eelliotss
eelliotss
elliotes
95 posts
bringing the stories i write in my head before bed to life.dw, im legal.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
eelliotss · 2 months ago
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pretty little baby 😵‍💫
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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writing my thesis is so annoying because no one understands my frustration or the jokes i make about my work except the very niche group of scholars who have read the same journal articles as me but it's not like THEY are listening. like i can't come on here and joke about daniel 'i don't explain my references' scheufele or cry about how everyone cites tuchman (1978) while i'm using tuchman (1973) like PLEASE!!! UNDERSTAND ME!!! i yell as they drag me back to my room and put me in a straitjacket
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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Oh, Suguru doesn’t let you sulk. Not for long, especially when you start tearing yourself apart.
You're standing in front of the full-length mirror, arms crossed, eyes narrowed, breathing sharp through your nose as you mutter under your breath about how nothing fits right, how everything feels off. Your shirt’s halfway over your head again, what is this, the fourth outfit? Fifth? You don’t even know anymore. And behind you, on the edge of the bed, Suguru’s been watching the whole thing unfold with quiet amusement. One leg crossed over the other, hair slightly damn still as it cascades down his shoulders, sleeves rolled up. Patient. Calm. Gorgeous.
You glance at him, lips pushed out in a frustrated pout, and ask without really asking, “Can I just wear one of your shirts?”
You think he’ll say yes. He usually does.
But not tonight.
Instead, you hear the soft rustle of fabric as he rises from the bed, footsteps slow as he comes up behind you. You barely register the way he slides one arm around your waist, the other drifting up to brush your hair aside. He leans in close - so close you can feel the warmth of his breath against your neck, the low, velvet murmur of his voice sliding down your spine.
“Why would I do that,” he whispers, lips grazing your cheek, violet eyes meeting yours in the mirror, “when you look so damn pretty like this?”
You try to scoff. Try to brush it off like you always do. But then he holds your gaze in the mirror. And something about the way he’s looking at you - lazy-lidded, smiling faintly - makes your throat go a little tight.
“I mean it,” he says, voice all honey and heat, hands trailing down the curve of your hips. “You know I do. So how about you tell yourself, huh? For me.”
Your eyes flicker down. You mumble, just under your breath.
He chuckles softly, chin resting on your shoulder now, eyes locked with yours in the mirror. “Not good enough, baby. You know better than that.” His voice dips lower. “Come on, pretty girl. Say it like you mean it. Look at her,” he murmurs, gesturing to your reflection with the tilt of his head. “She deserves to hear it.”
You try again. Louder. Still awkward and even a little shaky.
But he’s nodding, lips curling in satisfaction. “That’s my girl,” he murmurs. “Again.”
His hands slide across your stomach now, slow and purposeful, thumbs brushing that soft part he always lingers on. “Love this body,” he says. “Love this girl. Mine.”
Your smile creeps in slowly, until, he tickles your sides out of nowhere.
“Wish my pretty girl would love herself a little more,” he says through your squeals and laughter, his arms wrapping tight around you to keep you from escaping. “Think you can do that for me, baby?” he asks, voice right at your ear now before taking a small nip.
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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hearing that your characterizations are good is like. the best thing to hear as a fic writer.
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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Love and Deepspace Non MC Reader Fics
(list inspired by: @erisnxxi )
made this collection for myself and to keep track of everything I've read so far. some are crossposted on tumblr and ao3 so I'll try to add both links (though i might miss some so let me know).
Status: Unedited & Incomplete tags; More fics to be added soon
symbols (will use soon):
✧ - smut
♡ - yandere/possessive/obsessive
☆ - angst
✴︎ - isekai/reincarnation/transmigration/reverse isekai
☁︎ - fluff
𖥔 - self aware au (technically counts as nonmc)
Caleb:
Rotten Apples by hcntrcss: (ao3) (tumblr)
Echoes in Space by feralaffection: (ao3)
Live, for Me by kat_the_cat: (ao3)
Psychosomatic by minamidwinter: (ao3)
The Colonel's Keeper by saintobio: (tumblr)
Weightless Paradise by luvl3ss: (ao3) (tumblr)
The Engineer's Gravity by mephisto-reporting: (tumblr)
back to friends by hxlxnaaa: (tumblr) (ao3)
keeper by "anonymous": (ao3)
mine by captivating-flavors: (tumblr)
best friend's brother au by mandalhoerian7: (tumblr)
Caleb's Spitfire - MC Twin AU by lily-jaxk: (tumblr)
fake dating by militaryapple: (tumblr)
Sylus:
Rewriting Fate by feralaffection: (ao3)
when love arrives-- and when she leaves. by cainis: (ao3)
Inside an Otoge: Mister Dragon, Let Me Love You by writerclaire: (ao3) (tumblr)
A Second Life for Strays! by stupidboy: (ao3)
Error 404 by ittybittyfanblog: (tumblr)
Impartial Hearts by ladsonlads: (tumblr)
surprise encounter by kitimeq: (tumblr)
calm and serenity by blueivyy99: (tumblr)
breaking my heart, 'tis the season, i guess by cainis: (ao3)
the sin & the sinner by saintobio: (tumblr: 1, 2, 3)
heartbreak anniversary with sylus by mephisto-reporting: (tumblr)
hurts so good by comatosebunny09: (tumblr)
merry christmas, mr. sylus by comatosebunny09: (tumblr: 1, 2, 3)
sensitive by comatosebunny09: (tumblr: 1, 2)
a curse between us by eelliotss: (tumblr: 1, 2)
Fourth Wall by always-just-red: (tumblr)
Onychinus' Finest by always-just-red: (tumblr)
Emptiness by antaresr: (ao3)
ikigai by lighting_and_shadow: (ao3)
maybe by captivating-flavors: (tumblr)
enough by captivating-flavors: (tumblr: 1, 2)
Sylus' Darling - MC Twin AU by lily-jaxk: (tumblr)
Zayne:
Nocturne of Twilight by chuloyi: (ao3) (tumblr: 1, 2, 3, 4)
My Wedding Vow Is To Divorce You by kira-loves0905: (tumblr)
lost among the pages by lazylattedgleam: (tumblr)
just give me your forever by shaiyasstuff: (tumblr: 1, 2)
heartbreak anniversary with zayne by mephisto-reporting: (tumblr)
Gymnopédie no. 1 by deltachye: (ao3)
giliw ko (my dear) bybarefootindecember (ao3: 1, 2) (tumblr: 1, 2)
date by captivating-flavors: (tumblr)
Rafayel:
jealousy in the game by melkar: (ao3)
Intimations of Immortality by thyrd_pardie: (ao3)
When you suddenly wake up in Linkon City by irandial: (ao3)
heartbreak anniversary with rafayel by mephisto-reporting: (tumblr)
Fourth Wall by always-just-red: (tumblr)
Rafayel's Muse - MC Twin AU by lily-jaxk: (tumblr)
Xavier:
Meet Me at the Edge of Time by oeggchi: (ao3)
three hours past midnight by savouringmidnights: (tumblr)
glass half full by shaiyasstuff: (tumblr)
we can't be friends by kitimeq: (ao3) (tumblr)
Multi
Insatiable by Aceecee: (ao3) (tumblr)
Fake by urlulugululueverythinggoessmoothulu: (a03)
Wildest dreams by tactfulao3: (ao3)
Cats & Deepspace by thxforthemmrs: (ao3)
on the sideline by rqyup: (tumblr)
they forget your anniversary by yeosatinyngz: (tumblr)
Hugs are Mandatory by whosashan: (tumblr)
Sneakyyy by whosashan: (tumblr)
Bitter by whosashan: (tumblr)
Borrowed Time by eelliotss: (tumblr: 1, 2, 3, 4)
I am in love and deepshit by amethystheartsx: (tumblr: 1, 2)
tempatio by morningstarfirstsin: (tumblr) (ao3)
A Hymn to You by lapetitecafe: (ao3)
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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to be someone’s muse
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A painter and his muse 🥰
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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If you see beauty in something don’t wait for others to agree
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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write badly. write weirdly. write like a cryptid in a cave with one candle. that’s where the good shit starts.
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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its his little way of bringing you back to reality when you’re too lost in thought, too drowned in your own mind, too blind to see the present moment
Nobody:
Sylus randomly once in a while:
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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idk if i really should be doing this lol but i really want to write something for the 1k followers milestone so im opening requests! I will choose one, maybe a few, idk, but at least one to write as a thank you to all your support. I cant express enough how much your comments and asks have lifted or made my days, especially ones that start with “im sorry for the long rant but—“ as you analyze my characters and stories. You guys make me like my words a little bit more 🥹
So please send some requests or ideas! <3
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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writers who make playlists before writing anything scare me. how are you setting a mood for something that doesn’t exist yet. are you conjuring it. are you a witch.
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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I love when you’re reading multiple fics by the same author and you start to spot all the phrases and adjectives they like to use
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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sulus smoking does something to me 😔
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american satan
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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i will def be coming back to this whenever i have a bad day bc wtf was that 😭❤️💞
sylus can sense you as soon as he steps into the base. he knows you’re not far, knows you’re just a few steps away. but he doesn’t know why.
today is a wednesday. no breaks or holidays upcoming on your schedule (which he familiarized himself with). so… maybe an off-day? a sick leave? his stomach curls at the thought of you being ill. but simultaneously melts at the thought of you coming to him to recover.
he finds you curled up on his softest couch in the living area. caressed by an eerie warm light. wrapped in a blanket, eyes far away despite the book in your hand. he starts to worry when you barely notice him come closer. he waves a palm before you to draw your attention to him.
you blink, tired eyes finding the concerned gaze of your beloved. each line on his face asking, begging you to tell him what’s wrong.
“hi.” you murmur as he tilts you forward. he slides his leg between you and the backrest, his other plants itself on the ground, his arms drape over your shoulders, he leans against the armrest and he pulls you with him back into his chest. urging you to sink into him, let him carry the weight that makes your shoulders slump and your eyes lose their light.
his lips trail over the crown of your head, the shell of your ear, the plump of your cheek and finally the gasp from your lips. his timbre low and thoughtful, “how was your day?”
there is a clog in your throat that makes you swallow. a burning between and behind your eyes. a set in your jaw at his question that tells him more than words can convey.
“bad.” he concludes in a murmur, pulling back to cradle the softness of your face and turn it towards his. crystalline eyes confirm his suspicions.
“tell me?” he tries, thumb gliding back and forth over your warm skin. heated cheeks beneath his ministrations are doused with droplets of saltwater.
and so you cry, you hiccup and sob, you try your best to speak, to tell him— but how do you put it in words? how fed up you are? how much you feel you’re stuck in a loop? how far behind you feel? how no matter how hard you run, which route you take, you feel like you will end up nowhere?
how do you tell him you want to win when you have no idea how to play? that you want to breathe but your lungs are filled with smoke? that you are tired. so, so incredibly tired that nothing means anything anymore?
it’s a mess out your lips. stuttered syllables and tumbling words. and yet he nods like you are speaking clearly. he squeezes your hands like he understands.
he presses his forehead to your cheek as if he bears the pain with you too— and he does, not entirely, but the ache in your chest resonates into his own like an awful symphony.
and he will take it time and time again if it made even the slightest difference to you. if it made you feel less alone.
and you will never be alone. not while he breathes.
he does not speak when you ramble. his eyes may wander to check on your body for any injury or pain, but his attention is solely on you. he is taking notes in his mind on what made you snap, who made you upset, at which point was it all too much— while nuzzling his face into your neck.
and when you falter, your voice ceases to a whisper and then nothing at the thought that he might not be listening. that he might not want to listen to you drone on and on about your miserable week; be a weeping victim of your own circumstances, he hums something patient into your shoulder. “keep going.”
“i’m saying too much.” you sigh. your nails run over his scalp, your attention abruptly shifting to his needs and not your own. “how was your day?”
“good.” he simply says, reveling at the trickling needles down his spine at your touch. “keep going.”
you do, you trail your nails over his head, down the nape of his neck, and under his chin. and when you don’t say anything, he kisses your palm, whispering. “keep talking, beloved.”
taken aback at his request, you frown. “it’s really just… you don’t want to hear it.”
gentle. so achingly gentle, he breathes. “but i do.”
“it’s not important.”
“no.” he rasps, coming up again to peer down at you. to make sure you know, you understand— that everything you say is important to him. everything you are is important. your everything— your thoughts, your stories, your opinions, your experiences— is everything to him.
“no,” he says again, slow and raw and genuine. he brushes strands of hair away from your scarlet rimmed eyes and brushes his lips over each one. “it’s you.”
and you will always be important.
his arms are a solace to the world that feels endless. his presence is salvation to your rupturing soul. and he feels like an end worth running towards.
your awful day ends. tomorrow, the world will ask you to try again. and you will. but for now you are here, and so is he, and you rest knowing he always will be.
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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hi do u have an ao3 acct
hello! i actually just got an account not too long ago. i never knew there was a waiting list to get in and that the queue is that long!? but yea i got an account but i havent posted anything there nor do i plan to any time soon. this is my only main acc currently!
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eelliotss · 2 months ago
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— Borrowed time, part 5
‼️Caleb x reader x Sylus. Reader not MC. University AU. Modern AU. Angst angst angst!
Everyone knows Caleb is in love with MC. Everyone. Including you. But that does not stop him from flirting with you, teasing you, keeping you close. And it definitely does not stop you from falling for him—even when you know you’re just a stand-in, a place holder.
“I bet you still thought of me.”
song: party 4 u by charlie xcx [this song has been the main inspiration for this series, so whatever you feel listening go this song, i hope you’ll feel that while reading this series as well]
word count = 9.6k
i appreciate all likes, comments, reblogs, and asks. i may not reply to all of them, but i want you to know that i reread them over and over <3
i cant say im proud of this chapter, and tbh theres so much i hate about this part, but if i dont post this right now, i dont think i ever will, so please be kind, but i appreciate constructive criticisms! if this part felt unsatisfactory, just pretend this update didnt happen lol
ps. thank you so much for over 1k followers??? heres a thousand roses for all of you 😭🌹
part 1 | masterlist
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The door creaks open.
The closet’s darkness slips away, replaced by blinding light and loud cheers.
But everything feels distant.
Your breaths are shallow. The warmth of his breath still clings to your skin, the ghost of his lips a lingering echo. His touch—still branded into your waist, your jaw, the hollow between your ribs. Your pulse hasn’t settled.
The air outside is cool, but your skin burns.
You stumble slightly as you step out, Sylus behind you—his shirt rumpled, one button undone. His silver hair is tousled, a little too messy. Your lips sting. You know you look wrecked.
And the crowd eats it up. Whoops and whistles explode around you.
You try to smile. You try to breathe.
But then your eyes land on him.
Caleb.
He’s across the room, half-lit by the cheap string lights, drink forgotten in his hand. His jaw is tight, his expression unreadable—except for his eyes.
They are cold.
Piercing.
It’s not anger. It’s like he’s looking right through you—like you’ve somehow ruined something sacred. Like you’re the disappointment.
Your chest tightens.
And then, just behind him, you catch a flash of movement.
MC.
Her head is down, hair shielding her face, her arms wrapped tightly around herself as she brushes past him, shouldering her way through the crowd.
Caleb snaps out of his trance in a heartbeat. His face shifts—concern overtaking scorn—as he calls after her and follows without hesitation.
And just like every time before, he doesn’t even spare you a second glance.
The cheers fade into static. Laughter turns tinny and distant, swallowed by the ringing in your ears.
It hits you all at once.
The heat. The mess. The press of Sylus’s body against yours. The way you leaned into it. The way you wanted to. The way you let yourself.
And then—MC’s face. Her voice. Her smile when she told you he’s kinda cute, isn’t he?
Guilt slams into you like a car.
It punches the breath from your lungs.
You feel it in your throat, acidic and raw, threatening to spill. A sickening twist coils in your stomach, bile licking at the edges of your tongue.
What have you done?
What did you just let happen?
Your skin crawls. The warmth you felt seconds ago now feels wrong—disgusting. It clings to you like smoke. Like shame.
You wrap your arms around yourself, trying to hold in the nausea curling up your chest.
Sylus says something beside you, low and teasing, but you don’t catch the words.
All you can hear is your own blood rushing in your ears.
And all you can feel is the weight of what you’ve just done. The taste of it. Bitter. Burning.
And the worst part?
You don’t even know who you’re more disgusted with—Caleb…
Or yourself.
You don’t wait for the whispers.
You don’t wait to see if MC turns back or if Caleb says anything at all.
You push through the crowd, pulse hammering in your throat, lungs clawing for air like there’s not enough oxygen in the room, not enough space in your ribs for this many feelings, this much shame.
The door slams shut behind you but it’s not enough.
Not enough to drown out the ghost of Sylus’s hands still on your waist. Not enough to erase the memory of his mouth against yours, hot and unbothered and too real.
Not enough to wipe away the scowl in Caleb’s eyes or the way MC couldn’t even look at you.
The night is too loud. The world is too close. Everything—everything—is pressing in on you.
So you push everything out of your way, scouring to find air.
You don’t think, don’t breathe, just bolt down the steps of the villa, sandals slapping against stone, the wind catching in your hair, stinging your eyes, stealing your balance. You don’t care.
The beach calls to you like a goddamn siren.
You trip onto the sand, knees buckling, breath shaking, heart feral in your chest like it’s trying to break out and leave you behind. You tear your heels off, toss them somewhere you’ll never find again, and march straight toward the water like it might wash you clean.
The ocean crashes louder than your thoughts.
Salt fills your nose. Wind tangles in your hair. The stars above are too bright, mocking. Too calm for the storm splitting your insides apart.
You drop to your knees at the shoreline, water licking at your calves, seeping into your clothes, and you let it. You need it. You need the cold. You need the sting. You need to feel something real.
Because everything in your chest is twisted. Twisted and wrong and out of place.
You lean forward, pressing your forehead against your knees, breathing like each inhale might keep you from unraveling completely. You wish it were just the alcohol. Just a mistake. Just a hazy memory you could laugh off tomorrow.
But you remember it too clearly.
His mouth. The weight of his gaze in the dark. The way his hand didn’t hesitate when it slid against your jaw, when he leaned in like he’d been waiting to taste you all night.
And you let him.
Worse—you wanted it.
The thought turns your stomach. You dig your fingers deeper into the wet sand, nails scraping at the earth, like maybe you can bury the part of you that’s smiling.
Because she’s there.
Somewhere inside you—beneath the nausea, beneath the shame—there’s a version of you curled up, smug and satisfied. A version who watched MC’s face twist, who watched Caleb’s scowl turn cold, and felt nothing but satisfaction.
That part of you is smiling.
You hate her.
Because that part of you—the one that enjoyed it—she’s been quiet for a long time. Always biting her tongue, always watching from the corners while MC took the spotlight, while Caleb gave his warmth to someone else. You taught her to wait. To be kind. To be better.
But god, you’re tired.
Tired of twinkling for people who never look up long enough to see you. Tired of being loved only in parts—when you’re easy, when you’re quiet, when you’re beautiful and harmless.
You’ve always been the supporting character in everyone else’s story. The best friend. The comic relief. The tragic footnote.
So tonight, you wanted to be the villain.
So tonight, she let herself out.
You let her kiss him.
You let her drag Sylus into that closet and tilt your chin up with a smile that begged “ruin me if you want to.”
And she did.
Now here you are, buried in the sand and sea, trying to figure out if the guilt eating at you is heavier than the satisfaction still curling at the edge of your lips.
You’re not supposed to feel this way.
You’re not supposed to want to be seen like that. Wanted like that.
Not at the cost of MC. Not at the cost of Caleb’s crumbling expression.
But you do.
You wanted them to see. You wanted to be wanted. And for a second—you finally were.
And for that, you are repenting your sins, kneeling by the shore and letting the cold eat you whole.
The tide rushes in again, crashing against your skin.
You raise your head, throat raw, eyes burning.
You sit there, watching the waves hit and retreat, over and over, counting the sparkling stars reflected on the ocean surface, until you could not feel your feet.
This is your way of atoning—because you fear the girl curled up inside you, biting on her nails every time a tear threatens to fall. Because the damage she has done once you let her out for a fraction of a moment is irreversible. Collateral.
And because you can’t promise this will be the last time you let her out.
You finally return to your room, dread curling tight in your chest like a vice. Each step down the hallway feels heavier than the last, your body moving on autopilot, mind spiraling with possibilities.
You hesitate at the door. Fingers resting on the knob. You aren’t sure what you’re bracing for.
An angry Michaela?
A tear-streaked Michaela?
A cold, distant Michaela who won’t even look you in the eye?
You don’t know which would be worse.
The knob turns with a quiet click, the door creaking open. You take a breath—slow, bracing—and step inside.
Empty.
The room is quiet. Still.
Her suitcase remains tucked in the corner. A half-drunk bottle of water sits on the bedside table. The lights are off, the curtains drawn. Not a trace of her. Not even the ghost of footsteps.
Somehow, it’s worse than yelling.
You stand there for a moment, motionless, caught in the heavy weight of nothingness.
Then your phone buzzes.
MC [02:46 AM]: Had to clear my head. Be back later.
Short. Punctuated. Not cold, but definitely not warm either.
And with that, you’re left alone.
Surrounded by silence.
Sinking into it.
You sit on the edge of the bed, heart thrumming against your ribs.
You should feel relieved.
You grip the edge of the mattress tighter.
You should be thankful the confrontation didn’t happen yet.
But all you feel is this crawling unease.
Like the silence is just the eye of the storm.
And when she comes back—
You’re not sure which version of Michaela you’ll meet.
And worse—you’re not sure which version of you she’ll find.
You get changed and crawl under the covers, body heavy, soul heavier. The silence is your only companion—thick, choking, unforgiving. You bury yourself into the blankets like they could shield you from the weight of what you’ve done.
Eventually, exhaustion drags you under.
Rustling wakes you.
Sharp. Precise. Intentional.
You blink your eyes open, and there she is.
Michaela.
Her back turned to you.
Her suitcase is open on the floor, half-filled. Clothes folded with a neatness that feels hostile.
You sit up slowly, throat dry.
She doesn’t look at you, nor say a word.
You rise. Move toward your side of the room. Get ready in silence. The kind of silence that screams.
Every breath feels wrong. Every second, guilt crawls further up your throat, pressing, choking, aching.
You swallow hard, then try to break the weight as you part your mouth to speak.
Your voice is quiet. Fragile.
“Michaela… last night, I—”
Michaela freezes for only a second before she turns around, face already wearing a smile that feels too sharp, too bright.
“Was such a blast! You gotta tell me all about what happened in that closet!” She winks.
“No—I—”
“Don’t think too deeply into it!” She waves her hand casually, like you’d just brought up a funny memory from a party instead of the reason her bag is half-packed. She lets out a breathy laugh, brushing her hair behind her ear. “It’s college, Yn. People kiss like, all the time. It’s nothing.” Her face drops slightly, but returns back to its beaming state. She reaches for your hands, and her voice lowers down. “It’s just a kiss, isn't it?”
A pause.
“Y-yeah,” you utter.
Her face beams once more as she squeezes your hands. “Besides, he is a pretty good kisser, isn’t he?”
You stare at her. The smile she’s wearing is dazzling—carefully crafted, practiced.
But it doesn’t reach her eyes.
And that hurts more than if she’d screamed at you.
The silence that follows is unbearable.
Eventually, the two of you gather the last of your things and leave the room. You walk side by side, the air between you tight with everything unsaid.
Outside, everyone is saying their goodbyes. Laughter, hugs, last-minute selfies. But none of it touches you. Not really.
You spot Caleb near the car, arms crossed, jaw tight.
He shifts his weight, arms crossed, leaning against the car with that infuriatingly calm expression—like he’s been waiting to deliver a blow.
“Well, well,” he drawls, eyes dragging over your form. “Eventful night, huh?”
You freeze mid-step.
His tone is light, teasing, even laced with that familiar cocky lilt—but it cuts deeper than any insult. Because you know Caleb. You know exactly when he means it. When the smile on his face is just another weapon.
“Hope he was worth the show,” he adds with a smirk. You can’t quite get a read on his face, can’t really understand whether the smirk is teasing, jabbing, or insulting.
You don’t answer. You can’t. So you walk past him without a word.
But he’s not done.
He leans in just slightly, voice dropping low enough for only you to hear:
“I bet you still thought of me.”
It hits you like a slap. You don’t flinch. You don’t give him that satisfaction. But it scorches down your spine, curling into something heavy and sour in your stomach.
All words run dry in your throat.
Because you know you did, and he knows you did.
So, swallowing down the lump in your throat, you quietly climb into the car.
The ride back is a void—quiet and cold despite the sun that floods through the windows.
Michaela sits in the front, headphones in, eyes fixed outside. Her expression is unreadable, a delicate mask of serenity.
Caleb drives in silence, but the tension in his body betrays him.
His knuckles tighten around the steering wheel. The muscle in his jaw ticks every time the car slows.
And yet—despite everything—you still see the way his hand occasionally reaches over to Michaela’s thigh. Subtle. Familiar. He squeezes gently, reassuringly, every time the silence grows too loud.
You sit in the backseat, hands clenched in your lap, stomach churning, heart clawing at your ribcage.
Because somehow, in this cramped little car filled with silence and ghosts, you still feel like the one who doesn’t belong.
You finally find yourself back in your familiar space.
The door clicks shut behind you.
Shoes off. Bag down. Keys tossed on the counter.
The silence wraps around you, soft and undemanding.
For the first time in days, you breathe without pretending.
You shower, letting the water scald the memory of Michaela’s laugh off your skin.
You eat something. Actual food. Not alcohol. Not regret.
And for a brief, flickering moment, you start to feel okay again.
Until your phone pings.
A message.
Unknown [6:43 PM]: So?
You freeze.
Every part of you stills—except for your heart, which begins to pound like it remembers the thing you’ve tried so hard to forget since last night.
Something forbidden.
Something thrilling.
Something wrong.
The memory comes back in flashes as guilt claws its way up your throat, hot and unrelenting. It tastes like shame.
You stare at the screen until the words blur.
And then, with trembling hands, you type.
You [6:50 PM]: It was a mistake.
You [6:50 PM]: Don’t text me again.
You hit send before you can think twice.
Your phone slips from your grip, landing face-down on the bed as you bury your face in your hands.
“It was a mistake,” you mumbled.
The following days were the most peaceful ones you’ve had in what felt like forever—quiet, slow, and mercifully uneventful. No parties. No whispered gossip. No sharp glances from Caleb or strained smiles from Michaela. Just the soft hum of routine and the space to finally breathe.
You sleep more. Eat better. Enjoying the lasts of your break. You’re rebuilding yourself piece by piece—one uneventful morning at a time.
But the moment you start feeling a little more like yourself, Monday catches up.
The quiet comfort of the break ends the second your feet hit campus tiles. The world spins forward like nothing ever happened.
Michaela acts like nothing ever happened.
She greets you with the same bright smile, the same light giggle, the same affectionate bump of the shoulder. As if that night was just another one of many forgettable college party blurs. As if your lips had never touched Sylus’s. As if her eyes hadn’t dulled the second they landed on you.
And you pretend too.
Because it’s easier that way. Safer.
Later that day, she loops her arm through yours as you walk out of class, swinging your hands between you. “Let’s go shopping after lectures? I need a new outfit or something for the first viewing next week,” she beams.
You nod before you can think too hard about it.
“Oh—” she adds, with that little flicker in her voice that always precedes something calculated, “I invited Caleb too.”
Your smile doesn’t falter, but your stomach twists.
The shopping trip is tolerable at best. Michaela slips into her spotlight with ease—twirling in front of mirrors, holding up dresses with playful pouts, laughing just a bit too loud at jokes that don’t quite land. Caleb sticks close, fingers brushing her waist, whisper her ear when she grins too hard.
But his eyes wander.
You catch him sometimes, gaze flicking to you when Michaela isn’t looking. Just for a second. Just enough to leave that same sour taste in your throat.
You don’t acknowledge it.
You can’t.
Instead, you smile when Michaela pulls you into the dressing room with her. You nod when Caleb asks if you’re tired. You pretend not to notice how her laugh dims a little when he lingers by your side for too long. You go through the motions—lift the hangers, compliment the colors, offer the safe, neutral opinions you’ve mastered so well.
It’s like muscle memory now. Playing your role.
Because if you don’t look too hard, you can almost believe this is normal. That nothing’s changed. That your mouth hadn’t betrayed you. That your silence wasn’t stitched from guilt.
By the time the sun dips below the skyline and the three of you step out of the store, bags in hand and feigned joy in your lungs, you feel wrung out—drained from smiling too much and meaning none of it.
Caleb says something—something teasing, probably—and Michaela laughs like a girl in love.
You stay a step behind them, clutching your bag a little too tightly.
You tell yourself it’s fine.
You tell yourself you deserve this.
Because in this triangle of careful lies and quiet betrayals—
You’re the one who kissed the wrong boy.
And you were the one who almost said yes again.
“Oh! I almost forgot,” Michaela says, as if it just came to her. “You have to come to the premiere next month.”
You blink. “The… premiere?”
She grins. “The film. The one we shot over break? We’re doing a small screening—kind of like a soft launch—for friends and crew.” She swings her shopping bags absentmindedly. “It’s just this tiny old theatre on 12th. Indie vibes, red velvet seats, ancient projector that might burst into flames halfway through—super charming.”
You force a smile. “Sounds cute.”
“You’ll come, right?” she says, looking at you over the rim of her cup. “I already told them to save you a seat.”
You hesitate—but not long enough for her to notice. “Sure.”
She beams. “Perfect.” Then, casually: “Sylus will be there too. I made sure he’d come.”
Your fingers tighten slightly around the straps of your bag.
“Made sure?” you echo, trying to keep your tone even.
Michaela shrugs, but there’s a sparkle in her eyes—the kind that always means she’s saying more than she lets on. “Yeah! I’ve been seeing him pretty frequently these days. Bumped into him a few times after the shoot… had coffee once or twice. He’s actually really funny when he’s not being all mysterious and broody.”
“Oh,” Caleb joins, light and amused. “Him. Great. Can’t wait to hear him brood about cinematography or whatever the hell it is he does.”
Michaela laughs, linking her arm with yours again. “Be nice. He’s actually been really helpful lately.”
“Helpful,” Caleb echoes, quirking a brow as he pops the lollipop from his mouth. “Didn’t realize mysterious bad boys were part of the crew now.”
“He’s not a ‘bad boy’,” she says, rolling her eyes.
She says it lightly, but there’s a deliberate lilt in her voice—a softness, almost flirtatious.
Your grip on your bag tightens, the fabric biting into your fingers.
You nod once, slow. “Didn’t know you two were close.”
She hums. “We’re getting there.”
Then, with a coy smile: “He asked a lot about you, though. Thought that was cute.”
Your chest constricts. The air feels thinner somehow.
“Anyway,” she says, skipping in front and spinning to fully face you, “it’s going to be such a fun night. You should wear that black slip dress—the one you wore to Jenna’s party? You looked so good in that.”
And all you could mutter in response was a short hum along with a smile.
The following days were as normal as they could’ve been. Well, aside from the fact that he has suddenly been everywhere.
At first, it was subtle.
A glimpse of him through the glass-paneled door of the editing lab, leaning over a student’s shoulder.
The sound of his voice drifting down the hallway—low, smooth, impossible to mistake.
Then you saw him again, this time in the courtyard. Talking to a group from the business department, one hand in his pocket, the other holding a coffee he barely drank from.
Word spread quickly.
“I thought he took most of his classes online?” someone whispered nearby.
“He does. No one ever sees him around.”
“Then why’s he here now?”
“Who knows? Maybe to complete his last courses before graduation?”
“He’s a business major, right?”
“Yeah, but like… old money business. Scary smart. The kind that makes you nervous to breathe too loud.”
You kept your head down, but your pulse never quite stayed still.
Because every time you caught sight of him, he never once looked your way—
And yet, you felt his presence like it was stitched into the fabric of your day.
He was too composed. Too polished. Too calculated.
And somehow, his silence was louder than if he’d cornered you outright.
“Just a mistake,” you mumble to yourself each time you see his figure waltz by.
But your quiet whispers to calm your nerves didn’t prove to be a very sustainable method.
Not when the universe seems hellbent on rubbing it in.
You see them together.
Once in the corridor outside the media building—her laugh echoing off the walls, his hand casually in his pocket, head tilted down to hear her better. They walk side by side, their pace easy, unhurried.
Michaela looks effortless next to him—bright-eyed, golden, her hand brushing his arm as she says something that makes him smile.
Not his usual smirk. Not the quiet, condescending curve of his mouth he wore like armor.
You stop in your tracks.
Just for a second.
Long enough for Michaela to spot you.
She waves. Cheerful. Unbothered. “Hey babe!”
He followed her gaze and landed on you. The smile on his lips curls up a little higher as you meet his eyes.
“Hello,” amusement coats his voice.
“Hi—”
“I’m probably not going to be free today for our usual hangouts,” Michaela cuts in, turning to you with an apologetic pout. “I asked Sylus to help with some of my work… You can hang out with Caleb by yourself, right?”
Before you can answer, she adds with a dramatic sigh, “Please tell him to chill and that I’m fine—just really busy. He’s been blowing up my phone non-stop these days.”
You force a smile, nodding once. “Yeah. Of course.”
She beams, already tugging Sylus further down the hall.
He casts one last glance your way.
A flicker of something in his eyes—teasing, sharp, unreadable.
As soon as you’re left standing there, caught in the space between their footsteps and your silence, your phone buzzes.
You glance down,
Caleb [4:28 PM]: where are you
Caleb [4:28 PM]: arent we having dinner today
Caleb [4:28 PM]: are you with her? she’s not answering my texts
Your stomach tightens.
You can still hear Michaela’s laughter fading around the corner, Sylus’s low voice murmuring something back.
Caleb [4:29 PM]: nvm
Caleb [4:29 PM]: i’ll find you myself
You don’t even remember agreeing to it.
One minute you’re reading Caleb’s texts with a pit in your stomach, the next he’s striding up to you outside the lecture hall—jaw tense, eyes scanning over your shoulder like he’s half-expecting Michaela to appear.
“She’s with him, isn’t she?” he asks, no greeting, voice clipped.
You blink. “Caleb—”
His expression shifts. He exhales, scrubs a hand through his hair, and forces a smile.
“Whatever,” he says, eyes softening as they settle on you. “Doesn’t matter. You’re here.”
And just like that, the edge in his voice fades.
“Come on,” he says, nudging your shoulder. “I’m starving. Let’s go grab something before I start chewing my own arm off.”
You hesitate for half a second, but he’s already walking ahead, glancing back to make sure you follow.
Dinner ends up being at this tiny place tucked behind the arts building—warm lighting, mismatched chairs, the kind of quiet hum that makes everything feel a little softer.
You sit across from him, arms tucked against your chest, still a little shell-shocked from everything.
He notices.
“You’ve been doing that thing again,” he says between bites. “Where your brain goes somewhere else and forgets to take your body with it.”
You snort. “And what thing are you doing right now?”
He leans back, exaggeratedly smug. “Being charming and irresistible, obviously.”
You roll your eyes, but the corner of your mouth lifts. Just a little.
When your food arrives, he pushes his plate toward you with a quiet, “Try this. It’s better than yours.”
You glance at him, suspicious. “You haven’t even tasted mine.”
He grins. “Exactly. That’s how confident I am.”
It’s silly. Stupid, even. But it helps. The knot in your chest loosens just enough to let a small laugh slip out.
And then—just as you’re mid-bite—his voice softens.
“Hey.”
You look up.
His eyes are steady now. No teasing. No act.
“I never really got the chance to say it properly,” he murmurs. “About what happened at the filming set. That night. Everything.”
The clinking of cutlery fades around you.
“I was inconsiderate,” he says. “I thought too little. Acted too harsh. ”
He looks down at his hands for a moment. “I overlooked your feelings. And I hurt you more than I meant to.”
You don’t know what to say.
So you just watch him as he finally lifts his gaze again, softer now. Warmer.
“I guess what I’m trying to say is… I’m sorry.”
The air between you stills.
“Can’t say I really enjoyed the stunt you pulled though,” he jokes.
The dinner continues quietly—less heavy now, more like the old rhythm you used to share with him. Caleb cracks a few jokes, pokes fun at your serious face, and makes exaggerated guesses about the lives of people at nearby tables. You end up laughing more than you expected to.
Then, as you gather your things to leave, he tilts his head toward you with a mischievous glint.
“One drink?” he asks. “There’s this quiet place nearby. They make the worst cocktails I’ve ever had in my life. Thought you’d like it.”
You roll your eyes. “Sounds irresistible.”
He grins. “Exactly.”
The bar turns out to be this cozy hole-in-the-wall tucked behind a bookstore, dimly lit with string lights that look like they’ve been up since 2003. There’s an old piano in the corner no one plays, and the bartender greets Caleb like he’s a regular—which is both comforting and mildly concerning.
The music’s soft. The booths are deep and worn-in. And somehow, the world feels smaller here.
Caleb orders for both of you, raising a brow at you across the table. “Just trust me.”
You don’t. But you drink it anyway.
“You’re smiling,” he points out, pleased with himself.
You arch a brow. “Must be the worst cocktail I’ve ever had in my life.”
He lifts his glass. “To consistent branding.”
You clink glasses, laughter warm between you.
The kind of warmth that sneaks up on you—gentle, nostalgic, easy.
And then, somewhere between the second and third drink, he leans back, eyes softer now, his playful edge melting at the corners.
“You know,” he starts, swirling what’s left of his drink. “I don’t really remember what my parents look like anymore.”
You glance over at him.
“You don’t talk about your family much,” you say gently.
He lets out a breath. It could’ve been a laugh.
“Don’t really have one,” he says. “Not really.”
He lifts the glass to his lips, but doesn’t drink. Just rests it there, like he needs something to hold on to.
“Thankfully, Michaela’s took me in,” he continues. “Thankfully…” he repeats, quieter this time.
Your mood sours from the mention of her name. Of course she would be mentioned.
“She has always been sick since she was a kid. ‘Cause of her bad heart.”
You stay quiet. Let him keep going.
Something in his voice says he needs to.
“It’s always been my responsibility to keep her safe,” he says, almost like he’s reminding himself. “Since we were kids.”
His fingers drum against the glass, slow and steady, like a heartbeat.
“And whenever I failed to do so… well…” he trails off, then smiles, a crooked, breathy thing that doesn’t touch his eyes. “It never really ended very well.”
You feel the weight of those words, the way he tries to tuck pain into them like they’re just another part of the joke.
“He used to remind me constantly… of my purpose…” Caleb mumbles, his voice slowing, slurring slightly. His words are slipping like his grip on the glass—loose, tired, too worn down to hold on.
You watch his eyes begin to dim, heavy with drink and something much older.
“You’re too drunk, Caleb,” you say softly, reaching out to steady the glass before it tips.
He blinks at you. Slow. Dazed. And then his lips part, just barely.
“That I’m just a stray…” he whispers, almost to himself. “If no one needs me…”
His gaze unfocuses for a moment. You don’t think he even realizes he’s still speaking.
Your breath catches.
He’s still smiling, faintly, lazily. But it’s the kind of smile that scourches your chest.
You slide your hand across the table, fingers brushing his. He doesn’t move.
“You should go home,” you murmur.
He doesn’t answer. Just leans further into his folded arms, the tension in his shoulders finally giving out.
You sigh, quietly.
The bar is warm, the night colder. And somehow, without much thought, you find yourself wrapping his arm around your shoulder, whispering half-hearted complaints as you half-drag, half-guide him out the door.
The days fly by like leaves lifted off the branches.
Nothing of the past has ever been mentioned ever again—the few days at the film set, the tense atmosphere between you and Michaela, nor the night Caleb slumped into your shoulder, murmuring half-truths through the haze of cheap liquor and old pain.
Classes resume. Group chats return to life. The cafeteria starts serving that awful tomato soup again. You slip back into the rhythm like nothing happened.
But the cracks are still there—just beneath the surface, waiting.
You’re sitting under the shade of a banyan tree behind the humanities building. It’s quiet, peaceful, a little breezy. Your lunch is balanced on your lap, half-eaten. Michaela plops down beside you with a soft “ugh” and a dramatic stretch.
“God,” Michaela says brightly, appearing at your side like she always does—seamlessly, like a breath of perfume. “He’s actually so funny once you get him to talk.”
You glance at her. “Who?”
She tilts her head, playful. “Sylus,” she says, drawing the name out. “He’s been helping me prep for the Q&A tomorrow. Said I needed to sound less ‘pageant’ and more ‘visionary.’ Whatever that means.”
Her laugh is breezy. Too light.
“Oh?” you respond, forcing a smile. “Sounds like you’re getting close.”
“Oh, it’s nothing serious,” she says quickly, tucking her hair behind her ear. “Coffee here, late-night notes there. He’s just so…” She trails off, eyes sparkling. “Interesting, don’t you think?”
You hum. Noncommital.
Michaela doesn’t seem to notice—or pretends not to.
She takes a sip of her drink, then suddenly perks up. “Oh! The premiere’s this Saturday. Are you ready?”
You blink. “Ready for…?”
“The spotlight, duh,” she grins, nudging your arm. “To see yourself on screen, see the scenes you played in come together with the background music. And to see your name in the closing credit!”
You roll your eyes, but it makes you smile. “It’s not that serious.”
“It is,” she insists. “You looked amazing, even in the trailer. You carried that café scene.”
You snort. “I said four words.”
“Yeah, but you felt those four words. I almost cried.”
You laugh together, and for a second—it feels real. Familiar. Like the last few weeks never happened.
“Have you picked an outfit yet?” she asks between bites of salad.
You shake your head. “Was just gonna wear something simple.”
Michaela gasps. “No. You’re not walking into an indie theater full of film nerds in ‘something simple.’ You have to look effortless. Like you’re not trying, but also like… if you were trying, you’d end worlds.”
You glance at her, raising a brow. “That specific, huh?”
“Always,” she says, eyes sparkling.
And for a moment, it’s just the two of you.
Two girls beneath a tree, laughing about dresses and dumb film boys and the weight of appearances.
It feels soft. Safe. Like how things used to be.
And it hits you with a quiet ache.
Because even now, part of you still wants to believe this friendship can survive what’s been done.
That maybe you haven’t already burned the bridge.
That maybe—just maybe—she hasn’t noticed the match in your hand.
The rest of the week passes in quiet, deliberate steps.
Classes blur. The campus grows louder, buzzing with exams and end-of-semester deadlines. Your name gets tagged once or twice in the group chat—reminders about call times, wardrobe, a blurry meme of someone joking about crying during the Q&A.
You try on outfits with Michaela after class, like you promised.
It’s surprisingly normal—her room filled with scattered hangers, half-empty iced coffees, the faint sound of a playlist humming from her speaker.
You laugh. You bicker. You twirl.
And then—Saturday arrives.
The day of the premiere.
It’s just past golden hour when you step out of your building, the sky painted in soft streaks of lavender and orange. The air is crisp. The kind that wakes you up and reminds you something’s about to happen.
The old theatre on 12th is just as Michaela described it—small, a little run-down, with velvet seats that creak and a marquee that flickers every other letter.
There’s already a crowd forming outside. Film kids in too-large blazers and thrifted dresses, professors dressed semi-formal but too cool to act like it, and the crew—all wide-eyed and excited, passing around programs and laughter.
The theater glows in the soft spill of marquee lights, buzzing faintly overhead as you approach, clutching your clutch tighter than necessary.
The car pulls up just as you step onto the red-carpeted pavement.
And then you see her.
Michaela steps out first, the silk of her silver dress catching the light like water. It slips over her frame effortlessly—cool-toned and reflective, like moonlight turned human. Her lips are painted a soft coral, her eyes dusted with shimmer, and her smile—bright, unbothered, breathtaking—lands like a punch to the chest.
Then comes Caleb.
He unfolds from the car in slow, unhurried movements, sleeves of his black dress shirt rolled neatly to his elbows beneath a tailored blazer, the collar unbuttoned just enough to suggest trouble. His hair is slicked back, not too perfect, and a hint of cologne catches the air as he leans slightly toward Michaela, saying something close to her ear.
You feel it instantly—the pull. The heat.
They look like they stepped off a magazine spread. Like they’re here to be looked at. Owned it. Earned it.
Your stomach twists.
But then her eyes find yours.
“Yn!” Michaela beams the second she sees you, waving you over like the oldest friend in the world. Her voice cuts through the crowd with effortless warmth. “You look stunning! Oh my God!”
You force a smile, walking toward her as she reaches out and takes your hand for a brief spin. “See? I told you that dress was the one. Absolutely gorgeous.”
“Thanks,” you murmur.
Caleb’s gaze drifts lazily toward you. His eyes widen slightly, just for a second—subtle, but there. And then that crooked, lazy smile of his crawls up his face like he’s trying not to let it show too much.
“Damn,” he mutters under his breath, voice low, just loud enough for you to hear over the soft chatter of the crowd. “You do look good today, shortcake.”
You don’t turn to look at him. You don’t smile. But your pulse stutters anyway.
Inside, the lights are low and flickering, casting everyone in gold.
You find your seats near the front.
You sit first.
Then Michaela slips in beside you, smoothing the back of her dress.
Then Caleb—his thigh brushing against hers, jacket folding as he slouches back with that usual too-cool ease.
And then—
An empty seat. Reserved with a single placard.
SYLUS QIN
You stare at it for a second too long.
The serif font. The clean white card. The space he hasn’t filled.
People slowly fill the theatre, and the chatter dies down as soon as the introducing speech starts. Cheers and laughter are exchanged as the producer welcomes everyone, and soon, lights begin to dim, the hush rippling through the room like a spell settling.
The first flicker of light sears across your vision—too bright, too sudden. You blink, disoriented.
The grainy opening shot bleeds onto the walls, painting everyone in uneven strobes of white and shadow. Your hands curl into the fabric of your dress.
Then you hear your voice.
Just a small line, off-screen. But it makes your throat tighten.
And then you’re there. You.
A glimpse of your face on camera—too quick, too exposed.
Your stomach flips. A cold rush spreads down your back. You shrink into your seat without meaning to.
The flickering continues—scenes switching with sharp cuts, too fast, too loud. Your eyes strain to follow. The glow of the screen presses against your skin like heat.
You feel it in your temples. In the base of your skull.
A thrum. A pressure.
You try to breathe slower.
But there you are again.
In the corner of the frame. Behind Michaela’s shoulder. Walking across the background, smiling as she delivers a perfect monologue.
You’re always there—but never really there.
Never centered. Never seen.
Just enough to anchor the shot.
Never enough to be remembered.
Your heart races faster.
You glance sideways—Michaela is watching intently, chin tilted just so, the soft rise and fall of her breathing unbothered. Her hand rests lightly on Caleb’s arm.
You try to focus on the screen, but the lights are too much now. The images change too quickly. Your skin feels hot. The sound dips and rises, warping in your ears. Laughter in the film echoes strangely, like it’s bouncing around inside your chest instead of the room.
You swallow down the tightness clawing its way up your throat.
Breathe.
You stare at your knees. At your folded hands.
The screen flashes white again—another cut. Another shot of Michaela framed in golden light, eyes brimming with perfectly timed tears.
And just behind her, out of focus—your figure. Barely lit. Barely there.
You curl your fingers into your dress and force yourself to stay still.
Because if you move—if you flinch, if you breathe too loud—it’ll feel too real.
Like this isn’t just a movie. Like your position in the film is just as it is in real life.
Your breath hitches.
Get through this. Just get through this.
But the room feels too full. Your lungs too tight. Your face too visible under the flickering screenlight.
So, with quivering hands, you quickly excuse yourself out quietly, muttering a soft “I need to use the toilet,” to Michaela.
Your fingers brush her arm as you squeeze past, knees knocking against the velvet seat in front of you.
You don’t look at Caleb.
You don’t dare.
The moment you reach the aisle, you bolt.
The darkness of the theater presses in from all sides, but the exit sign glows red—blessedly real, blessedly distant from the version of you being projected for everyone else to see.
You push through the heavy doors.
Out into the hallway.
Into the quiet.
It’s cooler out here. Dimmer. The hum of the projector muffled by layers of walls.
And still, your hands shake.
Your chest heaves.
You press your back against the corridor and squeeze your eyes shut, willing yourself to breathe again.
To stop hearing the lines you spoke, the laugh that wasn’t yours, the way you stood just out of frame.
You weren’t supposed to matter.
You weren’t supposed to be seen.
But seeing yourself just that—seeing yourself as nothing more than a narrative device—knocks all air out of your lungs.
And so you do what you do best in situations like these.
You walk.
Down the corridor. Past posters for old plays and peeling signs pointing to locked rehearsal rooms. The soft clink of your heels echoes against the concrete, sharp and rhythmic, the only sound in the hush that follows you.
Left. Then right.
You take the stairwell without thinking—something about the way the door hangs open, waiting.
Up.
One flight. Two.
You’re not counting. You’re not really anywhere.
Just moving.
The final door gives with a groan.
And then—open air.
The rooftop is quiet. Dimly lit by a few tired bulbs and the soft haze of city lights glowing from below. The wind brushes past your cheeks, tugging at the hem of your dress, the strands of your hair.
You inhale slowly—deeply.
The air fills your lungs and doesn’t choke. For the first time tonight, your chest doesn’t feel so tight.
You hug your arms around yourself, rubbing warmth into your skin as you move toward the edge of the rooftop. The wind tangles softly in your hair. The quiet is heavier than silence—it’s soothing. Honest.
The sounds of the premiere, the echoes of your lines, the weight of Michaela’s smile, Caleb’s lingering glances—all of it stays behind those concrete walls.
But the moment your shoulders finally drop—the tension unwinding from your spine like thread pulled too tight—
a voice slices through the quiet.
“The movie boring?”
You jolt.
And there he is.
Leaning lazily against the railing at the far edge of the rooftop, one hand resting in the pocket of his black slacks, the other loosely curled around a cigarette he hasn’t lit. The wind toys with the edges of his shirt, untucked and open at the collar, the soft fabric fluttering just enough to hint at the warmth beneath.
His silver hair—bright even under the dull rooftop lights—shifts with the breeze, strands falling across his forehead in that effortless way that should be illegal. The city glows behind him, casting shadows across the hard angles of his jaw, the sharp lines of his cheekbones. His eyes catch yours beneath long lashes, amused, unreadable.
He doesn’t move.
He doesn’t need to.
Just the sight of him—calm, crooked smile in place, posture loose like he’s got nowhere to be and nothing to prove—pulls something taut inside you all over again.
Sylus Qin.
Looking like trouble sculpted in moonlight.
And you walked straight into it.
Your voice stumbles out, more breath than word.
“What are you doing here?”
He doesn’t answer right away. Just tips his head slightly, eyes trailing over you in that infuriatingly slow, unreadable way of his.
“Didn’t realize rooftops were exclusively yours now.”
His voice is quiet but laced with amusement, like he’s already enjoying how thrown off you are. The wind picks up, tousling the silver strands of his hair. He doesn’t fix them. Just leans back against the railing again like this is his space now. Like you’ve wandered into his scene.
“I could ask you the same thing,” he adds, gaze settling on you. “Didn’t strike me as the type to abandon your own premiere.”
Your jaw tightens. “It’s not my premiere.”
“Could’ve fooled me,” he murmurs, eyes glinting. “You were in almost every shot. That little background smile of yours really carried the emotional arc.”
You shoot him a glare. He shrugs.
“Relax,” he says, voice dipping just enough to make your skin prickle. “I’m just making conversation.”
And then, without breaking eye contact, he pulls the cigarette back out from his pocket—like he knew exactly when to use it for effect.
You watch as he rolls it between his fingers, slow and practiced, before slipping it between his lips. His eyes flick downward, shadowed beneath dark lashes, as he flicks the lighter.
A soft click.
A brief spark.
Then flame.
He cups the light with one hand, shielding it from the wind, the gesture intimate in its precision. The flame catches the edge of the cigarette, a quick sizzle, and then a curl of smoke unfurls between his lips as he leans back—head tilted, silver hair brushing the collar of his jacket.
He exhales through parted lips.
Smoke spills from his mouth in a lazy stream, rising into the night air.
And for a moment, the whole rooftop smells like sin.
You swallow. Hard.
Because it shouldn’t look that good.
No one should look that good doing something so simple.
But he makes it look like poetry wrapped in gasoline.
Dangerous. Beautiful. Impossible to look away from.
He glances sideways, catching your gaze—then smirks around the cigarette.
“What?” he says, smoke curling past his teeth. “You want one?”
You ignore his question as you cross the distance between you with quiet steps, heels clicking softly against the rooftop floor, until you’re beside him.
Close, but not touching.
You lean forward onto the railing, elbows braced, eyes fixed on the world below. The city stretches beneath you—cars like fireflies, neon signs blinking against concrete, life spilling in all directions.
“Heard you’re pretty close to Michaela these days.”
Words slip out of your mouth before you could stop them—carried off too quickly by the breeze.
Sylus doesn’t respond right away. Just takes another drag, eyes still on the skyline, unreadable behind the soft glow of the city lights and the rising smoke.
“Is that what people are saying?” he asks, voice low, like he’s half-amused, half-bored.
You glance sideways at him, but his expression doesn’t shift.
“She’s been… talking,” you murmur.
He exhales slowly, smoke curling from the corner of his lips. “Yeah. She does that.”
There’s a beat of silence. The kind that leaves your thoughts too loud.
“She seems to like you,” you add, keeping your voice light. “Says you’re funny. Helpful.”
His gaze finally cuts to you, slow and sharp. An eyebrow arches. A slow, knowing smirk tugs at his lips.
“You sound jealous,” he says, voice dipped in something darker. Teasing. Dangerous.
Your breath falters.
“I’m not.”
He hums, low in his throat, clearly unconvinced. Then, he turns—just slightly—enough to face you, enough to make you feel it.
“Could’ve fooled me,” he murmurs, voice barely above the wind.
He leans in, just a bit. Not close enough to touch. Just close enough that the air between you shifts.
“I mean… if you wanted my attention,” his eyes drag slowly down your face, “you didn’t have to bring her up to get it.”
You blink. Hard.
The smirk deepens. He takes one last drag from the cigarette, flicks it to the side, and exhales—
Right past your shoulder, warm and slow, like it was deliberate.
Then he turns back toward the railing, arms resting casually as if he didn’t just turn your pulse inside out.
“Relax,” he says again, voice smooth and cruelly amused. “I’m just making conversation.”
“Fuck you and your conversations.”
“Language, princess.”
The corner of his mouth lifts, slow and smug, like he enjoys your bite more than he should.
He doesn’t look at you when he speaks next—just watches the lights below with that lazy, unreadable calm.
“The deal’s still on, by the way,” he says, almost offhand. “I don’t usually hold my deals this long.”
Your breath catches—but you don’t answer. Not immediately.
Instead, eyes still fixed on the city, you ask quietly,
“What’s it like?”
He glances sideways.
“To smoke,” you murmur, voice soft against the wind. “What does it feel like?”
That catches him off guard.
His smirk fades into something quieter—still sharp, but thoughtful.
He straightens a little, resting his elbows on the railing, eyes narrowed at the skyline like he’s remembering something he can’t touch anymore.
“It’s… warm,” he says eventually. “First few seconds burn. Then it’s just heat in your chest. Makes everything a little slower. A little duller.”
He glances at you again, eyes shadowed beneath silver strands.
“You’d hate it.”
And then, softer—
“You’d get addicted.”
You glance at him, the corner of your mouth twitching. “That confident, huh?”
His smile returns, crooked and slow.
“Always.”
Then—without looking away—he reaches into his pocket, pulls out the pack again, taps it once against his palm.
“Wanna try?”
You hesitate.
Just for a second.
The rooftop wind brushes your skin. The lights below blur like you’re not quite grounded anymore.
“…Okay,” you say finally, barely above a whisper. “Sure.”
His gaze lingers on you for a breath longer than it should—sharp, slow, searching.
Then, with practiced ease, he slips the cigarette between his lips, flicks the lighter, and inhales. The tip glows ember-red. Smoke curls around his face like it belongs there.
He steps closer.
Not fast. Not aggressive. Just… inevitable.
Until your backs are no longer parallel, but aligned.
Until his body is angled toward yours, his hand brushing the railing beside your arm.
Then he exhales—slow, steady—up into the air first, just to show you how.
And before your thoughts can catch up, before your pulse even finds a rhythm, his hand slides around your jaw. Gentle, but certain. Fingers curling under your chin, tipping your face up to his.
“Open,” he murmurs.
And you do.
He leans in—closer, closer still.
Not to kiss. Not yet.
His mouth hovers just a hair’s breadth from yours, and then—
He exhales.
Smoke floods from his lungs into yours, warm and heady and tasting like fire and him.
It hits you all at once—your lips parted against his, the heat of his breath rolling into your mouth, your chest, your nerves. Your hands grip the railing behind you, fingers curling tight.
And just as your knees begin to weaken, just as the smoke begins to burn—
His lips press to yours.
Not soft.
Not tentative.
It’s full, hungry contact—heat and pressure and something sharp beneath the surface. He kisses you like you’re something he earned. Like he knew this was coming the moment you stepped onto that rooftop.
And god, you let him.
His hand slips from your jaw to your throat, thumb resting lightly just beneath your pulse. You feel it hammering there, wild and fast. He deepens the kiss, mouth coaxing yours open further, tongue tracing the edge of your bottom lip like a tease, like a challenge.
You kiss him back.
Harder. Needier. Like you’ve been holding it in.
Like you’re finally letting go.
The smoke lingers between you. In your mouth. Your chest. The heat of it coils through your veins, makes the moment feel reckless, dangerous, electric.
When he finally pulls away, just barely, your lips are still parted—still chasing after him.
And Sylus—
He’s already smirking.
“Told you,” he breathes, thumb brushing your bottom lip.
“You’d get addicted.”
Your breath comes shallow. Foggy. Like you’re drunk—from the smoke. From him.
From the way his voice sits too low in your stomach, too warm in your throat.
You blink, dazed. “What the fuck was that?”
He laughs—low, rich, and dizzying.
“Still want to call it a mistake?”
You don’t answer. Can’t.
Not with the nicotine still curling in your lungs. Not with his breath still ghosting yours.
Maybe it’s the way the air thins between you again.
Maybe it’s the flush that rises to your cheeks when you look up at him and realize he hasn’t stepped back this time.
Or maybe it’s just that dangerous cocktail of heat and haze and the taste of sin still lingering on your tongue.
“I think,” you whisper, eyes flicking to his mouth, “you didn’t teach it properly.”
His gaze sharpens. That smirk falters, just for a second—enough to show the hunger underneath.
“Oh?” he breathes.
You nod. Barely.
He leans in. Slowly. Purposefully.
His hand grazes your waist, his breath brushing your lips—and just when you think he’s going to kiss you again—
He pulls back.
Barely an inch. Just enough to keep you chasing.
His smirk returns, lazier this time. Meaner.
“Didn’t think you’d beg so soon,” he murmurs.
You glare. “I didn’t beg.”
“Mm,” he hums, dragging a finger along your jaw, “Not yet.”
Then—finally—he kisses you.
But it’s slower now. Crueler.
His mouth moves with calculated ease, like he’s studying you. Like he wants to see how long you can last with the tension stretched this thin.
He barely gives you what you want—just enough heat to make your knees unsteady, just enough pressure to make you lean in.
When your hand fists in his shirt, tugging him closer, he lets out a quiet laugh against your lips.
“Impatient,” he mutters, and you feel it—low and hot—right in your throat.
And then he deepens the kiss.
Because he knows you’re done pretending you don’t want it.
And he’s done pretending he doesn’t love watching you unravel.
But in the middle of it all—his fingers sliding under your shirt, your hands fisted in the back of his hair, breaths shared like secrets—
It hits you.
A crack of clarity.
Sharp and sudden, cutting through the haze.
You pull back.
Not far, but enough. Enough to breathe. Enough to speak.
“Why are you doing this?”
His brows knit, just slightly. You feel the shift in him, the quiet tension settling beneath the heat.
You keep going. You have to.
“What will you get out of the deal?”
Your voice is low, but steady. The question tastes bitter in your mouth—maybe because you’ve been trying to pretend it didn’t matter.
But it does. It always did.
He watches you, smoke still clinging to his breath, his thumb pausing on your skin.
And for a moment, he doesn’t answer.
Like he’s deciding what version of the truth to give you.
Like he’s debating if you’ve earned it.
He fully pulls away, the warmth of his body gone in an instant.
You watch as he straightens his spine, smooths down his collar with one hand, runs the other through his wind-tousled silver hair—like he’s putting his armor back on. Like he needs the distance again.
“I’m not playing games,” he says.
His voice is low. Still sharp, but there’s something underneath now. Not heat. Not flirtation.
Something older. Quieter. Worn.
You cross your arms, still catching your breath. “Then what is this?”
He pauses.
You see the flicker in his eyes—a calculation, a hesitation. The part of him that always weighs what to say and what to bury.
Then his lips tug into that same maddening smirk.
“You’re just really pitiful,” he says, voice lazy with mock sympathy.
Your brows shoot up. “Excuse me?”
“Kind of like someone I knew,” he continues, like he didn’t just insult you to your face. His tone is still light, but something about the way he says it—too casual, too precise—makes you freeze.
He doesn’t elaborate right away. Just glances down at the city lights below, cigarette smoldering between his fingers again.
He takes one last drag from the cigarette before flicking it over the edge, watching the ember fall like a dying star.
Then he turns back to you—smirk faded now, voice lower, rougher. Real.
“Let’s just say—” he begins, eyes locking with yours,
“you get to use me to get whatever you want…”
A pause. A slow step closer.
“And I’ll use you to get whatever I want.”
He lets the silence stretch between you, lets the weight of the words hang there like smoke.
“Sounds fair?”
You don’t answer right away.
You just stand there—wind tousling your hair, the taste of smoke still clinging faintly to your lips—watching him.
Watching the way he doesn’t push.
Doesn’t ask again.
Just lets the offer hang in the air like a match waiting to be struck.
Your thoughts spiral—through the flickers of the film, the ache in your chest as you watched yourself play the shadow, Michaela’s bright voice, Caleb’s wandering gaze, Sylus’s mouth on yours, the weight of his hands, the things he said.
And the worst part?
The way all of it made you feel alive again.
Like something inside you had finally stirred.
Like you were tired of being careful. Tired of being quiet. Tired of waiting for someone else to hand you the pen to your own story.
You draw in a breath, meet his eyes.
“Fine,” you say, soft but steady.
“I’m in.”
His smile is slow. Pleased. Like he already knew.
But he says nothing. Just nods once and turns to leave, hands in his pockets, silver hair catching the rooftop light.
You don’t stop him.
You stay there for a moment longer, listening to the echo of your own heartbeat.
And when the rooftop door clicks shut behind him—
You’re still tasting sin.
Still thinking about the deal you just made.
And wondering who, in the end, will really get what they want.
2K notes · View notes
eelliotss · 3 months ago
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this is insane tysm I never thought id ever inspire someone to write anything but i really hope youll fall in love with writing!!! 💞💞💞
Scar Tissue, Chapter 1
Zayne x Reader. University AU. Reader is not MC. Slow-burn. Angst!
When you begin your university year with an accidental collision with her new professor, Dr. Zayne, your world is thrown into awkward chaos. What starts as a simple mishap spirals into a tense dynamic between you and the former surgeon. Word count - 4.3k
A/N: I was really inspired by the wonderful @eelliotss and their story "Borrowed Time". It made me want to try writing something, for the first time in my life. It was definitely a hard challenge, since English is not my first language, and I don't have a writing style, but I really wanted to create something as wonderful as them (please check out Borrowed Time, it's literally a masterpiece). I would be more than happy to hear criticism or suggestions, just be gentle, I'm really new to it. ♡
Throwing a playlist I used while writing, hopefully it will help you immerse yourself in the story.
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The fresh, slightly cold air tossed fallen leaves, lifting them from the ground, forcing them into a bizarre dance mid-air. Slightly cold autumn air is pushing its way through the tops of the trees, carrying careless talks and laughs of the students, who are slowly approaching the big, towering building. 
The start of the new academic year is always worrying in anticipation of new acquaintances, new friendships, and new experiences. But the least exciting part here is probably the lectures, a bunch of homework, that will keep you away from going out with your friends, and tests. Fixing the loose strap of your backpack, you slowly walk along the stone pathway, tossing the golden leaves with your shoes. The lingering summer memories are flashing in your mind, making you miss hot sunny days and carefree time away from the town. Approaching the big, open glass door, you look up at the large building with the flashy name of your university. Covering your mouth with your hand, you yawn, stepping over the doorstep. Even though you promised to go to bed earlier last night, you stayed up too late, like usual, playing games. It will be hard to get back into the “normal” schedule after three long months of going to bed at sunrise. A loud laugh and hustle behind makes you turn your head. A group of students, walking inside the building, was laughing and talking loudly, sharing some funny moments from their summer vacation. They were so loud that it was hard not to hear what they talked about. You huffed, turning your head away, when suddenly, you bumped into something. Or someone. 
A strong smell of cologne and coffee enveloped you when your nose touched the soft fabric of a coffee-colored coat. Base notes of wet moss and amber with light heart notes of jasmine and pine hit your sense of smell, leaving a transparent cocoon around you. A loud gasp escaped the lips of the person you just walked into. You slowly looked up with your guilty gaze, but you underestimated how high you had to lift your head. Your gaze stopped first on the steaming brown blotch staining his chest: a fresh splash of coffee. Then, higher, to meet a pair of deep hazel eyes burning with irritation. 
His pale face looked irritated. His refined features were nicely framed by the dark, short hair, which looked shiny and well-styled. His thick eyebrows were furrowed, making his eyes appear even more piercing. Scarred fingers were clenching the half-empty cup of coffee as if waiting for something. An apology, perhaps. You quickly snap back from observing the man, nodding your head in a guilty gesture. “Sorry, I didn’t mean to.” Your hands searched your pocket, getting out a clean handkerchief, and handing it to the man in front. He swiftly grabbed the cloth from you, rubbing it on the wet spot, seemingly making it worse, smearing the coffee around the white shirt. Mortified, you murmured another apology and turned on your heel, rushing toward the stairs to escape the heat of his gaze—and the burning embarrassment tightening in your chest.
Swearing under your breath, you quickly move up the stairs, hoping this encounter won’t cause any trouble for you. Your palm slightly tapped your forehead, as if punishing yourself for not being careful enough. He didn’t look like a student. Maybe the way he wasn’t rushing anywhere, like other students, or the fact that he looked older than all the boys around, made you think he was the new lecturer, or someone with a higher position. What can make it worse? 
The morning encounter disappeared from your mind really fast, in the rush of the day. Running around the halls, trying to find the correct lecture hall, and meeting with classmates quickly took your thoughts to a different place. Your phone was exploding with new group chats and new contacts, trying to keep up with everything. The buzz already made you miss the quiet of your room and the comfort of your bed. Quickly unfolding the piece of paper with your schedule, you glance at the sign with the room number. Making sure it’s the correct one, you step inside, looking for an empty desk. Your gaze fell on the empty desk near the window in the room's far corner. You never liked sitting right in front of the teacher's face. If you took the front row, it always made you feel more supervised. This could take away the pleasure of doodling when the lecture gets too dull. Just as the bell rang, the door slowly opened, and the sound of footsteps echoed in the spacious room. Weirdly punctual, you thought, tapping the pen on the empty page of your notebook. The teacher's arrival time tells a lot about their teaching and their temper. Someone who is constantly late is usually laid back and a really easy-going teacher, letting students slack, or will try to blend in and joke around with them. As for someone who arrives with the bell.. It can be a tough one. Meaning, no relaxing in their lessons. 
It was enough for you to see the coffee-coloured coat that flashed in the doorframe, as your head sank into your shoulders. Soon, his tall figure was standing next to the teacher's desk, as he carefully put the cup of hot, fresh coffee on the table, next to the pile of files. He didn’t seem to rush, slowly taking off his coat and placing it on the back of the chair, exposing the faint coffee stain on the white shirt. 
Arms crossed, as the gaze of his hazel eyes carefully studied the room. It stopped on you for a second too long, forcing you to look away with a hint of guilt, once again reminding you of the incident in the morning. You slid down the chair, grabbing your notebook and hiding your face. It seems like he didn’t forget about the spilled coffee as fast as you did, since it ruined his outfit for the day. And it’s the first day of the new year, what a look to show up in a stained shirt. He finally stopped drilling your notebook with his eyes, slowly walking in front of his desk and leaning on it. “I hope you all had a nice summer, but it’s time to get serious and put a great start to your new academic year,” his voice, calm yet loud and clear, filled the room. It didn’t sound as you imagined it would, and there were no angry notes, so it made you relax and brush off the embarrassment once again. “I’m Zayne Li, a former awarded Cardiac Surgeon from Akso hospital, and now, your new anatomy teacher. You can call me Doctor Zayne. Hopefully, we can all work well together and achieve great results by the end of the year.”    
A wave of whispers rumbled across the class. Zayne Li was a well-known surgeon in one of the most prestigious hospitals in the town—the person who conducted tons of scientific research and was even awarded for one of them. Students seemed to wonder why he quit his job to teach at the university. Giving up something you've built for a long time isn't logical. “You have a lot of questions, I see. You can ask,” he lets out a quiet chuckle, turning around and grabbing the files from the table, opening them, and scanning through the text. The voice from the first row yelled out first, “Dr. Zayne, why did you quit your job as a surgeon at Akso hospital?” Zayne stopped, tapping his finger on the hardcover of the files. “You can ask anything not related to my dismissal.” Other students started asking questions about his work. Some had questions about his research, while others said he inspired them to enter this university. Zayne graduated as the best student from this exact university, which many think made the place special, and studying here could open many doors in the future. 
As for you, your inspiration to enter this university is your parents. They insisted, you didn’t complain, since at the time, you didn’t have any ideas for your future direction. The physical therapist wasn’t that bad, and your grades allowed you to get in. Still, his answer left you wondering. What could make such a successful doctor leave his position to be a teacher? You trailed deep in your thoughts, doodling some chaos on the pages of your notebook. You didn’t notice how the conversation shifted from questions to introductions. Your name was called twice, before you finally came back to reality, lifting your head up, and getting up. “Sorry. Uh, that’s me. Nice to meet you, Dr. Zayne.” Still struggling to keep eye contact with the man, you stare at the coffee stain on his shirt. He seems to notice, letting out a quiet hum and ticking your name in his journal. ��You seem very windy today. Not the greatest first impression,” he murmured, looking down at his shirt. Some students turned their heads around to look at you. Annoyed, you don’t say anything, swiftly sitting back in your chair. Embarrassment burns in your chest, but it goes away fast. It must be the payback for his ruined outfit. Quickly wrapping up introductions, Zayne starts the lesson with some literature recommendations to get into the subject. Writing down the necessary books, you feel Zayne’s heavy gaze on you as you glance up. His unblinking hazel eyes, as if looking somewhere past you, make you feel cold shivers on your back. So much for wanting to stay “unnoticed”, that’s why you chose the furthest desk, but it seems like there’s no hiding in this class. 
After the bell rang, class ended. Everyone collected their scattered belongings, leaving the classroom. Zayne, on the other hand, wasn’t rushing to pack. His files were standing on the table in a really nice pile, placed on top of each other. He tried to be precise even in the way he put things on his desk. You were leaving last, since the way from the corner of the room to the exit door was the longest, but just as you prepared to step out of the class, you heard a clear call. “Hey. I think I should give this back to you.” Zayne reached into his pocket and handed you the handkerchief from earlier. Now, stained with coffee and shriveled, it was saturated with the smell of Zayne’s detergent, sitting in his pants pocket all day. “Don’t worry about it. I’m not mad. But you should be careful spilling someone’s hot drink like that. Others might not be as forgiving.” His strict tone echoed in your head, like a parent lecturing the child about putting on the hat before going outside. Your fingers slowly grab the handkerchief, shoving it into the open backpack. Your lips curve into a smile, which you usually give someone when you mess up, showing a barely visible dimple on your cheek. It seems that in that exact moment, Zayne froze on the spot. His fingers dug into the edge of the table, and his mind shifted somewhere far away from here, deep in his memories. Noticing that his consciousness left the walls of this room, you quietly smacked your lips, rocking back and forth. Maybe he tried to remember something, to tell you about an assignment, or something else, so you just decided to give him some time. But it didn’t look like he was about to return anytime soon, so you slowly started backing up from the class, looking all around the place in a silent embarrassment. “Soo-oo.. I think I will go, I need to find another lecture hall. Have a nice day, Dr. Zayne,” you murmured, quickly turning around and disappearing from the classroom, like the wind. You heard him say something in return, but you couldn’t understand it, since the sound of his voice was drowned in the crowded corridor. Blinking several times at a loss, you shake your head, trying to eliminate the feeling that your new teacher is a weirdo. After a tiresome first day, your next destination was the university library. You decided to grab all the literature needed for your new subjects while you were at it. The library hall was in the farthest corner of the building, so reaching a big room stacked with books took some time. A library assistant handed you a little piece of paper with blanks, so you could write down all the books you’re taking. You ran your fingers through sparkly clean shelves, which were polished before the start of the new year. Your hand stopped at the “scientific research” section for the correct title. You scoffed under your breath, fingers closing around a book with Zayne’s face staring back at you from the cover. “Recommending your own research as class literature,” you muttered. “What a braggart.” But the smug satisfaction barely had time to settle before a low hum sounded behind you. Your arms instinctively wrapped around the book, clutching it to your chest. You didn’t dare turn around. The scent of coffee hit your nose, sharp and unmistakable. A sigh slipped out of you, heavy with dread, as you slowly turned, already picturing the furious expression you’d seen that morning when you'd spilled his drink.
“I mean… that’s wonderful. You must be really proud of it.” The corners of your lips twitch as you force an awkward smile. He doesn’t react, just rolls his eyes and takes a slow sip of his caffeine-heavy drink. Your ears burn. No way you’ve embarrassed yourself twice in front of your new teacher on your very first day. And to top it off, insulted him to his face.
“I just wanted to see who would actually stop by the library to get the books,” he said, pausing to lick the bitter remnants from his lips, “so I could maybe point them out as dedicated students next time.” Then his gaze flicked toward you, sharper now. “But I wouldn’t mention you. Since you already think I’m bragging, you should go ahead and read all my research.” He tilted his head with clear irritation, then set his coffee cup on the nearby table. 
Zayne stepped forward, closing the distance between you in one long stride, never once meeting your eyes. Your fingers dug into the book’s hardcover, but your legs refused to move. His chest stopped just in front of your face when he finally closed his eyes and exhaled—a long, heavy breath, like the weight of the entire day had just dropped onto his shoulders.
“Move.” The word came low and calm, almost a whisper scraped from the back of his throat. It cuts through your trance like a blade. You jolted, stepping aside without a word. His hand brushed past you, reaching for the book you'd unknowingly been blocking. 
Finally, lowering the worn research in your hands, you feel another heavy weight pressing down on your arms. Zayne places a thick, glossy book on top of your little pile. He moves past you, calm and deliberate, retrieving his coffee from the table. He said nothing, leaving you in the quiet of a library, staring at his light smile from the book cover. You lift your head and furrow your eyebrows at his echoing presence. Shoving books in your backpack, you try to fit everything without damaging your belongings. You quickly fill in the book registration paper and leave it on the desk at the exit, sprinting out of the library and soon out of the building. In your thoughts, you are already home, leaving the heavy day behind the university doors. The trip home doesn’t take long. The bus ride almost lulls you to sleep, but you manage to jump out of your seat before missing your stop. Entering the small apartment building, you climb the stairs, dragging your feet behind you. Stopping in front of your apartment, you slowly open the door, yelling, “I’m home!” from the doorway. You hear the quiet hustle in the kitchen when a dark-haired girl peeks out of the corner. Seeing your exhausted face, she offers you a warm smile. “Oh, hi. How was the first day?”. She finally leaves the kitchen, wiping her hands with a stained towel. It’s been the second year you and your friend Simone have been renting an apartment together. Living with her was not draining. She was a great roommate, and it took some weight off your shoulders regarding payments.
“They already loaded us with a mountain of books to read, and I’ve managed to get on my new teacher’s bad side. Wouldn’t be surprised if he fails me.”  You flopped onto the couch, grabbing a pillow and pressing your face into it, trying to bury yourself in the soft, forgiving embrace and shut out the world. Simone laughed, perching on the armrest and promptly stealing the pillow, your only line of defense, exposing your face to the light. “No one’s going to fail you,” she said with a grin. “Just get your teacher something nice. A bottle of wine, some fancy chocolate—boom, apology accepted. Who wouldn’t love that?” She flashed that radiant smile again, the one that always, without fail, made you feel a little better. “I was just cooking. Food’ll be ready in ten. Go wash your hands.” But you were already sprung to your feet, yanking open your backpack and dumping the books onto the couch to make space for something else.
“You’re a genius! I’m getting an apology gift.” You were halfway out the door before you finished the sentence.
“You can start without me!” you shouted back. Simone didn’t say anything, but her smile lingered. Somehow, she always knew exactly what you needed—even when she didn’t realize it. 
The late afternoon air hit your face the moment you stepped outside—crisp, laced with the distant scent of city exhaust and someone grilling down the block. You didn’t slow your pace. You zigzagged past the corner store, dismissing the sad stack of mass-produced chocolate bars in the window. 
No, this needed to be thoughtful. Personal. Maybe even charming. If Zayne was the type to wear expensive cologne and carry himself like a walking thesis paper, he probably wasn’t a fan of cheap sweets or mugs that said #1 Professor.
A small boutique caught your eye, tucked between a flower shop and a bookstore. Its window displayed neatly wrapped gift boxes, jars of imported honey, artisan teas, and a pyramid of dark chocolate truffles that looked sinfully expensive. 
A soft chime rang as you stepped inside. The place smelled like cinnamon, cedar, and vanilla—like December wrapped in tissue paper.
A woman behind the counter looked up with a warm smile. “Looking for something in particular?”
“Yeah,” you said, breathless. “Something for a… teacher. As an apology.”
Her smile widened knowingly. “Tough start to the year?”
You nodded, laughing a little under your breath. She guided you toward a velvet-lined shelf of truffles—dark, decadent, and neatly boxed with subtle gold accents. One label caught your eye: Dark Chocolate with Whiskey Ganache. You picked it up. Rich. A little bold. Slightly dangerous. Just like the man you were trying to appease.
“This one,” you said, nodding. “It feels… honest.”
“Excellent choice,” the woman said, ringing you up. “Strong enough to say sorry without groveling.”
You left the shop ten minutes later, the gift bag swinging gently at your side. In it was your olive branch—boozy, bittersweet, and slightly impulsive, just like you. Simone was right. You couldn’t undo the mess, but maybe you could sweeten the aftermath. 
Arriving back home, you realize that Simone has already vanished from the apartment. You notice a little note on the fridge, with her pretty, neat handwriting: I’ll be late, don’t forget to eat something. You look around to notice a small plate of pasta with meat sauce on the table, served with cheese, and even cutlery laid out for you, like a quiet invitation. 
A warmth spreads through your chest like a blanket. You didn’t need grand gestures. This was enough. This was Simone. Thoughtful even in something so simple as making dinner. 
You scooped up the plate and made your way to your small but clean room. It was lined with bookshelves, scattered with little figurines, and glowing softly from a tangle of LED lights. Nothing extravagant—just yours. 
Devouring the still-warm pasta, one hand already hovering over your laptop’s trackpad. The screen lit up as you opened your browser, fingers hesitating for only a second before typing: Zayne Li. The search bar flickered, loading results almost instantly. Articles. Publications. Academic praise. But nothing, nothing about his sudden departure from Akso Hospital. 
You leaned in, scanning the titles again. If someone like him, arguably one of the best surgeons in the country, had walked away from such a high position, shouldn’t that be front-page news? 
You even found his social media profile, though it felt sterile, curated, like a gallery where only the right parts of a life were displayed. Polished. Untouchable. Whatever happened… it was hidden. Intentionally. A soft sigh escaped you as you leaned back in your chair, pushing the empty plate aside. 
If the truth was hidden five feet deep, you weren’t curious enough to grab a shovel. At least, not yet. So you decided to get your mind off it by launching your favorite game, slightly glancing at the gift box, in anticipation of tomorrow.
The morning was quiet, cold but fresh and welcoming. You arrived earlier for the possibility of meeting up with Dr. Zayne and giving him your apology present, that you so thoughtfully prepared yesterday. The university halls are half-empty, still sleepy from the quiet night. Only the most dedicated students roamed these corridors at this hour. Those chasing scholarships, high honors, or simply the peace in the quiet of the library. 
You look through the schedule sheet, scanning the list of classrooms and lecture slots, stopping on the ones marked with his name. First period. It has to be the chance. But, arriving at the destination, you’re met with silent, empty walls. Your stomach twisted. What if you can’t find him before classes start? What if you lose the moment, or worse? What if the chocolate melts? You run around the halls, mind racing with possibilities. Where would Dr. Zayne go this early? What is the first thing he does in the morning? Then it hits you. Coffee. Of course. Without hesitation, you pivot towards the side exit to find a small coffee corner in the university garden. And there he is. Sitting alone on a bench, a paper cup cradled in his hands. He’s not on his phone. He’s not reading. Just sitting. His eyes are distant, as if he’s entertained by some unspoken deep thoughts. The rising steam curls around his face in soft spirals, making his glasses fog. He didn’t have those yesterday, but chose to wear them while drinking a hot drink. 
You slow your step, heart thudding from the sprint. Finally, taking a deep breath, you walk closer to the bench, figuring out how to start your heartfelt apology, since you didn’t think it through before. Your fingers clench around the pretty red box as you slowly nod, clearing your throat, trying to grab his attention, as he seemed not to notice you.       
“Good morning, Dr. Zayne.”
He glances up, brows faintly raised. You push through the knot forming in your throat.
“I know we had a… rough start.” You try to keep your tone light, but the words already feel like too much and not enough at the same time. “And I realize we’ll have to tolerate each other for the rest of the year, so—”
A pause. Your mind races ahead of your mouth, tripping over everything you didn’t rehearse.
“I just wanted to apologize for yesterday. I wasn’t careful and didn’t mean to sound rude or disrespectful. Especially toward your work.”
You extend the box toward him, almost too fast, and squeeze your eyes shut the moment it leaves your hand, bracing for laughter, or worse, complete dismissal.
“I don’t like alcohol.” He cut as sharp as a blade, making you freeze on spot. Somewhere in your mind, you could almost see a black Game Over screen flashing across your vision. 
Of course, you managed to mess up again, and how did that even happen? There’d been no way to know his preference, but that didn’t make the sting any less brutal. Pulling your hands away, your face darkened. Your shoulders dropped, the heat rising in your cheeks, as you were already prepared to leave without saying a thing, because it seems like a silent retreat is better than taking the embarrassing hit in the gut. 
“But you put in the effort,” he murmured, voice low and edged with something unreadable. “I appreciate that.”
A faint smirk tugged at the corner of his lips.
“I accept your apology. Though you should know. I was never mad to begin with.”
You blink, caught off guard.
“I’ve had worse from first-years. It takes more than spilled coffee and a stray comment to make me hate someone.” 
Zayne’s long fingers grasped the box, tucking it neatly under his arm as he rose from the bench in one smooth motion. His height loomed for a second before he gave a small, deliberate nod—an understated gesture of gratitude. Then, unexpectedly, his hand landed on your shoulder. Firm. Measured. His gaze locked onto yours, eyes scanning your expression with unsettling precision, making you feel like after a carrot, there will be a stick. “You really are.. windy.” 
It wasn’t quite an insult. Not quite praise either. But it lingered in the air, and for some reason, it felt like he wasn’t entirely wrong. With that, he disappeared from your view, behind your back, entering the building, leaving a somewhat bitter aftertaste of your failure. But at least you know your teacher is not holding a grudge, so there’s nothing to worry about. Right? 
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