#i actually spent time building him
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"You know nothing of the weight behind this power."
#welt yang#hsr welt#hsr fanart#hsr#honkai star rail#honkai fanart#honkai welt#strongest unit on my team#i actually spent time building him
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Just finished reading Pez Dispenser Debris (I donât even go there but I am fueled by Wiki articles and a love for your storytelling) and first of allâamazing!!! 10/10, I think I need to watch this series now.Â
Second, I  noticed that (while very much distinct) Yuuta & Izuku have a lot of similarities in the voice you gave themâmaybe itâs the constant panic attacks or perhaps both of  them placing blame for everything squarely on their own shoulders, but ough it makes for the perfect blend of gut-punching angst. Iâd love to hear any ramblings you currently have about either of them. I am currently obsessed with both of them now and am placing the blame on you <3
Iâm gonna pretty heavily discuss some spoilers for my hero academia in this. I figured that was okay since youâd already read my fanfic and the wiki so the cat is out of the metaphorical bag. That being said, maybe wait to read this answer if you want to not be spoiled for more details in my hero.
Yuuta and Izuku absolutely have the most similar voices out of all of my narrators and it is 90% because they are both completely insane and in violent need of a Xanax and a nice soothing cup of chamomile tea. God I love them both so much. They should each be heavily medicated.
My hero academia is a pretty great watch through the Shie Hassaikai arc. The concept is entertaining, the characters are GREAT, and the world building is really cool.
Then the story sort of. Went to shit.
I tried for a while after that, but eventually had to stop watching. My friends and I have a group chat named âhorikoshi just call usâ because we got so despondent at the writing decisions after that arc.
Horikoshi. If youâre out there. If youâre reading this. Just call us. We just want to help.
That being said, my love for the characters maintains its death grip on me. I simply adore them. Theyâre delights.
Yuuta and Izuku, on their face, have a lot of similarities as protagonists. The aforementioned insanity and need of Xanax, of course, but the skeleton of the stories has a lot of common touchstones and themes, like:
Both characters have some kind of history with suicidal ideation or tendencies. In the second scene of JJK0, itâs established that Yuuta canonically tried to kill himself. In the first episode of BNHA, Izuku is told to kill himself by his bullies, in an act which appears to be common to izukuâs life, and the only reason Izuku comes up with to not do it is âthen youâd get in trouble for telling me to do it.â
Both characters have severe self worth issues. Yuutaâs looking for a reason to be alive at the start of JJK0. Heâs looking for a right to be alive. In a way, Izuku is too at the start of BNHA. At the open of action, he is told by everyone in his life that he is useless. His nickname is âDeku,â which uses some of the same kanji as âDekunobo,â meaning blockhead. The most direct translation were given is that this is a way of calling him useless. Heâs the powerless member of a society choked with superpower, and heâs been told his entire life that he can do nothing, that his dreams are pointless, and that heâs a burden who would be better off dead.
Theyâre both saddled with power they canât fully control. Yuuta with Rika, and Izuku with One for All, a transferable power thatâs too strong to be contained in his body.
They both have a close relationship with an impossibly strong mentor that they are implied to be the successor of. Yuuta with Gojo, as heâs second only to Gojo in the modern age, and Izuku with All Might (aka Toshinori Yaga), who he is more literally taking on the mantle of One for All from.
They both are chugging that Loving Their Friends Juice and have tried to kill grown men with their bare hands as a result
That all being said, they could not be more different characters and honestly arenât all that similar.
I have this sort of lasting grievance with literary analysis when people take a list of common plot points or events and use them to make the argument that characters are similar or parallel one another. Like, thatâs all facial. The real question is how do they substantively handle those events. How do their story arcs treat those things? How does their character react to them?
Yuuta and Izukuâs actual substantive characters donât really react to those events in the same way at all. The analysis could go on all day in this respect, really, but the biggest difference is how their respective story arcs treat the cornerstone of their original conflicts.
Yuuta opens action with Rika as the cornerstone of his conflict. Sheâs who he wants to free, sheâs who heâs chained to, and itâs her protection of him that makes him think he deserves to die. Izukuâs cornerstone, meanwhile, is his own Quirklessness. He desperately wants to be a hero, and everyone in his life tells him he canât be because he is Quirkless. Heâs useless because heâs Quirkless. He should kill himself because heâs Quirkless. Heâs a burden and always will be because heâs Quirkless.
And while Yuutaâs arc reconciles him with his cornerstone, Izukuâs forgoes it entirely.
The story just. Forgets. That heâs Quirkless. They stop talking about it. It never comes up again. It doesnât make any real big impact on his character or decisions. Itâs one of my biggest axes to grind with how the story developed, and itâs actually one of the biggest reasons why I wrote pez dispenser debris.
Pez dispenser debris was actually inspired by this one piece of my hero academia art where Izuku is hugging his younger self. I donât know if it was official art or fan art, and I have no idea where it is or where to find it because by god have I tried so I can find it and link it for credit/to boost it. I saw it literally years ago, thought âoh thatâs cool,â wrote the original first scene of the fic (where Midoriya stops the bus and is hit by the Quirk), wasnât feeling it, got distracted by other projects, went to law school, graduated law school, signed up to take the bar exam, and was suddenly electrified in the last fucking month of studying with this fugue state of feverish artistic inspiration. I have never written so easily or so compulsively in my life. Iâd write for eight unbroken hours and it would be fucking magic every time. It was like an addiction. I was writhing with a need to create and had so much fucking anxiety about the test I was not studying for instead. The words could not be restrained.
Anyway I taught myself three subjects on the plane ride to the state I was taking it in and passed anyway so itâs fine weâre fine
The moral of the story is that this story has been cooking long enough for me to get two more diplomas than I had when I started it and I have no idea where to find that fucking piece of art that inspired it, but if I find it, Iâll reblog it so yâall can see it too.
The thing is, the narrative sort of forcibly excluding Izukuâs past as Quirkless would make total sense to me if it was used as something Izuku himself was doing.
Izuku necessarily had to hide the truth of his former Quirkless status at the start of actionâhe needed to keep the secret of One for All. Like, he could not let people find out that a Quirk was transferrable, but you know, just the most powerful one, and also he had it, please come torture it out of him.
But as the narrative goes on, that rationale becomes less important. He has people he can trust with it. And yeah, eventually One for All becomes more known, but the discussion is all about him being all mightâs successor. Him being Quirkless and how that affected him and still affects him isnât really discussed or treated as important. And Izuku doesnât act like itâs important to him either. He never really thinks about it.
And I just hated that. Like. He spent almost his entire life as a member of society who was spit on. Heâs had a Quirk for less than a year. How are his experiences with Quirklessness not important to how he interacts with the world?
The other point of contention I had was Mirio.
Mirio is this superstar of a senpai who takes Izuku under his wing. He has an extremely powerful quirk thatâs only as effective as it is because he put in the work and learned how to handle it. Heâs a perfect, eternally smiling paragon of heroism. Heâs flagged early as the one out of everyone, including heroes with established careers, who is most likely to replace All Might.
Heâs also the one who was supposed to get One for All.
His mentor had found him and trained him to be All Mightâs successor. Before All Might could meet him, however, he found this feral raccoon child in a sewer and said âoh my god I canât not offer him incomprehensible power within the first three hours of meeting himâ and tripped face first into fatherhood.
During a rescue mission, Mirio loses his Quirk in a way thatâs borderline irreversible. Thereâs no known cure, and the only possible one is dependent on a little girl learning how to control an extremely volatile and dangerous quirk and using it in a way she never has before.
So surely, theyâre going to commit to that writing decision, right? Heâs Quirkless. Weâre bringing back having Quirkless characters. Itâs going to be this sick as hell juxtaposition between Izuku and Mirio. We are at least going to force Izuku to reflect on his own times as Quirkless or have some kind of discussion about how Mirio is treated differently now that he is Quirkless.
But no. He gets his Quirk back by the next season. We donât talk about it much. Itâs more of a minor inconvenience than anything.
Itâs almost as if the show accepted as an actual rule that you couldnât be a hero without a Quirk. And then just. Forgot. Everything it had to do with its literal protagonist.
Anyway, I hated it.
In contrast, I fucking loved how yuutaâs storyline with Rika ends. That scene where Yuutaâs turning back to Rika, thanking her for loving him, telling him they can die together? Iâm obsessed with it. I recently moved across the country and listened to that theme song on loop during the drive.
Yuuta and Rikaâs love was unhealthy. They hurt each other. But it wasnât malicious.
They just didnât know how to love each other in a way that didnât hurt.
They were in shit circumstances. But the love was there.
Yuuta felt guilty for Rikaâs love for him and his for her almost the entire narrative. He thought he cursed her with his love. He wanted to kill himself because of how she hurt people out of love for him. Itâs why I have moments in sea glass gardens where Yuuta talks about begging Rika to stop loving himâhe didnât know why love had to hurt so goddamn bad, and heâs sorry for that, he really is. He wishes he was better at it than he was.
At the end of JJK0, Yuuta truly is the last person who remembers Rika as she was and still loves her for who she is. Heâs faced with Geto, who wants to use her as a weapon. Everyone treats her as a threat or a tool, except for Yuuta.
Like. Just that moment. Of loving someone so genuinely, and being the last one who does, and knowing that everyone else will just use them. Iâm obsessed with it.
Yuuta reconciles with his love for Rika and her love for him, and theyâre both finally freed. Itâs this perfect moment of acceptance that I adore. He comes to terms with his past. It doesnât hurt him so much anymore.
I wrote pez dispenser debris to sort of force Izuku to have that kind of reconciliation. As it is, he hasnât reconciled with his own Quirklessness and how that affected him. I wanted to give him something he couldnât physically escape and had to face.
#tw canon typical discussion of suicide#tw suicide#tw suicide baiting#pez dispenser debris#sea glass gardens#from a narrative voice perspective you are so so right#I tend to change my writing style a bit depending on who Iâm writing#and Yuuta and Izuku I use VERY SIMILAR STYLES WITH#to the point where I reuse a lot of sentences between the two stories#I do shift my writing a bit#with Yuuta I tend to use shorter simpler sentences and have a lot of âdistanceâ in the sentences#I use a lot of âYuuta thinksâ and âYuuta feelsâ when normally I would just cut to what he actually thinks and feels#like those are a lot of fucking words that arenât the point. theyâre dead weight in the sentence. most of the time theyâre unnecessary#but I /want/ there to be that distance between the start of the sentence and the point because it gives more of a detached feel to the#writing and I think of Yuuta as a very detached narrator. he spent most of his life isolated and traumatised. the distance protects him.#heâs got space between him and the rest of the world.#I go off on way more asides with Izuku but thatâs less because of a mindset Iâm trying to build and more because itâs my silly fun story. I#wanted to write it âbadlyâ and break rules. I wanted the silly asides that have no affect on the story but existed in my head. I donât let#myself do the same in sea glass gardens.#pez dispenser debris isnât abandoned by the way Iâm just burning myself out on sea glass gardens before I go back to it. I have to take#periodic breaks with stories and Iâm trying to get through this one arc before I take one with sgg. that arcs the entire reason why I wrote#sgg to begin with actually. I have a LOT of stories that I /love/ that I never post because I know I only have so much time and there wonât#enough to finish them all. a story has to have something I really want to do for me to actually post it. sgg wouldnât have made the cut if#it werenât for this one arc that I found so damn funny that I decided to write the entire thing for the sake of one scene in it. itâs not#that I donât like sgg to be clear. I love it. itâs just one of my much softer stories?#it doesnât have a big climactic or intricate narrative. itâs softer and about healing.#its less narratively dynamic and more introspective and probably wouldnt have made the cut were it not for one scene ngl#ill probably finish toy rosaries next once i do that arc like im so close
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Hey do you think Jamil has trouble seeing people his age as peers?
Like, growing up having to be a caretaker to a guy literally a few months older than him, always expected to act like the adult in the situation, expected to work with adults and adopt their perspectives and pick up their slack. Do you think he just, forgets sometimes?
I mean we've seen him go into caretaker mode with other sophomores, and the only people I've seen him take seriously are juniors like Vil who also act much older than they should have to (his reactions to Leona look more like a trauma response and I don't wanna get into it here). People like Malleus and Cater still somewhat get the caretaker treatment. Like I just highly doubt that he subconsciously realizes he's actually part of his age group
Aaand that inevitably brings up Azul, who also acts like he thinks he's older than he is. Whether you're looking at it from a shipping angle or not, he reacts to Azul like an actual peer. With older students, he seems more in his element but there's still a status hierarchy which he compulsively reacts to. With Azul he doesn't acknowledge any status worth respecting or see him as someone who needs to be looked after. He just bickers like an equal, in a way that implies he actually does see Azul as a real peer, like subconsciously he's categorized this guy into the same group as himself, who was previously alone on that level (he gets like this more with the twins too, over time, but it seems to start with Azul).
And my favorite part about this is, while that response stems from them both acting more like adults in general, they elicit a pettiness from each other which drags them both down to actually acting their own age, and I just love that. Their characters are perfect foils for each other and it seems to make them both less isolated in a way.
#idk how to fully explain this thought in the azul department#but other than that its... yeah. forced maturity is so fucking isolating#I'm not surprised the only people he seems to hang around with are the fish even though he claims to hate them#since they seem to be in a similar boat with that#jamil viper#on a more shippy note:#I feel like Jamil NEEDED someone who he didn't feel the need to respect. in order to avoid falling into programmed behaviors#he's able to be a person around Azul in a way that nobody else can give him#specifically because Azul CAN keep up. but doesn't command his respect in any way that his employers would force him to acknowledge#and stubbornly refuses to leave despite Jamil being an asshole in his desperate attempts to feel some sense of freedom and control#which results in him wearing himself out enough to calm down and socialize while actually being treated with respect and equality anyway.#And it seems like Azul needed to find someone that he couldn't just attain or control from behind his own walls#he's desperate for the attention of someone who refuses to let him play the role he's developed to distance himself from others#so he has to treat himself more like a real person in order to get what he wants#which is a guy who challenges him enough to prove that it's not just him and the twins vs the ignorant masses#he's spent so long building himself a fortress of wealth and arrogance to protect him from the rest of the world#and now he's faced with the fact that he can't stay in there and still get what he wants no matter how many well practiced tricks he uses#and suddenly they're both just teenagers bickering in school with a peer like everyone else for the first time in their lives#this got off topic
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another childhood bucket list item obtained: i finally have a snuggie
#and it's the real thing not even a knockoff#kinda surprised they still exist#but also not surprised bc Blanket. blanket is universal#i just remember a lot of those As Seen On Tv ads like. imploding within 5 years#they still do As Seen On Tv products like there are still boxes marked with that logo it almost feels wrong like an ancient relic#bc most like. ubiquitous 2000s brands from my childhood are just Gone or at least so fundamentally changed it's not the same thing#heard about like 50 more companies going bankrupt probably in the last year alone#anyway ive always wanted a snuggie it's one of those Always Wanted things that never go away#others include: staples easy button (obtained!); mini fridge (not); pillow pet (i had a knockoff once); power drill (not)#i spent a surprising amount of my childhood actually going out of my way to buy stuff i could use in my own apartment in the future#i grew up lower middle class and then just lower class#so like. i always Knew i couldn't just furnish the whole apartment at once i Knew I'd have to build stuff up over time#also bc when my sister got kicked out she had like. nothing. in her trailer. and i did not want to have nothing#i knew if dad was willing to just toss out my sister like that i would absolutely follow suit#and i did! two years younger than my sister when she was!#it just happened that my mom didn't want me homeless at FOURTEEN when i legally could not work for two more years#so she went with me and we lived with my grandma#so take that dad. turns out throwing family members out willy nilly makes the rest of your family not trust you or like you!#and now i get to rub it in his face that HE can't function in a house by himself and still needs to beg my mom to clean up after him#bc i spent so much of my childhood getting berated and called lazy for not doing chores#getting told stuff like 'you have to function by yourself your parents can't always pick up after you'#and then he's literally useless without his wife#he's not disabled and he's not neurodivergent he's never even had a serious health scare he just doesn't bother to learn how to clean#his excuse is that he doesn't know how to use the washer and dryer (it has been almost ten years fucker. learn)#or he doesn't know which cleaning products to use (you have google and a library card. LOOK IT UP)#he's the only person i get mad at for this behaviour bc he's a fucking hypocrite and a child abuser about it too#he is the exception to my rule of everyone needs to be given the space to get things done where they're able and deserve help when needed#and I'll bend over backwards to make excuses for other people so i DONT exclude them from my rule i will try to find every good reason first#he has no fucking excuse though he made two teenagers nearly homeless bc he thought we were too lazy and then he's even worse
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Tango still hasn't seen Tiny Timmy and if it takes til they say goodbye for that I'm gonna riot. fWhip and Jimmy's "keep the hermits here" plan better work long enough for at least a little more rancher shenanigans come on!
#hermitcraft#empires smp#hermitcraft x empires#i didn't expect much in the way of ranchers content but for goodness sake#shaking tango to get him to at least build SOMETHING in Tumble Town#he put the hearts in his video and then spent the whole time with fwhip#and shubble but with fwhip there's history there#the man's a menace#oooh my rancher love hearts actually i'm gonna spend this whole impromptu vacation with your ex love and kisses#you're killing me smalls
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call me crazy but I donât hate the umbrella academy season 4
#spoilers in the tags#like idk#Lila and five was weird but I could totally see 5 finally finding a partner and latching on too tightly#it didnât have to be Lila ffs#but I donât think it breaks his character to not tell Lila about the way home immediately#this is a 62 year old man#who spent a majority of that time alone in an apocalyptic wasteland#with an unhealthy attachment to a mannequin#and thatâs not to belittle his relationship with Delores#my atl poster is one of my closest friends to this day#it is VERY easy to build an attachment like that to an inanimate object when youâre that lonely#now imagine five finally has a chance to settle down after 62 fucking years of constantly running and chasing a way to save the world#and the universe basically gave him a second chance to actually live#to be in love and be loved#in a timeline where there is peace#it is entirely human to want to hold on to that for as long as possible#regardless of what you miss because of it#âthey broke 5âs characterâ is the weirdest take for me#because finding a way to regain control over your never ending eternal nightmare of a life#is one of the most human responses to trauma I have ever seen portrayed#it did NOT have to be Lila#and I will be forever mad that they paired him with Lila#but Five is not any less himself at the end of the series as he was at the start#he got to experience something a vast majority of the other fives never would#and thatâs what makes him OUR FIVE#if our Five hadnât had that moment of peace heâd have continued the same cycle of every other alternate five trying to fix the timeline#the umbrella academy spoilers#tua spoilers#tua season 4
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sometimes i wonder if my neighbours can hear me ranting about whatever coworker I'm mad at this day (....hour). i think it'd be real funny if I walked outside one day and the guy down the hall said "so have you killed John yet?"
#no but it's getting close#this guy i swear...#half the problem is that hes kind of a dick and talks down to people/is always ranting about how our system and products are shit#so all the people who actually build said products have a chip on their shoulder#and then if you try to call him out on it hes like 'oh well i didn't mean YOU were shitty our websites are all just GARBAGE....'#and then he sends vague notes like 'make this look better' and we get in a 20 min fight mediated by the HR guy#because wtf does 'make this look better' mean#and we SHOULD be charging the client for this time spent making it 'look better' so don't JUST TELL CLIENTS WE'LL DO STUFF FOR FREE#anyway. fuckin guy.
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Poll adventure (paventure? lol) Day 10: read the small story tidbit below the poll for more details, OR just vote based on initial impression
(⊠see past poll results + further information HERE (link) âŠ)
Yesterday's poll decided that The Adventurer should join the travelers on the larger river boat for a short lunch ...
~
"Before he even fully musters the courage to shout a 'hello', the large group on the boat initiates contact first, gleefully waving at him, whooping and shouting as they near his tiny raft in the water. Apparently, some of them were betting over whether they'd actually find any other travelers out on the river today.. He fumbles over his words a bit, as always, but somehow manages to successfully get himself invited onto their boat for a quick lunch..
After safely securing his raft to the side of the boat with some spare rope, he climbs aboard, stumbling into the excitement of some sort of celebration. A few of them explain that they're traveling for 'kahesallei', an old elven holiday recently re-popularized in some of the larger cities nearby. Whatever it's true meaning and origins used to be, the current significance (at least to those within the city walls) seems to just be mindless feasting, drinking, and gaudy decor. Most of the traveling group are strangers to each other, only brought together by catching a ride on the same tour/party boat, but the mood is light, quite friendly between them, and perhaps a bit drunk.
While the boat itself is relatively plain wood, it's been strewn with gold and orange banners, flags, shimmery tassels, beads, and bushels of dark green ivy braided with fresh herbs and wildflowers. There are flat round tables of food and drink, plenty of cushions to lounge on, and one random guy perched precariously on the edge railing of the boat, gently strumming a lute for background music..
The elderly ship captain hobbles over to The Adventurer, sternly explaining that, no matter what the 'silly' passengers say, he's only allowed to stay for an hour because he didn't pay for a boat ride ticket, and thus really shouldn't even be allowed on board. By the time The Adventurer has mentally processed this information, the captain has already returned to his little steering room, slamming the door shut with a displeased grunt.. It probably wouldn't be a good idea to confront him or question the rules...... But! Hey, at least he has one hour at the party.. How should he spend his time? "
~
Additional Information
the adventurer's current main goal: follow his map to reach the abandoned castle ruins and see the rare animal specialist about the mysterious egg he has
#paventure posting#polls#poll#choose your own adventure#LATE AGAIn I know.. I'm still in my weird unproductive spell. literally I've had the same 5 to do list items on my list#for 2 weeks now. I can't even do five simple things in 2 weeks lol. I did start some new supplements and change my diet since#my doctors are still trying to sort out what health issues are going on or etc. so maybe it's something with that#like accidentally on the new diet I'm not getting enough calories or not getting enough of some vitamin or something so it's made me oddly#brain foggy and just really tired and unable to focus well for the past few weeks or something..? ANYWYA. not really sure what#it is specifically but my functioning in terms of actually focusing on and completing tasks has been a lot worse . thus#chronically behind on things. which I am always chronically behind on things in some sense since I always have like 7000 projects#I'm working on at the same exact time and etc. lol. but like.. even more chronically behind than usual .. ToT#ANYWAY.. I'm suprised that the 'try to get a ride on the boat' option didn't get that many votes actually lol#Like.. treveling down a river in a tiny handmade raft is probably.. not extremely safe or efficient lol#But at least he gets to have lunch there. Just the hour that he's on the boat doing whatever will get him a lot further because the boat#is moving faster than his raft would be. It should still get him out of the river and back on track sooner. Because he still has a long way#to go to get to the abandoned castle. I know it's been a lot of days since I'm not keeping up well with actually doing these#daily or every other day - but technically in the story it's only been a little over a day since he left the Inn#The first day he just walked. the second day he saw there was a barrier in his path. then spent half the day building a boat. and now he'e#*he's where he is now. The trip is roughly 4 days and he's like.. a little over halfway through his second. Not counting any detours or#distractions he might run into. But at least at this pace he should be off the river before it starts to get dark#Thate the main thing. you want to get a good rest on solid ground. ideally. So long as nothing strange happens on the boat#but yeah! day 10.. of little elf man adventure... ALSO he is like early 20s I imagine. so he can drink hbhjbjh#I know the 'very quick simple ms paint style' is kind of chibi-ish so it makes people look young but he's not a boy#don't worry. I didnt want it to seem weird like some 10 year old kid walking into a party of drunk 30 year olds#like a toddler hanging out in a night club or whatever. It's safe and okay for him to be there. just for the record. lol#I mean maybe not SAFE safe. it's still a boat of like.. rowdy party goers who could easily fall over the edge into the water or whatever bu#but like.. safe in the sense that he's not a 6 year old being offered vodka by strangers at a party. etc.#despite his goofy nervous demeanor and chronic baby face syndrome he is indeed an actual adult somehow ghbj
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Istg I actually need to sit down and write a proper bio for Riku because even I get confused af as to what his personality is sometimes.
#oc tag#âbut prince he's your oc how tf did this happenâ he has a mind of his own trust me#i mean this is literally one of the parts of his character he is literally so good at adapting his personality#because he felt he needed to as a kid both in school and in the business world#that barely anyone knows what he's actually like#like one minute he's a suave overconfident guy who can take on anything#but hes also the quiet dude in class who never participates is probably asleep but somehow gets everything right and is top of the grade#he loves to flirt but will absolutely blue screen if anyone flirts back because despite the fact he flaunts himself-#he doesn't think hes attractive LMAO#his biggest motivation is spite and he doesn't know when to quit#this boy has so many fucking issues istg#def one of those characters who has so many masks that he hardly knows himself#i have a fear that he's nearly too complex to the point where he's a confusing character and i personally dont think thats a good thing#so i really hope that's not the case for you guys đŹ#over my break ive really spent time trying to iron out his character and just make him into soemthing im even more proud of you know#the good thing is that at least his story now has a clear arc and theme which im really proud of#so im gonna use that to build off and iron him out even more#the way i put more work into this funky dude i came up with than like my entire uni work#i love him so much sorry to be mentally ill about a guy i made because i liked a ship too much (and crossover i was having fun with too)#one day i will have a proper post for him with references and everything for him his outfits his personas the lot#one of these days
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Good morning! I just finished making me a new metal friend đ
Ain't he pretty đ
#Spent the last week slowly putting him together#It was my first time building a steel model and of course i picked up one of the hardest ones fhdkslsjshs#But honestly?#Pretty happy with how it turned out lol#Didnt lose or break a single piece#And due to a jewelry making phase i had way back when i had all the pliers and wire cutters and tweezers i could ever need lol#Thinking i might pick up the other 2 cause it was actually a lot of fun#Plus you know me i would never say no to more dragons fhdjsksjshs#Just gotta grab the red and blue dragons and ill have a pretty metallic trifecta đ
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do you think part of the reason diluc still struggles with his resentment towards kaeya is because kaeya is more like what crepus wished diluc to be? crepus was so proud of diluc for his accomplishments as a knight and lived his dream through him as well and we know how much crepus' approval meant for diluc, more than any title or doing. i sometimes wonder if diluc feels hurt knowing that kaeya gets to live the equivalent to his past life as a knight as if nothing happened when he had to make sacrifices for his own peace of mind and sense of justice. i wonder if that's what pains him the most, not the fact kaeya ommited the truth about his past for so many years but having felt like he was the only one who cared to do something regarding his father's death and who showed any sense of uprightness when confronted with the knights' request to cover their mistake and negligence. i always think about how diluc might have felt like everything was a lie and his sense of betrayal. but maybe that didn't matter as much as having the support of his brother and someone he could share his pain with would have mattered. maybe the worst thing wasn't what kaeya did but what he didn't do; maybe it was never about his actions but the lack thereof.
#i just keep thinking about how lonely diluc must have felt#we know they kept in contact but it wasn't the same#but i also feel so much for kaeya who must have been deeply worried all the time diluc spent away all the times his letters were unanswered#do you think kaeya checked diluc's vision frequently to see if it ever faultered?#my heart clenches whenever i think about them#as much as i love to dwell on the angst of their relationship i feel so happy to see an accurate representation of what healing is like#and the usage of time as a way of storytelling#how it's a slow process and how you get there little by little#how conflicting it is#you have diluc's simultaneously passionate/fierce and stoic personality vs his more vulnerable anonymous messaged in cat's tail board#he admits it pains him and he reminisces of the past yet it's so easy to get angry and it's so easy to build up walls#and then you have kaeya who comes across as confident charming laid-back but who's so hard to read#there's a sadness in him even though he's mostly well resolved#you wonder if some of his diligence is actually his or compensation for his guilt#i just really enjoy them both and how different they are yet so similar#how they are both deeply lonely how they draw a line at anyone putting people at risk#they're not my favourite characters by chance i really think they're extremely well characterised and i think they're easy to relate to#and even though kaeya uses the term anti-hero with attitude problems to describe himself they're both genuinely kind hearted people#they're both warm in their own way#and i hope they hug one day i hope by the end of this stupid game that they get to properly be in each others lives again#the way kaeya called diluc his brother in his hangouts warmed my heart a lot i'm just so glad despite everything they're still able to keep#the other around even if diluc is a silly grumpy guy the fact they dined together like the old times already means something too#my boys <3#sometimes i want to hit diluc because it's him who pushes kaeya away the most but i also understand that the process of getting ready to#fully let go of his struggles and forgive kaeya takes time#i'm simultaneously hitting him with a cardboard tube and giving him a big big hug#i still think they should be put in the get along t-shirt though đ i think that's what they're lacking that would work for sure
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#okay besties itâs time for an insane personal post#so i downloaded a dating app bc i was bored and i didnât actually expect to meet anyone but then i did meet this guy that i actually liked#and weâd been talking consistently every day for like a week#then we met up on campus and got starbucks and sat outside the library and talked#and then i sat in his lap and we made out for a while but thatâs not important#anyway. everything seemed to have gone fine like there was no indication he wasnât equally enjoying himseld#he made references to us seeing each other again in the future#and heâd even said âi donât ghost people even if we donât work out iâd still want us to be friendsâ#so then i get home after weâve spent like an hour making out#and heâs blocked me#now. the question here besties is that i know where i can find him#i know where his class will be tomorrow and when so i could in theory wait outside the classroom until he shows up and demand an explanatio#im aware this is insane. like i know i sound absolutely nuts#however i am tired of being nice and i would like to go apeshit#iâve had it with guys who do this and also heâs fully aware that i live my life in the science building where his class will be#he did this knowing thereâs a very high chance he will run into me#so like. so what if i make him run into me on purpose#i want to smash his kneecaps is that so wrong#sam speaks
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there are so many âbestâ AUs and the ones I label as they best definitely change according to my mood but right now the BEST kind is the kind where the AU reveals that in different circumstances the two characters end up in completely opposite roles in their dynamic because the SOULMATISM of it allâthe realization that these people respond EXACTLY the same way to thingsâTHATS EVERYTHING TO ME RIGHT NOW
#OKAY YEAH THIS IS FUELED BY ME GETTING OBSESSED WITH THE PREMISE OF MY OWN WIP blablablah self obsorbed blablablah touch grass#DO I LOOK LIKE I CARE#the prev post about enemies who make each other who they areâYEAH I MEANT IT WHEN I SAID IT IMPACTED ME#BECAUSE THAT DYNAMIC IS SO GOOD#Iâm obsessed with the character everyone sees as the darker one being CANONICALLY hopeful to a fault#being SO DRIVEN by the need to do good that it perhaps morally corrupts him beyond any return#and Iâm OBSESSED with his counterpart being the OPPOSITE she said âyes Iâm cynical what about itâ AND SHES SO RIGHT FOR THAT#and Iâm OBSESSED with moving their interactions to a time BEFORE his hope was corrupted. BECause the thing is she can actually be#the very thing that turns his hope into reality. She just needs to STOP BEING SO CYNICAL#AND I LOVE THAT#Aleksander: canonically is fueled by his hope to build a sanctuary for those unprotected by society and those literally hunted for their#existence (canonicaly spends hundreds of years doing this)#Alina: canonically assumes the worst (yes sheâs valid Iâm not saying sheâs not. sheâs also just very oh no looky here another FUCKING THING#TO DEAL WITH) (at SEVENTEEN YEARS OF AGE)#and yes I know these two people are actually terrible for each other (specifically uhh aleksander is terrible for Alina) but the IDEA that#in different circumstances they wouldnât beâ#LET ME HAVE IT OKAY LET ME HAVE JT#itâs just funny that aleksander is like that because of the hundreds of years he spent learning that loss is inevitable and it might as well#serve a purpose#and Alina is like that because sheâs had enough shit by age seventeen that sheâs just gonna fuck shit up if one more thing goes wrong#also no in this Alina does not become a despot thatâs not the point the point is she becomes incredibly world weary and apathetic while#aleksander is the one who is doing his damndest to help the world
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ok so i didnt realize the tags have a limit nor did i realize i wrote thirty fucking tags and i still wasnt done. so. tags cont đ„°đ„°đ„°
and like, idk it sounds like the wedding was all out, so like YEA. THAT'S A BIG THING TO JUST CANCEL. so ofc she had reservations about calling it off the closer they got, but im so glad she left him. cause like in the missing ring scene, it felt like she was more scared of *jung* and how he'd retaliate for the ring being lost more than the ring itself. like baby, forever isn't supposed to feel like a scary life sentence, and im so glad she realized it while spending time with min again. and idk! part of me does still think that maybe min should have taken time to go to his parents. that maybe just a little bit of time, just a little, for both of them to clear their heads and sort out their feelings. mc just kept digging and digging and digging this hole deeper and deeper and while yes, she did eventually dig herself out, she's still exhausted and covered in the debris of it all. and I know minho would hold her, clean the dirt off her himself while she rests in his arms, safe and loved and protected, it's so unfair to minho that he continuously has to be the one to bear the weight and the pain her emotional immaturity causes. like his frustration at the end where he was like *so u waited until the day before ur wedding to say something đ€š* I WAS LIKE RIGHT?????? like idk i just feel like he has every right to be wary of how mc actually feels about him, about them, about everything they'd been doing for the last two months, when she couldn't even be honest with herself for years.
i really do think this story feels *the most* human out of all your fics ive read so far. there is just so much realistic flaw within the mc and the people around her, and its not just magically changed or fixed or disregarded by the end. its there until the last moment, but minho looks at her and still wants her, mess and all. god.
also jung get fucked u stinky little man. he sounds like hes got the emotional maturity of a 10 year old with holographic pokemon cards or something like wtf. LIKE IDK IF I READ THAT PART WRONG BUT WHEN HIS BUDDY WAS MAKING THOSE COMMENTS DURING GOLF???? AND TOUCHED MC WITH THE CLUB????? mc is better than me bc i would have SWUNG. and jung didnt say shit!!!!! he was laughing!!! hes so fucking gross mc baby what did u ever see in this stinky little clown man
anyways this was a banger and once again im asking for ur hand in marriage bc wtf star ur so good at this AND IM SO SORRY ABT THE LONG TAGS AND THE RANT DOWN HERE I JUST HAVE SO MANY FEELINGS ABT THIS FIC
Begged & Borrowed
Pairing: Lee Minho x fem reader
W/c: 30.2k
Warnings: infidelity, drinking, smoking, use of pet names, unprotected sex, breast/nipple play, dry humping, clitoral stimulation
Synopsis: A turn of events causes you and your longtime best friend Minho to confront your true feelings for each other- except youâre already getting married to somebody else.
[this work was based off a request from âđ·â anon - thank you for requesting!]
18+. Mdni!
âą
For as long as Minho has remembered, heâs been in a constant state of grieving. But no oneâs passed, nor is there any reason to believe something should happen. Nonetheless, the feeling remains, a cruel reminder of the phenomenon when it hits him suddenly, eating away at his thoughts and boring into his flesh.
Like a seed planted deep in his body, one that suddenly sprouted, and wonât stop growing, and growing. And in his mind, this grieving takes its form in viridian hues of ivy, thin stringy stems that wrap around his bones and constrict him to a life lived within the cage of his own body. Rubbery leaves of green with venules that mirror his own veins and seem to mock him as they replace whatâs left of him. And Minho can do nothing except coexist with this heavy sense of grieving, let the ivy strangle him in its unsuspecting embrace and rob him of his last breaths. Heâs still in there, trapped somewhere, breathing in labored breaths and stiff at the limbs. But he canât breathe, and he fears one day this grieving is going to kill him.
*
Minho exhales deeply, balancing a small cardboard box which houses a white cylindrical cake in his hands, his eyes darting nervously over the crowd inside. There seem to be 20, maybe 30 people, already acquainted with the space, chatting amongst themselves with glasses of champagne in hand. Heâs tried your cell phone twice, to no avail- of course he knows youâre probably making your rounds, chatting with guests and double checking the hors dâoeuvres are to your liking. But he tries one more time just in case, bringing the phone up to his ear and letting it ring once, twice, three times- voicemail.
Thereâs no way around this but to go inside and socialize for the next hour, Minhoâs personal idea of hell on earth. He grips the box a little firmer with one hand, using the other to slip his cell phone back into his pocket and make sure he can access it easily, just in case he needs to look busy. And with one more deep sigh, he begins the journey inside, mentally preparing to pretend as though he cares about any of this.
The venue interior is spacious, and admittedly a breathtaking view at this proximity, much to Minhoâs stubborn dismay. Round white tables line the wooden floors, wrapped in velvety cream tablecloths and glowing in the dim lightning of tea candles. Similar cream-colored lanterns line the ceilings in neat rows, parallel to the strings of bohemian bulb lights that serve more as decoration than to actually brighten the place. And by the marble wall fountain at the back of the open space, thereâs you, all dressed up and chatting enthusiastically with a group of women. Minho pauses for a moment, not yet proceeding, as he takes in the sight of your elegant appearance. Your figure is hugged delicately by a slim-fitting dress, a pair of strappy heels complementing the loose curls and simple makeup you sport. And he sighs again, feeling as though this is all going to be in vain the second he approaches you.
Yet he doesnât even have to- you spot him from across the room first, whispering something in another womanâs ear before making your way toward him, an enchanted smile on your face and such purpose in your step as you near him. Minhoâs heart quickens in his chest the way it always does when heâs around you, though his demeanor seems to relax fully once youâre in front of him, your arms extending for a hug as he shoots you a saccharine smile and pulls you into his embrace.
âYou made it!â You exclaim enthusiastically, your arms wrapping around the broad shoulders he flaunts under his white collared button-up. He smells familiar, a comforting mix between fabric softener and his musky cologne, and it brings you right back to your days spent alongside him in college, catching late-night movies together and hitting up all your favorite fast food joints.
âI wouldnât have missed it for anything,â Minho replies sweetly. He chuckles a little as he speaks, lost in the striking glow of your eyes at this proximity, your long eyelashes fluttering as you smile in response and nod.
âThank god youâre here,â you voice, glancing around the room inconspicuously. âI think Jungâs friends have had one too many shots. And I asked for pink flowers on the centerpieces- do these look pink to you?â
You gesture to the bouquets of very magenta floral arrangements, shaking your head as Minho laughs in response.
âHey, remember this is just to celebrate everything being finalized. You can get nit-picky when the wedding rolls around- for now, letâs just enjoy the magenta flowers.â
You smile up at him, always endeared at the way Minho finds the good in everything. He has a special way of taking your fears or reservations and making them seem so insignificant in contrast to the world around you. And heâs been that way for as long as you can remember, quick to fix things and stay by your side through the hardships whenever they crept up on you.
Like the time your car got impounded and he walked nearly two hours with you to get it back because neither of you could afford a taxi. Or the time your holiday office party was all but sleep-inducing, and he didnât hesitate to drop what he was doing to take you out for burgers, instead.
And of course, being by your side throughout this very burdening wedding process. Minhoâs the first person who got the news of the engagement when it happened, nearly shattering the dish he washed during a session of old cartoon reruns and fast food while you were out at dinner with Jung. And it was the last thing heâd expected, too, remembering how the week prior was spent lending a kindly ear to you as you ranted about Jungâs stubbornness and his poor temperament.
âMarried?â Heâd spoken into the phone, like the proposition of getting an engagement ring implied literally anything else.
And when you saw him again an entire week later, the marquis diamond hugged by delicate prongs and a sterling silver band around your fourth finger confirmed the words, as if your excitement over the phone hadnât done so already. At first Minho was angry, declining invitations to hang out and forcing himself to stay asleep so as not to feel the sheer pain and regret that came with the news. What does she even see in him? Heâd asked himself a dozen times a minute, mapping out the factors you complained about to him and weighing them against the likelihood that youâd actually follow through with this wedding.
Heâs messy. He doesnât like spending money on fancy dinners, so sometimes weâll only do sides. My parents think heâs a little arrogant and when heâs with his friends, itâs like I donât exist.
All signs point to negative. Thereâs no way youâd actually follow through with marrying Jung- at least not if itâs up to you. Maybe you had stars in your eyes, couldnât say no to the sparkly ring and had thought back to the first date when he first got down on one knee. That has to be why you said yes.
The prospect of marrying him contractually is a headache when Minho thinks about it- and thatâs not even inclusive of the idea that comes with spending the rest of your life cooped up in a house with him, with children and in-laws. It would mean years of him talking back to you, undermining you and rubbing his superiority complex in your face. Minho isnât sure he could stick around for a lifetime of that.
At least he wasnât sure before- and now, with just two months out till the wedding, Minho is panicking. It feels like some race against time to knock an ounce of sense into you, but the stars in your eyes are still there when he catches you glancing at your ring, or moved by Jungâs actions that scream the bare minimum.
âDid you see the champagne glasses? Theyâre iridescent! Jung got them just for tonight.â
Maybe thatâs what you see in him. His noble trait of picking iridescent champagne glasses over clear ones.
âCool,â Minho responds, giving you a small nod.
âWhatâs in the box?â You ask, gesturing to the small white box in Minhoâs hands still.
âOh, just a little something,â Minho replies a little softly, watching as you slowly lift the thin cardboard lid and peer inside. And the smile that grows on your face makes everything worth it again.
âFrom our favorite bakery? Minho! That place is so expensive, you shouldnât have!â
âItâs a special evening,â Minho replies with a smile, watching as you admire the intricate icing display for a moment. White fondant ribbons and candy pearls line the frosted surface which enreathes decadent layers of chocolate- all your favorites. As Minho begins to close the box, heâs rudely interrupted by a finger prodding itself into the dessert, swiping across the frosting and moving the carefully placed cake toppers into complete disarray.
âIs this chocolate?â A voice asks from behind Minho, coming forward to sprawl an arm over your shoulders and lick the frosting off his finger. âDamn, thatâs good!â
And Minho can practically feel every ounce of hope in his body dissipate as he watches you giggle enthusiastically.
âHi, Jung,â Minho says flatly, observing your destroyed cake briefly before shutting the box again.
âWhatâs up, man? Thanks for the cake. Hey, weddingâs in two months- I hope you have your tux ready!â
Minho responds with a thin-lipped smile, not saying anything as Jung laughs loud enough to fill the awkward silence amongst the three of you.
âWhat do you say we go cut some real cake?â Jung asks, turning to face you as his grip around your shoulders tightens.
You smile back at him, turning to Minho and cocking your head toward the table by the wall fountain.
âYou wanna join? We got a variety of pastries, too. Thereâs those little cream puffs you like, and macarons from the French bakery.â
Minho extends his arms, passing the box of cake to you and giving you both a small bow.
âI actually just stopped by to gift you the cake. I have a work thing really early tomorrow.â
âYouâre leaving?â You question, a small pout on your face as Jung scans the room around you, desperate to ditch the two of you, but also stubborn about maintaining his dominance in front of Minho.
âWeâll catch up soon,â Minho replies, trying his best to convey a smile that will make it seem like nothingâs bothersome.
âOkay, okay,â you respond, separating from Jungâs hold on you and pulling Minho in for another hug.
âThanks for the cake, anyway. Iâm still glad you stopped by.â
âOf course,â Minho says, averting his gaze from Jung. âAnd congrats on finally getting all the wedding plans finalized. Thatâs a really big deal.â
âSheâll be hitched in two months!â Jung chimes in loudly from behind you. âAnd then weâll be on an island celebrating married life!â
Minho just nods at him, shooting him the same thin-lipped smile and bowing to both of you.
âCatch you later,â he says, finally pivoting to exit the way he entered. And he can still hear Jungâs obnoxious laughter from halfway across the room.
*
Fridays were always your designated days with Minho. In college, they meant movie nights and greasy takeout food. Post-graduation, they involved bars and gossiping about your entry level positions and your bosses. And after Jung came into the picture, they quickly became every other Friday, which soon turned to Sunday brunch on a monthly basis, which then transitioned to catching up over the phone or in brief passing. Jung made sure you were always busy doing something with him, his arm slung possessively around your shoulders and speaking far too loudly about your relationship for the whole world to hear.
Minho began to ditch the Friday group dates when Jung started inquiring about his own relationship status, getting drunk off one-too-many jĂ€germeisters and slurring questions and demands about when heâd finally bring a girl to the function. And Minho never had the heart to tell you why he stopped showing- he simply conjured intricate excuses for every instance you invited him out.
I have a headache. I have an early day tomorrow. The cats are lonely these days.
Of course, perhaps Jung could see right through him into the green leaves of ivy that enwreathed his bones and swallowed him whole with this grieving. Grieving for you, grieving for himself, grieving for this life he knew was bound to come to a close the minute Jung made his move. Which Jung did, practically setting the relationship in stone so that Minho would now be subject to a lifetime of his offensive slurred speeches and unsettling presence. And although the grieving grew heavier after the engagement, itâs always been there, perhaps even longer than Jungâs even been in the picture.
âJung said no male strippers at the bachelorette party, which is a bummer if you ask me. But we are having an open bar, so Iâll be too drunk to care about naked men anyway.â
Minho chuckles softly, bringing the straw in his iced coffee up to his lips and taking a sip from the corner of his mouth.
âBut heâs having strippers at his bachelor party, isnât he?â
You shrug casually, brushing off the question as you take a sip of your coffee, too.
âI donât really care, either way. I mean weâll be getting married regardless, so he can look at whoever he wants. I just need him to show up in a tux on the day of, and stand at the end of the aisle crying when I come to meet him.â
Minho doesnât reply, a string of questions circling his mind, which he chooses not to ask in order to maintain the peaceful silence that now falls over you both. Itâs one of the only days this month you two have been able to get some time alone, although it did require Minho taking off work early and you lying to Jung about your whereabouts. You find yourselves at the coffee shop youâve been meeting at since your college days, an iced americano in Minhoâs grasp and a latte in yours.
As Minho takes in his surroundings, everything feels vastly different than it used to- the distance between you two feels much greater, like there are miles separating the beverages you consume at this proximity to each other. The baristas donât shoot you curious looks like they used to when they were certain you two were an item. And the shiny ring on your finger makes an appearance every sip you take, glistening under the beams of sun that dance through the windows and fall over your enthusiastic figure.
âWhat are you up to this weekend?â You ask finally, meeting his shy gaze as he taps his fingers on the wooden surface of the table.
Minho shrugs, toying with the lobe of his ear as he thinks of a random commitment to voice back to you.
âOh, you know,â he stutters. âMoving stuff.â
And heâs completely unsure, himself, of what the words imply as they escape his lips.
âMoving stuff? To where? Where are you moving?â
âIâm not moving,â he emphasizes. âJust⊠moving stuff. Things. I want to rearrange some picture frames. And maybe reorganize my bookshelf.â
You sigh in response, a small smile tugging at your lips as Minho does his best to maintain the bogus narrative.
âMinho, you never leave the house anymore. Why donât you go out with Jung or something? Heâs doing a golf thing with some of-â
âNo, thank you,â he interrupts quickly. âIâm not a golfer.â
And you sigh again, cocking your head at him.
âOkay, mister âmoving stuff.â Will you at least call me when youâre done moving your stuff and your things?â
âIâll call you,â Minho reaffirms.
âI mean it. Iâm gonna call you when I get home from the party and you better not be asleep on the couch again.â
âI promise to answer,â he echoes.
You smile at him again, and Minho mirrors the action with a small smile of his own, his skewed teeth exposing from behind his plump lips as he grins sheepishly.
âMoving stuff,â you repeat, mocking his excuse.
âMoving stuff and things,â he emphasizes, chuckling lightly across from you.
*
Bachelorette parties are supposed to be one of two things: freeing, and cathartic. Luckily for you, yours checks both boxes, the two-day retreat to a luxury hotel in the city providing ample time to relax, and the shots you down at the open bar in your venue fulfilling the cathartic part of it. Your girlfriends shower you in presents, ranging from expensive dining sets and clothes, to humorous sex toys for you and Jung to try on your honeymoon. Even the bartenders join in on your two nights of dancing, parading your event with handmade signs and getting everyone in the bar to sing to you. And for the first time since the stress-inducing year of planning has begun, you feel excited, ready for your new life as a bride alongside Jung.
Husband and wife have a nice ring to it, you think to yourself, as you kick off your shoes and lie back on the thick white duvet of the hotel bed. And though youâre still a little tipsy, you keep your promise, selecting Minhoâs contact in your phone and giving him a ring. The phone rings once, twice and then three times, before you conclude heâs definitely fallen asleep on the couch again, probably while moving around his stuff and his things. But youâre proven wrong on the fourth ring, a gentle click echoing in your ears as you hear him press the phone to his ear and speak in a tired voice.
âHello?â
âYouâre asleep on the couch, arenât you?â
ââŠno,â he responds, after a short pause.
âYouâre so predictable,â you chuckle back at him, shaking your head as you sigh into the phone.
âHow was the bachelorette party?â He inquires, sitting up on the couch he definitely wasnât asleep on, to speak a little clearer into the receiver.
âIt was amazing,â you reply with a dreamy sigh. âWe did karaoke, and danced and even the bartenders were wishing me good luck. It was like something from college.â
âIâm glad,â Minho responds, nervously picking at the hem of his ratty old t-shirt.
âIâm a little drunk,â you say with a gentle laugh. âBut I couldnât help but wish you were there. The girls are great, of course, but I feel like bars were our thing.â
Minho blinks nervously a few times, pondering your words and keeping his gaze locked on the array of neatly-placed picture frames on the wall across him.
âYeah,â he settles on replying, his breath hitching in the back of his throat.
âDo you miss me?â You query, twirling a strand of hair around your finger. And Minho canât comprehend whatâs got you acting like this, flirting with him in the phone line while Jung isnât around.
âI do,â he responds after a brief pause.
âIâm serious, Minho. As your best friend, Iâd hope that you miss me sometimes.â
There it is- the clarification is enough for him to exhale the deep breath heâs been holding in all this time.
âYeah,â he says again. âI miss you, as a friend. And Iâm glad the night was enjoyable.â
âYou hate bars,â you say to him. âBut you used to let me drag you out to them. I miss you.â
And he nods on the other end, repressing the real emotions that eat away at him like, you might see them over the phone if he feels too deeply.
âI miss you, too. Get some sleep, okay? Weâll talk in the morning.â
âYeah, yeah,â you say sarcastically. âGoodnight. Thanks for answering.â
âSure thing,â Minho replies before ending the call. And the room is eerily quiet now that heâs awake, the clock on the living room wall ticking with the passing seconds, as the ivy in his chest constricts a little tighter now.
*
Jungâs bachelor party is nothing short of insufferable. Itâs loud, itâs rowdy, and itâs neither relaxing nor cathartic. Unless you define the two as getting lap dances in a smoke-filled limousine driving down the freeway a million miles a minute.
Minho sits quietly on one side, refusing every advance from the female strippers as they flaunt their beautifully-sculpted breasts in his face and dance to the loud rap music. He pretends to use his phone, having no service in this part of town, and yet still resorting to switching frantically between the compass feature and the weather app. And then he tips each stripper a generous amount, apologizing to them profusely as he gets off at the first stop and orders a cab. Where exactly the limousine is taking them, he doesnât even care to know. Jung questions no part of it, not even having wanted to invite Minho in the first place. And while Minho waits for his taxi, he calls you, frantically wishing he could remind you Jungâs possibly the worst person you could have chosen to marry.
âHi Minho,â you speak into the phone, shuffling about on your end as you tend to some household work. âI thought you didnât get reception wherever you were going?â
âI found a way,â he responds, lying through his teeth.
You narrow your eyes, pausing your work to listen in to the phone call a little more closely.
âMinho, did you⊠leave?â You question, taking note of the way thereâs not a sound in the background of the call- not Jungâs booming laughter, nor any music of any kind.
âNo,â he says quickly, and you let out a deep sigh.
âNow youâre lying,â you remark.
âIâm not-â
âYouâre talking in short responses, and I canât see you but I know youâre doing that blinking thing. Why would you leave?â
Unfortunately for Minho, you know him like the back of your hand, always quick to clock when heâs lying to you through his nervous habits. The same habits youâve studied since your days together in college, and ones heâs never been able to stop doing no matter how hard he tries. Minho lets out a deep sigh and runs a hand through his hair.
âLook, itâs just not my scene, okay? Iâm still going to the wedding, itâs not like ditching a bachelor party is going to ruin your marriage.â
You shake your head and pinch the bridge of your nose in annoyance.
âWhat am I going to do with you? Why are you so opposed to just bonding with him?â
âIâm not!â Minho exclaims. âHe wanted to go swimming. I canât swim.â
Another lie.
âLook,â you begin. Would you just come over if youâre not going? We can talk about it here.â
Minho nods eagerly, the idea of spending time by your side sounding much more appealing than a weekend with Jung.
âIâm just waiting on a taxi,â he says. âIâll be there soon.â
And when he hangs up, you stare briefly at the contact phone of you two, running your fingertips over the dimly lit screen. Itâs an older photo, of you guys in college out at a bar, Minho smiling enthusiastically and giving you a piggy-back ride. And although itâs still Minho, it doesnât feel anything like the version of him you know now.
*
âI donât want this to set the precedent for the rest of our relationship.â
âDonât want what to set a precedent?â Minho questions back.
âThis! You running away from Jung every chance you get so that weâre only able to bond when heâs not around! Youâre my best friend, Min. Why canât you guys just make it work so that I donât have to divide my time between the two of you like this?â
âYou had no problem learning to divide it when we were in college,â Minho says frustratedly. âNow that youâre engaged itâs like Iâm engaged to him, too. I donât like the guy, okay? Whatever we make of that as friends isnât in my hands, but it also doesnât mean Iâm gonna jump at the chance to go golfing with him every weekend.â
Youâre quiet for a moment, his frustrated speech circling your mind as he remains sprawled out on your couch. Heâs right, to some degree- you know very well that the two of them never got along well. And try as you might, theyâre just incompatible in every way possible. Jungâs loud, heâs stubborn, heâll never say no to a social outing and heâll only make an effort to get along with someone for a finite amount of time before heâs disregarding their existence, much like he does Minhoâs. And Minho is quiet, soft-spoken, only social when it comes to you and takes his stance on a person just minutes after meeting them. Theyâve already reached the stubborn conclusion that they despise each other, and at this point in your life, thereâs little you can do to change it.
âI just want to know things are okay between us,â you remark.
âThings are okay between us.â
âWe havenât had a proper hangout in months, Minho. I get married in a few weeks and then Iâm afraid we just wonât see each other.â
Minho seems to understand the seriousness in your tone, sitting up from the couch to finally meet your gaze. You look disheartened, an expression Minho is used to seeing when you try to set him up with a date or when he canât make it out to an event. But this time it seems like it has more weight to it, the way you sag your shoulders as you slouch over one of the barstools in the kitchen, completely terrified at the prospect of losing your best friend.
âIâll tell you what,â Minho breaks the silence. âHow about we plan something, just us? Itâll be like old times, and we donât have to worry about Jung or your friends or anyone. Just for a weekend.â
You meet his gaze, too, promptly glancing at the ceiling as you think over his proposal.
âI donât know, Jung probably wouldnât like it-â
âThis is exactly what I mean!â Minho interjects. âEverything you do is based on what Jung likes or doesnât like. We used to go out together all the time- if you only want to hang out when heâs around then yeah, things might be a little different from here on out.â
And the words pierce through you like a dagger, yet again filling your mind with all the regrets that will come with shutting him out for the purposes of pleasing Jung. Minho is right- heâs been your best friend for years. Jung might be your future spouse, but that doesnât mean your relationship with him has to be any more important than the lifelong commitment youâve made to your best friend, too.
âWhere would we go?â You ask reluctantly.
Minho shrugs casually, lying back down on the couch with his hands behind his head.
âAnything,â he responds. âYour pick.â
And you think over his offer again, mentally mapping out your schedule at work and what you guys might be able to do on a quick weekend together.
âCamping,â you say suddenly, straightening your posture.
âYou hate camping,â Minho retorts, chuckling lightly.
âYeah, but you love camping. Iâm just doing this to spend time with you, Min. I already spent my weekend in the city. Letâs do something you like and we can have an old friend trip like we used to.â
Minho canât help the grin that tugs at his lips, endeared by the way you always let him drag you to his favorite places just like you used to drag him. And he knows youâre a city girl through and through- youâve always been very vocally opposed to accompanying him on his camping excursions. But maybe going together, youâll have some change of heart if it means you wonât have to listen to Jung share all of his unwarranted opinions.
âLetâs do it,â Minho says confidently. âYouâre gonna love it.â
âIâm only doing this for you,â you reply with a smile. âI still maintain that Iâm going to hate it.â
*
A yoga retreat.
Jung is made to believe youâre at a yoga retreat, three hours out from your shared apartment, with a close girlfriend you havenât seen in months.
And maybe itâs because he genuinely believes you, or he simply doesnât care, but he doesnât press you for any information about the event, sending you off with a chaste kiss and turning his attention back to the sports he watches on television. He doesnât even inquire about why you fail to bring your yoga mat, leaving it folded neatly in the closet of your bedroom alongside all your workout clothes.
You do pack warm clothes, blankets and even a matching set of flashlights for when it gets pitch dark like you know the mountains do at night. And as you make your way to Minhoâs house with your backpack slung over your shoulders, youâre actually a little excited, the idea of getting some fresh air sounding like a well-deserved treat after the week youâve had in the city.
âWell arenât you all ready to go camping,â you say to Minho in an amused tone, admiring the outfit heâs put together for the occasion. He sports a simple white t-shirt and a loose-fitting pair of jeans, coupled with a black cap he wears backwards over his brown hair. He looks a lot simpler than usual- in fact, youâre not sure youâve ever seen Minho in a cap before today.
âYou look nice,â you voice to Minho, as he loads his duffel bag in the trunk of the car.
âMe?â He questions, furrowing his brows in genuine confusion. âIâm just dressed for comfort.â
âYes, you. That cap looks good on you. God forbid I compliment my best friend.â
He chuckles lightly, helping you load your backpack into his car and closing the trunk when heâs finished.
âReady?â Minho asks, turning to you with a small smile.
âReady,â you echo, climbing into the passenger seat beside him.
The drive to the campsite is just over an hour long, taking Minhoâs vehicle through narrow paths of dirt roads surrounded by trees. The treacherous drive doesnât seem to faze him at all, as he keeps just one hand on the wheel, while the other rests casually on the car console. You can tell heâs done this drive a number of times before, judging by the way he needs no form of navigation and doesnât stop to read the directional signs at any point.
âDo we need to pitch a tent when we get there?â You ask, and Minho laughs in response.
âThatâs how I can tell youâve never come here before.â
âWhat?â You reply with a chuckle of your own. âItâs a totally valid question.â
âYeah, maybe if we were on Survivor. Thereâs tents all over the campsite. And picnic tables, and bathrooms and I think thereâs a gift shop somewhere.â
You nod at his response, a little more intrigued now that you know itâs not going to be as hands-on as you thought. And when he pulls into the parking lot, heâs right- there are cabins that span the perimeter of the parking lot, presumably bathrooms and information centers about the place.
Minho puts the car into park as he helps you gather your bags, and then you both enter the cabin closest to you, being greeted by an older woman who sits at an information booth.
âWelcome!â She exclaims in a cheerful tone. âAre you folks staying overnight?â
âYes,â Minho answers, hoisting his duffel bag further up his shoulder. âWeâll be here for two nights.â
âWonderful!â she replies, gathering a thin stack of pamphlets. She uncaps a red pen, circling a little graphic that indicates a tent, and then slides it over to Minho along the counter.
âYou two will occupy this location here- itâs just a few minutes up the hill there. The bathroom is attached to the unit, and there are a few clean towels in the drawers there.â
She slides him two more pamphlets, gesturing to their titles and keeping her gaze on the infographics.
âThereâs a guide on plants to avoid, and some wildlife you might run into. Any questions?â
Minho shakes his head, stuffing the pamphlet into his pocket and giving her a small nod.
âNo, thank you,â he says, looking over at you.
And the woman shoots you a smile now, gesturing to your hand.
âThat is a beautiful ring,â she states, clasping a hand over her heart emotionally.
âThank you,â you reply with a smile. âIâm getting married.â
She laughs lightly, shooting Minho a thumbs up.
âEnjoy it while you can!â
Youâre quick to shake your head at her, taking a step away from Minho.
âOh god, no, heâs not my fiancĂ©. Heâs just a friend.â
And Minho takes a step away, too, giving her a nod.
âWeâre just longtime friends,â he echoes your words.
âMy apologies,â the woman is quick to say. âEnjoy your stay regardless.â
*
âIt never ends,â you say to Minho as you exit. âI canât believe people still think weâre a couple when we go out.â
âItâs just a common equation,â Minho responds. âTwo people. Engagement ring. Camping trip.â
âI know,â you emphasize. âItâs just so weird being so close to my own marriage and still having to tell people weâre not a couple.â
Minho swallows nervously, not entertaining the discussion any further as he takes your aversion to the idea of it as answer enough.
âItâs just up here,â Minho says, gesturing to the narrow dirt path that leads up to your tent.
The tent is a long, rectangular space, the beige tarp even accompanied by clear vinyl windows that zip up for added privacy. The inside houses a small birch wood table pushed against the side, two white folding chairs, and a single bed, just larger than a twin-sized one.
âOne bed?â You say as you scan the room, dropping your bags and looking nervously back at Minho.
âAll the units have one bed,â he explains casually. âIâll take the floor.â
âYouâre not taking the floor, Minho. Itâs freezing.â
âIâve done it before,â he says, unzipping his bag and pulling out a smaller pouch. âIâll be fine.â
âBut itâs so awkward to have you on the floor while I get a whole bed to myself.â
He disregards your concerns, tossing the pouch to you, which you catch in two hands and examine.
âBait,â he says with a small smile.
âBait?â You echo. âYou mean likeâŠâ
âFishing,â he says confidently. âWeâre catching our dinner tonight.â
*
Itâs a fair assumption to say you hadnât taken Minhoâs liking to camping very seriously. Sure, you knew he was partial to the great outdoors and to catching his own dinners. Of course he knows how to pitch a tent and gut a fish. But seeing him do it in action, string a spinnerbait onto his fishing rod and cast his line, watching meticulously as the bobber pulls underwater and he checks if heâs caught a bass yet, youâre admittedly pretty impressed. He looks completely in his element like this, uttering remarks about his âmonofilament fishing lineâ that you donât understand in the slightest, but you listen to regardless. For a brief moment, you canât help but feel bad, seeing how much this interests him, when all youâve ever done in the span of your friendship is drag him to clubs and get takeout together. Maybe you shouldâve taken this whole thing more seriously. Maybe you should have accompanied Minho on one of his offers for a fishing trip when you still had the chance to do it without being under Jungâs watchful eye.
âWe may need a smaller hook,â Minho says, as he adjusts his rod and stares out at the lake. The atmosphere is lazy and restful, the gentle lull of the lakeâs deep blue water sloshing against the rocks that line the shore and swaying with the breeze. Thereâs a distant buzz of cicadas at this hour, and the swallows circle the vast green trees overhead that rustle in syncopation with the water. You and Minho remain seated on the flat rocks that line the shore, a cooler of ice and a small pouch of bait between the two of you.
Minhoâs gaze remains set on the lake, attentively watching the bobber and praying for a bass to latch onto it so that he can instruct you on the de-gutting and cleaning process. But there seems to be no sign of fish anywhere, the only movement being the little ripples that vibrate with the sporadic activity of water bugs.
âWhen was the first time you went fishing?â You ask Minho suddenly, catching his gaze as he turns to you.
âFirst time?â He echoes. âI donât know, maybe age seven? My dad taught me.â
You nod in response, picturing a little Minho alongside his dad, learning the ropes of monofilament fishing lines and all that jazz. You canât help but smile at the thought of it, knowing Minho was probably so quiet, yet full of curiosity, the same way he is now.
âI wish I wouldâve come,â you say finally, letting out a small sigh as you speak. âI wish I came with you on one of these trips.â
Minho shakes his head and waves you off. âSolo camping is one of my favorite things in the world. I didnât need it to be ruined by all your city girl antics.â
âHey!â You exclaim with a small laugh, hitting him lightly, and Minho hits you back.
For a moment, the two of you say nothing, admiring the way the sunlight glares overhead and sets the water aglow with glints of light that make it almost hard to look at. Minho takes notice of the more casual look you sport, too, void of any makeup and your hair tied back loosely. Similarly, the little imperfections that mark his skin remind you of the Minho you met in college, back when you were both riddled with zits and drank cans of soda for breakfast. And now across from you, acne scars and a handsome face heâs grown into so well, you canât help but feel your heart swell at the fact that heâs still here, this many years later, regardless of the roadblocks your relationship has taken you through. Itâs a miraculous thing to have someone stick by your side knowing youâre getting wed to a person he despises. And you refuse to part ways with him, too, despite the amount of outings he declines in the name of nothing important. What a fascinating prospect, to be reminded that your most unconditional form of love comes in the form of a best friend more than even your fiancĂ© on most days.
You open your mouth to say something, being promptly interrupted by the reel of the fishing line being pulled back, the rhythmic buzzing of the handle startling you both as itâs pulled in circular motions to indicate a catch.
âOh my god, what do we do?â You exclaim to Minho, a sense of urgency present in your voice as you await his instruction.
âIâll teach you,â Minho says, as he rises from his spot and gestures to the fishing rod. âGrab the handle, like- yeah, just like that.â
And you do as youâre told, approaching the rod to steady the handle in your grasp. He guides you through the careful motions, steadying your hands a comfortable distance away from the reel seat, pulling back the handle with slow, yet purposeful movements and raising the fishing line away from the gentle current of the water.
âThereâs a lot of resistance,â you comment, as you pull even harder.
âReally?â Minho remarks, his hands on his hips as he looks out upon the water. âI wonder if itâs going to be a big one. Keep pulling.â
And you do, heaving the rod desperately away from the water to pull in your catch. Thereâs heavy resistance at first, and then a generous amount of give to the force, as the line finally glides across the water and begins to pull up toward you.
âGet ready,â Minho says excitedly. âItâs probably going to be a little skittish, just hold tightly and donât let go.â
As he watches you pull, he takes note of the way the line struggles to move past a barrier in the water, sending ripples down the shore as you continue to pull, to no avail.
âI need help,â you voice frantically. âMinho, take the rod-â
âJust relax,â Minho echoes, coming around behind you and placing two hands over yours. He stands close behind you as he helps steady the rod, gripping tightly and helping you reel it in.
The two of you watch with bated breath as the line finally begins to move again, erratic ripples of water vibrating in the otherwise still lake as you reel in the catch.
âHere it comes!â Minho exclaims, as he continues to reel over your hands with his, his veins protruding with every slight motion as his slender fingers work around yours.
And then the fishing line is promptly pulled out of the water, swinging in front of your view and slowing its swaying motions as you take a gander.
Itâs a large, juicy, vibrant hunk of moss.
No fish in sight, no catch of the day, unless for a bottom feeder. Minho says nothing for a moment, placing his hands on his hips again as he takes in the sight of the forest green mass. And then you break the silence with laughter, doubling over and clutching your stomach as you laugh at the ridiculous view.
âWhatâs so funny?â Minho inquires with a breathy chuckle, transitioning into his own fit of giggles.
âItâs fucking moss,â you exclaim, gesturing to the fishing rod and laughing again. âWeâve been here for hours and we havenât caught anything besides a fucking byrophyte.â
Minho laughs, too, setting the rod down to clutch his own stomach.
âItâs not funny,â he says between laughter. âWe donât have dinner tonight.â
âYeah we do,â you say breathlessly. âWe have moss.â
And the two of you almost collapse on the gravel, holding your stomachs as you laugh endlessly at the ridiculousness of the situation. The fishing rod remains propped up against the rocks, the slab of moss dangling and dripping murky water back onto the gravel.
When your laughter dies down, Minho sprawls out onto one of the big rocks, the palms of his feet flat against the warm stone as he meets your gaze again. You occupy the spot beside him, your knees bent too, keeping your gaze locked on his as you smile.
âI missed this,â you say after a moment of silence. âI missed hanging out with you.â
Minho responds in a breathy chuckle, running his hands through his hair and rolling his eyes in a joking manner.
âYou shouldâve come camping with me ages ago,â he says. âWe couldâve been eating moss for dinner instead of fast food.â
You chuckle too, and the sunlight beams over your listless bodies sprawled out on the rocks, glints of light hitting Minhoâs golden-brown hair and his sparkling eyes. He looks so angelic in this atmosphere, so at peace with the nature around him and in tune with his emotions. For the first time in a long while, thereâs nothing present between you and Minho that hinders the relationship you have to each other. Heâs just as important to you in this moment as you are to him. And not even the knowledge that youâve lied to your fiancĂ© to be here with him can come between that.
*
Lucky for you, Minho always comes prepared. Of course heâs dealt with the situation of catching nothing while fishing and needing a plan to fall back on for dinner. So itâs no surprise to you that his backpack contains cups of instant ramen and bags of chips.
âShrimp or chicken?â Minho asks, as water boils on his portable kettle.
âSurprise me,â you shoot back, getting comfortable in one of the two camping chairs across the bed. You feel a wave of tiredness wash over your body instantly, but you also feel fulfilled, having bonded with Minho more in the last few hours than any of your double dates with Jung and one of Minhoâs picks from a dating app.
Minho shuts off the kettle, tearing open packets of vegetables and mixing them with your noodles as he pours hot water in both cups.
âCareful, itâs hot,â Minho remarks, handing you a cup and sliding a pair of chopsticks across the table to you.
âToday was fun,â you say to him, as you blow on a generous serving of noodles and guide them into your mouth with the wooden chopsticks.
âYouâre not half bad at fishing,â Minho states. âI think itâs just emptier this season. But your techniqueâs good.â
âReally?â You query. âI feel like you did most of the work.â
Minho shakes his head, slurping a portion of his noodles before speaking.
âMaybe if you ditched your lame golf nights with Jung and came camping with me more, you could get some practice.â
âHa ha,â you muse sarcastically. âHis golf nights arenât lame, theyâre actually pretty fun. Youâd know if you came out to one.â
âPlease,â Minho retorts, gathering more noodles with his chopsticks. âArtificial grass and polo shirts arenât really my thing. Of course theyâd be Jungâs, though.â
âWhat does that mean?â
âMeans even his favorite sport is as fake as he is.â
âMinho!â
âWhat?â He says in a breathy chuckle. âYou asked what I meant.â
You shake your head, stirring broth around in your cup with your chopsticks. You normally don't entertain Minho when he insults Jung like this, knowing heâs just going to get mad and list everything he despises about him. But tonight, being so far away from Jung, it somehow feels permissible. Itâs not like Jung is going to materialize out of thin air and find out about his little remarks. You donât get cell reception out here, and itâs possibly one of your last few intimate moments with Minho to just let loose and joke with him. So you don't say anything, allowing him free reign as he cracks jokes about Jung at his expense. And you donât feel bad about it, either, knowing Jung wouldnât hesitate to do the same back at Minho.
The tent falls quiet for a moment as both of you finish your meals, the only noises present between the two of you being slurping the remainder of your noodles and setting the cups aside. Minho runs his hands through his hair and spreads his legs out in front of him as he slouches back in his camper chair.
âI canât believe youâre getting fucking married,â he says with a breathy chuckle. âThatâs still so weird to me.â
âImagine how I feel,â you emphasize. âThe word âwifeâ still kinda grosses me out.â
âWell you have about a month to get used to it,â Minho replies. And then he gets quiet, averting his gaze from yours as he blinks. âOr a whole lifetime, I guess.â
You stay quiet, too, pulling up your legs to cross them in your chair and nodding reluctantly.
âYeah. âlifetimeâ kinda sounds like a scary word, too.â
Minho purses his lips, and then he turns to meet your gaze again, a solemn smile on his face.
âIt doesnât have to be,â he voices. âIt can also imply a lifetime of happiness. And of love. Permanence isnât a bad thing.â
You smile at him, comforted by the optimism he brings to the atmosphere, despite his dislike for Jung, and especially the prospect of you getting married to him. He doesnât change- heâs still the Minho you know very well, the one who takes your problems and makes them seem so small, so unimportant, until you canât, in good conscience, worry about them anymore.
âYouâre right,â you say back at him. âIâll remember that when I say my vows.â
You think over his words momentarily, and then you meet his gaze with a knowing smile.
âDo you remember when we had to write an essay about where weâd want to travel if we won the lottery? In our literary analysis course?â
Minhoâs eyes roll to the ceiling as he thinks for a moment, and then he nods.
âYeah. You wrote about Europe or something.â
âI did,â you recall. âAnd you wrote about that one historical town. What was it called again?â
âShirakawa,â Minho responds. âSmall mountain village in Japan where it snows a ton and there are little farmhouses everywhere.â
You chuckle lightly, remembering the countless images Minho had shown you when he was producing his paper on the subject. You can still picture the little brown houses and the vibrant green hills in the summertime. And the winter photos looked like something out of a Christmas movie, fresh snow blanketing the village and painting the town with bright hues of white.
You think over his essay for a moment, remembering just how many times youâd peer edited each otherâs papers, and Minho wound up getting the best grade in the class for how poetically he spoke of Shirakawa. He talked about it for several months after the assignment, too, always voicing his desire to visit one day and see all the farmhouses for himself.
âI wish we still had time to go,â you say finally. âI always pictured weâd go one day.â
Minho purses his lips in a thin line, your statement echoing in his ears and the words stinging. Itâs moments like these heâs especially regretful youâre getting married to Jung- all the stupid, likely intangible plans you made together and promised youâd fulfill sometime down the line. And now with Jungâs obnoxious presence indicating that of permanence, Minho knows thereâs zero possibility youâll be able to fulfill any of the plans you made together.
âYou have a whole honeymoon planned on a tropical island,â Minho says somberly. âThatâs far better than little old Shirakawa.â
You say nothing in reply, nodding at his words and thinking back to the plans you and Jung have already booked for your honeymoon.
Honeymoon. Even that word sounds foreign.
âMaybe weâll plan for when I get back,â you tell Minho. âLittle camping excursion in the farmhouses. We can get shitfaced and pet all the little goats.â
He laughs lightly, giving you a smile.
âSure,â Minho affirms. âWe can do that.â
And then his gaze darts to his backpack which sits on the floor, his eyes widening as he sits up.
âSpeaking of shitfaced,â Minho says. âI think I brought boxed wine.â
âBoxed wine?â You repeat with a chuckle. âJesus, we really might as well be back in college.â
He rises from the camper chair to make his way over to his backpack, unzipping the larger pouch and pulling out two small black cartons of wine, giving them a small shake before scanning the room as though heâs looking for something else.
âWhat?â You query, waiting for him to say something.
Minho says nothing, standing up again and taking long strides to where his fishing rod is, grasping it in one hand and fiddling with the hook.
âWhat are you doing?â You ask, watching as Minhoâs expression turns serious again. His slender fingers toy with the small hook, the two cartons of wine balanced in his other hand.
You watch as he unfolds one tab on the box of wine, and then brings down the fishing hook to pierce it through the thin cardboard and string it through securely. When heâs finished, he gives it a little tug, and then raises the box of wine as he lifts the fishing rod once more, reeling the handle in the counter direction to move it out toward you.
âWhat the hell are you doing?â You ask again, chuckling softly as you watch Minho struggle to balance the carton of wine.
He reels the carton out further, and then slows as he drops it into your lap, moving the rod around in erratic motions and pretending to stabilize the line.
âGet it!â Minho exclaims. âItâs getting away, you have to get it!â
You play along, grasping the carton of wine in your two hands and pretending to steady its slippery grip as it flaps around helplessly.
âItâs slippery!â You exclaim back, holding it up with two hands and angling it toward Minho.
Minho gasps, and then sets his rod down to applaud you generously.
âCongratulations,â he says in a proud voice. âYour first catch. You caught your own dinner.â
And the dark night around you seems to be set aglow as laughter fills the entirety of the tent.
*
Two hours later, itâs half past midnight, empty cartons of wine on the table between you as you talk through your starkly different lives.
Minho shares tales of work youâd missed out on, dating app horror stories and recounts days from college when youâd go to nightclubs together and use fake IDs. You listen attentively for the first time in a long time, no sense of urgency present, nor the desire to set him up with somebody else. Itâs you who wants to be here alongside him, rekindling your friendship and reliving your glory days. And Minho feels the same way, a gentle buzz swirling his mind from the cherry merlot and your sweet laugh in response to his tales.
âThey so thought we were lying when we turned 21,â you say through laughter. âIn hindsight, itâs pretty lucky we didnât get thrown in jail for a night.â
âYeah, only because you flirted with the bouncer,â Minho says. âIâm pretty sure he wouldnât throw you in jail after offering you a drink.â
You laugh lightly, remembering the bizarre encounter, and then you slouch back in your chair as you shut your eyes.
âWe should get to sleep,â you say to Minho. âItâs late.â
âYeah,â he responds. âIâll get my sleeping bag on the floor.â
âDonât be such a fucking drag,â you protest.
âWhat?â
âJust sleep on the bed with me. Itâs big enough and thereâs less of a chance that youâll wake up with a broken back. Iâm not listening to you complain about your fucked-up joints on tomorrowâs drive home.â
Minho laughs lightly, and then he gestures to the bed.
âIf you snore, Iâm throwing you to the bears,â he says plainly.
âYeah, well you kick me, Iâm dumping you in the lake.â
*
Minho brushes his teeth over the small steel sink in the corner of the room, swapping out to fix the bed sheets while you brush your teeth, too. When youâre finished, you meet him at the foot of the bed, pulling your corner of the blanket down and climbing in beside him. The ceiling of the tent is barely visible in this level of darkness, just an indistinguishable outline of fabric visible as you cross your hands over your chest and exhale deeply. Minho does the same, and though heâs right beside you, he feels miles away, his exhale sounding distant as he focuses on the ceiling of the tent, too.
âItâs really dark,â you comment.
âYeah,â he says back. âThatâs the outdoors for you.â
He thinks for a brief moment, and then he breaks the silence that washes over the two of you.
âAre you excited for the honeymoon?â He asks quietly.
Thereâs no answer for several moments, the only sound coming from the gentle sway of the trees just beyond your tent.
And you are excited, but youâre more nervous, uncertain and disappointed knowing that everything will be so different upon your return. Itâs like exchanging an old life for a new one- one that could be far worse, for all you know.
âIâm nervous,â you say candidly.
âWhy?â
âBecause marriage is a big deal. Sometimes I donât know if Iâm even doing the right thing.â
Itâs Minhoâs turn to remain quiet now, his hands folded over his chest as he ponders your words.
âAre you happy?â
Thereâs no response from you. Not now, not after a minute and not even after several minutes have passed. And you are happy, but youâre still much of the same- nervous, uncertain and disappointed that this new life implies change.
âJung hates me,â Minho says suddenly.
âHe doesnât hate you-â
âHe hates me,â Minho reaffirms a little louder. âThe way he looks at me, or interrupts us whenever weâre talking. Iâm sorry that Iâm so distant from you when heâs around. The guy hates me.â
You stay quiet, knowing heâs right, but not wanting to fuel the fire that burns between the two of them.
âHe probably thought we had something going on,â Minho says. âHeâd kill me if he knew I was in the same bed with you.â
You scoff lightly, dismissing Minhoâs claims with a wave of your hand.
âPlease,â you emphasize. âHe hasnât even touched me in a month.â
And you regret the words the second they leave your lips, bringing two hands up to cover your mouth as Minho props himself up to look at you.
âWhat? Why?â
âNothing,â you say quickly. âForget I said anything.â
âNo, I genuinely want to know,â Minho reiterates, keeping his gaze locked on yours. âYouâre getting married and you havenât had sex with your fiancĂ© in a month? Who does that?â
âHe told me it was a punishment,â you say in exasperation. âWe had a fight, and he told me he wouldnât touch me if I didnât admit to being wrong.â
âWhat?â Minho says, turning audibly irate. âAre you serious? What kind of cruel and unusual punishment is that?â
âLook, I donât know, okay? Letâs just not talk about it-â
âThere go your excuses,â Minho says. âYour future husband wonât touch you, and youâre still defending him. Jesus Christ, itâs worse than I thought it was.â
âWould you stop?â You say to him, sitting up as he slings his elbows around his knees and shakes his head.
âStop what? Stop being concerned for my best friend whoâs clearly suffering at the hands of her own fiancĂ©? Not gonna happen.â
âIâm not suffering,â you relay to him.
âSure,â Minho says sarcastically. âSo you never wanted to have sex in the whole month heâs kept this punishment going.â
You say nothing, swallowing nervously as you keep your gaze locked on Minhoâs. Heâs at a painfully close proximity to you right now, one strand of hair falling loosely in his face as his eyebrows furrow together in anger. His plain black t-shirt hugs his broad shoulders as he sits up, his basketball shorts riding up to expose a generous amount of his toned thighs. And his lips remain parted, waiting for you to say something, which you donât. You simply stare at him blankly, your eyes darting over his gaze, down to his lips and then back up to his eyes.
Minhoâs expression turns serious, too, unable to look away from your conflicted expression as you watch him.
âNot⊠reallyâŠâ you manage to say in short words.
âMaybe notâŠâ you continue, leaning into him a little as his arms loosen around his knees.
He somehow looks so tantalizing right now, in a way youâve never seen him before. Sure, youâre aware Minho is good looking, and he always has been. And maybe your fleeting crush back when you first met him was short-lived, quickly moving on to date somebody else you met at a party. Maybe you were a little jealous the time his former girlfriend remarked how good he was in bed, or that she got to touch him when he wore that suit you loved so much at graduation. Maybe you even touched yourself once or twice to the thought of him, conjuring some stupid fantasy in your mind for the sole purpose of getting off to it. But nothing was ever going to come to fruition, not when heâs been your friend for years, you have Jung and youâre about to get married.
âŠAt least not with any intention besides being fucked by him the way Jung has neglected of you for a month now.
âMaybe not until now,â you finally breathe out, your heart beating erratically in your chest as you await an answer from him.
Minhoâs gaze flickers down to your lips, and then back to your eyes, furrowing his eyebrows as he makes sense of your words.
âAre you drunk right now?â He asks simply.
âNo,â youâre quick to respond, shaking your head to affirm the answer.
âGood,ââMinho says. âMe neither.â
And the two of you meet in the middle, his lips crashing against yours roughly as you kiss him for the first time, hands flying to tug at his t-shirt as he brings to hands around the small of your back.
He tastes like wine, transferring the robust flavor of cherry merlot back onto your lips as you kiss him, his plump lips working perfectly against yours as you pull him closer. You want so badly to position yourself differently, to adjust your bodyâs awkward spot on the bed so that you can be a bit closer to him, so that you can cup his face and pepper it in breathless kisses. But you fear that the minute you pull away, Minhoâs going to somehow realize that itâs you heâs kissing, his best friend of so many years, one whoâs already engaged.
Itâs Minho who pulls away briefly first, getting a little closer to you, while you scoot further back and lie flat on your spot on the bed.
âThis is just to prove a point,â Minho says breathlessly, as he hovers over you now and steadies himself over your body with one strong arm. âItâs not cheating,â he emphasizes, and you nod eagerly at the words, suddenly aware that itâs not even the cheating aspect you were worried about. It was solely the possibility of ruining your friendship with Minho, whoâs always been so vocal about his distaste for disloyalty.
âItâs just to prove a point,â you repeat, tangling your hands in his hair and pulling him back down to kiss you. âNobody has to know.â
Minho grins against your lips, pressing repeated, chaste kisses to your already swollen lips and trailing down to paint a line of kisses down the column of your neck. Your heart beats in ways youâve never felt before, a rapid arrhythmia brought on by the sheer terror of being found out, by the knowledge that this is the one person who could single handedly ruin your engagement to Jung. And yet you couldnât care less in this moment, as his teeth take your flesh between them and suck bruises down your neck, a generous purple color painting the goosebumps that rise upon your skin.
Are either of you in any place to return with hickeys painting your skin like you spend the weekend at a frat house? Not in the slightest. And yet you canât help but feel this is what you missed in college all that time, the same actions Minho repeated with the few girlfriends he ran through. Fucking them sweetly in his dorm bed, roping scarves around their necks when heâd send them off and his ears turning a bright shade of red when youâd point them out in your 7am college lectures.
Was there ever a hint of jealousy present between the two of you? Maybe, you think to yourself, as a string of spit connects Minhoâs lips to your bruises, peppering them in light kisses. You could never help but wonder what it was like, what those girls had experienced each time they disappeared from his dorm in the early hours of the morning. And Minho, being the gentleman he was, was never one to kiss and tell. The sex was intimate, private, the details living and dying with him only, even if the relationship went awry or fizzled out suddenly.
âWe probably shouldnât go any further,â Minho interrupts, pulling away from you to maintain eye contact. His eyes are hooded with lust, his lips pink and swollen from kissing you so passionately. And his eyebrows arch up in a state of concern, mostly worried youâre going to protest him taking it any further than this. But itâs all youâve occupied your mind with now, wanting so badly to know what little tricks Minho wears up his sleeve, if heâs just as intrigued with the idea as you are, if he even wants to have sex with you.
âItâs not like weâre dating or anything,â you say to Minho, desperately searching for the words to indicate how badly you want this. âItâs just⊠some drunken hookup. Itâs probably nothing Jung didnât do at his party last week.â
âBut weâre not-â Minho begins, promptly silencing himself. He begins to tell you that heâs not drunk, and you arenât either- but heâs already caught on to your little plan.
âYeah,â Minho then says. âIâm a little tipsy.â
âMe too,â you say with a soft chuckle. âToo much wine.â
âYeah,â he says, leaning into kiss you again. âAnd I get really horny when Iâm drunk.â
âMe too,â you say between kisses. âItâs not like we can just leave each other hanging. Unless you want me to rub one out beside you, and that would be more awkward.â
âYeah,â he replies. âMight as well⊠help each other out, right?â
âRight,â you affirm, pulling down your panties as Minho separates to pull off his shirt.
Itâs nothing you havenât seen before, already having witnessed him in this level of undress at every pool party and when youâd come over to his dorm unannounced. But it feels different at this proximity, his tanned skin hovering over yours and brushing against your flesh with every eager kiss.
Minho begins to ask you if he can touch you, but youâre faster than he is, taking his hand in yours and guiding it to your aching clit, letting him circle two fingers around your bundle of nerves as he pulls back to look you in the eyes.
âJesus,â Minho remarks. âYou are wet when youâre drunk.â
And your breath hitches in the back of your throat as he rubs you gently, a smirk growing on his face as you let out little whimpers. Itâs been so long since somebodyâs touched you like this, Jung hardly even giving attention to the foreplay on most days. His nimble fingers rub at a steady pace, his eyes boring into yours as he makes you writhe in pleasure beneath him. Minhoâs eyes are sparkling at this proximity, his big brown pupils exuding curiosity and tenderness as he gauges your every reaction to his touches.
âMinho,â you breathe out desperately, arching into his touch to chase the friction.
âWhat?â He asks sweetly, his expression shifting into that of concern as he waits for you to speak. But he knows what youâre going to ask, also aware of the tent pitched in his boxers as he works you.
âDonât make me ask,â you say with a sheepish chuckle.
He chuckles softly, too, leaning in to press a chaste kiss to your lips before pulling his hand away.
âLet me get a condom,â Minho says in a serious tone. And youâd completely forgotten about protection, not even having used a condom in ages, since your only partner for several years has been Jung.
With the painful ache between your legs, you wish so badly you could ask him to fuck you raw and help ease the weeks of waiting youâve had to do just to feel some sense of relief. And a part of you canât help but think back to your days of college, when Minho would always ensure he kept a new one between the crisp bills in his wallet. Ones that were put to use with other women, Minho always so careful not to make any stupid mistakes or take risks the way you and Jung often did.
But you canât let him fuck you raw, being in the middle of nowhere, no access to pills and admittedly not the most punctual at remembering to take your birth control. The last thing you can do right now is show up to your own wedding with Jung- pregnant with Minhoâs child.
Minhoâs cock is fully erect as he fishes around his backpack for a condom, pulling out his wallet and sorting through the bills for one. You briefly wonder what would happen if he didnât have one- youâd likely ask him to fuck you anyway, and to finish on your face or your tits. But itâd be such a waste not to let him finish inside of you, not when youâre both this aroused and desperate for some sense of relief
You silently pray he wonât think too hard about any of this. Donât think about who I am to you. Donât think about how this will complicate things, and donât think about the fact that Iâm engaged to another man. Just fuck me, and weâll deal with whatever consequences arise tomorrow.
âGot it,â Minho voices, and you feel yourself exhale the breath youâve been holding this whole time.
Minho approaches you again, pinching it between his two fingers, tearing open the silver packet with his skewed front teeth and pulling out the white rubber. You watch with bated breath as he rests a knee on the bed beside you, steadying himself with one hand and rolling the condom onto his length with one hand.
Itâs the first time youâve properly taken note of the appearance of his cock, and heâs bigger than youâd imagined. His thick, veiny girth is tinted a bright shade of red in anticipation, his head leaking a bead of precum as the rubber grazes his tip and coats every inch of his flesh. Youâre a little disappointed at the sight being obscured by the protection, but you take a sharp breath, anyway, wanting nothing more than to just feel it inside of you.
âAre you sure this is okay?â Minho asks, as he hovers over you again and props himself up with two hands. âIf you think weâre making some mistake-â
âWeâre not,â you say quickly. âItâs not a mistake. I promise you Iâm not drunk or out of my mind or anything. Iâm just really fucking horny.â
Minho chuckles lightly, and then he leans into graze his lips over yours just barely, delivering a painfully light kiss as he positions himself in front of you.
âJust tell me if you want me to stop,â he says, pressing another light kiss to your lips. âI promise I wonât get mad or anything.â
You nod eagerly, wrapping your arms around his neck, and then you both maintain eye contact with his hands as he carefully guides the tip of his length inside of you. You feel like you could cum at the sensation of his tip alone, your walls contracting around him desperately as he shuts his eyes in pleasure.
âJesus,â Minho breathes. âYouâre tight.â
âItâs been a month since he fucked me,â you admit shyly. âI havenât even touched myself.â
And Minho takes it as a signal to snake a hand down between your bodies, latching the pads of his fingers to your clit once more and rubbing in gentle circles.
âHeâs a fucking idiot,â Minho says plainly. âWhat a fucking joke.â
You weave your fingers in his golden brown tresses pulling him in for another kiss as he begins to thrust in and out of you with gentle movements so as not to hurt you. And it feels heavenly, like nothing youâve ever felt with Jung before. Thereâs so much fear circling your mind, but it simply elevates the arousal you feel at the same time, your mind and body contracting in syncopation to echo the same sentiment that maybe you have indeed, been jealous of some of the other girls heâs fucked. Maybe your jealousy forced you to shut out the idea of anybody being pleasured like this by your best friend. You silently pray it never felt half this good for any of them, that he simply couldnât get hard for them or maybe heâd neglected the same parts that drive you crazy in this moment. Because the thought of his cock inside of anybody except for you drives you mad, it feels so unnatural to think about when heâs fucking you so sweetly in the privacy of your tent, here in the middle of nowhere. Virtually impossible to feel an ounce of guilt when the nearest human is likely miles away, made even harder considering the only man whoâd even care is much, much farther.
And Minho hopes you canât feel that heâs been trying to stave off his own orgasm for the better part of 20 minutes now. His cock twitching with every thrust, his eyes shutting tightly to give attention to the sensation of your cunt clenching desperately around his thick girth. He canât remember how heâd imagined it all those years, but he knows this feels much, much better than any fantasized version of you that ran rampant in his thoughts. One he had to stop himself from staring at a little too long when youâd opt to wear short skirts and tight little shirts to the clubs youâd frequent. A version of you he swore would one day come around to the realization that Jung isnât meant for you, that he doesnât fulfill you emotionally, or intellectually or even physically. Even a version of you that found exhilaration in fucking Minho behind Jungâs back, because having any version of you belong to Minho in one form or another would always take precedence over your inevitable absence following the wedding.
âTalk to me,â Minho says, as his thrusts slow a little. âTell me what youâre thinking about.â
âYou,â youâre quick to respond. âI canât believe this is happening.â
Minho captures your lips in a drooly kiss, gasping into your parted lips as he thrusts in again and holds it there for a moment.
âIs it still okay?â He asks, like he hasnât already been fucking you for several minutes now.
âItâs more than okay,â you respond, folding your leg at the knee beside him so that heâs hitting an entirely new angle.
âJesus Christ,â Minho breathes, squeezing his eyes as his cock grazes your cunt even deeper.
Your breaths are labored now, involuntary gasps escaping your mouth with every thrust inside of you. His cock is completely buried to the hilt inside of you, the condom completely coated in your juices and working out of you with complete ease as he fucks you.
And he fucks you like heâs yours, like heâs the one getting married to you, perhaps subconsciously to prove a point to both you and Jung. He could never fuck you like this. Iâm willing to bet he never has. He could never want you the way I do so passionately and unrelenting.
âMinho,â you call to him, arching into his touch as he moves a strand of hair out of your face.
âWhat is it?â
âThis is okay, right?,â you state, though your tone takes the form of a plea, tears pricking the corners of your eyes. âIt feels so good, I donât want to ruin things-â
âIt wonât ruin things,â Minho emphasizes. âWeâre drunk, remember?â he says with a light chuckle.
His face is promptly buried in the crook of your neck, peppering kisses along the flesh and whispering promises against you that exist only in the intimate space of your shared tent.
âIâm just helping you out while weâre here,â Minho repeats. âAnd then you have a wedding to run off to.â
You smile up at him, fingers massaging his scalp lightly as he stays still inside of you, his cock pulsating lightly inside of the rubber as you take him.
âI wouldâve asked for help a lot sooner if I knew itâd be this good,â you say with a saccharine smile, allowing your fingers to loop in his hair and tug lightly.
Minho chuckles down at you, his smile instilling an almost immediate sense of comfort once more as he begins to move again, his cock grazing your cervix with every slight movement as he lets out little gasps over you.
âI think Iâm gonna cum,â you breathe through labored pants. Your tone sounds surprised, almost, at the prospect of your best friend coaxing an orgasm out of you.
And maybe you are, never having thought that this camping trip would end up with him inside of you, making love to you the way you picture the events of your honeymoon to unfold. Your best friend since college, and the most vocally displeased person at the reality of your engagement to Jung.
And the moment Minhoâs been fantasizing since he first confronted his own feelings for you, a time completely unbeknownst to him now. Maybe it was the time you let him stay in your dorm bed when he wasnât feeling good, or the time you baked him his favorite cake for his birthday most people seemed to have forgotten about. But the pinpointed time doesnât matter right now- heâs here, your entire being is his for the night, and love or not, heâll take any form of you he can grasp so desperately at.
âFuck, Iâm gonna cum, too,â Minho says back, his hands digging into your waist as he moves a little faster.
For several moments, nothing else is said between the two of you, only the echoing sounds of skin and drool and his toned body working itself in and out of you teeming around the dinky little tent like an erotic film on low volume. The sounds are muffled, both of you doing your best to remain hushed in your words and your breathy exchanges to each other, almost as if itâll all be too real if you voice it any louder than this.
But all of this is very real, the actions serving as a sealed promise between the two of you to maintain this remarkable relationship youâve developed with him. One in which you traverse the complexities of dating a man whoâs never quite fulfilled you the way Minho caught on to very early on. And in turn, Minho uses the opportunity to fulfill you in every way heâs able to, whether it means being there at 3am to lend a kindly ear, concocting your favorite dishes after waking up hungover as a result of drinking to mask Jungâs shortcomings. And even to fuck away the stress Jung instills inside of you. To meet you halfway with his version of intimacy, one Jung has withheld from you for so long, and to remind you that although the marriage implies permanence, things could still be so, so different.
âCum for me,â Minho says to you, leaning in to keep his lips pressed to yours. âJust let go of everything. Donât think about him right now.â
And somehow itâs those words that assist you in reaching your finish, the subtle command to eject Jung from all your thoughts and replace him with Minho and Minho and more Minho.
Itâs Minho easing the pain, Minho kissing you so tenderly, Minho thrusting his hardened cock in and out of your soaking cunt as you whimper helplessly beneath him.
And itâs Minho who finishes first, squeezing his eyes tightly as he feels his tip releases strings of cum into the constriction of the rubber condom, the finish feeling as though itâs the heaviest heâs had in months.
And the gentle pulse against your flesh coaxes out your own release, contracting around his wet girth and dribbling cum along the length of the condom as he fucks you through your fervent moans.
âGod, youâre amazing,â Minho voices, as he pulls you in for a much gentler kiss. He holds his lips there momentarily, grazing them softly over yours, every part of him wanting to stay right here inside of you.
But as his cock begins to soften against him once more, he pulls out without another word, stripping off the condom while you watch him.
Strands of sweaty hair hang loosely in front of his face, framing his flushed appearance as his nimble fingers work to tie the condom off. He looks so attainable, so forgiving as he moves, and every part of you wants nothing more than to pull him close again and keep him tangled in your needy embrace.
âMinho?â You ask, as you sit up on the palms of your hands to meet his gaze.
âHm?â He hums in response, discarding the condom and running two hands through his disheveled hair.
âWould you stay like this?â
He chuckles softly, occupying his spot again and pulling the blankets up to his chest.
âIâm not taking the floor anymore, if thatâs what youâre asking.â
âNo, would you stay... close to me?â You ask shyly, your eyes flickering over his figure as he lies beside you.
He sits up to meet your gaze, reaching a hand out to you, his palm facing upward as he shoots you a sweet smile.
âI can stay close to you,â Minho reaffirms, pulling you close to his chest as he lies flat again, your head resting on his broad chest.
His chest rises and falls with every breath, his eyes shutting gently as he revels in the sensation of you seeking comfort beside him like this. And he canât help but press a series of soft kisses to your temple, smiling when he hears a soft giggle escape your lips.
When the tent falls quiet once more, your listless bodies welcome the sleepiness that washes over you, euphonious melodies of crickets engaging in the sounds of nightfall outside. And Minhoâs hand rubs gentle back and forth motions along the small of your back, reassuring for one last time that you have nothing to feel guilty about.
*
Itâs like a moth to a flame, the way youâre drawn to Minho in the morning, despite the promise of it being just one night with him.
Youâre hypnotized by the way he pulls on his sweatpants, chuckling as he nearly trips over himself in the confined space of the tent. His veiny hands working nimbly to chop vegetables and crush herbs as he prepares you one of his signature omelets. The silence that falls over you both while you eat, two fascinated gazes stuck on each other knowing very well youâd let him do it all over again if you werenât so pressed for time. And when heâs helping you hoist your heavy backpack over his shoulders, the pressing urge to kiss him is present again, as though you seek a reminder that what occurred was indeed real and not some lucid dream conjured up within the darkened campsite.
An urge which you act upon, leaning into press your lips to his as he turns to ask if youâre all packed. And one which is reciprocated with a smile from him, grinning against your lips as he takes his time cupping a hand to your cheek and grazing his fingertips along your skin tenderly. With no real purpose, no sexual implication, no rush. Simply a kiss to conclude the trip, which may very well have been everything you needed as it precedes the wedding.
And with shared smiles between the two of you, Minho leads as you make your way back through the informational center. The same woman is sat at the desk, except she says nothing as you pass her by, a scowl on her face at the sight of you. You watch as she bows politely to other guests, inquires about their stay and offers them hard candies from the glass jar in front of her. Except she says nothing to you, almost appearing to shake her head as you pass her by.
âShe was nicer yesterday,â you voice to Minho, your concerned gaze scanning his expression for a reaction. But he doesnât give one, shrugging lightly as he holds the door for you on the way out.
âSheâs probably having a bad day,â he says back. âDonât worry about it.â
And itâs not until he takes your hand in his again that you realize it- this woman who youâd so confidently corrected on the fact that Minho is not in fact your fiancĂ©, has witnessed you kissing him and holding his hand on your way out. Like a scarlet letter you wear upon your chest, except itâs you who put it there. Confirmation that youâre disloyal- a cheater, simply put. You want to defend your actions, but realistically, to whom? Not to Minho, who actively facilitated it. Not to Jung, who would kill you both if he knew.
And not even to the elderly woman, who you canât explain it to, because itâs different. Itâs not cheating, not when itâs Minho. Heâs not some drunken hookup from a dive bar, or someone whoâs relentlessly pursued you despite your protests. Heâs your best friend, one who did you a favor in the absence of your fiancĂ©âs desire to satisfy you. Itâs different, you want to say to her. Itâs not cheating with Minho- heâs different.
But you settle on the uncomfortable silence that remains when you climb into the passenger seat of Minhoâs car, watching the trees melt into a blur of green hues as he backs out of the parking lot. And his hand meets yours over the center console, intertwining your fingers to put your mind at ease like he can somehow read your mind.
Perhaps he can, being the person whoâs known every one of your thoughts so intimately since your time in college. And he also reads into your dismissal of the event when you finally let out a gentle sigh, lacing your fingers with his and allowing him to press a kiss to the back of your hand.
*
The arrival home is a non ceremonious one, Minho dropping you off a block before your shared apartment with Jung to avoid the interrogation he knows heâll get.
He assists in gathering your bags, consolidating your items to ensure you can comfortably carry them up the block. And for a minute, the two of you say nothing as he sends you on your way, a kind of sparkle present in his eyes as he stares at you. He looks different today, a saccharine smile on his face and a much calmer demeanor overall. Every bone in your body wants to jump him and pepper him in kisses, to thank him for relieving the pent up sexual frustration in you and affirming that your fears surrounding this wedding are valid, but they donât imply that you wonât enjoy married life, either. Theyâre just⊠feelings, ones you often find trouble confronting in the presence of Jung, and ones that you realize youâve probably never confronted at all, if not around Minho.
The fears are valid, and theyâre not fleeting in the slightest. But they are lessened with the reminder that Minhoâs beside you every step of the way- regardless of how it manifests in your relationship. And the silence remains, as Minho shoots you a small wave, his eyes flickering briefly over the distant outline of your apartment.
âHey,â you call out to Jung, whoâs lazily sprawled out over the sofa, his feet laid flat upon the coffee table.
âHow was the trip?â He asks enthusiastically, not taking his eyes off the sports channel that echoes loudly in front of him.
âOh, you know,â you reply casually. âJust yoga. Always good to see old friends, though.â
âIâll bet,â Jung replies, chuckling sarcastically as he speaks. âSeems like the only person youâre around these days is Minho.â
And then he reaches for the remote, lazily flipping through channels as you set your bag down.
âHeâs my oldest friend,â you say casually, hoping he wonât notice the audible shakiness in your tone. It feels like he can hear how loud your thoughts are, the fears circling your mind, an expression on your face painted with incrimination. You think of your heart racing while Minho kissed you, the way his cock felt inside of you, your clit pulsating gently at the mere memory of it.
âYeah, well, change is good,â Jung finishes. As you turn the corner, to meet him in front of the couch, you take note of his lap- a small, white cardboard box propped upon his sweatpants, the top ripped to keep it open and his hands working and out of it in rushed motions.
Itâs the cake, you quickly realizing, your heart sinking a little at the sight of the frosting in complete disarray, almost half the dessert either smeared around the sides or piled on the fork he brings up to his lips.
âListen,â Jung says, between a mouthful of food. âI have a golf thing this week and I want you to come see a couple buddies of mine.â
âThis week?â You echo, your mind pondering all the potential excuses you can use against him. But nothing comes to mind, as Jung sets the box of cake aside and stands up from the couch.
âYeah,â he says casually. âMy buddy from college is gonna be in town, and he wants to get together before the wedding.â
You want so badly to protest his offer, knowing very well that Jungâs friends are nothing short of insufferable. They very seldom like you, openly voicing their concerns with your flaws, and theyâre protective of him, as though Jung is the one whoâs sacrificing more by being wed to you.
âDo I have a choice?â You ask, a small smile on your lips to offset the anger that could very well erupt in response to your statement.
But Jung just brings two hands up to your shoulder, rubbing the sides as he turns his attention back to the television.
âNot really. Hey, the gameâs on again but make sure to clear your calendar on Thursday for me. And letâs bring that wine we got recently.â
âThe white one?â You question, sagging your shoulders a little at his lack of hesitation to offer your favorite wine as a housewarming gift to his friends.
âYeah, that one,â he says plainly, pressing a chaste kiss to your forehead and slinging his body back over the couch.
âBy the way,â Jung voices, motioning for you to move out of the view of the tv screen. âWhereâs the cake from? Shitâs good.â
Your gaze lands on the box again, completely torn apart, the icing letters indistinguishable and the fondant ribbons in disarray on the cardboard. You canât help but think of Minho and his careful attention to detail- the way he picked all your favorite colors, the flavors he knows you love, all from your favorite bakery you very seldom even visit because of the steep price points.
âBabe?â Jung calls again, spooning a layer of frosting into his mouth. âI asked where the cake was from.â
And you shrug casually as you pivot on your heel to exit the room.
âMinho picked it,â you say as you stride away from his still-slouched figure. âI wouldnât know.â
*
âYou have to freeze your cake and eat a piece of it every wedding anniversary,â Jungâs friend Kwang explains, as he brings a cigar to his lips and inhales generously. âThatâs what we did, and we still have enough red velvet to last fucking years in there.â
âI love it,â Jung replies in a chuckle, slinging an arm over your shoulder and nudging you harshly. âCourse, Iâm not sure this one could stop herself from eating the rest of our cake for a whole year. Sheâs got a bigger sweet tooth than I do.â
You distance yourself from Jung a little, fiddling with your golf club as the men share echoing laughter between puffs of smoke.
The golf course Jung frequents is massive, spanning several hectares of land, which means youâre often stuck here for a long while during his golf sessions. His friends are the same detestable group of men heâs usually out with, all old friends from college youâve since been forced to get acquainted with. And together they talk each othersâ ears off about sports, food, making subtle digs at their own wives or partners, and of course, golf. The blinding shade of green hills contrasts harshly against a pale blue sky and depicts an almost cartoon scenery, and you can feel the headache in your temples worsening with every loud chuckle that escapes Jungâs lips.
He hasnât asked once about your yoga retreat- which may be a blessing of sorts when you recall the events that unfolded. But you know itâs got nothing to do with that, and everything to do with the fact that he doesnât give a shit.
He probably doesnât even remember you were gone, nor does he care to fill you in on the details that unfolded while you were away. And it wouldnât matter, because you know it would be exactly some version of this- his obnoxious friends, golf, sports on tv and bragging about his proximity to a married life with you. Strangely enough, youâre normally able to stomach these conversations when youâre forced to go out with Jung. But somehow today, every word he utters aggravates you, and youâre desperate to find some excuse to make it home again.
Except you also know very well that itâs something else eating away at your mind this afternoon.
âY/n?â Kwang questions, and you snap your head to look at him, realizing youâve tuned out most of his talking points up until now.
âYes?â
âItâs your turn,â he says, gesturing to your golf club. Jung watches you and chuckles, almost embarrassed with you, as he mirrors Kwangâs gesture.
âGo on,â Jung says condescendingly. âRemember how I taught you last time.â
And with the golf club in your timid grasp, you approach the tee, positioning your club out in front of you and doing your best to mimic the way Jung taught you. Or rather the way he yelled at you to memorize, always taking his sports endeavors far too seriously.
The club head rests gently against the golf ball, pulling back momentarily as your hands shift and tighten around the grip again. And Kwang exhales another puff of smoke, a light chuckle escaping his lips as his eyes bore into your standing figure.
âHer formâs gotten a little better,â he remarks to Jung.
âYeah, because of me,â Jung says back.
âAnd good thing, too,â Kwang voices. âIf sheâd gotten better without your help itâd mean someone else was helping her.â
He laughs as he finishes speaking, transitioning to a coughing fit as you turn to meet Jungâs gaze. But Jung doesnât look back at you, he simply pats Kwangâs back and exchanges laughter of his own.
âThatâs true!â Jung echoes through a fit of laughter, like itâs the best joke heâs heard all century.
âCould you imagine if she pulled up here better than you?â Kwang says, flicking stray ashes off his cigar. âSome other man doing your part for you?â
Jung chuckles again, pulling a box of cigars from the pocket inside of his blazer and thumbing at a fresh one. You watch as he flips open a small bronze Zippo lighter, a small metal clink emitting from behind his cupped hand, as he brings the cigar head to the little yellow flame and holds it there momentarily.
âFuckinâ A,â Jung remarks with the cigar hanging between his lips.
When itâs lit successfully, he pockets the lighter again, taking a generous puff and blowing smoke just past the direction of Kwangâs still-laughing figure.
âThey say thatâs how you know your wifeâs disloyal,â he remarks. âHer sports form never worsens.â
You stand awkwardly, your fingers grazing the rubber of the golf club grip as you say nothing. Their laughter continues to swirl the atmosphere around you, the sound of the birds and the buzzing cicadas drowning out amidst their cackles. The sun beams entirely too bright down over you, the artificial grass seeming to turn an even more obnoxious shade of green as you wait for them to finish.
âBetter hope this oneâs not disloyal,â Kwang says amidst his jokes, nudging your upper thigh with the tip of his own golf club. âThatâs a lot of planning down the drain.â
And somehow the words trigger the familiar arrhythmic beat in your chest, flashbacks of Minho crossing your mind instantaneously. Itâs like they know, the way their jokes seem to run on forever, their wicked cackling taunting you with every passing second. They speak of your form and your position, and you canât help but picture the way Minho had you sprawled over the bed for you, his toned body looming over yours as he fucked you like he was consummating a marriage.
Beads of sweat trickle down your forehead as the sun glares over you, and the feeling is reminiscent of your sweaty bodies tangled together in the confined space of the tent. Was it you who came first? Was it Minho? The details are a little blurry right now as you try to steady your breathing, every single fear coming to life as you use your golf club to keep upright.
Disloyal. Another man. Cheater.
Their words replay in your mind and produce offspring of new ones, alluding to implications of broken trust and shattered plans. Hypothetical talks of one whole year of planning down the drain, another man with his hands all over you fulfilling Jungâs role in his absence and improving your form.
They know. They know you cheated, this is Jungâs way of humiliating you in front of his closest friend before he publicly calls off the marriage. Heâs going to confront you about it any second now. Heâs going to drag Minhoâs name through the mud, and possibly also his corpse when heâs done with him-
âY/n?â A voice interrupts, and your head snaps in the direction of their still gazes. The atmosphere is quiet now, birds chirping overhead once more, cicadas buzzing rhythmically in the distance again.
âHuh?â
âYou want to forfeit your turn?â Jung asks with a chuckle. âWeâve been waiting for you to start for ten minutes now.â
Your gaze falls down to your hands, gripped tightly around the rubber of the club still, the ball remaining immobile on the little red tee.
âUh, sure,â you reply, handing the golf club to Jung as he shakes his head.
You watch with an embarrassed expression as Jung grasps the club skillfully, pulling back and twisting his heel as he produces a robust hit, the ball lifting off its tee and soaring into the distance over the green hill.
âShe canât be disloyal,â Jung says with a chuckle, as he prods you with his golf club for the nth time today. âShe canât even complete one round successfully. Any other man wouldâve taught her thatâs not how you golf.â
*
At the one week mark since youâve seen Minho, heâs aware something is wrong. You havenât picked up his calls, havenât responded to a single one of his texts, and you feign tiredness or some made up illness when he offers to stop by at hours he knows Jung isnât home. But you donât entertain any of it, fearing still that Jung knows, and that this is going to be the end of your marriage.
A fleeting physical endeavor caused by your fiancĂ©âs stubbornness, and yet itâs effectively going to be the end of what was supposed to be your entire future. Seeing Minho will only reignite every fear present inside of you, causing it to coax the truth out of you and confront your fears in the presence of Jung.
The fear of what a lifetime of marriage implies. Are you meant to feel like teenagers in love for the entirety of it? Do the fights last a lifetime? Are you supposed to find a middle ground, or will there always be a need for somebody like Minho to provide some clarity and help you rekindle things to the best of your abilities?
What if in a week, you hate the cake flavor youâve picked? What if you find yourselves so comfortable it doesnât feel like love anymore? What if you spend a lifetime picturing itâs Minho fucking you instead of Jung, just to get off at night?
What happens to the marriage then? Does the love fizzle out until itâs a comfortable state of tolerance, one in which youâre sacrificing happiness for stability? Or does it simply exist somewhere else- or with somebody else? Whatâs implied by a lifetime of this?
Minhoâs always been a worrier at heart, though, and he wonât let up until heâs certain your relationship to him isnât at risk of dissipating, too. So at 11pm on a Friday, when he knows Jung is out with the same group of friends, he makes his move to confront you.
The living room is completely quiet at this hour, a soft ticking noise from the clock overhead as you flip past a page in your book. A romance novel, one littered with smut and cheesy dialogue, true to the lonely housewife youâre already conditioning yourself to be. And as your gaze falls over the first sentence of a new chapter, a knocking at the front door interrupts you.
Itâs not Jung- it canât be at this hour, his return home always signaled by his loud stumbling through the doorway, the jingling of his keys and drunken steps over the shoes he so conveniently forgets to put on the shoe rack.
You wrap your arms around the knit holes of your sweater, approaching the door hesitantly. Itâs likely one of Jungâs friends, late to the party, or even one of your own girlfriends, here for a late night gossip session. But when you unlatch the door and pull it open, your heart drops at the sight of Minho, his hands shoved in his pockets and his figure standing slouched as his head looks up to meet your gaze.
âHi,â says Minho, giving you a thin-lipped smile.
You give him a small nod, unsure of what to reply.
He looks handsome tonight, in a dark denim jacket and a pair of jeans. His golden-brown tresses fall loosely around his chiseled face, and his eyes look a little tired, like he hasnât gotten much sleep.
âMinho,â you say plainly, fidgeting with a loose hem on the inside of your sleeve. âWhat are you doing here?â
Minho shrugs, peering into the doorway behind you, and then his eyes lock on yours again.
âI never taught you how to gut a fish,â Minho replies.
âI was just- what?â
âA fish,â Minho repeats. âI never taught you how to gut one.â
âYeah, because we didnât catch any,â you reply, a short chuckle escaping your lips.
âI know,â Minho says. âI was wondering if you wanted to come over and gut one.â
âNow?â You reply, glancing at the darkened street behind him. âItâs late.â
âYeah, and Jung isnât home until early morning. Thereâs a salmon defrosting on my counter as we speak, assuming the cats havenât gotten to it. And I was wondering if you wanted to gut it.â
And heâs doing that thing again, where he takes the problem at hand and makes it so much more miniscule than it actually is. This state between disloyalty and tension you feel toward Jung, and the conflicting feelings you have toward Minho and the tripâs subsequent events. But he doesnât address any of that- instead, he takes issue with you never having gotten to gut a fish. And thatâs a relief, when you think about the other option of verbally confronting the emotions you keep at bay.
âIs it messy?â You ask with a little smile.
âItâs messy,â Minho replies.
âWhat if Iâm bad at it?â
âThen youâre bad at it. But Iâll help you. Mess and all.â
You turn around to peer back into the hallway, at the book lying open and flat on the couch, the second hand on the clock moving painfully slow and the dim lamp illuminating the room around you. Thereâs not much of anything to stick around for, not when Jungâs still going to be out for hours on end. And not when a part of you is dying to confront the situation with Minho in the privacy of his place.
âYou canât laugh if Iâm bad,â you say to Minho as you turn back to face him, slipping on your shoes in the process
âI wonât laugh,â he retorts. âNo promises, of course.â
*
Two hours later, the kitchen is littered with napkins, plates, gloves, filet knives and scales. Minho walks you through how to remove the roe and the milt, discarding them for you as you prep your filet knife. He verbally instructs you how to descale the fish, and when you make minimal progress, he guides your hand up and down the length of the salmon with his, giving a little nod as the scales fall off with ease and uncover the smooth finish beneath.
Heâs understanding when your reluctant hands fail to cut through to the back bone, chuckling lightly as he helps you cut that, too. And when you successfully pluck the remainder of the pin bones with tweezers, he nods proudly, giving you a thumbs up as you dispose of the fish parts and slide the plate of pink slabs to him across the counter.
âYou did really well,â Minho says comfortingly. âYouâre very attentive to detail. I donât think thereâs a single pin bone still on there.â
âItâs a little gross,â you say, shaking off your hands and chuckling lightly.
âBut the end result will be worth it,â he replies. âSomebody plucked the pin bones off every filet youâve eaten.â
You hit his arm lightly, as he laughs, coating the slabs in seasoning as you pull your gloves off.
âMinho,â you voice nervously, as he keeps his attention on the plate of fish in front of him.
âHm?â
âShould we⊠talk about what happened?â
He sprinkles dried parsley atop the filet, not looking at you as you hold your breath for an answer.
âWe can talk about it,â Minho replies simply. âOr we can choose not to. It was just a favor I ran you.â
You nod in response, watching as he swaps out parsley for onion powder and sprinkles lightly.
âCan we talk about it?â You say finally, twiddling your thumbs together.
Minho sets down the glass jar, turning to face you and pulling off his gloves, too.
âSure,â he says, leaning back against the counter and giving you his undivided attention. Your heartbeat quickens momentarily at the sight of him focusing solely on you, and you struggle to find the words to say. But Minho is faster, taking reins of the conversation and breaking the deafening silence between you two.
âYouâve been avoiding me,â Minho finally says, a kind of sadness evident in his tone.
âI was scared,â you reply. âI felt like Jung knew. It could ruin all of our wedding plans.â
âThereâs no way he can find out,â Minho says. âI havenât said a word to anyone. Unless you felt inclined to say something-â
âGod, no,â you reply quickly. âI wouldnât dare say anything.â
âGood,â Minho then says. âThen it was just a mistake in the heat of the moment. Thereâs nothing to worry about.â
And somehow the words sting a little, this conclusion that the affair was a mistake. Was it a mistake? Youâre not sure- though you are sure of the complete sense of ease it instilled in you, and the fact that it hasnât left your mind in a whole week.
âAre we okay?â You ask him, a nervous expression painting your face as you wait for an answer.
And Minho nods confidently, pulling on a fresh set of gloves as he reaches for the salt and pepper shakers.
âWeâre fine,â Minho reassures. âIf you think anything is getting in the way of a decade of you being stuck with me, then youâre mistaken.â
You laugh lightly, pulling on another pair of gloves too and joining Minho in front of the plate of fish.
âYou want to pan fry this?â Minho asks, changing the subject. âIâll walk you through it.â
Your eyes scan the well-seasoned strips of salmon, and then Minhoâs comforting figure beside you, as he slides you a pair of tongs.
âYeah,â you say to him. âLetâs finish this thing.â
Minhoâs right- the end result is worth it. The fish is tender, well-seasoned, paired beautifully with his favorite bottle of white wine over an old comedy movie.
And everything feels like itâs back to normal once more as you sit beside him, your plates completely void of food as you finish your glasses of wine and sit back comfortably.
As the end credits roll, Minho lowers the volume, but he doesnât shut off the television yet, taking another sip from his glass as your gazes fix on the names disappearing on screen.
Your eyes scan Minhoâs mostly-vacant walls, at the things and the stuff heâs moved around. And he has, a couple new photographs displayed neatly on the wall in gold frames.
Most of them are black and white photographs you recognize to be cityscapes. And among the collage, placed right in the middle, the only photo with an ounce of color catches your eye.
âShirakawa,â you say to Minho, cocking your head at the photograph.
Itâs a wide shot of the town, bright green grass contrasting the traditional brown farmhouses that span the entirety of the landscape.
âMhm,â Minho affirms, giving a little nod as he looks over the photograph, too.
You remain like that for a moment, reveling in the view, and then you finally break the comfortable silence once more.
âCould you tell me about it?â You ask him sweetly. âJust anything.â
Minho thinks back to the facts of Shirakawa he stores in the corner of his mind for a moment, sorting through facts and tales heâs held onto since college. Little stories heâs always wished to pass along again one day.
âThose are called GasshĆ-Zukuri houses,â Minho says. âWhich directly translates to hands in prayer.â
You cock your head in the other direction, nodding at his words, and seeing exactly what he speaks of. The houses do resemble two hands in prayer, the triangular thatched roofs almost reminiscent of a churchâs.
âThe roofs were designed to prevent heavy snowfall,â he continues. âWhich the town is notorious for receiving. But apparently itâs like a little winter land when youâre there.â
His voice trails off a little at the last syllable, getting quiet again as he folds his hands in his lap.
âWhich is pretty cool,â Minho finishes, pulling back from divulging too much information about the town he could go on about forever.
And he doesnât know youâd gladly listen to him talk about it forever, being continuously fascinated with his appreciation for the centuries-old town across the world from you two. You nod in response to his words, imagining the winters those tucked away in that little town must experience- blankets of snow and freezing temperatures, and yet so warm inside those historical homes loved by people all around the world.
âWeâll go one day,â you say to Minho finally, turning to meet his gaze.
He turns to look at you, too, a somber expression on his face as he listens to you speak.
âWeâll go to Shirakawa one day. I promise it.â
Minho swallows nervously, well aware of how close you are to him on the couch now. Your face at such a close distance to him, your limbs resting right beside each other as his eyes flicker over your parted lips.
Minho engages in the nervous habits he always does, blinking nervously a few times and toying with the lobe of his ear. But he doesnât act on anything, not wanting to push the boundaries youâve practically just set in place. The same boundaries that concluded it was a mistake in the heat of the moment. So then why do you feel so inclined to kiss him all over again, let your body tangle with his and ease your stress as he assists in confronting all your fears preceding the wedding? Why does the idea of a lifelong commitment feel so much less intimidating when youâre in the presence of Minho? And what are you doing having these thoughts about your best friend when youâre getting married to somebody else in a month?
Thoughts that fail to induce an answer from you- instead interrupted and subsequently silenced by your lips on Minhoâs again, kissing him with such desperation the way you did before.
And though desperate, it's still tender, his eyes shutting instinctively as his hands cup your cheeks and pull you closer. And youâve nowhere to go but his lap, straddling his waist with your legs as you refuse to break away from the kiss, your kisses turning hungrier by the second as his hands find your waist.
This implication to fuck you is far greater this time, a pressing urge between the two of you to mirror the nightâs actions and confirm it really did happen. That he did fuck you that night in your tent, and that you both came with each other and for each other, your bodies releasing the pent-up frustration youâre now certain has existed for years.
âIs this okay?â Minho begins to ask, his hands grazing your sides, and your kisses trail down his neck to provide a clear answer to his concern.
âPlease,â you plead, nibbling a light bruise into his flesh. âI havenât stopped thinking about you.â
âI donât want you to feel guilty-â
âI donât,â you say, moving to meet his lips again. âIt feels so right with you. Please, could we do it again?â
Minhoâs breath hitches in his throat as you palm him over the fabric of his jeans, his erection already visible for you.
âI want to,â Minho gasps. âBut youâre getting married. I donât want you to make another mistake-â
âIt was never a mistake,â you say breathlessly. âNot the first time, not now. It feels so different with you. Do you feel it too?â
You pull away momentarily, hands cupped around the back of his neck as you wait for his answer. And Minho shoots a nervous smile in response; sheepishly toying with his hair as he struggles to voice his feelings.
âI⊠do,â Minho begins. âBut I want you to-â
âDonât worry about me,â you say, leaning in to resume pressing kisses along his neck. âJust fuck me like he doesnât exist,â you finish, your lips working against his once more and guiding his hands down to your waist.
Although you were the one worried of getting found out, you canât keep your distance from him, wanting nothing more than to feel him inside of you all over again. Coaxing your own arousal out of you, encouraging you to forget all about him the way youâve been trying to do in the absence of Minho. But with him here in front of you, you know the only way to shut Jung out of your mind is to fill it with thoughts of Minho, and Minho and more Minho.
âI⊠can do thatâŠâ Minho says with another nervous chuckle, as you unzip his jeans and palm him through his boxers.
âCall me something other than my name,â you say to him, pressing a series of chaste kisses to his lips. âSay it like Iâm yours.â
And Minho reaches up to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear, pulling away again to look into your eyes.
âBaby?â He questions nervously, eliciting a smile from you.
âYeah. Like that.â
âYeah, baby?â He says again, reciprocating confidently now as you stroke him over his boxers. âYou want me to make you forget about him?â
âPlease,â you beg again. âYouâre so much better than him.â
And amidst the ego boost, Minho can feel his cock swell, painfully hard in your firm grasp now as you stroke him.
âWait,â Minho says, wincing slightly as you slow your movements. âI donât want to cum yet.â
âThen hurry up and fuck me,â you smirk down at him, looping your fingers in the waistband of his jeans and tugging slightly. And Minho sits up straighter, smirking back, as he moves to press you down against the couch and hover over you.
âYou want me to fuck you?â Minho asks, using one hand to tug his jeans down to his thighs. âGod, you havenât stopped thinking about it, havenât you?â
âNot once,â you admit, wrapping two arms around his neck and pulling him down toward you. âI wouldâve asked you to fuck me years ago if I knew what I was missing out on.â
The two of you share giggles as his jeans are discarded on the floor, followed by his t-shirt, and then your pants and your t-shirt, leaving him in just his boxers, and you in your bra and panties.
Minho lowers himself against your clothed core, rubbing ever so gently against you to provide some relief to his aching shaft as he works his kisses against your drooly lips. And he smiles in between every slight movement, completely satisfied at the fact that itâs him rubbing against you like this and taking care of you instead of Jung. For the second time this month.
The idea that Jung is completely clueless to this game you play behind his back, that he still comes home thinking you belong to anyone except Minho. Both in mind and body, your entire being is intertwined with Minho in every way possible.
And you both know it, judging by the way you grab at each other like a pair of horny teenagers on a first date, trying everything in your ability to hold onto the feeling. Also by the way heâs so patient and forgiving with his movements, stil careful not to move too fast in case you decide you want to stop. And an unspoken promise between the two of you, that no matter what happens, the friendship will remain, that it simply canât slip through your fingers after a decade of promises to each other.
âLetâs go to Shirakawa,â you say to Minho in a whisper, finally tugging his boxers down and freeing his erection against abdomen.
âYou want to?â Minho asks, tugging your panties down, too.
âYes, I want to,â you reply. âWeâve talked about it for so long. Tell me what weâll do there.â
âWell weâll definitely go fishing,â Minho begins, pressing a chaste kiss to your lips as he discards your panties on the floor beside you. âAnd Iâll help gut all the salmon with you.â
âMhm,â you voice in a dreamy tone, massaging his hair with the tips of your fingers.
âAnd then we can see all the animals there,â he continues, positioning himself over you and lifting your leg a little to get a better angle. His hand massages gentle circles in your inner thigh, careful not to enter without ensuring youâre comfortable first.
âAnd when it snows,â Minho says. âWeâll be trapped inside. But we can occupy the little attic space, where the walls slant inwards. And I promise to make love to you until it stops snowing.â
âWhen does it stop snowing?â You ask, as Minho pumps his cock gently over you and positions himself in front of your entrance. He chuckles lightly as he leans in to kiss you, your entrance quickly swallowing his tip and caressing his girth with your arousal as he leans in to push himself even further.
âIt doesnât,â Minho replies finally, thrusting himself into you and letting his hands find the small of your back to steady himself. You let out a fervent moan at the sensation, quickly drunk on the feeling all over again. The mesmerizing sensation of his body hovering over you, of his cock inside of you, exactly the way you remembered it from the other night.
And itâs not right, but it feels so right to have him those close to you again, your best friend closing the gap of uncertainty between you and shutting you up with the confirmation that your souls have always belonged to each other this way.
âFuck, Minho,â you breathe out, beads of sweat dripping down your temples as he buries himself to the hilt inside of you and holds it there, pulsating harshly against your cervix.
âWill you go faster?â You ask him, running your fingertips down his back in encouragement.
âAre you sure?â he says between labored breaths, still careful not to hurt you.
âPlease,â you practically beg. âIâm so eager for you, please just do something about it, baby.â
Minhoâs eyebrows raise a little at the utterance of a pet name. Heâs never heard it from you- not in all your years of friendship. Heâs hardly secured a nickname from you in all that time. And yet here you are now, taking him so fully obediently, throwing words like baby at him and begging him to fuck you so that you wonât have to think about Jung.
âBaby?â Minho says curiously, capturing your lips in a kiss.
âBaby,â you reply, rutting your hips up against his as he begins to move a little faster. âBaby, and honey, and fiancĂ©.â
Minho chuckles a little at the last word, cocking his head as he digests your response.
âFiancĂ©?â
âYeah,â you say back between little moans that escape your lips. âIf we were in Shirakawa I think weâd be engaged. And you could fuck me whenever you wanted to.â
Minho feels his cock twitch at your words, his mind running rampant with the fantasy of being engaged to you. The implication of a lifetime of this, fucking you sweetly in the comfort of a shared home and coaxing all your stress out of you. And furthermore, a lifetime of you- of being dragged to all your favorite bars, takeout meals and cheap comedy movies, camping when the leaves turn orange and gutting salmon alongside you.
A lifetime of security, stability. One of sheer, unwavering happiness.
âWhat a dream that would be,â Minho voices, moving a little faster at your words now.
âYou think?â
âI know,â he affirms, his hands finding the mounds of your breasts and cupping them gently to unclasp your bra.
âWhat a fucking dream it would be to have you like this every night.â
Your bra is promptly discarded alongside you on the couch, the cool air grazing your erect nipples as he brings his mouth down to latch around one in gentle sucking motions. You can feel yourself clench around his cock, taking in the sight of his drooly lips wrapped around your chest and working you in eager motions. Itâs still the same Minho you recognize from years ago- still the dorky, yet handsome figure of permanence always present somewhere in your life. And it feels even less unnatural than the last time you slept with him, simply instilling another wave of eased stress and tranquility deep inside of you. Itâs like this is supposed to be the relationship between the two of you now- you live your life catering to the stubborn, unmoving personality of Jungâs. Minho tends to his monotonous life away from you. And when you reunite once more, relishing in tales of your separate lives from each other and laughing over glasses of chenin blanc, he concludes the night with a slow, intimate session of love-making, one to seal the promise between your souls that regardless of where the future takes you, this is still permanent.
Neither the college girls Minhoâs fucked so well, nor the shitty men you promise yourself to could come between that. And itâs a comfortable truth you both come to terms with as he gives himself to you so lovingly and wholly.
âAre you close?â Minho asks, moving to your lips once more and indulging you in a slow, sensual kiss.
âYeah,â you breathe out, wrapping your arms around his neck a little stabler and bringing your gaze down to his cock, where he disappears inside of you with complete ease.
âWhere do- fuck- where do you want me to finish?â Minho asks, squeezing his eyes shut momentarily. âI donât want to pose any risks to you right now.â
And heâs right, both of you knowing very well that just because youâve addressed your mutual attraction to each other, doesnât mean you can run around with Minhoâs arousal catching in your walls like you just arenât engaged.
You still have a wedding to tend to, another person to return home to and a promise in the eventual holy sanctity of marriage that Jung is your only lover. But right now that no official certificate holds you to that, you canât find it inside you to care, wanting nothing more than to be filled by Minho, and Minho and more Minho, and yet knowing itâs simply not a possibility.
âWherever you want,â you finally breathe out, placing the option in the hands of Minho. Your breasts, your mouth. Inside of you. You donât care- all you care is that heâs here, and heâs upholding his end of sealing the permanence between you two.
Minho gives a few particularly harsh thrusts, and then he brings a hand to the base of his cock, pulling out carefully and wincing as he staves off his orgasm. Your hands remain wrapped around the back of his neck, your gaze fixed on his as he works himself in quick strokes and leans in to kiss you.
âCan we go to Shirakawa?â You ask him again tenderly, as he continues to pump himself over your lying figure.
âOf course we can,â Minho responds with a sweet smile, his breaths labored as he nears his finish. âWe can go wherever you want.â
âAs long as youâre there,â you say to him, smiling up at him as he leans forward to kiss you again.
âAs long as itâs the two of us,â Minho clarifies. âWe can go anywhere.â
His eyes shut once more, his long eyelashes grazing his eyelids as his lips part open, and then he lets out a whimpered moan as he finally reaches his finish, coating your stomach in the milky white release of his orgasm. He kisses you when he finishes, smiling against your lips as he brings a hand down between you and rubs your clit in gentle, circular motions.
Your moans turn whimpered, too, as you reach your finish, clenching around what you wish was his cock and letting go for him.
And the credits on the television reach their end, transitioning to the hushed echo of a commercial playing. But neither of you are in any rush to leave or clean up just yet, allowing your listless bodies to intertwine lazily on the sofa as your giggles fill the quiet space between you and reverberate off the walls with such mutual fondness.
*
Mondays are heavy with work. Tuesdays, Jung works late. Wednesdays and Thursdays are dedicated time for his friends from college, and every day after that is a toss-up, but theyâre often days you spend with Jung, watching movies in your apartment, going on little dates or in uncomfortable silence alongside him as he spills details of his work and his friends.
And he believes this to be your schedule, because heâs clueless otherwise.
Mondays are really for late-night phone calls with Minho, where you run off to the patio for a few minutes of privacy while Jung catches up on sports broadcasts. Tuesdays, Minho cooks you intricate meals at his apartment, alongside old comedy movies and concluded always by his gentle love-making to you. Wednesdays and Thursdays feel like college again, Minho finally agreeing to accompany you to all your favorite bars again and paying for your drinks as he watches you dance for him, his hands all over you as the two of you exchange needy kisses for everybody to watch.
And though the lights by the bar are far too dim for anybody to recognize youâre out with somebody beside your fiancĂ©, a part of you doesnât care.
Bastard. Facilitator of cheating. Homewrecker.
Sometimes you and Minho joke about the names theyâd call him if they found out. Every derogatory term under the sun, like they havenât already thought it of him for being quieter than Jungâs douchebag friends. And yet they also fail to see heâs more kind, more attentive and more loving than any of them could ever bring to the table in the presence of their own wives.
You also know they wonât find out- not when youâre virtually invisible to Jung and his friends when heâs not showing you off like some trophy to be won. When corporate holiday parties arise, or the need for an even number of golf participants makes itself known, Jungâs there without hesitation, grasping your hand between his clammy fingers and recounting days of when youâd met.
And yet none of his stories involve the present you. They fail to include your successes at work, or the books youâve taken a liking to recently, or even the valiant efforts youâve put into decorating your shared space with him, despite his complete lack of assistance. His stories of you exclude the liking youâve taken to âyoga retreatsâ recently. And they definitely donât know you can gut a fish like your life depends on it.
âThis wine is better than the last one,â you say to Minho, as he pours himself a glass and slips a crystal stopper into the spout.
âIt cost me less than the loaf of bread,â Minho replies with a breathy chuckle. âI donât think weâll ever stop favoring cheap convenience store wine.â
You swirl the cherry red color around in your glass, admiring the way the liquid forms a little whirlpool and settles once again, the strong scent wafting upward in the process.
âNotes of cherry, wood, french vanilla and⊠pocket money,â you say to Minho wafting the scent up even further with a wave of your hand.
He laughs at your words, taking a sip from his own glass and smacking his lips together once.
âUndertones of fruit and nuttiness. And maybe penny pinching, like in our college days,â Minho replies, the two of you chuckling as you set your glasses down.
You look out at the view from his balcony window, the darkened sky providing little to see at this hour, but still outlining the silhouettes of the trees and the bushels that line his apartment terrace.
âThe time passed us by so fast,â Minho says in a somber tone, not turning to face you. You keep your gaze on the trees outside, thinking over your shared actions over the past few weeks. Itâs been nothing short of thrilling going behind Jungâs back the way you do, but youâre also aware that with every meetup, youâre a day closer to tying the knot with Jung, preparing for a lifetime of permanence alongside the same person youâve never felt so unsure about before now.
You turn to face him finally, a sad smile on your face as he waits for your answer.
âI wish we did something about this earlier,â you respond finally, taking note of the glow in his eyes as you speak. He looks marvelous at this proximity to you, so attainable and so enchanting all at the same time.
âDid something about what?â
âThis,â you emphasize. âUs.â
Minho blinks nervously a few times, and then he cocks his head slightly as he waits for you to continue, too scared to affirm your words with thoughts of his own first.
âAll this time I was trying to validate the fears inside of me surrounding this wedding,â you explain to him. âAnd then there was you, the same person who makes them nearly nonexistent. I wish we did something about it earlier so that maybe the fear was just lessened to begin with.â
Minho nods nervously, as he understands very well now that youâre on completely separate pages.
Minho, who wishes he could shake some sense into you and confess that this isnât just some physical endeavor soul-searching the way it is for you- that heâs so madly in love with you, and that he chases the reminder of your permanence because the ivy that constricts his veins will surely kill him in your absence.
And thus, he takes what he can get- you, at your most vulnerable moments, unloved and uncherished by Jung, just seeking a kindly ear and maybe a warm body to remind you that there is some semblance of comfort to be felt in the interim.
And yet you, who only partakes in this fleeting act of physical yearning because youâre scared of commitment to Jung, who maybe doesnât fulfill you every way you wish he would all the time. So you go behind his back, and you chase the fulfillment yourself, and you act upon the fears and the anxieties that have always circled your mind in the presence of Minho.
Maybe he likes you, maybe heâs jealous, maybe he wants to fuck you.
Statements youâve heard throughout the entirety of your friendship, ones you couldnât help but ponder, too, as Minho would grow painfully quiet with Jung in the room. But ones you always brushed off, telling yourself that the two just donât click. And yet the arousal present with the fear makes for some of the most pleasurable moments together in the privacy of Minhoâs home, albeit for Minho, on time begged and borrowed from you. The affair with Minho is not indicative of permanence in any form, and yet it exists to confront your very fear of permanence.
Selfish? Surely. Contradictory? In every sense of the word. The concerns raised to you by Minho himself in any way? Never.
So it remains, this tragic cycle of sleeping with your best friend behind your fiancĂ©âs back, blind to the fact that heâs irrevocably in love with you, in a comfortable state of mind knowing that at least youâll have felt this state of peace for even just a finite amount of time before you give yourself away to the marriage completely.
And yet itâs a beautiful thing in essence, this shared love between the two of you. A trust instilled so deeply on both sides to give yourselves away to each other every night and close a chapter of what once was, regardless of the differences in how itâs perceived.
The incandescent glow Minhoâs tender embraces bring forth in you, no matter the fact that heâs simply grieving a very real, living love that still exists between the two of you. Green leaves of ivy that constrict his throat and force words back down them again, so that he may never admit that heâs jealous, and itâs you, itâs always been you. The same suffocating feeling he ponders late at night, asking himself why heâs been so magnificently cursed to only love you under these circumstances, and never in ones that promise him your permanence in return.
But when you're across from him, a glass of cheap wine in hand and your gentle laughter accompanying his, he canât help but embrace the grand feeling- tarnished, but still grand.
âMaybe it worked out the way it was supposed to,â Minho settles on saying. âMaybe it wasnât supposed to be more than this little period of time.â
And thereâs a pang of pain in his chest as he utters the words, but heâs met with your small nod in response, visibly comforted by the prospect of his implications.
âHey,â you say after a moment of silence, sitting up straight and swirling your glass of wine around in your hand again. âThereâs a dinner thing Jungâs hosting with some people from the guest list. Donât say you didnât get the invite.â
Minho exhales with an audible groan, slouching back in his chair and running his hands through his hair.
âI donât even like his cooking,â Minho admits frustratedly. âHeâs just going to make me feel like an idiot the whole night.â
âBut I want you there,â you say to him in a pleading tone. âYouâre my best friend. I canât do this stuff without you.â
âI know you canât,â Minho replies. âAnd I donât want you to have to. But itâs going to be awkward, and painful.â
âI wonât let him cross any boundaries,â you reason with him. âIâll diffuse anything that comes up. I just want you there, even if it means youâre going to sit there and say nothing. Even that would make me happier than seeing your empty chair all night.â
Minho groans again, swirling his own glass of wine around in his hands and averting your gaze. Heâs quiet for a long moment, and then he speaks again, in a reluctant voice.
âHe would kill me if he found out, you know. We would never see each other again.â
You feel your heart sink at his words, even the thought of it beyond unnerving to you.
âWhy do you say that suddenly?â
âJust⊠thinking,â Minho finishes.
âWell he has no way of knowing,â you console him. âAnd I promise to keep things civil.â
Minho thinks for a moment, wanting to press you for more answers about what this even is, about why youâre choosing to let him waste his time like this and what possessed him to agree to attend your pre-wedding dinner as the other man.
But he says nothing, letting a generous sip of alcohol serve as the answer to the requests you press him for- yes, of course heâll be there, albeit with his long list of fears and reservations. But heâll do anything, twice even, at your behest.
*
The ebony wood dining table looks particularly elegant when itâs set up for guests. You line the seats with ceramic white platters, shiny silverware and iridescent glasses, paying special attention to even minute details, such as the direction of the prongs for each fork you place on white nylon napkins. Mixed peonies and birchwood make up the long centerpiece, and tall white taper candles are lit in the bronze candleabras.
And the mood is largely set by the guests, who laugh loudly around the table with glasses of expensive beverages in their hands. They speak of their jobs, and their spouses and pop culture references you canât be bothered to pay attention to. Your eyes scan the emptiness in their eyes, most of them living lives you can tell theyâve simply settled for. And you wonder, briefly, if theyâve ever experienced the unwavering happiness you do in the presence of Minho. Do they ever crack open a bottle of convenience store wine? Do they still let loose at clubs every now and then? Could they gut a fish if they caught one?
You respond to their stories with little nods and fake chuckles, and your head snaps in every direction past your guests to the front door.
Minhoâs fashionably late tonight, or at least you hope he is, still holding on to the promise that heâs going to be here. And Minhoâs many things- but heâs not dishonest. Heâll show if he says he will, albeit for a few minutes each time when it involves Jung. But heâll still show, dropping by with a timid smile and greeting the audience before sending you off with a lousy excuse again and leaving his spot vacant for the remainder of the evening. But tonight is different- tonight heâs here as the other man. And you canât decipher whether that indicates a change in his subsequent actions, that perhaps he wonât show after all, and youâll be left to your own devices with Jung and his obnoxious friends.
â⊠And one of our clients is an intern this quarter,â Jung says loudly, as he rants about his work in typical fashion. âWhich means Iâm going to be carrying most of our partnership.â
The guests laugh and raise their glasses, and you canât help but wonder how on earth the comment warrants even an ounce of laughter. As Kwangâs wife begins to voice a response, the doorbell rings once, and your head snaps in the direction of the echoing bell.
âIâll get it,â you say quickly, rising from your seat and smoothing down your skirt. âExcuse me.â
The guests glance briefly in your direction, and then turn their attention back to Jung, who begins to voice another chronicle of his inadequate colleagues. As you march down the hallway, your heart quickens in your chest, admittedly a little nervous to confront Minho after the recent events. You wonder if heâs going to be more awkward, or maybe even shut down entirely around the group. Maybe heâs just here to drop off another cake and send you off with a wave. Endless possibilities youâve never had to consider when you werenât actively sleeping with him. You unlatch the front door, taking a deep breath, and then pull it open, your gaze falling instantly onto the standing figure.
And itâs a wave of comfort when he smiles at you, his eyes forming little crescents as he grins and exposes his endearing set of skewed teeth, a breathy chuckle escaping his lips as he does. Heâs much more dressed up tonight, in a black collared button down and a black tie, his light brown tresses framing his chiseled jawline so well. And seeing him is more exciting than any other guest youâve seen tonight, a present urge to pepper him in kisses and remain right here alone, with him.
âHey,â Minho says in a shy voice.
âHi,â you respond, trying to stifle the giddy expression on your face from the guests around you who might be looking. âI saved you a seat,â you continue. âCome on.â
Minho enters reluctantly, glancing around the room and giving a small nod to the guests as you direct him to the vacant seat beside you. And somehow, he looks a little more confident, his posture much straighter and a knowing smile on his face as he occupies the seat beside you.
âHi,â he says to the guests as they meet his gaze, and he even gives a small nod to Jung, who shoots him a subtle scowl.
âJung,â Minho voices, gesturing to the table. âPleased to be here.â
Jung just nods at Minho, and then goes back to telling a story of his business accounts.
But your attention is everywhere except for Jungâs story, hardly even able to take your gaze off Minhoâs. His eyes sparkle under the hanging pendant lamp, his lips pulling into a little smirk as you watch him with such fascination. Thereâs something so enticing about the prospect that nobody here knows heâs fucked you, several times since the last time they saw him, and heâll likely do it tonight when Jung thinks youâre out with a group of girlfriends. They donât know the world you two have effectively built together, romantic nights of cooking intricate dinners together over glasses of cheap wine. And they donât know the history you two share, years of walking through your fears and uncertainty alongside one another and bettering yourselves in the process. Heâs your other half in so many ways, and youâre not sure itâs something anybody except the two of you could even begin to comprehend.
You watch as Minho picks up a bottle of wine from the table, rotating it in his grasp and examining the contents. Itâs one of Jungâs favorites, an expensive bottle of zinfandel he picks up from a special market a few hours out of the city. And it all tastes the same to you anyway, pairing just fine with steak or fish or even fast food at 3am. In fact, itâs subpar in comparison to Minhoâs favorites, which taste like safe intimacy, laughing at comedy reruns and love-making under the warmth of his blankets.
âAnyways,â Jung voices loudly, finally garnering your attention from beside him. âWeâve never been more ready for this honeymoon. I need tropical weather and some margaritas.â
âAmen to that,â Kwang chimes in, raising his glass for the nth time tonight.
I hate warm weather, you want to say. I wish it was Shirakawa, under the safety of the prayer hands thatched roofs and blankets of snow.
âIf we donât come back, just know we opted to stay,â Jung then says. âIâll stay golfing on the beach and you guys can tough out the rest of winter here.â
Cue the obnoxious laughter, fake smiles, raised glasses.
âYouâll have the whole trip to help on her form,â Kwang says loudly, gesturing over to you with the wine bottle in hand.
âWe went golfing the other day, and letâs just say thereâs ample time for improvement.â
Roaring laughter, unsightly grins and clinking glasses.
And Minho glances over at you, who keeps a smile on your face at the stupid remark.
Itâs exactly this that keeps him from acting upon the urge- you look content. You donât argue, you donât maintain a blank expression. Instead you smile, and you agree with his friends and your eyes look like theyâre still on the same page of devoting entirely yourself to this less-than-desirable relationship you flaunt. Minho knows heâs just a stepping stone in this chapter, and that heâs going to come out of this hurt. But he also knows that despite your fears, youâre content, and heâs not going to insert himself between the love that you deserve, though it may take a while to materialize fully.
You glance over at Minho with a nervous smile, silently hoping heâll say something. Just ask me to run away with you, you want to say. Tell me to run, and Iâll meet you there. Wherever.
But you know he wonât dare, too set on the idea that this is still what you want. So heâll remain like this, in the unfamiliar atmosphere of a dining table you share with another man, and heâll let himself face what becomes of it in due time.
âAre you okay?â Minho asks quietly, leaning in to fill your glass with more expensive wine.
âPeachy,â you say with a smile. And one he returns, shooting you another gentle smile and nodding at your confirmation.
The two of you listen as Jung segues into another story about his business client, and Minhoâs leather heel finds your ankle under the table, grazing it softly as you stifle a smile.
Thereâs no sexual implication rooted in his actions, maybe not not even romantic implication, as his heel moves up and down the back of your bare calf. Itâs just a reminder to say this will always be of permanence.
*
Minhoâs hands work up and down the sides of your waist as he kisses you, smiling against your lips as you slot yourself between his legs and grasp the back of his neck.
He kisses Jungâs expensive wine back into your mouth, the flavor complementing the mouthwatering look he sports this evening, and you have to remind yourself several times to slow down.
âThis looks so good on you,â you say with a smile, fidgeting with his tie and loosening it from around his neck.
âItâs the same one I always wear,â Minho says with a chuckle. âI canât be bothered to buy a new one.â
âDonât buy a new one. I want this one. I want it to be this one every time.â
Minho laughs lightly, a form of verbal agreement, and then he pulls you a little closer to him, rubbing little circles in the small of your back as you stay close in his embrace. Heâs sprawled out on his couch, strands of hair hanging delicately in his face as he steadies you in his hold over him, his pink lips visibly swollen from having kissed you for the better part of an hour now.
âTell me something about Shirakawa,â you ask him innocently, unfastening the first few buttons of his collared dress shirt.
âAnything?â Minho responds, bringing an arm up to rest casually behind his head.
âAnything. Something dreamy.â
âHm,â Minho hums in response. âThere are rice fields, and lily ponds and green orchards,â he says finally. âWe can walk through all of them without a care in the world, and we can get drunk off little glasses of sake.â
âAnd the whole town can be ours,â you chime in, leaning forward to press a chaste kiss to his toned chest.
âThe whole town,â Minho echoes. âIt can be whatever we want it to be.â
âAs long as youâre there,â you tell him, trailing your kisses lower and undoing the line of buttons as you near his navel
âAnything you want,â Minho exhales in a dreamy tone. âSay it and itâs yours.â
His eyes shut instinctively as the last of his buttons are undone, exposing his chest to you and promptly covered in eager kisses as you trail down to his hardening cock in his pants.
And his arms rest lazily behind his head, feeling completely taken care of, so needy always for your delicate touch. Your nimble fingers work to graze in slow back and forth motions over his flesh, and then you hoist yourself up a little higher to straddle your hips over his crotch.
âThank you for showing up tonight,â you say to him in a sweet voice. âIt means everything to me.â
âAnything you want,â Minho says for the second time tonight. âSay the word and Iâm there.â
âYouâre my best friend,â you voice to Minho. âI couldnât do any of this without you.â
And the utterance of a friend doesnât even sting for him anymore. Itâs fact- you belong to each other, time and time again, as friends, and lovers in the evening, and everything else in between. He doesnât fight it, because heâs grateful for any role he can play amidst the grand role you play in his.
âAre you hard?â You ask a little quietly, a knowing smile on your face as you rock your hips gently over his.
âA little,â Minho replies, though heâs in no rush to have you take care of it. Itâs enough exactly like this, your bodies intertwined together and infatuated with each other in the secrecy of his home.
âYou want me to take care of you?â You then ask, one hand trailing up to wrap lightly around his throat.
And as your slender fingers graze the column of his neck, itâs clear to you at this angle. Sticking out like a sore thumb, so glaringly wrong and indecent from this proximity.
Your left ring finger, completely bare, your engagement ring nowhere to be seen.
At first youâre sure youâre hallucinating, pulling your hand back quickly to examine the thin tan where your finger meets your knuckle, one thatâs usually covered by the gleaming jewelry. But as you rotate your finger around under the dim lighting, you confirm itâs not in fact some illusion- your engagement ring is gone.
Minho sits up a little, craning his neck a little to examine your worried expression.
âY/n?â He questions, taking note of the way your eyes remain fixed to your hand. âIs everything okay?â
âItâs not here,â you say simply.
âWhat? Whatâs not here?â
âMy ring,â you say a little more panicked, climbing off him and glancing around the coffee table.
âWhereâs my ring?â You question, moving aside stacks of books and magazines atop the glass table. Minho sits up, glancing around too, searching desperately for the little piece of silver jewelry.
âLetâs stay calm,â Minho says as he stands up. âIt has to be around here. When was the last time you saw it?â
âI canât remember,â you say in a panicked tone, now scrambling to the kitchen and searching the marble counters.
âOkay,â Minho says calmly. âWas it- do you ever take it off to wash it?â
âI never take it off,â you reply. âI never take it off, why the fuck isnât it on my finger?â
âLetâs stay calm,â Minho repeats. âIt has to be in here-â
âCalm?â You finally retort, turning to face him with tears pricking your eyes. âYou want me to stay calm? Jungâs going to kill me, do you know how fucking expensive that thing was?â
âOf course,â Minho says, buttoning up his shirt as he continues to search. âWhich is why weâre going to find it.â
And you donât reply for several moments, still frantically scanning the kitchen counters for any sign of your ring. But itâs a moot point, every napkin you unball containing nothing, nothing in the trash cans Minho searches through, even the dishwasher thoroughly searched, to no avail.
And you canât help but to cry, tears falling nonstop from the corners of your eyes as you rush about the kitchen and think of every worst-case scenario. This is it. Confronting Jung about it means heâs going to know whatâs been going on, chew you out about the cost of the ring and your carelessness toward it. And then call off the wedding, and every single one of your friends will know youâre a cheater and a liar.
âItâs not fucking here,â you cry out to Minho, halting your movements to bury your face in the palms of your hands, letting yourself emit muffled sobs into the sleeves of your sweater.
âIt has to be,â Minho says, glancing once more around the room, and then approaching you to pull you in for a hug.
âDonât,â you order, pushing him away from you, and Minho furrows his brows together. âJust donât fucking touch me right now.â
Minho gives a breathy chuckle, thinking at first you might be joking, and then his expression softens as he realizes youâre being completely serious.
âWhat- seriously? Thatâs it?â Minho questions.
âWhat?â You say with a choked sob. âI canât find my fucking engagement ring. The one I was given to get married, in case you forgot. Sorry Iâm not in the mood.â
Minho scoffs lightly, placing his hands on his hips and shaking his head. And then he meets your gaze once more, a solemn expression on his face.
âWhat are we doing?â
âWhat?â You query in response.
âWhat the fuck are we doing?â Minho repeats. âWhat the fuck are you doing here if youâre getting married?â
You shrug frustratedly, wiping tears with the back of your hand and saying nothing in response.
âNo, answer me,â Minho commands, his voice raising a little. âWhat are we doing, going behind his back like this? You come here almost every night spewing your bullshit about Shirakawa and suddenly itâs my fault that you canât find your fucking engagement ring? I mean, who even cares?â
âWho cares?â You retort. âI do. Iâm getting married-â
âExactly,â he interrupts. âSo then what the fuck are we doing? Go get married, for fuckâs sake. Will you just leave, for good then?â
âYou want me to walk out of your life just because Iâm getting married?â
âI want you to leave because Iâm in love with you,â Minho says finally, and a deafening silence washes over you two.
For a moment, all thatâs heard are your echoing sniffles and Minhoâs heavy breathing, as he struggles to find the words to continue.
âYou really donât see it in the way I look at you? You really havenât realized Iâm only okay being the other man because Iâll take any fucking version of you I can get at this point?â
Your gaze fixes on his, taking note of the way tears prick at the corners of his eyes, too.
âIâve been in love with you for all these years,â Minho says, his voice coming out in a choked sob. âAnd what a waste, all these talks of Shirakawa when Iâve known all along it was always going to be him in the end.â
His words circle your mind with a sense of urgency, as you struggle to respond.
You have known it, maybe even reciprocating by this point, but knowing that you canât, not when youâre getting married in mere weeks. Youâre happy, and youâre safe here with Minho. But in terms of love, this isnât permanent. Itâs a fleeting thing, one that has to end like this as you approach the next chapter of the rest of your life.
And yet it hurts, like a knife pierced deep into an existing wound, like thick vines of ivy that caress your veins and pull tightly with every thought of it being Minho all this time, all these years.
âI love you,â Minho says almost sheepishly, throwing his hands at his sides in defeat. âIâve always loved you. I love you in loud bars and over cheap bottles of wine. And Iâm jealous- god, Iâm jealous,â Minho admits in a choked sob. âAnd itâs killing me. I canât do anything about it except watch you plan a life with somebody Iâll spend the rest of my life wishing was me instead.â
Your lips part to say something, but you canât, simply wiping the tears that fall onto the sleeve of your sweater.
âI love you in the hands of another man and Iâll still love you if you choose him. But I canât do it at this proximity to you anymore.â
âMinho, please-â
âThereâs nothing else,â Minho says, gasping back his tears. âThis is it for us.â
You watch as he exhales deeply, wiping his tears and gesturing back to the kitchen.
âDid you check the soap dish?â Minho then says in a quiet voice.
âWhat?â
âThe soap dish,â he clarifies somberly. âFor your ring.â
And Minho watches as your gaze falls to the stainless steel soap dish across the room, a bristle pad sponge occupying the rectangular dish, alongside the familiar glint of your silver engagement ring.
One you removed to ensure you didnât lose it among the plate of pin bones from the cod you helped Minho prepare. And one you hadnât even realized has been missing from your finger for several hours now.
Your gaze falls back to Minhoâs before you retrieve the ring, and his eyes are swollen and mournful. Thereâs not a glint of hope present between you two- not in friendship, and certainly not in love.
And neither of you say another word as you pivot on your heel to collect the symbol of yours and Jungâs ode to permanence.
*
The polyester-spandex mix of your reception dress is much itchier than you remembered it to be. Itâs a simple white piece, long and cascading behind the heels youâve chosen, a generous v-cut enhancing the curve of your breasts as you adjust the hem in the mirror.
âIs it more comfortable than your wedding dress?â One of the bridesmaids questions with a smile.
You shoot her a somber smile, nodding at her and fidgeting with the long sleeve of your dress.
âYeah. It is.â
âIt should be,â she responds kindly. âRemember, try not to step on the bottom or weâll have to get it cleaned off before the real thing.â
You nod at her, checking your reflection once more in the full-length mirror across from you. You love the woman you embody- she looks elegant, and sure of herself and well on the path to a lifetime of stability and happiness.
And yet the girl inside of you canât feel further from the perception.
You want nothing more than to climb out of the tight-fitting dress and leave all of this, damn this rehearsal dinner to hell and call off the wedding. But this is it- the final stretch. Guests at every corner assume their positions and practice where theyâll stand and how theyâll move about so elegantly as you say your vows.
Jung seems so sure of himself, adjusting the cuffs of his suit and shooting you a wink from across the room as you stare blankly. And you canât reciprocate, still far too preoccupied with the events of last week to care about any of this. Minho sending you off, the ultimatum to choose between your fiancĂ© and the best friend youâre in love with.
Of course you couldnât choose Minho, whose role in most of this has been to help lessen your fears and prepare you for a lifetime of giving yourself to Jung. And yet somewhere along the way, you couldnât help but wonder if that was even true, completely smitten with every part of him, too. The fact remains that youâre in love with him, and yet youâve both been so magnificently cursed to keep it at a comfortable distance and pray that in some version of this story, itâs you guys in the end.
Your family saunters about the venue in their fancy dressed and suits, and your guests chat amongst themselves and sample the foods that have been laid out for them. And your mind circles with images of Minho, and Minho and more Minho. And what he would look like, instead of Jung, waiting at the end of the aisle for you with a toothy grin and tears in his eyes. The cheap wine youâd choose to cater, just a handful of guests the way you know heâd want it. And an innocent, undemanding love shared between the two of you, sealing your promise to each other with a tender kiss and his breathy laugh.
Yet the fantasy is fleeting, itâs rooted in the delusion of a cheater, in every sense of the word, and it would effectively ruin your life had it come to fruition.
âWhich way do we go from here?â Jung questions loudly, and your head snaps up in his direction.
âFrom here youâll go to the right, just past the foyer there,â a coordinator responds. âMake sure to smile when youâre walking down an aisle at any given point.â
Stupid. The whole thing feels stupid.
âDid you get that?â Jung questions, and you nod meekly.
âSure.â
âLetâs take five,â a coordinator says, clasping her hands together.
Jung resumes a conversation with the groomsmen beside him, and your eyes fall to the vacant seat across the table, where Minhoâs meant to be sitting. A small white folded card rests delicately on a white platter, his name scribbled in loopy cursive to reserve his spot.
Lee Minho.
And you read his name over a dozen times, replaying every last word of your conversation in your head and wondering what heâd do if he were here. Probably criticize the wine, or make faces at Jungâs phony speeches. And love you from afar, but with his entire heart, regardless.
âWhat do you think so far?â Jung leans in to whisper.
âYeah,â you reply, nearly evading the question altogether.
Your eyes scan the room at the carefully placed decorations- rows of lantern lights, white tablecloths and organized dishes for the guests, tapered candles are lit at every table. And in the center, bushels of magenta flower arrangements in cylindrical glass vases.
Magenta.
Your eyes do a double take, carefully examining the color as you furrow your brows. Magenta. Neon, obnoxious shades of magenta at every table. Nothing within the realm of the baby pink you requested. Harsh on the eyes and contrasting repulsively against the rest of the decor.
âThe flowers are magenta,â you say to Jung quietly.
âHm?â
âThe flowers,â you repeat. âAre magenta.â
âYeah,â Jung says, audibly a little confused. âTheyâre nice, right?â
âI said pink,â you respond. âBaby pink. These arenât pink.â
Jung furrows his brows together, and then he cocks his head at the floral displays set upon each table.
âYouâre right,â he then replies. He snaps his fingers at a staff member, and then he gestures to the floral displays.
âThese arenât pink,â he says harshly. âShe requested pink and not magenta. Could we get these swapped out, please?â
A coordinator jots something down in a small notepad, and then gives him an understanding nod.
âThatâs what weâre paying you guys for, right?â Jung asks sarcastically. âCome on, donât let us settle for magenta flowers.â
And when he turns back to you, his chuckles get quieter as he observes the displeased expression on your face.
âWhy are you making such a big deal out of this?â You ask him quietly.
âWhat?â
âWhy are you ordering them around like that? Theyâre just flowers.â
âWhat? But you just said-â
âYou never make things feel like less of a big deal,â you say quietly, a little scoff escaping your lips as you speak.
âWhat are you talking about?â
âYou just take something and run with it. You donât make things feel like less of a problem than they are. Youâre supposed to comfort me, or find the good in magenta flowers. Not yell at the service workers.â
Jung laughs nervously, taking your words for a joke at first, and other guests begin to stare across the table as they watch you rise from your seat.
âAnd why is the wine so fucking expensive?â
âPlease, sit down,â Jung says nervously, waving the guests off as they shoot him concerned looks.
âNo, I donât want to.â
And as you search for the words to say, your heart beating erratically, you realize itâs exactly this that youâve stopped yourself from doing all this time. Fighting back. Using your voice the way Jung so comfortably weaponizes his against you. Letting your emotions spill out from the years theyâve been bottled up inside of you, and finally coming to terms with the fact that this isnât the life you want at all.
Itâs Minho you love, itâs always been Minho and itâs always going to be Minho.
âI donât want this,â you say to Jung, as you smooth down your dress and stand up.
âPlease, sit,â he says through gritted teeth.
âYou donât know the first thing about me,â you say in a shaky voice. âYou donât fulfill me, you havenât touched me in weeks, I donât think you even know that I asked for baby pink flowers, because youâre too busy showing off to all the shitty people you call friends. I donât think we have ever been friends.â
All of the guests keep their gazes on you, taken aback by your words, but you donât care, continuing your rant while they watch in horror.
âI hate expensive wine,â you say to Jung. âI want to go on a honeymoon somewhere it snows. I want to watch comedy movies, and go camping and be so madly in love it hardly feels like it some days, because weâre also such good friends when weâre not completely infatuated with each other.â
Jung doesnât say anything, glancing nervously around the table as the coordinators maintain their silence, too. Your chest rises and falls with gasped breaths as you try to hold back from crying in front of them. And then you shrug, before finishing your speech.
âAt the end of the day, thereâs the man who tells me how to golf,â you say in a shaky voice. âAnd thereâs the man who guts a fish alongside me, mess and all.â
Jung frowns at your words, visible confusion painting his features.
âWhat?â
âI have to go,â you say to him, sparing him any sort of explanation.
The hem of your dress is balled into the palms of your hands and pulled up to give yourself room to walk, as you kick off your heels and begin to exit the venue. And before you do leave, you pivot around one last time, letting your gaze meet Jungâs visibly irate expression.
âHere,â you announce, pulling the silver band off your ring finger and setting it down on the tablecloth.
âIf youâre going to make a big deal out of anything, at least let it be this.â
*
The polyester-spandex mix of your reception dress isnât made to run in. Itâs much too long, the fabric bunches up at the sides and its bright white color begs to be kept indoors only. And yet you run- and you donât stop, not even for a second, until the reception building is completely out of your sight, disappearing beyond the trees and the tall grasses that surround it.
Your bare feet scrape the squelching mud that surrounds the grassland after the recent rains, and overhead, the piercing blue sky and a harsh sun beams down over you in encouragement. And you normally hate blue skies and green grasses like this, always equating them to Jungâs stupid golf courses and the corporate events heâs dragged you to for years.
But today it serves as a sort of blessing, like the world is brighter, lighting your path and guiding you to the beacon that is Minho, and all his unconditional, unwavering love for you. Maybe it took you years to finally acquaint yourself with your emotions like this, and maybe you hadnât even realized what true love was until Minho. And thereâs the possibility, of course, that youâre also too late, and that Minho has already settled on the tragic fact that Jung would always remain a part of you.
And thatâs true- he will maintain a role of permanence in your life. He was your first serious boyfriend throughout college, your first fiancĂ© and your first true love before you understood it in a less superficial form. And yet he will also permanently remain the man whose life you walked out on, because he helped you realize heâs nothing near what actually fulfills you.
Once the paved roads are in view again, you waste no time waving down a taxi and uttering Minhoâs address to the driver with such urgency. Your dress is caked in mud up to the ankles, and your hair is in complete disarray as you glance out the window at the rows of cars, all belonging to guests here for your dinner rehearsal. And you chuckle briefly, at the thought of them emptying the lot and walking out of your life forever.
Contrastly, Minhoâs apartment is in complete disarray, too, as he hoists the last of his immediate belongings into a leather bound suitcase and latches it shut.
What a waste, he thinks to himself. What a waste to have spent so much time comfortably in love with the idea of a finite soulmate, and at such close proximity, too. Youâre probably off at your rehearsal dinner, sampling finger foods and laughing at all of Jungâs surface-level conversation.
And heâll never know you the way Minho knows you. He will never comprehend your fears, your reservations, all your little quirks and the things that make you tick. Heâll never fully understand the prospect of being so bound to somebody in both friendship and love that itâs almost indistinguishable what you are to each other. Perhaps thatâs where you went wrong, too- because Minho knows it, that his role in your life has always been to love you, near, far and at every point in between. And yet you deem it just a fleeting thing, one implying an end.
There is no discernible point between the end of my friendship and my love for you, Minho wishes he could tell you. Just like the promise of my friendship to you, itâs a blossoming thing, this beautiful phenomenon. And we can run with it, or we can let it die like this- but it will always remain of permanence.
The chestnut suitcase is hoisted into the trunk of his car, also littered with boxes and duffel bags of his belongings. Itâs a vulnerable feeling, to pack up and move on like this. Not forever- just for the duration of which youâll be uttering your vows to Jung. He canât bear to be in the same city as any of it, he refuses to let himself love at the proximity of you dolled up in a wedding dress, in the sacred environment of a church surrounded by your family. How could a higher power accept the felicitations of the same man whoâs been fucking you behind the groomâs back? Within the four walls of which transforms hate to love, and sin to virtue?
What a waste, Minho concludes again. What a waste to have loved this deeply, and to pacify your fears only for another man to reap the benefits. Try as Jung might, heâll never know you the way Minho does. And the vast trench that separates you from Jung, one which paints a clear divide of friendship and his superficial love for you- that will remain permanent, too.
As Minho starts up the engine, the last of his belongings all packed and ready to go, he glances around the neighborhood with a somber expression. The sun glares down on the empty concrete roads, birds circling the sky like thereâs any reason to celebrate. Maybe theyâre ravens, and maybe they circle in a mourning ritual. The only event fitting for an afternoon like this one, as Minho prepares to leave for his parentsâ house- like the coward he knows he is.
His apartment grows smaller with every passing inch he drives down the concrete road, and a trembling hand reaches up to adjust his rear view mirror, letting out a deep exhale as he prepares to leave all this behind.
And as the faint outline of his apartment grows smaller, a white figure behind him grows bigger.
It starts as a fleeting blur, maybe a shadow, or perhaps the glint of the sunlight in his mirror. But as he quickens the push of his foot to the gas pedal, it grows faster, too, catching up to the drag of his car along the concrete and approaching him with such purpose.
An apparition of sorts, he thinks momentarily.
Iâm fucking seeing things. Iâve officially lost it.
But as the frantic call of his name floats through the air and into the crack of his car window, his eyes widen, the lag of his brain finally reaching a halt as he slams on his brakes and throws open the door.
And in rushed motions, heâs climbing out to face you, doubled over as you catch your breath and hold a hand up in surrender.
âStop!â You shout, waving your hands and motioning for him to cease his movements.
And Minhoâs eyes donât get any smaller, maintaining their shocked expression as he waits for you to speak.
Your white dress, tainted brown up to your knees in mud and grass. Even your face is muddy, streaks of it painting the otherwise stunning face of makeup you flaunt. And you speak in pleading gasps as you finally break the silence between the two of you.
âItâs you,â you say to Minho sheepishly.
âWhat are you-â
âItâs you, itâs always been you,â you breathe out. âI was so stupid, and I left as soon as I could comfortably come to terms with it. Itâs you I love, Minho. Not Jung and not the idealized version of that life I created in my head. I canât do any of this without you, and I canât live the rest of my life without having said something. I love you- now, and in ten years time and I want to spend the rest of my life gutting fish alongside you- mess and all.â
Minho doesnât say anything for a moment- in fact, he wears a poker face as he watches you continue to catch your breath. And then he scoffs lightly as he shakes his head.
âYou waited until the day of your wedding to say something?â Minho retorts frustratedly.
âRehearsal dinner,â you correct him. âThis is just a dinner dress.
âRegardless,â Minho says. âI mean, what are we doing? Thereâs another man waiting for you, and weâre here doing something we shouldâve done years ago if it was meant to be in the slightest.â
You feel your heart drop at his words, confirming the theory youâd feared the most. Too late.
âPlease,â you beg, and Minho shakes his head.
âWeâre terrible people,â he then states, his voice trembling in the process. âCheaters, and liars. And this is far too rooted in dishonesty and selfishness to be love.â
Tears prick the corners of your eyes as you watch Minho scan your expression. And perhaps heâs right- but it canât be anything except for love, not when it feels this right with him.
âWhere are you going?â You ask Minho quietly, moving a strand of muddied hair out from your eyes.
âMy parentsâ place,â he replies.
And you give him a small nod, pivoting on your heel to walk out of his life, forever.
Except itâs the realization of this that causes you to turn back around-
There is no forever in the absence of Minho- not when he plays a role of permanence.
He will forever be the man you fell in love with, the man youâve been in love with for years, one you risked your life to come find and one whoâs defined the limitations of what it means to be a best friend and simultaneously a lover.
That will remain with you always, and near, far and everywhere in between, the love will exist the way it always has.
âLoving me was the most selfish thing you ever did,â you call out to Minho, and he turns back around to meet your gaze.
âAnd yet you did it anyway,â you continue. âYou made love to me and you drank my fiancĂ©âs wine and weâre in love so selfishly at this proximity to each other. But it doesnât change the fact that weâre in love, and that Iâm not going back to Jung. And leaving here- depriving yourself of the love youâve wanted for so long, thatâs also a selfish move. You can go as far as you want, but it doesnât change the fact that the love is still here between us.â
Minhoâs lips part to say something, but he doesnât, instead blinking nervously as he waits for you to finish.
âAnd at the end of the day, thereâs the man who tells me how to golf, and thereâs the man who teaches me how to gut a fish, mess and all,â you finally finish.
Minho stays silent, pondering your words, and scanning your expression.
And truth be told, he wants to take you in his arms and run, hearing the words heâs longed to hear all his life. But he stops himself, instead emitting a breathy chuckle from his lips and shaking his head.
âWell what do you propose?â He finally asks, cocking his head as he awaits your reply.
And his response is a weight off your shoulders, as you sigh deeply and shrug in his direction.
âI propose we let ourselves be selfish,â you say to him. âAnd we spend the rest of our lives seeking forgiveness together.â
Minho chuckles, taking careful note of the way your eyes sparkle as you approach him. Heâs not sure heâs ever seen you so relaxed before, and certainly not so sure of yourself. You look like the woman heâs loved both near and far, exuding confidence and passion and unwavering comfort in your demeanor. His best friend and his lover, he thinks encouragingly, as he cups his hands around your cheeks and pulls you in for a tender kiss, one that confirms your proposal and implies all of this permanence.
The roads are still empty in the dull afternoon of the hour, Minho maneuvering the car with one hand as you sit beside him in the passenger seat, your hands intertwined over the center console as the harsh blue sky and bright hues of green grass melt into blurs of color beside you. And he speaks only of Shirakawa as he drives, promising you beautiful snowfalls and chilly walks along the lily ponds upon your arrival.
You can picture everything as the tales escape his lips, full of life as you imagine the brown farmhouses and green hills, where you and Minho promise to love selfishly under the prayer hand thatched roofs, the very place your forgiveness will coincide alongside the permanence.
And as he brings the back of your hand to his lips for a chaste kiss, he can feel the green vines of ivy loosen around his soul, but this time you feel it too, viridian leaves finally putting distance between your venules and their harsh grasp. And perhaps it wasnât grieving all along, but love for you- love which youâre full of, too.
And the vines tangle themselves beautifully between your seated figures, blossoming flowers and color and placing life back into you both.
And for the first time in a long, long time, Minho can finally breathe.
#i am so upset#i was typing a NOVEL of excitement and praise in these tags and THEN THE APP SHUT DOWN AND ERASED THRM ALL#I WAS GOING ON ABOUT HOW FUCKING POETIC AND TRAGIC THIS WAS LIKE HELLO#but LIKE OH MY GOD STAR U DID IT AGAIN#U DID THE DAMN THING AGAIN!!!!!#u created literary perfection once more#like oh my god this was ao good#the!!! FEELINGS!!! and the turmoil mc felt through the whole story#the *yearning* from minho#the *i'll take whatever i can have of you. whatever you'll give me i'll cherish without complaint*#and god the way his patience snaps at the end#I WAS BEGGING FOR IT#like min baby please dont let this slide#PLEASE say something bc god mc NEEDED to hear it#and im ngl i did agree with min at the end there#it DOES feel too steeped in dishonesty to build a foundation for a true love on BUT IT MAKES SENSE THAT HED THINK THAT#like even mc was blind to what she wanted out of#honestly not just her relationship with jung but like out of life in general#what she wanted for *her* life. the person she wanted to be#the roles she wanted to play#the relationships she wanted to have#she feels like someone who has spent her entire life people pleasing and never like??? even entertaining her own desires#like she was going with the flow and just doing what was expected of her by others#and minho was someone she actually got to prioritize herself with even if she didnt always realize it#and ofc she'd feel hesitant and anxious walking into that marriage#she was never happy with him!! but it was the path she was already on#the path that she was expected to just follow and be happy with#but it's not what she wanted!!! she wanted more#and this is such a big thing to realize that you want more from life with#especially if its like one of the first times youre advocating for yourself in years
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I still find It crazy that I had this many credits at one point.. which was yesterday
I also got Blade to 10000 hp in simulated universe lol
#đ â ânervo rambles . â
#I probably have so many credits bc I have pretty much no resin at all times so I can't build my characters as much as I want to..#like I spent quite a bit to build Gallagher but he still can't heal for shit bc I ran out of resin#(I had over 1000 saved up)#he still does crazy break effect dmg tho#like 35k#also Gallagher slouches in battle#BAD POSTUREââââââââââ#he's so silly but wtf is up with him man đšđš#also update I just looked at hsr and I actually have 7.5 mil now
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AU where Danny has spent a very long time in the Infinite Realms for one reason or another (time travel work for Clockwork, Ghost King business, fled Earth for some reason, decided he didn't jive with living under capitalism, realized he wasn't aging, whatever).
On his first trip out to the living world where he actually interacts with living people, he drops into a reality where the Justice League exists and gets curious about the Watchtower. It's definitely Earth technology, but it's way different than anything he's seen them build before. How cool! He has to check it out.
He gets intercepted. Danny's first introduction to the Justice League is Green Lantern, Superman, and Martian Manhunter. They're friendly enough when they realize he's just curious.
In the course of talking, his abilities come up. Danny talks about his ice and the time powers Clockwork started teaching him after AGIT.
Then one of them says something along the lines of "and you can fly."
Danny gives them a weird look.
"...and I can walk?"
Which is about the moment that they realize that, not only has Danny assumed that flight is normal for them (since all of the people he's met since showing up are capable of it), but he could have any number of abilities that he considers not worth mentioning.
#dpxdc#idea tag#I think he's been boiled like a frog in the weirdness of ghosts#hasn't seen a living human in long enough that he's forgotten that not just phasing through walls is a physical limitation#and not just good manners
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