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@mochaquokka
This was my comment šš
I wish I wouldāve said something more positive but I canāt believe I was acknowledged omg

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Legendary - Chapter 1
stray kids 4.9k words female reader insert stray kids ensemble SFW
š¤Ā warnings: canon-typical pokemon violence, worldbuilding, my motives are transparent and my favoritism is clear š¤
šµSeries Masterlist
connect with me!Ā /Ā masterlist
As you dodge the second beer spilled at your feet tonight, step out of the reach of the man next to you wildly waving his gym banner and shouting over the din of the crowd, as you shield your eyes and try to track the movements of your client's dizzy and Poisoned Raichu in the ring below, you can't help but think that this is exactly what you've been trying to convince your mother for the better part of the last decade.
This isn't for kids anymore.
When you were a kid yourself, that's how it seemed. Pokemon were just for children, interesting until the children grew up and the Pokemon passed on or went too wild to keep at home, and they were abandoned for more practical things.
Back then, all the other trainers you knew were children.
Everyone knew the stories. Decades past, centuries ago. Back then, millions of people in the center of thriving society lived and worked alongside Pokemon. But that wasn't reality anymore. Long before your time, by financial or political or social means, for whatever reason that was lost to time, training fell out of fashion, and the world that was shaped by it changed.
Pokemon gyms became obsolete, as visitors dwindled. Traveling trainers could no longer support themselves that way, and they turned to more stable work to make ends meet. Infrastructure closed, Pokemon Centers went out of business, and Pokemon themselves were relegated back to zoos, pet shops, or the wild.
Cities closed in. People rarely left them. Nobody bothered to go out and catch or, God forbid, put in the hours to tame and train Pokemon. And soon, even the methods and tools became hard to find. You couldn't even count how many times your grandfather had told you wistfully about the days when you could buy Pokeballs in the local supermarket, when every child in town would visit Pokemon professors to receive their ceremonial first Pokemon and begin on their journey.
Tales. Relics. Things of the past.
Until they weren't.
You still remember the first tame Pokemon you ever met. You were twelve, and a new student joined your school class, fresh in from another town. She had raised more than a few eyebrows just by virtue of being from the outside - transplants were rare enough, let alone pretty, headstrong ones with thick country accents.
The rest of your class were wary of her, but you were curious. Curious about her, and even more curious, in that overly-fixated childhood way, about the little bag she kept slung over her shoulder at all times, close to her chest.
So you sat with her at lunch that first day.
And the day after that, and the day after that, and every day until she became your best friend beyond all doubt, and you learned almost everything about her. Almost. Her favorite color, her dream job as a Pokemon Trainer (something you didn't even understand at that time), and how she and her mother left her dad behind to come to your town and start over (something you understood even less, until you grew up).
Everything except what was inside that little beaded bag, always right over her heart.
One day, the teasing that she endured from your classmates spilled over to include even the people who should know better, and your shared homeroom teacher snapped at her for her accented pronunciation as she asked a question, first thing in the morning.
She ran from the room in tears, and you followed.
You found her in the girls' bathroom, deserted except for the two of you as classes had already started. She stood in the corner stall, door ajar, her fingers inside her bag and her face stony under the drying tear tracks.
"Are you okay?" you'd gasped, out of breath from the sprint, coming into the stall after her.
"D'you really wanna know what's in here?" she asked you quietly.
"What?"
"In my bag. Do you wanna know?"
Of course you did. You wondered every day. The other kids had theories - drugs, her own baby teeth, live bugs, or something even grosser - but you just wanted to know.
You never knew why that day was the day to share. It should have worried you more, looking back. But of course you wanted to know.
"Yeah," you'd said. "Yes."
She peeled her fingers out of the bag, and there it was.
Red and white, spherical and perfect, almost glowing.
A Pokeball.
"Where did you get that?" you asked, incredulous, but she didn't answer.
Instead, she pressed the little release button in the center of the Pokeball, keeping her unwavering gaze on you. The tiniest bit of worry tinged her face, as if she was hoping you wouldnāt be too scared. Wouldnāt run from her. Wouldnāt leave.
The Pokeball opened, and the flash of light that came out had you covering your eyes and pressing yourself to the stall door.
When you looked again, there was a giant bird in the bathroom.
Brown, stately, and long-necked, nearly as big as you were, it simply regarded you with one orange eye as it cocked its head and leaned in to nip at your friend's outstretched hand.
"This is Fearow," she had said.
And you were hooked.
"Oh, too bad, folks! Raichu is down for the count!"
The announcer's booming voice brings you back to the match at hand, and all you can see as you refocus on the mess in the ring is the limp form of Ryujin's Raichu being zapped back into its Pokeball.
Fuck. Another paycheck for you to heal her stupidly over-powered and under-experienced rat, sure, but you hate seeing the Pokemon after battles like this. Especially after facing a fully-grown Arbok with Acid Spray...it's not gonna be pretty.
Pokemon used to be just for kids. Not anymore.
Once you'd found out your childhood friend's big secret, you learned about the revival.
People, mostly kids at the time, were training Pokemon again. In the country, and in towns smaller than your own, with more direct access to wild forests and the coastal plains and the winding rivers that spanned the dangerous and mostly untraversed space between metropolises, they would catch wild Pokemon. And in barns and bedrooms and back sheds, they would train them, like people had done in their grandparents' time and before.
Your friend did it. You started to do it, too. Once the other kids at school found out, there was an explosion of interest, and they all snuck out to find Pidgeys and Rattatas to take home and keep for their own. You and your friend became the talk of the town, the two original trainers with all the dirt to spill.
And as you grew up, in your town and in the rest of the world that you saw online and on TV, Pokemon training came back.
It was underground, at first, like so many things are. Whispers about matches on the soccer field after school, scorched turf when the police showed up to calls of a bunch of teenagers out past dark. Online offers for speedy and discreet deliveries of eggs and supplies, the occasional reported sighting of a Ninetales or an Alakazam that the local authorities called nonsense.
Soon, like so many things, the underground became the mainstream, and when you turned sixteen, your own mother bought you your first free-and-clear legal Pokemon.
She thought it would be a cute gift, part of a fad that so many young people were into, something that you would hand off or set free after the craze ended and society returned to seeing Pokemon as pests or wild animals.
But those young people grew up, and the determination to train and raise and battle Pokemon remained. Society changed again, with the rising generation clawing back the bond between human and Pokemon with a vengeance.
Your friend moved away from your small town after high school, swearing that she was going to travel the world like people used to, and become the world's greatest Pokemon trainer.
You haven't seen her since.
And now you're here in the stands of the biggest, shiniest, most brand-new Pokemon stadium in huge and bustling Azalea City, thinking about what treatment course is going to work best to clear all that poison from that poor Raichu.
"Somin and Arbok are our winners, folks, nice and easy!" calls the announcer.
The crowd roars around you, but you don't have time to join in. You start fighting your way down the few rows between your reserved seat and the trainers' box at the edge of the ring where Ryujin and her team have been waiting. You're gonna need to triage now, during the break between rounds.
When you get there, Ryujin is looking at her Pokeballs helplessly.
"I only have five more."
"You'll be fine," you assure her, taking the proffered Pokeball, "Who's up next?"
"They have one more guy on their team. Seph? Sephy? Something like that," Ryujin says.
"J.Seph," you guess, with a glance at the schedule.
You don't make it your business to keep track of the big training teams in the city, mostly because there are too many to remember, but you've met these guys before. Not personally, or anything. But their banner is familiar, and the last trainer with his close-cropped hair and severe resting expression has been in a few matches that youāve worked.
"That one," she agrees.
"What Pokemon do you have left?"
Ryujin points down her row of Pokeballs. "Pikachu. Starmie. Seadra. Pinser. And Blastoise."
"Okayā¦seems like J.Seph starts with two Koffings and a Weezing like some kind of hack."
She seems near tears when she says, "But I don't know-"
You punch her shoulder, annoyed. "Weak! To! Psychic! Type! Take Starmie first and get your ass out there! Now!"
When did they start letting novices into major battles?
As she selects her three starters for this next round, you take the Raichu in its Pokeball, and you beat a hasty retreat out the stadium door into the parking garage. You get the feeling that this Pokemon is going to need you sooner rather than later.
A half-lit corner of a parking structure isn't an ideal hospital setup, but it'll do for now. You double-check to make sure no one is around to get mauled by an injured and scared Electric rat, and you let out the Raichu.
It's unconscious.
You sigh.
You swing your backpack off your shoulder, and you get to work. Ryujin is gonna have to pay you double for this.
Lots of the kid trainers you knew back at home grew up to be great professional trainers. They learned all the stats, all the moves, the strengths and weaknesses, and they set out to battle their way across the continent.
You learned all of those things too, but as you got to know more Pokemon, both as species and as individual animals that friends brought you in tatters after impromptu battles, it became clear what path you were meant to take.
You didn't want to battle. You wanted to help.
So you became a Pokemon healer.
There's nothing wrong with battling, of course. People love it, and the Pokemon seem to love it twice as much. It's mostly just an exercise, a hobby and a way to let loose. By and large it's harmless, especially when there are people like you to make sure that everyone gets healed up safely afterwards.
Azalea City is just the most recent stop you've made. Traveling, you've found, is a much more lucrative way to live, as a healer. A lot of places don't have full-time Pokemon Centers yet, and trainers are willing to pay a pretty penny to get someone professional to look after their Pokemon while they work the local circuit.
Ryujin is your most recent customer, her parents paying your lucrative tab (which you admittedly did boost by twenty-five percent when you met the girl and realized that she doesn't know the first thing about battling) and keeping you cushy enough to stick around this city for a while.
You finish up the Raichu in record time. A quick Antidote and it's back on its feet, looking almost sheepish as you zap it back into the ball.
Another wave of deafening screams and cheers from inside the stadium let you know that the battle is well underway, and you return to the floor just in time to see Ryujin's Starmie finish off one of those Koffing with what looks like Psybeam. Damn. It makes you wonder who trained and evolved that Starmie, because it damn well wasn't the hapless trainer employing you.
That other trainer, J.Seph, seems appalled. You smirk to yourself. Bet he wasn't expecting that.
"Oh, a nice rebound for Ryujin and Starmie!" the announcer booms, "That has her record at one loss, two wins, which means she advances to tomorrow's bracket!"
There's an answering roar from the crowd, and Ryujin turns and waves, victorious.
But as you watch her, one part pride and two parts exasperation, you notice someone watching you, in turn.
It's a man, with short white-blonde hair and muscles on display in a loose tank top. He's lingering on the sidelines near the other battling team's box, and his eyes are narrowed and dangerous as he stares at you carefully. He looks like he knows something, and you don't really wanna stick around and find out what.
When Ryujin reaches you, it's all you can do to clap her on the back and offer her a hurried smile. "Good job. Have your dad wire me, okay?"
"You're not staying?" she says, sounding disappointed, "But Chaeryeong has another round and-"
"No, I really gotta - I should go," you say, attention still elsewhere.
The man is still watching you, but now he's grabbed one of the girls on his team, the one who gave Raichu that nasty beating, and he's talking to her sidelong.
"Okay. I'll see you tomorrow, though, right? My bracket should be after lunch."
"I'll be there," you promise.
You don't really want to turn your back on the other trainer team, but you have to, just to get out the door as fast as possible. Maybe if you hurry, and keep your head down, you won't have to find out why you've suddenly become so interesting to these strangers.
Just the stadium doors, a long hall, and then the nondescript little back doors that empty into the outside parking complex behind the building. You just need to make it that far. You walk, not trusting yourself to run, not trusting that it won't look more suspicious if you do run-
But just as you near the doors to the outside, as you reach out to push the handle and escape, a hiss and a lashing of purple right in your ear. You flinch.
Arbok, the same one from earlier.
It's curled in front of the doors, now, blocking your path, head bobbing and tongue flicking like itās ready to unleash an attack at any time. And behind you, footsteps.
"Oh, baby, we can't let you go that easy."
You steal a glance away from the Arbok, and there he is. That man. And with him is Somin, his teammate, the Arbok's trainer.
"What do you want?" you ask.
"Just a chat," he says.
You turn fully away from the Pokemon, certain now that the bigger danger is in front of you. "Why don't I believe that?"
"I'm a trustworthy guy," he says.
āDonāt really believe that, either.ā
He crosses his arms across that broad chest. āRude, much?ā
"Get to the point, Matthew," Somin says.
"What's the point?" you ask.
Somin smiles, venomous like her Pokemon. "We think you're interesting."
"Why?"
"You're a healer. Those are pretty damn rare," she says, simply.
"But more than that, I think you're really the brains here, huh?" the man, Matthew, says with a wayward grin. "You're the one who fucked up Seph's team with that Starmie."
"You're crazy. It's Ryujin's Pokemon," you say.
"And you're the one who told her to use it," he counters.
āIām supposed to pay attention. I work for her,ā you tell him.
āYou havenāt always,ā says Matthew. āWeāve taken out that stupid little rookie team enough times to know.ā
Somin sneers. āHer Starmie knows Psybeam. I didnāt even know it knew Psybeam.ā
āYou came outta nowhere and started teaching those little fuckers how to win,ā Matthew says.
You shrug. āIām new in town.ā
Suddenly, Somin's mouth falls open. "Wait. I know you."
"No, you definitely-"
"Yes, I do!" she insists, "I've heard of you. You're that little healer from Cherry Town."
You can feel yourself start to sweat at that. How could she know?
Somin laughs, "Oh, just wait until I tell-"
"Getting to the point," Matthew interrupts, "We want you to come with us. 'Specially if you're...the healer from Cherry Town, or whatever."
"Oh," you say, "Oh, I really - no, you don't. I have to get going, I have clients here, I have-"
Somin rolls her eyes, and snaps her fingers sharply. The Arbok sidles up tighter behind you. You swear you can feel its tongue flicking against your side, but you don't dare look.
"You have a Poison Pokemon behind you and about a dozen more waiting for you here, if you don't decide to play along," she tells you.
You're dumbfounded. "Are you threatening me?"
"I don't get my hands dirty," says Somin, waving long manicured fingers at you, "But that's what Pokemon are for."
"Pokemon don't...Pokemon don't attack people," you say.
"Sure they do," Matthew says.
"Not - not trained ones. Trained Pokemon don't hurt people on purpose," you insist.
"Now, what fun is that?" Somin simpers. "When you have a big strong Pokemon that will do whatever you say, why not ask it to keep people in line sometimes, hm?"
"That's...horrible," you say, voice quivering. "That's wrong."
"Now, really, who decides what's right or wrong?" Somin says.
You're overly aware of the Arbok behind you, nearly touching you, apparently all too willing to hurt you.
"Are you coming or not?" Matthew asks. "I'm getting bored of this."
Your hand goes to the pocket of your backpack. You always keep your own Pokemon with you, just in case you get into a sticky situation and need a little extra help, but this...
This seems like far too much for them.
Unluckily for you, Somin notices.
"D'you have your own Pokemon?" she asks, still in that saccharine voice. "Oh, how cute. Let's see, then."
You pop one of your Pokeballs into your hand. It's not like you want to obey her and start a Pokemon battle here, like this, but you don't know that you have any choice. This is your best option, and it's not going to be enough.
"Come on, baby, let's see," Matthew echoes.
The Pokeball grows to full size in your hand, but you still don't release it.
"Shy," Matthew says. "That's okay. I'll go first."
You've seen that their team favors Poison types, but that apparently isn't their only specialty, because Matthew throws his own Pokeball to reveal a Golem. It's the biggest one you've ever seen, spiked rocks down its back and a gleam in its eyes that matches its trainer's.
A rock type, too. You're fucked.
"Any time now," Somin says.
There's no way out, with the Golem in front of you and the Arbok behind. This is a service exit, anyway, so it's not like anyone is necessarily going to be coming through here after you. Help is probably not on the way.
So you call out your Pokemon, praying to whatever power will listen that it'll be okay when this is over.
Somin takes one look at it when the light clears, and laughs. "A Kakuna?"
"Well this ain't even gonna be fun," Matthew laments.
"Oh well," Somin says, "Itāll be simple. We'll take you and the Pokemon. Maybe the little bug will be useful when it evolves."
"Kakuna's not ready to evolve," you defend, your mouth moving before your brain, "It's not-"
"Hey, Arbok?" Somin interrupts.
The Pokemon hisses behind you.
Somin looks at you, and smiles sweetly. "Acid Spray."
No.
You fumble with your Pokeballs, desperate to get Kakuna back inside before it gets hurt, but apparently Somin wasn't ordering an attack on your Pokemon.
Because the Acid Spray hits you.
It doesn't hurt until it does, and then you crumple to the ground, a sound that you didn't know you could make ripped from your throat at the pain. Your Pokeballs spill from the open pocket of your backpack, and as one smashes into the ground, it hits right on the release, letting another of your Pokemon free. You can barely think enough to wonder which one.
You writhe.
You scream.
And then blessed silence.
-----
You know you're not dead when you come to, with a big leaf in your mouth.
With a heave and a gasp, you sit up, batting the leaf away and curling up into a ball as well as you can, adrenaline-shaky, sitting with your arms wrapped around your knees.
You have no idea how you survived that. Your clothes are smoking and acrid green. Your backpack, flung away from you as you fell, has a big scorch across one side.
And your Oddish peers up at you.
"Oh, fuck me, Oddish!" you gasp.
The little blue Pokemon doesn't answer, of course. She just looks at you, far too innocent for the scene around her.
Because they're all still here, the two trainers and their Pokemon. They're just out cold. Your Kakuna sits among them, unbothered.
"Did you - Sleep Powder?" you ask, as if she's going to tell you.
You stand up on quivering legs and gather your fallen Pokeballs, returning poor Kakuna to safety before you repack your bag.
"We have to haul ass before they wake up," you say. "How long was I out?"
Oddish vocalizes, a tiny mumble, and you nod as if it made sense.
"I could kiss you, Oddish, really. Fuck. Let's go."
You scoop up the tiny Pokemon, and you run.
The answer to how long you'd been out comes as you make your way to the parking lot. Because it's empty.
Dark has long since fallen, and as you peer up at the digital display across the top of the stadium that lists the time and date and events, you see that it's already past midnight. The tournament has been over for hours. No one came down that hallway to find you. No one came looking for the other trainers, either, apparently.
But now you have nowhere to go.
You'd had the forethought to come out the same door where you'd parked your scooter earlier, and you go over to the stupid little machine and unlock it from its post. You wish you'd also thought to have it charged back up that morning, because you have a little more than half a battery charge left. It's definitely not enough to reach the next big city.
Still, you climb on, and you kick off for the highway with Oddish secure in your front basket.
You should have put her away in her Pokeball already, but she...saved you. You almost don't feel safe without her.
The streets are mostly deserted, save the few drunken locals on their crawls between bars and pubs, and the smattering of cars alongside you on the highway that cuts through this side of the city. The masses of tourists who had come in for the tournament are all gone for the night, back to their hotels or to their neighboring suburbs.
It makes for a peaceful drive, except for the pounding of your heart, as you leave Azalea City behind and disappear into the night.
Peaceful, for about an hour.
Maybe more, maybe less.
Just about that long, though, because you'd estimated your scooter's charge to last an hour and a half, and you're edging towards E.
You've reached a little hamlet in the foothills, a few dozen buildings that you can see and a smattering of lights toward the far edge that you suspect to be either a stadium or - even more remarkable - a Pokemon gym. It seems like a decent place to stop for the night, even if you have to camp out, and you're weighing your options when you hear an awful gasping sound somewhere in the silence.
The sound alone would be unsettling, but it's worse because you recognize it.
It's a Koffing.
"Damn it," you swear softly.
J.Seph. It has to be. There's no way that you would help Ryujin beat him in a match, and then knock out two of his teammates before they could kidnap you, and then run into a random Koffing in the middle of nowhere.
There's a rumbling, then, like an engine more powerful than yours. Headlights in the distance.
You turn off at the first exit. Looks like this town is it, for tonight. You just need to get your scooter off and hidden, so you can wait them out.
But your poor little scooter doesn't move all that quickly, and the Koffing is getting closer. You can smell it now, that noxious methane smell that you could never stand for long enough to keep and train one of them yourself.
And then overhead, there's a shadow.
You look up, and see a giant bird.
A Fearow.
It scares you more than it should. It's a common Pokemon. They roost in flocks of hundreds, in some places. But you swear you can see one beady orange eye looking down at you, and it's familiar. Too familiar.
Your scooter hits a bump, and you're so distracted by the Pokemon that you gasp, and swerve. It's a sharp turn, too sharp to recover, and you go down, right into the dip in the side of the road. Oddish goes flying with a cry, and you take a hard spill into the dirt.
"Shit!"
Faster than you probably should, considering potential old and new injuries, you claw your way back onto your feet. The scooter's front tire is damaged beyond what you can repair right now, and you fight back a howl at the injustice of it. You kill the engine, left with no other choice, and stuff the key into your pocket.
"Oddish!" you whisper furiously.
There's a prod at your shoe, and there she is, smudged with dirt but fine, and you scoop her up again and take off running, instead.
That other engine is still looming behind you, faint headlights and the sound, eerie and distant, of a voice.
"Come on, little healer," a man's voice is crooning, so loud that he must be using a megaphone or something. "Is it really so bad to just come with us?"
Like you'd seen from the road, this little village has winding streets of darkened houses, and off at the end of a far lonely road, a big building lit up like a parade. That's where you're headed, the only place that looks alive this time of night. Someone in there can help you.
"You're making us put in an awful lot of work," the man says, reproachful.
The headlights swing onto the road behind you, painting your shadow in stark relief as you run down the bumpy paved road. There are only a few blocks left between you and that building, so close that you can see the splattered paint job, the brightly-colored signs on the outside.
You hazard a glance over your shoulder, and there's a small glossy black sedan following you, roaring with a motor that was most certainly an expensive upgrade. Your guess was right - there's J.Seph the Pokemon trainer at the wheel, and a woman in the passenger's seat.
"As if a third-rate gym is going to be any use," J.Seph tsks.
The car speeds up, but you reach the door before he reaches you, and you pound on the metal plating desperately. There's a moment of awful echoing clangs, the unanswered sound of your knocks, and the tires of that car squeal to a stop just behind you.
But just before it's too late, the door swings open.
There's a figure there. A boy.
And behind him, the hulking form of a Pokemon, crackling with fire up and down its arched back.
"What the hell do we have here?" he asks.
"I need - they're gonna-" you sputter.
He looks you over, dirty and bruised and probably bleeding as you are. Expression severe and full of understanding, he looks past you out the door, and you're not sure what he sees, but he grins. It's a dangerous grin.
"Aw," he says. "New challengers."
The boy looks back at his Pokemon, and as if it understands, it barks, a thunderous sound that echoes around the gym. It's an Arcanine, you realize. You've never seen one up close. It's enormous. It must be nearly seven feet tall, you'd guess, based on how close its head reaches to the top of the bay doors.
Dazed, you gaze farther into the gym.
It's a menagerie of Pokemon. Just from a glance, you can spot at least a half dozen people and twice as many Pokemon, a frenzy of movement and distraction. There's a Gyarados in a deep pool by the far wall, two Machamps locked in a fistfight in the center, a Gengar hanging from the metal rafters.
What is this place?
The boy's grin slips into a look of the deepest, most sarcastic pity. The Arcanine's fire fans out even more, and the shiver that creeps down your spine is more akin to excitement than fear.
"Lame."
just letting all stays know that charlie puth is a zionist and you should maybe reconsider your support for this new song with stray kids
cr.
Tommy Hilfiger supports Isr*el. Please do not interact with the SKZ Campaign!

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No Zionists on my page thank you
I am not arguing with a picrew ethnonationalist. From The River To The Sea.
HEY SO IN CASE I HAVENT BEEN FUCKING CLEAR.
DO NOT FEED MY FIC, OR ANYONE ELSEāS FICS, INTO FUCKING AI CHAT BOTS.
YOU ARE STEALING. FLAT OUT. YOU ARE STEALING PEOPLEāS HARD WORK AND FEEDING TO A BOT TO REPRODUCE MANUFACTURED SHIT.
I DONT GIVE A FUCK HOW MUCH YOU LOVE A PARTICULAR CHARACTER ITERATION. IF YOU MAKE THESE, OR EVEN INTERACT WITH STOLEN FIC AI BOTS, YOU CAN FUCK OFF. FUCK AI, FUCK THE THIEVES WHO MAKE THIS SHIT.
HOW MANY TIMES DO WE HAVE TO SAY THIS SHIT BEFORE IT CLICKS.
just learned that a mutual of mine is pro israel (theyāre now blocked) so i wanted to take the time to say that if you believe whatās happening in palestine is not a genocide than you are not welcome here. unfollow me block me whatever i donāt want you interacting with me at all
HEY SO IN CASE I HAVENT BEEN FUCKING CLEAR.
DO NOT FEED MY FIC, OR ANYONE ELSEāS FICS, INTO FUCKING AI CHAT BOTS.
YOU ARE STEALING. FLAT OUT. YOU ARE STEALING PEOPLEāS HARD WORK AND FEEDING TO A BOT TO REPRODUCE MANUFACTURED SHIT.
I DONT GIVE A FUCK HOW MUCH YOU LOVE A PARTICULAR CHARACTER ITERATION. IF YOU MAKE THESE, OR EVEN INTERACT WITH STOLEN FIC AI BOTS, YOU CAN FUCK OFF. FUCK AI, FUCK THE THIEVES WHO MAKE THIS SHIT.
HOW MANY TIMES DO WE HAVE TO SAY THIS SHIT BEFORE IT CLICKS.
Reblog to tell zionists to fuck off your blog. If you say you aren't a zionist but still get offended then uhhh sorry hun but this is exactly for you <3

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consort vi | minho
pairing:Ā lee minho x reader
word count:Ā 17.1k
genre:Ā historical au, arranged marriage au, enemies-to-lovers
warnings:Ā period-typical sexism, a boatload of family issues, a rapidly increasing amount of sexual tension, like reader is starting to go the tiniest bit feral about it
series masterlist | one | two | three | four | five
summary:
Minho paused, the lingering traces of cheer disappearing before your eyes. The shift in his mood was almost tangible, and it felt as if you had made some sort of misstep in a dance, thrown yourself and your partner out of rhythm.
His gaze flickered upwards, so very briefly, to look at you, before moving downwards. Down to your notes, down to where the space between your bodies was at its narrowest, barely a few fingersā width between your skirts and his thigh. He took a breath.
An uneasy sleep must have reclaimed you in the night, because you awakened to soft morning light streaming through the windows ā and chambers entirely devoid of Minho.
You sat up, unsteady, the beginnings of a headache already forming. Your thoughts were scattered, muffled as if wrapped in cotton, barely intelligible under the dull throbbing.
An empty bedchamber. Did that disappoint you? The sheets beside you seemed undisturbed, indicating that he hadnāt joined you at any point in the night, hadnāt risen from the couch heād been sleeping on last night when āĀ
Embarrassment ā hot, ugly flashes of it ā flared within you, so violent that you physically shuddered in an effort to suppress it. You wouldnāt be so careless again, risking something so mortifying and so vulnerable as beingĀ caughtĀ in a position like that.
A tiny voice in your mind uttered thanks for Minhoās order to keep servants out of his chambers without specific request. You didnāt want to imagine having to untangle these awful thoughts in front of an audience waiting to dress you for the morning.Ā
The more you dwelled on the situation, the more you could feel something in your chestĀ twist. Shame, perhaps. You couldnāt help but picture last night again and again, your awful thoughts painting over your memories, imagining Minhoās eyes open instead of closed, imagining the curl of his lip as he watched you in disdain, maybe even in disgustā
No.
You felt your expression harden, breath expelling from you in one sharp burst. You hadnāt realised how much anger you could summon at merely anĀ imaginedĀ Minho. Already, even at just the thought of him, you found yourself itching to rebuke him, to challenge the contempt you had imagined yourself.
There was a danger that you could spend the whole day in this bed, imagining all the ways in which you could argue with Minho.
So, instead, you forced yourself out of bed, determined to focus on the rest of your day and leave last nightĀ firmlyĀ in the past.
It was strange to realise just howĀ quietĀ these chambers were. They were so far removed from the bustling of the palaceās lower floors that even now, as scores of nobles and servants alike rose from their beds and began their days, you could almost mistake the palace for being empty.
The spring morning air was no longer a shock of cold, but pleasantly mild. Perhaps you should make use of the weather today, you thought. It would be good to get some fresh air.
And then, you came to a sudden halt ā as a flash ofĀ orangeĀ caught your attention out of the corner of your eye.
You turned your head, startled, to find a tabby cat perched on the low table of Minhoās chambers, staring you down.
This was not the pampered sort of housecat you had seen in the houses of your motherās friends during your youth. While this cat seemed well-fed, there were tell-tale signs of the fights it must have gotten into. There was a pea-sized chunk missing from its left ear, and a faint scar on its little orange snout.
Perhaps this was a kitchen mouser? But how had it wandered so far into the palace, all the way into Minhoās chambers? How had it gotten past those heavy wooden doors, not to mention the guards stationed nearby?
You dared to take a step towards it ā to no response. The cat continued to stare. Its tail twitched from one side to the other, slowly, almost lazily.
It didnāt move as you approached, instead continuing to eye you with an expression soĀ distinctlyĀ unimpressed for such a tiny face.
Of course, theĀ secondĀ you lifted your hand towards it, it jumped away from you in the blink of an eye. There was no panic to its retreat, just a vague sense of disdain as it withdrew from your reach.
For one brief second, you were bizarrely reminded of Minho.
To your own surprise, laughter bubbled up in your chest, slipping out between your lips. It lifted a weight off of your chest, leaving you feeling just a little lighter as you observed the way the cat shot you what could only be described as the feline equivalent of a scowl before it padded over to the bed and disappeared beneath it.
Deciding against following the cat and disturbing its hiding place, you chose to head for the door and request breakfast be served outside.
It seemed only right that the lingering worries of the previous nightās events would disappear in the light of a warm spring day.
There was something so calming about the palace grounds in the morning. At your request, a table and chair had been set up at the base of a hill, just by the long winding steps back up to the palace itself, in perfect position for you to gaze out at the huge expanses of land in front of you.
Morning dew budded on the still blades of grass. Clouds slowly drifted across the sky above, the sun hiding behind them, only reappearing atĀ justĀ the moment the air grew too chilly. In the distance, a light layer of fog lingered amongst the trees of the royal forest, retreating further and further with each moment.
There was nothing but peace andĀ quiet.
You breathed deeply, savouring the morning air, as you reached for the last slice of bread. Beside it, in a tiny porcelain dish, sat a little pat of creamy butter. You scraped the last of it up with your knife to carefully spread onto the bread.
Your plans for the day were the same as always. Studying, mostly. You were eager to crack open the most recent council records you could find, already making plans to note down the stances of each member, the factions that might have formed, anything that might be useful.
How soon would Minho talk to his father? How much time did you have to prepare? You should have pressed for more details.
You could ask him at dinner this evening, you realised. It was still such a strange idea, to think that you and Minho could talk to each other soā¦often, now.
Because you shared a bedchamber, a voice in your mind ā one that sounded suspiciously like your mother ā reminded you. You should be doing so much more than justĀ talking.
A mouthful of bread lodged itself in your throat mid-swallow, making you cough and splutter as you reached for your tea.
Not that you were particularly eager for that, of course. Last night had been a brief moment of insanity, a sudden break from rational thought, brought on by returning to the bed that held so many strong memories. It had infected your dreams, and even seeped into your sleep-addled actions in the dead of night, but now you had recovered.
Now, once again, you were just as uninterested as he was. Moving to his chambers was good enough to mend your image as a successful, stable pairing. It didnāt matterĀ whatĀ happened behind closed doors, because you had gotten what you wanted.
But before you could make an effort to divert your thoughts back towards the day ahead, the peace of the morning was broken.
You watched as a group of palace guards marched into sight, descending the palace steps ā and you stilled when you saw the person they were accompanying.
Her Majesty, the Queen.
You sat up a little straighter, as your eyes met across the wide-open space of the palace lawns. She always seemed so perfectly put together, her long dark hair twisted and braided neatly into a bun, the soft and sweeping fabrics of her dress somehow spotless even when brushing against the ground.
In her fine features, there was so much of Felix. You almost wanted to look away.
Instead, you followed protocol to the letter, rising to your feet and bowing your head at her arrival. āYour Majesty.ā
āI didnāt expect to see you here,ā she replied, and there was a genuine soft note of surprise to her voice that reinforced her words. āIf youāre finished with your meal, would you like to accompany me across the grounds?ā
You blinked, lifting your head in shock. Youād barely spoken to this woman in weeks. Youād half-expected her to ignore you. Youād half-given up on the affection the two of you had grown for each other during your childhood.
āY-yes,ā you replied, and cleared your throat. āYes, Iād love to.ā
She gave you a smile ā one so deeplyĀ familiarĀ that it made your heart ache for just a second ā and inclined her head, silently offering you the place by her side.
You moved quickly, almost without thinking, barely retaining the grace expected for a lady of your position, as you tried to join her before she could change her mind.
Before the two of you could start walking, however, she first turned to glance at the guards behind her. With a firm, clear voice of a queen, she told them. āI trust Iām accompanied by guards possessing theĀ respectĀ of allowing two ladies some privacy while they talk. Am I not?ā
The nearest guardās eyes widened slightly in understanding, and he hurried to nod at her. āYes, Your Majesty. Of course.ā
āDelightful to hear. The usual twelve paces behind will suffice,ā she said, her voice so casual that the comment could almost be described as offhand, before she finally set off. You had to quicken your steps slightly to catch up with her.
And, sure enough, the guards waited until you were twelve paces ahead before they followed ā at the perfect distance to remain out of earshot.
This was the woman you remembered from your childhood. Always polite, always charming, and just a little cleverer than she seemed.
You fell into step beside her, searching for something to say to start the conversation. āI heard a delegation from the Lakelands are on their way.ā
āYes,ā she said, nodding with a warm smile. āMost of the delegates only came to their positionĀ afterĀ I left, but I know a handful. Among them is a prince I last saw as a young boy. I look forward to seeing the man heās now grown to be.ā
āThat will be nice,ā you remarked, looking for something else to say. Something clever, or funny, or charming. It used to be so much easier to talk to her. āDo you miss the Lakelands?ā
āOccasionally. Especially in the winter. Iāve never developed a taste for the cold that sets in here,ā she said, but there was no trace of sadness in her voice. Nothing wistful. āBut what about you? Are you keeping well?ā
āYes,ā you replied ā but it felt like a half-truth at best. āAs well as can be.ā
āIām sure youāve had so many pleasantries asked about your marriage,ā she said. āThatās usually all people can think to talk about, with women like us.ā
Her words struck something in you, hooking something strange and raw and tugging it out into the open.
āThatās usually the topic of conversation, yes.ā
Her lips twitched, the briefest flicker of a smile. āThen weāll speak about something else. Are you still keeping to your studies?ā
Ā āYes!ā you exclaimed, unable to keep your excitement from rushing out. āPractically every day. Mostly, Iāve been focusing on my histories and geography, but I like to brush up on my languages every so often.ā
āYou did always love studying your histories,ā the Queen nodded, and for the first time in your conversation, you picked up on the slightest hint of sadness in her tone.
It sparked a vaguely familiar feeling. An old desire to cheer her, the feeling so ingrained that it felt like slipping on an old favourite coat.
āMy new tutor has helped quite splendidly,ā you said, with a smile just a touch forced. āI hadnāt realised how much more I could learn with someone following me in my interests, instead of just telling me what IĀ shouldĀ be interested in.āĀ
The Queen smiled back at you, and hers seemed entirely genuine. āThere seems so much to catch up on. Iāve been meaning to talk to you sooner.ā
Her words, as light and carefree as she had offered them, managed to hit something deep within you. Your expression faltered, as you felt the words dig into you, like claws gripping your flesh, piercing you.
You blurted out your only thought. āWhy didnāt you?ā
The question came out in a rush, an outpouring of emotion that you had tried so hard to keep dammed. You watched the way she paused, caught off-guard by your sudden harsh words.
You swallowed, trying frantically to recover some sense of manners. āI mean, Iā¦itās just Iāve beenā¦Iāve been so alone sinceā¦ā
āā¦I know.ā
Her gaze grew so soft, as she watched you sadly. There were moments, occasionally, when her eyes were soĀ expressive, just as Felixās were.
For a moment, you pictured what it must have been like for her, all those years ago. Newly married to a stranger, not just alone but alone in an entirely different kingdom. A kingdom that her father and her fatherās father and his father before that had been at war with. A kingdom with a people who mistrusted her, who still mourned for her husbandās first wife, the beloved wife, the wife she must constantly be compared to in public and in private.
You wondered how long it took her to learn to hide those expressive eyes. You wondered if it saddened her to look upon her son, and see those same bright eyes shining back.
āI missed you,ā you confessed. āI miss how it used to be.ā
āSo do I, sweetling,ā she murmured. There were only two people in this world the Queen called āsweetlingā. One was standing in front of her. The other was half a kingdom away, quiet and aching by the coast. āBut thatās precisely why Iāve stayed away.ā
āWhat?ā You asked, sharp in your confusion. āWhat are you talking about?ā
āThere are whispers at court,ā she began, before pausing. You detected the faintest of eye-rolls as she continued. āThere always are. Right now, they are centred on you.ā
āMe?ā You repeated. āI havenāt heard anything.ā
āOh, the subjects never do,ā she said, her tone sharpening just a touch. You knew sheād had her fair share of experience with court rumours. āItās no fun for them if the rumour gets dragged into daylight and exposed for the nonsense that it is. Better to whisper in secret, and give their empty brains something to spin from nothing.ā
āWhat are they saying?ā You asked. Youād half-expected something like this to happen, but youād always thought your first reaction would be worry, or fear ā and yet, right now, the news filled you with nothing butĀ anger.
āTheyāre harmless, for now. Idle gossip. But if any fuel is added to them, they could prove dangerousāā
āWhat are theyĀ saying?ā You repeated, cutting her off. You needed to hear it. You already had an inkling, but you needed it in words.
She sighed. āā¦You and Felix. Iām afraid my son will always be a subject for scandal in your future.ā
Felix.
You turned away, eyes searching for the horizon, for something to fix on in the distance.
You hated that this didnāt surprise you. YouĀ hatedĀ that your paranoia, your constant insecurity about how you were perceived, about how your issues with Minho were perceived, that constant nagging feeling of your marriage being forced under a magnifying glass, was partially justified.
āAnything in particular?ā You finally managed to ask when your voice returned to you.
āThe stories change every week. Nothing has truly taken hold, whichĀ isĀ a good thing,ā the queen reassured you. āBut until you and Minhoā¦well, when your marriage seemed on shakier ground, I thought it was wise to keep my distance. I thought it would make things easier for you.ā
Easier.
Right.
A lump was forming in your throat. You did your best to swallow it down.
āI thought you were angry at me,ā you admitted. āFor marrying Minho, instead of your son.ā
āYouĀ didĀ marry my son.ā
There was such strong feeling in her voice that it forced your gaze back to her. The queenās jaw was set, her mouth curved downwards slightly. Years and years of learned authority, of power however scant it might be, radiated through her as she stood firm.
āMinho is my son. In every way that counts.ā
You stared, silent, as the faintest hint of guilt began to warm your cheeks.
The queen continued to walk, her gaze softening as she fell back into old memories. āHe was soĀ tinyĀ when I entered the palace. I helped him take his first steps. I helped him learn his letters, I selected his tutors and I watched him grow.ā
She slowed her steps, as you reached the edge of the forest that surrounded the palace. The two of you would have to turn back soon, but you took a moment to observe the quiet of the trees, the way that sunlight filtered through the newly-grown leaves.
āI might not be called his mother, but he is my son,ā she finished, quietly. āAnd Iām very proud of him.ā
She blinked rapidly a few times, clearing her throat, and turned to flash you the briefest of knowing smiles. āAs mule-headed as he can be sometimes.ā
You couldnāt help but laugh ā albeit quietly, softly, as the emotion of the conversation still kept its grip on you.Ā
There was a pull in you ā that familiar one, the one that urged you to please others, the one that pushed you to say exactly the perfect thing ā to praise Minho to the Queen. To call him a good man. You knew she would want to hear it, she would want to hear how happy you had turned out in spite of it all, that by pure serendipity, your marriage to Minho was just as splendid and happy as the marriage with Felix you had been awaiting your whole life.
But the words stuck in your throat. You practically choked on them. Not just because they were untrue.
Because for a second ā for such a brief, unthinking second ā you hadĀ wantedĀ them to be true, just as badly as she did.
Something cold began to take hold of you. It started in your gut, unfurling his long icy fingers, grabbing and twisting and squeezing as it slowly dragged the rest of you into its grip.
Betrayal. In that moment, you felt ā youĀ knewĀ ā you had betrayed Felix.
Did it show on your face? The queen was watching you now, and you couldnāt imagine the expression you must have had.
You swallowed, trying with all you had to shove that awful pain away.
You needed to say something.Ā Anything.
āMinhoā¦heās alwaysā¦he never seems to care when people believe the worst in him,ā you said, the words stumbling out of you, as if your mind was two steps behind your mouth. āItās almost like heĀ prefersĀ it. I donāt understand it.ā
The queen took in your words. After one long pause, in which her eyes studied you so intensely that it felt they were about to burn through you, she turned to look up at the palace on the hill. Even from this distance, it seemed to loom over you, waiting so impatiently for you to return.
āThis placeā¦ā she trailed off. Her jaw tightened - and in that one instant, as her eyes flashed, you saw the teenage girl that had first stepped foot into this court, so far from home and facing such a nest of vipers. āIt pulls something out of the people here. A way to protect themselves. My husband already had his ingrained when I came here. I felt it take hold within myself. I watched it form in Minho, that desire to push people away. And youā¦ā she turned to you, briefly, and you blinked at the twist of amusement in her lips. āWhat opposites you and he are. How perfectly you mirror.ā
You stared. Her words were vague, crypticā¦and yet, you couldnāt help feel as if you had been insulted. You opened your mouth to protest, but the queen had already turned away back towards the palace.
āYou canāt live in a place like this without growing a few thorns,ā the queen sighed. āLike the roses in my gardens, I suppose. The ones without thorns are the first to be eaten.ā
There wasĀ somethingĀ layered in her words, something sad, something resigned.
You realised then that of all the members of the royal family she had just mentioned, there was one obvious name left unsaid.
āLet us return,ā she said, finally. āBefore those guards grow too curious and drift too close.ā
Not only did Minho keep his promise of returning for dinner again that evening, he arrived even earlier than you.
You almost stopped at the door, thrown by the sight of him at the table, as perfectly poised as he always was, flicking through a sheaf of papers by the side of his plate. He looked up at your arrival, eyes meeting yours, and something caught in your chest.
You hadnāt realised how strange it would be to see him in person after last night, howā¦affecting.
Clearing your throat, you gave him a tight smile and made your way to your seat across from him ā unfortunately for you, as it gave you a clear unobstructed view of Minho at a time when you very much wished for anything but that.
You reached for the decanter in front of you, eager to pour yourself a drink to deal with this building lump in your throat. To your surprise, you found it to be filled with water, not wine.
āHow was your day?ā you asked, finally speaking, hoping to sound calm and collected.
Minho eyed you carefully, as if youād offered some sort of complex riddle, and not a feeble attempt at small-talk. āā¦Slow. Until the Lakelander delegation arrives, thereās nothing urgent to take care of. Iāve been looking over budget proposals for the harvest season.ā
The harvest season was months away. In fact, you were almost certain that the fields had only just been sown at all. That truly did seem like a slow day. āI see.ā
You knew you should try to continue the conversation, to ask him more about his work. Instead, you let your eyes drop to the plate of food in front of you, words dying on your tongue as you tried and failed to push down the memories of last night.
It felt soā¦deeplyĀ indecent, to sit across from Minho, and pretend you hadnāt touched yourself just a few feet away from him. And it was only madeĀ moreĀ indecent by the fact that he didnātĀ know.
It was all you could think about when you looked at him. You knew a secret, and he didnāt.
For dinner, the kitchens had prepared some sort of fishĀ beautifully. Perfectly cooked, tender and soft and practically melting in your mouth.
You barely tasted it. You just kept eating, preoccupied, eyes trained on your plate. You were certain that if you looked up at Minho for too long, you would give yourself away.
In fact, the longer you sat there, the more uncertain you became.
Were you acting unnaturally? Were you too quiet, too reluctant to make conversation?
But, then again, whatĀ exactlyĀ did acting ānaturallyā in Minhoās presence entail? You might have finally found yourselves on better terms, butā¦
āSomething on your mind?ā
Your eyes jerked up to meet his, caught off-guard.
How long had Minho been observing you? It looked like he hadnāt even touched his food yet, one hand resting on top of his papers, his other arm propped up on the table, hand curled under his chin as he looked at you.
You made an effort to swallow down the food in your mouth, despite how dry your throat had become, and reached for your water with all the nonchalance you could muster. āNot particularly. I was justā¦ā
Think of something, think ofĀ anything.
āWondering about those budget proposals. The harvest season must be months away. Was there really nothing else more pressing?ā
Minho was quiet for a second, just long enough to spark the tiniest flicker of nerves in the pit of your gut, before he let out a sigh. āMy father likes to drip-feed me responsibilities, one at a time. If thereĀ isĀ anything else more urgent, I wonāt know until my next meeting with him. And that wonāt be for several days.ā
There was an edge of frustration in his voice, something long-suffering, as if this were the topic of multiple arguments in the past, arguments that never seemed to resolve themselves in his favour.
He reached for his water, taking a sip, before his gaze returned to you. āThat will also be when I talk to him about you joining the council.ā
For a brief moment, all thoughts about the previous night and your embarrassing secret disappeared from your mind entirely. You leaned forward, intrigued. āWhat do you think his response will be?ā
Minho tilted his head slightly in thought ā and it filled you with surprise at the fact that youĀ recognisedĀ this subtle shift in Minhoās body language, that at some point you had come to learn how to read him, even slightly ā and replied. āā¦I wonāt mince wordsāā
āDo you ever?ā You retorted, almost without thinking.
Minhoās lips twitched, fighting a smile, but continued without acknowledging your mildest of jabs. āIt will be a hard sell. My father is not a revolutionary. A large part of his popularity has come from his upholding of tradition. But heās been dragging his feet on filling this council seat for months now, and for good reason. Itās a political minefield, and you are the best compromise. I hope heāll see that.ā
Minho was right. Your appointment to the council, however perfect a resolution to the infighting between your father and the blue-blooded nobility, would not be an easy sell at all. āI hope so too.ā
The rest of your dinner passed in relative quiet, but the little calm you managed to gain in that time soon evaporated when you exited the dining room ā and found yourself confronted yet again with the question of sleeping arrangements.
Minhoās bed was now the site ofĀ twoĀ of your most scandalous transgressions. Both of which involved Minho, both of which rendered you almost completely unable to look him in the eye whenever you thought of them.
In contrast to your internal strife, however, Minho seemed perfectly at ease.
He transported his sheaf of papers from the dining table to the couch, seating himself comfortably and setting them down on the low table in front of him.
Actually, perhaps āstackā of papers might be more accurate a description than āsheafā. Just how much work went into preparing these budget proposals? Had he done so little in his office all day to bring so much work to do in his chambers? Or was this a far more demanding responsibility than you had assumed?
All evidence seemed to point to the latter, as Minho worked silently throughout the evening, brow furrowed just a hint in concentration.Ā He didnāt look up once, not when you rose to start preparing for bed, not when you returned in your nightclothes, not even when you wished him good night. He returned the words with a quiet murmur, clearly too enwrapped with whatever he was working on.
He was so engrossed, he didnāt see the way you hesitated by the bed.
Should you invite him over? He might have had work to do, but this would be yetĀ anotherĀ night that you went to bed without him. You were sharing a bedchamber now, surely the two of you shouldā¦
At least once, you shouldā¦
You tried to decide on the words of the invitation, of how to phrase it. A suggestion that he should bring his papers to bed, if he had so much work still to do? That was a reasonable question, wasnāt it? If he refused, you could press him on it, demand to know why it was beginning to seem as if he wereĀ stillĀ avoiding youā¦
āYes?ā
You blinked, emerging from your thoughts, to find Minho had glanced over to you. You likely made a strange sight, hovering by the bed, still yet to get under its covers.
The words were on the tip of your tongue, carefully crafted, ready to ask.
And then, traitorously, you thought of last night again.
Minho had been on the other side of the room, able to sleep through it, but if heād beenĀ nextĀ to youā¦Ā
You pictured it. You pictured jostling him awake in your sleep, the embarrassing sounds you might make. What you mightĀ do.
An awful,Ā awfulĀ wave of embarrassment crashed through you becauseĀ what if you tried to grab at him in your sleep?
You swallowed, turning away without even attempting to reply to Minho, and slipped under the bedcovers without another word.
In the morning, you woke to find that Minho had already risen long before you. The bedchamber was empty, and again the sheets by your side were untouched.
When the third night elapsed in just the same way, and the fourth, it became clear that this couldnāt be mere coincidence. Minho didnāt justĀ happenĀ to be so enthralled in his work that he fell asleep on the couch four nights in a row.
He was refusing to sleep beside you. You might have forced his hand in letting you share his chambers, but apparently he would not let that extend to his actualĀ bed.
You were half-convinced he still held that early contempt for you, that he was still stubbornly maintaining that unconquerable distance between the two of you out of disdain.
And yet, he still sat with you at every dinner. He talked with you about his day, about your studies, telling stories about a particular odious noble that had done something to irk him, or listening to you talk passionately about a particular historical figure or event that had come up in your research. Heād even teased you once, when you confessed that you didnāt have the patience to read through the handful of art history books that Seungmin had added to your list.
The two of you were very slowly developing some odd sense ofā¦well, perhaps friendship was still too strong a choice of word, but at least anĀ understandingĀ around each other that definitely hadnāt been present in the first few weeks of your marriage.
Nowhere else had this become so apparent than on your fifth evening in Minhoās bedchambers.
For a change of scenery, you had decided to spend the afternoon catching up on your research in these chambers, taking lunch there with your books, enjoying the little pocket of quiet in which Minhoās bedchambers were nestled within the palace.
To your surprise, and delight, the cat was back.
Initially, it was just as sullen as you remembered. It eyed you from across the room, perched on the low table yet again, sat as tall and imposing as it could make itself.
That was, until you called for a plate of kippers to be brought to you.
Despite its surly appearance, the cat barely needed convincing before it wandered over to you and the plate of fish, taking each offered kipper from your hand without hesitation. After three fish, it allowed you the softest of pets between its ears. After six, it drew closer, jumping from the table to the seat next to you, a little more relaxed as it took yet another fish from your hand.
To your delight, once the plate was empty, the cat did not abandon you immediately. In fact, it curled up near you ā not quite close enough to be within easy reach, but enough that you could lean over and give it slow and gentle strokes as you continued to read. It even began to purr, just a little, whenever you scratched just beneath the base of its ears.
The more attention you gave the cat, the more you realised just how cared for it seemed to be. How comfortable it was with being touched, how well-fed it was, how soft its fur was. Even in a palace, this was not at all typical for a kitchen mouser.
āSomeone spoils you, donāt they?ā You murmured, giving the cat more strokes. āI can see why, youāreĀ lovely. So cute.ā
The cat, while not acknowledging your words, leaned its head up into your hand a little, chasing after those little scratches.
You were close to abandoning your studies entirely for the day, ready to devote your full attention to this adorable little creature, when the bedchamber doors swung open.
The cat jolted a little, jumping from its place on the couch ā but to your relief, did not run out of the room. Instead, it lingered by the low table, ready to disappear under it, and stared down the sudden arrival.
Minho, mouth still parted slightly in whatever greeting heād been about to give you, was silent as his gaze flickered between you and the orange cat eyeing him from the floor.
āWe have a visitor,ā you told Minho, solemnly, gesturing to the cat.
Minho nodded, briefly, still looking between you and the cat. āYes. Yes, she seems to like it in here.ā
āāSheā?ā You repeated, raising an eyebrow.
Minhoās expression immediately smoothed into the perfect neutral, refusing to give even the slightest bit of emotion away. āā¦I assume.ā
āMm. Well, she seems to be a sweetheart.ā
āDoes she?ā Minho repeated, glancing at the cat again, who seemed to have now relaxed. She began to approach Minhoās feet, sniffing familiarly at his boots.
āI may have had to bribe her with a plate of kippers,ā you admitted, increasingly amused by the way the cat began to weave her way between Minhoās legs, but managed not to let it show too obviously in your face. āShe seemsĀ veryĀ well-fed, for a kitchen mouser.ā
Minho made a non-committal sound in response, not meeting your eyes. āā¦Yes, well, I imagine people must toss her dinner scraps here and there.ā
āI suppose so. But who would be so soft-hearted in this palace, to feed a kitchen cat from their own plate?ā You wondered aloud.
Minhoās face was a mask at this point, unmoving, perfectly calculated. He made his way to one of his armchairs, attempting to ignore the way the cat followed him happily, jumping up and perching herself on the arm of his chair.
You continued. āIn fact, I wonder what a mouser would be doing here, so far away from the kitchens. Thatās quite a distance for a cat to wander unprompted.ā
āI suppose so,ā Minho stated, perfectly neutral, even as the cat moved from the arm of the chair to seat herself in his lap.
You continued to stare at him, wordless, eyebrow raised ā and finally, he relented.
āI might have given her some scraps, once or twice,ā he admitted, even as the cat nuzzled into his hand from where she rested nearby. āI suppose she canāt help it if she isnāt good at mousing, and goes hungry.ā
āTrue,ā you allowed, thoroughly unconvinced by his faƧade. āAnd do you know if this failed mouser has a name?ā
āā¦I think Iāve heard someone call her Soonie,ā Minho said, andĀ finallyĀ let his hand drift over to Soonie and begin to give her gentle scratching behind her ears. She purred loudly enough that you could hear her from where you sat, utterly content to receive affection from someone she was clearlyĀ veryĀ familiar with. āSomewhere. At some point.ā
āHow odd. Not many kitchen mousers have names.ā
āMm,ā Minho hummed, noncommittal, but when his eyes dropped down to glance at Soonie, he couldnāt hide the slightest of smiles.
You took in the sight, this cold and prickly prince melting as he pet the scruffy little tabby cat. Minho was still in his usual daily prince attire, all high-necked and formal. His legs were clad in those familiar riding leathers that you never let yourself look at for too long, so you moved your attention instead to his jacket. Instead of a royal scarlet, this one was a dark blue, the fabric glinting in the candlelight from the clusters of beading embroidered within it. It suited him, you forced yourself to admit, far more than red did.
In fact, you tried to remember the last time Minho had worn the colour red, but nothing recent sprang to mind. Perhapsā¦
āIām meeting with my father tomorrow,ā Minho told you, and immediately your attention was captured.
Tomorrow.
The word sparked something in your gut ā not quite dread, or alarm, but something akin to that. Urgency.
You swallowed back your excitement, remaining as calm and neutral as you could. āAnd youāll talk to him about the council?ā
āThatās the plan,ā Minho replied, enigmatic.
You paused, and a quiet fell over the room. It wasnāt as if Minho was expecting you to reply ā in fact, as Soonie settled completely in his lap, chin dropping to rest on his knee, he was looking down and away from you.
But something still justā¦tugged at you. Just a little bit.
Your eyes darted down to the book in your hands, and as nonchalantly as you could, you spoke. āā¦Thank you.ā
You saw Minho move out of the corner of your eye, head raising to look at you.
āā¦Iām just doing what Iām supposed to,ā Minho said, his voice detached and light. āOne of my duties is to recommend the most capable candidate I can find. Donāt think of it as a favour.ā
His words rendered you speechless, heart beginning to pound in your ears.
Most capable.
You were the daughter of a rich, powerful man. You had been given many compliments throughout your lifetime.
None of them had ever caused the same kind of lump to form in your throat as you felt now. None had caused this kind of strange heat to bloom behind your eyes, this way your heart swelled.
Most capable.
And just like that, you were spurred into action. If you had only one night left to prepare yourself and construct the perfect defence to prove why you deserved to be on the council, you would take full advantage of it.
You began combing through the papers you had with you, reading voraciously, consuming every piece of information available to you. You did this throughout dinner, chewing absently as you turned pages and scrawled notes. You were so devoted to your studies, you made your way through two full cups of tea before realising, upon looking up, that it was Minho who poured it for you each time.
Your eyes met, just as he held the teapot over your cup to pour a third time, and your gaze held long enough to note the flicker of amusement in his before he looked away.
When dinner was over, you retreated back to the couch with more reading to finish. Minho did the same, taking up the same spot he did every evening, that familiar pile of paperwork set in front of him. There was a strangely companionable silence as the two of you worked into the night.
You almost forgot he was there, despite the sounds of his writing and the crisp sounds of paper-shuffling, slipping into a quiet rhythm of reading and re-reading until words began to blur together.
As the candles burned low, and the hours grew later and later, you felt your concentration start to slip. Your eyes would close, just for a few moments, and the will to open them again slowly began to elude you. Exhaustion crept up on you, an old friend, and you found yourself repeating paragraphs, reading over the same sentence again and again and unable to take in its meaning.
Your eyes closed again, and you vaguely remembered telling yourself it would be just for a moment.
Sleep found you instead.
Blissful, calm. Warmth from the fire. Papers slipping from your hand, but never landing on the floor. You felt safe, wrapped in the quiet.
Something brushed your arm. Soft. Fur. Soonie?
Your eyes opened, bleary, only to find grey instead of orange. The wrongness of it jolted you, your hand darting out to grab at something pale and moving.
Skin.
A hand. Soft.
Except for a callus on the edge of a knuckle on the middle finger. You recognised it, for you had your own on the very same finger. It was where the pen sat whenever you wrote.
Your gaze wandered, still sleep-fogged, and there was no surprise when you saw the hand attached to a Minho.
Your grip on him relaxed, fingers slipping from his, and you barely mumbled a half-formed thought. āYour hand matches mine.ā
Your eyes closed again, just as Minho stilled, and you drifted back to sleep.
You woke up, neck aching, still upright on the couch. Your books and papers lay scattered around you, from where youād been too tired to put them away properly. Morning light streamed in from the windows, and despite the ashes in the fireplace indicating that it had long since burned out, you found yourself unusually warm.
Ah. You had fallen asleep in the previous dayās clothes ā and with very familiar furs draped over you.
There was a brief flash of a memory, of Minhoās hand pulling the furs over you. You dimly recalled saying something, perhaps, but the details escaped you. You pushed the furs off of you, your movements unusually gentle as you handled the blanket, as if it commandeered an unthinking respect from you. Sentiment, maybe.
As always, Minho had risen before you and left your chambers, but today this observation filled you with equal parts excitement and nerves.
Were they discussing it right at this moment? Did their meetings take place in the mornings? Or in the afternoons? Would other items be brought up first?
It was maddening, to have so many questions and no way to pursue the answers.
With a nightās worth of sweat sticking to your skin, you made up a bath for yourself, even heating the water entirely on your own. The only oils in Minhoās bathroom were lavender, suited for relaxation in the evenings rather than energising in the mornings, but you made do.Ā
The water was a touch cooler than how you usually liked it, but you didnāt have the patience to heat more water. Instead, you stripped and climbed into the bath with as much grace as you could muster and set about cleaning yourself.
This wasnāt the first time you had bathed entirely without servants ā in fact, since you had moved into Minhoās chambers, the only times a servant had been permitted to enter was to bring them dinner each evening.
You found yourself becomingā¦amenable to that arrangement. It gave Minhoās chambers a sense of quiet, a private solace, that could not be found anywhere else in the palace.
Perhaps that was why it was so jarring, almost invading, when you heard knocking from afar, the sound of a door swinging open, and a womanās voice ringing out hesitantly. āYour Highness?ā
You startled, upsetting the water, letting some of it slosh over the side of the bath and onto the floor. āYes? Is something wrong?ā
Footsteps approached ā timid, rushed ā and the voice drew closer. āYouāve been summoned, Your Highness. By the king.ā
Your stomach dropped, your breath cut short.
āHeā¦said it was urgent, Your Highness, but I can let them know youāre still bathingāā
āNo,ā you blurted out, quickly, sharply. You got out of the bath hastily, dripping water all over the floor. āHelp me change into something quickly, and Iāll go now.āĀ
There was only one reason you would be summoned by the king on this particular day, and from the sounds of it, it wasnāt to congratulate you on your new position on the council.
You needed to stand your ground, to explain your reasoning in the face of his refusal. And if there was any chance of persuading him to grant you the position, to ignore the concerns of your genderā¦
Well, telling the king that he needed to wait to discuss urgent business until the princess finished drying her hair wasĀ notĀ the kind of image you wanted to present to him.
And so, you were laced into a dress with impressive dexterity by your maid, the luscious fabric increasingly dampened from your dripping hair. Was it an uncomfortable sensation? Absolutely, but it was difficult to dwell on it when all you could think of was why you were be summoned, what could have happened between the king and Minho to warrant such an urgent demand for your presence.
Discussions must not have gone as smoothly as Minho intended ā but notĀ soĀ disastrously as to be dismissed out of hand.
As you slipped on a pair of shoes, your maid gave one last attempt to persuade you to wait. āYour Highness, are you sureā¦ā
Ā You turned, smiling politely at her. āYes. Iām sure it will dry soon enough. Thank you for all your help.ā
She returned your smile, somewhat nervously, eyes darting to the dishevelled aspects of your appearance, but seemed a little more assured. Marginally. Barely.
Before she could protest again, you marched straight for the door.
Of course, as was so often the case with grand gestures, there were certain factors you didnāt think through entirely.
The palace halls wereĀ unforgivinglyĀ cold, especially as your hair continued to slowly drip water down your neck, soaking into the back of your gown. It made every step uncomfortable, as every little drop of water that landed on the nape of your neck was another reprimanding shock of chill.
You made sure to stand tall, proud.
If your head was bowed, if your shoulders were slouched and your steps more resembling a scurry than a stride, you would have made a pitiable sight. It would look as if you were caught off-guard, as if you were panicked, incapable, scared.
But with your chin held high, with your shoulders back and a confidence steeling you, this was intentional. This was a statement. An image fit for songs, for stories, a princess devoted to her role and to the orders of her king.
As you drew closer to the kingās chambers, navigating through the ever-narrowing hallways, you felt your chest begin to tighten. You realised you might genuinely hate it here, this deep within the very depths of the palace, its cold little stone heart. A king might be well-defended here, the walls witness to nearly a thousand years of history, but you couldnāt shake the feeling that you were descending into a tomb.
And then, you heard the voices.
The last time you had been summoned by the king, you remembered catching a snippet of conversation at the very doorstep of his chambers. That was how close you had to get before Minhoās and the kingās voices could be heard through the thick wooden door.
But now? You heard them in the corridor - because they were loud.
Not quite a screaming match between father and son, butā
āātalk of duty, but whatās your solution, Father? Burying your head in the sand, that tried and tested trick?ā
You almost stumbled, shock rendering you clumsy, because did Minho just say that to the king?
āCaution, boy, is not ignorance. How do you mistake the two? Youāre well-versed in the latter.ā
The two guards in front of you exchanged a glance. You noted that they did not share your horror. In fact, you could almost mistake it asā¦resigned.
āWas it age that turned your belly yellow? Is that my fate too? Cowardice?ā
āI will not be lectured by a son still wet-around-the-ears on age.ā
Not just resigned.
Long-suffering.
Theyād heard this all before. Frequently, by the looks of things.
And then, as if that knowledge had unlocked something, had lifted the veil over your eyes, you could hear it. The hint of familiarity, the ease with which the two hurled insults at each other.
This was not the first time Minho and his father had quarrelled. In fact, youād wager this wasnāt the first time this week.
The argument paused when the guards knocked at the door, announcing your arrival. As the doors swung open, you caught sight of Minho and his father ā not a hair out of place, not even a flush of anger to their cheeks ā glaring at each other with familial exasperation.
Minho looked away first, turning to look at you ā and paused.
His Majesty followed his gaze, and you watched those regal eyes blink in surprise at your appearance.
You must have made a sight, your gown on its way to being ruined, your hair still slick and dishevelled, trying hard not to shiver in the cold of these chambers.
āYour Majesty,ā you greeted, not even the slightest bit affected, and bowed low. You straightened up before offering Minhoās greeting. āHusband.ā
āMy dear,ā the king spoke, just the slightest bit alarmed. āIf my summons caught you at an inopportune time, I assure you itās perfectly reasonable to delay answering until youāre presentable. Donāt concern yourself so thoroughly.ā
You smiled brightly. The picture of obedience, of devotion. āI hated the thought of keeping you both waiting. I imagine I know what this conversation is about.ā
The kingās gaze flickered between you and Minho at this, a frown soon beginning to form. Still, there was a subtle note of surprise in his voice when he spoke again. āI see. The two of you are conspirators in thisā¦ā
āProposal?ā you supplied, gently.
āAttack?ā Minho offered, bitterly.
āā¦Folly,ā the king said, finally, turning back to you.
You dipped your head, keeping your voice soft and sweet. āIām sorry to hear that you see it that way. I believe it to be a fair compromise, to ease the tensions at court.ā
āYes, Minho said the same thing,ā the king sighed, dismissive. āBoth of you are blind to the same issue. Any conflicts that your position on the councilĀ mightĀ resolve are outnumbered by the discord it wouldĀ certainlyĀ cause.ā
Minho sighed, eyes darting up to the ceiling. You wondered how many times he had heard that argument this morning. āAnd yet, a good king prioritises the future of his kingdom above all else, is that not so?ā
The king shot Minho a look. It didnāt take much to realise that those were likely the kingās own words that had come out of Minhoās mouth, not his own.
āSonāā
āTalkĀ to her,ā Minho interrupted, gesturing to you in pure exasperation. āListenĀ to her. Ask her anything. Sheās more than qualified to be on the council.ā
After a momentās hesitation, in which it looked as if the king was debating whether to indulge his oldest son or nip this matter in the bud entirely, he turned to you.
āā¦Very well,ā he said, giving in. You watched as he made his way to the splendid-looking chair behind a monstrosity of a writing desk, sinking into it. For a brief moment, you thought you caught something of a grimace in his expression.
Exhaustion? Perhaps. It must have been tiring work, running a kingdom. Let alone arguing with Minho too. You had first-hand knowledge of howĀ thatĀ could drain your energy.Ā Ā
The kingās eyes became fixed on you, almost pinning you to the floor, as he spoke. āSuppose you were on the council, and a message was received, warning of a great army about to invade. What would you advise?ā
Your brow furrowed as you considered the question. You needed to remain calm, measured, and use every scrap of information you had studied.
āWhich border is the army advancing toward?ā you asked, thoughtful.
The kingās face remained unchanged. āThe one we share with the Lakelands.ā
Interesting. No cardinal direction given ā you assumed that must have been on purpose ā but still plenty of information to form an answer. The Lakelands were in the north, and under treaty with your kingdom.
āI would advise you to send missives to Lords Kim and Geum in the north with instructions to muster their forces and man our security garrisons along the border. I would alsoāā
āWhich garrisons?ā the king interrupted, gently but firmly.
āYalrock and Banna. Yalrock is the largest garrison on the northern border, Banna is strategically advantageous because of its position on the river plains. Youād be forcing the army to march along the mountain passes instead.ā
The kingās expression remained cold, neutral ā and you realised, in that moment, exactly where Minho might have learned the same habit. āContinue.ā
āI would also advise you to send word to our allies in the hills and across the Sunrise Sea, informing them that the Lakelands have broken our treaty pact.ā
āBroken the pact?ā the king repeated. āI never said the Lakelanders were the ones invading.ā
āThe treaty pact also forbids the harbouring of any forces with aggressive intent towards treaty members. In this scenario, the Lakelanders would be doing just this ā unless they themselves were invaded by this army too, which I doubt if we received no summons for aid or word from our ambassador there,ā you said. Was this too much detail? Were you rambling? You did your best to keep your words steady, unrushed. āTherefore, the treaty would be broken.ā
From out of the corner of your eye, you caught Minho watching you, a hint of a smile on his face.
The king, while perhaps a touch surprised at your answer, pressed on anyway with another question, changing the subject entirely.
āā¦Suppose Lord Sunās lands are failing to produce the amount of grain demanded of them. How would you advise me?ā
āI would be confused,ā you admitted, ābecause Lord Sunās lands produce fish, not grain.ā
āAnd why is that?ā
āBecause his lands are in the east, along the coast. The land there isnāt arable.ā
āWhy?ā
āThe weather is too hot in the summer, too dry. There isnāt enough freshwater for crop-growing.ā
The quickness of your answer was rewarded with the smallest ā almost unthinking ā of nods from the king. He paused once more, and spoke again. āSuppose I wanted toāā
āAnotherĀ question?ā Minho interjected, sighing, as he wandered across the room and took a seat by the window. He rested his head against his hand, elbow planted into the plush armrest of his chair.Ā
The king shot him a look, either for the interruption, or for the flippant tone Minho had used, or perhaps even for the way he was lounging in the presence of his king, but he made no move to reprimand him. Instead, he turned back to you. āSupposeĀ I wanted to offer a gift to the Lakelander delegation when they arrive next month to renew the treaty. A personal one, not a grand spectacle of an offering. What would you suggest?ā
You paused. This wasnāt a question that could be answered with any of your recent studies of war or economics or geography. This was a question of hospitality, knowledge you needed as a queen, not as a councillor.
It took a moment, longer than it took with the first two questions, but soon there was an answer in your mind. āWhen the last Lakelander delegation came to this country to sign the treaty, one of the gifts they gave Your Majesty were wild rose seeds. Wild roses that were native to the Lakelands, difficult to grow in this climate, meant to symbolise a new peace and the care needed to maintain it. Her Majesty, the queen, still grows these roses in her private gardens, does she not?ā
The answer to your question did not come from the king, but from Minho. āShe does.ā
āThen, I would suggest a bouquet of these roses. It would be symbolic of the care this kingdom has taken to nurture this new relationship with the Lakelands, a sign that we do not take their gifts for granted.ā
The king eyed you carefully for a moment, silent. āā¦You werenāt present at the first signing of the treaty, were you? Youāre too young for that.ā
āYouāre right, I wasnāt present, Your Majesty,ā you replied. āBut the queen graciously allowed me to play in her gardens when I was a child, and taught me the origins of those roses.ā
Not quite. The queen allowed youĀ and FelixĀ to play in those gardens. She told you the origins of the roses when Felix tried to pick some for you, and accidentally cut open his palm on the sharp thorns of their stems. You remembered him, tears in his eyes, sniffling as Her Majesty held the both of you close and warned him gently that these roses were wild, were Lakelanders just like her and a little like him, and because of that, they were fiercely protective.
You remembered sitting and watching the two of them exchange smiles, and silently wishing that you were a Lakelander too. You wanted to be protective. You wanted to be like the roses, like them.
āAny more questions, Father?ā Minho asked, jolting you from your memories. āOr has she proven our point?Ā Impressively?ā
And again, just as they had last night, Minhoās words stirred something within you. A kind of warmth, filling your chest.
The king regarded the both of you, silently, before sighing. āYour education isā¦indeed, as Minho says, impressive.ā
Your heart soared, mind so entirely filled with elation that you almost missed his next words.
āButĀ Iām afraid that still does not change the obvious. I did not secure decades of unprecedented peace under my reign by breaking with tradition. A woman sitting on the council isĀ notĀ tradition.ā
You swallowed, heart sinking just as sharply as it had risen just moments ago.
āā¦There is precedent,ā you pointed out, softly. āI found records of Princess Jiyoon on the royal council, less than two centuries ago.ā
āThat is true,ā the king conceded, before tilting his head slightly. After a moment of consideration, he pushed himself out of his chair with the same half-grimace glimpsed earlier, and crossed the room towards a bookcase stuffed with leather-bound volumes. His hands hovered over them, fingertips brushing their spines, until he found the one he was searching for and pulled it from its stack with ease.
He made his way back to the two of you, opening the volume and thumbing through the pages as he walked, before offering the volume to you.
You took it, uncertainly, and looked down at what exactly he had handed to you.
Council records ā but unlike the ones you had studied with Seungmin, you were shocked at just how much more detail this version contained. You supposed that made sense. The records in the library were likely censored, or edited for public consumption. These were private, a kingās own personal records, passed down from ruler to heir most likely.
Jiyoonās name was there, listed amongst the other councillors, but these records included a strange symbol next to her name.
You frowned, and the king spoke again.
āI imagine you found no records of any contributions she made, correct? No votes cast, no motions brought to attention?ā
āā¦No,ā you admitted, reluctantly, looking up at him as dread began to curl in the pit of your stomach.
āThere is a reason for that. Jiyoon filled a particular role. If you scour through the legal treatise of the time āĀ dryĀ reading, all of it, but itĀ isĀ there ā youāll find it. Jiyoon was not granted the role of an adviser, but of anĀ observer. A silent one, there only to watch the council proceedings so that she could better educate her heirs in service of her husband.Ā ThatĀ is the precedent that Jiyoon set.ā
Silent. Heirs. Husband.
Of course.
OfĀ course. You should have known. That was what it always came down to. Centuries of royal women,Ā millenniaĀ of royal women, and it wasĀ always the same.
Silent. Heirs. Husband.
You should have known. You should have known not to get your hopes up.
āWhat are you saying?ā you heard Minho ask, dimly, as these thoughts repeated endlessly in your mind.
āThe observer is required to be silent. She cannot vote, she cannot dissent, she cannot speak even when called upon to do so in session. SheĀ observes.ā
Minho made a sound of disdain, maybe even disgust. āThen, whatās theĀ point? Why haveĀ thatĀ great of a mind on your council if she canāt even use it? What aĀ waste.ā
āPerhaps, but that is the precedent you argue for. If you seek a compromise, that would be it.ā
āAĀ compromise? Whatāā
āI would accept it,ā you interrupted, quietly. Your eyes were trained on the floor, voice barely above a murmur. Your brain still thundered with those three words, again and again. Silent. Heirs. Husband. āIf Your Majesty were so gracious as to offer this role, I would accept it.ā
You didnāt have to look at Minho to know the way his mouth was parted in surprise, astonished and outraged in equal measure. You could sense it in his tone when he spoke. āYou canāt be serious.ā
You raised your eyes to look at the king, purposefully avoiding Minhoās stare.
āI hope His Majesty knows that I donāt ask for this council seat out of personal ambition,ā you said, softly, lying through your teeth to your king. āYou said Jiyoon took the role as a duty to her husband and her children. If anyone objected to my position on the council, I would ask you say the same of me.ā
āā¦You would take the council seat in service of Minho,ā the king said, and evenĀ heĀ sounded sceptical. You werenāt sure what that said about your marriage, but it wasnāt exactly promising.
āAnd our future children. We both take that duty very seriously.ā
āDo you?ā the king questioned, sharply,Ā pointedly, but surprisingly it wasnāt you he was addressing ā it was Minho.
You might have tensed at such an insinuation, but Minho practicallyĀ bristled.
āDonāt,ā Minho warned his father, straightening up in his seat. No, more than warned, he practicallyĀ spatĀ out the word. āI thought weĀ agreed.ā
Agreed? Agreed what?
You glanced between Minho and his father, sensing a tension that remained unspoken as the two eyed each other, jaws both set.
You were clearly missingĀ somethingĀ vital to this exchange, some secret piece of information ā and, as always, the idea chafed at you.
And then, with a quiet and cold anger that you hadnāt heard in weeks, Minho told his father. āYou owe me this.ā
The kingās expression twisted. It was guilt, you realised. āMinhoāā
āYou owe meĀ something.ā
Another pause.
And then, finally, the king broke this staring contest with his son to look at you. āā¦The role requiresĀ completeĀ silence. If I decided to grant you the seat on these conditions, and you flout them immediately, I willĀ notĀ look kindly on it. Do you understand?ā
āI do,ā you replied, solemnly.
āā¦Very well,ā the king said, eventually. āIāll make the necessary arrangements.ā
You did it.
It was a hollow victory, yes, but a victory nonetheless.
You couldnāt quite muster happiness about it, or evenĀ gratitude, but there was a sense of achievement.
You nodded, quietly, and curtsied low before the king. āThank you, Your Majesty.ā
When you lifted your head again, you found the king glancing between your face and Minhoās before he spoke again.
āYouĀ doĀ have quite the mind,ā the king said, gaze still shifting between the two of you. āYou might not be able to speak in the council room butā¦well, you share bedchambers now. Whatever you might discuss in there is your own private business. Is it not?ā
Within days, news of your appointment to the council spread across the palace likeĀ wildfire.
You expected this, to some extent. Precedent or not, observer or not, this was still an undeniably shocking development. You knew there would be whispers about it, gossip passed around, growing and contorting with each telling and retelling.
All of this, and still you didĀ notĀ expect the conversation you happened upon one evening as you took a shortcut through one of the palace courtyards on your way back from a tutoring session with Seungmin.
The sun had just descended below the horizon, casting the square into shadow wherever the dim glow of torchlight did not quite reach. You caught snatches of voices as you walked, whenever you passed doors to parlours, to sitting rooms, to the dozens upon dozens of meeting places for the elite that resided within the court. Some of these doors were cracked open to enjoy the fresh air brought by the open-air courtyard on their doorstep, unaware of any passers-by.
And then, one particular comment caught your attention.
āPerhaps the poor girl is simplyĀ bored,ā a haughty voice said, with a hint of laughter. āThat council room might be a dreary place, but Iād wager itās a damn sight better than her bedchambers.ā
You froze, half within shadow, half without.
There was only one person that comment couldĀ possiblyĀ be referring to.
Immediately, you slipped behind one of the stone pillars lining the courtyard, heart pounding.
Finally, after all this talk of rumours, of whisperings at court behind your back, youĀ finallyĀ had the chance to listen for yourself.
āCareful, Park,ā another voice cautioned, although sounding more amused than concerned.
āA prince too scared to share a bed with his wife forĀ weeksĀ after the wedding,ā the first voice ā Park ā scoffed. āWhat, did he hope no one would notice?ā
A third voice chimed in, low and gleeful. āYou want to hear something good? My wife heard a maid talking the other day. They change the sheets of that marriage bed every day. And theyāre alwaysĀ pristine.ā
Your face heated, something approaching bile threatening to burn the back of your throat. There was something about hearing your privacy be soā¦violated, and said so casually. YourĀ bedsheets? They all talked about yourĀ bedsheets?
āYou know my theory,ā the third voice spoke again.Ā
āYourĀ wifeāsĀ theory,ā Park corrected, sounding dismissive.
āIt makes sense. Sheās saving herself for the other brother. Traded one for the other before, maybe sheās waiting to trade back when he comes home.ā
Felix.
Traded one for the other. Is that how they saw it? Is that how theyĀ allĀ saw it?
āHeās not coming back,ā Park scoffed. āNot for a long time. Not unless His Highness fancies looking down and wondering why all his children have the Lakelander look to them.ā
Your heart stopped. YouĀ feltĀ the blood in your veins freeze, matching theĀ iceĀ-cold anger settling into your bones.
āGods be good,Ā close the doorĀ before you say horseshit like that. Moron.ā
This was more than fury.
This wasĀ wrath.
You stepped out of the shadows,Ā justĀ at the right moment to lock eyes with Lord Park as he stood by the doors, his too-late hand stilled on the handle.
āGood evening, Lord Park,ā you said, voice so syrupy-sweet and cloying, and watched the blood drain from his face as he stared back at you in horror. You craned your neck to peek over his shoulder, catching a glimpse of the two other men with him. āOh, I see Lords Song and Ryu have joined you. How nice.ā
āY-Your Highness,ā Park stammered, and there was genuine fear in his eyes.
He knew what you had heard. He knew the words that had come out of his mouth, and howĀ closeĀ those words danced along the line ofĀ treason. It would take you only one conversation with Minho, or with the king, and his career would beĀ done. His family. His fortunes. Possibly even his life.
You smiled brightly at him. āI look forward to seeing you next week at the council. Iāve heard youāre quite the contrarian. Youāve voted to reject the last, what is it,Ā sevenĀ bills put forward by my husband?ā
Park didnāt answer. Perhaps it was more accurate to say ParkĀ couldnātĀ answer. You wondered what could possibly be going through his head at that moment. You wondered if he hadĀ everĀ felt this afraid in his entire pampered little life.
You tilted your head slightly, eyeing him. āPerhaps from next week, you might find yourself second-guessing a decision like that. Donāt you think so?ā
Parkās face, still pale, twisted into something approaching realisation. He seemed to grasp exactly what you were hinting at ā the threat that remained unspoken.
āā¦Y-yes, Your Highness,ā Park agreed, nodding erratically.
āAnd your companions? Perhaps theyāll have similar changes of heart?ā
From behind Park, his friends stammered their assent, just as rattled.
You beamed.
āPerfect. Have a nice night.ā
You attended your first council meeting the very next week, finally taking that last empty council seat that had remained vacant for so long.
Sixty-two members attended the session in total.
You felt sixty-one pairs of eyes on you throughout.
You recognised quite a few of the faces in this meeting. Lord Young, as delightful as ever, sat just a few seats removed from the royal family ā a position ofĀ greatĀ honour, especially for a man with neither blood nor marriage ties to the crown.
Lord Park had also made an appearance, and blanched the moment your eyes met his.
Good.
You paid the stares little notice, attention completely and utterly captivated by the debates that took place. Every idea proposed, every motion considered and accepted and denied, every opinion volleyed back and forth, you noted down.
You might have been silent, but you wroteĀ feverishly.Ā Pages and pages of scrawls, near indecipherable as you worked to keep pace with the spoken word of the other council members.
Minho was seated next to you. Of course he was ā he served as a visible explanation for your presence there at all. To be useful toĀ him, to educateĀ hisĀ heirs and betterĀ hisĀ legacy. In the eyes of everyone else, your seat on the council was essentially just an extension of Minhoās.
You werenāt sure what to expect of him during these council meetings. You knew just how seriously he took his position as heir, and his duty to the kingdom ā but you also remembered that carriage journey home from Lord Youngās orchards, the disdain he had for politicking, his derision in his voice when he talked ofĀ strings attached.
It turned out that in council meetings, Minho kept up the same perfect princely mask he always did in public. Never once raising his voice, never slipping into anger or mockery. Exemplary behaviour from the first second of the meeting to the last.
Except for one moment, when an old lord from the Tan family had loudly proclaimed an argument so poorly constructed, with parts soĀ moronicĀ that you made sure to underline his exact wording for its stupidity, that you heard the quietest of noises from Minho. When you glanced up at him, he was watching the debate with apparent rapt attention. If you werenāt sat so close to him, you would have missed theĀ slightestĀ way his jaw clenched, as if to fight a look of disdain as he watched Lord Tan blather on.
Minho proposed only one new bill ā investment in a new mill, to be built in one of the kingdomās slowly-dwindling rural villages, in the hopes of creating employment opportunities. You paused your notetaking to watch each council member cast their votes for or against the bill.
Most supported it. Some rejected it. Your eyes sought out Lord Park again, and you watched as he reluctantly raised his hand in favour of the bill, gaze nervously flickering towards you as he did so.
What an astonishing change of heart from the man. Who could have predicted?
Still, despite it all, the council meeting ended without incident. The issues tabled for the next meeting were fairly standard: a new maritime trade deal with a kingdom across the Sunrise Sea, preparations for next yearās census, the ongoing reports from the Lakelander delegation slowly making its way to the palace. You made note of it all, jotting down your own thoughts on each matter when you were able to, and kept the notes closely guarded on your person.
You made sure to take them straight to your bedchambers as soon as the meeting finished, intending to lock them away in your desk until dinner that evening, when you could discuss them with Minho.
To your surprise, instead of making his way back to his office to spend the rest of the working day, Minho followed you back to your shared chambers. You tried and failed not to focus on his footsteps, how they matched your pace precisely, echoing along the empty corridors.
The slightest sense of frustration sparked within you. If youĀ hadĀ to be watched by gossiping onlookers, why couldnāt they at least seeĀ this? Minho ignoring his usual duties to accompany you back to your bedchambers? Let them whisper aboutĀ that, sordid or not, that could at least beĀ useful.
You pushed away the thought with one last scoff at your own poor luck, reaching your chambers without so much as a single pair of prying eyes to witness you.
āSo,ā Minho said, as the doors swung shut behind the two of you. āHow did you find it?ā
Frustrating. Exhausting. Borderline insulting.
āInformative,ā you replied, collapsing into a seat. Your hands ached from how feverishly you had written throughout the meeting, and you began to clench and unclench your fists in the hopes of relieving the pain. āI made a few notes.ā
āI noticed,ā Minho commented, eyebrow raising as he appraised the pile of papers at your side. āThey lookā¦detailed.ā
āThey are,ā you confirmed, picking the papers up and beginning to flick through them. āIf I canāt speak my mind in that room, writing will just have to do.ā
For now, you added internally. YouĀ refusedĀ to accept that this silent role would last forever.
āCan Iā¦read them?ā Minho asked, and his question came out hesitantly, almost cautiously.
You looked up, surprised. You werenāt sure how much use these notes would be ā you were both just at the very same meeting after all ā but there was something about the request that was almostā¦endearing.
Minho. Endearing.
Hell had truly frozen over.
āOf course,ā you replied, holding the notes up.
Minho paused for a moment before, slowly making his way towards you. When he sat next to you, he was close enough that his jacket sleeve brushed your bare arm.
You cleared your throat, focusing your attention on anythingĀ butĀ how close he was. āThese pages are about the logging site proposals, this one was on the Lakelandersā progress, thisā¦oh, this page is actually about Lord Tan.ā
āLord Tan?ā Minho repeated, one eyebrow raised.
āYes. Heāsā¦ā you trailed off, trying to think of a polite way to phrase it. āā¦Heās a blithering idiot, honestly.ā
Minho, to your surprise,Ā laughed. Openly, loudly, with a note of genuine delight. A few weeks ago, you wouldnāt have thought him capable of producing such a sound.
āDo you know how many hours of my life I have wasted listening to that old man ramble incoherently?ā he asked. āThere were moments I was driven half to madness. But he was my fatherās first real supporter when he became crown prince, so heās adamant on keeping the man around.ā
You watched as Minho turned the page over, half-smiling to himself.
āHeās a sentimental old fool like that, sometimes,ā Minho said, too lightly to really be considered critical ā or treasonous.
āWho was your first supporter?ā You asked, curiously.
Minho paused, the lingering traces of cheer disappearing before your eyes. The shift in his mood was almost tangible, and it felt as if you had made some sort of misstep in a dance, thrown yourself and your partner out of rhythm.
His gaze flickered upwards, so very briefly, to look at you, before moving downwards. Down to your notes, down to where the space between your bodies was at its narrowest, barely a few fingersā width between your skirts and his thigh. He took a breath.
āā¦Felix,ā Minho said, softly, discreetly shifting away as he held your notes out to return them. āHe was the only one to never doubt me. Not even for a second.ā
Yes. Yes, that sounded like Felix.
You took back your notes, and tried not to notice how Minho avoided your touch as your notes exchanged hands.
A new silence fell between you.
Stifling.
Deafening.
You tried to take a deep breath, and stood up, making your way over to your desk to lock away your writings from prying eyes.
From behind you, Minhoās voice brought you to a halt.
āWe havenāt talked about Felix,ā he noted. āā¦And we probably should. At some point.ā
He said it so plainly, so devoid of nuance or emotion. As if it were a mere observation, a comment about the weather and nothing more. As if his words didnāt strike something deep and vulnerable within you, like fingers clumsily probing a freshly-formed bruise.
You hated his apparent nonchalance. You despised it, and you envied it because you might never be able to do the same. To speak Felixās name as if it meant nothing to you.
To speak his name as ifā¦
To speakā¦
Youā¦
Realisation ā cold, violent realisation ā hit you at once.
You had not. Not once. In months.
It had been months. And you had not spoken Felixās name.
Not since your wedding day.
Others had. Countless others had. They murmured it gently and sweetly like Her Majesty, or they crowed it before you mockingly like those noblemen, or they threw it at you, cold and cryptic and horrifically empty like Minho.
They dragged him out of your memories where you kept him locked away.
Away, where he was safest to you. Safest from you. Safest for you.
āā¦No. We havenāt,ā you said, and the words were quiet. Pained. Final.
The two of you did not speak again that day.
Soon enough, your father found you.
Your mother, all those weeks ago when she summoned you for that painfully awkward afternoon tea, had at least shown you the decorum your new status demanded and sent you a formal request.
Your father, a proud man, a pragmatic man, had no patience for such etiquette.
You were in the library, sat with Seungmin and poring over budgetary records with tired and bleary eyes, when he came marching in. He was flanked by two panicked guards, too fearful of your fatherās status to lay their hands on him, too mindful of their duty to let him wander freely.
They fixed you with beseeching looks. āYour Highness, we ā no one told usā¦y-your fatherā¦ā
āDesires to speak with his daughter,ā your father finished, in a tone youād never heard from him before. āUrgently.ā
Usually, your father was calm, collected, never one to show even a hint of vulnerability.
Now, here, he was impatient. Almost rattled.
You rose to your feet, so thrown off-kilter by the situation that you were a touch unsteady. After a moment, you nodded to your guards. āVery well. Please leave us.ā
They did just that ā and so did a third guard who had been sat just a few paces away from you and Seungmin.
Your fatherās eyes darted to your tutor. āHim too.ā
Seungmin, however, stayed seated. Slowly, he laced his fingers together and rested his hands on the table in front of him, returning your fatherās glare with an unimpressed stare.
āIt takes a bold man to order around a princess,ā Seungmin remarked. Gently, as always, but firmly.
Your fatherās expression hardened. He opened his mouth to speak back, but you cut him off at the pass.
āHeās right, Father,ā you said. You couldnāt quite shake the nerves from your voice. You supposed that was only natural, after a lifetime of loyally following his orders and keeping your mouth shut in the process. āWhatās wrong? Has something happened to Mother?ā
Your father stared at you for a moment, almostā¦bewildered. He recovered quickly enough. āYour mother is fine, which is more than I can say for the state of yourā¦ofā¦ā he gritted his teeth, swallowing back whatever he desperately wished to say, and instead cut straight to the point. āYou took a seat on theĀ council?ā
His question, and the venom behind it, almost took you aback.
Still, you lifted your head, trying to stand firm. āYes, I did.ā
āHow could you be soā¦foolish?ā your father demanded to know, anger giving way to frustration. āI could haveĀ protectedyou there.ā
It took you mere moments to read between his words.
You didnāt takeĀ aĀ seat on the council.
You tookĀ hisĀ seat.
āCould you?ā you said, swallowing. āOr would you have protected your own interests?ā
Your fatherās eyes blazed at the accusation. You knew the look. Your own temper was a family trait ā and it certainly didnāt come from your mother.
He thundered his response. āYou are myĀ daughter! My interestsĀ areĀ your interests!ā
āAre they?ā You shot back, your voice rising to match his.
āWe are family, we areĀ bloodāā
āAnd what have I done, except increase our familyās legacy?ā you interrupted him. āI did that, I secured our first council seat.ā
āAnd what seat isĀ that?ā he replied, incensed. āAĀ muteĀ councillor, never to vote, never to speak?ā
Your face burned, as you tried to think of a rebuttal to his questions. Something began to twist in the pit of your stomach.
Your father sighed, fixing you with a stern look. āLet me be frank, girl, if youāre so eager to play politics. Your position is not secure.ā
You swallowed. āI knowāā
āNo, you doĀ not,ā he snapped, briefly raising his voice, before dropping his voice to a more controlled volume. āYou inspired the love of the people, but what else? I know half a dozen lords are plotting your annulment, and another dozen with their own girls waiting in the wings. What will you do with that council seat, when a proposal comes to terminate your marriage? Watch silently when they vote to cast you aside?ā
You stared at him, as that twisting sensation in your gut finally earned a name: dread. You tried to respond. āRoyal marriages are a kingās prerogative, they canātāā
āYes, they can,ā your father said, simply. āAny silver-tongued politician could convince the king that your marriage is a matter of theĀ state. Perhaps if you were married to the younger prince, youād be safe, but youāre married to the heirāā
At those words, coming out of yourĀ fatherāsĀ mouth of all peopleās, your vision turnedĀ red.Ā Your response, when it came, hung heavy in the air.
āAnd whose fault is that?ā
Your fatherās eyes widened, and he hissed. āMind your tongue.ā
āIĀ did,ā you said, your voice cracking. Before you could top yourself, words began tumbling out of your mouth, every secret silent thought that had festered in the darkest, most vulnerable corners of your mind, spilling to the surface. āI was happy and content andĀ loved, and I still bit my tongue and let you scheme to take it away. I married theĀ rightĀ brother for you, are you still not satisfied?ā
In an instant, your father stormed his way towards you, eyes blazing as he loomed over you.Ā āBe careful, girl.ā
For a moment, you thought he was threatening you. Your own father.
And then you watched his body crumple slightly, panic and concern finally bleeding through all that pomp and anger. āEspecially aboutā¦that. Him.ā
You watched him take a deep breath, rendered speechless. You had never ā notĀ once, in all your life ā seen your father like this.
He seemed almostā¦scared.
āIf there are plots to annul your marriage, there are plots for something far darker. Annulment would be catastrophic, but bearable. But any whispers of adultery, ofĀ treason? To see you executedā¦ā
Gently, he lifted his hand to cup your cheek. And for a moment, you were four years old again, showing your father your very first letters, beaming as he called you his little princess, long before the rest of the kingdom was obliged to.
āYou are my child. MyĀ onlyĀ child. Doubt my intentions, if you must, but do not doubt my love.ā
You were stunned into silence. His words should have been touching, and you supposed on some level that they still were. But you felt almost numb as you absorbed them. Was it shock, hearing your father speak of his emotions so plainly? Perhaps.
There was a small part of you that whispered if this was all just too little, too late.
Your father dropped his hand and stepped away from you, silence filling the air between the two of you.
Then, he paused, and turned his attention to something behind you.
For a moment, you felt confusion, turning to follow his glare ā before embarrassment consumed you.
Seungmin,Ā of course, had been sitting there the whole time.
āAnd you,ā your father interjected, his voice cold and bordering on menacing, pointing at your tutor. āIf you breathe aĀ wordĀ of thisāāĀ
Seungmin, despite showing the very clear signs of awkwardness one would expect from someone who had just witnessed such an intense and private family dispute, managed to keep calm as he replied with unfailing honesty.
āI am no fool. This position keeps my family fed, and will see my sisters marry well. I am only here at Her Highnessās request, and if the princess goes, this job goes with her,ā Seungmin said, fiercely. āā¦And if nothing else, I know about your reputation, sir. I would rather like my tongue to remainĀ insideĀ my head.ā
Your eyes widened.
That was aĀ boldĀ insinuation on Seungminās part. Tongue mutilation had been outlawed years ago, deemed too brutal a punishment when death was a surer way to guarantee silence.
You half-expected your father to deny this with bluster and offence. And yet, all he did was eye Seungmin silently, before nodding once and turning to the door.
As he approached it, your father spoke one final time to you.
āKeep your wits about you. Youāve made a dangerously bold move, and your enemiesĀ willĀ use it against you,ā he warned, before finally leaving, letting the heavy door slam shut behind him.
The echo of it reverberated across the library, as you stared after him with far more questions than answers.
It was Seungmin who first broke the silence, clearing his throat with just a touch of unease. āā¦Well, I imagine youāre no longer in quite the right mindset for last yearās harvest calculations. Would you like to finish our sessions early today, Your Highness?ā
You didnāt speak. You barely looked at him, in fact, as you silently sank back into your chair.
Seungmin waited a moment or so longer, beginning to tap nervously on the smooth wooden surface of the table in front of him. āā¦Your Highness?ā
āIā¦ā you trailed off, as you realised the incriminating words that had fallen from your own lips just moments ago, and your head jerked towards Seungmin in panic. āDonāt⦠I donāt know how much you report to Minho about our lessons. Butā¦please donāt tell him what I said about beingā¦you know, aboutā¦ā
āBiting your tongue?ā Seungmin supplied for you, but his tone was heavy, knowing. He knew that wasnāt the offending part of your outburst.
āYes,ā you replied in the same tone, and when your eyes met, you knew you had an understanding. āHeās a smart man, Iām sure itās nothing he doesnāt already know, butā¦it just seems cruel. I think. To hear it directly.ā
Seungmin observed you for a moment, brow furrowing just a touch. He opened his mouth as if to say something, hesitated, before speaking anyway. āActually, you should know that I donāt āreportā anything to Minho. Sometimes, he asks questions about what we study, and I answer them. Nothing more.ā
You blinked, and before you could stop yourself, your curiosity won out. āWhat kind of questions?ā
Seungmin eyed you again, and for a split-second, you could have sworn something akin to amusement quirked the corner of his mouth. Whatever it was, it disappeared in an instant, as he replied. āHe asks about what interests you. Once, he asked about a book heād seen you reading, and took a copy for his own use.ā
āOh.ā
Whatever you were expected, it wasnāt that. A strange, unbidden feeling began to spread in your chest, warm for just a moment before common sense returned and drove it away.
āWell, I suppose that makes sense. Minho sometimes takes an interest in my education. Perhaps he wants to test me on it, make it a competition or something.ā
āYes, Your Highness,ā Seungmin said, perfectly politely. āOr something, indeed.ā
Soon after that, the first move was made against you.
Details were leaked about the maritime trade deal discussed in the council meeting.Ā ConfidentialĀ details that were now freely gossiped about, within the palace and without. No one could say for sure who was the source of those leaks, but the evidence was damning.
Before you joined the council, there hadnāt been a single leak in years. And now, after you attended your first meeting, sensitive information was being bandied about within days.
There was only one simple conclusion to be drawn about the identity of the leaker.
You.
Your father was right. Whoever your enemies were, theyād been scheming, and theyĀ didĀ use your position on the council against you.
Perhaps the library would have been a better place to take a breath, dwell on the knowledge a little longer, turn it over in your mind alone to work out the whos and whys and how to press forward.
But your feet drew you to your chambers, through the doors, and even once inside they refused to let you sit idle. You paced, backwards and forwards, going over the situation, the accusations about to be levelled at you, the defences you might need, the evidence you had and did not have to prove your innocence.
You paced and paced, and thought and thought, until your head spun and your feet threatened to leave its imprints in the stone beneath you, until it became clear to you exactly what you were doing.
You hadnāt chosen these chambers for silent contemplation.
You were waiting here.
Because when you imagined defending yourself, you didnāt picture a faceless mob before which to protest your innocence. You didnāt picture the king, and his councillors, and the lords scheming behind your back.
You pictured Minho. His expression flickering between accusing, betrayed, angry, cold, pitying, wounded. It was him you wanted to convince before any others, as illogical as it was.
It was hurt, perhaps, maybe, at the idea that Minho thought you would betray his trust. You knew how heād pushed hard for your position on the council. You would never throw it back in his face like this, and you needed to make sure heĀ knewĀ that.
You questioned just when Minhoās good opinion of you had become soā¦important.
Eventually, the chamber doors opened, and your words came spilling out at the mere sight of Minho in the doorway.
āI didnāt do it,ā you declared. You wished you could be calmer. You feared that the panic in your voice would mislabel you guilty.
Minho, blinking in surprise for a moment at your sudden outburst, regarded you calmly. āOminous words to hear when entering a room.ā
āIām not the leak,ā you clarified, with little patience for his cleverness. āAnd donāt pretend you havenāt heard about it. I know the information being spread, and I know fingers are pointing in my direction. With some reason, I suppose, but it wasĀ not me.ā
āYou seem agitated,ā Minho remarked, maddeningly, all but ignoring your words as his hands moved to begin undoing the fastenings of his jacket. It was some sort of rigid construction, high-necked and broad-shouldered, and perhaps once the imposing princely sight of him in it might have intimidated you. Now, there was a familiarity to the sight ā and a bizarre comfort that came along with it, perhaps. āUsually Iām the one to spark it. Itās actually quite bemusing when something else is the source.āĀ
You stared at him for a second. Off-guard, waiting for any kind ofĀ actualĀ response to what you were saying. When none came, irritation sparked in your chest. āMinhoāā
āYouāre innocent,ā Minho said simply, halting you in your tracks. āI know. I told my father as much.ā
It took you a moment to register exactly what he said, your head too full of practised arguments to leave much room for the recognition that Minho didnāt need to hear them.
He believed you without them.
It felt as if you had been barrelling towards something at high speed, a runaway horse, only to come to a sudden jarring stop. Air left your lungs in one unconscious breath, like a weight that had crushed your chest had been lifted.
āā¦Good,ā you said, haltingly, and then relief struck you with such a violence that your eyes began to sting with tears.
At the sight of them, Minhoās expression shifted instantly from flippancy to something bordering on horror.
Frustrated, and more than a little mortified, you wiped them away impatiently. āDonāt. IāmĀ fine.ā
Minho opened his mouth, about to speakā
āNo,ā you interrupted, pointing at him, embarrassment warm in your cheeks. āThis is just a serious allegation to be faced with, and Iāmā¦relieved that I donāt have to waste my time defending myself.ā
You managed to regain your composure, with no more tears threatening to make an appearance and humiliate you further. Taking a deep breath, you refused to look at Minho, refused to know if he believed your words or if that damned expression still lingered on his face.
āPeople are talking,ā you said, finally.
āā¦People always talk. Weāve discussed this before.ā
āItās different now. I thought it was just idle gossip before, butā¦ā you trailed off. āMy father came to me a few days ago. He believes some of the nobles are scheming to dissolve our marriage. Free you up to marry a daughter of their own, and have me removed.ā
Or worse.
You hadnāt fully comprehended what your father had hinted to you that day, not until now. You could see it all now. The image of your execution, a hundred smirking noblemen awaiting it, ready to thrust their own girls into your role. Perhaps to perish after you. Their scheming would not end with your death. They would simply turn on each other, try again and again, a dozen dead brides falsely accused and outmanoeuvred and doomed from the start.
And then, you snapped out of your dark thoughts when you realised that Minho had closed the distance between you, standing almost toe-to-toe.
His eyes sought your gaze, and held it.
āThey canāt do that,ā Minho said, firmly, gently. Certain. āWe are married, and nothing can change that now.ā
āIt could. It would be easy, really,ā you argued. āThereās no real proof of our consummation. You could say it never happened, and our marriage could be annulled by dayās end.ā
āI would not,ā Minho said, firmly. āBelieve what you will about me, but I would never break off our marriage with a lie like that. Those are a cravenās actions, not mine. I swear it.ā
Perhaps to your surprise, you found that you believed him. Minho could be called a great many things ā indeed,Ā youĀ have calledĀ Minho a great many things ā but ācravenā was not one of them.
Minhoās lips set into a grim, serious line. āIs that what concerns you? That I would set you aside?ā
Would he?
Even after so many years around Minho, after weeks of being married, you still could not guess his true intentions.
āā¦I donāt know,ā you confessed.
Something small flashed in Minhoās eyes. It looked like hurt.
āYou have done a lot for me these past few weeks. More than I ever expected. More than I could ever ask for, truthfully. I thinkā¦IĀ hopeĀ that we are friends, or at least something approaching it,ā you told him, because it was true, and theĀ lastthing you wanted was to destroy this budding trust you had developed between the two of you. Still, he deserved total honesty. āBut I know you didnāt want this marriage, Minho.ā
Minho was silent for a moment. You knew he couldnāt refute it, and he didnāt try to.
Instead, to your surprise, his hands lifted to rest gently on your shoulders. You could feel their weight on you, and how warm it was. Solid. Grounding.
He held you there and when he finally spoke, his tone was serious ā grave, almost.
āā¦The night before Felix left for the coast, he came to me,ā Minho admitted. āHe made me swear ā on my life, on his, on my mother, on my crown, on everything I have ever valued ā that I would protect you from harm.ā
Your lips parted in shock.
Felix.
āI love my brother, more than anything. He was once my only friend, in all the world. The very best of me,ā Minho said, words beginning to pour out of him, as if finally freeing thoughts he had kept buried deep inside for months, perhaps even years. āI didnāt tell him how much he meant to me, not really. And nowā¦ā
Minho swallowed, eyes closing for a brief second, before meeting your stare again with a quiet intensity.
āHe will never forgive me for marrying you. Never. The least I can do is honour the last thing ā theĀ onlyĀ thing ā he has ever asked of me.ā
You didnāt know what to say.
A sudden realisation hit you. A small piece of an inscrutable puzzle, revealed.
āIs that what you meant, when you told your father he owed you something? For making you marry me?ā
Minho swallowed, pausing for a second, and answered.
āYes, in short. My father and I have had our squabbles but this marriageā¦it was the first true fight we had. The first time heās ever had to order me to do something as a king, not asked me as a father. We havenāt seen many things eye-to-eye since. He doesnātā¦understand,ā he said, and then, almost to himself, ābut he doesnāt need to. I know Iām doing what is right.ā
There was a terrible sadness in his eyes, a shockingĀ vulnerability. It was almost alien to see such an expression on Minhoās face, to glimpse beyond the walls he so skilfully kept up.
Unthinkingly, you surged forward and wrapped your arms around him.
He stilled in your hold, tense with surprise. You ignored it, squeezing him tightly, pressing your face into his chest. It was an awkward embrace, perhaps. The hard edges of the embroidery on his jacket dug into your cheek, stitching rough against your soft skin, and Minhoās movements were stiff and unpractised as he returned the hug.
But it didnāt need to be perfect. It only needed to prove the one thing you intended to show him.
Trust.
That night, when dinner was cleared, Minho retreated to his couch and paperwork. You left to change into your sleepclothes in private, as usual, and returned to slip quietly into bed.
There, however, you fidgeted and fumbled with exactly what to say before finally, bravely, breaking the silence. āā¦You can sleep in the bed. Next to me. If you wereā¦unsure about it.ā
Minhoās stare in response was indecipherable. But he nodded once, and when he finished whatever report he had picked up from the pile of papers, he disappeared to the bathroom and reappeared dressed for bed.
White linens. Thin, soft. You remembered them from your wedding night.
It was enough to make your breath hitch ā and, embarrassed, you rolled to your side to avoid looking at Minho, lest you stared too openly at him.
You heard him pull back the covers on his side, and felt the weight of him sink into the mattress. He seemed to keep his distance, as not a single part of you touched, and yet you wereĀ painfullyĀ aware of his presence there.
Silence fell over the two of you, interrupted only by quiet breaths in tandem.
Something squeezed gently in the pit of your stomach. You recognised it as something like anticipation, which was bizarre, as you knew nothing was going to happen.
Nothing would happen.
ā¦And yet, you supposed it would be easy for Minho to shift closer towards you. You could imagine him reaching over, and setting his warm hand on the curve of your hip.
Would he turn you, so you were facing him? Perhaps, but you could also see him keeping your back to him. Letting you hide your face, a small mercy, because he would probably know how embarrassed you would be.
Your eyes drifted shut.
It would be easy for him to press his face into the back of your neck, his mouth into the crook where your neck and shoulder met.
And perhaps he would whisper, soothingly, as his hand travelled lower, seeking the hem of your nightgown, sliding it up your thighs andā¦
No.
Your eyes snapped open as you scolded yourself, a mixture of excitement and shame heating your face. You banished every remotely inappropriate thought from your mind, turning to lie on your back and stare up at the ceiling.
You wondered, briefly, if Minho was looking up at the same thing too. You refused to glance over at him to check. The thought of seeing his face after allā¦thatĀ that had been swirling in your thoughts? Absolutely not.
It took far longer than usual to fall asleep in the deafening silence, but eventually you managed to.
The next morning, you awoke and realised, for the very first time, you had woken up before Minho. He was sleeping peacefully, unaware that the two of you must have turned to face each other in the night, bodies still a careful distance apart.
With one exception ā Minhoās left arm lay outstretched, the knuckles of his hand just barely kissing the delicate skin of your wrist.
You stared at where your hands touched, skin-on-skin.
And you did not move your hand away.
⨠Exciting News āØ
I'm adding webcomics to my list of what I proofread, and my rates are $3 per page.
However, the first person to commission me for their comic will get free proofreading for the duration of one comic, whether the comic is ongoing or completed.
Services include checking:
Spelling
Punctuation
Grammar
Formatting (incl. overall consistency, crossbar Iās, captions, bubbles/bubble tails, widows & orphans, fonts, etc.)
I can also read hangul for those who prefer sound effects to remain in Korean.
Check out my carrd for more info:
Proofreading Services
goes without saying i donāt want any eric nam or any of his stans anywhere near me from now on but im posting this for people who havenāt seen yet. he liked and unliked zionist tweets when it all began and everyone was mostly silent but now all of this extra stuff is coming out.
Just because he is co founder doesn't mean he calls the shots. Eric is working in a very deeply structured industry and we outsiders know nothing about his personal and business life. I understand not supporting Dive studios for supporting Israel, but don't jump on the 'how could you, you monster ' accusations. If you what answers, we can't get true answers whilst any artist is under a company
the fact that you think he, as a FOUNDER of the company, doesnāt call the shots, and youāre calling for people not to accuse him of being pro-israel despite the fact heās proven to be numerous times already, tells me everything i actually need to know about your stance. dive studios is HIS PROJECT. itās not something heās SIGNED TO. he and his FAMILY (his brothers) founded dive studios entirely, so THE NAM BROTHERS FOUNDED PRO-ISRAEL COMPANY DIVE STUDIOS. his brother is the CEO. what is not clicking???? what are you getting out of defending this man?

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In the spirit of encouraging people to comment on fanfics while also making it easier to do so, I feel obliged to share a browser extension for ao3 that has quite literally revolutionized the comment game for me.
I present to you: the floating ao3 comment box!
From what I've seen, a big problem for many people is that once you reach the comments at the bottom of a fic, your memory of it miraculously disappears. Anything you wanted to say is stuck ten paragraphs ago, and you barely remember what you thought while reading. This fixes that!
I'll give a little explanation on the features and how it works, but if you want to skip all that, here's the link.
The extension is visible as a small blue box in the upper left corner.
(Side note: The green colouring is not from the extension, that's me.)
If you click on it, you open a comment box window at the bottom of your screen but not at the bottom of the fic. I opened my own fic for demonstrative purposes.
The website also gives explanations on how exactly it functions, but I'll summarize regardless.
insert selection -> if you highlight a sentence in the fic it will be added in italics to the comment box
add to comment box -> once you're done writing your comment, you click this button and the entire thing will automatically copied to the ao3 comment box
delete -> self explanatory
on mulitchapter fics, you will be given the option to either add the comment to just the current chapter or the entire fic
The best part? You can simply close the window the same way you opened it and your progress will automatically be saved. So you can open it, comment on a paragraph, and then close it and keep reading without having the box in your face.
Comments are what keep writers going, and as both a writer and a reader, I think it's such an easy way of showing support and enthusiasm.
HERE'S THAT BITCH IVE BEEN LOOKING FOR
[231011] 'OVERDRIVE' BEHIND THE SCENES B.Stage Update

