point.” you glance toward the kitchen, where your father is still stirring. “appa sends him home with leftovers sometimes. banchan, mostly. the good stuff.”
jungkook watches you as you talk. the way your face moves, the way your hands gesture when you”re explaining something.
you’re different here than you were at the airport—still teasing, still sharp, but softer somehow. more settled. like this place fills something in you that the rest of the world can’t.
“so,” you say, turning back to him, “are you going to order, or are you just going to stare at the menu until it catches fire?”
he looks down. the menu is laminated, yes, and the edges are slightly curled. the breakfast page has maybe seven options. simple. handwritten fonts. no pictures.
“what do you recommend?” he asks.
you smile, and it’s different from the teasing one. warmer. “the seafood stew. obviously.”
“for breakfast?”
“it’s jeju,” you say, like that explains everything. “we don’t really do ‘breakfast food’ the way seoul does. here, you eat whatever sounds good. and the stew sounds good, trust me.”
“you said that yesterday. ‘trust me.’” he remembers. the grocery bags. the footpath. the way you’d looked at him when you said it.
“and you’re still standing here, aren’t you?” you counter. “so clearly, trusting me worked out fine.”
he can’t argue with that.
“okay,” he says. “the stew.”
you nod, pleased, and reach for the menu to take it back. your fingers brush against his for just a second—not long enough to mean anything, but long enough for him to notice that your hands are warm and your nails are bare and you smell faintly of sesame oil.
you pull away first.
“good choice,” you say. “i’ll tell appa.”
you turn and walk toward the kitchen, the door swinging shut behind you, and jungkook is left sitting at the small table by the window, alone with his thoughts.
he looks out the window. the street outside is quiet—a few cars parked along the curb, an elderly man walking his dog, a cat sleeping on a wall. the stone statue next to the door watches over it all, its big eyes unblinking, its long nose pointing toward the sky.
he thinks about the way you said my island.
not jeju. not the island. my island.
like it belongs to you. like you belong to it.
he doesn’t know what that feels like. to belong to a place. to have a place belong to him.
seoul has never felt like his. his father’s apartment. his father’s company. his father’s expectations. everything in his life has been handed to him, planned for him, decided without him. even this trip—especially this trip—wasn’t really his idea.
but this restaurant, with its worn tables and its old photographs and its stone statue outside—
this is yours.
and somehow, without meaning to, he’s sitting in the middle of it.
the kitchen door swings open again, and you come back out, wiping your hands on a small towel. you don’t go to him.
instead, you stop at the elderly woman’s table, saying something quietly, refilling her tea without being asked. the woman nods, pats your hand, and you smile—a real smile, soft and private, the kind you give to someone you’ve known your whole life.
jungkook watches.
and he realizes, somewhere in the back of his mind, that he’s not annoyed anymore.
he’s curious.
you come back a few minutes later, a large bowl cradled in your hands, steam curling up from the surface in lazy spirals. the bowl is ceramic, a warm earthy brown, and it’s heavy enough that he can see the slight strain in your forearms as you carry it.
you set it down in front of him with careful precision, your fingers pulling back quickly to avoid the heat.
the stew is beautiful.
that’s not a word he usually uses for food, but it’s the first thing that comes to mind. the broth is a deep, rich red-orange, the kind of color that comes from gochugaru and hours of simmering. pieces of white fish peek through the surface, tender and flaking. there are clams too, their shells slightly open, revealing the plump meat inside. mussels. shrimp. slices of radish and zucchini and onion, all swimming in that vibrant broth. a sprinkle of chopped green onion on top, bright and fresh against the red. a small piece of kelp curled at the edge of the bowl, like it’s been placed there on purpose.
a side dish of rice sits next to the stew, perfect and white in a smaller bowl. and beside that, a small plate of banchan—kimchi, pickled radish, seasoned spinach, a tiny portion of stir-fried anchovies.
he looks at it.
then he looks up at you.
“you made this?” he asks.
you shake your head, smiling. “appa made it. i just carried it.” you pause. “but i did watch him make it. so i get partial credit.”
he doesn’t know why that makes him smile. but it does.
“it looks incredible,” he says, and he means it.
“taste it first,” you say. “then tell me if it’s incredible.”
he picks up the spoon that’s resting on the table, a long-handled one meant for stews, and dips it into the bowl. the broth is the perfect temperature—hot enough to warm him from the inside, but not so hot that it burns. he brings the spoon to his lips and takes a sip.
the flavor hits him immediately. it’s deep and complex, the kind of taste that comes from hours of careful preparation. the seafood is fresh, the broth rich with the essence of the ocean. there’s a subtle heat from the gochugaru that warms the back of his throat without overwhelming. the vegetables are tender, still holding their shape, and the clams are perfectly cooked.
he closes his eyes for a moment without meaning to.
when he opens them, you're watching him. waiting.
“well?” you ask.
“it’s the best thing i’ve eaten in months,” he says.
and he means it. he can’t remember the last time he had a meal that felt like this—not just food, but something more. something that felt like care.
you smile, pleased, and he notices the way your eyes crinkle at the corners when you do. “good. eat it while it’s hot. i’ll be at the counter if you need anything.”
you start to turn away, and he doesn’t know what makes him speak.
“wait.”
you stop, looking back at him. “yeah?”
“sit with me.” the words come out before he can think about them. “if you’re not busy.”
you raise an eyebrow. “are you asking? or telling?”
he catches himself, and this time he doesn’t have to be reminded. “asking,” he says quietly. “please.”
your expression softens, just a fraction. you glance over at the counter, then toward the kitchen, then back at him. your father is still in the back, humming to himself. the elderly woman is finishing her rice. the restaurant is quiet.
“okay,” you say. “let me just grab something.”
you disappear behind the counter and come back a moment later with a small cup of tea—barley tea, he thinks, from the color and the smell. you pull out the chair across from him and sit down, cradling the cup in your hands.
“so,” you say, settling in. “you came back.”
“i was hungry.”
“you could have gone anywhere.”
“i came here.” he takes another bite of the stew, letting the flavors settle on his tongue. “my driver said it was the best on the island.”
“mr. park is a good man,” you say. “and he’s right. but he’s also biased. my appa gives him extra banchan.”
“so it’s a bribe.”
“it’s a thank you,” you correct. “there’s a difference. appa thanks him for bringing customers. mr. park thanks appa for the food. it’s a system.”
he shakes his head, but there’s no heat in it. “you’re really protective of this place.”
“of course i am,” you say simply. “it’s my home.”
he doesn’t know what to say to that. so he takes another bite of the stew instead.
you watch him eat for a moment, sipping your tea, not pushing. the silence between you is comfortable, easier than he expected. the old woman in the corner finishes her rice and stands up slowly, patting your shoulder as she passes.
you smile at her, say something in jeju dialect that he doesn’t catch, and she pats your shoulder again before shuffling out the door.
the restaurant is quieter now. just the two of you and the faint sounds from the kitchen.
“so,” you say, setting your tea down. “why jeju?”
he looks up from his stew. “what do you mean?”
“i mean, why here?” you lean back in your chair, crossing your arms loosely over your chest. “tourists usually go to seogwipo. or the east coast. or hallasan. you’re staying at a hotel near the airport, which means you haven’t planned anything yet. and you’re eating breakfast at a tiny restaurant that’s not on any of the tourist maps.” you tilt your head. “so why jeju?”
he considers the question. it's a good one, and he doesn’t have an easy answer.
“my father,” he says finally. “he sent me here.”
“sent you?”
“he said i needed a break. that i was working too hard. that i was no good to anyone like this,” he stirs his stew absently, watching the broth swirl. “he made the arrangements. the hotel, the reservations. he even made a list of places i should visit.”
“and you’re following it?”
“i’m not not following it,” he says, which is the most honest answer he can give.
you hum, considering this. “so you’re here because your father told you to be.”
“basically.”
“and you don’t want to be here?”
“i don’t..” he trails off, unsure how to finish. “i don’t know what i want. that’s the problem.”
you don’t look at him with pity. that’s what he appreciates. you just nod, like that makes perfect sense.
“how long are you staying?” you ask.
“a week,” he says. “maybe longer. i haven’t decided yet.”
“a week,” you repeat. “that’s not very long.”
“it’s the longest i’ve taken off in three years.”
your eyebrows lift slightly. “three years? you haven’t taken a break in three years?”
“there hasn’t been time.”
“there’s always time,” you say, and there’s something gentle in your voice. “you just have to make it.”
he doesn’t know how to respond to that. so he takes another bite of the stew.
you sip your tea.
he eats his stew.
the morning light filters through the window, casting soft shadows across the table.
“what about you?” he asks finally. “you said you’re on break. from university?”
you nod. “political science,” you say, and then you wait, like you’re expecting him to react a certain way.
“political science?” he asks, and he must say it correctly because you look surprised.
“yeah,” you say slowly. “most people don’t know what that is.”
“i know what it is,” he says. “you want to work in policy? diplomacy? something with the UN?”
you blink at him, and there’s something in your expression he can’t quite read—surprise, maybe, or wariness. “something like that,” you say carefully. “how do you know about that?”
“i’m a business major,” he says. “we share some classes with the pol sci students. international relations, global economics. i’ve had a few.”
“so you’re not just a rich heir who doesn’t know anything,” you say, and there’s teasing in your voice but also curiosity.
“i know some things,” he says. “not everything. but some things.”
“like sim cards?”
he laughs. actually laughs. “okay, i didn’t know that one. but you taught me.”
“and now you’ll never forget,” you say, smiling. “you’re welcome.”
he shakes his head, but he’s smiling too. just enough for you to notice.
you study him for a moment, your eyes soft and thoughtful. “so you’re a business major,” you say. “and your father sent you here. and you haven’t taken a break in three years.”
“that’s the summary, yeah.”
“and what do you want, jungkook?”
the question lands softly, but it lands heavy. he looks at you, at your calm eyes and your oversized sweatshirt and your hands wrapped around your tea, and he doesn’t have an answer.
“i don’t know,” he says honestly. “i’ve never really thought about it.”
“that’s sad,” you say, and it’s not mean. it’s just true.
he looks down at his stew. the broth is still warm, the clams still tender. he takes another bite and chews slowly, letting the flavors settle.
“what about you?” he asks. “you said you’re on break. from seoul?”
you nod. “i study there. but i come back whenever i can.”
“and what do you want?”
you smile, and it’s different from the teasing one. softer. more honest. “to make a difference,” you say. “to do something that matters. to help people, maybe. that’s why i chose pol sci. i want to understand how things work so i can make them better.”
“that’s a big goal.”
“it’s a big world.”
he doesn’t have a response to that. so he just eats his stew and listens to the quiet hum of the restaurant and watches the way the light moves across your face.
you’re not like anyone he’s met before.
he doesn’t know what to do with that.
he finishes the stew. every last drop of broth, every piece of fish, every clam and mussel. he even eats the vegetables, which he usually picks around. your father comes out from the kitchen at one point—a tall man with kind eyes and grey-streaked hair, wiping his hands on a towel. he says something to you in jeju dialect, and you roll your eyes and say something back that makes him laugh.
“my appa wants to know if you liked it,” you translate, sitting back down across from him.
“tell him it’s the best thing i’ve ever eaten,” jungkook says.
you say something to your father in jeju, and the older man's face breaks into a wide, warm smile. he nods at jungkook, says something that sounds like a thank you, and disappears back into the kitchen.
“he says you’re welcome to come back anytime,” you say. “and that you’re too skinny and need to eat more.”
jungkook looks down at himself. “i’m not that skinny.”
“appa thinks everyone is too skinny,” you say. “it’s his love language. force-feeding people.”
he laughs again. just enough.
he pushes his empty bowl away and sits back in his chair, his stomach full and warm. the tea you brought him is still half-full, and he picks it up and takes a sip—barley tea, light and nutty.
“thank you,” he says quietly. “for the food. and for sitting with me.”
“you already said thank you,” you remind him.” “i’m saying it again.”
you smile, something soft and private, and don’t argue.
the restaurant is empty now. the elderly woman left. a young couple came in for coffee and left five minutes later. your father is in the back, cleaning up, and the hum of the kitchen is a quiet background noise.
he should probably leave. he’s been here for almost an hour. he has a list of reservations and recommendations somewhere on his phone. his father’s assistant probably expects him to visit at least one museum today.
but he doesn’t want to leave.
not yet.
“is there a balcony?” he asks suddenly.
you blink. “a what?”
“a balcony. or a terrace. somewhere with a view of the beach.”
you look at him, confused, but you don’t ask why. “there’s a small one,” you say. “out back. we use it for storage mostly, but there’s a view of the ocean.”
“can you show me?”
you hesitate for a moment, something flickering in your eyes, but then you nod. “sure. let me grab something.”
you stand up and walk behind the counter, coming back with a clean tablecloth and a small cup of tea for yourself. you motion for him to follow, and he does, pushing his chair back and walking with you through the kitchen.
the kitchen is small and warm, filled with the smell of garlic and sesame oil. your father is at the stove, stirring something, and you say something to him in your dialect that makes him wave you away, shooing you both toward the back door.
the door leads to a small balcony. it’s not much—just a narrow wooden platform with a rusted railing and a few plastic crates stacked against the wall. but the view is everything.
the ocean stretches out in front of them, vast and endless, the water a deep blue-green under the morning sky. the waves crash against the rocks below, sending up plumes of white foam. the beach curves along the coastline, empty and quiet, the sand pale gold in the morning light. the mountains rise in the distance, soft and hazy, wrapped in a thin layer of morning mist.
it’s beautiful.
jungkook walks to the railing and grips it, letting the sea air hit his face. the wind is stronger here, carrying the sound of the waves and the cry of seagulls and the faint salt smell that he’s starting to associate with this place.
you come up beside him, setting the tablecloth down on one of the crates and sitting on it like it’s a chair. you’re so casual about it, so comfortable in this space, like you’ve done it a hundred times before.
“first time in jeju?” you ask, even though you already know the answer.
he turns to look at you. “you saw me yesterday. you know it is.”
“i know,” you say, smiling. “but i wanted to hear you say it.” you pause, taking a sip of your tea. “you looked so lost. standing there with your luggage and your expensive shoes, squinting at your phone like it personally offended you.”
“it did personally offend me,” he says. “my phone and i have a complicated relationship.”
you laugh, and the sound is soft, carried away by the wind. “i could tell. you were muttering to yourself.”
"i was not."
“you were. i heard you.” you do a terrible impression of his voice, low and grumbly: “come on, come on.”
he stares at you. “i don’t sound like that.”
“you absolutely sound like that.”
he opens his mouth to argue, but he can’t. because he does. he does sound like that. he sounds like that all the time, apparently, and you noticed within thirty seconds of meeting him.
“okay,” he says, shaking his head. “fine. i was muttering.”
“i knew it.”
“but in my defense, i was having a really bad day.”
“and now?”
he looks at you. you’re sitting on a plastic crate, drinking tea, your sweatshirt slipping off your shoulder for the hundredth time. your hair is blowing in the wind, and there's a small smile on your face, and you’re looking at him like you actually want to know the answer.
“now,” he says slowly, “it’s better.”
you nod, satisfied, and look back out at the ocean. the silence between you is comfortable again, filled with the sound of the waves and the wind.
“you know,” you say after a moment, “you look a little less lost today.”
“i’m not lost,” he says. “i’m just… not sure where i’m going.”
“same thing.”
“no it’s not.”
“yes it is,” you say, turning to look at him. “being lost and not knowing where you’re going are the same thing. you just don’t want to admit it.”
he doesn’t know what to say to that. because she’s right. she’s absolutely right.
you look at him, something shifting in your expression. “you know,” you say, “i could show you around.”
“what?”
“i’m teasing,” you say quickly, waving a hand. “i’m not actually—i don’t have time to be anyone’s tour guide. i have to help at the restaurant, and i have reading to do, and—”
“okay,” he says.
you stop mid-sentence. “okay?”
“yes,” he says. “okay. show me around.”
you stare at him. “i was joking.”
“i wasn’t.”
the wind blows between you, carrying the salt and the green and the faint sound of seagulls.
“jungkook,” you say slowly, “i have responsibilities. i can’t just—”
“you said you were on vacation.”
“i said i was on break. that’s different.”
“how?”
“break means i’m still a student. i still have readings. i still have papers. i still have—”
“you can do your readings at the beach,” he says. “i’ll bring you a blanket.”
you look at him like he’s grown a second head.
“you’re serious,” you say.
“i’m serious.”
“you want me—a stranger you met yesterday—to be your tour guide for your week-long stay in jeju.”
“you’re not a stranger,” he says. “i know your name. i know you’re a pol sci student. i know your family owns a restaurant. i know you have a baby blue phone case.”
“you noticed my phone case?”
“it’s hard not to. it’s very.. you.”
you blink at him, and something in your expression shifts. something almost like surprise. like you didn’t expect him to notice that.
“what exactly would this tour guiding involve?” you ask slowly.
he doesn’t have an answer. he hadn’t thought that far ahead. all he knows is that he doesn’t want to spend his week in jeju following his father’s carefully curated itinerary, visiting museums and galleries and restaurants that require reservations. he wants to see the real jeju. the one you belong to.
“whatever you want,” he says finally. “show me what you love. where you go when you’re home. the places that matter.”
you stare at him. the wind blows your hair across your face and you push it back, tucking it behind your ear.
“you barely know me,” you say.
“i know,” he says. “but i want to. that’s why i’m asking.”
the words hang in the air between you, heavy and honest.
you look at him for a long moment. your eyes search his face, looking for something—a joke, a trick, a hint that he’s not being serious.
he doesn’t give you one.
“i have to talk to my appa,” you say finally. “and i need to finish my readings before monday. and i’m not going to be your tour guide for free.”
“i’ll pay you.”
“i don’t want your money.”
“then what do you want?”
you look at him, and for a moment, he thinks you’re going to say something teasing. something light. something that would let you both off the hook.
but instead, you say: “i want you to actually see it. not just take pictures and post them. i want you to pay attention.”
he nods. “okay.”
“okay?”
“okay. i’ll pay attention.”
you hold his gaze for another moment. and then, slowly, you smile.
“fine,” you say. “one week. but you’re buying lunch.”
“deal.”
you stick out your hand, and he takes it. your palm is warm against his, your grip firm. the handshake lasts a beat longer than it needs to, and when you pull away, he notices that your cheeks are slightly pink.
you clear your throat. “i should probably go help appa.”
“yeah,” he says. “i should probably go too.”
but neither of you moves.
the ocean crashes against the rocks below, and the seagulls cry overhead, and the wind carries the salt and the green and the sound of a morning that's just beginning.
“i’ll come back tomorrow,” he says. “to the restaurant. for breakfast.”
“you don’t have to—”
“i want to,” he says. “if that’s okay.”
you look at him, your expression soft and unreadable. “okay,” you say quietly. “i’ll be here.”
he nods, and this time he steps back, moving toward the door to the kitchen.
you stay on the balcony, still sitting on the plastic crate, your tea growing cold in your hands.
he pauses at the door.
“hey,” he says.
you look up.
“thank you,” he says. “for giving me a chance.”
you smile, and it’s the warmest one yet. “you’re welcome, jungkook.”
he steps through the door, into the warm kitchen with its smell of garlic and sesame oil, and he doesn’t look back.
but he thinks about you.
the whole way to the car.
the whole way to the hotel.
the whole rest of the day.
and when he lies in bed that night, staring at the white ceiling, listening to the ocean breathe—
he’s already thinking about tomorrow morning.
a/n: i am deeply sorry for such a LONG delay. at first it was me being sick but then i was literally procastinating so much and this chapter was legit just in my drafts 😭😭 anyways, i hope you guys enjoy!
SORRYYYY for wait everyone 😭😭 i’ve been slacking off for the past few days BUT sots chapter two will be posted in a few! thank you sm for bearing with my procrastinating ass 🤓
happiest 13th anniversary to my home, my forever seven. i love you sm :( 💜

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i’m so so so sorry guys for not updating anything for so long. i’ve been sick from past 3 days, stomachache and nausea too. i promise to update as soon as i get better.
i love your graphics so much! could you do a tutorial?
awww thank you soooo much!! i put in a lot of time and brainstorming for my graphics so this means so much to me 🥹🫶
abt the tutorial, idk how to do that tbh 😭 i just use canva (sometimes photoshop but only for filters). i think canva itself is pretty easy to navigate and use.
for the colours i search over pinterest or go to any colour palette website. then i search for png icons (from pinterest again) and remove their bg from an online website to use them on my projects + i use elements (shapes and frames) to add details. as for fonts, here are a few i have starred:
hope this helps! you can always dm me if you want 🥰🫶
Hello love, how are you? I was just curious about your series Salt on the Shoreline because I’m genuinely hooked 😭 I LOVE the vibes and haven’t read something this nice in such a long time. Just wondering when part 2 might come out — absolutely no pressure, only curiosity 🤍
*Kisses*
hiiee babyy, i’m good! i hope you’re too 🫶
so abt my series, the thing is… i’m just halfway through the second chapter 😭 i do have the ideas, but currently i’ve got a lot on my plate
i’m filling admission forms for colleges, getting documents and what not + pair it up with my lazy ass, it’s just not working out 💔
but now that i see so many people looking forward to the series and other stories from me, i’m gonna finish the parts ASAP (although i can’t guarantee any date, but it’ll be out soon!!) thank you so much for loving sots 🥹🫶
*kisses for you 💋*
TRIPLE FUCKIN KILL BABYYYYY ‼️‼️
y’all don’t understand how important this was for all of us omg 😭 i’m so glad we could give the tannies all three awards and make them proud! congratulations to ONLY those who voted (i’m slaty like that bruh).
OH GODTAN NO ONE’S COMING CLOSE TO YOU.
i got TWO fanfic requests 😭😭 y’all actually trust me with your ideas i’m gonna combust, like genuinely thank you for trusting me enough to think i can turn your ideas into full fics.
i do read all the asks, even if i reply late sometimes 💔 i’m currently working on those requests along with sots (salt on the shoreline), so please be patient with me aaaa.
i’m really excited for you guys to read everything when it’s done! 🤍

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some writers here are genuinely so fucking mean it’s pathetic how they have this main character syndrome and think they’re better than others cause they have a big account, like sit tf down.
Fresh pink lemonade. Aha so refreshing retro mix idk. Looks coooooooool baby
yayayayay thank you soo much!! hehe :D