It wasn't that he could forget. If anything, the memory remained entirely too clear. The difference was that, until now, Seojun had simply chosen not to bring it to the forefront of his mind. Certain things were easier left untouched. Filed away. Unexamined. He had spent years mastering that skill. He would never admit it aloud, but coming face-to-face with someone who had only been meant to exist for a single night was not something he had anticipated. They had both understood that. At least, he had. One night. No reason to ever see one another again. And yet here Jia stood.
The unfortunate thing about memory was how quickly it resurfaced when given the opportunity. As Seojun looked at her now, fragments of that night returned with irritating ease. Not enough to distract him, but enough to remind him. The feeling itself remained unfamiliar. Foreign. His logical mind immediately attempted to categorize it. Chemistry. Recognition. A simple biological response. The explanation should have satisfied him. It didn't. Because Seojun knew himself well enough to understand he did not make decisions based solely on chemical reactions. He certainly did not share his bed with someone because of one. His head tilted slightly as Jia spoke, a silent indication that he was listening. Then she stopped. Mid-thought. The unfinished sentence lingered between them. Most days, he would have ignored it entirely. People abandoned their own points all the time. It was hardly his responsibility to complete them. Yet for some reason, this one bothered him. Perhaps because it had clearly bothered her first. Or perhaps because now he wanted to know what she had been about to say.
Neither possibility pleased him.
“Like the world revolves around me?” Seojun repeated. A measured breath left him as he shook his head once. The suggestion itself sounded ridiculous. His gaze remained fixed on her for a long moment afterward, thoughtful rather than offended. If anything, he appeared to be examining the statement itself, trying to determine how she had arrived at such a conclusion. Before he could formulate a response, another quiet exhale left him. The closest thing Seojun offered to visible annoyance. Something within him wanted to dismiss the comment entirely. Another part wanted to rebut it. An unfortunate contradiction. His mouth opened slightly as if preparing to respond. Unfortunately for him, Jia spoke first.
Even hearing his name was enough to unsettle him. It was an ordinary thing, really. People addressed him by name every day. Colleagues, strangers, informant---it was simply how the world referred to him. Nothing more. Yet hearing it from her was different. A cold sensation crawled down the back of his spine before he could stop it, subtle but impossible to ignore. Then came the memory. Uninvited. Persistent. Seojun, the same name, yet spoken in a way his mind had not forgotten. softer. closer. Laced with something that made the recollection far more vivid than he would have liked. The sound of it resurfaced with irritating clarity, and for a brief moment he found himself staring at nothing at all. His jaw tightened. Damn his memory. A slow blink followed as he forced the thought aside, dragging himself back into the present. Jia wanted to leave. Fine. He wasn't going to stop her. What puzzled him more was the anger. Why? What exactly was there left to prove? A year had passed.
One memory that neither of them seemed particularly capable of forgetting. And yet here they were. Seojun remained silent. There was little value in pursuing an argument neither of them appeared willing to define. Whatever frustration lingered between them belonged to something far older than this conversation. His gaze followed her briefly as she turned away. Then, with a measured breath, he looked elsewhere. The conversation was over. Or at least, that was what he told himself. Adjusting his course, Seojun resumed walking toward his original destination, every bit as composed as before. Only now his thoughts were considerably less cooperative than they had been a few moments ago.
He should have expected this, and then again, he didn't. one, she was challenging him, by invading his personal space. To say he was surprised was an under statement. Had she been someone he was truly dismissing, the conversation would have been over the minute it began. "If that is your definition of being dismissive, a poor job considering you've returned. Jia." there, he acknowledge that he knew ---remembered her. Then the next set of words, felt like cold water poured over his face, by her candor, and then bringing the memory back up. 'I did something with my tongue and you felt something' .The Audacity. Then it clicked, she wanted validation? and then he thought about it more. The anger, was because he didn't agree? he released a humorless laugh, like he couldn't believe this is where the conversation led. "What?" he blinked, again processing all of this. when did this become that conversation or even up for discussion.
“In the five minutes since you stepped into the path I was already walking,” Seojun began, his voice even, measured as always, “at what point did I give you the impression that was a subject worth bringing up?” His gaze settled on her, steady and unreadable. “Better yet,” he continued after a brief pause, “what exactly did you expect to accomplish by mentioning it?” A quiet breath left him through his nose, somewhere between disbelief and mild annoyance. His head tilted slightly. She went on talking about a stray dog, and his mind could only handle one topic at a time, and comparing herself to a stray dog? far from it. "a dog, really?" and he shook his head. They were frustrating him because of this emotional rollercoaster and he didn't want to be on this ride.
"From where I'm standing, you introduced the topic, became irritated by it, and now appear intent on blaming me for the conversation that followed.”