an: Just something that was in my mind and I decided to drop here
Warning: not all, just I little sadness
After the Uchiha clan massacre, you stood on the porch of your home, once gazing at the heavy, silent night with melancholy in your eyes. The sky seemed to mirror the emptiness consuming your chest. But now, your fists were clenched so tightly they ached, and solitary tears streamed, warm, down your face.
"Say something!"
Your voice came out laden with frustration, though you desperately tried to keep your tone steady. He remained there, motionless, his head bowed, as if the weight of everything had shattered his soul. His fists were clenched too, as though he were frustrated, anxious... uncertain.
"Itachi... please..."
Your voice broke, almost a whisper, as you moved closer to him, unable to contain the pain eating away at you. With trembling hands, you started hitting his chestânot with strength, but with all the desperation his silence had stirred within you.
"Talk to me! Explain... do something! Look at me!"
The words spilled out, tangled with sobs. It was your last attempt to reach him before the distance between you became irreversible.
"Say something... or Iâll give up on you..."
Thatâs when his eyes finally met yours. They were deep, filled with something you couldnât decipher: pain, guilt... or farewell.
You stayed like that, locked in each otherâs gaze, for what felt like an eternity. Then, without warning, he stepped closer.
With gentleness, he pressed his lips to your foreheadâa kiss that hurt more than any words could have.
"Itâs your best option."
Because deep down, you knew you could never truly give up on him.
His words echoed, cold and final, as he stepped away. Before you could say or do anything, he was gone. Just like the night, which swallowed his figure into the darkness, leaving you alone with the weight of a farewell you would never overcome.
Its my first time writing something in in english, so be kind. I would like to write some more things that I have in mind. I like to write about jjk, haikyuu, Naruto and aot characters. So if you have a favorite one of those and a cool idea, post it here and maybe I'll write it
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"dead poets society is yellow" "dead poets society is blue" "dead poets society is brown" dead poets society is blurry, it's really fucking hard to see through all these tears
Guys, Iâm dying for an AoT fanfic that follows the canon timeline but adds an OC paired with Levi. Like, I want to see their relationship develop through all the major events. Anyone got any recs?
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âŒïžNORMALIZE NOT ADDING ANGST TAGS TO YOUR SMUT FICS WHEN THERE'S NONE JUST TO GET AUDIENCEâŒïž
guys please, respectfully, not everyone want to be freaky all the times. imagine craving some sad, melancholic fics but getting a nastiest smut instead like-
... just pls let us have our own personal, separated space of sadnessđ„șđ„ș
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"cold showers are better for you" WRONG! SCALDING HOT SHOWERS FOREVER!!!!!!!! đżđżđżđżâšïžâšïžâšïžđżđ§đ§đ§đ§đŠđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđżđ„đ„đ„đ„đ„đżđ§đ§đŠđŠđŠđ„đ„đ„đ„đżđżđżđ„âšïžâšïžđżđżđżâšïžâšïžâšïžđżđżđżâšïžâšïžâšïžđ„đ„đ„đżđ§đ§đŠđŠđŠđ„đ„đ„đ„đżđżđ§đ§đŠđŠđżđ„âšïžâšïžđżâšïžâšïžđ§đŠđŠâšïžđżđżđżđżđżđżđ„đ„đ„đ„đżâšïžâšïžđ„đ„đ„!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
pairing: slytherin! na jaemin x gryffindor! fem. reader
genre: hogwarts au, fake dating (hell yeah!), fluff, smut, angst
wc: 34k
summary: It's a simple deal: fake date the Slytherin golden boy to dodge his arranged marriage. Easy. Except patrols turn into makeouts, a Quidditch win ends in a very steamy contract violation, and suddenly your N.E.W.T.s feel like the least of your problems. After one badly timed confession, itâs clear heâs not acting anymoreâand neither are you.
content warnings: slow burn, explicit sexual content, loss of virginity, unprotected sex, oral (f. receiving), miscommunication!!!, emotional hurt/comfort, cursing, alcohol consumption, reader is self conscious/bit anxious, heavy hogwarts canon themes obvs, slytherin/gryffindor dynamics, jaemin is lowkgenuinely manipulative at the beginning, mean slytherin stereotypes, avoidance as a coping mechanism. lmk if i missed anything! btw the ones in italic apply to the second part.
a/n: ok this is gonna be a long a/n so bear with me. this fic genuinely almost killed me. i donât think iâve ever struggled so much to finish something in my life and itâs 100% my fault for being too ambitious. youâll notice i tried to weave in more hogwarts details and brit lingo to make it feel more authentic, but as you may have guessed⊠i am not british đ so that meant a lot of googling, rewatching, and rereading some of my fav hp fics just to make sure i wasnât embarrassing myself. i did my best okay (shoutout to every hp fic writer before me, yall are the blueprint). also: yes, you may catch a hint of draco malfoy in jaeminâs character and thatâs very much intentional. i am, at my core, a draco apologist and i donât see myself changing. anyways. i really hope you enjoy reading this as much as i suffered writing it. please let me know what you think w ur comments, anons, reblogs. everything is appreciated more than you know đ€
âI was within and without, simultaneously enchanted and repelled by the inexhaustible variety of life.â
â F. Scott Fitzgerald, The Great Gatsby
Hogwarts had always held a certain allure, with its ancient stone walls and magic that seemed to permeate every nook and cranny. For six and a half years, you'd wandered those hallowed halls, immersing yourself in a world so far removed from the mundane that at times it hardly seemed real.
Yet, for all its wonder and mystique, Hogwarts was not without its dangers.Â
There were cursed objects that lurked in shadowy corridors, waiting for an unsuspecting student to stumble upon them. Staircases that shifted without warning, leaving the unwary stranded or, worse, deposited in some unknown part of the castle. The Whomping Willow that stood sentinel on the grounds, its gnarled branches poised to strike at any who ventured too close. Even Peeves the Poltergeist roamed the halls, cackling with malicious glee as he wreaked havoc and sowed chaos in his wake.
In the face of such peril, you had thus far emerged unscathed, a feat that was nothing short of remarkable given the castle's rather alarming mortality rate. You attributed your survival to a simple yet effective strategy: be invisible, be boring, and for the love of Merlin, stay away from anyone interesting.
Interesting people, you had learned, were magnets for trouble. They ended up in the hospital wing with alarming regularity, usually victims of rogue hexes or potions experiments gone awry. They attracted drama the way honey attracted flies, their lives a constant whirlwind of rumor and intrigue. Interesting people had complicated social lives, with networks of friends and enemies and romantic entanglements that required constant upkeep.
You, on the other hand, were perfectly content with your quiet, unassuming existence. You had one close friend, one beloved cat, and a comfortable routine that rarely demanded more of you than attending classes and avoiding human interaction as much as possible. It wasn't a particularly exciting life, but it was safe and predictable and suited you just fine.
At least, it had until this particular moment, when your sole friend had apparently taken complete leave of her senses.
"Are you having some sort of episode?" You peered at Jo over the top of your book, brow furrowed in concern. "Should I fetch Madam Pomfrey? Is this what happens when you inhale too many potion fumes?"
Jo rolled her eyes with an exaggerated huff. "Please!" she wheedled, her voice climbing to that particular pitch that never boded well. "Please please please, I swear on Merlin's saggy baâ"
You held up a finger, cutting her off before she could complete that thought. "I'm going to stop you right there..."
"I'll never ask you for anything ever again!" She pleaded, clasping her hands together. "I'll do your Potions essays for a month! I'll clean Whiskers' litter box! I'llâ"
"I don't think you heard me the first time," you interrupted, fixing her with a pointed stare. "Are. You. Mental?"
The Gryffindor common room was mercifully empty save for the portrait of a tongue-less lady, who watched your exchange with rapt attention. Having gotten her tongue cut out in 1642 for "seditious gossip", the painted woman had developed a keen appreciation for drama in all its forms. Judging by the way she clutched at her pearls, this was the most excitement she'd witnessed in decades.
"Come ooon," Jo cajoled, undeterred by your apparent lack of enthusiasm. "When do I ever do things like this? You're always telling me to try new things!"
"I meant take up knitting! Join the Gobstones Club! I did not mean sneak out of the castle in the middle of the night to meet some potentially lycanthropic stranger you've been corresponding with!"
"He's not a stranger, I've been writing to him for monthsâ"
"Which is exactly what every person who's ever been murdered by a pen pal has saidâ"
"And he's not a werewolf, he's perfectly lovely! I saw him in Hogsmeade last month, I just couldn't say hello because McGonagall was watching me like a hawk."
"Seeing someone from a distance hardly counts as a proper introduction," you argued, pulling your blanket tighter around yourself as if to punctuate your point.
This was the problem with having just one close friend. You knew Jo too well, could read her every expression and intonation better than anyone else. That gleam in her eye, the set of her chin, the way she twisted her fingers in her lap - you recognized the signs of a course already plotted, a decision already made. She would go through with this mad scheme with or without your help, and if you refused, she'd likely end up dead in a ditch somewhere and you'd be left to drown in guilt for the rest of your days.
Guilt, you thought grimly, was a most effective motivator.
With a weary sigh, you closed your book and met Jo's hopeful gaze. "Fine. Fine. What exactly do you need me to do?"
Jo's answering grin could have lit up the entirety of the Great Hall. "Just swap patrol shifts with Sophie Crockett tomorrow night? She's an absolute nightmare, and if she catches me out after curfew she'll go straight to McGonagall."
You could feel a headache blooming behind your eyes. "And when Sophie asks why I'm suddenly so eager to take on the worst patrol slot in existence?"
"Just make something up! She's not going to turn down a chance to skive off for an evening, is she?"
Rubbing your temples, you silently cursed the fickle twists of fate that had led you to this moment. "And the other prefects? I'll still have to deal with them, you know."
Jo waved a hand dismissively. "Nah, you're all right. The only other one scheduled is Na Jaemin, and everyone knows he never actually patrols. Just goes and snogs girls in the library all night, doesn't he?"
You raised an incredulous eyebrow. "How would you know that?"
"Everyone knows," Jo said with a shrug. "It's common knowledge."
"Well, I didn't know."
"That's because you never pay attention to gossip," Jo pointed out, flopping down beside you on the couch. "Honestly, you're missing out on prime entertainment. Anyway, I'm sure Jaemin's got better things to do than patrol corridors. You'll probably have the place to yourself.â
You made a noncommittal sound, trying not to think too hard about Na Jaemin and his extracurricular activities.
It was funny, really. Well, not funny funny. More like cosmically ironic. First and second year, Jaemin had been an absolute pest. Always lurking around corners, waiting to charm your bag so your books would spill everywhere, or jinx your quill during tests so it would only write rude limericks. Heâd found you endlessly amusing, apparently, a never-ending source of entertainment. Youâd gone to bed countless nights fuming, plotting revenge youâd never actually carry out, wishing heâd just leave you alone.
And then, somewhere around third year, he just stopped. He stopped seeking you out, or looking at you entirely. As if youâd ceased to exist the moment you stopped being fun to torment.
By fourth year, heâd transformed into a whole different person entirely. Suddenly he was all smoldering glances and that insufferable âplayboyâ swagger, a different girl on his arm every week. Too cool for pranks and too sophisticated for something as juvenile as tormenting students. Heâd become exactly the sort of person youâd made it your mission to avoid: interesting, magnetic, drowning in attention and drama.
You supposed you should have been relieved. Youâd wanted him to leave you alone, after all. But there was something particularly galling about being so thoroughly dismissed, about going from his favorite target to utterly beneath his notice. At least when heâd been pulling pranks, youâd existed to him.
Now you were just⊠nobody. Which was exactly what youâd wanted, you reminded yourself firmly. Exactly what youâd worked so hard to achieve.
âYouâre probably right,â you said to Jo, pushing thoughts of Jaemin firmly out of your mind. âIâll probably have the whole patrol to myself.â
Privately, you rather doubted that. In your experience, the universe had a way of placing you in the path of people and situations you'd much rather avoid. Still, Jo was clearly determined to see her plan through, and short of physically restraining her (a tempting prospect, but ultimately impractical), you saw no way to dissuade her.
"Fine," you said again. "I'll take Sophie's patrol. But if this goes sideways, I reserve the right to say 'I told you so' in the loudest, most obnoxious voice I can muster."
"You're the best." Jo pulled you into a rib-cracking hug, her hair tickling your nose. "Seriously, I owe you one."
"You owe me several," you grumbled, but you returned the hug all the same.
Later that night, as you lay in bed listening to the soft snores of your dormmates, you tried to ignore the sense of foreboding curling in your gut. Rationally, you knew the odds of anything truly catastrophic happening were slim. It was just one night, one patrol, one tiny favor for your best friend. Surely the universe wouldn't be so cruel as to upend your careful, boring routine over something so trivial.
But then, you thought wryly, life did seem to have a twisted sense of humor where you were concerned.
With a sigh, you rolled over and buried your face in your pillow, willing sleep to come. Tomorrow would bring what it would. For now, all you could do was hope that, just this once, the cosmic forces that governed your life would decide to give you a break.
Poorly planned rule-breaking never worked out the way you expected it to.
There was the first year incident, for instance, involving a misplaced curiosity about the Restricted Section and a borrowed invisibility cloak that was, crucially, not yours. Youâd lasted exactly twelve minutes before knocking over a stack of cursed folios and alerting Madam Pince.
Second year had been defined by an ill-advised attempt to brew Pepper-Up Potion in a bathroom sink, resulting in steam, screaming, and a week-long ban from practical spellwork. Jo still insisted it would have worked if youâd stirred clockwise instead of counterclockwise. You maintained that the problem was attempting potion-making in plumbing never designed for magic.
After those things, you'd like to say you saw the impending disaster coming from a mile away, but honestly? You were too preoccupied with figuring out how to convince Sophie Crockett to swap shifts without making her suspicious.
As it turned out, Sophie was pathetically easy to persuade. You caught her after Charms, mentioned something vague about "wanting to study for the Divination exam in the morning" (there was no Divination exam, but Sophie didn't take Divination, so she was none the wiser), and she agreed immediately, no questions asked. Just a breezy "Oh, thank Merlin, I've got an Astronomy essay I haven't even started" and that was that.
In hindsight, that should have been your first warning sign. When things fell into place too smoothly, it usually meant the universe was just winding up for a truly spectacular cosmic sucker punch.
At nine sharp on Saturday you pinned your prefect badge to your robes and made your way down to the Entrance Hall, silently cursing your inability to say no to Jo's puppy dog eyes.
The castle took on a different character at night. Not peaceful, exactly. More... haunting. The portraits whispered conspiratorially as you passed, and the shadows in the corners seemed to stretch and deepen weirdly. You'd walked these corridors countless times before, but they never quite lost their eerie quality after dark.
You were supposed to meet Jaemin at the main staircase to divvy up patrol routes. But in theory, if the rumors about his extracurricular activities were true, you'd never actually know have to interact with him at all.
That was the theory, anyway.
The reality was that when you arrived at the designated meeting spot, Na Jaemin was already there, leaning against the banister and looking distinctly un-snog-ready.
Jaemin was the sort of boy who looked like he was born in moonlight and named by a poet. Even in the sallow torchlight, his hair glowed, silver-gold and a little too long for regulation. There was always something quietly triumphant in the angle of his jaw, the tilt of his smile, as if every corridor was a stage and every passing student a captive audience.
You stopped short, your feet suddenly rooted to the spot. Some ancient, reflexive part of your brain was screaming at you to turn around, to flee, to avoid him the way youâd been so carefully avoiding him for the past four years. The last time youâd been alone with Na Jaemin youâd been twelve years old and heâd been too entertained by your mortification to let you escape.
Now you were seventeen, and he was looking at you with an expression that was completely different and all too intense. He was supposed to be off in some secluded corner of the library, doing unspeakable things with whatever girl was lucky enough to be on his arm that week. He was absolutely not supposed to be here, looking alert and purposeful and like he was actually planning to do his job.
Even more concerning, he looked annoyed.
"You're the Gryffindor prefect," he said, and it sounded more like an accusation than a question.
"...Yes?" Really, what else could you say?
"Where's Crockett?"
"We swapped shifts."
His eyes, a rather striking shade of dark brown that you'd never had occasion to notice before, narrowed suspiciously. "Why?"
"Does it matter?"
He closed his eyes briefly, and you got the distinct impression he was counting to ten in his head. When he opened them again, he fixed you with a look that could have flash-frozen a cup of tea. "I needed Crockett on duty tonight."
Well. That was... odd. Extremely odd. Highly, suspiciously odd. Why would Na Jaemin, Slytherin prince and general too-cool-for-this-nonsense type, care which prefect was patrolling with him?
"Well," you said, channeling every ounce of polite defiance you possessed, "we've already swapped, so I'm afraid you're stuck with me. Unless you've got a Time-Turner hidden somewhere, which would be highly illegal, so I'm going to assume you don't."
Jaemin's jaw clenched almost imperceptibly. "This isâ" He stopped himself, visibly recalibrating. "Fine. Right. You take floors three through five then. I'll handle the lower levels and the grounds."
And that's when your brain, which had been operating at half capacity due to stress and sleep deprivation, finally caught up with the situation.
The grounds.
Jaemin wanted to patrol the grounds.
The same grounds where, at this very moment, your best friend was likely rendezvousing with her mystery man.
Oh no.Â
"Actually," you heard yourself say, the words tumbling out in a slightly manic rush, "I was rather hoping to get some fresh air tonight. Bit stuffy in the castle, you know. Mind if we swap? You take the upper floors, I'll do the grounds."
His expression shuttered faster than a shop window in Knockturn Alley. "No."
"No?"
"No."
"Well, that's not very cooperative of you," you said, mentally calculating how quickly you could sprint to the grounds to warn Jo. "Aren't prefects supposed to work as a team?"
Jaemin raised one perfectly arched brow. "Why so keen on the grounds all of a sudden?"
"No reason." Your voice came out at least an octave higher than usual. "Just thought it would be nice to get some air. Lovely night for a stroll, don't you think?"
"You're an atrocious liar," he informed you, taking a step closer. You were suddenly, acutely aware of the fact that he was quite a bit taller than you, and that the height difference was doing absolutely nothing to bolster your confidence in this situation. "What's going on?"
"Nothing's going on."
"Of course not. And I suppose you just happened to swap shifts with Crockett tonight for no particular reason, and now you're coincidentally desperate to patrol the grounds."
Okay. This was getting out of control. You needed him. away from the grounds, away from Jo, away from this entire situation. And there was only one thing you could think of that might actually work.
âDonât you have somewhere else to be?â
His eyes narrowed slightly. âWhat?â
âYou know.â You waved a hand vaguely, heat creeping up your neck. âItâs Saturday night. I just thought you might have⊠plans.â
âPlans,â he repeated flatly.
âYeah, well⊠You donât actually patrol on Saturdays.â The words came out in a rush, ungraceful and desperate. âSo if you want to go do whatever it is you usually do, I can handle this. Really. You donât have toââ
âWhatever it is I usually do,â Jaemin said, his lips twitching. âAnd what exactly do you think that is?â
Oh god. Why had you started this?
âI donât know. I donât keep track of your schedule.â
âClearly not, or you wouldnât be standing here trying to⊠what? Give me permission to skive off?â He was definitely smiling now, the bastard. âHow thoughtful of you.â
âIâm just saying, if you have other commitmentsââ
He laughed, short and sharp. âIs that what weâre calling it? Commitments?â
Your face was absolutely burning now. âLook, what you do with your time is none of my business.âÂ
âYouâre the one who brought it up.â
âBecause Iâm trying to be helpful!â You gestured wildly at the empty entrance hall. âThe libraryâs right there. Iâm sure whoever youâre supposed to meet would appreciate you actually showing upââ
âAh.â Jaeminâs grin widened, showing teeth. âYou think Iâm supposed to meet someone in the library.â
âThatâs what people say,â you muttered, unable to meet his eyes.
âPeople say a lot of things.â He leaned back against the banister, looking thoroughly entertained now. âAnd you believe all of them?â
âThatâs not the pointââ
âTell me, what else does everyone say about me? Iâm curious.â
This was a disaster. A complete and utter disaster. âForget I said anything.â
âOh no, I donât think so.â He pushed off the banister, taking a step closer. âYou started it. Come on, donât be shy now. What exactly are these Saturday night activities Iâm supposedly abandoning patrol for?â
You wanted the floor to open up and swallow you whole. âYou already know what people say.â
âI do. But I want to hear you say it.â His eyes were dancing with so much glee. âGo on. Donât spare my delicate sensibilities.â
âThis is ridiculousââ
âGo on.â
You took a breath, lifted your chin, and forced the words out with as much dignity as you could muster. âFine. People say you spend your patrol shifts in the library doingâŠthings.â
âI really donât. Youâll have to be more specific.â
He was enjoying this far too much, the absolute prat. âThey say you⊠meet girls there.â
âMeet girls,â he said thoughtfully. âLike a book club?â
âNot like a book club,â you gritted out.
âThen what?â
You threw your hands up. âThey say you snog girls in the library instead of doing your prefect duties! There! Are you happy?â
Jaemin laughed. âMerlinâs beard, is that it?â
âThatâs what everyone says.â
âAnd you believed it?â He shook his head, still grinning. âThatâs adorable, really.â
âDonât call me that,â you snapped.
âWell, you are when youâre trying to delicately inform me about my own scandalous reputation.â His eyes glittered with delight. âHow very considerate, giving me an out like that. âOh Jaemin, donât let me keep you from your library assignations.ââ
He said it in a high pitched tone, clearly trying for a very inaccurate impression of you.
âI was only trying to be nice.â You huffed.
âYouâre trying to get rid of me,â he corrected, but he didnât sound annoyed about it. If anything, he seemed more intrigued. âWhich brings us back to the question of why youâre so desperate for me to not patrol the grounds tonight.â
Damn it. Youâd played right into his hands. âIâm notââ
âYou just tried to use my supposed promiscuity as an excuse to get me to leave.â He tilted his head, studying you. âSo either youâre deeply concerned about my social life, or thereâs something on the grounds you donât want me to find.â
Your heart was hammering again. Heâd out-maneuvered you completely, turning your own attempt at manipulation back on you.
âWell?â he prompted. âWhich is it?â
âThe first one,â you lied weakly. âIâm very concerned about your social life.â
âRight.â His smile was sharper now, more predatory. âIn that case, youâll be delighted to know Iâm completely free tonight. I have no library dates or clandestine meetings. Just a nice, thorough patrol of the grounds.â He paused. âWith you, apparently, since you seem so determined to tag along.â
You rolled your eyes. âYou are so irritating.â
âThereâs the Gryffindor honesty I remember,â he said cheerfully. âCome on then. Letâs go catch whoever it is youâre trying to protect.â
Wait. What?
âIâm notâthereâs no oneââ
But he was already turning toward the entrance hall, and panic clawed at your throat. You needed to try something else, anything to keep him from the grounds.
âLook,â you said, a note of genuine desperation creeping into your voice, âpatrolling the grounds is easily twice the work of the upper floors. Iâm offering to take on the extra effort here. Whatâs the problem?â
He paused, glancing back at you with an expression of exaggerated surprise. âYou? Volunteering for extra work?â He pressed a hand to his chest in shock. âIâm sorry, have we met? Iâm Na Jaemin, and youâre the girl who once hid in a broom cupboard for twenty minutes to avoid helping set up for the Yule Ball.â
âI did notââ You stopped, because you absolutely had done that, and he somehow knew about it. âThatâs not the point.â
âIsnât it though?â He was grinning again, clearly enjoying himself. âCome on, admit it. Youâve spent six years perfecting the art of doing the absolute bare minimum. Iâve seen you let third years wander the corridors after curfew as long as they promised to go straight to bed.â
Your face burned. âI was tired that nightââ
âYouâre always tired.â He tilted his head. âSo forgive me if Iâm a bit skeptical about this sudden burst of civic responsibility. Itâs very out of character for you.â
The sheer audacity. The unmitigated gall. To accuse you of apathy and then dismiss you without so much as a backward glance? An ember of indignation flared to life and burned away the last vestiges of your tattered patience. He had no right. No right to stand there and act like he understood anything about you when he was the reason youâd learned to make yourself invisible in the first place.
And now here he was, cataloging your flaws with that same amused smile, like you were still just entertainment to him.
âFine,â you bit out. âDonât take my offer. See if I care.â
âOh, I wonât.â He turned back toward the entrance hall, waving a hand dismissively over his shoulder. âIâm patrolling the grounds. You can join me or check the upper floors. Your choice.â
âWhy do you just get to decide that on your own? The grounds arenât even part of the standard patrol route!â
"They are tonight," he tossed over his shoulder, not even bothering to turn around.
"Why?"
"Because I said so."
And with that spectacularly unhelpful explanation, he walked out the front doors, leaving you standing slack-jawed and sputtering in his wake.
This was it. The moment of truth. You had approximately five seconds to make a decision that would either save your best friend from expulsion or doom her to a fate worse than death.
Option one: let Jaemin go off on his own. He'd catch Jo, she'd be expelled, and you'd spend the rest of your life weighed down by the guilt of your inaction.
Option two: follow him, try to run interference, and most likely fail spectacularly but hey, at least you could say you tried.
In the end, your choice was clear. The reckless, devil-may-care loyalty that had landed you in Gryffindor in the first place reared its noble head, and before you quite knew what you were doing, you were hurrying out the doors after Jaemin, resignation and foreboding dogging your every step.
"I'm coming!" you called after him.
Jaemin spun around, one eyebrow quirked in a way that suggested he'd interpreted your words in a decidedly less innocent manner.
"To the grounds," you clarified hastily, feeling your face heat up. "To patrol. With you."
âI gathered that much,â he said, his tone dripping with amusement. âThough I appreciate the clarification. Wouldnât want any misunderstandings.â
You glared at him, but heâd already turned back around, that damned smirk still visible in profile.
Beyond the castle corridors, the night grounds felt twice as ominous. Shadows stretched from the Forbidden Forest, where twisted branches reached toward the sky like gnarled fingers against the dark. Nearby, the Black Lake remained a silent mirror, its surface only occasionally broken by ripples that hinted at the heavy, mysterious life lurking in the depths.
Jaemin had conjured a floating orb of soft white light to guide your path, which was considerate yet irritating, as it seemed to delight in hovering mere inches from your face and nearly blinding you. He walked with an easy grace, hands in his pockets, looking for all the world like this was just a casual evening stroll and not a patently absurd situation that could land you both in a world of trouble.
You, on the other hand, were so tense you could practically feel your muscles vibrating. Your mind raced as you tried to remember what Jo had told you about her planned rendezvous.Â
Theyâd be in the grounds, obviously, but beyond that? Hogwarts' grounds spanned nearly a thousand acres and included everything from dense forest to rolling hills to a literal giant-squid-infested lake. If you were going to have any hope of intercepting Jo before Jaemin did, you needed a clearer idea of where exactly to look.
And you needed to keep him distracted.
âSo,â Jaemin said, his voice cutting through your rising panic, âcare to tell me whatâs really going on here?â
âWeâre patrolling,â you said, keeping your eyes fixed firmly ahead. âThatâs whatâs going on.â
âAnd I suppose you always volunteer for extra patrols on Saturday nights, do you? Just for the exercise?â
âMaybe I do. Fresh air is good for you.â
âRight.â He didnât sound like he believed you for a second. âAnd here I thought you preferred to spend your evenings in the Restricted Section, avoiding human interaction as much as possible.â
You shot him a sideways glance. âHave you been spying on me?â
âItâs called being observant,â he said lightly. âYou should try it sometime. Although I suppose that would require you to take an interest in something beyond your very busy schedule of going through the motions and avoiding anything that might resemble effort.â
There it was again, that annoying assessment of your character, delivered with a smile that made it impossible to tell if he was genuinely criticizing you or just winding you up for his own amusement.
Bristling, you planted your hands on your hips and glared up at him. "I put in effort when it matters."
"And I'm sure swapping shifts with Crockett was a matter of utmost importance, then?" His lips curved into a smirk that made you want to hex it right off his unfairly symmetrical face. "Go on. Whatâs so crucial about tonight? Did you lose a bet? Secret passion for night-time groundskeeping?â
âWhy do you care so much?â
âBecause youâre terrible at being subtle, and watching you try is genuinely entertaining.â He grinned at your affronted expression. âPlus, Iâm curious. Youâve spent the better part of six years being aggressively unremarkable, and now here you are, practically begging to patrol the grounds with me. Itâs very out of character.â
âStop acting like you know everything about me.â
âI might not know everything about you,â he said, his voice taking on a knowing tone, âBut I know youâre trying to protect someone.â
Your heart skipped. âI donât know what youâre talking about.â
âDonât you?â He stopped walking, turning to face you fully. The floating light cast strange shadows across his features, making his expression harder to read. âHereâs what I think is happening. Thereâs someone out here meeting someone they shouldnât be meeting. You agreed to swap with Crockett to cover for that person, expecting me to skip patrol like I apparently always do. But I didnât, so now youâre stuck trying to run interference while pretending this is all perfectly normal.â
You stared at him, your mouth going dry. Heâd worked it out. Of course he had. Because Na Jaemin might be annoying and smug and entirely too pleased with himself, but heâd never been stupid.
âThatâsâŠâ you started, but your voice came out weak. âThatâs a very creative theory.â
âYouâve gone red again.â He tilted his head, studying you. âDead giveaway.â
You opened your mouth to retort, but closed it again, floundering. There was absolutely no way to explain your actions without either incriminating Jo or making yourself look even more suspicious. You were well and truly cornered, and the triumphant gleam in Jaemin's eyes told you he knew it.
But before you could cobble together a halfway coherent response, a sound drifted through the night air that made you stop cold.
Laughter.
More specifically, Jo's laughter, bright and carefree and coming from somewhere worryingly close by.
Jaemin froze too, his eyes narrowing. "Did you hear that?"
"Hear what?" you asked, feigning ignorance even as your heart threatened to beat its way out of your ribcage. "I didn't hear anything. Probably just the wind. It howls around the turrets sometimes..."
"That wasn't the wind." He was already moving again, long legs eating up the ground as he strode purposefully toward the source of the sound. "That was a person, maybe two, from the sounds of it"
"What? No, that'sâI really think it was just the wind. Or maybe Peeves playing a prank. You know what a menace he is, always causing trouble, we should probably go back inside andâ"
But he wasn't listening. Because he was Na Jaemin, and he'd caught the scent of rule-breaking, and Merlin forbid he let it go in favor of the much more appealing option of minding his own damn business.
You had no choice. You were either going to have to physically stop him (a laughable notion - he had a good six inches and probably thirty pounds of muscle on you), or you were going to have to get to Jo first.
The words were out of your mouth before you could think better of them. "Wait!"
Miraculously, he actually stopped walking and turned to look at you, one eyebrow arched expectantly.
"Iâ" Your mind raced, grasping for any excuse, any diversion, anything to keep him from taking another step. "I think I saw something. Over there." You pointed vaguely off to your left, in the opposite direction of Jo's laughter. "We should go check it out."
Jaemin regarded you with exasperation. "You know, for someone who's spent the better part of six years avoiding attention, you're shockingly bad at subterfuge."
"IâI'm just being cautious. It's dark out here, and there could be...things. Dangerous things. Like snargaluffs, or...or a moke on the loose."
"A moke," he repeated flatly. "An invisible lizard the size of a mouse. You think I should be worried about a moke ambushing me.â
 âThey can be vicious!â
âTheyâre ten inches tall.â
âSize isnât everything,â you shot back, then immediately regretted it as his grin widened into something positively wicked.
âIâll have to take your word for that,â he said smoothly, and you felt your face flame.
âThatâs notâI didnât meanâoh, for Merlinâs sake.â You covered your face with your hands, wondering if it was possible to die of embarrassment. âCan we please just check the trees?â
âWhy?â He took a step closer, and you had to tilt your head back to maintain eye contact. âWhat are you so afraid Iâm going to find if we keep going this way?â
You hesitated, weighing your options. On the one hand, the truth was unthinkable. You couldn't just throw Jo to the wolves like that, not after you'd promised to cover for her. On the other hand, you were rapidly running out of plausible lies, and Jaemin clearly wasn't buying any of them.
âNothing,â you said, but it came out weak and unconvincing even to your own ears.
âNothing,â he echoed. âRight. So you wonât mind if I justââ
He made to move past you, toward where Joâs laughter had come from, and you did the only thing you could think of.
You grabbed his arm.
The moment your fingers closed around his sleeve, you realized what a monumentally stupid mistake youâd made. You could feel the warmth of his skin through the fabric and the solid muscle beneath. He stilled instantly, his gaze dropping to where your hand clutched at him, then slowly lifting to meet your eyes.
âPlease,â you said quietly, all pretense abandoned. âDonât go over there. Justâjust forget you heard anything, and Iâll explain later. I promise.â
He studied you for a long moment. You were acutely aware of how close you were standing, of the way his eyes seemed to catch every flicker of emotion that crossed your face.
"So you are covering for someone," he said at last. "A friend, I'm guessing. The one you're always with? The loud one, with the"âhe gestured vaguelyâ"the hair?"
"Her hair is perfectly normal, thank you very much, and I don't see how that's any of your business."
"It absolutely is my business, seeing as there are students out of bed and I'm a prefect. I'm supposed to report this sort of thing, you know."
"Yes, well, I'm also a prefect, and I'm asking you not to." Desperation bled into your voice, and you hated it, hated that you were practically begging him for something that you had no right to ask for. âPlease, Jaemin. Can't you just...look the other way? Just this once?"
He was silent for a long moment, and you braced yourself for the inevitable. For the sneer, the cutting remark, the gleeful reminder that he was a Slytherin and Slytherins didn't do favors without expecting something in return.
But when he finally spoke, his voice was surprisingly soft. "You really care about her, don't you? Your friend."
You swallowed hard, caught off guard by the gentleness in his tone. "She's my best friend. I'd do anything for her."
"Even lie to a fellow prefect and risk getting in trouble yourself."
"Yes." You met his gaze squarely, unflinching. "Even that."
Another long silence, and then he sighed. "All right, fine."
You blinked. "Fine?"
"Fine, I won't report her. But"âhe held up a hand as you opened your mouth to thank himâ"I want something in return."
There it was. You should have known it wouldn't be that easy. Slytherins always had an angle, and Jaemin was Slytherin to the core.
Wariness crept into your voice as you asked, "What sort of something?"
His lips curved into a smile that could only be described as predatory. "A favor. One favor, to be determined by me, at a time of my choosing. Do this, and I'll conveniently forget I heard anything tonight."
Your stomach dropped. A favor. An open-ended, unspecified, could-be-anything favor, owed to Na Jaemin. Well. This was how you died, not in a blaze of glory like a true Gryffindor, but in the thrall of a serpent's forked tongue and devastating jawline.
But what choice did you have? If you refused, Jo would be caught for sure. And then she'd be expelled, and it would be all your fault, and you'd have to live with the guilt for the rest of your life. A life which, frankly, was looking shorter and shorter with each passing minute as Jaemin stared you down, waiting for your answer.
"Fine," you said through gritted teeth. "One favor. But nothing illegal or dangerous or humiliating."
His smile widened, showing far too many teeth for your comfort. "Look at that. Youâre negotiating. Will wonders never cease?"
"Those are my terms. Take them or leave them."
"Oh, I'll take them." He held out a hand, long fingers uncurling in an inviting gesture. "Shall we shake on it?"
You glared at his hand like it might bite you (and really, with Jaemin, who knew?) but reluctantly reached out and grasped it. His skin was warm, his grip firm, and you tried very hard not to think about how nice his hand felt in yours.
"Pleasure doing business with you," he murmured, and was it your imagination or did his thumb just stroke across your knuckles?
You snatched your hand back like you'd been burned, face flushing. "Yes, well. You'd better hold up your end of the bargain."
"I'm a man of my word." He sketched a mocking little bow. "Your friend's secret is safe with me for now."
The words 'for now' hung there as a silent threat, and you suppressed a shiver. What had you just agreed to? What price would you have to pay for your loyalty?
As if reading your thoughts, Jaemin's smile turned sly. "Don't look so worried. I promise I won't ask for anything too dreadful. Probably."
"Probably," you repeated faintly.
"Probably," he confirmed, and then he turned on his heel and started back toward the castle, leaving you to trail after him in a daze.
The rest of the patrol passed in a blur. You walked in silence, Jaemin seemingly content to let you stew in your own anxiety, and by the time you returned to the Entrance Hall, you were a nervous wreck. You kept imagining all the horrible things he might ask forâdoing his homework for the rest of the term, being his personal servant, confessing to McGonagall that you were the one who'd let those nifflers loose in the staff room last year (even though that had been entirely Jo's doing and you'd just been an unwilling accomplice).
At the foot of the stairs, Jaemin paused and turned to face you. In the dim light of the entrance hall, his eyes were pools of shadow, unreadable and fathomless.
"I'll be in touch," he said, his voice low and full of dark promise. "Sweet dreams."
And then he was gone, melting into the shadows like he'd been born from them, leaving you with a racing heart and the sinking certainty that your life was about to become a lot more complicated.
The next morning, you cornered Jo in the common room before breakfast, pulling her into the corner by the window where no one could overhear.
âTell me everything went okay last night,â you demanded without preamble. âPlease tell me you didnât do something insaneââ
âWhoa, whoa!â Jo held up her hands, her eyes wide. âIâm fine! Everything went perfectly. Well, mostly perfectly. There was a weird moment where I thought I heard someone coming, but then nothing happened, soâŠâ She trailed off, then grabbed your shoulders. âWait. What happened to you? You look like you havenât slept.â
âThatâs because I havenât.â You started pacing anxiously. âJo. I think I might have done something really, really stupid.â
Her expression changed from concern to dread in the span of a second. âWhat kind of stupid?â
âThe kind that involves Na Jaemin and a debt to repay.â
âOh no.â Joâs face went pale. âTell me you didnât.â
âI did.â
âYou didnât.â
âI did.â You tugged at your hair, feeling the full weight of last nightâs decision crushing down on you. âHe wanted to patrol the grounds, Jo. He would have found you. I couldnât let that happen, so I⊠I made a deal with him.â
Jo stared at you like you'd just confessed to murdering the Minister of Magic. "You made a deal with Na Jaemin. The boy who once convinced half the school that Professor Flitwick was secretly a goblin in disguise."
"To be fair, he has a dash of goblin blood..."
"Not the point!" She grabbed your shoulders, forcing you to stop pacing. "What kind of deal are we talking about here? What did you promise him?"
You took a deep breath. "A favor."
"A favor," she repeated slowly. "What kind of favor?"
âThe unspecified kind. The âto be determined at a later dateâ kind. The âI now owe Na Jaemin a debt that he can collect on whenever he wantsâ kind.â
She looked about two seconds away from fainting. âYou didnât.â
âI panicked!â you wailed, not caring that you were probably drawing attention from the other early risers scattered around the common room. âIt was either agree to the favor or let him catch you with Mr. Mysterious! What was I supposed to do?â
âNot sell your soul to a Slytherin, for starters!â She released you and began pacing, chewing on her thumbnail in that way she only did when she was truly stressed. âThis is bad. This is really, really bad. Na Jaemin with a favor from you? He could ask for anything. Anything.â
âYou think I donât know that?â You dropped your head into your hands. âIâve been up all night imagining the horrible things he might ask for. What if he wants me to do something illegal? What if he wants me to sabotage someone? What if he wants me toââ You shuddered. ââpublicly humiliate myself somehow?â
Jo stopped pacing, her expression shifting from panic to determination. âOkay. Okay, weâre not going to catastrophize. Yes, this is bad. Yes, owing Jaemin a favor is potentially disastrous. But itâs not the end of the world.â
âIsnât it though?â
âNo.â She sat down beside you, taking your hand. âListen to me. You did this to protect me. You put yourself on the line because youâre a good friend, the best friend, and Iâm not going to let you face this alone. Whatever Jaemin asks for, weâll figure it out together. Okay?â
You wanted to take comfort in her words, in the fierce loyalty shining in her eyes. But deep down, you couldnât shake the feeling that youâd just made a deal with the devil, and the bill would come due sooner rather than later.
âOkay,â you said quietly, squeezing her hand. âTogether.â
âTogether,â she confirmed. Then her expression turned mischievous. âBesides, who knows? Maybe heâll ask for something simple. Like help with his Potions essay or something.â
You snorted despite yourself. âJaemin doesnât need help with Potions. Heâs annoyingly good at everything.â
âWell then maybe heâll ask you toâI donât knowâorganize his sock drawer? Polish his prefect badge?â
âJo.â
âIâm just saying, it might not be as bad as you think!â
But even as you tried to let her optimism buoy you, you couldn't shake the feeling that your life had just changed irrevocably. That in agreeing to owe Jaemin a favor, you'd set into motion a chain of events that you couldn't possibly predict or control.
Whatever he wanted from you, you had a feeling it wouldnât be something as simple as organizing his socks.
A haze of anxiety and paranoia defined the following week, one that had you reaching a level of vigilance that would have impressed even Mad-Eye Moody.
You jumped at every sudden noise, flinched every time a Slytherin so much as glanced in your direction, and spent an inordinate amount of time scanning the Great Hall for any sign of Jaeminâs blonde head bent in whispered conversation with his housemates, plotting your doom.
To avoid him, you mapped out convoluted routes to class, opting for deserted corridors even when they made you late. Mealtimes were rescheduled to avoid the rushâbreakfast at dawn, lunch in the late afternoon, and dinner only when the Hall had emptied to a few stragglers. In Potions, which was the one class you shared with him, you positioned yourself as far from his usual spot as physically possible, practically pressed against the dungeon wall, and refused to so much as breathe in his direction.
Not that it mattered⊠Because he didnât approach you at all.
He just watched you.
From across the courtyard, his gaze would find you through a flurry of Slytherin green. Other times, your eyes would drift upward in Potions only to find him already staring, head propped lazily in his palm. He looked for all the world as if you were far more entertaining than any lecture Professor Slughorn could provide.
You started second-guessing everything. The way you sat, the way you spoke, the way you tugged at your sleeve or tucked your hair behind your ear when nervous. You found yourself becoming a caricature of yourself: rigid, overly cautious, desperate to give nothing away.
By the end of the week, you were a nervous wreck. Youâd bitten your nails down to the quick. Developed a stress-induced rash on your neck that no amount of Essence of Dittany could soothe. And even started having vivid nightmares about Jaemin cornering you in increasingly absurd locations like the Prefectsâ bathroom, or memorably in the middle of a Quidditch match where heâd swooped down on a broom to demand you juggle puffapods while the entire school watched.
âYou need to sleep,â Jo said on Friday night, eyeing the bags under your eyes with concern. âThis is getting ridiculous. You look like youâve been hit with a Confundus Charm.â
âI canât sleep,â you muttered, your third cup of coffee cooling forgotten beside your Transfiguration essay. âEvery time I close my eyes, I just see his face. That stupid, smug, infuriatingly perfect face.â
Joâs eyebrows shot up. âPerfect?â
âPutrid,â you corrected hastily, feeling your face heat. âI meant putrid. The point is, I canât relax knowing that at any moment, he could just⊠appear and demand whatever horrific thing heâs been planning.â
âMaybe heâs forgotten about it,â Jo suggested, though she didnât sound convinced. âMaybe he was just messing with you, and he never actually intended to collect.â
You wanted to believe that. You really did. But youâd seen the satisfied glint in Jaeminâs eyes when youâd shaken hands.
No. He hadnât forgotten. He was just biding his time, waiting for the perfect moment to strike.
The weekend dragged on with NEWTs studying, failed naps and increasingly creative avoidance techniques. By Sunday morning, you were so on edge that when an owl swooped down at breakfast and dropped a letter directly onto your plate, you actually screamed.
Half the Gryffindor table turned to stare.
âItâs just the post,â Jo said soothingly, though she was eyeing the letter with nearly as much suspicion as you were. âProbably from your mother.â
Your hands shook as you picked up the envelope. The handwriting was your motherâs, thank Merlin, and you sagged with relief as you broke the seal.
âSee?â Jo said. âYouâre being paranoid.â
âCan you blame me?â you muttered, scanning your motherâs cheerful recounting of your auntâs latest garden gnome infestation. âItâs been a week, Jo. A whole week of nothing. Itâs unnatural.â
âPsychological warfare, thatâs what this is. Classic Slytherin mind games. Heâs letting you stew, letting the anticipation build, until youâre so wound up that youâll agree to anything just to put yourself out of your misery.â
âThank you, Jo,â you said through gritted teeth, stabbing your sausage with enough force to make your fork screech against the plate. âThatâs incredibly comforting.â
âIâm just saying, itâs textbook manipulation.â She reached for the marmalade, unbothered by your glare. âMy cousin Fergus dated a girl from that house once, and she used toââÂ
But you never found out what Jo's cousin's Slytherin ex-girlfriend did, because at that moment, a hush fell over the Great Hall. You looked up, already knowing what you'd see, and felt your stomach drop straight through the floor.
Jaemin was walking toward the Gryffindor table with purpose and intent, his long strides eating up the distance between the Slytherin table and yours. His eyes were fixed on you with such singular focus that you couldnât have looked away if you tried.Â
There was a small satisfied smile playing on his lips.
He was enjoying this, the utter bastard. Enjoying the way every eye in the hall was now fixed on you, the way whispers erupted in his wake like the hissing of a hundred snakes.
He came to a stop directly across from you, and you had to crane your neck to meet his eyes. They were dancing with amusement, and you had the sudden, wild urge to tip your pumpkin juice into his lap.
"Good morning," he said, for all the world as if this were a perfectly normal interaction and not a blatant violation of the unwritten rules that governed breakfast seating arrangements. "Sleep well?"
You gaped at him, too stunned to formulate a response. Beside you, Jo made a noise that sounded suspiciously like a snort hastily disguised as a cough.
Jaeminâs smile widened, showing a flash of teeth. âIâll take that as a no.â His gaze swept over you, taking in the bags under your eyes, the coffee stains on your robes, the general air of sleep-deprived panic youâd been cultivating all week. âHave you been avoiding me?â
The question was delivered lightly, almost teasingly, but there was an undercurrent to it. A knowing edge that said he was perfectly aware of every corridor youâd ducked down, every meal youâd skipped, every desperate attempt youâd made to stay out of his path.
âAvoiding you?â you repeated with a nervous laugh. âOf course not. Iâve beenâIâve been busy. Studying and stuff.â
âMm.â He didnât sound remotely convinced. âWell, youâre not busy now, are you? I need to talk to you.â He paused, letting his gaze sweep meaningfully across the rapt faces surrounding you. âPrivately.â
Oh no. Oh no no no.
"Huh?" you said eloquently.
"Talk. Privately," he repeated, enunciating each syllable as if you were a particularly slow-witted troll.
âIâm eating breakfast,â you said weakly, gesturing at your plate where your eggs had gone cold and congealed.
âYou can eat later.â It wasnât a suggestion. âCome on. This wonât take long.â
Every fiber of your being wanted to plant yourself in your seat and force him to either leave or make a scene. But you could feel the weight of the entire schoolâs attention pressing down on you.Â
You glanced around, taking in the avid stares, the blatant eavesdropping, the gleeful anticipation on every face. Even the staff table looked uncommonly interested, with Professor McGonagall peering at you over her spectacles and Flitwick not even pretending not to listen in.
"Fine," you bit out, shoving back from the table with enough force to make the dishes rattle. "Lead the way."
Jaemin inclined his head, that infuriating smile still playing about his lips, and turned to walk out of the hall. You followed, determinedly ignoring the explosion of chatter that erupted in your wake.
He led you out of the castle, across the dew-damp lawn, all the way to the edge of the lake where a lone beech tree stretched its branches over the water. It was, you noted sourly, an incredibly picturesque spot for a clandestine meeting. Almost as if he'd planned it that way.
"All right," you said, crossing your arms and fixing him with your best glare. "What do you want?"
He leaned against the tree trunk, the picture of nonchalance, and regarded you with a calculating expression. "I think you know."
"The favor," you said flatly.
"The favor," he agreed. "Time to pay up, I'm afraid."
Your heart began to race at this, palms turning clammy as every horrible scenario you'd imagined over the past week came rushing back.
You took a deep breath, steeling yourself. "Fine. What is it? What do you want me to do?"
Jaemin pushed off the tree and took a few steps toward you until he was so close you could see the individual flecks of gold in his dark eyes.Â
He looked down at you, his expression turning serious, almost solemn. "I need you," he said softly, "to be my girlfriend."
What the fuck.Â
You stared at him dumbly. Surely he'd said something elseâ"be my guard friend" or literally anything that made more sense than what you thought you'd heard. But after several seconds of awkward silence he simply stood there, staring back.
"I'm sorry," you said at last. "I must have misheard you. It sounded like you just saidâ"
"Be my girlfriend," he repeated, enunciating each word carefully. "That's the favor I'm asking."
You searched his face for any sign that this was a prank, or at the very least a bizarre figment of your overtired and overstressed imagination.
But he looked deadly serious, his eyes never leaving yours, his jaw set in a way that suggested he was bracing himself for your reaction.
"Right," you said slowly. "Okay. So you've clearly been hit with a Bludger recently. Or maybe you inhaled some dodgy spores from the Forest?" You peered at him more closely, genuinely concerned now. "I think you might be having some sort of mental episodeâ"
"I'm not having a mental episode."
You started backing away slowly, hands raised placatingly. âJust stay there, I'm going to go get help. Maybe Madam Pomfrey has an antidote for whatever's happened to your brainâ"Â
"My brain is fine," Jaemin said, and he actually had the audacity to look amused. "I'm completely serious."
"That's even more concerning!" You threw your hands up. "Jaemin, you can't justâI mean, we barely evenâwe're not even friends! You spent two years torturing me and then four years pretending I didn't exist! And now you want me to be your girlfriend?"
"Fake girlfriend," he corrected.
"Oh, well, that changes everything," you said, your voice dripping with sarcasm. "Fake girlfriend. Of course. How silly of me. That makes perfect sense."
"It does, actually, if you'd let me explainâ"
"No. Absolutely not. This isâthis is insane. You've lost your mind. Gone completely round the bend." You started pacing frantically. "You could have literally any girl in this school. Any girl! Iâm sure thereâs probably a waiting list even. And you want me to pretend to date you?"
"Yes."
"Why?!"
"Because you're perfect for this," he said with a shrug.
You let out a slightly hysterical laugh. "I'm what now?"
"Perfect," he repeated, and there wasn't a trace of humor in his voice now. "Think about it. You're a half-bloodâ"
"Oh donât start with that blood purity crapâ"
"No, I mean that it works perfectly because you're not involved in pureblood politics. You're not part of my usual social circle. You have no reason to want anything from me or my family beyond this one favor." He was ticking points off on his fingers now. "If we start dating, it'll be believable precisely because it's so unexpected."
"You think people will just believe that we're dating. You and me."
"Why not?"
"Becauseâ" You gestured wildly between the two of you. "âbecause look at us! You're you, and I'mâI'm me! I spend my free time reading in corners and avoiding human interaction! You spend yours being disgustingly popular and having your pick of the female population! We have nothing in common! We don't even like each other!"
"All excellent points for why no one will suspect it's fake," he said smoothly. "If I were trying to stage a relationship, Iâd pick someone more obvious. Someone from my house, someone I'm already friendly with. The fact that it's you makes it more authentic."
You stared at him, your brain struggling to process this absolute madness. "Have you been Imperisued or something? Seriously, I'm genuinely worried about you right now."
"I appreciate your concern," he said dryly. "But I assure you, I'm thinking perfectly clearly."
"Then explain it to me," you demanded, throwing your hands up in exasperation. "Because from where I'm standing, this makes about as much sense as trying to teach a troll how to read. Why on earth would you need a fake girlfriend? You're Na Jaemin! Half the school is in love with you! If you wanted a real girlfriend, you could probably just point at someone and they'd swoon into your arms!"
"That's actually part of the problem," he muttered, and was that... was that a hint of frustration in his voice?
You blinked. "What?"
He sighed, running a hand through his hair. "There's a girl. Yuna. Her family and mine... they move in the same circles. Have for generations. Old pureblood families, lots of money, all that tedious rubbish."
"Okay...?"
"And lately, she's gotten it into her head that we're meant to be together. That it's our destiny to unite our families, carry on the pureblood tradition, produce the next generation of perfectly bred wizarding heirs." His voice was slightly tinged with disgust. "She won't take no for an answer."
Despite yourself, despite the absolute insanity of this entire situation, you felt a bit of sympathy. "And you don't want that."
"I'd rather wrestle a Hungarian Horntail," he said flatly. "But she's not listening. Every time I tell her I'm not interested, she just smiles and says I'm playing hard to get. That I'll come around eventually."
"That's..." You searched for the appropriate words. "That's actually kind of disturbing."
"It's extremely disturbing," he agreed. "And I can't just tell her to fuck off, because our families... it's complicated. There's business deals, social connections, generations of intertwined pureblood nonsense. If I publicly reject her, it could cause all sorts of problems."
"So you need a girlfriend," you said slowly, finally starting to understand. "A visible reason why you can't be with her."
"Exactly." He gave you a hopeful look. "Someone who won't get caught up in the drama and then can walk away clean when it's over. Someone like you."
You covered your face with your hands and sighed. "This is still insane."
"Is it though?"
"Yes! Completely, utterly, absolutely insane!" You started pacing again. "Jaemin, in case it's escaped your notice, we can barely stand each other! We've barely had a conversation longer than five minutes that didn't involve you annoying me or me wanting to hex you! How exactly do you propose we convince anyone we're madly in love?"
"We don't have to be madly in love," he said. "Just... dating. You know, just act like a regular couple, sit together at meals, go to Hogsmeade on weekends. People see us together, word gets back to Yuna, she backs off. Simple."
"Simple?â you repeated incredulously. "You think any part of this is simple?"
"More simple than the alternative." His expression turned serious. "Look, I wouldn't ask if I had any other choice. But I'm running out of options here, and you'reâ" He paused. "You're the only person I can trust with this."
That brought you up short. âYou barely know me."
"I know enough," he said quietly. "I know you're loyal. I know you'd do anything for your friends, you proved that when you made our deal. I know you're not interested in status or popularity or any of the things most people want from me. And I know that when this is over, you'll keep your word and walk away."
The sincerity in his voice caught you off guard. This wasn't the smug, teasing Jaemin from the patrol or the cold, dismissive one from your earlier years. This was someone... genuine. Vulnerable, even.
"I think I need to sit down," you said faintly.
There was a convenient rock nearby and you sank down onto it, your head spinning.
"So just let me make sure I got it right," you said, staring out at the lake. "You want me to pretend to be your girlfriend. To protect you from an obsessive pureblood heiress who won't take no for an answer and so you wonât get trapped into a marriage of convenience.â
"That's the gist of it, yes."
"For how long?"
"A month? Maybe two at most."
"Two months?!" You whipped around to stare at him. "You want me to pretend to be your girlfriend for two months? Are you completely off your rocker?!"
âCome on, two months isnât even that longâ"
"Two months is eight weeks! Sixty days! Over a thousand hours of my life spent pretending to be in love with you!" You were nearly hyperventilating now. You shot to your feet, pacing again.Â
âAgain, no need to be madly in loveâ"
"And have you thought about the logistics of this?" You spun to face him. "Every girl in this castle is going to hate me! They already probably think we're shagging or something after your little breakfast stunt, and that was two minutes! Imagine two months of that! I'll need to go into witness protection!"
âI think thatâs a bit of an overreaction.â
"Jaemin, people will actually want to murder me. There will be attempts on my life. I'll have to taste-test all my food for poison. Sleep with one eye open. Practice a good shield charmâ"
"Nobody's going to try to murder you."
"You donât know that!"
âAnd we wouldn't even be together the entire time," he continued as if you hadn't spoken. "Just... in public. Where people can see us. The rest of the time you can go back to pretending I don't exist."
You let out a laugh that bordered on hysteria. "Oh, well, that makes it so much better. Thank you for that generous concession."
"Are you finished panicking?" he asked mildly.
You glared at him. "No. No, I'm not finished. I'm just getting started. Do you have any idea how exhausting this sounds? How mortifying? I've spent six years perfecting the art of being invisible, and now you want me to voluntarily become the center of attention? The subject of gossip and speculation? Do you know what that will do to me?"
âCome on, it wonât be that bad.â
He seemed too casual about all this. It made you wonder if he did this sort of thing often. Not that it would be surprising, purebloods had weird customs that you could never begin to understand.
"Okay," you said slowly after a few seconds of gathering what little patience you had. "Okay. Let's sayâand I'm not agreeing to anythingâbut let's say I did this. Don't you think people would find it a bit suspicious? Us dating out of nowhere? We've barely spoken in years. We're not friends or even friendly. People aren't stupid, Jaemin."
"We'll say we've been keeping it quiet," he said, like he'd already thought this through. "We didnât want the attention, wanted to make sure it was real before we went public. No one will question it if we sell it right."
"And how exactly do you propose we do that?" You fixed him with a glare.
âEasy. We make it look like we can't keep our hands off each other. You know, hold hands, and that sort of thing. Make it look convincing."
âYou want me to hold your hand?â
"Among other things."
"What does that even meanâŠ?â
"Well, we'd have to play it convincingly," he said reasonably. "Couples don't just hold hands. They sit close. They touch. They..." He paused, his eyes glinting with amusement. "They kiss occasionally."
"KISS?!" The word came out as a strangled shriek. "You want me to kiss you?!"
"I mean, not right now necessarilyâ"
âOh, youâre barking mad if you think I will kiss you!â
"Come on, y/n. It's just a bit of acting. Surely a clever girl like you can manage that?" His voice dropped, turning silky and persuasive.
You bristled slightly at the blatant flattery even as some traitorous part of you warmed at the compliment. "And what's in it for me? Besides the joy of being glared at by every girl in this castle and kissing your dumb face?"
"The fact that I wonât tell McGonagall about your little friendâs nocturnal escapade isnât enough for you?â he reminded you.
You froze, shoulders tensing. "You're really going to hold me to that? For something this insane?"
"A deal's a deal. I helped you and nowI need your help."
"I don't know," you said slowly. "This is...it's a lot to ask."
"I know." He took another step closer, his eyes intent on yours. "But I'm asking anyway. I need your help, y/n. Please."
You had agreed to this. You had shaken his hand, accepted his help, promised him a favor. And now he was calling it in.
"This is blackmail," you said weakly.
"It's really not."
You stared at him, at his stupidly handsome face and his infuriating certainty, and felt the trap closing around you. You still could refuse, tell him to shove his favor and walk away. But then he couldâwouldâtell McGonagall about Jo. And Jo would be expelled. And it would be all your fault.
"Fuck," you groaned.
"Is that a yes then? he said.Â
You truly hated everything about this.
Still, you heard yourself say, "Two months. That's it. And we need to set ground rules, boundaries. I'm not going to do anything that makes me uncomfortable."
Relief flashed across his face, there and gone so quickly you might have imagined it. "Okay, thatâs fair."
"And when it's over, we go back to normal. No hard feelings. We just... end it and move on."
"Agreed." He held out a hand, his eyes never leaving yours. "So. Do we have a deal?"
You hesitated for a long moment, your heart pounding so hard you were certain he must be able to hear it. This was, without question, the most insane thing you had ever considered doing. It was reckless and impulsive and had the potential to blow up in your face in a truly spectacular fashion.
But looking up into Jaemin's eyes, seeing something that might have been hope or desperation or both, you found yourself reaching out and taking his hand anyway.
"Deal," you said, and sealed your fate for the second time in a week.
"Excellent." His smile was pure satisfaction. "I'll pick you up for breakfast tomorrow. Try to look a little pleased to see me and not like you want to murder me."
"I make no promises," you muttered.
As you walked back toward the castle, your mind whirling with the absolute insanity of what you'd just agreed to, one thought kept circling back:
Na Jaemin, Slytherin prince and general menace to your sanity, wanted you to be his fake girlfriend.
Jo was never going to believe this.
A waking nightmareâthat was the only way to describe the days following the grand revelation of your supposed relationship.
It felt as though Hogwarts had contracted a plague, a virulent strain of "Y/N-and-Jaemin" fever that consumed everyone from the dungeons to the astronomy tower. No one could quite wrap their heads around the unlikely pairing of a Gryffindor nobody and the Slytherin prince, and that confusion turned into a collective obsession.
Everywhere you went, eyes followed. First-years openly gawked as you passed. Third-years whispered behind their hands, their eyes following your every move with ravenous curiosity. Even the portraits seemed more interested in your comings and goings, their painted heads swiveling to track your progress through the corridors.
Horrible as the attention was, the rumors were worse. Wild, baseless theories seemed to spawn from thin air, multiplying with the rapid, disgusting speed of Horklumps in a garden.
âThey've been secretly dating since third year,â one voice hissed in the corridor, âbefore he was even popular, I heard.â
The theories only grew more ridiculous from there. According to a Ravenclaw, you had saved his life during a Quidditch matchâor perhaps from a rogue curse. One Hufflepuff swore on her life sheâd seen the two of you kissing in the Astronomy Tower a year ago. Most sinister of all were the whispers of blackmail or pranks, culminating in the one theory that nearly made you choke on your pumpkin juice: âOh Merlin, do you think sheâs pregnant?â
The attention was suffocating, oppressive, like being trapped in a greenhouse in the middle of summer with no windows and too many people pressing their faces against the glass. You couldn't breathe without someone noting it, vouldn't eat without a dozen pairs of eyes watching every bite, and couldn't so much as sneeze without someone speculating about whether Jaemin would find it endearing.
And as if the whole thing wasnât a nightmare already, there was Jaemin himself. Whatever level of insufferable he had occupied before was nothing compared to this new persona: the devoted boyfriend that was attentive, affectionate, and clearly determined to make the charade as mortifying as humanly possible.
He'd materialize at your elbow between classes, his arrival heralded by the subtle scent of broom polish that never quite left his robes and that you were beginning to recognize with Pavlovian dread. He'd fall into step beside you with that athletic grace of his, his hand finding the small of your back with proprietary confidence.
âThere you are,â heâd say, his voice carrying an affected breathlessness as if heâd been searching the entire castle rather than simply memorizing your schedule. âI was looking for you.â
âWere you,â came your flat reply, as you struggled to ignore the sudden weight of a hundred curious stares pinning you to the spot.
âMm.â Without an ounce of hesitation, his hand would slide around your waist, hauling you firmly against his side. âMissed you in Charms. You disappeared before I could catch you.â
âI was in a rush,â youâd mutter, omitting the fact that the rush was specifically to escape him.
âI know.â His smile would be warm and intimate, a masterpiece of conviction. âLetâs walk together next time. I canât stand being away from my princess for too long.â
A collective swoon would ripple through the nearby students at the display.
Mealtimes offered no reprieve. He'd bypass his usual spot at the Slytherin table entirely, crossing the Great Hall with long strides to slide onto the bench beside you at Gryffindor. The first time he'd done it, the entire Hall had gone silent, hundreds of heads swiveling to watch as Na Jaeminâtoo cool for cross-house fraternizationâplanted himself among the lions.
âMorning, princess,â heâd announce, his voice projecting just far enough for half the table to catch. A casual kiss to your temple followed, delivered with such affection that you nearly lost your balance on the bench.
A sharp kick from Jo connected with your shin under the table. Smile, her wide-eyed expression screamed. Youâre supposed to be in love with him, remember?
Obediently, youâd attempt a smile. Though it likely looked more like a pained grimace, Jaemin seemed satisfied enough. His arm draped across your shoulders as he reached for the orange juice, acting as if this were the most natural routine in the world.
Every meal followed the same suffocating pattern. He was always there, a solid line of warmth pressed against your side. Beneath the table, his thigh would brush against yours, making you hyperaware of his every shift. Often, his hand would rest on your knee, his thumb tracing absent patterns that felt far too intimate for public consumtion. Occasionally heâd lean in, murmuring something pointless like âPass the saltâ or âYour hair looks nice todayâ into your earâbut to the rest of the room, it looked like he was whispering sweet nothings.
The Great Hall devoured every crumb of the spectacle.
But while the general student body watched with wide-eyed fascination, you were forced to contend with a far more dangerous audience: the inner circle.
Jaeminâs friends were not merely students; they were the closest thing Hogwarts had to a royal court. To exist within the castle walls was to know them by reputationâa collection of wealthy, beautiful purebloods who navigated the drafty corridors with the effortless entitlement of aristocrats. Yet, observing them from the safety of the Gryffindor table was entirely different from being the direct target of their scrutiny.
Giselle led the first offensive.
She didn't walk so much as glide, approaching the Gryffindor table like an elegant snake. Everything about her was designed to intimidate, from the lethal sharpness of her cheekbones to the glossy waves of hair that fell perfectly down her back. Even her uniform defied the rules; her tie was knotted into an oversized, rebellious bow that no prefect would ever have the courage to cite as a dress-code violation.
âJaemin,â she purred, ignoring your existence entirely as she draped herself against the table. âWeâve missed you at breakfast. The Slytherin table is positively bereft without your presence.â
âIâm sure youâre all managing,â Jaemin replied, his tone conversational and mild. He didn't move his arm from its proprietary position across your shoulders.
âBarely.â Only then did her eyes slide toward you in a slow, assessing sweep that made you feel like a piece of furniture being appraised for auction. âAnd this must be the famous girlfriend. Y/N, was it?â
âYes,â you managed, forced to swallow against the sudden dryness in your throat to keep your voice from cracking.
âMm.â Her smile was sharp enough to cut glass. âHow⊠unexpected. I donât think weâve ever spoken before, have we? What house are you in again?â
The question was a blatant insult, considering you were currently sitting at the Gryffindor table draped in scarlet and gold.
âGryffindor,â you ground out through gritted teeth.
âOh, right. Of course.â She paused to examine her dark green nails. âI always have trouble keeping track of the⊠quieter students. You must be one of those studious types. The ones who hide in the library all day.â
Boring. Forgettable. Beneath notice. The implication was clear. Beside you, Joâs hand whitened as her grip tightened around her fork.
âI suppose so,â you said, choosing caution over a confrontation you weren't prepared to win.
âCute.â Giselleâs smile widened, though it never reached her eyes. âJaeminâs never been much for books, have you, Jaem? More of a... social creature. Though Iâm sure you two have found something in common to keep things interesting.â
Beside you, Jaemin remained a statue of calm, taking a slow sip of his tea as if he were watching a particularly dull play rather than a verbal execution.
The pressure didn't let up as the days went on. A few days later, Changmin intercepted the two of you in the crowded corridor between Ancient Runes and Arithmancy. Towering and broad-shouldered, he possessed the rugged, athletic build of a seasoned Beater. He didn't need words to dominate the space; his presence alone caused younger students to scatter like leaves. When he looked at you, his smile was so predatory and sharp it made you think of a wolf finally closing in on a scent it had been tracking for miles.
"So this is her," Changmin said, his eyes traveling over you with clinical detachment. "Have to say, mate, when you said you were seeing someone, I pictured⊠I don't know. Someone different."
Jaeminâs voice remained light, though his eyes turned piercing. "What do you mean?"
"Just⊠different." A shrug followed, along with a dismissive flick of his gaze. "No offense, of course."
"Of course," you echoed through a tight jaw.
"Itâs just surprising, is all." Changmin gestured vaguely with one hand. "Youâve always gone for a certain type, and sheâs⊠well, not that."
Not pretty enough, you knew he meant.
Jaeminâs arm hooked around you, pulling you into his side. "Sheâs exactly my type," he countered. "Perfect, actually."
His words were meant to be reassuring but they'd just made you feel more like a prop in whatever game he was playing.
A shift in strategy occurred by the following week. The subtle snubs evolved into a coordinated siege as Changmin and Giselle began appearing together, a united front of immaculate hair, expensive robes, and thinly veiled hostility.
They seemed to materialize in every common space you frequented, armed with false smiles and poisonous pleasantries. Every interaction was a minefield; every question was a calculated probe designed to expose the fraying seams in your story.
Their interrogation didn't stop at the legitimacy of your relationship. They began taking aim at the very fabric of your life... Quite literally.
"Those robes," Giselle remarked during a chance encounter in the corridor, her eyes sweeping over your silhouette with a look of practiced pity. "Are they... vintage? They have that distinctive, worn quality. That 'hand-me-down' aesthetic."
The fabric felt suddenly heavy and scratchy against your skin. They had been your mother's, mended with care and kept clean through sheer effort, but they lacked the shimmer of new silk. Heat flooded your face, a hot prickle of shame you hated yourself for feeling.
"They're fine," you muttered, clutching your books tighter to your chest.
"Oh, I'm sure they're perfectly serviceable," she added, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness. "Not everyone has the luxury of replacing their wardrobe every season, after all."
Changmin leaned across the table, his expression open and conversational, though his eyes remained predatory.
"So, what does your father do for work?" he asked, swirling the pumpkin juice in his goblet as if it were a fine vintage. "My father sits on the Wizengamot, of course. And Giselleâs family runs one of the largest potions corporations in Europe. It's always so interesting to hear what other families do."
"He works for the Ministry," you said shortly, keeping your eyes fixed on your plate.
"Oh? How prestigious. Which department? International Magical Cooperation? The Auror Office?"
"Magical Maintenance."
The silence that followed was heavy enough to suffocate. You didn't need to look up to feel the shockwave of silent communication passing between them. You could practically hear the click of the mental locks falling into place: the suppressed smirks, the shared glances, and the smug, knowing silence that broadcast exactly what they thought of your familyâs status. You weren't just the 'wrong type' for Jaemin; in their eyes, you were a glitch in the social order.
"Very honest work, Iâm sure," Giselle added finally, her voice carrying just enough to be heard at the neighboring tables. "Someone has to keep the toilets functioning."
Jo who'd been next to you the whole time, bolted upright, her face flushed a dangerous shade of scarlet. You moved instinctively, grabbing her arm and hauling her back into her seat before she could cause a scene.
The real ambush, however, didn't come until Friday evening.
You'd been in the library trying to calculate the magical decay of a complex curse for your Arithmancy assignment. Beside you, Jaemin had been hovering for the better part of an hour, his presence a persistent distraction.
"If you carry the nine there," he whispered, his long finger hovering over your string of equations, "doesn't the probability of a backfire increase by 12%?"
"No, Jaemin," you huffed, rubbing your temples where a dull ache was beginning to bloom. "This isn't Divination. You cannot simply guess your way through Arithmancy. Seven is a powerful magical prime, but in an inverted sequence, its weight is halved. I am trying to ensure you don't accidentally liquefy your own bones during the NEWTs."
"Right, right. Half the weight, double the trouble," he murmured. He wasn't even pretending to look at the numbers anymore; his gaze was fixed on the way you were biting your lip in concentration. "Explain the Pythagorean bridge to me again? That was very sexy."
A sharp retort about his lack of focus was halfway up your throat when the shadows fell over the table.
Giselle and Changmin. They were flanked by Sungchan, another Quidditch type you vaguely recognized, and a fourth person whose presence made the air leave your lungs in a rush.
Yuna.
She stood there, ice-blonde and perfectly beautiful. You felt Jaeminâs posture stiffen beside you. You hadn't known. Heâd never mentioned she was part of his circle, that she was this close to the people he spent every waking hour with. The "fake" part of your relationship suddenly felt dangerously flimsy.
"Study date?" Giselle asked, sliding into the seat directly across from you. "Iâm sorry, is that a textbook, Jaemin? I thought you used those as coasters."
Jaemin didn't look up from your parchment. "We're just working."
"Itâs Friday night," Sungchan cut in, leaning heavily against a nearby bookshelf. "The guys are sneaking kegs of firewhisky into the common room as we speak. Thereâs a party starting in ten minutes, mate. Weâve been looking for you for an hour."
Yuna stepped forward, her dark eyes narrowing as she focused on you for the first time.
"Y/N, right?" she said, her voice a soft, melodic contrast to the tension. "What exactly have you done to him? Jaemin hasn't missed a Friday night since third year. And yet, here he is, looking at... what is that? Arithmancy?"
"Itâs important for the exams," you said, your voice sounding steadier than you felt. "And he's actually quite good at it when he tries."
A snort of pure skepticism escaped Yuna. "Since when is calculating the weight of a hex more entertaining than a party?"
"Since I realized I was failing," Jaemin interjected smoothly, reaching out to lace his fingers with yours atop the table. You knew it was a calculated move, a public display for the one person who mattered. "Y/N pointed out that if I don't pass the Arithmancy boards, I won't be able to take the advanced Theo-Magic track next year. She's very persuasive when she wants to be."
"Persuasive, huh?" Giselle repeated, though her eyes flicked toward Yuna to gauge her reaction. âI can only imagine the things she can do, if sheâs managed to make you skip every single party since you started dating.â
Giselleâs implication was blatant, dripping with enough tawdry subtext to make your cheeks flame. You looked at Jaemin, waiting for him to shred her with his notorious silver tongue. Instead, he remained maddeningly static. Only the slight tightening of his jaw betrayed his irritation.
âDid you know thereâs actually a betting pool regarding how long youll two last?â Yuna asked, her tone conversational, as if she were discussing the Quidditch scores than your social execution. âThe smart money says two weeks. That is, if the novelty doesnât wear off by Tuesday.â
The news hit your stomach with a cold, hollow thud. âThereâs a what?â
âDonât look so scandalized.â she waved a hand, her emerald ring catching the light. âItâs nothing personal, darling. People adore a spectacle, and this is a bewildering one. Jaemin has spent years as the prize everyone was chasing, and then he suddenly chooses...â
She trailed off. Her silence was more eloquent than any insult.
"The weird girl who hides in corners," Sungchan supplied helpfully. "No offense."
"Loads taken," you snapped before you could stop yourself.
âSo defensive.â Yuna chuckled cruelly.
âThatâs enough,â Jaemin said. His voice lost its playful lilt, replaced by a low edge. It was the sound of a predator deciding a conversation had reached its conclusion.
âWeâre just teasing, Jaem. Donât be so sensitive.â Giselle stood, smoothing her robes. âIf Y/N is going to be part of our inner circle, sheâll need a thicker skin. We aren't known for our gentleness.â
âI am dating Jaemin,â you said, your voice finally steady. âNot applying to be your friend.â
The temperature at the table dropped approximately ten degrees.
âWell,â Yuna said, her delicate features arranging themselves into an expression of theatrical, wide-eyed surprise. âIt seems the little bird has claws after all."
They had successfully poked at the seams of your composure and were now departing before the scene became truly messy.
"A little parting advice, Y/N," Giselle said, pausing as she turned. "The more defensive you become, the more it appears as though youâre hiding something. And in this school, secrets are the only currency that matters."
Then they were gone. The only sound left was the rustle of their expensive robes fading into the library stacks. You sat there, shaking, while Jaeminâs fingers remained locked with yours.
âTheyâre foul,â you muttered, the sharp thud of your textbook echoing too loudly against the mahogany table. âYour friends are actually vipers, Jaemin.â
âI know.â His reply was flat, lacking any of the heat you were looking for. âLook, Iâm sorry.â
âAre you?â You yanked your hand away from his, suddenly angry at him. âBecause you just sat there like a statue. You let them say all that, and you didn't even blink.â
âAnd what did you want me to do? Start a row in the middle of the library?â
âOh, I donât knowâmaybe defend me!â The words burst out, earning a sharp, hawk-like âShh!â from Madam Pince.
You leaned in, dropping your voice to a fierce whisper. âTell them theyâre being cruel. Tell them to sod off! But you just sat there looking like you were enjoying the show.â
Jaemin didn't answer right away. He leaned back in his chair, the wood creaking as he studied you with those dark, unreadable eyes.
âIf I get too defensive, theyâll know somethingâs up,â he said eventually. âYou heard Giselle, she's looking for a reaction. Thatâs what theyâre all doing. They're looking for proof that weâre lying. The more I protest, the more suspicious they get.â
âSo Iâm just supposed to sit there and take it?â You felt a hot sting behind your eyes and hated yourself for it. âI have to let them slag me off and talk rubbish about my family, all to keep your precious cover story alive?â
âJust for a bit,â he insisted. âOnce theyâre convinced itâs real, theyâll back off. But right now, theyâre testing us. Theyâre testing you. And if we want this to work, you have to pass.â
âIâm trying to pass the bloody test!â you hissed, your voice rising again.
âTrying, yeah.â He leaned forward, his shadow falling over your parchment. âBut youâre not being very convincing, Y/N.â
Your face flushed. âWhatâs that supposed to mean?â
âIt means you always look uncomfortable.â He ran a hand through his hair, his composure finally fraying. âYou look miserable, Y/N. Constantly. Like being near me is a form of torture.â
âWell, it isnât exactly a holiday,â you shot back.
âI know this isnât ideal,â he continued, ignoring the jab. âI know you didn't want this. But we made a deal, and if you keep acting like Iâm a Dementor every time I come within a foot of you, no one is going to believe this.â
âSo what? You want me to swoon? Hang off your arm like a mindless doll?â
âI want you to look like you can at least tolerate me,â he cut in, his tone sharpening. âI want you to stop flinching when I hold your hand. Lean into me instead of going rigid as a board. Smile, Y/N. A real one, not that grimace you do when people are watching.â
âThatâs the best I can do.â
âWell, your best isnât good enough.â He looked at the library door, then back at you. âGiselle asked me why youâre so tense all the time. I told her you were shy about public affection, but that excuse only works for so long.â
You stared at him, your chest tight with a cocktail of fury.
âMaybe you shouldâve picked someone who actually wanted to be your girlfriend.â
âI picked you because I thought you were smart enough to pull this off, but if you can't... â He trailed off, shaking his head. "If you canât even manage to stay in the same room as me without looking like youâd rather be drowning in the lake, the whole thing falls apart.â
"So will you be satisfied if I start kissing the floor you walk on? " you asked bitterly.
âItâd be a start,â he said simply. âLook, I know theyâre awful. But you need to try harder. Stop pulling away. Stop acting like my touch is burning you.â
âIt is burning me,â you muttered. You didn't mean to say it out loud, and you immediately wished you could swallow the words back down.
Jaeminâs eyes widened slightly. âWhat?â
âNothing.â You stood up abruptly, gathering your things with fumbling hands. âForget it. Iâll try harder, alright? Iâll be more convincing. Iâll smile and lean in and act like Iâm absolutely mad about you. Is that what you want?â
âY/N, waitââ
âIâm going back to the common room.â You slung your bag over your shoulder, refusing to look at him. âIâll see you at breakfast. Iâll be sure to put on a proper show.â
âThatâs not what Iââ
But you didnât stay to hear the rest. You turned and walked away, your vision blurring slightly as you navigated between the towering bookshelves, Madam Pince's disapproving glare following you all the way to the exit.
Behind you, you heard Jaemin sigh, but he didnât call after you.
Just as well. You needed to be anywhere but near him.
Expectations of a smooth public performance next morning were shattered the moment Jaemin actually appeared. You had braced yourself for the usual, the effortless slide onto the bench, the heavy weight of his arm claiming your space, and that charming attitude that suggested your library row had been nothing more than a minor blip.
Instead, the Jaemin who approached the table looked like heâd gone several rounds with a rogue Bludger. His tie was a shambles, hanging loose around his collar, and his hair was a chaotic nest of blonde strands as if heâd spent the early hours of the morning dragging his hands through it in frustration. He didn't sit, but lingered at the edge of the bench with a strange, jittery energy.
"Can we talk?"
The question was a mere breath under the noise of clattering plates and the morning owl post.
You looked back down at your porridge. "About what?"
"Yesterday." He sounded nervous, not the polished Pureblood prince, but a boy who was genuinely out of his depth. "Please?"
Jo delivered a sharp kick to your shin under the table. Why did she keep doing that?! You winced, the sting jolting you out of your stubborn trance. Against your better judgment, you found yourself nodding.
"Fine. Where?"
"Third floor. The corridor by the one-eyed witch statue." He checked his watch, his fingers drumming a frantic rhythm against the wood of the table. "Ten o'clock?"
"Thatâs oddly specific," you muttered, finally meeting his eyes.
"Justâtrust me on this. Please?"
There was that word again. Please. It was a far cry from the boy who had told you your best wasn't good enough yesterday. And because you were apparently a glutton for punishment, you felt your resolve crumble.
"Ten o'clock," you agreed.
He didn't offer a smirk or a wink for the benefit of the watching Great Hall. He simply gave a tight nod and sat down, keeping a conspicuous gap between your shoulder and his.
Stone walls and guttering torches made the third floor just as drab as the rest of the castle. A few portraits dozed in their frames, and the statue of the one-eyed witch stood sentinel at the far end, her painted eyes seeming to follow your every move with an almost unsettling intensity.
Five minutes of waiting had already passed, which was roughly four minutes and fifty seconds longer than it took to start feeling like a total idiot.
Just as the urge to bolt back to the safety of the common room became overwhelming, the rhythmic scuff of boots echoed against the flagstones. Jaemin rounded the corner, his usual swagger replaced by a stiff gait. You drew a breath, ready to tell him exactly where he could shove this clandestine little meeting, but he hoisted a hand to silence you.
"Before you lay into me," he started, coming to a halt just out of armâs reach, "I want to apologize. Properly. For yesterday."
The anger youâd been carefully stoking for the last twelve hours flickered and died, leaving you feeling strangely hollow. "Oh."
"I was frustrated, and I took it out on you. It wasn't fair, and it wasn't right." He dragged a hand through his hair, a sign of genuine nerves that made him more like a tired teenager. "Youâre right. This situation is mental. My friends are absolute vultures, and Iâve been asking you to stand in the middle of the pack without giving you a single bit of support."
"I mean... yeah." You leaned against the cold stone wall, trying to hide how much that small bit of validation actually mattered. "That has been the arrangement so far, hasn't it?"
"Well, itâs a rubbish arrangement." He stepped into your personal space, his eyes searching yours with an earnestness that felt far too real. "I want to make this bearable for you. But for that to happen, I think we need to... practice."
"Practice?"
"At being comfortable," he explained, as if he were simply suggesting a bit of extra Quidditch drills. "You said my touching burns. Not literally, I hope, butâ" He gestured between the two of you. "Thereâs this tension. This massive wall between us. People can see it, Y/N. Itâs written all over you."
"Right. So your grand plan is..."
"Exposure therapy," he said. "We need to get accustomed to one another. And we need to do it without an audience watching your every flinch."
A snort almost escaped you as you processed the sheer absurdity of the suggestion. It felt like a scene ripped straight from one of those tawdry novels Jo kept hidden in her trunk, the ones with titles like The Warlockâs Wicked Whim.
But beneath the embarrassment sat a cold, hard logic you couldn't ignore. Every time his skin brushed yours, your heart panicked. You went rigid, your breath hitched, and your pulse became a frantic drumbeat in your ears. If you could feel that visceral wrongness vibrating through your bones, then vipers like Giselle and Yuna could definitely tell too.
"And you want to do this here?" A wary glance down the drafty corridor followed, half-expecting a gaggle of students to peek around the corner, eager for a glimpse of the castle's most talked-about couple. "What if someone comes by?"
"They won't." Jaemin started walking again, gesturing for you to follow. "Thatâs the whole point of meeting on this floor."
Confusion was about to mount into another argument when he came to a sudden halt in front of a completely unremarkable stretch of stone wall. Without a word, he began to pace. Back and forth, back and forth, his brow furrowed in a look of intense concentration.
For a moment, you just watched him, convinced that he'd finally cracked under the pressure and that this whole fake relationship scheme had driven him round the bend. You were seconds away from suggesting a firm dose of Calming Draught from Madam Pomfrey when the masonry began to ripple.
Solid stone blurred and shimmered like the surface of the Black Lake under a midday sun. Then, with a low, tectonic grind, an ornate wooden door bled into existence.
Your mouth fell open. You'd heard of this, of course. Read about it in 'Hogwarts: A History'. But reading about something and seeing it happen right in front of your eyes were two very different things.
"The Room of Requirement," you breathed, awe temporarily overriding your general state of irritation.
"The Room of Requirement," Jaemin confirmed, and there was a note of satisfaction in his voice. "I figured if we're going to do this, we should do it somewhere we won't be interrupted."
"Unless you don't want to?" he asked, and there was a carefulness to the question, an unspoken offer of an out. "I know this is... I know it's a lot to ask. But I really think it'll help. I do."
You stared at the door, your mind whirling. This was insane. Completely, utterly, certifiably insane. Practicing feeling comfortable with Na Jaemin in a magical room that appeared out of thin air? This was your life now? This was what your Hogwarts experience had come to?
But what was the alternative? Continue on as you had been, flinching and grimacing your way through this charade until even the most gullible Hufflepuff could see right through you? Let Jaemin's awful friends pick and prod at you until you broke?
No. No, as much as it pained you to admit it, Jaemin was right. If you were going to make it through this with your dignity remotely intact, you had to stop being the weak link. You needed to become a better liar.Â
And if that meant subjecting yourself to Merlin knows what kind of 'practice' in a secret magic room... well. So be it.
âI swear if this is some kind of prankâŠâ
"It's not." He pushed open the door, warm, inviting light spilling out into the corridor. "I promise."
The moment you crossed the threshold, you felt a strange sensation wash over you. Like stepping into a warm bath after a long, cold day. The room was...not at all what you expected. It was smaller, cozier. There was a plush sofa against one wall, a few cushy armchairs arranged around a low coffee table. The lighting was soft, emanating from no discernible source, and the air smelled faintly of vanilla and old books. It felt safe, somehow. Comforting. Which only served to put you more on edge.
"So," you said, crossing your arms over your chest as the door swung shut behind you with a soft, final-sounding click. "You brought me here to practice. Practice what, exactly?"
Jaemin had the grace to look slightly abashed. "Intimacy."
"I'm sorry, what?â
"Notânot like that," he said quickly, and was that a hint of a flush on his cheeks? Surely not. Na Jaemin didn't get flustered. It must be a trick of the light. "I mean... being close.. and comfortable enough to casually touch each other. You know, the things couples do in public that you keep shying away from."
"You make it sound so simple," you muttered, feeling a blush rise to your own cheeks despite your best efforts.Â
"Itâs not that big of a deal." He gestured to the sofa. "Look, we're going to have to spend the next two months being physically affectionate in front of the entire school. And right now, every time I so much as brush against you, you look like you'd rather be facing a herd of centaurs. So we need to practice. To make it feel normal."
Normal. What a ludicrous concept. There was nothing normal about this. But you bit back the sharp retort on the tip of your tongue. Youâd agreed to this madness, and backing out now would only make you look more pathetic.
"Right. So you want me to get used to you pawing at me."
"I do not pawâ" He cut himself off, taking a visible breath to steady himself. "I want you to get used to me touching you in a completely respectful, non-pawing way.
You stared at him and he stared back. You could practically hear the seconds ticking by, feel the weight of the impasse settling over the room.
"Fine," you said at last, the word feeling like it was being dragged out of you with fish hooks. "Fine. What do you want me to do?"
His shoulders relaxed, the tension in his jaw easing just a fraction. "Just⊠come sit with me. We'll start slow."
He settled onto the sofa and patted the cushion beside him. You approached warily, lowering yourself onto the opposite end and putting as much distance between your bodies as physically possible. Jaemin looked at the three-foot chasm of empty space and raised an eyebrow.
"You're going to have to get closer than that."
"This is close."
"Youâre barely sitting on the couch."
"Baby steps," you muttered.
"We don't have time for baby steps." But his voice was gentle, coaxing. "Come on. I don't bite."
That remains to be seen, you thought. But despite every instinct screaming at you to run, you scooted closer. Then a bit closer still. You stopped in the middle of the sofa, a foot of space still separating you, but closer than you'd ever voluntarily been to him outside of your mandated public displays.
"Better," Jaemin said, and the soft, approving lilt in his voice sent a traitorous flutter through your stomach. "Now, I'm going to put my arm around you. Like I do at meals. And I want you to try not to tense up. Okay?"
You nodded, not trusting your voice not to shake.
Slowly, broadcasting his movements like he was approaching a skittish animal, he lifted his arm, draping it across the back of the sofa. His hand came to rest on your shoulder, the weight of it startling in its warmth, its solidity.
Instantly, you felt your entire body go rigid, your muscles locking up like you'd been hit with a full body bind curse. Every nerve ending was suddenly alight, hyper-aware of the exact dimensions of his palm, the precise pressure of each individual finger.
"Youâre doing it again," he murmured. His voice was much closer than youâd expected. "Tensing up."
"I know," you gritted out. "Iâm trying."
"Here." His other hand hovered just shy of your arm, hesitant. "Just breathe. Focus on that."
Breathe. Right. You could manage that.
You sucked in a breath, held it for a count of three, and forced it out. You repeated the cycle until the iron bands of your muscles began to slacken, slowly adjusting to the foreign sensation of him.
"Good," Jaemin whispered. "See? Not so terrible."
"Itâs weird," you countered. It was unsettling and entirely too much. "Youâre weird. This whole thing is mental."
"Noted." There was a definite streak of amusement in his tone now. "But you aren't flinching. Thatâs progress."
He was right. The initial shock of the contact was fading, replaced by a strange sort of...not comfort, exactly. Awareness, maybe. You were intensely conscious of the weight of his arm, the warmth of his body seeping into yours, the steady rise and fall of his chest as he breathed next to you.
The feeling wasn't the searing, blistering heat you'd stupidly mentioned yesterday in a moment of unthinking frustration. But it was a lot. Intimate in a way you weren't at all prepared for, in a way that made your heart thud traitorously against your rib cage.
"Okay," Jaemin said after the silence had stretched out just long enough to teeter on the edge of uncomfortable. "Next step. I'm going to pull you a bit closer. Like I do when we're walking to class."
"Do you really need to narrate every little thing?" You couldn't help the note of exasperation that crept into your voice.
"I'm trying not to spook you."
"I'm not a skittish woodland creature."
"Could've fooled me," he muttered, but there was no real bite to it.
Before you could formulate a properly scathing response, he drew you firmly into his side. Your instinct was to lock up again, but you fought it. This close, the scent of him was overwhelmingâclean linen, and a subtle hint of broomstick polish.
It was disorienting. Overwhelming. But...not entirely unpleasant, if you were being honest with yourself. Which you absolutely were not going to be, because that way lay madness.
"Are you okay?" Jaemin asked, and his voice lacked his usual arrogance, sounding instead like he was actually concerned about your boundaries.
For a dizzying second, you wondered if there was more to him than the unflappable, silver-tongued Slytherin. Was this just as strange and unsettling for him? You pushed the thought away immediately. Thinking of Jaemin as a real person with real nerves was a one-way trip to jagged rocks and shark-infested waters. He was a means to an end. A necessary evil.
"It's fine," you said, and if your voice came out a little breathier than usual, a little less steady, well. That was nobody's business but your own. âNot terrible, I suppose."
"High praise, coming from you," he said, and you could hear the smile in his voice, could practically feel the curve of his lips where they brushed against your hair.Â
You chose to ignore that, focusing instead on keeping your breathing steady and your heartbeat under control.
Time passed, seconds or minutes or hours, you couldn't quite tell. The room had narrowed down to the weight of Jaemin's arm around you, the heat of his body pressed against yours, the soft sounds of your breathing intermingling in the quiet room.
The whole thing was almost peaceful, provided you let yourself forget exactly who he was and why you were here.
âHow much longer do we have to do this?â you asked eventually, when the silence and the sensation started to feel like too much.
Jaemin shrugged, the movement jostling you slightly. âUntil it feels normal, I guess. Or at least not horribly awkward.â
You let out a long sigh. âWeâre going to be here a while, then.â
He laughed, the sound warm and resonant in the small room. âProbably. But look on the bright sideâat least the couch is comfortable, right?â
You made a noncommittal noise, unwilling to give him the satisfaction of an agreement.
âJust think,â he continued, a teasing lilt returning to his voice, âa few more of these sessions and weâll be the most convincing couple Hogwarts has ever seen. Weâll put the real ones to shame.â
âBe still my beating heart,â you deadpanned. âWhat a glittering future.â
âWeâll practice the basics for now. Then weâll work our way up.â
âWork our way up to what, exactly?â You regretted the question the moment it left your lips. His arm tightened slightly, and his voice took on a silkier quality.
âWell,â he said, âeventually, weâre going to have to practice kissing.â
You practically launched yourself off the cushions at that. You scrambled to the very edge of the sofa, your heart hammering against your ribs like a trapped bird. The distance between you was back to a yawning three feet in a matter of seconds.
Heâd mentioned kissing when he proposed this mad arrangement in the first place but you genuinely thought heâd been trying to ruffle you. The prospect of actually kissing Na Jaemin was so far outside your comfort zone it felt like another planet.
âAbsolutely not!â you gasped, your eyes wide with genuine alarm. âNot happening. Not in this lifetime.â
Jaemin stared at you, his arm still draped over the empty space where your shoulder had been a moment ago. He looked startled by your sudden flight, but it only took a second for that lazy amusement to crawl back onto his face.
âItâs going to come up, Y/N,â he said, dropping his arm and leaning back comfortably, as if he hadn't just suggested something world-ending. âCouples kiss. Especially 'new' couples who are supposedly mad about each other. If the first time I kiss you is in front of the entire Great Hall and you look like youâre about to be sick, the game is up.â
âI get it,â you snapped, your face feeling like it was being held over a Bunsen burner. âI get it. But weâre notâI mean, we donât need to do that. Itâs way too much.â
âWe donât have to do it today,â he agreed, his voice surprisingly gentle as he watched you vibrate with nerves at the end of the sofa. âWeâll work up to it slowly. Baby steps, remember?â
âI hate this,â you mumbled, slowly sinking back into the upholstery, though you stayed firmly out of arm's reach.
âI know,â he said, his eyes tracking you with a look that was far too observant for your liking. âBut youâre getting much better at pretending you don't.â
The witching hour, that eerie stretch of night when all respectable souls should be tucked safely in their beds, found you instead padding down the darkened corridors of Hogwarts, your dressing gown pulled tight around you and your wand tip illuminating the way.Â
It was a terrible idea, really, wandering the castle at this hour. You were a prefect, for Merlin's sake. You knew the rules better than most. Out of bed after curfew, risking detention or worse, all for what? A craving for something sweet that couldn't wait until the civilized hours of morning?
But sleep had proven elusive, your mind refusing to quiet, insisting instead on replaying the events of the past week in excruciatingly vivid detail. The practice sessions with Jaemin in the Room of Requirement featured most prominently, of course. The steadily shrinking distance between your bodies, the way his touch was beginning to feel almost... familiar.
You were making progress. Which was precisely the problem.
So now, at an absolutely unreasonable hour, you found yourself seeking solace in the kitchens. If you were going to be awake anyway, you might as well have a biscuit to keep you company.
You reached the portrait of the fruit bowl, tucked away in a corridor no one ever noticed, and tickled the pear. It squirmed and giggled, as it always did, before transforming into a door handle.
The kitchens were a welcome oasis of warmth, the vaulted ceilings echoing with the industrious sounds of house-elves going about their nightly dutiesâkneading dough for the morning's bread, organizing the pantry, scrubbing the massive cauldrons until they shone. They looked up as you entered, surprise evident on their wrinkled little faces.
"Miss!" squeaked a particularly diminutive elf, hurrying over to you, her tea towel toga flapping about her knees. "Miss should be in bed! Is Miss hungry? Was something not to Miss's liking at dinner?"
"No, no," you assured her quickly, crouching down to her level with a smile. "Dinner was wonderful, as always. I just couldn't sleep and thought a little something sweet might help."
The elf's large eyes widened further, a delighted smile stretching her mouth. "Oh yes, yes! Dipsy can help! We has treacle tart left over from dinner, and chocolate biscuits, and Dipsy can bring fresh cream for Miss's teaâ"
"Just a biscuit or two would be lovely," you said. "And maybe a bit of that apple tart, if there's any left? I don't want to make extra work for you."
"Is no work at all!" Dipsy insisted, already scurrying off toward the enormous cooling racks that lined one wall. "Is Dipsy's pleasure to serve! Miss sit, sit! Dipsy will bring tea!"
And so you found yourself perched on a stool at one of the long preparation tables, watching with a mix of amusement and awe as Dipsy and two other elves fluttered about, assembling a plate of biscuits and tart and a pot of fragrant, steaming tea.
"Thank you," you said sincerely as they presented you with your midnight feast. "This is exactly what I needed."
Dipsy beamed, her bat-like ears quivering with pleasure. "Miss is always so kind, so polite! Not like some students, so rude and demanding they is. But Miss is a good student, yes she is!"
You felt a pang at that, remembering all the times you'd seen your classmates treating the house-elves like mere servants. "You work so hard," you told her. "The least I can do is be polite."
The ancient elf in the tea towel toga shuffled up then, setting a small pot of jam next to your plate. "Special raspberry preserves," he croaked. "Made 'em myself. Good for what ails you, they is."
"That's very kind, thank you," you said, touched by the gesture.
You passed the next quarter hour in the warm bustle of the kitchens, savoring your illicit snack while the elves worked around you, peppering you with questionsâdid you need anything else, what did you think of the new recipe they'd tried at lunch, would you like to take some extra tarts back to your dormitory? It was soothing, the cheerful chatter and clatter, so different from the brooding silence of your room.
By the time you'd drained your teacup and consumed a frankly inadvisable number of biscuits, you were feeling considerably more yourself.
"Thank you," you said again as you rose to leave. "I feel much better."
"Miss is welcome anytime!" Dipsy assured you earnestly. "Dipsy is always here if Miss needs a little pick-me-up!"
You left with a smile and a promise to visit again, slipping back out into the dark and drafty corridor.
It was deserted, as you'd expected. Or so you thought, until a voice emerged from the shadows some twenty feet ahead, stopping you in your tracks.
"Out for a midnight stroll?"
You nearly leapt out of your skin, your wand raised defensively before you'd even fully registered the words. But then a familiar figure stepped into a pool of torchlight, and your racing heart stuttered for an entirely different reason.
Jaemin. Even in the middle of the bloody night, he managed to look put together, his school robes immaculate and his prefect badge gleaming. His hands were tucked casually in his pockets, and there was a glint in his eye that might have been amusement.
"Merlin's beard, Jaemin," you hissed, lowering your wand. "Are you trying to get hexed? You can't just lurk in the dark like some sort ofâvillain!"
"I'm not lurking, I'm patrolling," he countered. "It's my job to accost students out of bed after hours. Which, need I remind you, you currently are."
"Iâm a prefect too," you shot back, though you were painfully aware that your current attireâdressing gown, fluffy slippers, and basically a bird's next on your headâdidnât exactly command authority.
"A prefect who's very much off duty," Jaemin pointed out, his eyes sweeping over you in a way that made you acutely conscious of your bare legs and messy hair. "And wandering the castle at two in the morning, no less."
You crossed your arms, trying to salvage some shred of dignity. "I couldn't sleep. Not that it's any of your business, but if you must know, I was hungry. I went to the kitchens."
"The kitchens," he repeated slowly.
"Yes, the kitchens. You're familiar with the concept, I assume? Big room, lots of elves, food comes from there?"
Jaemin, looking awfully like he was trying not to smile, said again, "You went to the kitchens. At two a.m. In your dressing gown."
You rolled your eyes so hard it hurt a little. "Yes, that's what I just said. Is there an echo here I'm not aware of?"
"Y/n y/l/n, prefect and notorious rule-follower, snuck out of bed and all the way down to the kitchens in the dead of night...for a biscuit?"
"What, like you've never had a late-night snack craving?"
"No, I can't say I have." He was definitely fighting a smile now. "I'm just surprised. I didn't take you for the type."
"Yes, well, there's a lot you don't know about me," you muttered, brushing past him to continue your trek back to Gryffindor tower. To your great chagrin, Jaemin fell into step beside you, long legs eating up the distance effortlessly.
"And here I was thinking I had you all figured out... Now I come to find you have a dark side. Late-night wanderings, clandestine trips to the kitchen...so scandalous. Merlin only knows what other secrets you're hiding behind that prim prefect exterior."
"Oh, yes," you agreed dryly. "I'm a woman of endless mysteries. Careful, Na, or I'll file you away in my mental 'too curious for his own good' cabinet with all my other deep, dark secrets."
It was possibly the most ridiculous thing you'd ever said, made all the more absurd by the fact that you were padding through the halls in slippers, being relentlessly followed by the boy you were supposed to be pretending to date. Who was going to write your biography one day? They'd have a field day with this.
"So why are you lurking about in the dark, anyway?" you asked, feeling the need to shift focus away from your own nocturnal misadventures. "Isn't this usually when you abscond to the grounds to catch hapless rule-breakers?"
"Wasn't in the mood," Jaemin said with a shrug. "Thought I'd switch it up tonight. Catch hapless biscuit thieves instead."
You shot him a withering look. "I'm not a thief. The elves gave me those biscuits fair and square. And anyway, you're one to talk about avoiding the grounds. What, did our last excursion awaken a sudden fear of the dark?"
"Hardly." A pause. "Just wasn't the same without my favorite patrol partner, I suppose."
Your steps faltered a bit at that, and you hoped desperately that the darkness was enough to hide the flush you could feel creeping up your neck. Favorite patrol partner. He had to be mocking you. Nevermind that he'd said it almost...softly. Sincerely, even. A trick of the acoustics in this drafty old castle, no doubt.
âIâm flattered,â you managed, arranging your face into an expression of arch disdain. "Though I think we both know I'm likely the only patrol partner youâve terrorized on the grounds. Bit of a low bar, as far as favoritism goes."
âI'm grading on a curve," Jaemin said with a smirk. "Bumping you to the head of a class of one."
"How magnanimous of you."
"I'm choosing to take that as a compliment."
A slow shake of the head was the only response you could muster. Between the amusement and the sheer exasperation, it was hard to keep track of your own feelings. This boy. This ridiculous, irritating, unfairly handsome boy. How had your life come to revolve around verbally sparring with him in darkened hallways in the middle of the night?
You'd reached the stairs leading up toward Gryffindor Tower, and you paused at the base, turning to face Jaemin. He was looking at you intently, as if he wanted to say something.
"You've been better this week," he said abruptly.
You blinked, caught off guard by the change in topic. "What?"
"At pretending," he clarified. "You don't flinch anymore when I touch you. That thing you did yesterday, with your hand on my chest when you were laughing at Jo's joke - that was good. Natural."
Heat crept up your neck at the memory. You'd surprised yourself with that gesture, the easy intimacy of it. It had just...happened. No thought, no awkwardness. For a moment, it had felt real.
"Oh," you said eloquently. "Um. Thanks?"
Jaemin nodded. "I can tell the practice is helping. People are buying it. Even Giselle's backed off a bit."
"Only a bit," you muttered. Jaemin's prickly best friend had been keeping a hawkish eye on you. She'd cornered you just yesterday, demanding to know Jaemin's favorite Quidditch team. You'd guessed the Falmouth Falcons, only to be informed with a triumphant sneer that he was actually a die-hard Montrose Magpies supporter, had been since childhood, and really, what kind of girlfriend doesn't know that?
"She's protective," Jaemin said, as if reading your thoughts. "But she's coming around. Slowly."
"Hooray for small mercies," you said dryly.
Jaemin's lips twitched. "Anyway, I didn't just track you down to compliment your acting skills."
"So why did you track me down, then?" You folded your arms, trying to ignore the way your pulse had picked up at his words. "Other than to save me from death by biscuit overindulgence, of course."
"Next weekend is a Hogsmeade weekend," he said.
You nodded slowly. "I'm aware."
"It's also Valentine's Day."
"Oh." You blinked. "Right." Somehow, in the midst of all the fake dating drama and NEWTs prep, you'd completely forgotten about the most romantic day of the year. "That's...a thing."
"A thing we should probably do together," Jaemin said. "I mean, it would look weird if we didn't, wouldn't it? The whole school will be there, all the couples will be out in force..."
Suddenly your hands felt clammy. He was right, of course. If you were really dating, you'd be all over each other on Valentine's Day. Holding hands, sharing butterbeer, probably snogging in some corner of Madam Puddifoot's like every other disgustingly happy couple.
But you weren't really dating. And the thought of upping the ante on this charade you were already barely keeping up with...it made you feel a bit sick.
Jaemin must have seen some of this on your face, because he quickly added, "We don't have to make a big deal of it. Just walk around together, maybe get lunch at the Three Broomsticks. I could buy you some chocolate from Honeydukes, let people see me being a good boyfriend. That's all."
"Right," you said faintly. "Sounds...great."
He studied you for a moment. "I mean, if you had other plans, or if you think it's too muchâ"
"No," you said, more firmly than you felt. "No, you're right. We should go together. For appearances' sake, if nothing else."
His eyes flickered at your words, a brief shadow passing over them before he straightened up. "Great," he said briskly. "It's a date then."
You took a step back, suddenly desperate for the safety of your dormitory. "I should go. Itâs late."
Jaemin nodded. "Get some rest, Y/N. Iâll see you in Potions."
"Can't wait." You started up the stairs, but paused at the landing to look back. "Goodnight, Jaemin."
"Goodnight." He waited a beat, his voice dropping to a low, melodic murmur. "Sweet dreams, baby."
You huffed a laugh to hide your skyrocketing pulse and hurried up the stairs, feeling his gaze on your back until you turned the corner.
Valentineâs Day with Jaemin. It was just another scene in the play. You could handle it.
Right?
But as you climbed the stairs to your bed, you had the sinking feeling that 'sweet' dreams were the last thing you were going to get.
The Hogsmeade trip came around quicker than expected. It had barely stopped raining for weeks, but on Saturday the sun was a weak golden disk behind a scrim of clouds, and every student with even a shred of romantic aspiration was queued up to be let out the gates, Gryffindor and Slytherin and the rest all jostling close, careful to keep up appearances for whatever audience they believed themselves to have.Â
You, on the other hand, spent the first half of the walk pretending that the clumps of snow along the path were of great zoological interest, then the next half pretending you couldnât feel Jaeminâs hand cradling your elbow, like you were some frail Victorian damsel and the uneven ground posed a mortal peril.
 âThis is a bit much, isnât it?â you muttered, as you reached the crest of the hill and saw the town below.Â
Every shop window had been transformed into a shrine for Valentineâs Day: Sugar quaffles in the shape of anatomically correct hearts, boxes of chocolates spelled to whisper eternal devotion when opened, bargain bouquets of roses that swatted at you if you tried to walk by without paying them a compliment. Even the cobblestone streets seemed to have been scrubbed up for the occasion, each puddle reflecting a film of pink and red banners strung overhead.
Jaemin grinned at your side, unbothered by the spectacle. âYouâre nervous.â
âIâm not nervous,â you insisted, though you eyed the brightly colored display tray warily. âI just donât want to accidentally eat one of those chocolates that makes you recite poetry. Last time Jo had one, she spoke in haikus for three hours. It was a nightmare.â
âThat sounds amazing, actually,â Jaemin said, a devilish glint in his eye. He veered off the main path, his long coat swishing around his ankles as he approached the sugar-dusted worker hawking the tray. âLetâs see if we get Lord Byron or... Byron-but-make-it-sexy.â
âThose are the same thing, Jaemin.â
He snagged two samples before you could protest, pressing a heart-shaped truffle into your gloved palm. The chocolate was dark, dusted with shimmering pink edible glitter. âGo on. Whatâs the worst that could happen? A little rhyming couplet never killed anyone.â
You rolled your eyes, but the smell of rich cocoa was overpowering your common sense. You took a tentative bite.
The chocolate was velvety, melting instantly over your tongue with notes of dark cherry and espresso. For a second, you thought you were safe. Then, a strange warmth bloomed in your diaphragm. It wasn't the heat of the candy, but more like a physical compulsion, like a marionette string tugging at your vocal cords.
Your lips parted against your will. You tried to say âItâs good,â but your voice, suddenly projecting with a nasal, theatrical vibrato that echoed off the cobblestones, intoned:
âLove is not love which alters when it alteration finds, or bends with the remover to remove!â
Jaemin doubled over, nearly dropping his own sweet, his laughter bright and loud in the crisp air. âOh, brilliant! Shakespeare it is! Give it some more feeling, come on!â
âShut up!â you tried to hiss, but the magic ignored your intent completely. Instead, you threw a dramatic hand over your heart, your eyes fluttering shut as you bellowed, âO, no! it is an ever-fixed mark that looks on tempests and is never shaken!â
You slapped a hand over your mouth, mortified, as a group of Ravenclaws walked by, giggling. The spell finally sputtered out, leaving you breathless and flushed.
âI hate you,â you mumbled into your palm, though the lingering taste of cherry was admittedly delicious. You looked up at him, realizing something didnât add up. âWait. How do you even know that was Shakespeare? Or who Lord Byron is?â
Jaemin finally straightened up, wiping a tear of mirth from the corner of his eye. He popped his own truffle into his mouth, looking entirely unbothered.
âWe have a library at the Manor that rivals the one at Hogwarts,â he said casually, chewing with a thoughtful expression. âMy parents⊠well, theyâre traditionalists, obviously. But my mother has always insisted that a true wizarding education is incomplete without understanding the âarts of the common man.ââ
He swallowed, and for a second, his eyes went wide. You braced yourself for a poem, but he just cleared his throat and smirked. A dud candy. Typical luck.
âShe thinks Muggles are tragically fascinating,â he continued, offering you his arm. âShe insisted I read the classics. âIf you are to rule the world, son, or simply live in it, you must understand how the other half feels.â Or something like that.â
You stared at him in slight awe. You had never really considered that wizards from old, sacred twenty-eight families cared much about the Muggle world, other than to look down on it. As a half-blood who spent most of your childhood navigating the regular world and reading paperbacks, you assumed Jaeminâs world was entirely insulated.
âIâm just glad theyâre using good material this year,â he finished, waggling his eyebrows suggestively. âSonnet 116? âIt is the star to every wandering barkâ? Very romantic choice, Y/N. Is there something youâre trying to tell me?â
You tried to glare at him, to maintain your annoyance at being made a public spectacle, but his smile was so wide, so full of genuine delight, that your irritation evaporated like breath on glass.
âIâm telling you that youâre paying for these sweets,â you said, linking your arm through his.
âFair enough,â he hummed. âWhere to next?
Before you could answer, a shrill voice cut through the chatter of the crowd. "Jaemin! Yoo-hoo, over here!"
You turned to see Yuna Bae waving at you from the doorway of Madam Puddifoot's Tea Shop. She was resplendent in robes of pale pink, her dark hair arranged in perfect curls. Beside her, looking like he'd rather be anywhere else, was a Ravenclaw you recognized from your Charms class. Taehyun, you thought his name was.
Jaemin's grip on your arm tightened imperceptibly. "Yuna," he said, his smile never wavering. "Fancy seeing you here."
"Oh, you know me," Yuna trilled, her eyes raking over you dismissively. "I never miss a Hogsmeade weekend. Taehyun was just treating me to tea. Why don't you join us? I'm sure we could squeeze you in."
The way she said that made it clear she was referring solely to Jaemin. You might as well have been a Flobberworm for all the attention she gave you.
âY/N and I were just heading to Tomes and Scrolls. Sheâs been telling me about the new research into the Goblin Wars that just arrived and you know I can never resist a good history tome.â
Well, that was a blatant lie. Youâd mentioned the book in passing a week ago, but Jaemin would rather drink Bubotuber pus than read a dry history text. Still, you appreciated the save. Yunaâs smile dimmed a fraction, her eyes flicking to the modest storefront of the bookstore as if it were a contagious ward at St. Mungoâs.
âIs this what youâre prioritizing now, Jaemin? This⊠little excursion into the mundane?â
Her eyes raked over your clothes down to your scuffed shoes. âIâm simply fascinated, Jawm. Your family has spent generations cultivating a certain standard, and you're playing the role of the benevolent saint. Taking pity on the less fortunate is a fine hobby, but surely youâre bored of the charity work by now?â
You felt your heart drop to your stomach. You started to speak, but Jaeminâs voice cut through first.
âYuna.â The word was a warning, low and dangerous. âWatch yourself.â
âIâm being perfectly transparent,â she snapped, her feline eyes flashing. âItâs embarrassing, Jaemin. People are laughing. Theyâre wondering how long this little âexperimentâ has to last before you regain your senses and return to your own kind. Youâre a Na. Act like it.â
âI am a Na,â Jaemin said flatly, his arm sliding from your elbow to wrap firmly around your waist, pulling you flush against his side. âAnd Y/N is my girlfriend. She isn't an experiment, and she isn't someone you get to talk down to. If you canât show her the respect sheâs earned, then you and I have nothing left to discuss.â
Yunaâs jaw tightened, her composure finally cracking into a mask of pure venom. âEarned? Sheâs a nameless Gryffindor with nothing to her name but a few decent marks and a tragic wardrobe. Donât think for a second this won't reach your father, Jaemin. He won't be as âcharmedâ by your rebellion as you are.â
âSend the owl tonight if you like,â Jaemin countered, his voice steady. âTell him Iâm busy.â
Yunaâs eyes flicked to you one last time. âEnjoy your biscuits while you can, darling. The higher you climb, the harder the fall.â
You simply smiled, though your chest was tight with fury.
"Oh, Iâll keep that in mind. Do enjoy your tea, Yuna. I hear the service is wonderfully⊠swift today.â
As she turned on her heel to sweep into the tea shop, you kept your hands tucked inside your coat pockets, your fingers curling around the smooth wood of your wand. With a sharp, silent flick of your wrist and a jagged thought of Ventus, you sent a precise jinx whistling through the air.
The effect was instantaneous.
Just as Yuna reached for the heavy brass handle of the shop door, an invisible, violent gust of wind caught the hem of her pristine pink robes. They billowed up like a startled peacockâs tail, tangling around her head and blinding her just as she stepped forward.
Thwack.
She walked straight into the doorframe with a dull thud. Her scream of outrage was muffled by her own silk skirts, and as she scrambled to untangle herself, her designer boots skidded on a patch of black ice youâd surreptitiously greased with a bit of Glacius. She performed a frantic, uncoordinated flailing dance that sent her expensive handbag flying into a nearby slush pile.
Taehyun made a strangled noise that was either a cough or a repressed sob of laughter.
Jaemin stood perfectly still beside you, watching as a disheveled Yuna finally managed to shove her way inside the shop, her perfect curls now looking like a bird's nest and her dignity in tatters. He slowly turned his head to look at you, his eyes wide delight.
"Did you just�"
"The wind in the Highlands is so unpredictable this time of year," you said, keeping your gaze fixed on the shop window as Yuna frantically tried to wipe slush off her bag. "Itâs a real hazard for those who aren't used to the climate."
"You're terrifying," Jaemin whispered, a grin breaking across his face. Absolutely terrifying. I love it."
"I told you," you said, finally meeting his gaze with a defiant spark in your eyes. "I'm a woman of endless mysteries. And I really, really hate being called a charity case."
"Fair point," he laughed, steering you away before she could recover enough to look back. "Come on, Shakespeare. Let's check out the books."
Tomes and Scrolls was blessedly quiet, the heavy wooden door acting as a silencer against the bustle of the High Street. You inhaled deeply, loving the smell of aged parchment, beeswax, and the faint, ozone-like spark of old magic trapped in ink. This was your happy place.
You moved instinctively toward the back, trailing your fingers along the spines. Some books hummed under your touch; others, like the Compendium of Common Curses, seemed to shy away.
âThere,â you whispered, spotting a thick, midnight-blue spine with silver embossing The Iron Quill: Unfiltered Testimonies of the 1612 Rebellions.
You pulled it from the shelf, cradling it like it was made of glass. âIâve been waiting for this for months, Jaemin. Itâs based on the personal journals of Ug the Unreliable that were found in a sealed vault in Gringotts last summer.â
You opened it to a random page, your eyes lighting up. âLook at the diagrams! Everyone thinks the rebellion started because of the wand-ban, but these letters suggest a secret trade embargo on silver-threaded lace. It could completely rewrite the seventh-year curriculum. If the economic tension preceded the legislative one, it changes the entire motive of the Goblin liaisons!â
You turned a page, your voice gaining speed and volume as the academic thrill took over. âAnd look at the footnotes! Thereâs a cross-reference to The Tales of Beedle the Bard that suggests the âWarlockâs Hairy Heartâ was actually a coded political allegory for the Minister of Magic at the time. Itâs brilliant. Itâs... it's...â
You broke off, suddenly aware of the silence. Jaemin wasn't looking at the book. He was leaning against the mahogany shelf, watching you with with interest.
âSorry,â you mumbled, the heat rushing to your cheeks. You started to close the book. âIâm boring you to death, aren't I? You probably want to go look at the Quidditch supplies orââ
âNo,â Jaemin said softly. He stepped closer and reached out, not to take the book, but to tuck a stray lock of hair behind your ear. âNot at all. I like seeing you like this. Passionate. A little bit nerdy. Itâs... it's really cute, Y/N.â
You froze, the heavy tome suddenly feeling very light compared to the way your heart was thudding against your ribs. You looked down, pretending to be intensely interested in a footnote about goblin-wrought armor, trying to ignore the way his thumb lingered near your temple.
âItâs just history,â you whispered, though your pulse was racing fast enough to win a broom race.
âBut you love it,â he countered, his voice dropping an octave. âAnd thatâs why I like listening.â
You didnât quite know what to say to that so you busied yourself with the book, pretending to be engrossed in the table of contents, trying to ignore the way your pulse was racing.
It was just an act, you reminded yourself. A show for the onlookers. Jaemin was a good actor, that was all. There was no real feeling behind his words or his looks.
You lingered by the history section for a moment longer before a small, unassuming sign caught your eye toward the very back of the shop, nestled under a low, sloping ceiling: "Non-Magical Curiosities & Literature."
âWait,â you said walking towards it. âI didnât know they kept a Muggle section here.â
Jaemin followed as you navigated the narrowing aisles. This corner of the shop was more cramped, the books bound in plain cloth or faded dust jackets rather than dragon-hide or shimmering silk.
You scanned the titles until your eyes snagged on a familiar, battered spine. You pulled out a well-loved copy of Wuthering Heights.
âSince youâre so well-versed in Byron and Shakespeare,â you said, holding the book out so he could see the cover, âdid your mother ever make you read the BrontĂ«s?â
Jaemin took the book, his long fingers tracing the silhouette of the moors on the cover. âI donât think this one made the library list. Is it another tragedy?â
âThe best kind of tragedy,â you sighed as you leaned back against the shelf. âItâs about a love so intense itâs practically a curse. Heathcliff and Cathy... theyâre terrible for each other, really. Theyâre vengeful and cruel, but theyâre also part of the same soul. Thereâs this one lineââ you paused, closing your eyes for a second to recall the words that had lived in your head since you were twelve. ââI am Heathcliff. Heâs always, always in my mind: not as a pleasure, any more than I am always a pleasure to myself, but as my own being.ââ
When you opened your eyes, Jaemin was staring at you with an intensity that made the air in the cramped corner feel suddenly very thin. The playful smirk was gone, replaced by something much more sincere.
âThatâs a bit more intense than a Honeydukes poem,â he murmured, his thumb brushing the edge of the pages.
âMuggles donât have magic to fix their problems,â you explained, feeling a rush of that deep-seated passion again. âThey donât have Amortentia to force a feeling or Cheering Charms to dull a heartbreak. They just have words. They have to build these massive, sweeping worlds of emotion just to explain how it feels to be alive. I think⊠I think sometimes thatâs more powerful than any spell weâre taught.â
Jaemin looked from the book back to you, a small, thoughtful smile tugging at the corner of his mouth. âYou talk about them like theyâre the ones with the real power.â
âIn a way, they are,â you whispered.
He handed the book back to you, but as your fingers met on the cover, he didn't pull away. âWell, if itâs that good, I suppose I should read it. But only if you promise to highlight the best parts for me. I want to see the world the way you see it.â
His words caught you off guard. You looked down at your joined hands, the scent of old paper and Jaeminâs expensive, woody cologne swirling around you.
âI can do that,â you promised softly.
The afternoon bled away as you drifted from one storefront to the next. It wasâŠnice. More than nice, actually. Despite yourself, you found yourself relaxing and enjoying the banter.
Despite the frantic warnings screaming in the back of your mind, you found the armor around your heart beginning to flake away. You were relaxing, leaning into the sharp cadence of his banter and the way his shoulder occasionally brushed yours
As the sun began to dip towards the horizon, painting the sky in streaks of pink and gold, Jaemin suggested one last stop.
Jaemin shrugged, a smile playing about his lips. âItâs tradition, isnât it? Canât come to Hogsmeade and not have a Butterbeer.â
He had a point. The warmth of the pub sounded inviting after the chill of the February air. âLead on, then.â
The place was packed to the brim with students crowding every table, their cheeks flushed from the cold and the Butterbeer. You wove your way through the throng, Jaeminâs hand at the small of your back.
âY/N! Jaemin! Over here!â
You turned to see Jo waving at you from a table in the back. Beside her, was a handsome boy you vaguely recognized as a seventh year Hufflepuff. Won-something?Â
âI didnât know youâd be here!â Jo said as you approached, her eyes bright. âY/N, this is Wonbin. Wonbin, this is my best friend, Y/N. And her boyfriend, Jaemin.â
Wonbin smiled at you. âNice to finally meet you, Y/N. Joâs told me a lot about you.â
âAll good things, I hope,â you said, sliding into the seat across from them. Jaemin settled beside you, his thigh pressing against yours under the table.
âOh, definitely,â Wonbin said, grinning. âThough she did mention something about an incident with a Niffler and a bottle of Sleekeazyâs Hair PotionâŠâ
You groaned, shooting Jo a look. âThat was one time! And it wasnât my fault the Niffler got loose, I maintain that to this day.â
Jo laughed, leaning into Wonbinâs side. They looked so comfortable together, so at ease.
Not for the first time since you arrived at Hogsmeade and finding yourself surrounded by dozens of loving couples, you felt a pang of something that might have been envy. What must it be like, to have that? To not have to question every look, every touch, every flutter of your heart?
You glanced at Jaemin, only to find him already looking at you. His eyes were the color of dark mahogany in the firelight.
If this were a real date, he would lean in. If you were a real girlfriend, you would let him.
The thought of his lips on yours, not as a tactical maneuver to thwart Yuna, but as an answer to the restless, poetic ache that had started in the bookstore, sent a shiver through you that was violent in its intensity. You wondered if his mouth would taste like the dark chocolate heâd eaten earlier, or the butterbear he was having now.
Your heart hammered a frantic rhythm against your ribs, a drumbeat of "what if" that threatened to drown out your common sense. You looked away quickly, grabbing your Butterbeer and taking a long swig to hide the sudden heat in your cheeks.
The conversation kept flowing around you, but you found it hard to concentrate. Everywhere you looked, couples were leaning into each other, hands entwined, heads bent close. All you could hear around you was the sound of laughter and the soft smack of lips meeting in chaste kisses.
Suddenly, your skin itched with a restless sort of energy. You were hyperaware of Jaemin beside you, the solid warmth of him, his hand on yours on the table.
This was supposed to be a date. A fake date, yes, but a date nonetheless. And what did couples do on dates?
They kissed.
The thought was terrifying and⊠exciting. Kissing Jaemin, how would that feel? Putting your mouth on his mouth in front of all these people.
âY/N?â Jaeminâs voice was barely audible over the din, but it vibrated through your very bones. He leaned closer, his breath warm against your ear, his scent of cedar and winter air enveloping you. âYouâve gone very quiet. Where did you go?â
You took another gulp of Butterbeer, trying to drown the sudden dryness in your throat. There was no need to get so worked up about it, really. It was all part of the act. Just one more scene to play, one more line to deliver.
You could do this.
Setting your tankard down with a thunk, you turned to Jaemin, determination surging through you. His eyes widened slightly as you leaned in, your hand coming up to rest on his chest.
âY/N,â he said carefully. âWhat are you doing?â
âImprovising,â you murmured, and kissed him.
For a moment, he was utterly still beneath your lips. Then, just as you were about to pull away feeling completely humiliated, he came to life, his hand cupping your cheek, his mouth slanting over yours.
It wasâŠMerlin. It was everything. His lips were soft and warm but still demanding, the scrape of his calluses against your skin sending goosebumps down your arms. You melted into him, your fingers curling into the soft wool of his sweater, anchoring yourself lest you float away entirely.
Someone wolf-whistled, probably Jo, and you jerked back to reality, breaking the kiss with a gasp. Jaemin looked as dazed as you felt, his eyes dark, his lips kissed-red.
âWell,â he said, his voice rough. âThat wasâŠsomething.â
âUm⊠yeah,â you said weakly, trying to catch your breath. âGotta be convincing, right?â
Jaeminâs pupils were more dilated than before. âRight,â he said. âOf course.â
He turned back to his drink, and you did the same, trying to ignore the way your lips were tingling, the way your heart was doing a complicated tap-dance against your ribs.
That wasn't real, you reminded yourself as you gulped down the rest of your Butterbeer, the alcohol doing little to steady your nerves. None of it was real.
Jo was grinning at you across the table, her eyes knowing. You glared at her, silently daring her to say something. Wisely, she didnât, but her smile spoke volumes.
As the evening wore on and the empty tankards accumulated, you found your tongue loosening, your inhibitions lowering. The pub seemed overly warm, the laughter too loud, the press of bodies too close. You needed air, needed space. You neededâŠ
âI need to pee,â you announced loudly, lurching to your feet. The room swayed around you, and you grabbed the edge of the table to steady yourself. âIâll beâŠIâll be back.â
You wove your way through the crowd, ignoring Joâs concerned call of your name and the way Jaemin slightly rose from his seat, his hand outstretched as if to stop you.
You didnât need his help or anyoneâs help. You were fine. You were absolutely, totally fine.
Outside, the night air was a blessed slap of cold. You took in great lungfuls of it. Merlinâs beard, how much had you had to drink? The empty tankards swam before your eyes in a hazy blur. Three? Four? More? It was hard to keep track when the Butterbeer had been so sweet and the pub so warm and Jaeminâs lips so soft against yoursâŠ
Oh no. Oh no no no. Youâd actually kissed him, right there in front of everyone. What were you thinking?
Well, it didnât matter now. What mattered was getting away, finding a quiet place where you could think. Somewhere without Jaeminâs eyes on you.
You picked a direction at random and started walking with unsteady steps. The high street was nearly deserted now, the lovebirds gone home to their castles and their common rooms and their cozy little romances.
Leaving you alone with your thoughts and your too-fast heartbeat and the sinking realization that you were, perhaps, a bit drunker than youâd initially thought.
âY/N!â
You closed your eyes briefly, both thrilled and terrified by the sound of his voice.
âIâm fiiiiine,â you slurred without turning around. âI just need a minute.â
Jaemin caught up to you in two long strides, his face tight with concern as he reached out to steady your swaying frame. "You're completely blasted. Please, just stand still for a second before you fall into a ditch."
"I am not blasted," you informed him with great dignity, though you tripped over your own feet and ended up slumped against his chest. You looked up at him, your eyes unfocused but swimming with a sudden honesty. "You're the one whoâs blastedâ Blasted with... with your perfect hair and your Byron talk."
âLetâs just get you back first, okay?â
âI can get there by myself, thank you very much.â You slurred, starting to walk in the opposite direction of the castle.
âIâm sure you can. But I'd rather help you get there in one piece.â He said, sliding his arm around your waist and gently veering you in the right direction.
You tried to pull away, a whine building in your throat. âDonât wanna. Mâhaving fun.â
âI think youâve had quite enough fun for one night,â he replied, his voice dripping with that dry, aristocratic patience that made you want to kick his shins.
âAre you mad at meâŠâ You said softly after a second. âBecause of the kiss? IâI didnât meanââ
Your eyes smarted. Tears, sudden and hot, pooled and fell freely. You felt mortified and ridiculous and very impervious at once. The laugh you tried to force came out more like a sob.
âMâsorry,â you hiccuped. âWhat was I thinking? Iâm awful.â
He stopped walking and turned to face you. For a moment, he was quietly furious and perhaps even a little bewildered, which made him look achingly human.
âDonât say that,â he breathed. He did not sound like someone who believed in platitudes. âYouâre not awful. Youâre just tired and youâve had too much to drink.â
âMâdrunk, not dumb. I know I shouldnât have kissed you. Jusâ gotâŠgot lost in the moment.â
âLetâs just go back to the castle firstâ he said, his tone brooking no argument. âWe can talk about this tomorrow, when youâre sober.â
You sniffled weakly, wiped at your face with the back of your hand, and let him shepherd you back toward the castle.
By the time you reached the portrait of the Fat Lady, you were barely keeping your eyes open, your body growing heavier with each step.
âPassword?â the Fat Lady trilled, eyeing Jaemin suspiciously.
You tried to form the word âFlibbertigibbet,â but your tongue felt like a thick piece of wet paper and it came out as something closer to "Flub-a-dub". The Fat Lady, mercifully, just sighed and allowed you access anyway.
âIâll help you,â Jaemin murmured, his arm tightening around your waist to keep you upright as the portrait swung open.
But as he made to step over the threshold, you planted a hand firmly on his chest.
âYou canât come in,â you said, shaking your head slow and wide.
He raised an elegant eyebrow. âAnd whyâs that?â
âCause youâre a snake,â you told him seriously. âAnd the Fat Lady⊠She doesnât like snakes. Nope! No snakes âllowed in the lion house. Sâthe rules.â
You dissolved into giggles, finding this logic unbearably funny. The look on Jaeminâs face only made you laugh harder, a snorting, hiccupping thing that had you clutching at the portrait frame for support.
âRight. God forbid I upset the natural order,â he said, a reluctant, lopsided smile finally tugging at his lips.
He reached out, gently tucking a messy strand of hair behind your ear. âI think thatâs quite enough out of you. Go on, get to bed.â
You sketched a salute, barely avoiding smacking yourself in the face. âAye aye, capân,â
And with that, you let the portrait swing shut, cutting off the sound of Jaeminâs laughter. You made your way up to your dormitory on unsteady legs, collapsing into bed fully clothed.
As sleep claimed you, dragging you down into dreamless oblivion, one last thought chased itself around your fuzzy brain.
No snakes in the lionâs den. Not even pretty ones with soft lips and warm hands.
It was a good rule, you decided muzzily. A very good rule indeed.ââââââââââââââââ
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âŒïžNORMALIZE NOT ADDING ANGST TAGS TO YOUR SMUT FICS WHEN THERE'S NONE JUST TO GET AUDIENCEâŒïž
guys please, respectfully, not everyone want to be freaky all the times. imagine craving some sad, melancholic fics but getting a nastiest smut instead like-
... just pls let us have our own personal, separated space of sadnessđ„șđ„ș