#wow. that used to be my domain. that was my THING. ok in retrospect it was just a hyperfixation but u know what i mean
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prophecyofgray · 1 year ago
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okay so like. ignore the Everything about All Of This. it was 2019, i was a different person, simpler times etc etc etc. anyway. u guys dont even KNOW u dont even know....
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gureishi · 4 years ago
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Ohhhh, requests? Requests!!!! ❤️
We all know and love SE and the Choi family (Mc, Saeyoung and Saeran living together in the bunker).... But what about. Other way arround?
Saeran after ending, with saeran and saeyoung making amends, and you finally befriending and getting to know the true person behind 707.
Im happy with whatever ideas you have for this, but if you need more guidance... A scene between saeyoung and Mc, talking? Saeyoung thanking mcfor making saeran happy and feeling like he failed as a brother for not protecting him, and mc being all sweet as she is reassuring him that it's OK and that they are happy now and just fluffy??????
Gosh, I wrote a lot, sorry.
Oh wow. I ADORE this request. Thank you for bringing me this sweet idea. ♡
I love envisioning their lives together post-AE, and it was so much for fun me to imagine this tiny little slice of that. 
after
Saeyoung & Reader (platonic); Saeran X Reader (background), G, words: 2355
.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・。.・。.・゜✭・.・✫・゜・
Today there’s one of those early-winter snows where the flurries get stuck in your hair but the ground’s not white and beautiful, just cold and damp. The parking lot is nearly empty—apparently no one else wanted to go out today. Personally, you can’t understand why. You love the way the sky’s a bright white and how the biting wind makes the tips of your ears pink.
Saeyoung, who’s been walking a few paces ahead of you, turns around in time to see you stop and catch a snowflake on your tongue. He raises his eyebrows; he’s got his hood up and there’s a light dusting of snow on top of his head, like powdered sugar.
“I was gonna ask if you regretted coming along now that it’s snowing, but I guess I have my answer.” He’s got a complicated look on his face, like he’s not sure if he’s allowed to laugh at you or not.
“I have no regrets!” you sing, and then he does laugh, shaking his head indulgently.
“Come on,” he says. “Your shoes are getting wet.”
“Your shoes are getting wet. Also your head. Who goes to the store in just a hoodie in the winter?” But you run to catch up with him, splashing in the little puddles that have collected in the uneven pavement.
“It was the hoodie or the floor-length pink fur coat, so I went for the hoodie,” he says, and you can’t tell if he’s joking or not. 
The automatic doors slide open for you; he grabs a shopping cart from the assortment parked just inside the door. You walk beside him, feeling a little awkward. Grocery store etiquette, you think, is such a personal thing. Saeran, for instance, likes to go slowly through the store, lingering in each area—looking for inspiration, sometimes checking recipes on his phone. You like to move through the store at random, picking out items that strike your fancy. These methods work surprisingly well together—perhaps because Saeran finds it charming when you come running up to him with a strange new fruit in your arms.
Saeyoung, it seems, has neither a list nor a plan. He pushes the shopping cart lazily with one hand, heading vaguely toward the nearest aisle. You’re tempted to guide him in one direction or another, but you also don’t want to be a nuisance. This is his shopping trip—he was the one who announced he was going to the store; you were the one who’d insisted on tagging along.
“Are you sure?” he’d asked then, hesitating, one hand already on the doorknob. “You don’t need to! I can get whatever you—”
“I want to,” you’d said firmly, jumping off the couch where you’d been lying with your feet in Saeran’s lap, reading a book. It wasn’t that you needed anything in particular from the grocery store or that you didn’t trust Saeyoung to find whatever was needed for the house (though, in retrospect, it wasn’t that you did trust him, either). It was just…
In the few precious days that you’d been living in the bunker with the brothers—in a world that was suddenly so peaceful you couldn’t quite believe it—you’d begun to realize something: in spite of the hours of phone conversations and chats you’d shared with the enigmatic and charming 707, you actually hardly knew Saeyoung at all.
“So, uhhh,” he begins, a bit uncomfortably. You glance at him askance; his cheeks are pink. “What do we need, anyway?”
You laugh—you can’t help it. “What were you going to buy if I didn’t come with you?”
Saeyoung shrugs, looking down. He’s definitely blushing. “I was gonna…wing it.”
Maybe it’s his inexplicable shyness with you and maybe it’s your genuine love of grocery shopping, but your confidence is bolstered. You take the cart from him and he relinquishes it gratefully, falling into step behind you.
“First we’re going to get produce,” you tell him, and he nods eagerly, bouncing on his heels. He honestly looks excited that you’ve taken the lead; you make a mental note about this. At home, Saeyoung is often in charge—of little things, like what movie you’ll all watch together—because he is boisterously enthusiastic about everything and you and Saeran are more subdued. But here, without his twin, outside of his domain, he is suddenly much less confident.
You select a few types of squash; he watches somewhat reverently. “How do you know what to get?” he asks in a quiet voice.
“Practice, I guess,” you say. “I have in mind a couple of recipes we can make this week, and there are some staples it’s always good to have…” You pause, realizing something, your hands full of squash. “Saeyoung, can I ask you something?”
“What? Yeah!” He responds a little too readily and you know he’s trying to mask his awkwardness. It’s endearing.
“You lived alone for a pretty long time,” you say thoughtfully. You survey the selection of cabbage. “Didn’t you…buy food? To eat?”
He laughs, runs a hand through his already-messy red curls. “God Seven doesn’t need food to live!” he sings, and it’s in the tone of the 707 you’d developed a strange friendship with during those days you were at Mint Eye. You know now that Saeyoung was there, even then, under all that false positivity and diversionary teasing.
“You do, though,” you tell him. You hand him a head of cabbage.
Your firm tone seems to quell him. He looks down at the cabbage. 
“I ate snacks, mostly,” he says, a little more quietly. “Sometimes Vanderwood got frustrated and brought me other things to eat.”
You turn away to hide the look in your eyes from him. These poor, poor boys.
“You two!” you explain in mock-frustration, pushing the cart to the next refrigerated shelf. “So you were living on junk food while he was keeping himself alive with caffeine pills. What am I going to do with you?”
Saeyoung bounces behind you, still holding the cabbage.
“Feed us!” he says. You roll your eyes and tear a plastic bag off the role beside the shelves. 
“Put the cabbage in the bag,” you tell him. He does.
You gather a few more fruits and vegetables and Saeyoung asks about all of them; you’re amused when he doesn’t know what a persimmon is.
“So besides chips and stuff, then, what do you like to eat?” you ask him, pushing the cart into the large, open area where meat and fish sit on ice, row after chilly row.
Saeyoung hums thoughtfully, peering at a particularly large fish, complete with eyeballs and everything. “This is creepy,” he says. “Can we get it?”
“We…can,” you say. “But that doesn’t really answer my question.”
He walks a little ahead of you, and he looks at each different type of meat with such curiosity. They’re both like this, you think—so full of wonder over basic, mundane things. Saeran was in awe the first night the three of you settled in on Saeyoung’s huge couch to watch TV together. And now here is Saeyoung—who’s had considerably more freedom than his brother—staring at an assortment of different cuts of meat like he’s in a museum.
“I’m not sure,” he says finally, tilting his head to the side. “I love chips, and, you know, fish-shaped buns…”
“But is there a meal you like? Maybe from, I don’t know, the past…?” You regret the words as soon as they’re out of your mouth.
Saeyoung laughs bitterly. “Not from childhood, if that’s what you mean.”
“Right,” you say. “Yeah. I knew that. I’m sorry.”
He comes back to your side, leans on the cart. “It’s okay,” he tells you. “I don’t mind.”
“Still,” you say. “Sorry.” You steer the cart toward a display of different chicken parts and he pads along beside you—like an obedient dog, you think.
“What’s the difference between…” he bends over, peering at the packages. “Breasts and thighs?”
You giggle. “You tell me.”
You watch as his face turns red, clashing wonderfully with his hair.
“Um, l-let’s get the…thighs, I guess,” he chokes, and you stifle your laughter with your hand.
“Thighs it is.”
He throws the chicken into the cart with his face turned away and you grin. 707 was a tease, but it is easy to fluster Saeyoung. 
You move through the aisle of bottled sauces in companionable silence. You hold up a bottle of bottle of soy sauce and he nods enthusiastically; he does the same for the fish sauce and corn syrup. To test him, you hold up a banana ketchup—which you’ve personally never actually tried—and he gives you the same affirmative head bob.
“Saeyoung, do you know what this is?”
He tilts his head to the side, reads the label.
“Banana ketchup? Yum!”
You sigh. “Fine.” You toss it in the cart; maneuver to the next aisle.
“You didn’t even have soy sauce or salt or anything in your house when we moved in,” you say. “There was literally nothing in the cabinets.”
He strolls along beside you, running a finger along the rows of different kinds of pasta. “It never occurred to me.”
“We were kind of surprised,” you add, tossing a big bag of rice into the cart. “We bought a bunch of stuff, before we…left.” You stumble over the words; gears spin frantically in your brain. The words hang heavily in the air between you. Before we left to find you. Before we found you and then lost you again.
He’s silent for a moment and you know he feels the change in atmosphere, the way time seems to have slowed down.
“Hey,” he says finally. He’s got one arm draped over the side of the cart and his posture is a little stiff. “Did I ever thank you? I mean, properly.”
You bite your lip, keep walking. Your face feels hot. Suddenly, you’re not really looking at what’s on the shelves.
“You did,” you say softly. “But I feel I should be the one thanking you. You’re the reason we’re both alive, you know.”
Saeyoung stops, and you almost crash into him. He spins around, and he’s got a hard, determined look in his face. You’ve seen that look before. 
“No,” he says. “Nuh-uh. You saved us. You protected him. You did what I didn’t…couldn’t—”
Ah. Your heart’s pounding against your ribcage. Of course it’s here, you think—in this narrow aisle, next to hundreds of loaves of bread, that he’s saying this to you.
“Saeyoung, he knows that you would die for him. You tried to.”
He stuffs his hands in his pockets, walks away from you, lingers at the end of the aisle. The change in him is remarkable. There’s no hint of the awestruck boy, bouncing up and down over the wide selection of steaks, in this morose, bitter man.
“I didn’t succeed, did I?” he says. A mother with a small child seated in the front of her shopping cart comes down the aisle and you back up into the shelves to let them pass. You wonder if they can feel how thick the air is.
“No, you didn’t,” you say. “And thank god, because where would we be if you had?” He finally looks at you then, and you’re taken aback by the wild look in his eyes. It scares you; you take a step toward him. “You fought for him,” you tell him. “And he fought for you.”
His fingers drum a frantic pattern on the metal shelf beside him. He’s got the look of a cornered animal, ready to bolt. You’ve seen this expression before—though on a different Choi brother.
“I was supposed to protect him,” he says, so quietly you can hardly hear him. You take one more step. Another. Finally you’re at his side, and he flinches, but he doesn’t run away.
“You did,” you say. “And he’s safe. All of us are safe.”
He doesn’t say anything.
“We’re going to buy this stuff,” you tell him. “We’re gonna pay for it, and get in the car, and go back home, and he’ll be there. Waiting for you.”
Saeyoung shuts his eyes and takes a long, slow breath. You do it with him. He runs a shaky hand through his hair again and you give him a little nudge with your elbow. Eyes still closed, one side of his mouth twitches upward—a half-smile.
“Sorry,” he mutters. “I didn’t mean to…”
“I know.”
“I just feel like I owe you…”
“Me too.”
His eyes open; they’re clearer, bright and gold behind his glasses. 
“You don’t owe me anything,” he says, and it sounds like a question.
“I love him,” you say. “So, I think I do.”
Saeyoung shakes his head; the color’s back in his cheeks now, and he grabs the cart, pushing it out of the aisle. You jog to catch up, grab onto the side just as he’d done earlier. Hold on tight.
“You love him a lot, don’t you?” he says. You can see him in your peripheral vision—his eyes are twinkling.
“More than anything in the world,” you reply.
“Me too,” he says, echoing you, and you grin. You picture the look on Saeran’s face if he could hear this conversation—the way his green eyes would soften, the way he’d get that adorable little dusting of pink over his cheeks. 
Saeyoung turns the cart abruptly, maneuvering into the next aisle with an expertise you didn’t expect—you shriek, barely holding on. He cackles.
“We need this!” he says, and you turn to see him pointing at an alarmingly large box of some sort of purple cookie you’ve never seen before.
We don’t, you almost say, but you hesitate, because what’s the harm? 
“Sure,” you say, and you toss them in the cart.
Saeyoung smiles. “I’m glad you’re here,” he says. You know he’s not talking about the stupid cookies.
You beam right back at him. “I am too.”
★・・・・・・★・・・・・・★・・・・・・★
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