#and most likely an unnamed tangerine fic
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foli-vora · 2 years ago
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deck the halls with hundreds of fictional cocks, fa la la la la, la la la la—
It’s my favourite time of year!
Here are my holiday fics for this december - all of which have been completed/mostly completed and scheduled for the noted dates. They're packed with the fluffiest of fluff and spiciest of smut and are made to provide cosy comfort and warmth - no angst will be found here!
These are the 'main' ones, but I'll probably get drunk off of holiday spirit so there'll most likely be extra drabbles that I'll throw out whenever and add on as I go. Fics will be tagged #folijollyxmas if you wanted to follow along!
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↳ my only wish
jack daniels x singlemumf!reader. rating: explicit 18+ ONLY.
typical hallmark movie. he’s never been one for christmas - he hates the tacky decorations and the ear drilling music, but maybe the owner of a small town bakery and her children will change that.
- part one
- part two
- part four : coming soon
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↳ meet the yorks
dave york x f!reader. rating: explicit 18+ ONLY.
just a filthy soft as fuck christmas fic in the york house.
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↳ under the tree
bradley “rooster” bradshaw x f!reader. rating: explicit 18+ ONLY.
santa came early for bradley and he’s positive you’re trying to kill him. too bad mav also decided to arrive earlier than planned. awkward chaos ensues.
coming soon
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↳ tinsel tangle
matt murdock x f!reader x frank castle. rating: explicit 18+ ONLY.
christmas decorating and baking and gift wrapping and porn. it's just porn idk.
coming soon
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↳ curse breaker
marcus pike x f!reader. rating: explicit 18+ ONLY.
after an embarrassing confession to the pretty stranger at the bar, you find that maybe this is the year you break your apparent 'curse'.
31/12/22
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wincore · 4 years ago
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sour tangerine | huang renjun
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pairing: keyboardist!renjun x songwriter!reader
words: 15.3k
summary:  ‘i gave up on that sort of music,’ he’d said. but not like this. not when you’re there to grab his wrist and drag him into your ridiculous notions about music that make him want to tear all his hair out. huang renjun falls in love with two words that escape your lips, and now he has to pretend his cheeks aren’t caked in a blush as red as donghyuck’s guitar. maybe he shouldn’t have agreed to joining this band of idiots just for an incredibly cute songwriter.
themes: rock band!au, fluff, (mostly existential) angst, comedy-ish
warnings: making out, alcohol, college kids being college kids
song recs: hello sunshine - wetter // how to love - day6 // today - nell // rooftop - n.flying // what can i do - day6 // red - the rose // i loved you - day6 // leave it - n.flying // baby - the rose
a/n: nct dream 00 line rock band. that’s it. who wants to join my renjun cover literally any song by day6 agenda. if you think this is like a kdrama compressed into a fic i am so sorry but you are correct hsdksh also i do not know what it’s like to major in music or make music so... please bear with me.
special thanks to @insomni-writing​ for beta reading this ilysm!! and @cinanamon​ because your support made me actually finish this ily dude <3
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With hair dyed blond and a stream of colourful words ready at the tip of his tongue, no one assumes Huang Renjun majors in classical music. Not when he’s threatening Lee Donghyuck by the vending machine, not when he’s pulling an arrogant half-smile by the semester-end results and certainly not when he’s hardly ever seen near an instrument as elegant as the grand piano.
If they heard him play it just once, they’d forget the rest.
He strikes the keys gently, and then all at once in a motion so very unique to him—and you know this, not because you were stalking him, but because you happened to get a very rare ticket to the national level performing arts concert (which you didn’t scam out of someone that time, you swear). Looking pristine in a clean tuxedo and with then dark hair swept to the side, Huang Renjun looked very much like an alien, like the words leaving his mouth and the things he’d do would be so unpredictable. 
You were right. 
Huang Renjun plays the piano like he’s not of this world. 
He plays soft rock tunes even better—which, this time, you know because you were, in fact, stalking him while he spent extra hours in the practice room. From the lazy smile on his face to the way he let himself loose (for once) in a hot pink hoodie he kept trying to cover with his bag all day, you knew he was perfect.
Out of all the miserably planned (and timed) situations you’ve pulled yourself into, this might just hit top 3. 
You’re going to convince Renjun to join your band.
Which is easier said than done, because Renjun is just as stubborn as you are, if not more. You’ve never wanted to smack someone so bad and neither have you ever contemplated the outcome of spontaneous fistfights as much. But as frustrated as he leaves you, you know you need him, or your picture-perfect plan will fall apart before you’ve even started to paint.
The first time you’d nudged him in class, he’d sent you a glare as soon as the question left your lips. You’d fought a pout, the warmth on your cheeks popping like firecrackers. But you’re not easily discouraged, no, not really, not ever. 
The second time, you’d spread your arms in front of him to get him to stop walking off, looking more of a lunatic than a college student (sometimes, what’s the difference?) and Renjun had pursed his lips and furrowed his brows in an expression more than annoyed. 
“Please!” you yelled, catching the attention of fellow students.
Renjun eyed your palms flat against each other, elbows raised in a most comical prayer and announced a “No” just as loudly before briskly walking away.
The third time, you’d sent Donghyuck, your lead guitarist, who you really shouldn’t have expected to perform better than you did. You know they’re friends, so that should have worked better, right? Wrong. Renjun had returned a pouting Donghyuck, complaining nonstop for two whole days afterwards and with a message from Renjun to “in the best of words, fuck off”.
You sigh, glancing at the time on your watch. This is your last time to book him for your ragtag rock band (still unnamed) and you’re going to leave him with no choice. You can do this. 
You tiptoe from one side of the corridor to the other, the large windows drenching you in an uncomfortable amount of sunlight. But you are quiet—you know how to be sneaky and you’d be lying if you said you’re not at least a little bit proud of it. Renjun stays at the senior practice room well into late afternoon and if the door was closed fully, you’d be hearing nothing of it.
The old model of electronic keyboards in the practice room, which made you wonder if electric instruments ever rust, now plays ringing clear. It’s not just the fondness with which your school’s beloved pianist plays it but the added charm of his structure, straightened enough to focus but relaxed just as much.
A few minutes pass by in quiet contemplation, as you run through your plan again. First, approach him with a friendly gesture, offer him your strawberry milk or something. Second, block every exit he might seek once you’ve cornered him. Third, spew that long speech you prepared—a pretty pile of words ought to move him. Right? If all else fails, you’re going to call in Jaemin as your secret weapon. The boy can charm a rock, and you hate to be doing that to anyone (even Renjun), but drastic situations call for drastic measures. You take a sharp breath.
Oh, he’s singing now?
You misstep over the marble flooring and the door creaks open a little too loud.
Shit.
The music stops. You take a good second to swear at yourself, well and full, before breathing in and entering the practice room with as much confidence as you can gather.
“Renjun!” you say, grinning wide and arms stretched as if you’re there to welcome him.
Renjun looks at you, surprise smeared across his face. He quickly picks up his bag, shaking his head at you as he makes his way towards the door.
“You- “
Instead of all your brilliant planning, you resort to pulling a disgruntled Renjun into a lonesome corner before he can leave. It would seem more of a threat than an invitation to join, you’ll admit, but right now, you need Renjun to not glare at you with a scowl so obvious. It’s not that his face makes you nervous, it’s the outcome of today’s attempt. The bright afternoon sun reaches his hair and the left side of his face, a warm hue over eyes that look at you with more than just mild annoyance. He wears a grungy dark jacket over his lightly coloured T-shirt and has the audacity to claim he doesn’t do rock.
“Are you trying to kidnap me or something?” he asks, adjusting the strap of his bag.
You quickly smack the wall so your arm blocks his way, though the impact of it makes you wince.
“Join me,” you say, looking at him, determination across your face though the sentence comes off more cult-ish than you’d want. 
Renjun takes a step back to look up and take a sharp breath.
“I already told you,” he says, raising his voice, “I don’t do that sort of music anymore.”
“Anymore?”
Renjun groans, lips shaped in perfect annoyance. “Just how long are you going to keep this up?”
He tries to escape you but you take a hasty step closer, his back hitting the wall with a thud. It’s not all that fun, getting people to join your band. It’s even less fun when Renjun’s cologne is a tad too minty for your tastes.
“I’ll do anything!” you say, pressing your lips tight as the pleading grows in your eyes.
“Anything?” he asks, raising an eyebrow.
“Yes!” You jolt up straighter.
“Then leave me alone forever for the rest of my life.”
Renjun crosses his arms and you frown, a sigh lacing your lips till you bring yourself to look him in the eye again. It’s not yet time to pull out Jaemin, you’re not even sure if that will work, but you might just have something else. 
“Lee Chaerim!” you suddenly yell. “You like her, don’t you?”
It’s a long shot but if it works… 
Renjun’s cheeks dust pink and he takes a step back, furrowing his eyebrows at you. Bullseye. You fight a snort before he can catch you. Gods, he’s so obvious.
“Wh-what gave you that idea?” he retorts, pitch shooting higher before he recomposes himself. “She’s a classmate, idiot. And don’t yell her name!”
“Star pianist Lee Chaerim,” you wave your hand about. “Who wouldn’t have a crush on her? I mean you’re a close second though.”
Renjun raises his eyebrows in disbelief. “It’s really not…”
“I’ll score you a date with her!” you declare, grinning like a maniac. “If you join my band.”
Renjun sighs, shoulders sagging. “You’re really not going to drop this, are you?”
“Nope.” You shrug, popping the ‘p’ in a helplessly obnoxious manner. 
Renjun leans back against the wall, head tilting to look you in the eye as the frown grows prominent over his lips.
“And you think scoring me a date will make me want to join your…band?” Renjun snorts.
You shift your eyes awkwardly. “Well, I didn’t really paint you as the Romeo type either but hey, I don’t judge a book by its cover.”
“(name)?”
“Yes?”
“You’re the most annoying person I’ve ever met.”
“Oh. That’s actually the sweetest thing I’ve heard from you,” you muse before quickly returning to the subject at hand. “Ah, come on. Just give it a chance, please? 
“I major in classical music.”
You raise an eyebrow, a smirk crawling over your lips. “And yet you’re more than decent at Queen on the keys.”
Renjun straightens, the crease between his eyebrows deepening. “You’re stalking me?!”
“No, I’m scouting you. All the big companies hire people to do that.”
“You’re impossible.”
“Er, it’s called extraordinary.”
“Extraordinarily annoying.”
“Stop arguing with me!” You stomp your foot.
Renjun mimics you in a rather aggressive tone, the tip of his nose almost touching yours. You pull a face, throwing a soft punch at his shoulder to which he responds with a sharp cry and a glare. 
“Fine!” Renjun says, massaging his shoulder. “I’ll give you one week to prove to me this band’s worth my time.”
You feel something akin to surprise before his words register. Worth his time? He's just about as arrogant as you expected. 
“Deal,” you say, shooting him a forced smile.
From the light periwinkle of his T-shirt to the blond strands astray against his forehead, there’s a sort of halo surrounding him. You press your lips together before you can laugh at his supposed angelic qualities, before he somehow starts to look as pretty as your friends describe. 
“Starting today, I’m your lyricist and composer!” you grin, extending your hand towards him.
“I...You…” 
Renjun hesitates before taking your hand in a firm shake, but not before pursing his lips in doubt. Perhaps you could have warned him before grabbing his wrist and so unceremoniously dragging him here. 
“I didn’t even join,” he mutters.
“I’m giving you the full trial!” you defend.
Renjun stays quiet before suddenly clearing his throat. “You can- You can let go of the wall now.���
Your eyes trail to your hand and you immediately retract it with an “ah”. There’s barely any distance between your chests, and you suppose you were successful in cornering him—a little too effectively. Renjun shakes his head, quickly walking past you with no gesture of goodbye.
“You’re going to be disappointed, (name),” he says quietly before leaving.
You blink in confusion at his disappearing figure. 
Whatever. When have you ever paid attention to words of warning? You glance at the back of Renjun’s head from the second floor’s handrail as he rushes down the stairs, albeit a sort of grace to his movement, and sigh. 
Donghyuck owes you twenty. You’re going to be rubbing it in his smug face that you’ve recruited, er, almost recruited the unreachable Huang Renjun. And for a date? He must be far more romantic than you thought. You don’t think you’ll ever understand him.
You take a slow, deep breath reaching all the way to your belly. 
Your plan is working out. It’s going to work out—soon you can be writing songs to a rhythm and melody of your choice, for people who can hear the words and dance to it. The world’s gonna sing along to your songs, to the chorus to your ambitions. 
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“Renjun?!”
Between Donghyuck’s agape mouth and Renjun’s defensive stance, you really don’t know who to approach first. This place was apparently the only room in all of Seoul a bunch of college kids could rent out and while all of you dished out a remarkable chunk from your earnings, it was worth every penny. From the ugly orange wallpaper to the stinky couch, you wouldn’t trade a thing in this room, except for maybe Jeno’s withering plant in exchange for a new one. Poor thing’s been dead for as long as you can remember (courtesy of Jaemin).
“(name) actually convinced you?” Donghyuck asks, exaggerated surprise in his voice before he drops it lower. “You can tell me if you were threatened or something, promise I’ll get you out of this.”
Renjun rolls his eyes, a smile making on to his face anyway. “It’s just for a w—mph!”
You slap a hand over Renjun’s mouth, stepping in to grin victoriously at Donghyuck. “See, Hyuck? I told you I’d make it work. Now, pay up.”
“You bet on this?” 
The curtains are drawn shut but the room lights are bright in a strange sort of way, like someone in the sixteenth century discovered electricity early and decided to reinvent candlelight out of it. Late afternoon isn’t as gentle as it is in winter, but you’d rather have patches of sunlight decorating the room instead of the garish yellow lights. The lavender air freshener you sprayed a few minutes ago has already settled in, the previous scent of instant noodles, though delicious, finally gone. You should’ve brought the coffee mix, you think with regret. A productive day needs a productive start, as you’ve always been told. (You might have messed up, but it’s never too late, right?)
You think you should have anticipated a little adjustment trouble after all.
Jeno walks headfirst into the mess—with Renjun choking Donghyuck under his arm while you try to not drop the pile of records from the small coffee table and onto the Dorito dust-covered wooden floor. The recorder is safe, a good few feet away from your mayhem.
“Oh, hey Renjun, didn’t know you’re a part of this,” Jeno says, raising an eyebrow at the boy.
“Yeah, I didn’t either,” Renjun mutters in response, loosing up on Donghyuck.
You narrow your eyes. “Wait, you guys know each other?”
“Yeah, we’re in the same dorm,” Jeno answers, shrugging before he drops his bag onto the couch. 
You gasp. “You could’ve just asked him all this time?!”
“Uh,” Jeno drawls out before coughing forcefully. There’s a slight change of air, and your inability to read situations, for the first time, is a major help.
“Hello, trouble children,” Jaemin announces as he enters, his bag thrown in Jeno’s direction, who seems relieved for the interruption.
“Oh, hi Renjun!” 
“You know him too?” You’re almost offended at this point. 
Jaemin stares blankly in confusion. “Yeah, we’re…all…in the same dorm.”
You throw up your head in exasperation, an annoyed huff leaving your parted lips. “And none of you thought of asking him to join?!”
“We didn’t think he’d ever agree,” Jaemin says, glancing at Renjun discreetly. 
Renjun stays quiet, shrugging before he plops down on the couch. “Anyone wanna tell me what we’re supposed to do today? Apart from killing Donghyuck?”
“It’s not my fault you’re so bad at rock, paper, scissors,” Donghyuck retorts quietly. 
“You cheated!” Renjun sits up straight, glaring.
You raise your palms like the peaceful negotiator you are, and honestly, all they had to do was decide the lead vocal for the new song, which Renjun vehemently rejected. 
Donghyuck gasps. “Renjun isn’t half as innocent as he looks. Watch out (name)—oof.”
Renjun elbows him in the stomach, the resulting expression on Donghyuck making you wonder just how much strength Renjun really has.
“Renjun, Donghyuck. You’re both lead,” you say, finalizing.
“What?!” 
The two of them look at you, one with betrayal and the other with an emotion very close to murder. It wasn’t easy coming to the decision, sure, but for this song, you’ll be needing Renjun a little bit more. Is it treacherous of you to have picked out the song most suited to him? You have your reasons, however. You’re not letting Renjun leave without experiencing the wonders of performing at a local pub, and in general, you’re a little iffy about letting him leave at all. You need the keys and you need a chance. You have something to prove.
“Just this song, Hyuck,” you sigh. “You know we switch up things every time.”
“Fine,” he grumbles. “The show's coming Saturday, right?”
You nod when Renjun interrupts.
“Show?!” he blurts.
“We’re performing,” you answer, shrugging. “You know Odd Fruit? In Hongdae?”
Renjun wrinkles his nose, shifting back. “No? Isn’t that a dive bar?”
“Best place for us,” Jaemin grins, resting his elbows against the headrest beside Renjun. “Saturdays are for rock.”
Renjun sighs. “I don’t- I don’t sing rock.”
Jeno raises an eyebrow. “I wasn’t peeping or anything but wasn’t that you in the shower? What were you singing again—”
“Okay, okay!” Renjun sits up straight, heaving a sigh, his shoulders moving with it. “I sing Disney songs in the shower, it doesn’t mean anything…”
“We can do that sort of music too.” You grin, tilting your head. “We can do any music!”
“Yeah,” Jeno encourages thoughtfully, “Even idol music!”
“No,” everyone says in unison. 
Jeno mutters something under his breath, sulking as he sinks into the couch and crosses his arms after adjusting his bright red baseball cap.
Renjun shakes his head, recomposing himself. “You want me to perform next Saturday?! That wasn’t in the deal!”
You furrow your brows. “I told you it’s a full trial!”
“That’s over a week!” He throws up his hands in exasperation.
“The trial week ends on Friday and Saturday’s just a bonus,” you reason, crossing your arms. 
You don't break the gaze just in case it determines your stand. It’s probably a full minute of glaring at each other before your humble audience intervenes, Donghyuck bursting into laughter and the other two following. You share a puzzled look with Renjun, looking around for an explanation.
“We’re gonna have a blast this Saturday,” Donghyuck says, wiping a tear from his eye. “I can’t wait.”
“We’ll get to practise,” Jaemin says, resting his palm on Renjun’s shoulder reassuringly. “You’re gonna have fun, trust me.”
“I hope so,” Renjun mutters.
That’s all you need to hear.
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Renjun isn’t half as disagreeable when he’s focused. His brow line is straight, lips parted gently and eyes almost hazed over as if his fingers over the keys have eyes of their own. 
Renjun is also fantastic at perfecting your notes. You always thought he’d be too prissy to work with you, but he doesn’t seem to care about that anymore. With flushed knuckles and long fingers, part of hands that were meant to play the piano—you’d say Renun lives up to the musical prodigy title. The short demo you’d played for him somehow swirled and twined into music so him and yet still you, rock undertones with light blues. You haven’t met anyone who can play with melody like that, besides Donghyuck.
Rock means hope. Undone to be done.
And maybe, part of you is a little disappointed at how well he handles the pre-performance stress. You would love to see a hint of jitters in him for once. Saturday wastes no time in creeping up and while you wish you could say you feel what your band looks like, you don’t. The pre-performance stress is very, very different for you. 
Let’s say, you’re not too sure about reviving rock music in Seoul. It’s not very popular and still considered underground, but hey, at least it’s easy on the ears and it is honest, if nothing else. And an honest sound wins, right?
You lock eyes with Renjun, before they're ushered to the centre. There's not much to be said. You smile with a determined nod, holding up both of your thumbs to the boys. This will work out. It will.
And at the very least, you're getting two shots of whiskey on the house.
The place is shabby, but not too shabby for a dive bar. There’s a giant mural… thing of what seems to be the hybrid of a peach, apricot and dragonfruit. You’re not too sure, actually. Just as crowded as you expected, the lights glow dim and the smell of musk and lime keep in check the other foul smells that could possibly emanate from the human body. Lovely. Your fingers play against your lips as they stretch into a smile. It’s the perfect place to play your song, but maybe the jitters have a purpose after all.
There are foreign faces around, quite literally, and it makes you nervous. You settle by the bar, your last words of encouragement drifted off further from you to whatever that excuse of a stage is. 
Renjun looks calm as ever. The confidence in him is not what you'd expected, though a bubbling feeling in you suggests it's even better this way.
“You finally got someone on the keys,” a familiar voice calls from behind the countertop.
You turn your head to find Doyoung, arms resting on the table and holding what seems to be a bottle of vodka so tenderly, you’d think it was either his child or an explosive.
“Huang Renjun,” you respond, smiling. “Like the best pianist in our year. Or maybe second best.”
Doyoung laughs. “You kids could be as good as us some day. Need more practice.”
“Hey, old man, it’s not your time anymore,” you say, raising an eyebrow with a cheeky grin. “Maybe you were the best keyboardist back then but…”
You lean in to emphasize as you point at a Renjun furrowing his brows at all the wiring. “That guy’s going to outsing you. It’s the new era now. Etcetera, etcetera.”
“You talk like I’m from a different generation.” Doyoung scoffs, though the corner of his lips twitch. “Still dreaming of making your boyband? Do you guys even have a name?”
You pout. “It’s not a boyband! Okay… technically, it is a boyband. And no, we don’t have a name.”
You sulk for a moment or two at the way Doyoung had called your life’s work a boyband in that uninterested tone. Nothing’s wrong with a boyband. You sigh.
“At least we’re getting free alcohol, eh?” you nudge Doyoung, him being the reason you’re getting to play here anyway. What does a graduated music performance major do in his free time? Bartending, apparently. You haven’t ever really questioned his life choices and you’re not going to start now. Never question your seniors.
“I’m not serving you kids alcohol,” he says, furrowing his eyebrows in disbelief.
“We’re legal,” you argue, crossing your arms.
“Hard to believe.”
You see the smile lines crease on Doyoung’s face and before you can retort, a hum of strings resounds through the place, loud enough for the two of you to catch.
“Sorry,” Donghyuck mouths sheepishly to the two of you, Doyoung responding with an eye roll.
“I didn’t know that demon could get nervous,” he mutters and you laugh at the comedic duo the two of them make. 
Donghyuck clears his throat into the mic and you cringe, but not before holding back your laughter at the terror in his eyes. Right then, the keys are struck, and suddenly, music is into motion.
You absentmindedly hum along, smiling to yourself before it strikes you to monitor the crowd. You gulp, a crease in your brows as you look around with the determination of a child at a pet shop scanning for a puppy to adopt.
You give up after a minute or so, the feeling weighing heavy. Reading facial expressions has never really been your thing, especially under lights that don’t acknowledge the purpose of their existence. (You’re not saying this because you have bad eyesight.) Fun varies. Everyone in this place is in a crowd of their own, and if not a crowd, in a dream. Some nod along, some smile but you, you know the song better than anyone else in this room. It has to be worth something.
You sigh. Your desperation gets a notch crueler each drawing year, and yet, the questions still arise. Do you have to be someone? A smiling face at a dive bar is more than enough to be, you think.
You mouth the lyrics, nodding your head along to the baseline you helped make. You think Doyoung chuckles beside you, something about taking self-love too seriously but you can’t hear him over the sound of the band. 
Bass. Drums. Keys.
Suddenly, in the moment between heartbeats, your eyes meet Renjun’s.
He sings into the mic full of self-assurance, teeth occasionally making an appearance in a chaotic smile. It's always the little things that make the person. Eyes peering down at the keys, barely keeping open at certain parts and yet you think you see a hint of exhilaration in them. 
The riff of the second song starts out loud. This is Donghyuck’s song and this time, it turns heads. You’re not sure in a good way or bad, but it wouldn’t be the first time people have wanted to beat him up in a bar. You snicker to yourself but just then, two guys cheer from the crowd, a red-faced Donghyuck flashing them a grin.
“Ah, Jaehyun and Taeil are here too,” Doyoung notes. You’ve never actually met the two but you’ve heard of them so many times you think you could replace Doyoung as their lead singer. 
The song is called Cheers and for good reason.
Donghyuck smiles into the mic, and with a highly anticipated breath, you realize, Renjun is smiling too. Little by little, the night grows more optimistic and into the palms of your youth. Even in this tiny, crowded place. Even in a room full of people you can’t read.
The song ends in time, but not enough for Donghyuck to actually convince Doyoung to give him drinks. It’s not a Saturday night without their fights, and despite that, the atmosphere is warm with spoken words. You think you catch Renjun beam at Doyoung’s compliment, suppressing your own smile at the two..
Clink, splash, clink.
“You know, for someone as excited about whiskey, I thought you’d be better with liquor,” Renjun says, sighing as his hesitant finger pokes you in the forehead.
Your eyes open so suddenly, Renjun flinches and you ease into a smile. “I’m not that drunk. The next shot, maybe.”
That’s not entirely true because you’re sure the previous one just needs a little more time to settle into your gut. Renjun, on the other hand, seems to be better at dealing with alcohol. The peach hue across his cheeks make you want to pinch them and you’ll give it twenty minutes before you lose control and actually do.
The two songs were only three and a half minutes each but they seemed to stretch long enough for you to be pleased with them. You’re not sure about the rest.
“I almost messed up the beat there,” Jeno mutters, resting his head against the bar table. Jaemin shrugs beside him, taking another shot. The two of them can hold their liquor, at least. Donghyuck cannot.
“Was it that bad?” Donghyuck asks, adjusting the red bomber jacket he was so sure made him look cool. “I don’t think it was bad. I mean, we all do embarrassing things once in a while—”
“Does he not shut up?” Renjun wails before looking at you accusingly. “Don’t end up like that.” 
“I don’t mope, Renjun,” you snap, your finger unsteady as it points at him. “You better remember that about me.”
Renjun rolls his eyes. “And you’re gone too.”
“Tell me,” you say, your lips tugged into a lazy smile, “you enjoyed it, didn’t you? I saw you smiling.”
Even under the wash of blue light, you can see his cheeks tinge with colour. Is Huang Renjun purple now? Not the crystal clear jewel you’d expected, but these hues are so much nicer on him. He doesn’t always have to be under golden spotlight—he can just bask in the mulberry shades of a nearly sketchy club once in a while.
“Renjun,” a loud whine erupts from beside you, Donghyuck immediately wobbling up. “I can’t believe you actually agreed to play with us. C’mere, let me give you a smooch.”
Renjun curls his lips, desperately trying to fight off Donghyuck clinging onto him for life, and you hear a grunt of pain from Renjun in a pitch you didn’t think was humanly possible. You laugh, clutching your stomach and hear a few strained words from Renjun about how no one ever helps him. Who would help him when he’s providing you the funniest event of the weekend?
Jeno is the knight in shining armour tonight, pulling Donghyuck off but not before the boy lands a kiss on Renjun’s neck, in turn getting smacked in the lips a little too hard. Donghyuck places his hand over his mouth, keeling over with eyes shut in pain and Renjun mutters about how he deserved that. He fits in just fine, you think.
“You wanna… not do that?” 
Renjun pulls the shot glass away from you, and you frown at him.
“So tell me,” he says, leaning in a little closer to be heard over the song. “Why did you want me to join your band so desperately you forgot your own dignity? I’m not saying you had any to begin with but…”
“Look, Renjun, I don’t give away embarrassing secrets when I’m drunk,” you warn, poking him right between the ribs. “Even if it’s not embarrassing. Or a secret.”
“Right. You’d do that sober,” he sighs, arms a polite distance from you when you try to stand up.
“Now you tell me—”
“You didn’t even answer me.”
“—did you have fun?”
Renjun pauses, taking a moment or two as he scans your face. The light dances across his features, gentle eyes and parted lips, across the dark jacket over a white shirt that has turned fluorescent under the lighting. You forgot how fun this place got beyond midnight, when they play beats to dance to for a crowd that seeks nothing more than fun.
“Yes. Yes, I did.”
Renjun might be trying very hard to stop the smile over his lips but you can see it in his eyes. And perhaps, people are only seen when they are true to themselves.
“Huang Renjun!” you yell all of a sudden, voice still drowned out in the delicate discordance. 
Unfortunately for Renjun, you yell directly into his ear and he responds with a violent recoil, hand flying to his ear involuntarily. He probably cries out too but the music is deafening, something you enjoy rightly so. Or is it the alcohol? Should you have stayed sober for Renjun’s sake? Right now, you don’t even mind the strong minty scent wafting from Renjun—in fact, it’s welcoming, even.
You wobble onto his chest before tentatively pushing yourself away. You curse at yourself. You weren’t supposed to get hammered. How much did you drink? You can’t even bear to look at the bill right now.
“You know what? I’m not having fun right now,” Renjun speaks into your ear and you jump. There’s a hint of a smile on his face. 
You sit back down on the bar stool, pouting at the fuzz blooming inside your head. No more words for tonight. In all honesty, why doesn’t anyone ever let you dance?
“Oh no, you don’t.” Doyoung pulls the bottle of whatever-alcoholic-beverage out of your reach. “Do you even know how expensive that is? You’re going to have to pay.”
You think you sober up a little, sitting straight. “Oh no. I don’t have money. I’m not cleaning the place again.”
A sort of unspoken arrangement passes between Doyoung and Renjun, who you’re sure have never met before. You know Jaemin’s dragged Donghyuck home, the same way you’d drag your pet cat away from the kitchen and Jeno is the only one with a driver’s license and Doyoung’s trust (hence, designated driver). Which leaves the two of you. 
Renjun heaves a sigh, pulling you up by the shoulders. “You’re going home. Or whatever dumpster you came from.”
He proceeds to mutter something about Jeno being late but in the moment, you flash him a grin, walking perfectly away (at least, you think you do) and out into the night. Renjun follows, flustered by your absolute lack of restraint as he somehow manages to stop you from tripping over the sidewalk.
“You didn’t dance,” you complain, looking at him. 
“You didn’t let me,” he retorts. “Look at you. You’re as bad as Donghyuck. Babysitting him is difficult enough.”
You grumble before agreeing. “Okay, fair. Next time, no drinking. Unless it’s free.”
What college student would have the audacity to turn down free drinks? Huang Renjun should not have been this good at holding his liquor. Needlessly, your thoughts are incoherent—not too good for a songwriter, right?
Huang Renjun has a lighter touch than you thought. He has a polite hold over your shoulder, in a way friends do most often, and you might feel like you could have been friends with him forever, but you can never tell what he thinks. Sometimes, Renjun really is extraterrestrial. In the way he talks, in the way he looks at things and in the way you almost believe he’s going to do something unspeakably outrageous someday. 
You feel a certain sprout of warmth in your chest as he sits quietly beside you in the noisy car Jeno loves to drive. Must be the alcohol, of course. Of course.
And sometimes, you come up with words fit for a song. To fall asleep in last night’s clothes and wake up with tomorrow’s dreams—all part of the grand plan, part of the crusades of youth, nothing more and nothing less. That sounds like something you’d love telling your family when you’re old and grey. You laugh to yourself, pulling the covers over your head, not knowing how you even ended up here. 
It smells minty. 
With that one fleeting thought, you doze off in your unwashed bed sheets and faintly lemon-scented pillows, shades of plums and oranges and cherries of the night twisting into midnight black.
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Playing at Odd Fruit is now a thing. Your thing. The band’s thing.  
As if you needed any more reasons to stay over at the bandroom, now that Donghyuck and Renjun bickering keeps everyone up all night. You’re not blaming them, of course, when you join in the fun too. The day Renjun’s nostrils stop flaring and his eyebrows don’t furrow into an oddly adorable expression will be the day he’s finally set free from your ‘ill-treatment’.
Tap, scratch, tap.
Donghyuck fiddles with the strings of his guitar, while the rest lay slumped in any clean bit of space they could find, like runners after a marathon. Which is funny, really, considering you were the one running errands and cleaning up the damn place and it’s yet still somehow trashed. You could be having a little more energy, you always could. 
However, the lengthened nights have left you in a state you’re rather afraid to be in. Your eyes don’t grow any more determined when it’s time for end semester tests, you don’t grow any happier at the thought of graduating. There are so many tunes to find, so many words to scribble—just how will you catch up?
Fun is a perfectly valid reason to do things but it’s only so long before the rest of your feelings each grip you by the limbs. 
“We need to do something more,” you say, pacing the room. “Something that’s a little more eye-catching, you know?”
There’s a pause.
“Make Jeno play the drums shirtless,” Donghyuck suggests.
Jeno sighs, still not having figured out how to respond every time a scandalizing proposition escapes the boy’s mouth. At this point, most of you have considered duct taping him over the mouth but it’d never work. Renjun’s tried.
“Why do we even need it?” Renjun asks, eyes on the ceiling as he lies back on the couch.
“To improve!” you say, shoulders hunching.
“I don’t need improving,” he mutters, neck angled to the side in contemplation.
“Yeah, you should see Renjun at the dorms,” Donghyuck snorts. “I don’t think he can get any better.”
Renjun furrows his brows. “What?”
“You play the keys in your sleep, Renjun,” Donghyuck says, almost distastefully. “You keep tapping and tapping against the study desk. How the hell do you not wake yourself up?”
“And you snore,” Renjun mumbles, glaring at him. “How the hell do you not wake yourself up?”
“Guys,” you interrupt. Your lack of sleep throughout the exam season has not left you any better than this. “More important matters at hand.”
“Why are we so stressed anyway?” Renjun sighs.
There’s another pause in the quiet afternoon. You’d think it’s comforting even to have the same fear lingering beneath each of your noses, that same existential grasp ready to pounce—all within the comfort of the same room you share. All those late nights sharing ramen have meaning after all, as do the utter messes all of you make on Friday evenings as the boys try to practise, as does every Saturday night performance and every Sunday afternoon spent trying to watch the same movie on a tiny phone screen.
“How about we each look for inspiration?” Jaemin pipes up, eyes still a little lost.
Everyone turns to him and he straightens ever so slightly. “Me and Jeno can come up with a beat, (name) and Renjun can look for a melody and Donghyuck—”
“Can fuck off?” Renjun suggests helpfully.
Donghyuck pouts, crossing his arms. “Hey I’m—”
“Yeah, maybe Donghyuck can fuck off,” Jaemin says, fighting a smile. You raise an eyebrow, wondering which one of Donghyuck’s antics finally got on Jaemin’s nerves.
“This is harassment,” Donghyuck mutters before sinking into the couch beside Renjun. “Well, good for me! I get a day off—”
“No, you don’t,” Jaemin disproves. “You’re cleaning up this place.” 
Donghyuck lets out a gasp. “All by myself?”
“Well, you trashed the place all by yourself,” Jeno reasons.
You tune out the bickering for a few moments. There are important matters at hand and no one seems to be listening to you. You play with your fingers absentmindedly when the thought arrives that maybe you should declare your secret little project. The song you wrote with Renjun in mind, that is. You should admit that it’s really just a nicer way of saying you wrote a song for him. 
Astounding, isn’t it? This should be the part where you feel your pulse quicken. It’s just a song and the nights spent with him on the keyboards, rubbing the sleep out of his eyes has given you a head full of rhythm and song. It’s just a song.
You’d do anything for a good song.
But first, you need your audio converter fixed. The damn thing’s been generating noise all on its own, when it’s clearly your job.
“I need to go to Yongsan,” you say, picking up your bag. “We can find inspiration along the way, can’t we Renjun?”
“Why do we need to go—”
“Oh, get me some replacement strings for my guitar,” Donghyuck chirps.
“And a new pair of drumsticks,” Jeno says, awkwardly scratching the back of his head. You sigh. He really needs to stop breaking those. Where do drummers get such unparalleled rage on a drum set?
You walk over to the door before turning back and sending a pointed look at Renjun.
“I… have to?” he asks, and the look in his eyes almost makes you pity him. If anything, he’s having it worse than the rest of you are, with balancing the weekly gigs and practising for his piano recitals, though he never studies like the rest. You feel sorry but clearly, not enough.
“Yes,” you reply hurriedly. “Quick, get up, come on, we’re wasting time.”
“Okay, okay! Don’t pull my shirt!”
It’s so easy to get Renjun to do things these days. You bite back a smile as he fixes his collar, features still disgruntled by your (over)enthusiasm. His bag is cuter than you thought for someone who dresses punk (“It’s not punk,” he’d snapped, after re-dyeing his hair yet again.), with three different moomin keychains hanging against a baby blue hue. 
You should know better than to let yourself think about someone so much.
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The subway is absolutely lovable when it isn’t rush hour.
Skyscrapers nearly aren’t as looming as they are on rainy days, but you make your way through a still busy city, the heart of it beating like a snare drum with each passing moment.  A little rain cannot stop Seoul. 
Renjun walks beside you explaining how you should really look into this new underground artist you’ve already listened to three times this week because of him. He never seems to understand that you are, in fact, capable of remembering the things he says.
“I wrote a song about you,” you say abruptly.
Very smooth.
Renjun raises an eyebrow. “Like as a gift? A fan song? I’m so flatter—”
“No, stupid,” you interrupt, shifting your eyes upon irrelevant surrounding details. “It’s not about you. I just thought you’d like it.”
You pause.
“Yeah, it’s a little bit about you. A gift for joining. You can sing it to yourself in the shower or something.”
“You know, I feel really offended when you call me stupid.”
You glare at him. His ears are tinged red but right now, you’re a little more than done with his insults. Sure, you make mistakes—like dropping a full open can of soda on your own lap or submitting the wrong assignment to the wrong professor—but at least you’re not cynical Huang Renjun, incapable of making mistakes at all. It would be much more infuriating if you hadn’t seen Renjun drooling in his sleep or vigorously wipe at his nose after having snacks too spicy for his own good. You suppress a retort.
You reach the subway entrance taking slower steps than usual; but time is not a constraint here.
“It’s not a diss track, is it?” Renjun asks, suddenly doubtful. 
You can’t help your laugh (and horrifically, snorts), in turn evoking a smile in Renjun.
“No, it isn’t,” you assure, before grabbing his wrist and skipping down the steps, Renjun’s panicked voice yelling at you to slow down. 
“Can you not do that?” he complains, massaging his wrist at the subway platform.
“You made it through without tripping,” you reason, sticking your tongue out at him.
He reaches out to flick your forehead but you cover it just in time, a grin blooming across both your faces at this childish playfight. The train arrives with an almost soundless screech and you hop on slowly with anticipation in your footsteps.
“So what is it about?” Renjun asks, leaning forward to rest his elbows against his knees.
“You,” you respond, nonchalant.
“Very informative.”
The noise of the trains keeps the moment engaged, chuffing throughout as busy as they are.
Renjun lets out a barely audible gasp. “It’s not a- It’s not a love song, is it?”
You laugh, amused.
“Renjun, I knew you were arrogant but not this arrogant,” you tease.
He flushes hotly, and there’s that feeling again—that maybe you’re wrong. Maybe you don’t have anything else to hang on to and music is the only ledge left. 
You wrinkle your nose before shaking yourself off the feeling. Rainy days always do this.
“Besides,” you say, “I’m still going to score you that hot date with star pianist number one, aren’t I?”
“Not number one,” he begins before hesitating. “That’s… not necessary but thanks.”
You punch him swiftly and he responds with an oof, clutching the ball of his shoulder.
“Don’t be shy,” you complain. “That’s not fun.”
“Well, I’m not fun,” he retorts. “I don’t need to be. I like having a working brain.”
You send him an exaggerated hurt look, hand reaching to pull at his cheek before it gets swatted away. Somehow, in this exact moment, you find a new tune and it doesn’t seem to be the end of your search. You contemplate saving it in your voice memos but you figure a noisy subway train is the last place to record. Besides, you don’t want to lose the look in Renjun’s eyes when he’s talking about how impressive the new relocated concert hall is.
“It’s called Not Feeling Spring,” you say when the train doors open to your station.
Renjun raises an eyebrow, somewhat disbelieving, although you’re not sure of what. 
“You’ve definitely packed some insults in there,” he accuses.
You look at him, defeated. “Trust me.”
“Sorry,” he mumbles.
Step, step, splash. 
“Ew,” Renjun says, shaking his foot after landing on a particularly damp part of the sidewalk. They really should have evened out the path when laying the pavement. But unfortunately for Renjun, he’s already stepped onto rainwater in bright yellow converse.
It’s not just his shoes that look like daisies could bloom over them either—there’s paint over his denim jacket in pictures you’re aware that Renjun himself painted. A nice little touch, but not a very smart choice for a garment. How unlike him, you think to yourself when you hear him sigh and complain about the weather.
“So this is your famous shop?” Renjun asks, eyeing the discoloured walls of the store by the shop.
“You’re doing your thing again,” you reply, face souring.
He looks baffled. “What thing?”
“Your thing. The one where you act all cynical.”
“I’m not cynical.” He crosses his arms.
“Great, you’re even cynical about being cynical.”
Inside is, of course, as warm as ever. The walls are vibrant red, in stark contrast with the exterior and you think you see Renjun’s face grow pinkish. You smile at the man behind the counter, in his late fifties and smile still somehow as bright as yours.
“What’s the problem, dear?” he asks, glancing at your laptop. “You know I can’t help with software issues.”
“I know,” you say, “But I’ve tried every guide on the internet and there’s still unnecessary noise.”
He clicks around your screen for a few seconds.
“Have you tried getting a better mic?”
“Uh.”
Renjun snickers beside you before promptly apologizing at the two pairs of eyes on him. You didn’t bring him here just to embarrass yourself in front of him. Your cheeks flush as you tell the man you’ll come another day with your mic, before heading to the supplements aisle. Renjun follows you quietly, silent laughter yet still etched over his face and he looks away when you glare at him.
“Are you sure you wanna buy the wooden drumsticks?” Renjun asks, picking up the carbon fibre ones instead.
“Jeno loves the wooden ones,” you defend. “And you really think those are within my budget?”
Renjun shrugs, keeping them back in place. 
“Feels like I’m shopping for babies,” he mutters.
There’s a second’s pause before he straightens, a particular discomfort in his being. “Not- Not like my babies or something. I- I meant—”
“I know what you meant,” you say, trying very hard to hold in your laughter. 
“I don’t like that face you’re making.”
“You don’t always have to explain yourself,” you smile before heading to the counter.
The scent of rain makes you nostalgic. You step outside with Renjun and into the sound of rain against pavement. It’s wet and damp, and your hair clings to your skin in that horrific discomfort of humidity, truly one of the worst cruelties of rain. You make a face but an idea strikes you smack across the forehead.
You gasp.
“This can be our stage!” you declare, spreading your arms.
Renjun pulls your arms down. “Don’t block the sidewalk!”
“Sorry.”
You shove your bag onto Renjun, bewildering him even further. The sleeves of the jacket he rolled up, fall into place again as he raises an eyebrow at you.
“This,” you say, waving your arms about, “Should be a stage.”
“Huh?”
Renjun looks unconvinced at your flailing and you sigh. 
“The rain!” you say, trying to sound as enthusiastic as you can. “Isn’t it romantic? You’ve never thought what it would be like playing in the rain?”
“Uh, inconvenient?”
You groan. “Come on! Picture it for a second.”
You give it a moment before showing him what you mean. Renjun bursts into laughter at your air guitar performance, suddenly unaware of the pit-a-pat. 
“It would be nice,” he says, his teeth poking against his lips. He places the bags under the shaded entrance of the store before stepping into the drizzle.
Pitter, patter.
Renjun flashes you a goofy smile, shaking the water out of his hair only for the rain to come in stronger. With raindrops caught on eyelashes, you can only think of the soft, rising melodies that come in movie scenes like these, except it’s a lot more uncomfortable than they show it to be. You smoothen your hair, getting slightly frizzy due to the raindrops. You’ve always wanted to do things out of line and out of regularity and it’s not just because of the price sticker spelling ‘youth’ that clings to your back—but now, is it selfish to just want to stay under the rain? 
In a way it feels just the same as ever; like singing barefoot on an asphalt road, cooling rains and people around, without a care each. You tell Renjun about the time you were stranded by the bus stop under heavy downpour for so long, you decided to walk home with pneumonia a step behind you and he tells you that you’re an idiot. It’s nothing unusual but it makes you smile when he laughs at you. 
The rain slows again before you can start to shiver, chest rising and falling with each breath that fills your lungs. 
“I have a song!” you declare, eyes shining. “A love song. We’ve never done a love song.”
“A love song?” Renjun asks, laughing almost. “You want to write a radio love song? Why?”
“Because, Huang Renjun, there’s not a thing in the world that isn’t made for love.”
Renjun pauses before wrinkling his nose. “Don’t preach me.”
The clap of thunder startles the two of you out of calm. It’s not so much the screams that left your mouths simultaneously as the looks you get from passersby. Renjun looks at you the same time as you look at him, his ears red and eyes nervous.
“Lightning doesn’t- Lightning doesn’t strike in the middle of the city, does it?” Renjun asks, eyebrows furrowed and lips parted, like a hare stranded in the middle of a busy road.
“I don’t know!” You respond, pulling him by the sleeve to the nearest cover. “I don’t want to know.”
Renjun grabs your hand and you realize with a thump in your heart the effect of it. He pulls you to the side, saving your jeans from the fate of getting splashed by muddy water courtesy of an oncoming car.
“Ooh, quick reflex,” you say, despite the clanging of cymbals inside your ribcage.
He shrugs, picking up the bags and shoving yours to your chest.
“Ow?”
“Don’t look at me like that. You know why.”
“You know, you’re not as grumpy as I thought you were. You’re still petty, though.”
“Thanks.”
When you’re back to the bandroom, you find Donghyuck snoring on the couch with an even more worn out Jaemin sitting cross legged on the floor and his head against Donghyuck's knee. Jeno looks like he’s in a world of his own, tapping away at his phone in a game he seems to be losing at.
“Why are you guys wet?” Jaemin asks, cracking an eye open. “Had some life-changing experience?”
“Not really.” You shrug. “Why do you guys look dead?”
“I am dead,” Donghyuck mumbles in his sleep to which Jaemin shakes his head.
“He didn’t even do the entire cleaning…”
You hope the skip in your steps isn’t too obvious. You have a song and this time, it feels pure in a way that you haven’t made before.
“I hope you guys came up with a beat,” you call.
“Uh, about that—”
“I have a new song!” you announce bouncing on the balls of your feet.
Your declaration is met with a bunch of smiles. Soon enough, everyone in the room is up and to their positions in a matter of minutes. 
Music isn’t about being eye-catching, considering the eyes have nothing to do with it anyway. You signal Renjun who in turn, clears his throat.
A strum of guitar string. Four notes on the keys. Bass. A beat on the drums.
“One. Two. Ah, one, two, three, four!”
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The cafeteria is jam packed at three a.m so it’s a good thing you brought Renjun here an hour early. So, your top secret, full resistance, avant-garde mission? Your new song and the one for Renjun, of course. 
“So this is top secret,” you whisper when he sits down from across you.
“I’m sure it is,” he snickers.
You pass your notebook to him, scribbles neater than usual. (That’s only because you rewrote the song in a new page.) You start your laptop, waiting for the screen to load as Renjun goes over the lines.
“My dreams and I don’t get along,” Renjun reads aloud before furrowing his brows.
Ah, I hate people.
I hate my friends too.
And I love saying that which isn’t true.
“Oh, very funny, (name),” Renjun scorns, crossing his arms. “Is that what you think of me?”
You chuckle to yourself. Maybe it was a little petty, but you love the look on Renjun’s face when he’s annoyed, nerves a second away from being completely fried. Just for fun. This was just for fun. 
Somewhere along, however, you can’t deny the essence of him you’d so hopelessly wanted to capture in the melody, in rhythm and timbre, orchestral almost. It’s each note of the piano he plays to himself late at night in the bandroom, each featherlight hit on the cymbal and the song you hum to yourself on the bus ride to classes every morning.
It’s a love song. 
You break into a sudden coughing fit at the thought, Renjun flinching before offering you his bottle of water. Somehow, the gentle hand on your back trying to ease you gives you yet another reason to support your unwanted epiphany. That’s just ridiculous. It’s something natural between friends, isn’t it? Yet, you’d gag at the idea of writing Donghyuck into a song. 
You calm down and meet Renjun’s eyes, the glint of something familiar making you pause. 
“Water?” he offers, and you straighten.
“I had the stupidest thought,” you say, trying to laugh it off.
You can’t do it. You can’t make light of it with him.
“When do you not?” he says, a soft smile on his face.
You smile awkwardly in response, avoiding his eyes as you rub circles on the soft flesh between your thumb and forefinger. 
It’s quiet, much more than not, distant buzzing of the 3 a.m. university cafeteria crowds drifting through the space between you and him.
“Do you ever- Do you ever think about doing it?” Renjun asks.
You blink before feeling warmth on your cheeks. 
“Doing what, Renjun? That’s a little too private to ask. I mean, I could answer, of c—”
It doesn’t take long for him to burn bright vermillion at the cheeks. 
“I- I didn’t say that,” he defends, stuttering over the words. “I was talking about making music. Do you ever think about it or do you just do it?”
“Oh,” you respond intelligently, the embarrassment making you flush harder. Funny, you used to laugh the loudest at these sorts of mistakes. “I don’t- I don’t know. I think about it after I’ve… made it?”
You scratch the back of your head awkwardly. 
“You… do like it, don’t you?” he asks, something akin to worry in his eyes. 
You hum, smiling. “Of course I like it, Renjun.”
No. The truth is, you don’t even know how it makes you feel. The truth is, you do feel sick listening to your own song over and over again. Have you run far enough? Do you have to be running for this?
You seem scared. Is that what he wanted to tell you? You can’t be that easy to see through, you resist. When he held your hand earlier, could he feel it shake?
You’re so afraid that all of this is for naught that you can’t feel it anymore. You hardly make music for yourself, for no one else to hear. Is that what you wanted? When you wrote Not Feeling Spring, were you searching for something you desperately wanted or something you lost? You’re only twenty and you’re aging.
You snap yourself out of the whirlpool of questions to a drowsy Renjun playing with the bracelet around his wrist, lost in his own circle of thoughts. 
“I wanted to give up on this,” he whispers suddenly. “I wanted to give up on music.”
You hold your breath till he looks at you, a strange sense of vulnerability that makes you want to reach over the table and share some of the warmth your palm offers.
You’ve already drawn the conclusion.
“You’re not alone,” you say, leaning in with the widest grin. 
Renjun rolls his eyes. “Are you saying that to comfort me? It barely has any effect. Thanks, th—”
You shake your head, standing up abruptly and scrambling onto the tabletop. It’s the perfect time to be a little ridiculous. Renjun looks around, alarmed, tugging at you to get down which, unfortunately, draws even more attention. 
“Raise your hand if you’ve ever wanted to give up on music!”
There’s a moment of pause before laughter erupts, followed by a few cheers and almost as many raised hands as you’d expected. Some of them tell you to get back to your date, or focus on completing overdue assignments—friends and friends of friends. They are music students, after all.
Renjun looks around the place, rosy hued in the face, though he isn’t as angry as you thought he’d be.
“I almost never started,” you say, giggling as you resume in your seat. “Giving up came so much later.”
Renjun laughs. You don’t even have to make music out of it.
“I tried to give up the piano,” he admits, still flushed. “But I couldn’t break the habit of playing against my desk. Even then.”
You smile, resting your chin against your palm. “That sounds just like you. Now tell me, when did you discover flumpool?”
Renjun frowns and you feel an uncharacteristic thump in your chest. You want to draw your finger against his cheeks and the space between his brows, against the strained lines—the thought of it much more scandalous than the action itself.
“I didn’t- My parents didn’t- ugh.” He hesitates. “Look, everyone hated my style of music. My parents, the neighbours, their dogs. 
Your eyes soften as you sit up. “I’m sure they didn’t hate it—”
“No, trust me on this one.”
Suddenly the honey tint of his voice is dripping a dangerously low baritone. It doesn’t sound like him and it sends a shiver down your spine, a certain coldness you never thought would seep into you. It is the loneliness of curbed dreams, after all.  
“I thought I should’ve given up on music altogether. Became, what, a doctor? A lawyer?” Renjun sighs. “Whatever I do, it shouldn’t be music, right?”
He heaves a sigh in sync with you. There’s a passing moment in between where you can clearly see the apple of his eye, shining a daunting amber and a warmth you can only feel over coffee tables in university cafeterias at midnight. 
“But you’re here now because this is the closest you can be to music?” you offer, your smile sheepish.
Renjun laughs, your eyebrows furrowing as he tries to stop. “No. No, classical music was the last option on their list—but it was on the list.”
You smile, although it is small and gentle. And—unlike anything you’ve felt since you jumped onto the adulthood train.
“They like it now, though,” he beams, shoulders relaxing as if rid of a burden.“I mean- They said- They said they’re proud of me.”
When someone decides to confide their happiness to you, it is just as precious.
You look up, eyes bright as you finally get to ruffle his hair. “Well, I’m proud of you too!”
Renjun coughs indiscreetly, shaking his head before facing you. “Th-Thanks. It’s… good to hear.”
“Say it back,” you demand, making Renjun laugh.
“I’m… proud of you,” he says with rose-tinted cheeks.
The midnight chatter grows louder when the two of you pause. A symphony of voices through the area, higher pitches and lower, baritones and trebles. You wonder what people talk about most when you are quiet. You have friends—it’s not like you’re alone, per se. But everyone seems to be running, away from something or towards something. Your bones feel heavy for a second as you stir the coffee. Is it selfish to just want to get to know someone? Neither of you moving a muscle, with laughter that isn’t carried away by the wind.
“I didn’t think I’d be good at anything apart from classical,” he says, reluctance in his mouth. “Sorry about all that ruckus I caused when you asked me to join.”
You raise an eyebrow, nose wrinkling at the apology. “Renjun. It sucks when you apologize.”
He groans. “You’re really annoying, you know that? I was being nice.”
“I know,” you say, grinning. “It was all forgiven a long time ago. Can’t believe you had to say it out loud.”
“Oh, pardon me,” he says, voice rising. “I was taking into consideration your below average understanding of social cues.”
“You’re going to get smacked.”
That night, when you leave Renjun at the intersection to your respective dorms, you have yet another unwanted epiphany. He waves you goodbye with a smile, pale blue T-shirt hanging loose on his shoulders and you wave back as ardently as you can against your prominent heartbeat. Huang Renjun has the kindest eyes you’ve ever seen.
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Some days, you take the bus together to and from classes. It’s not like the dorms are far but walks are considerably less fun when you’ve barely rubbed the sleep dust out of your eyes and class started ten minutes ago. Besides, you’re not letting the student bus pass go to waste.
Rattle. Rattle. Woosh.
You yawn and it quickly spreads to Renjun beside you. Classes are over and there’s no practice today. You can hear a popular song play through his earphones and tilt your head to look at him, a suppressed smile on your face. Renjun does a double take when he notices you, a little flustered as he quietly offers the other earbud and you put it on with a short word of thanks.
It is a track by one of Seoul’s favourite bands and you’re not going to lie, say you haven’t fallen prey to its charms. A catchy baseline, engaging drums and attractive vocals—you stop yourself. When was the last time you enjoyed a song without deconstructing it piece by piece? You sigh and Renjun shifts beside you, though no words part from his lips.
Absentmindedly, you find your head drawing nearer to his till they bump once and you startle away, only to laugh at each other. Is this another useless epiphany of yours? That Renjun has a lovely laugh—these are getting out of hand.
You look out the window instead, skyscrapers shiny and metallic as always and with little to offer. Unwittingly, a pout climbs onto your face at the prospect of feelings bubbling up right when you’re setting Renjun up on a date. He doesn’t know, of course. It’s meant to be a surprise and somehow, the little voice in your head won’t stop yelling at maximum volume inside your head about how wrong this is. Is it selfish? To an extent—nothing ever is purely selfless and you haven’t lived long enough to question. So why are you even bothering with this whole surprise?
Because you don’t want to think about the feelings. As if they’re things to be thought about. As if you can throw them away into the trash bin like a crumpled piece of paper.
An elderly couple boards the bus, sharing a large shopping bag as they take slow, careful steps over the aisle. Renjun responds almost at the same time you do, getting up so quickly Renjun has to hold on to the strap so as to not trip over you. The couple thanks you and you nod politely, trying not to bring attention to the earphones tangled around your necks.
You take a step closer in an attempt to separate the wires but it only makes you lose balance, Renjun clutching the cloth at your back so you don’t faceplant right into him. The other hand hangs overhead on the strap, grasping so tight his skin has turned red. 
He glances at the old couple once, blood rushing to his cheeks at something and he turns his focus back to you. 
“The- The wires- We should—”
Young love isn’t what this is. How silly. There’s enough of that all around.
“That’s what I was trying,” you interrupt. “Wait.”
You use your hands to pull the bud from your ear, trying to figure out how the loop even coiled this way. Renjun’s hand pushes against your waist at the sudden jerk, your soul almost leaving your body at the unexpected feeling of falling down. You breathe out, cheeks getting warmer. This isn’t quite uncomfortable, though.
When you look up to meet Renjun’s eyes, you feel something faint, a hint of something you can’t quite put your finger on.
“There,” you say, the wires all out of their miserable twining. 
Renjun barely nods, the music still blasting loud and clear through the buds. His hand still holds the strap for balance, and the other still holds you, for reasons private. 
There’s a warm flush over his face when he mumbles about crowded buses and the afternoon heat, eyes averted to every corner but you.
You laugh. Renjun is adorable when he least expects to be. And when you least expect him to be, he’s even terribly attractive. You swear by the way he’s looking at you, if you leaned in a little further, he’d let you kiss him. 
Wait, what?
You sober up quickly, in a moment of clarity you do not wish to have. You’ve never felt the weight of the feelings this intense. Yours isn’t the name he should be calling out so affectionately. Her. Anyone else. You were so sure of it. Huang Renjun’s fleeting interest in romance doesn’t involve you—cannot involve you.
That’s why you’re doing him (and yourself) a favour. Besides, you promised it anyway, didn’t you? 
You gulp. 
When did you start explaining yourself for everything you do?
Step, screech, step.
“Where the fuck are you even  taking me?” Renjun complains from behind you, light on his foot. “You said it’s not too far away.”
“It’s a surprise!” You stop walking to cross your arms.
“I hate it when you say that.”
How would he react? You think he’ll get a little angry, maybe scowl at you or even yell a little. You haven’t been able to look him in the eye longer than two seconds for about a week now. 
“Ta-da!” 
You stretch your arms to point towards the new cafe in town. Renjun looks at you and then the cafe and back again.
“You’re taking me on a coffee date?”
You choke on air, coughing before you can clear your throat and clarify.
“Not- Not me. Remember I promised you a date with—”
“No.”
“Yes! Wait, is that disbelieving no or are you saying you’re not going to go?”
Renjun closes his eyes and sighs, as if dealing with a toddler. “I’m not going. Why didn’t you say anything? I’m not prepared or anything!”
Something takes a tumble and falls inside your chest. You smile at him nevertheless.
“Don’t be shy now. She’s waiting, come on.”
Renjun shifts his weight from foot to foot, but it seems equally uncomfortable on each. He peers intently at you, looking up and down your face before pressing his lips together.
“Have fun,” you wish.
You push Renjun towards the door and he hesitates, some part of you expecting a little more resistance. He shrugs, although he seems to be holding back a smile. This isn’t the time, you tell yourself.
You turn on your heel before you lose your final excuse to be able to say that you are not completely enamored with Huang Renjun.
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The afternoon would be more peaceful if it weren’t for Donghyuck and Renjun yelling at each other. This time, you’re not to blame.
“That’s not how you tie a bow tie!” Donghyuck complains, though Renjun won’t let him anywhere near.
“I know you’re trying to get back at me for drawing on your face last Saturday,” Renjun yells back. “But this is the pre-annual concert. You’re not fucking anything up.”
Donghyuck grumbles before settling down. Four music performance majors and yet none of them know how to do a bow tie—if it weren’t for you, Renjun might have ended up with his usual askew one. Or maybe that’s just wishful thinking, and you’d just rather not look at him too long anyway. 
Formal white shirt, a much debated black bow tie and polished black dress shoes on Renjun aren’t strange to look at—in fact, they quite suit him when, despite its striking colour, his hair is parted neatly to the side. But they’re all so out of place in the bandroom, monochrome against messes, that you start to wonder if you simply think too much about him. That all of his colours and melodies are just there for you to notice.
It’s not true, of course.
But when did you become a cynic? 
“I’m going out,” Donghyuck says, huffing, “Why are they taking so long to buy ramen?”
Oh no. No, no, no. You try to mask your panic. Is one person enough to check up on Jaemin and Jeno? Would it be weird if you left too? Before you can answer those questions, you and Renjun are the only ones left in the room. You stand awkwardly by the couch, Renjun a few feet away, smoothing out the creases on his shirt.
You clear your throat, bringing his attention to you.
Nice going.
“So how was your date?”
You had to ask that, didn’t you?
The voice in your head has never been so loud before. When your question goes unanswered, you look up from the highly interesting floorboards to Renjun trying very hard to fight a snort.
“We talked about the recitals, extra lessons. Joked about you being an idiot.”
You furrow your eyebrows. “What?”
“Chaerim’s not interested in guys.” Renjun laughs. “I thought you knew!”
There’s a pause.
“Wait, you were serious about setting me up with her?”
You stare a little too intensely at the space between your feet. Why would you choose now of all times to be coy? You keep yourself from swearing out loud.
“I- I didn’t know, okay?”
You feel the heat over your cheeks, the sound of everything other than your own heartbeat drowning out. A few more seconds pass and you worry more. 
“Don’t set me up on dates,” Renjun says, a sigh leaving his lips. “It’ll never work out.”
“What? Why?”
Renjun falters only to cover it up. “I- I… Why do you keep avoiding me?”
You can’t answer that.
“Setting me up on a date, never looking at me when you talk to me—are you going by the book or something?”
You hold your breath. He’s not misunderstanding and it only makes matters worse.
“All that because you don’t want to be in love with me?”
“Renjun, that’s not—”
“So what is it?”
You look up from your restless fingers and regret it almost immediately. The way Renjun looks at you, it damn near breaks your heart. His nose is a pale shade of red, his Adam’s apple bobbing up and down with undecided words.
“Am I- Am I dreaming everything up? Just tell me you don’t like me. I thought I made myself obvious.”
You can feel your pulse against your eardrums, ready to burst open any second.
“Renjun. It’s not about this,” you say, voice strangely low. “It’s about music—It’s always about music. I can’t risk anything.”
“Risk? What risk? You’re afraid you’re going to stop making music when you’re with me?”
“No—”
“You just want your songs on the Billboard charts? 
“And what if I do? I just want to be heard—”
You can barely breathe at the lack of distance between the two of you. Renjun looks straight into your eyes and you remember why your heart has been hammering in the first place.
“So it isn’t about music.”
You fall silent. It’s not wrong to want to succeed. But it’s never been about that. You were preparing yourself for a race while you repeated your love for it that was never there. Music is not a race and so, it is not the race you love.
“I didn’t want to be rich or famous,” Renjun says, voice lower than usual. “I don’t want to be rich or famous.”
But a musician does not want to be forgotten, does he?
For once, Renjun is fearless and you are not.
“There are worse things,” Renjun says, breath against your cheek and a rapid pulsing in your wrists. You look from his eyes to lips before breathing out slowly, eyelids growing heavy despite yourself.
The sudden bang makes the two of you jump away from each other.
Donghyuck kicks the door open, hands occupied with steaming instant ramen cups and Jeno walks in with the sprite. 
“Jaemin’s paying and we forgot our wallets,” Jeno offers an explanation when you raise an eyebrow.
You clear your throat awkwardly as the two scrutinize you with eyes you’re not yet ready to meet. You know you’ll never hear the end of this and better yet, you can pretend it never happened.
“Aren’t you supposed to get going?” Jeno asks, struggling to balance this month’s entire supply of ramen while Donghyuck holds the top of the pile.
Renjun responds with a soft ‘yeah’, eyes glancing at you once before he grabs his coat.
“I’ll see you for practice then.”
With that, the sounds inside your chest draw to a deafening close.
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You’d think Doyoung would perform with his own band at his brother’s wedding.
(“I don’t want to work on the day my brother gets married.”
“I thought you work as a bartender?”
“Oh, dear.”)
You’re not complaining, of course. The longer you spend in the bandroom, the more suffocated you feel. You can’t meet Renjun’s eyes and neither can he meet yours. You rejected him, for fuck’s sake. It cannot get any more awkward than that. Any distraction will do.
This might be the first time you’ve been to a wedding on a Thursday night. At the very least, you’re happy about it being an outdoor wedding, the cool night air refreshing you the moment you step into the garden. It’s fairly large and you know Doyoung’s brother is an actor, but it never really struck you how wealthy that meant.
“There’s a chocolate fountain?!” Donghyuck gasps, walking towards it before Jaemin grabs him by the collar.
“Stage. We’re being called.”
Donghyuck massages his neck before he decides to give everyone an unnecessary pep talk.
“Look, Renjun, you better sing like that’s your ex, who you’re still in love with, getting married,” Donghyuck turns to advise a deadpanning Renjun.
“I- what? You should do that yourself.”
You smile at them encouragingly, smacking Donghyuck a little too hard on the back (you need payback for him “borrowing” your lunch on Monday) and stand at the sidelines. Donghyuck’s guitar seems to be the brightest thing in the venue, followed by Renjun’s hair. Unfortunately for Jeno, they couldn’t get the whole drum set in and the puppy dog look on his face when he sees the box-shaped cajón might have affected you some other day. 
They perform as usual, if not more enthusiastic to be in front of a crowd that isn’t drunk or worn out or both. The love songs you wrote came to be useful, after all. The muse of them, however, stands out even now.
This time, your heart skips a beat to meet Renjun’s eyes. And he doesn’t take them off you the entire performance.
The soft vibrato of his voice doesn’t fade easy, the crowd clapping along to the song with encouraging laughter. You move to the drinks table—it’s a good thing the wedding has a no kids rule because there’s alcohol you haven’t heard of at the bar table. Or maybe it isn’t a good thing. You’d love to see the look on Doyoung’s face when some rebellious twelve year-old chugs a shot of vodka. The thought makes you giggle.
You keep your word, even if you were drunk when you’d said it. You didn’t drink at any of the gigs, mostly because Doyoung wouldn’t offer anything for free, but a deal’s a deal. This doesn’t count, does it? 
You take the shot after a few moments of contemplation. You’d ordered it on impulse and whatever dare of whim you have left in you.
Unbeknownst to you, the songs had stopped about five minutes ago, enough time for Renjun and the rest to appear at your side. 
“Doyoung never said there’d be alcohol,” Donghyuck says, not trying very hard to hide the sparkles in his eyes.
Renjun doesn’t say a word, not even at the obvious flush over your cheeks from the drinks.
“I need to go to the washroom,” you say, wobbling as you stand.
“Woah, (name),” Jaemin says, steadying you. “Take someone with you.”
“I’ll go.”
You avoid Renjun’s eyes, even now. Looks like shame isn’t as easy to wash away as it seems.
You can’t hear anything apart from your pulse, a rather disarming thing to have to listen to when it’s for long enough. You walk wordlessly to the building, locating the washroom after a few twists and turns and Renjun waits patiently for you outside.
It’s always bizarre to see yourself in the mirror of a public washroom, especially with alcohol in your system and a flush over your cheeks that you think makes you look cute. You rinse your face and dry it before you exit.
Renjun leans back against the wall, eyes glazed over in thoughts he spills only occasionally. He looks gentle in the fairly lit hallway, under lemon-coloured lights. 
“Renjun,” you call absentmindedly.
He straightens immediately and for the first time in a while, you stare at each other for longer than four seconds.
“I don’t want you to feel awkward around me,” you begin. “I didn’t- I didn’t mean—”
“Cut it out.”
You feel a drop in your heart at the harshness in his tone. Even so, you don’t feel any less drawn to him.
“Don’t be like that,” you say, voice nearing a whine. “You know I’m not any good at this. I… I have so much work to do.”
“Are you so insecure that you can't trust yourself?” he hisses, and somehow the truth of it doesn’t lessen the euphoria of proximity with him.
“You have pretty eyes, Renjun,” you say, but his eyes are not what you’re looking at.
Renjun looks down, sighing out heavily. “Stop this, (name). Don’t play.”
You smile. “This isn’t a drama, you know?”
It really isn’t, but the touch you're craving has been collecting, drip drip drip, and now it’s ready to boil over in a climax befitting any stupid drama. There should be a soundtrack to go with it, right? Renjun’s face so near to yours, lips full and pink, and heartbeat erratic under dim lights. Temptation has never been a sin to you. Then, what are you afraid of?
For a moment, Arctic Monkey’s Snap Out of It loops in your head.
“Can I kiss you?” you ask, the last shred of your senses fallen apart.
He falls silent, at a loss for words you don’t want to hear.
You can’t blame the alcohol. It’s not that you wouldn’t do this sober—it’s that you would definitely do this sober, and all would be ruined just like that. So now, while you’re under the thinly veiled excuse of being drunk, you might as well say it.
“I want to kiss you,” you repeat, bolder.
Oh, sudden proximity can make you aware of so many things. For instance, Renjun has changed his cologne, less minty and more citrus. You aren’t even looking at him when you lean closer, pressing your lips softly and yet carelessly against his. You feel returned pressure and for a moment, the wash of numbness.
Renjun pulls you away by the shoulder, eyes wide in panic. 
“I- I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to—”
“Why are you apologizing? God, I hate you. I could listen to you speaking forever.”
You bury your face in Renjun’s neck and breathe in. He gives in almost too soon, a hand gently resting against the back of your head while his arm wraps around your waist.
“Let’s get you home,” he whispers. 
You feel him shift, the rhythm of his pulse loud in his jugular, and somehow it makes you breathe a sigh of relief. The night fades little by little into the chatter of crowds, to the the hum of a car engine and finally, to the inevitable quiet of your own bedroom.
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It’s a Friday. They’re supposed to be nice.
Of course, it would be were it not for a list of things. One: your fading hangover. Two: the vague regret of a drunk kiss. Three: your friends you can’t tell a word to. You might just die of shame before the autumnal existential dread settles in.
“Do you guys have any idea whose number this is?” Donghyuck asks, holding the handkerchief open for the rest of you to see. “I don’t want to be accidentally related to Doyoung hyung.”
The night is bleeding into the evening outside as Jaemin stands up to flip the light switches. You stay curled up at one side of the couch, Renjun by the keys as he tries to figure out a tune and a state of calm that would be perfect if you weren’t falling apart inside. The bandroom always made you feel at ease, but it doesn't seem to be working its charm now.
“You drink too much,” Jaemin states. “You would’ve remembered if you didn’t have an entire bottle of soju.”
“I wasn’t the only one,” he defends, sending you a pointed look. You roll your eyes. Donghyuck never did learn to take the blame.
“Didn’t Renjun and (name) leave early?” Jeno asks innocently. “What were you guys doing for so long by the washroom?”
Renjun presses on several of the keys at a force too hard, the haphazard symphony bringing everyone’s attention to him.
He awkwardly clears his throat. “Home—the dorms, er. We went back. Taeil hyung drove us.”
You don’t know about the atmosphere, but you could definitely cut something with a knife right now. Your eyes shift from person to person, nothing unusual about them except for the two of you.
“Does anyone want to come get ramen? I’m hungry,” Jaemin suggests quietly.
Jeno shrugs, getting up.
“I just had a cup of ramen,” Donghyuck begins before breaking into a smile. “Too much ramen can never hurt.”
“I’ll pass,” you say, ready to fall asleep any moment, if it somehow alleviates the messy scribbles in your head.
“Me too,” Renjun says, back to playing out the tunes softly.
Your fingers tap against the armrest of the couch, occasionally scratching it out of boredom. The atmosphere is still just as thick but you can't say much about it hanging there.
“You’re not sleeping,” Renjun says suddenly, more of a statement than a question. “You look tired.”
“Yeah.” It’s all you can manage. 
“Is your hangover gone?”
You cough when you try to answer, getting more nervous with each passing moment.
Renjun slowly walks towards the coffee table, picking up the bottle of water to offer it to you. You utter a short ‘thanks’ and before he can get back, you tug at his sleeve. Your breathing is sharp but you don’t react much when he sits beside you, legs outstretched in front of him.
“Your roots are showing,” you note, hand involuntarily reaching out before you stop yourself.
Renjun sighs. “What’s wrong? You don’t- You don’t have to—”
He clears his throat.
“—You don’t have to pretend around me.”
There’s a rustle of cloth as he shifts to turn to you, eyes concerned when they look over.
“I’m just...sad,” you admit, the feeling weighing down when you do. “What, you never have days like these?”
Everyone does, don’t they? The truth is, sometimes you get a little sick listening to your songs. If you don’t hate it at least once, is it worth it at all?
The monthly breakdowns have taken a hard turn now that you don’t have much to do. No exams, no more weekly gigs due to Odd Fruit’s renovation and most importantly, hardly any inspiration. You don’t know how to do things unless you’re on the run. It’s so stupid.
You speak of dreams and yet, yours feel void.
“I do. A lot, some weeks.”
Renjun hesitates. You know he’s dying to talk about last night, he’s never been the sort to let feelings rot inside his stomach. But how do you tell him that despite knowing life’s full of ups and downs, no one’s bothered to explain to you which is which? You’ve never lived life with clarity. 
Sometimes life hands you tangerines instead of lemons. Sometimes they’re still as sour.
You look back at Renjun, heart churning with feelings you don’t understand. From wide eyes to his full lips, there’s a way you can’t help but stare. It wasn’t the alcohol—you still want to kiss him. Maybe you should start with an apology, maybe those are meant to be said out loud sometimes.
“I’m sorry I… I ‘m sorry I kissed you,” you say, finally. “Without warning.”
You wonder how you turned into this. Head over heels for something that might not even be real. 
“I’m not mad,” he mumbles, “Just don’t go around kissing strangers.”
You let out a short laugh, rubbing your arm. It’s not like you to explain yourself but for him, you’d spill every single thought that crosses your head. Does he know that? You’d never let him but now—you can’t say you mind.
Quiet.
“I- I may not always know what I’m doing, Renjun,” you start. “I want things and I don’t know how to get them. Sometimes I don’t even know what I truly want.”
There’s a short pause when Renjun draws nearer.
“You want to make music,” he says with certainty, gaze trailing over your eyes, then nose, then lips. “You want to have fun…”
Your heartbeat quickens despite everything.
“...And right now, you want to kiss me.”
It’s partly the confidence, and partly the fact that his lips are less than three inches from yours, that you close the gap without hesitation. 
It’s different—of course, it’s different this time. There’s no goddamn alcohol and the amount of clarity you can taste with your mouths pressed together is more than you’ve ever had. All the sounds in the world fall silent, replaced by the rhythm of your lips moving against his. Renjun’s hair is soft and he hums when you run your fingers through them, not song enough but still full of melody.
You pull apart after a few minutes, breathing heavily before you push your lips against him again, rising to keep your leg on either side of him. For a moment, there’s a sinking feeling and then a soaring one, and it evens out to the mellow drumming of your heart against your chest as Renjun holds your waist with the same delicate desire as ever. 
The second time you pull apart, Renjun breaks into the widest smile you’ve ever seen on him. You can’t help but reciprocate, burying your head against his shoulder.
“I think you should get off me.”
You pull back, frowning severely. 
“Oh, that’s very romantic,” you huff, eyebrows furrowed as you move to sit beside him, crossing your arms. 
“Hey.”
You look at him and he takes your hand in his, thumb rubbing over the back. Somehow, the gesture calms a part of you down, a part that hasn’t been calm for a very long time. You smile without realizing, leaning in for another kiss when the door slams open.
You yelp, clutching Renjun’s hand harder with just about the same force he does. 
“Jeno.”
You turn around to see Jaemin glaring at Jeno on his knee, Donghyuck fallen over his leg and both of their faces scrunched in pain. Jaemin shoots the two of you an embarrassed smile, scratching the back of his head.
“Did you guys know this room isn’t all that soundproof? I can’t believe the neighbours didn’t complain.”
The tip of Renjun’s ears flare red, and he points an accusing finger at the three of them.
“You were spying on us!”
Jaemin clears his throat but Donghyuck snorts before he can say anything.
“You’re still holding hands, lover boy.”
The statement flusters Renjun further but he doesn’t let go.
“Look, did the two of you think we’re stupid?” Donghyuck continues. “God, we thought your pining romance would, like, break up our band or something.”
You flush deeper, averting your eyes. 
“You cry at romantic comedies,” Renjun provokes.
Donghyuck stutters something incomprehensive before crossing his arms indignantly.
“We’re glad you’re dating now!” Jaemin butts in. “Ah, I can’t wait for all the love songs. The two of you do great on those!”
Renjun turns a brighter shade of red. You’re not going to be the one to tell Jaemin that he’s not helping at all but you sigh instead, resting your forehead against Renjun’s shoulder. 
“Ugh,” Donghyuck makes a gagging sound. “Does this mean you’re going to be all heart eyes in here? Right in front of my innocent eyes?” 
He shuts up when he receives four glares all at once, the air turning dry.
“I’m guessing you guys didn’t buy any ramen,” Renjun says, sighing.
“Shall we go?” you ask, looking at him.
He nods, smiling at you.
“You guys don’t mind us crashing your date, do you?” Jaemin says, wrapping an arm each around the two of you.
“I’m not complaining.” You shrug.
“I heard there’s a new flavour. Tastes like crap apparently,” Renjun says.
There’s collective laughter and Renjun beams, walking over to the door with you in tow. Every once in a while, you don’t mind peeling off the layers of a tangerine, especially since winter is near. 
You were right, Renjun did change his perfume to something more citrus-y. It’s the little things that build up in simplicity and it’s the little things that give everything flavour, from songs to journeys. 
Crackle. Shrrk. Rustle. 
“Dream,” you say, the noodles slipping through the chopsticks. 
The others look at you quizzically, as if you’d suggested the most ridiculous thing ever.
“That’s the name. Our band!” 
Under the convenience store lights, it somehow makes sense—and that’s one of the only moments of clarity you need.
656 notes · View notes
fragileizywriting · 3 years ago
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6 through 8? 👀
LDSKJLSJKDFLJKDSF shit shit, okay, i have previews for the first two (6 and 7) but i don't have a preview for 8 BUT i do have it all planned out so i'll make a new post entirely for that!!! give me a moment to type that other post out
6. unnamed DL fic #1
“Today sucked,” she groans out, louder than should be allowed to since they’re in an apartment building, tossing her keys into the catch-all tray by the door. “Today really, really sucked.”
“Awh, Princess,” Adrien’s halfway through eating a tangerine, at the kitchen table, knee-deep into a sudoku book she got him three weeks ago. His massive hand looks even huger as he cups the tiny fruit like he’s eating a snack made for pixies, the pen wedged on his ear. “Is everything okay?”
“I’m miserable,” she peels off her boots. She struggles a tiny bit, because her coat is huge and massive, so she shucks that off too, praying to god and Jesus and whoever else that nothing will give her a shock if she touches it from how much static she’s sure she’s collecting. She hates the cold. She drops her coat onto the hanger just next to the door, too, making a face at how it rumples up and kinda sits a little stiff on the hanger from how frosty it is outside.
Yuck.
“Something happen at work?”
“Everything happened at work.” She pauses a bit to dig her phone out of her messenger bag. She lets the bag sink into the third cubby— her cubby— forgetting about everything as she makes sure to shove the two other storage boxes back into the shelf. Adrien constantly forgets to push his back. Luka barely can push his back onto the shelf without ruining the shoes he keeps stored inside. “Everything. You name it. Hospital called, we got new patients, we had a family come in that had absolutely no manners of any kind. I even had to waitress for a bit today, in the cafeteria, because they were short staffed and you know I can’t say no to helping anyone who asks.”
“I know,” Adrien’s eyes sparkle with some kind of fondness that makes the ice in her body from how cold it is start to thaw a little bit. She relaxes at the way he looks at her, pouting tiredly, feeling gross and icky and sweaty and cold in her scrubs. Her hair is bound to be frizzy from the wind and the rain. Her cheeks feel raw from the cold and the wind. No amount of chapstick will be enough to save her lips from how much they hurt— she definitely looks like a nightmare. But Adrien keeps looking at her like she’s divinity herself. “You are the most charitable person I’ve ever met, Princess.”
7. unnamed DL fic #2
“You have really pretty eyebrows.” It really is such a curse for succubi that they’re not able to control their mouths. She barely has the energy to blush at this point, because she’s lived too long on Earth to be embarrassed by what she says or does— but she doesn’t expect the way he reacts. He looks up from the travesty that is him trying to use chopsticks against the sticky rice dumplings she’s made— eyes widening when he realizes she’s talking to her.
Who else would she be talking to? It’s just them.
“Uh huh. What is it?”
“What is what?”
“Marinette. You have that look in your eyes,” he smiles at her, leaning into a palm, hiding his widening lips behind his thumb. “You want something.”
“No I don’t. Can’t I just compliment my boyfriend?”
“I can prove you wrong just by listening to your desires,” he shrugs, never losing eye contact with her, “but I’d rather hear you say what’s on your mind. What’s going on, little one?”
“Your eyebrows are just so gorgeous,” she sighs dreamily, letting her eyes glass over the more she looks at him. What does she focus on the most? His shaggy and long hair? It’s so glossy, now that she’s coerced him into using the proper hair products— so clean and so soft that it feels like touching a cloud whenever she runs her fingers through his hair. Or what about his lips? So kissable, so wonderful, oh how she loves that mouth of his— she loves peppering kisses over his face until he blushes from amusement. “Well. Everything about you is, obviously. Who am I to pretend you’re not the hottest guy I’ve ever met.”
“And Adrien?”
“Hottest prince.” She makes a duh! noise.
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