#help i need more recognition
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I think he's going insane while the lights flicker on and off
#fnaf#fnaf dca#dca fandom#dca#fnaf security breach#sundrop#fnaf moon#moondrop#eclipse#screaming#help him#help i need more recognition#plz reblog#loud#STAY IN THE BOX#NO#moon#sun
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"wylan almost got away with lying to kaz" this "wylan stood up to kaz" that. WHAT ABOUT MY GOAT KUWEI??! HE LITERALLY ACTUALLY LIED TO KAZ AND GOT AWAY WITH IT (pretending not to know kerch)!! LIKE KAZ LITERALLY NEVER KNEW, THEY ALL THOUGHT HE WAS THE POOR INNOCENT KID WHEN HE'S LITERALLY SO SMART AND SCHEMING!!
#i'm so done with people overshadowing kuwei#like dont gwt me wrong i love love love wylan#but god why do we have to erease everything kuwei has done just to olace wylan on a pedestal#if kuwei has no fans then i'm dead#like i feel like the fandom hatred for kuwei acrually needs to be studied#but the shit hes hates on for is honestly so fucking stupid when in reality anything hes done is the least worrying thing#like what about the fact that kaz is actually morally gray and for all the lives he's helped there are double the lives he's wronged#in that sure hes jot the worst person in the barrel but why do we hate more on kuwei's relatively tame actions than kaz#like a ything good kaz has done was either for his friends or for some sort of reward#sure hes done some good things as well#but the majority of the time it is NOT our the goodness of his heart#(still love him though)#i'll make on actual post explaining my thoughts on kaz eventually#my point is just the kuwei is overhated and deserves more recognition#soc ck#six of crows#crooked kingdom#soc#ck#six of crows kuwei#kuwei#kuwei yul bo#wylan van eck#wylan hendriks#kaz brekker
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im sorry, i paid no attention to this scene but even i got the signficance of brushing your teeth with a water bottle while staring at an addict huffing on the street
#you know how hard it is caring about something as menial and basic like brushing your teeth???#the rage on her motions. the recognition through the other.her fight for everything she built now being demolished#look at this woman she was working 10hs a day or more as a 8yo and only managed by abusing substances. look at her!#look at her reaching at her past with hatred and fear. her fate she avoided for years there on the streets of the town she helped ruin#everything is so old and abandoned and she in her grief and anger needs to mantain the tempers tamed and her teeth white#harmony cobel i love you#severance spoilers#i have no media literacy and did find this poignant idk idk idk#maybe i am reaching but i think is so very clever as a way to tell the state of the community there#and also foreshadowing for her past issues
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idk if anything, i dont think pmd2 hero “derailed” partner’s destiny and stole their life so much as they got partner to actually start the train in the first place because partner was afraid of crashing it
#‘’you stole my place as the hero’’ is an interesting concept but i really dont think it works for these characters#especially since like. we didnt steal the spotlight from partner? the narrative and townsfolk praise and adore BOTH hero and partner#if anything partner technically got sole recognition for a while when hero was dead and it made them miserable#idk. i think this idea is more interesting if it applies to someone who was thrown to the side. like in spiderverse#not someone who still saves the world and is still adored by everyone and now has a best friend to enjoy it with#echoed voice#idk it just feels mean…#sorry. guy who is autistic abt this game and gets annoyed kinda easily by ‘’what if you actually sucked and ruined everything?’’ theories#like i always thought the og timeline failed bc partner didnt have someone like hero to encourage them#and help them grow to be the person the planet needed
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I don't hate my job or anything, but man, being a float educator is so fucking thankless
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Man, I wish someone was able to interview Melanie and Peter for their contributions to Alan Wake 2. Behind The Voice said he sadly couldn't reach Melanie and idk if he ever tried to reach out to Peter.
They deserve to get more, detailed spotlights on them for their performances in this game.
#my posts#alan wake 2#melanie liburd#peter franzén#idc if peter is gonna be awkward about it like he did in that remedy released video i just need to know more about the koskelas#and how much he helped shape them to the characters they are#same for melanie i would love to hear her insights and hwat her experience were on set#i dont believe she's done mocap before? (im not familiar with her earlier work) so knowing more about that would be dope too#THE POTENTIAL PEOPLE HELLO someone plz get on it T_T tey deserve more recognition#melanie especially since she was the dual PROTAGONIST#my ramblings#saga anderson#koskela brothers#ilmari huotari
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How life feels after I block the people who are obviously using AI to create their content



#[rawbin]#Please do not pollute fandom spaces with your AI content#ESPECIALLY don’t try to label it as your own.#not gonna name any names in case I’m wrong but man.#some of u barely even try to hide it 😭😭😭#I can very rarely tell when something is AI and usually need it pointed out to me so you know it’s bad when *I* can tell#It’s so inconsiderate and plainly weird to pretend as if you’ve written something when you only typed in a prompt for the AI :/#I’m not gonna judge students who use AI to help them write essays too hard cause like. I get it it’s tough#but don’t fucking use that shit for what’s meant to be CREATIVE WRITING in a fandom space it’s so gross and dishonest#I get you want recognition and you want to be known and you want to have an audience but it’ll be so much more rewarding for EVERYONE if -#- you just put in the effort to do that yourself.
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SO BASICALLY…. I defeated Strider Hiryu in Teppen and what happens next is shocking !!!


#this loser got into strider recently ahahhahahhaha#OK BUT FR HIRYU IS SOOOOO COOL LIKE AAAAA#RAGHHHH I HATE HIM SO MUCH HE’S BEEN STUCK ON MY MIND FOR A WEEK#ALSO THIS GAME NEEDS MORE RECOGNITION GUYS PLS TALK MORE ABOUT STRIDER PLS PLSPLS#Strider Hiryu#teppen#capcom#HELP I NEED TO STUDY FOR EXAMS BUT IM LOSING MY SHIT OVER A NINJA ASSASSIN INSTEAD BYEEEE
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2 sketches I did lol i liked how howl turned out and not not me howl howl from howls moving castle. Wow that's a lot of howls eat a gummie for ever time I hay howl lol anyyyyy who that sundrop is for a tik tok that I'm doing that I might post here but yeah hope yall like the sketches
Thies 2 characters will always be my favorites ♡♡♡♡
Well not to mention yhe soul eater and stuff to BUT WE DONT TALK ABOUTNTHAT YET till I post it tm
#fnaf#fnaf dca#dca fandom#dca#sundrop#fnaf security breach#howls moving castle#howl pendragon#digital art#anime art#art#plz reblog#more recognition#help i need more recognition
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Obviously if this happened The Incredibles wouldn’t have a plot but consider since the US government seemingly paid for their whole relocation and house, meaning the Parrs have 1 less major expense than most people, do they even need Bob to work at the insurance desk job?
Like what’s stopping him from quitting and going to go be a firefighter instead?
Is his insurance job also a part of the super relocation program and is government mandated or something?
#Incredibles#the incredibles#Even if the desk job pays more it’s not like he needs more money to maintain his family’s lifestyle#i think Bob would be way happier as a fireman imo#he gets to help people#he gets to rescue people/carry them out of danger#it’s a well respected job#he gets the hero recognition he wants#no one’s going to notice if he accidentally breaks a wall or two cause the fire did it
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im ngl i had a lil breakdown before my shower (which i took just before i went to bed to chill and watch the new eps) abt some thought-id-already-worked-all-thru-it irl stuff that resurfaced on me like trauma tends to and i just
it made everything in the show so. I don't know how to say it right. but i feel seen and understood and emotionally overwhelmed in a safe yet weird way, just like i did with a lot of s1 and I am Feeling So Much akdnfkgb (i cannot stress enough that this is a Good Thing and I'm absolutely thrilled and happy with the new eps and like. Going to be fine mentally I just gotta wrangle this like i have the times before.)
#text post#god i need a therapist that specialises in PTSD when i can afford therapy again#in the meantime recognition of the self thru the admired other while im in this state weirdly helps#makes me feel like im gonna burst out of my skin and I'm blasting metal in my ear buds to deal with that for now#gonna sleep eventually#i think lmao#im fine honestly bc like. this is not my first breakdown by any means but just. the fucking timing could not have been better#that said i both need a hug and absolutely could not handle being touched rn so that's something#no one's gonna read this far so im gonna just let myself have one little extra messy vent in that#my stupid fucking dad triggered part of this last one and I'm so mad abt it#he doesn't give two fucks abt me now (but he'd pretend to if he saw me in person bc jason LOVES keeping up appearances)#and he would just do a little nod and smile and talk over me telling him all that's happened this last year#i moved across the fucking country with help from friends so i wouldn't wind up dead in ND#and that's the thing i keep surviving and I dont understand why when I'm so often stressed and struggling to want to live#that and more has been sitting weighing and i just. want to tell him all of this and for him to be proud of me#he'll never be proud of me the way i want bc even my mum hasn't pulled that off#where they're proud of me as I am with no caveats or hiding parts of myself#if u think this is bad pls know i deleted a maximum tags tag essay/trauma dump just before this on this post lmao#i am In The Soup rn but it's gonna be fine#gonna rewatch s2 eps and be slightly but safely triggered by bits of ed and izzys stuff and get stoned and try to. process feelings#find some ptsd therapy worksheets online like dr. blohm suggested i try#forgive me the long tags and scroll by it fast if u want/need friends ill try to contain my current mess to this post & few others
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silver has to help eleanor and anne's plan to kill the men not just because of his precarious position and need for powerful allies but also because he is max and he needs to save himself and if he doesn't he can't survive which also part of why max couldn't kill him (aside from "i would have had to live with it") because she's him and killing him means killing herself and they both need to survive. send post.
#anyway he doesn't know this at the moment i mentioned but max DOES when they confront each other all that time later. need that clear.#do you even care they are each other. do you get it do you get it?#and silver helps seal their intertwined paths in this act. there was the moment of recognition and if she had died then#none of what happens through the story the rest of the way makes sense. gripping your shoulders does this make sense to you#its his self preservation manifesting in more than one way on instinct because it has to happen that way#one day ill post my whole twin tag doc somewhere and it will be insane#twin tag#black sails for ts#if that slips through the crack sorry main tag doesn't need this
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Here something I did for my friends brithday she requested sonic so I did it for her!
(Also I need commissions to pay for my school please commission me if you can)
#sonic the hedgehog#sonic#sonic fanart#art style#artist#ditgital art#digital drawing#rings#green hill zone#render#artists on tumblr#help i need more recognition#i need commissions#reblog plz#please commission me
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how long before we fall in love - choi seungcheol imagine
the way i was smiling, throwing air punches when i wrote this. pure 100% fluff coming your way!!!🥺😭🤭 (my head screaming SANA GETS NYO KO as i write this)
you can follow me on x, my un there niniramyeonie 😊🌻
for my other svt fics, check them here
All works are copyrighted ©scarletwinterxx 2025 . Do not repost, re-write without the permission of author.
(photos not mine, credits to rightful owner)



You’re nursing the last of your drink, ice clinking against the glass as you swirl it with deliberate disinterest, hoping the guy beside you gets the hint. He doesn't. His hand lingers too close to your elbow, and every laugh he exhales smells like beer and desperation.
You've already tried subtle. You even lied about having a boyfriend — twice. Still, he leans in with that rehearsed smirk like he's the one doing you a favor.
You scan the room, fast. Desperation breeds boldness, and tonight, you’re emboldened.
Then you see him.
He’s impossible to miss. Seated at the far end of the bar, broad shoulders framed in black, head dipped low as he nurses something amber in a short glass. He looks like he belongs somewhere darker, quieter. Maybe someplace where men don’t smile, only nod.
You’re not even sure how your legs carry you there, but in three long strides, you’re beside him, heart skittering in your chest like it knows you’ve made a gamble. He glances up, and for a second, you're sure this was a mistake but there's no time for second-guessing.
“Hey, babe,” you say, and your voice barely wavers. “Sorry I took so long.”
His eyes narrow a fraction, and for one charged second, silence stretches between you like a fuse waiting to be lit.
Then his expression shifts. It's subtle, the faintest curl of his mouth, a spark of recognition in his eyes that wasn’t there before.
“There you are,” he says, low and even, like the words were always meant for you. He slips an arm around your waist with a kind of confidence that feels too natural, too smooth.
You think you’ve pulled it off — until a voice slices through the act.
“Seungcheol,” she purrs. She’s suddenly there, close enough that you feel the static of her presence before you even see her. “You weren’t gonna introduce me to your little friend?”
You tense, barely hiding the wince. The stranger, Seungcheol, doesn’t move his arm.
His voice is calm, even, as if this happens all the time. “Not now, Jiwon”
“But babe—”
He doesn’t even look at her. “And how many times do I have to tell you to not call me that”
Something in his tone makes her falter. She huffs, audibly, but walks away with a forced flick of her hair.
You glance up at him, parting your lips to apologize, but he cuts you off before you can speak.
“You okay?” he murmurs, just for you and you don’t know why but you believe him. You nod.
He leans in just a little, just enough that the warmth of him slips past your skin. “You want me to make sure he stays away?”
And god help you, you say yes.
Seungcheol shifts in his seat, gaze sharp now, trained somewhere over your shoulder. You don’t even have to turn to know the persistent guy’s still hovering. You can feel the weight of him, orbiting.
“Stay close,” Seungcheol says, barely more than a breath against your ear. It shouldn’t send a chill down your spine, but it does.
He stands in one smooth motion, hand still warm against your lower back as he guides you forwar. You catch the guy’s expression the moment he sees who you’re with now. The faux confidence drains from his face in real-time, replaced by something caught between confusion and an almost primal, involuntary instinct to back off.
“Problem?” Seungcheol asks him. He’s not loud. Doesn’t need to be. There’s something in the way he holds himself, loose and deadly, like a predator who doesn’t have to growl to be heard.
The guy lifts his hands in weak surrender. “Nah, man. Just talking.”
“You were done talking when she walked away.”
It’s not a threat. It’s a statement. Inevitable. Irrefutable.
The guy backs off, muttering something that doesn’t sound like an apology, but it doesn’t matter. He’s gone. You exhale for the first time in what feels like minutes.
Seungcheol turns to you again, and just like that, the sharpness in him softens—no less intense, but different now. He looks at you like he’s cataloging something he doesn’t quite understand yet.
“You okay?” he asks again, but this time the question feels more layered. Not just are you safe, but what made you need someone like me?
You nod, slower this time. “Yeah. Thanks. That was… I didn’t expect you to actually go along with it.”
He shrugs. “You looked like you needed out.”
There’s a beat of silence, then—
“You wanna sit?” he asks, gesturing to his now-vacant seat. “I won’t bite. Unless that’s what you’re into.”
It’s deadpan. Almost. You glance at him and find the smallest glint of mischief tucked in the dark of his eyes.
You sit. Maybe it’s the adrenaline, or maybe it’s something else entirely but you get the distinct feeling your night just shifted on an axis you didn’t see coming.
You’ve barely settled into the seat beside him when you feel the disturbance before you see it. She’s back. Jiwon. Her heels click soft and calculated across the floor, posture loose but eyes laser-focused on Seungcheol. She doesn't bother with you, not really.
She stops at his other side, voice syrupy. “Thought I’d grab you that drink you like,” she says, holding it out like a peace offering. Like she’s done this before and won.
But Seungcheol doesn’t even glance at the glass. He doesn’t blink.
“I’m good here,” he says, calm as still water. “With my girl.”
It hits with the kind of weight that lands sharp but quiet. No performance, no dramatic pause. Just absolute certainty, smooth as silk and impossible to argue with.
You blink. My girl?
Then, as if on cue, he leans in—closer than he’s been all night. His hand brushes against your thigh under the bar, casual but unmistakable. The space between you disappears, and suddenly, all you can see is him.
The edge of his mouth tilts just slightly, a private smirk made only for you.
“I help you,” he murmurs, voice pitched low, just for your ears. “You help me.”
Like a switch, you slip into the role. No hesitation. No breath to second-guess.
You lean in until you’re practically folded into his side, your shoulder brushing his chest, the scent of him filling your senses like a hit of something you’re not supposed to want.
Your fingers find his thigh beneath the bar, light but deliberate, and when you turn your head to face her, your expression is sugar-laced steel.
“Thanks for keeping my boyfriend company,” you say, voice sweet enough to rot, “but we’re good now.”
Jiwon stiffens. You see it in the tight pull of her jaw, the way her hand curls around the untouched glass like she might throw it but she doesn’t say anything. Not really. Just a scoff, quiet and bitter, before she turns on her heel and disappears into the crowd again.
The moment she’s gone, Seungcheol exhales a laugh. Low. Quiet. Almost impressed.
“Well damn,” he says, tilting his head to look at you properly. “Didn’t think you had that in you.”
You arch a brow. “What, the spine or the spite?”
His grin widens, lazy and wolfish. “Both.”
You should pull away. You should return to your drink, your solitude, the night you had before this turned into something else entirely.
But you don’t.
Because now, you’re curious—and curiosity is a dangerous thing when someone like Seungcheol is involved. He smirks again, but there’s something different behind it then he leans down, slow enough to feel deliberate, and you feel it:
The brush of his lips against your bare shoulder.
Barely there. Barely anything. But it sets off a fire low in your belly, a spark you weren’t expecting and definitely weren’t prepared for. Your breath catches, and you turn your head to say something but you’re interrupted.
“Yo, Choi!” a voice calls out, casual and easy, and you look up just as two guys approach the table.
They’re both tall, well-dressed, and annoyingly attractive in that infuriating way that only works because they know it. The one with the long and cat-like grin lifts his brows as he takes in the scene. Your hand still on Seungcheol’s thigh, your body tucked into his side, his lips a breath away from your skin.
“Are we interrupting?” the long haired one asks
Seungcheol doesn’t move away. If anything, his arm tightens slightly around you. “If I say yes, will you go away”
The other one—gentler-looking, nudges his friend. “Jeonghan, stop being an ass. Hi,” he says, this time to you. “I’m Joshua. You?”
You give your name, and Jeonghan grins like you just told him a secret. “Cute. She’s cute.”
Seungcheol doesn’t say anything. He just takes a sip from his drink but there’s something in the way his thumb traces idle circles against your hip that says plenty.
“You’re not usually the type to play house, Seungcheol,” Jeonghan adds, sliding into the seat across from you both. “What’s this, new leaf?”
“Maybe I like what I’m playing with,” Seungcheol says, and his voice is so calm, so unapologetic, that for a second, even you forget this started as pretend.
Joshua raises a brow but doesn’t push it. He just smiles a little, as if he already sees where this is going before either of you do. And when you feel Seungcheol’s hand settle more firmly against your thigh, like he’s staking a claim in front of his friends.
A few drinks later, your head’s pleasantly light, the warmth of alcohol and laughter still lingering in your chest. Jeonghan and Joshua had finally wandered off to harass someone else, leaving you and Seungcheol alone again, though somehow the silence between you isn’t awkward—it’s alive.
You glance at your phone, blinking at the time. Late.
You push your glass away and sigh, “Alright, I should probably call it. Before I start thinking karaoke’s a good idea.”
Seungcheol chuckles, low and easy. “You’d make a great bad decision at karaoke.”
You shoot him a look, but you’re smiling. “I’m not drunk enough to embarrass myself like that.”
“Pity. I’d pay good money to hear you scream-sing something tragic.”
You snort. “You’re not even pretending to be nice.”
He tilts his head, mock thoughtful. “Did I ever pretend?”
You open your mouth to fire back something snarky, but the moment shifts. Just slightly. Just enough.
You glance toward the exit, suddenly uneasy. The weight of earlier brushes the edge of your thoughts, and now that the buzz is wearing down, the memory of that guy—the lingering stare, the way he didn’t get the hint—sticks.
Seungcheol notices. Of course he does. His eyes sharpen, but his voice stays light.
“Want me to walk you out?”
You hesitate then nod. “Actually… would it be weird if I asked you to drive me home?”
His brows rise just a touch but he doesn’t hesitate. “Not weird,” he says. “I was hoping you'd ask.”
You raise a brow, teasing. “You were hoping?”
“I mean, you’re kind of glued to me tonight,” he says, smirking as he stands, grabbing his jacket. “Thought I’d return the favor.”
You follow him out, the air outside cooler than expected. He opens the passenger door like it’s instinct—like he’s done this for you a hundred times already—and when you slide in, he leans down just enough that your eyes meet.
“You trust me to drive you home?” he asks, voice lower now, a touch more serious, but still laced with that lazy confidence.
You look up at him through your lashes, lips quirking. “I don’t know. Should I?”
And just like that, the door shuts with a soft click and your pulse doesn’t quite settle the whole ride home. When he slides into the driver’s seat, the engine purring to life beneath his hands, you glance sideways at him, half-joking, half-not, voice just a little too casual.
“I’m not gonna end up in a true crime documentary, right?”
He smirks without looking at you, eyes on the road as he pulls out of the lot. “Nah. Too much paperwork.”
You laugh, but he doesn’t stop there.
“If I was gonna murder you, I wouldn’t have bought you drinks first. That’s just inefficient.”
You raise a brow. “Wow. Comforting.”
He glances over at you, one hand loose on the wheel, the other resting near the gearshift, his voice a bit softer now
“I mean, you approached me. Technically, this is your villain origin story.”
You feign scandal. “So I lured you in.”
“Exactly. Innocent-looking girl at a bar, bold enough to lie her way into my lap? Yeah, you’re the dangerous one here.”
You roll your eyes, but there’s a grin tugging at your lips. “You think I’m innocent-looking?”
He cuts his eyes toward you, a slow once-over that makes the air between you crackle.
“I think you’re a lot of things,” he says. “But innocent? Not buying it.”
And just like that, the car gets a little quieter. Not uncomfortable. Just… charged.
And you wonder, as the streetlights blur past the windows, what you’ve really gotten yourself into tonight.
“Oh,” you say, feigning surprise, a slow smirk curling at your lips. “So you’ve got me all figured out already?”
He glances over, and this time he doesn’t hide the smile.
“Didn’t say that,” he replies smoothly. “I said I’m not buying the innocent act. Big difference.”
You hum, dragging your gaze out the window like you're not grinning.
“Maybe I’m just mysterious,” you tease. “Hard to read. Dangerous, even.”
He snorts. “You’re definitely dangerous.”
“Yeah?” you ask, turning back to him, playful but edged with something more. “Afraid I’ll break your heart?”
He laughs once but then his eyes flick over to you, and it’s different now. He’s not smiling anymore, not quite. His voice drops, soft but steady.
“Nah,” he murmurs, “I’m enjoying this too much.”
You don’t answer right away, and neither does he. The quiet stretches, dense with something neither of you name. But when his hand brushes yours over the center console—barely there, just a question—you don’t pull away.
“And you?” he says, voice quiet, like he’s easing into something he actually wants the answer to. “How come, out of everyone there… you suddenly let yourself strut my way?”
“I don’t know,” you say at first, then pause. “You just looked like the kind of guy who wouldn’t ask questions.”
He huffs a laugh, amused. “You were banking on me being cooperative?”
“I was banking on you being scary enough to make the other guy piss himself.”
“And I was.”
You grin despite yourself. “So humble.”
He finally turns to look at you fully, eyes dark but curious, a faint crease in his brow like he’s studying you a little deeper now.
“But that’s not it,” he says. “Not really.”
You tilt your head. “No?”
“No. You could’ve gone to the bartender. The bouncer. Your friends, if you had any there. But you came to me.”
You’re quiet for a beat too long, because—yeah. He’s right.
So you shrug, pretending it’s simple when it’s not. “Guess I like walking toward the fire sometimes.”
He laughs again, deeper this time, but there’s something thoughtful behind it.
“Then lucky for you,” he murmurs, eyes still on you, “I don’t burn easy.”
And your heart? Yeah. It skips. Hard.
=
The next morning, Seungcheol walks into the office ten minutes late with zero regrets and exactly one iced Americano in hand, looking irritatingly composed for someone who got maybe four hours of sleep.
He’s barely set his cup down when Jeonghan’s voice sings from across the room.
“Well, well, well—if it isn’t Mr. I-Don’t-Do-Relationships strolling in like a man who definitely didn’t go straight home last night.”
Joshua looks up from his laptop, raising a brow with a barely contained smirk. “So… who was she?”
Seungcheol doesn’t answer. Just pulls off his jacket and hangs it up with surgical precision, like he’s trying not to indulge them.
Which, of course, only makes them hungrier.
“C’mon, Cheol,” Jeonghan pushes, trailing him to his desk like a cat stalking something shiny. “You had her in your lap half the night. You don’t cuddle in public. I didn’t even know you could cuddle.”
“Technically,” Joshua adds, “I think she was in the driver’s seat.”
“Literally and figuratively,” Jeonghan nods. “She had you wrapped. It was… inspiring.”
Seungcheol exhales through his nose and finally turns around, arms folded, leaning against the edge of his desk like he’s humoring children.
“She was someone who needed help,” he says evenly. “That’s it.”
Jeonghan’s eyes glint. “So you just happened to keep your hand on her thigh all night out of… community service?”
Joshua’s tone is gentler, but no less pointed. “You looked comfortable. Not pretending-comfortable. Just… real.”
Seungcheol hesitates. He hates that they’re good at this. That they know how to read the cracks in his tone.
“She was easy to talk to,” he admits. “Didn’t play games. No agenda.”
Jeonghan fake gasps. “Wait. You liked her.”
He rolls his eyes. “I didn’t say that.”
“You didn’t not say it,” Joshua counters.
Jeonghan grins like he just won something. “What’s her name?”
Seungcheol smirks now, because this is the part he won’t give them. “Wouldn’t you like to know.”
And when he turns back to his desk, his phone buzzes once.
A message from you.
You: So… if I walk into your office right now, am I gonna ruin your mysterious, emotionally unavailable persona?
He stares at it for a second, then smiles—small and private. Maybe he is in trouble. He stares at your text for a beat longer, thumb hovering over the keyboard like he’s weighing something heavier than the words.
Seungcheol: Only if you walk in looking like last night. My reputation wouldn’t survive it.
Seungcheol: Free for lunch? I’ll come to you.
He hits send before he can think better of it.
Across the room, Jeonghan is still dramatically theorizing about your identity, now halfway into a ridiculous monologue about you being an international art thief who seduced Seungcheol for corporate secrets.
He ignores it because right now, he’s more interested in seeing you again and if that means sneaking in an hour between meetings and pretending he’s not the kind of guy who clears his calendar for a woman he just met, then so be it.
A little past noon, your phone buzzes again. You’re mid-email, squinting at your screen, when the notification pops up.
Seungcheol: Outside. Come down. I brought bribes.
You blink. Bribes? What does that even mean? Curiosity wins out fast. You grab your phone, smooth your outfit and head down.
The moment you step out, you see him leaning against a sleek black car that absolutely screams expensive and unnecessary, sunglasses pushed up in his hair, holding a paper bag and two drinks.
Your brows lift. “So this is you not trying?”
He grins, looking annoyingly perfect for someone who probably woke up late and still somehow managed to make the pavement feel like a runway. “Told you. Bribes.”
You walk up slowly, eyeing the bag. “What is it?”
“Sandwiches. From that overpriced place near here. Hope you’re not one of those 'just salad' people.”
You narrow your eyes. “I contain multitudes.”
He chuckles, hands you your drink. “Good. You’ll need them to keep up.”
You gesture toward the car. “So, this your day job? Picking up women and showing off your mysterious wealth?”
He laughs genuinely, this time. “Would you believe me if I said I’m just a humble middle manager?”
You give him a long, skeptical once-over. “Not a chance.”
He opens the passenger door for you again like it's a habit. Like he already knows you’ll get in and you do. Because lunch with Choi Seungcheol? Yeah. That sounds like danger worth walking toward twice.
You slide into the passenger seat, you glance at him as he rounds the front of the car and settles into the driver’s seat again, placing the food carefully between you.
“Okay, so what is it that you actually do?” you ask, peeling open the sandwich wrapper, the scent already unfairly good.
He shrugs, like it’s no big deal. “Management. Mostly.”
“That’s vague as hell.”
“Intentionally,” he says, shooting you a sideways glance. “You’ll find I’m very good at withholding.”
You snort. “Is that your way of saying you’re emotionally constipated?”
“No, that’s me saying I like keeping some cards close.” He takes a bite of his sandwich, chews, swallows. “Makes things interesting.”
You hum, eyes narrowing just a touch. “So you’re not gonna tell me what your job actually is?”
He shakes his head slowly. “Not yet. I kind of like that you don’t know.”
You blink. “Why?”
He turns toward you fully now, one arm draped over the back of your seat, eyes lazy and unreadable but focused—very focused—on you.
“Because if you knew,” he says slowly, “you might treat me differently.”
Something flickers behind his tone. Not arrogance. Something quieter. Something worn and for a second, you forget you're supposed to be teasing him.
You hold his gaze. “Then maybe I’d rather not know.”
He searches your face for a beat, like he’s waiting for you to flinch, waiting for that inevitable shift he’s used to seeing in people when they do find out. But you don’t.
You just take another bite of your sandwich and speak through your smirk.
“So, Mr. Vague Middle Manager, are all your dates catered and chauffeured?”
That draws a full laugh out of him—deep and unguarded.
“This a date now?” he throws back.
You shrug with exaggerated innocence. “You did bring food. And bribes. And you’re staring at me like you wanna ruin my whole week.”
He hums, low and amused, eyes dropping to your lips and staying there just a little too long.
“Trust me,” he murmurs, “if I wanted to ruin your week… you’d know.”
And just like that, your heart forgets how to beat steady.
Again.
The place he takes you to is tucked away on a quiet side street. nothing flashy, no fancy valet, no five-star pretensions. Just the warm, familiar smell of grilled meat and the faint sizzle of something delicious already hitting a hot pan.
You recognize it immediately. The kind of Korean spot that’s half comfort, half chaos. Worn wooden tables, metal chopsticks in tin cups, steam clouding the windows from hot broth and soju-fueled laughter. A place where people don’t come to impress, they come because it feels like home.
He pulls the door open for you, and the ahjumma behind the counter beams when she sees him.
“Seungcheol-ah!” she calls, already bustling toward the kitchen. “Same table?”
He nods, bowing slightly in greeting.
You look at him sideways. “Regular, huh?”
He shrugs, the edge of his mouth twitching. “Told you. I like places where people don’t ask too many questions.”
She’s already setting the table as you both slide into the booth. The tabletop grill is already heating, meat—samgyeopsal, thick-cut and glistening—lands in the center with a satisfying thud.
He picks up the tongs like he’s done this a hundred times, which he probably has, and starts placing the pork belly on the grill, the sizzle instant and loud.
“Wow,” you say, smirking. “So this is how you impress women.”
“I’m feeding you, aren’t I?” he says, eyes focused on flipping the meat with practiced ease. “It’s a love language.”
“You do seem suspiciously fluent in this.”
“You gonna psychoanalyze me now?”
You lean your chin into your hand, watching him with lazy interest. “Maybe. Or maybe I just like watching you cook.”
He glances up, brow raised, but there’s a flicker of something else in his gaze now. That slow burn again.
“Careful,” he murmurs. “Flirting with me at a restaurant I come to every week? You’re treading into girlfriend territory.”
You pop a piece of kimchi into your mouth and smile like it’s nothing. “Wouldn’t want to ruin your reputation.”
“Too late.”
There’s something light about this but underneath, there's a current neither of you are pretending to ignore anymore.
He wraps a piece of grilled meat in lettuce, adds a bit of ssamjang and garlic, then holds it out across the table.
“For you,” he says, voice soft, hand steady.
You pause. Then lean forward, take it straight from his fingers, lips brushing his skin on the way.
And the look in his eyes?
Yeah, lunch just got a lot more complicated.
You're mid-chew when the ahjumma comes back over, wiping her hands on her apron, eyes sharp and curious as she sets another bowl of pickled radish down on the table.
She turns to Seungcheol with a knowing grin. “You’re not with the usual troublemakers today. Who’s this lovely girl? You got married and didn’t tell us?”
You almost choke. Seungcheol freezes for a secondbut then, smooth as ever, he swallows, glances at you, and smiles like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
“Not married yet,” he says casually, sliding his chopsticks into the rice like punctuation. “But I’m working on it.”
Your eyes snap to him. Excuse me?
The ahjumma gasps, clearly delighted. “Aigoo! She’s pretty and patient—finally, a girl who can handle you! Yah, I prayed for this!”
You blink at her. Then at Seungcheol. He’s not even flinching. The man has the audacity to look pleased.
“Ah, he’s exaggerating,” you say quickly, giving the auntie a smile and trying not to combust. “We just—”
“—Make a good team,” Seungcheol finishes for you, eyes flicking to yours with a glint of mischief. “She keeps me in line.”
The ahjumma sighs dreamily, clearly buying the whole act. “Don’t let him go, sweet girl. He might act cool, but he needs someone who’ll yell at him when he forgets to eat. This one’s stubborn.”
You nod solemnly. “He does give off that energy.”
“Exactly!” she points at you like you’re a genius. “You understand already! Just marry him.”
Seungcheol coughs into his drink, but he’s grinning now, and you can’t help it—you’re laughing, eyes narrowed at him across the table.
The auntie bustles off, muttering about bringing more side dishes for the happy couple.
You lean in, tone low and pointed. “Married? Really?”
He shrugs, unabashed. “What? You handled it like a pro. I’m impressed.”
“You’re impossible.”
“And yet,” he says, sliding another wrap your way, “you’re still here.”
You hate how easy it is to smile at him. Hate it even more that he’s smiling too—like he likes whatever this is just as much as you do.
The ride back to your office is quieter, he pulls up in front of your building, shifts the car into park, and glances over at you.
You unbuckle your seatbelt slowly. “Thanks for lunch.”
“You make it sound like I’m not planning on doing it again.”
You grin, leaning just a little closer. “Oh? Planning on making a habit out of me?”
His smirk is there, but softer now. “Thinking about it.”
You hop out before you say something stupid. Before he says something worse. But before you can shut the door, he leans across the console and says, quieter:
“Text me when you get up there. Just so I know you made it.”
You roll your eyes, but your smile betrays you. “Yes, Dad.”
He raises a brow. “You really want to test that boundary this early?”
You shut the door before your brain melts and give him a mock salute through the window.
By the time Seungcheol pulls into the garage under his own office building, he’s five minutes behind schedule and vaguely irritated at how fast traffic moved now that he was in a rush.
He checks his phone in the elevator: one message from you.
You: Alive. Fed. Still thinking about that ssam you made. 8/10.
He grins to himself just as the elevator dings open on his floor. Unfortunately, his mood immediately sours when he sees who’s already in the conference room, arms folded, feet on the table like he owns the place.
Jeonghan.
The second Seungcheol steps through the door, Jeonghan looks at his watch dramatically.
“Five minutes late. How domestic of you.”
“Save it,” Seungcheol mutters, dropping into the seat across from him.
Jeonghan smirks like he’s been waiting for this moment. “So? Was it worth it?”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about.”
“Uh-huh. You’re flushed, your hair’s a little messy, and for once, you didn’t glare at anyone” Jeonghan taps his fingers against the table. “You’re basically glowing.”
Seungcheol sighs, runs a hand through his hair. “Can we just get through this meeting?”
“Oh, we will,” Jeonghan says brightly. “But not before you tell me if she’s single, if she has friends, and if your sudden boyfriend energy is gonna affect this quarter’s performance.”
Seungcheol narrows his eyes. “You’re enjoying this way too much.”
“Absolutely.”
The days blur together. You two still talk, in between meetings and his hectic schedule he would always find some time for you. When he’s free he’ll go drive to you and grab lunch, wherever you want or sometimes a surprise.
It’s just past six when Seungcheol finally leans back in his chair, eyes dragging away from the spreadsheet he’s barely processed for the last fifteen minutes.
His fingers hover over his phone for a second before he gives in to the impulse—simple and direct.
Seungcheol: You free for dinner?
You:Yes. Come rescue me.
He smirks, already pushing back from his desk. Jacket on. Sleeves rolled. A very quiet kind of urgency in his steps.
On your end, the timing couldn’t be more perfect. Your coworkers have been hovering at your desk all afternoon, buzzing about Friday drinks like it’s the social event of the year. They’re already lining up shots in their heads, plotting karaoke and potential chaos.
“You coming, right?” one of them asks, nudging your elbow. “C’mon, you always dip. Just one night.”
You smile politely, already trying to edge away. “I actually have plans—”
“With who?” another cuts in, eyebrows raised. “You’ve been glowing all week.”
You blink. “What is it with people and this glowing thing?”
They groan. “So you do have a date. Who is he?”
Before you can lie—or dodge, or disappear into thin air—your phone buzzes again.
Seungcheol: Be there in twenty. What kind of rescue we talking? Fire escape or just dramatic entrance?
You bite your lip to suppress the grin that tries to surface.
“Just someone picking me up,” you say vaguely, grabbing your bag and ignoring the chorus of curious oohs that follow.
“You’re no fun,” one of them whines as you make your escape. “At least send us a picture! We won’t believe he exists!”
You wave behind you. “Exactly why I’m not sending one.”
They groan louder, but you’re already walking toward the elevator, pulse picking up just a little. You don’t know what this is with him yet—not really. But it’s enough to have you hoping the next twenty minutes pass just fast enough.
You make it out of the building just as the sun is dipping behind the city skyline, casting everything in that dusky golden glow that feels almost too cinematic for real life. As if on cue, his car pulls up.
The passenger window rolls down, and there he is, arm resting on the wheel, watching you with that lazy, low-key amused smile that somehow makes your heart skip like it’s late for something.
“You always look like you just walked out of a movie,” you say as you slide in, tossing your bag at your feet.
He glances over, that grin growing as he shifts the car into drive. “Funny. I was just thinking the same about you.”
You shake your head, suppressing a smile. “Flattery before food? Risky move.”
“Not flattery,” he says, glancing at you as he pulls into traffic. “Observation. You look like you needed a getaway.”
You sigh dramatically, letting your head thud against the seat. “You have no idea. They were trying to hold me hostage for soju and noraebang.”
He chuckles, tapping the wheel. “I’d pay to see that.”
“You would,” you mutter. “Anyway, thanks for the timely rescue.”
“Anytime,” he says, tone quiet but sincere.
For a moment, you both fall into comfortable silence, the hum of the road filling the space. It’s not awkward. If anything, it’s the kind of quiet that only settles when someone’s presence feels... easy.
“Where are we going?” you ask after a while, glancing at him.
He tilts his head, lips tugging upward. “Somewhere that serves food hot, drinks cold, and lets me look at you across the table without interruption.”
You arch a brow. “Is that your version of romantic?”
“No,” he says. “That’s my version of honest.”
Your stomach does that annoying little flutter again. He doesn’t look at you when he says it, but his hand briefly brushes your knee in a turn—accidental, maybe—but he doesn’t pull away too quickly.
The drive takes longer this time, farther out from the noise of downtown, the streets growing quieter, narrower.
You glance over at him. “You’ve got a thing for hidden spots, huh?”
“I don’t like crowds,” he says simply. “And I like places that let me hear you when you talk.”
You pause, caught off guard by the casual weight of it. “You’re smooth.”
“I’m observant,” he corrects, pulling into a tiny gravel lot tucked away
You step out and take in the place. No line. No obvious branding. Just the kind of restaurant people guard like a secret.
“This place looks like it has stories,” you murmur, tucking your hands into your coat.
“It does,” he says, rounding the car to walk beside you. “Mostly about good food. And about the owner being mildly terrifying if you show up drunk and disrespectful.”
You laugh, and he pulls the door open for you, holding it until you step inside.
It’s warm. Cozy. The scent of doenjang jjigae and grilled mackerel hangs in the air. The lights are soft, yellow, casting everything in that old-kitchen comfort glow. You’re seated in the farthest corner, a little nook with floor cushions and a small table already set with water, chopsticks, and folded linen napkins. The privacy of it feels intentional.
The owner, a silver-haired woman in a worn apron, comes over with barely a word, just a sharp eye and a small smile when she sees Seungcheol.
“You brought someone,” she says, voice raspy but kind. “She’s pretty. And awake, unlike the last idiot your friend brought.”
Seungcheol winces. “That was Mingyu.”
She waves him off, already handing you both menus like she’s decided you’re staying regardless.
You stifle a laugh. “Do all your regular spots come with built-in character witnesses?”
“Only the good ones,” he replies, flipping open the menu. “What’re you in the mood for?”
You pretend to study the list, but really, you’re watching the way he sits here—comfortable, known, but still somehow wrapped in mystery. Like there’s more under the surface that he only lets people see in pieces.
“You choose,” you say, passing your menu across the table. “You haven’t steered me wrong yet.”
He takes it with a slow smile. “Dangerous trust.”
“You like that about me,” you say without missing a beat.
His eyes meet yours, steady and sure.
“I do.”
And the way he says it?
It isn’t playful. Isn’t light. It lands somewhere between a promise and a warning.
And suddenly, the quiet between you feels like something else entirely.
He closes the menu without looking at it for too long, then says something casual to the owner, his tone respectful but familiar. She gives you one last look (a little assessing, a little approving) before disappearing toward the kitchen with a short nod.
You raise an eyebrow. “You didn’t even ask what I wanted.”
He leans back, completely unbothered. “I did.”
“Oh really?”
“Yeah. You said, ‘you choose.’ That’s verbal consent. Witnessed and documented.”
You snort. “Okay, lawyer.”
He grins. “You’ll thank me in a few minutes.”
And you do. Because when the food comes, it’s thin wheat noodles in a light broth, topped with julienned vegetables, sliced egg, seaweed, and just a hint of sesame oil. The aroma alone makes your eyes widen.
Your inner monologue might as well be standing on a table, screaming. He ordered noodles. My weakness. My love language. My eternal home.
“Are you a mind reader?” you ask, unable to hide your excitement as you pick up your chopsticks.
“I had a hunch,” he says, watching you with mild amusement as you practically dive in. “You look like someone who’d fight for the last noodle in a pot.”
You pause with your chopsticks halfway to your mouth. “Is that a compliment or a psychological profile?”
“Depends.” He’s smiling, elbow propped lazily on the table, eyes fixed on you. “Are you the type to share your noodles, or hoard them?”
You pretend to consider it, chewing thoughtfully. “Depends on who’s asking.”
He laughs, low and full. The kind that catches in your chest.
The food is simple, warm, deeply comforting. Not because of the food, exactly. But because of who’s sitting across from you. And how easy he makes all of this feel.
And when he steals one of your noodles just to prove a point? You let him.
As you both finish the last of the broth, the warm glow of the restaurant wrapping around you like a lazy blanket, you lean back on your cushion and stretch your legs under the table, nudging his knee with your foot.
You glance at the time on your phone and raise a brow. “It’s not even eight,” you say, mock-disbelief in your voice. “Don’t tell me you’re the type to go to bed right after dinner. Old-man hours already?”
“What, you think I’m boring?”
You shrug. “I mean… I don’t know. The cozy dinner. The secret spot. The soft lighting. This has bedtime-by-nine written all over it.”
“You’re lucky I like you,” he mutters, grabbing the check before you can even reach for your wallet.
You blink. “Wait. What was that?”
“I said,” he repeats, standing smoothly and ignoring your faux-innocent stare, “you’re lucky I like you.”
“Bold assumption,” you say, following him toward the door. “You don’t know me like that.”
He holds the door open, leaning into the frame as you step past him. “You say that, but you’re not running away.”
You pause outside, cold air kissing your skin as you glance up at him.
“I’d say that depends,” you murmur, lifting your chin slightly. “Are you planning to make the night more interesting or tuck me in with warm milk and a bedtime story?”
“I was thinking…” he steps a little closer, voice dipping, “maybe something in between.”
Your pulse flickers fast. Intrigued.
“So,” you say, eyes narrowing. “What now?”
He glances toward the car, then back at you. “Let’s drive.”
“That’s it? Just a drive?”
He shrugs. “You scared I’m secretly boring?”
You smile, teeth catching your bottom lip as you shake your head. “No. I’m scared you’re not.”
The city peels away behind you, all neon and noise in the rearview, replaced by wider roads and quieter corners. You glance over at him as he drives, one hand on the wheel, the other resting lazily on the gearshift.
"You always drive like this?" you ask, the wind catching in your voice just slightly.
He glances over, curious. “Like what?”
“Like you're in a movie. Slow, steady. No destination, just vibes.”
His mouth tugs into that crooked half-smile. “Wouldn’t be the worst scene to be in.”
You roll your eyes, but your grin gives you away. “You're really running with this leading-man energy, huh?”
“You’re the one who asked me to rescue you. I’m just sticking to the role.”
"Right. So where's the dramatic monologue about how you're secretly emotionally unavailable but somehow willing to change only for me?"
“That’s coming in act three,” he says smoothly. “Right after the almost-kiss and right before I mess it all up.”
You’re laughing now, really laughing, and when you glance at him again, he’s not even pretending not to stare.
He clears his throat. “There’s a lookout just up ahead. View’s nice this time of night.”
“Another hidden spot?”
“You doubting my taste now?”
“Never. Just making sure you’re not lulling me into a false sense of security before you reveal you are, in fact, a very charming serial killer.”
He chuckles under his breath. “If I was, you wouldn’t’ve made it past the noodles.”
You hum. “Fair point. Still. You are dangerously smooth.”
“I could say the same about you.”
That brings a new kind of quiet. One with heat underneath it.
By the time he pulls up to the lookout you’re not sure whether you’re more captivated by the view outside, or the one inside the car.
He kills the engine but makes no move to get out. Neither do you.
“So,” he says after a beat, voice a little lower. “Still think I’m putting you to bed before nine?”
You smirk, turning just slightly toward him. “We’re well past bedtime, Cheol.”
And somehow, that feels like the most dangerous thing you’ve said all night. He huffs a short laugh through his nose, eyes narrowing slightly with amusement as he shifts to face you more fully in the dim glow of the dashboard lights.
You tilt your head, feigning casual. “Just doing my due diligence,” you say, poking at the corner of the console with your nail. “Before this gets… you know. Interesting. You don’t have kids right? Or a wife waiting at home something like that”
He raises a brow, resting his arm against the back of your seat. “Interesting, huh?”
He doesn’t deny it. Just lets that lazy grin spread as he lets his gaze settle on you—like he’s trying to read between your words and the space between your knees brushing his.
“No wife,” he says finally. “No kids. No secrets.”
You blink. “Wow. A full set.”
He leans in just a little, voice lower now. “Disappointed?”
You laugh, the sound soft, breathless. “Relieved, actually. I’d hate to be a plot twist in someone else’s drama.”
“No,” he murmurs. “If anything, you feel like the beginning of something.”
You freeze just for a second.
“Are you always like this? Charming, smooth-talking, devastatingly good at timing?”
His fingers brush a strand of hair behind your ear, slow and deliberate. “I don’t know. You tell me.”
“Guess I’ll need more data.”
He laughs again—quiet, warm—and lets the moment linger in that hazy space between restraint and intent. Outside, the city glows. But in here, it’s just the two of you, suspended in that delicious kind of silence where everything feels possible.
You swallow lightly. “So… how much data are we talking? One night? Two? A whole series?”
His smile curves, lazy and full of mischief. “Are you asking how many dates it takes before I kiss you?”
“Maybe,” you say, voice just above a whisper.
“Depends how good the data is.” He leans in a little, not touching you yet but close enough. His voice dips, rough around the edges in that way that sends a shiver up your spine.
Your breath catches, pulse ticking a little faster, but you don’t lean away. If anything, you meet him halfway.
You exhale slowly, watching his eyes flick down to your mouth.
“You’re really not going to kiss me, are you?” you ask, a little breathless now.
He smirks, gaze lifting back to yours.
“I will,” he says. “But not because it’s expected.”
You blink, pulse stuttering.
“Then why?”
He tilts his head, thumb brushing the curve of your cheekbone.
“Because the second I do… it stops being light and easy. And I think we both know it.”
You sit there for a second, stunned into silence—because he’s not wrong. There’s a weight to this that neither of you are quite ready to name, but it’s there. Unspoken, humming like the low thrum of electricity before a storm.
So instead, you nod—slow, almost amused.
“You’re dangerous, Choi Seungcheol.”
He leans back just slightly, watching you with that infuriatingly unreadable expression.
“And you’re trouble.”
You smile.
“So what now?”
He reaches for the gear shift, gaze still lingering on you.
“Now,” he says, “I drive you home before we both make very bad, very good decisions.”
And you don’t argue.
But as he pulls away from the lookout, your fingers resting dangerously close to his on the center console, you get the feeling this isn’t the end of the night.
It’s just the prelude.
=
The sky is painfully clear, bright blue with not a cloud in sight and the sun has no business being this aggressive before noon.
Jeonghan’s halfway through lining up his swing when he notices it. The stillness. The quiet hum of something off.
He looks over and nearly misses his shot entirely.
“Okay,” he mutters, club dangling from one hand as he turns toward Joshua. “Am I hallucinating or is Seungcheol smiling at his phone?”
Joshua, already sipping on an iced americano and way too comfortable in his obnoxiously pastel golf attire, raises an eyebrow and glances over at their friend, who’s sitting on the edge of the golf cart with his phone in hand, thumb tapping out something quick.
And yeah. He's definitely smiling. Not smirking. Not plotting someone’s downfall.
Actually, smiling.
Joshua leans closer, squinting dramatically. “Are we about to die? Should I call my mom?”
“Maybe he’s reading memes,” Jeonghan says, though his voice lacks conviction.
“Right,” Joshua snorts. “Because Seungcheol totally wakes up and chooses cat videos.”
They both watch him a beat longer.
Seungcheol finally glances up, catching their stares. “What?”
Joshua holds his drink up like it’s a toast. “Just wondering if we need to evacuate Seoul. You good, buddy?”
Jeonghan crosses his arms. “You’re smiling, Cheol. Like… full teeth. Sunshine smile. Are you in pain? Blink twice if it’s a hostage situation.”
Seungcheol rolls his eyes, but the corners of his mouth don’t drop. If anything, they twitch higher when his phone buzzes again and he types out a quick reply before tucking it away in his pocket.
“Y’all are dramatic.”
“Oh no no,” Jeonghan says, hopping into the cart. “You don’t get to be mysterious. Who is she?”
“There’s no she.”
“Liar. You haven’t looked this happy since Mingyu fell into that koi pond.”
Joshua hums, thoughtful. “It’s the girl from the bar, isn’t it?”
Seungcheol doesn't answer which is an answer in itself.
Jeonghan squints. “Wait, you’re still talking to her? Damn. I thought that was just a one-night distraction.”
Seungcheol shrugs, grabbing his club and walking toward the next hole. “Maybe I like being distracted.”
Joshua raises his brows. “He’s whipped.”
“Absolutely whipped,” Jeonghan echoes, grinning like he’s already plotting how to make this his new favorite topic of conversation.
The reason for that rare, suspiciously soft smile on Seungcheol’s face? Easy.
It’s sitting in his phone, timestamped at 8:02 a.m.
A photo of your desk, where a bouquet of creamy white ranunculus and pale blush roses now sits in the center, like it owns the place. A handwritten note tucked between the blooms simply reads:
Thanks for keeping me up past my bedtime. - CSC
Your caption underneath the photo had been equally unfair.
You: You smooth bastard. You knew I liked flowers, didn’t you?
He hadn’t, actually but he guessed. Just like the noodles. And the way your voice lit up over the phone when he mentioned he had a surprise coming.
It was a hunch, like everything else about you so far, a series of guesses that kept turning out more right than he probably deserved.
You: Do I have to say thank you over lunch or dinner? Because I can clear my schedule.
Hence: the smile.
The same one he’s fighting right now, out on the golf course, while Jeonghan interrogates him like a nosy mother with a magnifying glass.
“She thanked me,” Seungcheol says finally, smirking to himself as he adjusts his grip on the club.
Joshua frowns. “For what?”
He doesn’t even look up as he swings. “For the flowers I sent this morning.”
There’s a pause.
“Flowers?” Jeonghan yells from the cart. “Oh, we’re officially in rom-com territory now.”
Joshua leans on his driver. “You used to make fun of me for that. Remember back then when I got my girlfriend flowers after two weeks and you called me a simp with no spine?”
“I was right. You were insufferable,” Seungcheol replies easily. “I, on the other hand, am charming.”
Jeonghan snorts. “You sent ranunculus, didn’t you?”
That actually gets Seungcheol to glance over, brow raised. “How the hell do you know that?”
“Because you’re dramatic,” Jeonghan deadpans. “And because you’re literally the only person I know who flirts with florals like it’s a love letter.”
He shrugs, but the smug look doesn’t leave his face.
“She liked them.”
And really, that’s all he needs today. Not the perfect swing, not a quiet weekend, not even an answer to whatever it is that's slowly, surely happening between you and him.
You’re barefoot, hair up in a loose bun, sleeves shoved past your elbows, and a cleaning rag hanging off your shoulder like a badge of honor. There's a half-folded pile of laundry on the couch, your favorite playlist echoing from the kitchen speaker, and the scent of lemon cleaner still lingers in the air.
You weren’t thinking about him. Not exactly. Okay, maybe a little.
But still, when the doorbell rings, you freeze mid-wipe, glancing toward the door like it might be another delivery.
Flowers again?
You make your way over, still patting your hands dry on your pajama shorts, and swing the door open without much thought.
And your heart absolutely stutters.
Because standing there isn’t a courier. Or a stranger.
It’s him.
Choi Seungcheol, dressed down in jeans, a dark tee, and that unfairly calm expression that somehow looks even better in daylight. One hand casually stuffed in his pocket, the other holding up a familiar-looking takeout bag.
“You said lunch or dinner,” he says, like it’s the most obvious thing in the world. “Thought I’d split the difference.”
You blink, stunned and slightly underdressed for this plot twist. “You—wait, you’re here?”
He lifts the bag slightly. “Samgyeopsal dosirak. And something sweet because I thought you might need dessert after all that dusting.”
You let out a soft, surprised laugh, stepping back instinctively to let him in. “You could’ve texted.”
“I could’ve,” he agrees, stepping past the threshold, eyes flicking to the mess of throw pillows and laundry and general weekend chaos. “But I figured showing up gets me bonus points.”
“Bold move,” you say, shutting the door behind him.
He shrugs, setting the bag down on your kitchen counter. “You already called me smooth this morning. Might as well live up to it.”
You watch him for a moment, slightly in awe—and slightly mortified you’re wearing an old t-shirt and fuzzy socks while he looks like that.
“Sorry for the mess,” you mutter, grabbing a few stray pieces of laundry and shoving them toward a basket.
Seungcheol just leans against your counter, watching you with that amused, unreadable expression.
“Relax,” he says. “I kind of like seeing you like this.”
You pause mid-fold. “Like what? Disheveled and unprepared?”
“Comfortable,” he corrects. “Like yourself.”
You clear your throat and gesture to the bag. “Well… you coming all this way with food means you’re definitely staying to eat, right?”
He grins. “Only if you sit next to me this time.”
“Scandalous,” you murmur, already pulling out plates. “We’ll have to keep the blinds shut. Can’t let the neighbors catch me fraternizing with the flower guy.”
He lets out a low laugh as he moves to help, and just like that, the space between you feels smaller again.
You slide the plates across the counter toward him, eyes flicking up briefly to meet his as you settle into the rhythm of unpacking the food. The scent of grilled meat, garlic, and rice fills the space, and for a moment, you let yourself enjoy the easy comfort of it.
“How was your morning?”
He leans back a little against your counter, breaking apart his chopsticks slowly, like he has time—like he’s in no rush at all.
“Golf,” he says. “Jeonghan roped me into it. He and Joshua have this bet going about who’ll finally beat me. Spoiler: they didn’t.”
You snort softly. “Let me guess. You smiled once and they thought something was wrong?”
He looks up at you, surprised, then chuckles. “Actually, yeah. Jeonghan thought the world was ending.”
“Because you were texting me?”
His gaze lingers on you for just a beat too long.
“Maybe.”
You look away then, biting back the way your heart trips at the casual weight of his honesty.
You try to keep your voice light. “You like golf?”
“I like the quiet,” he says. “And the way it slows everything down. Plus, it's one of the few times the guys don't expect me to be in CEO mode.”
You blink. “Wait—CEO mode?”
His smile turns crooked, caught between smug and sheepish. “You didn’t know?”
Your mouth opens, then closes. “You told me you work in management!”
“I do,” he says innocently. “Technically.”
You gape at him. “You're ridiculous.”
“And you're adorable when you're annoyed,” he replies, grinning as he sets the table with casual precision.
You shake your head, still reeling, still smiling despite yourself.
“Fine,” you say, settling down beside him. “You can be mysterious and charming and maddening later. Right now, just tell me more about your morning. What else happened?”
And he does. He tells you about the way Joshua nearly ran over Jeonghan’s foot with the golf cart. How the coffee at the clubhouse was abysmal. How the sun was too bright but the breeze made up for it. And you listen like it’s the most interesting story you’ve ever heard.
You finish the last few bites of your meal, chopsticks tapping against the empty container as you sit back with a satisfied sigh.
“So,” you say, stretching slightly, “since you’re already here, Mr. CEO—”
His brow arches, amused. “Oh, we’re using titles now?”
You ignore that smug little curve of his mouth. “Since you're already so generously spending time with a commoner like me, mind helping with a few things?”
He eyes you, mock suspicion in his gaze. “Define few.”
You push off the counter and gesture for him to follow you down the short hallway.
“It’s really just one thing. I’ve been putting it off because I like having a functional spine.”
You stop in front of your bedroom door, already bracing yourself for the impending chaos he’s about to witness. With a deep breath, you push it open and point to the far corner of the room.
“That,” you say flatly, “has not moved since I moved in. It’s heavier than it looks and it hates me.”
Seungcheol steps in behind you, eyes landing on the wide, solid wood dresser wedged awkwardly against the wall. He whistles low.
“Yeah, okay. That thing looks like it weighs more than I do.”
You cross your arms, already grinning. “Don’t be dramatic. I just need it shifted a little to the left so I can finally plug in the lamp I’ve had sitting on the floor”
“And you were just gonna… try to do this alone?”
“I tried. Got maybe an inch before I considered calling emergency services.”
He laughs, shaking his head, already flexing his fingers like he’s warming up. “Alright, move aside. Let me show you what those gym memberships are actually good for.”
You step back, arms folded, watching as he tests the weight, then—with alarming ease—shifts the dresser a few inches left, then a bit more, until it’s perfectly centered beneath the window.
“That’s it? That was like, two seconds.”
He turns, feigning a wipe of imaginary sweat from his brow. “You’re welcome, peasant.”
You scoff. “Okay, that’s the last time I compliment your arms.”
The sunlight hits him just right, painting golden streaks across his face and forearms, and for a second, the whole room feels brighter. Lighter.
“You’re trouble,” you murmur, half to yourself.
He catches it anyway, walking back over until he’s standing in front of you again, too close in that now-familiar, deliberate way.
“And you keep inviting me over,” he says, voice low and warm. “What does that make you?”
“Worse than I thought, apparently.”
He grins. “Good.”
And just like that—helping you move a dresser somehow becomes its own kind of intimacy. Domestic. Quiet. Dangerous in all the best, slow-burning ways.
Then something catches his eyes on something behind your desk. He drifts toward it, more curious than anything, his gaze pulled by the small burst of color on the wall.
It’s a collage of sorts, not perfectly arranged, but it has that personal, lived-in charm. Polaroids with slightly smudged ink dates along the bottom, movie tickets curled at the corners, scribbled notes, travel stubs, even a pressed flower or two.
A few things are clearly sentimental, a few probably meaningless to anyone but you.
But it’s the tiny folded receipt pinned neatly in the corner that catches his eye. Barely noticeable, until he sees the logo.
The bar.
He steps closer, mouth quirking slightly. “You kept this?”
You glance over from where you're fluffing the pillow he nearly flattened earlier. “Hm?”
He taps the pinned slip, and your eyes flick toward it.
“Oh.” You laugh softly, walking over to stand beside him. “Yeah. It felt... significant, I guess. A good story.”
“You keep a lot of stories, huh?” he asks, gesturing to the wall.
You shrug, suddenly shy. “I like remembering things. Even the dumb ones. Even the weird little in-between moments. They make everything feel more real.”
“Where’s the part where you almost got kissed by a stranger pretending to be your boyfriend?”
You narrow your eyes at him playfully. “You’re lucky I didn’t choose someone taller.”
“I’m lucky you chose me at all,” he says, quiet but clear, not teasing.
The silence that follows isn’t awkward. It’s full—warm. Like the pause after a really good line in a movie, one that doesn’t need music or movement to make it matter.
You glance back at the wall, at the receipt, the night that started all of this.
“Guess that night’s part of the wall now,” you murmur. “Part of the story.”
His eyes flick back to you, amused. “So you’re the sentimental type.”
You raise a brow, lips twitching. “Why? That not fit into your little criteria?”
Seungcheol tilts his head slightly, eyes scanning you in that quietly intense way that always makes you feel like you’re being read instead of looked at. His voice drops, warm and smooth.
“I don’t think I ever had a real list.”
You scoff lightly. “Please. Everyone has a list.”
He grins. “Fine. Maybe I thought I’d go for someone less likely to keep bar receipts and concert stubs like museum exhibits.”
You feign offense. “Wow. So judgmental for someone who literally sent me florals with emotional implications.”
“That was strategic,” he deadpans.
“Mm-hmm. And I’m sure flirting with me in front of your friends was all part of some master CEO plan too.”
He doesn’t answer right away. Just studies you for a long moment, something unreadable behind that steady gaze.
From then on, the flowers keep coming. Not every day but often enough that it’s clear there’s a pattern. An intention.
Sometimes it’s a soft arrangement of lilies and baby’s breath that arrives late in the morning with a note scrawled in that clean, all-too-neat handwriting: Don’t skip lunch today.
Other days it’s bold peonies or deep red ranunculus, tucked into a glass vase that seems to match your desk without trying.
One morning it’s a single sunflower with a post-it: Because you were complaining about deadlines. Sun’s out now.
And in between the deliveries, there are lunches—casual, spontaneous. A text at 11:32 a.m.: You free? I’m craving something spicy.
Or dinner on the way home from work, when you say you’re too tired to cook and he offers takeout. He picks you up like it’s routine, like the two of you have been doing this for years.
He holds doors open, lets you steal bites off his plate, keeps track of which side of the booth you like to sit on. He remembers you hate soggy fries and that you get cranky when you skip breakfast. And when your wrist started aching from too much typing, a small ergonomic mouse showed up at your office two days later. No note. No message. Just Seungcheol, a few hours later at dinner, asking casually, You get that thing I sent? Like he hadn’t just studied your habits like they were blueprints.
One night, you tease him. “You always feed people this well when you’re trying to win them over?”
He glances at you across the table, eyes warm, steady.
“No,” he says. “Just you.”
And it’s not a confession. Not really but your heart answers like it is. He grins at that—slow and lazy, like he’s been waiting for you to say it.
“Careful now,” you say, voice light, but your eyes don’t leave his, “I might get used to being spoiled.”
He leans back in his seat, one arm draped over the back of the booth, and he gives you that look
“And what exactly would be the downside of that?”
You hum, pretending to consider it, swirling the last of your drink with your straw. “Mm, I don’t know. Expectations. Disappointment. Sudden withdrawal of dumpling privileges.”
He chuckles, low and smooth. “I don’t take things back once I give them.”
You glance at him sideways, the corner of your mouth lifting. “Sounds like a threat.”
He tilts his head, his smile softening. “Sounds like a promise.”
For a second, the noise of the restaurant fades behind the weight of those words—like the hum of conversation, the clink of plates, even the music playing overhead all quiet just enough to make space for the way he’s looking at you.
You feel it, the shift. Again.
And you could say something sarcastic, you could push it away with another joke—but you don’t. Instead, you let the moment hang there, rich and charged.
“You keep this up,” you murmur, “and I might start thinking you actually like me.”
He doesn’t flinch. Doesn’t blink.
“Good,” he says. “That’s the idea.”
You swirl your drink once more, watching the ice clink softly against the glass before glancing up at him with a sly tilt to your head.
“So…” you start, casual—too casual. “How many more dinners like this before the kiss?”
Seungcheol’s fingers pause mid-reach for his glass, his eyes lifting to yours, slow and deliberate. There’s that smirk again—just a shade more dangerous now, edged with the kind of tension you’ve both been dancing around for days.
He leans in a little, arms resting on the table, and his voice drops low. “You keeping count?”
You shrug, the corner of your mouth twitching. “I’m just saying… that first night? You played the part really well. Had me thinking you were the type to go in for the dramatic, sweep-her-off-her-feet, movie-scene kiss.”
“I remember,” he says. “You were looking at me like you were waiting for it.”
Your laugh is soft, quiet. “Maybe I was.”
“So what number is this then? Dinner four? Five? Let’s call it four and a half. One of those was technically just noodles and complaining about work.”
“So what you’re saying is… I’m close.” You lift your glass to your lips, hiding your grin behind the rim.
“Closer than you think. Don’t worry, I’ll make it worth the wait.”
And you believe him. God help you, you really do.
“You’re really making me wait for this kiss, huh?”
Seungcheol’s lips part, not in surprise exactly, but like he wasn’t expecting you to say it so directly. His gaze drops to your mouth for the briefest second, and it’s subtlebut enough that your heart skips once, hard.
He exhales, and the corner of his mouth lifts like he’s trying not to let it turn into a full smile. “I told you,” he murmurs, “I make things worth it.”
“Yeah, but now I’m starting to think you like the anticipation too much.”
“I do,” he says without missing a beat. “But I like your reaction more.”
Your brows lift. “My reaction?”
“The way you look at me,” he says, quietly now, eyes not wavering. “The way you lean in just a little closer when you think I might—” He doesn’t finish the sentence. Just lets it hang there between you, heavy and electric.
“You’re dangerous,” you whisper. Your heart’s hammering now, a rhythm too loud to ignore, and still he doesn’t close the distance.
“You’re really not going to kiss me,” you say, half a laugh, half a dare.
He tilts his head slightly, like he’s deciding something. Then—
“I will,” he says, voice barely above a whisper. “But not here.”
Your breath catches. “Why not?”
His eyes flick to the restaurant around you. “Because when I finally do, I’m not sharing it with a room full of strangers.”
And just like that, your skin is flushed, your chest tight, and you’re no longer thinking about how long it’s been—but how close you are now. How much more you want.
The moment you step out into the night, the cool air brushing against your skin like a sigh, his hand finds yours. No hesitation. No theatrics. Just warm fingers threading through yours like they’ve done it a thousand times.
You glance at him, heart kicking once against your ribs.
He doesn’t look over. Doesn’t need to. His grip is steady, his stride unhurried, and there’s something about the way he holds you—like it’s not even a decision anymore. Just instinct.
When you reach the car, he lets go only to open the door for you. Still without a word. Still with that same quiet, unrushed certainty. He waits until you’re seated, until the seatbelt clicks, before he rounds the front and slides into the driver’s seat beside you.
No questions.
No where to?
He starts the engine and pulls out into the street like he already knows. Because he does. He’s memorized your route home—left turns, shortcut alleys, that one spot where traffic always sucks near the crosswalk.
And for a moment, you sit in the silence of the ride, his hand resting on the gearshift, the lights of the city playing soft across his profile.
You lean your head against the seat, watching him through the slow hum of passing streetlights. “You’re a little scary when you’re this confident.”
“I’m always this confident,” he murmurs, eyes forward, that same grin pulling at the corner of his mouth.
You laugh under your breath. “Cocky.”
He doesn’t deny it. But when he reaches over at the next red light, brushing his thumb across the back of your hand, there’s a softness in it—something that betrays the calm exterior. Something that says: I’m not rushing. But I’m sure.
And it steals your breath more than any kiss might’ve.
=
Seungcheol’s already at his desk when Jeonghan strolls into his office unannounced, like he owns the place. He’s got that look on his face too. mischief bubbling just beneath the surface, like he’s been waiting for this all morning.
Seungcheol doesn’t look up from his laptop. “No.”
“I didn’t even say anything yet,” Jeonghan counters, already dropping into one of the chairs across from the desk, far too comfortable for someone who doesn’t technically work in this building.
“You’re thinking very loudly.”
Jeonghan grins. “Fine. If you insist, I’ll start. One: she completely held her own last night. Didn’t flinch once when Mingyu started rapid-ordering food like he was feeding an army.”
Recalling last night when Seungcheol took you with him for drinks out with the guys. Surprising everyone.
“She’s impressive,” Seungcheol says simply, and this time he does glance up, barely trying to hide the small, proud smile tugging at his mouth.
Jeonghan points. “That. That smile. That’s what I came here for. I knew you were gone the moment she toasted Soonyoung under the table.”
Seungcheol just leans back in his chair, lacing his fingers together. “He challenged her. It’s on him.”
“And she won. You know what that means? She’s one of us now. And more importantly…” Jeonghan leans in dramatically. “You’re so in it, man.”
“I drove her home,” Seungcheol says casually, but the softness in his voice betrays him.
Jeonghan narrows his eyes. “And?”
“And nothing.”
Jeonghan groans. “You’re seriously dragging this out? You're the most controlled man I know, and even I was rooting for a kiss.”
Seungcheol just smirks. “Told her I’d kiss her when she’s sober.”
Jeonghan stares. Then throws his head back with a groan. “You’re hopeless. Ridiculously swoony and hopeless.”
“I like her,” Seungcheol says, tone low and honest.
And that—that—makes Jeonghan pause. His teasing drops, just for a second. Because when Seungcheol says it like that, not as a joke or a half-guarded confession, but as a fact... it’s real.
He leans back, quieter now. “Yeah. I know you do.”
There’s a beat of silence between them before Jeonghan can’t help himself. “Still. If this ends in wedding bells, I’m officiating. Or, at the very least, giving the toast.”
Seungcheol sighs, already regretting letting him in.
Jeonghan grins again. “Don’t worry. I’ll start writing my speech.”
=
The city blurs past the windows in a soft hum of motion, headlights washing warm streaks of gold across your skin as you talk—casually, openly, like you always do now.
You’re curled in the passenger seat with your legs tucked under you, your shoes kicked off and your fingers fidgeting absently with the soft edge of the blanket draped over your lap. His blanket. The one he insisted on leaving in the car after you shivered just once during a late drive home.
Seungcheol doesn’t say much as you talk, but he glances over often—tiny flickers of attention between the road and you, like he’s memorizing pieces of the moment to revisit later. His left hand rests on the steering wheel, right one easy on the gear shift, the movement of his thumb mirroring the rhythm of your voice. Calm. Comforting.
You’re halfway through rambling about a disaster of a meeting you had that morning when your train of thought stutters.
“Oh,” you say, almost too quickly. “I—actually. Meant to ask you something.”
He hums, a lazy sound that rumbles in his chest. “Yeah?”
You hesitate. Just a second too long. He picks up on it immediately, his gaze flickering your way.
You’re looking down now, fiddling with the corner of the blanket, suddenly hyperaware of the lip gloss you left in his cup holder and the extra hair tie wrapped around his rearview mirror. There are little bits of you all over his car now. Just like there are little bits of him scattered across your days.
“So…” you start, trying for casual, but it comes out a little breathy. “There’s this wedding. In a couple weeks. One of my friends from college.”
You chance a glance at him. He’s still driving, still calm, but his head tilts slightly. Listening.
“I kind of... need a plus one,” you go on. “Well, I don’t need one, technically, but everyone’s bringing someone, and—” You bite your lip, nerves buzzing. “I just thought maybe… if you’re free, you could come? With me.”
“You want me to go with you?” he asks, voice low, like he’s checking—really checking—that he heard right.
You nod, trying to keep your voice light, even as your heart feels like it’s doing cartwheels. “Yeah. I mean, you’d probably hate it. Lots of mingling. Dancing. Champagne. Small talk with strangers.”
He smiles a little. “And you want me to be your date.”
You blink at him. “Well… yeah.”
The light turns green. He doesn’t move. Not yet. His eyes are on you, steady and searching, and the longer he looks, the more you feel exposed—in a good way. In a real way.
“I’ll go,” he says finally, with that soft certainty that always makes your chest ache. “Of course I’ll go.”
Your breath whooshes out of you. “Yeah?”
“Yeah,” he repeats, eyes on the road now as the car starts moving again. “But only if I get to keep pretending I’m your boyfriend.”
You laugh, startled by how easy he makes it feel, how warm your chest goes at his words. “Is that what you’ve been doing all this time? Pretending?”
His grip on the steering wheel shifts. “You tell me.”
And you don’t answer right away, not because you don’t know but because the answer sits somewhere in the middle of your ribs, nestled against every glance, every ride home, every shoulder kiss and every moment he’s chosen to stay.
When you reach your building, he parks without asking for directions. Of course he does. He knows the way by heart now.
As you’re getting out, he catches your wrist gently. “Text me the details,” he says, voice lower now, more serious. “What time. What to wear.”
You nod, and your throat’s a little tight. “Okay.”
It’s one of those perfect afternoons. the kind that hangs suspended between spring and summer, warm without being too hot, a breeze just light enough to make your dress flutter as you wait outside your building.
You’re not waiting long.
His car pulls up exactly on time, and you catch sight of him behind the wheel through the windshield—dark suit, crisp white shirt, and a tie that looks suspiciously like it was chosen to match the color of your dress.
Your heart kicks up, stupid and traitorous in your chest, because he looks good. Too good. Like the kind of man who belongs on magazine covers, not in your driveway.
And then he steps out.
He smooths a hand down the front of his suit jacket, one brow lifting the moment he sees you. “Wow,” he says, low and honest, eyes sweeping over you with a slow, appreciative gaze that makes heat crawl up your neck. “I knew you’d look beautiful, but... I wasn’t ready.”
You try for casual, but your grin gives you away. “You clean up alright yourself, Mr. CEO.”
He holds the car door open for you without a word, and when you slide in, you spot the little extra things right away. Your favorite mints in the cup holder. A spare hair tie looped on the gearshift. He doesn’t say anything about them, but the details are there—always there.
“You nervous?” he asks at one point, tone light.
You shake your head. “About the wedding? No. They’re the ones getting married. I’m just there to eat cake.”
He smiles. “About me being your date, then?”
You pause, then look over at him with a soft grin. “Not even a little.”
When you get to the venue, it’s like the entire world slows for a second. The moment you both step out of the car and walk in together—side by side, his hand hovering at the small of your back, your arms brushing as you walk—you feel it. The glances. The looks.
You were right. Everyone did bring someone. And yet somehow, you’re the one that people can’t stop staring at.
Because of him.
Because of the way Seungcheol exists in a room like he’s always been meant to be there—quietly powerful, quietly yours.
Introductions start slow. your friends immediately curious, trying to figure him out. But Seungcheol handles them all with the kind of smooth charm that makes you want to simultaneously laugh and melt.
He’s polite. Warm. Slightly reserved. But he doesn’t leave your side once, and when your hand accidentally brushes his under the table during dinner, he doesn’t pull away.
It’s only when you're both standing off to the side during a slow song, sipping champagne and laughing at the clumsy first-dance attempts on the floor, that he leans down, voice brushing your ear.
“You know,” he says, “I don’t think I’ve seen you stop smiling since we got here.”
You glance up at him, heart thudding. “Yeah? Is that a bad thing?”
He meets your eyes. “No. I think I’d like to be the reason behind it more often.”
He holds out his hand. “Come dance with me?”
And with your fingers in his, his suit pressed lightly to your side, his palm warm at your back, you finally stop waiting. Because this, him, was worth every slow, drawn-out second.
You don’t realize how naturally it happens. How easily you lean into him, how right it feels to have your hand resting lightly on his shoulder while his other hand holds your waist, not too tight, but firm.
“You’re not a bad dancer,” you murmur, the tease threading through your voice.
Seungcheol lets out a low laugh, eyes twinkling as he looks down at you. “I had to learn. It was either that or embarrass myself at corporate galas.”
You tilt your head, smirking. “So I’m your rehearsal?”
He leans in, just enough that you feel his breath along your cheek. “No,” he says softly. “You’re the reason I’m glad I learned.”
That shuts you up for a second—not because you don’t have a comeback, but because the way he says it—earnest, grounded—makes your heart stumble in your chest.
“I still haven’t kissed you,” he says quietly, almost like he’s reminding himself. “And you’ve been very patient.”
“Painfully patient,” you whisper back. He smiles, but it’s different this time. Not teasing. Just full of something so genuine it makes your stomach twist.
“But this moment,” he says, pulling you in just a little closer, “this right here… I didn’t want to rush it. You deserve the good kind of build-up.”
You swallow. “So… this is a build-up?”
“Isn’t it?” he murmurs. “Every time I pick you up. Every dinner. Every time you leave your things in my car on purpose.”
“I don’t—” You try to defend yourself, but he grins, cutting you off.
“I like it,” he admits. “I like all of it. Even the fact that your lip gloss has now permanently scented my dashboard.”
You laugh, cheeks warm. “You’re very sentimental for someone who pretends not to be.”
“And you’re very brave for someone who said they weren’t looking for anything serious,” he counters.
That gives you pause. Because he’s not wrong.
You didn’t plan for any of this. But then again, you didn’t plan on walking up to a stranger at a bar just to escape a persistent creep either. And now… now you’re dancing with that stranger at your friend’s wedding while the night curls around the two of you like it knew.
“I still don’t know what we are,” you say finally, your voice lower, honest.
Seungcheol’s thumb brushes your waist gently, like he feels the shift.
“You don’t have to name it,” he says. “Not yet.”
“But you already have,” you murmur, meeting his gaze.
He looks at you for a long second. “Only in my head.”
You smile. “What is it, then?”
His grip on you tightens ever so slightly.
“Mine.” he says.
Just like that the music slows to an end, but he doesn't let go. And when the moment feels just too full, too warm, too close. His hand lifts gently to your jaw. His thumb grazes your cheek. And this time, finally, he doesn’t kiss your shoulder.
He kisses you.
It’s soft at first. A gentle brush of lips that speaks less of fireworks and more of certainty like he’s been waiting for just the right moment.
You don’t even realize your hands have slipped up to his chest, anchoring yourself as his other arm wraps around your waist to keep you close. There’s no rush, no urgency. Just the quiet, unspoken truth of it sinking into your bones—that this kiss was a long time coming. T
When you part, barely an inch between you, your forehead lingers against his. Your heart beats like it’s trying to memorize the rhythm of his.
“Finally,” you whisper.
Seungcheol chuckles, low and husky, still close enough that his breath grazes your lips. “Was it worth the wait?”
You tilt your head just enough to press another soft kiss to the corner of his mouth. “I’ll let you know after the second one.”
He smiles like he can’t help it, like something warm is cracking open in his chest. “Greedy.”
“Very,” you reply without missing a beat.
You don’t even care that you’re standing in the middle of a wedding reception, that people are milling around behind you with cake and champagne and whispered guesses about who you are. None of that matters.
Because he’s still looking at you like you’re the only thing that does.
When you got to your building he offered to walk you up. Standing outside your door, your fingers are curled into the lapel of Seungcheol’s suit jacket, your mouth barely a breath away from his when the sound of someone clearing their throat slices right through the moment.
You both flinch, pulling apart like guilty teenagers caught sneaking out after curfew.
Your eyes widen. “Oh my god.”
Your mom stands there in front of your apartment door, arms crossed and one brow raised with terrifying precision, the classic mom look of I have questions and you better answer them properly.
She blinks slowly, then turns to Seungcheol with the kind of pointed interest that has your soul trying to escape your body.
“And who,” she says, sweetly, “might this be?”
You swallow. “Uh. Hi, Mom. What are you doing here?”
“I texted. You didn’t answer. So I thought I’d drop off some side dishes I made.” She holds up the container bag like evidence. “Good thing I came, it seems.”
You’re nearly sweating. Seungcheol, on the other hand, somehow still looks calm. Like he didn’t just almost get caught mid-doorstep make-out by your mother.
He straightens, then offers your mom a polite bow. “Good evening, ma’am. I’m Choi Seungcheol. I was just dropping her off after a wedding.”
Your mom gives him a long once-over, then side-eyes you. “A wedding? Interesting. And how long has this Choi Seungcheol been around?”
“Mom,” you groan, but Seungcheol beats you to it.
“Not very long,” he replies easily. “But I’m hoping to stick around a while.”
You gape at him.
Your mom narrows her eyes. “Is that right?”
“If she’ll let me.”
Your mom stares at him another beat. Then to your utter disbelief, she… smiles. “Hmm. Well. At least you’re polite.”
You’re still recovering when she presses the container into your hands. “These are for you. You too, I suppose, since you’re clearly being fed well.”
Seungcheol accepts them with a small bow and a quiet “thank you.”
Your mom gives him one last look, then leans in to whisper (not quietly at all), “She likes flowers. And she talks in her sleep.”
“Mom!”
She pats your cheek and strolls away like she didn’t just commit emotional homicide.
You turn to Seungcheol, mortified. “I’m so sorry. I can’t believe—”
But he’s already smiling. Like really smiling. “That was the best first ‘meet the parent’ ambush I’ve ever had.”
Seungcheol’s in his office early the next morning, already settled in behind his desk. His sleeves are rolled up, fingers tapping out a light rhythm on the edge of his desk as he hums a low, tuneless melody to himself.
He’s got that look on his face, the rare kind his staff sees maybe three times a year, a glint in his eyes like he just won the lottery and the stock market. Every so often, he pauses to check his phone, then smiles like someone just whispered a joke in his ear.
That’s exactly the energy Joshua and Jeonghan walk in on.
“Okay,” Jeonghan says slowly, not even trying to hide the suspicion in his voice. “Who are you and what have you done with our very serious, emotionally constipated CEO?”
Seungcheol doesn’t look up. “Good morning to you too.”
Joshua squints. “Is that... whistling? Are you—tapping your foot?”
Jeonghan drops into the seat across from him and kicks his legs up on the coffee table like he owns the place. “You’re smiling. Like smiling smiling. The last time you were this chipper was when we landed the Tokyo account and you got to yell at someone in perfect Japanese.”
Joshua leans against the wall. “No offense, man, but it’s kind of weirding me out. Is this like… a blood sugar thing? Are you okay?”
Seungcheol leans back in his chair, stretching with a soft groan and a big, satisfied sigh. “I’m great.”
“Yeah. We can tell.” Jeonghan raises a brow. “So go on. Tell the class. What happened”
Seungcheol doesn’t answer right away, just glances at his phone again with that same soft smile playing at his lips.
Jeonghan and Joshua exchange looks.
“Oh my god,” Jeonghan breathes, sitting up straighter. “It’s her, isn’t it? The bar girl. Your girl.”
Joshua’s eyes widen. “The one who literally drank Soonyoung under the table?”
“She’s not my girl, yet” Seungcheol says quickly—but his voice betrays him with the slightest upward lilt at the end, like even he doesn’t believe himself.
Jeonghan leans forward, both elbows on his knees. “So what happened last night? Because whatever it was, you’re acting like a man in love.”
“I am not in—” Seungcheol stops himself, mutters something under his breath, then groans as he runs a hand over his face. “You two are insufferable.”
“Did she finally kiss you?”
“Technically,” Seungcheol replies slowly, “I kissed her. But only after she asked for the third time.”
Jeonghan lets out a bark of laughter. “Took you long enough, Romeo.”
“It wasn’t about taking my time,” Seungcheol mumbles, and then lowers his voice, more to himself than to them. “I just… didn’t want to screw it up.”
There’s a beat of quiet.
Joshua softens. “You like her.”
Seungcheol doesn’t look up. “Yeah.”
Jeonghan’s watching him, a little differently now. Less teasing, more thoughtful. “It’s serious, isn’t it?”
“She asked me to be her plus-one to a wedding,” Seungcheol replies, then glances at them, almost shy. “And I met her mom.”
Joshua and Jeonghan practically explode.
“You what?”
Seungcheol winces. “It wasn’t planned—her mom showed up at her apartment with side dishes and caught us on the doorstep. Thought I was her boyfriend or something.”
Jeonghan is beside himself. “And you survived? No wounds? No emotional damage?”
“She liked me.”
“Okay, that’s it,” Joshua says. “We’re done for. He’s in too deep.”
“Send help,” Jeonghan deadpans, placing a hand over his heart. “Our friend is gone. Replaced by this domestic, well-fed, love-struck clone.”
“I’m not love-struck.”
“You’re literally glowing.”
Seungcheol shakes his head with a small chuckle. “Shut up.”
But he’s still smiling.
Seungcheol’s phone buzzes once, then again—your contact lighting up on the screen. His hand darts for the phone almost too eagerly, thumb swiping before the second ring finishes.
“Hey,” he answers, voice dropping into something soft and familiar, like the two of you are already alone in a room and not with Jeonghan and Joshua both watching like hawks from a few feet away.
You laugh softly on the other end. “Hi. Sorry, are you busy?”
“No,” he says without hesitation. “I’ve got time.”
Jeonghan mouths liar and Joshua smirks.
“So, I was gonna text, but my mom insisted I call. She’s making dinner tonight and… well, she asked if you’d like to come?”
His heart skips in a way he’s not used to—it’s not nerves exactly, more like… something warm curling in his chest. He stands slowly, pacing to the side of the office, back turned as if it’ll make the conversation any more private.
“You sure?” he asks, lowering his voice. “I don’t want to intrude.”
“You’re not,” you assure him. “She literally made enough for an army and said, and I quote, ‘tell that polite boy to come hungry.’”
He chuckles, unable to help himself. “Guess I can’t say no to that.”
“Seven okay?”
“Perfect.” He smiles again, stupid and wide and absolutely forgetting that he is not alone.
“I’ll see you tonight then.”
“Yeah,” he says, still in that soft tone only reserved for you. “Looking forward to it.”
The call ends. He stares at the screen for a second longer before pocketing his phone, already mentally rearranging the rest of his day.
Then he turns around.
Joshua is grinning like a fox. Jeonghan has both hands folded like he’s praying. “Okay. Let’s try that again. You’re not love-struck?”
Seungcheol sighs, running a hand through his hair, the soft grin on his lips refusing to fade. “She invited me to dinner. Her mom’s cooking.”
“Oh my god,” Jeonghan groans dramatically. “That’s domesticity. That’s serious.”
“You’re doomed,” Joshua chimes in cheerfully. “Next thing we know, you’ll be asking us to be groomsmen.”
“Shut up,”
You’re halfway through setting the table when the doorbell rings, and your mom, already at the stove with her sleeves rolled up, waves you off with a knowing smile. “He’s early. That one’s got good manners. Go let him in.”
You smooth down your shirt, trying not to look too eager, but your feet are already hurrying toward the door.
When you open it, Seungcheol is there dressed in that casually polished way that makes it look like he stepped off the cover of a weekend magazine. Button-up sleeves rolled just once, watch peeking out, hair slightly tousled like he ran his fingers through it before he knocked.
And in his hands?
Two bouquets.
You blink. “Are you trying to start a flower shop?”
He grins, lifting both arrangements slightly. “One’s for you.” He holds out the first—soft colors, delicate petals, your favorites, of course. “And the other’s for your mom.”
You take the bouquet, inhaling the sweet scent with a tiny smile before stepping aside. “She’s going to love that. You just earned, like, ten extra points.”
“I’m trying to rack them up,” he says lightly, stepping in and revealing the dessert box in his other hand. “Also, I may or may not have picked up your favorite. You know… just in case.”
You glance down and immediately light up. “You remembered?”
“Please,” he scoffs playfully. “You’ve only ranted about it, what, three times? Of course I remembered.”
You laugh as you lead him inside, his shoulder brushing yours in that easy, now-familiar way. Your mom peeks out from the kitchen, and her smile grows when she sees the extra bouquet.
“Oh, you charmer,” she says warmly, walking over to greet him. “Flowers again? You’re going to make all the other boys look bad.”
Seungcheol offers her the bouquet with both hands and a small bow. “I figured last time I came empty-handed, so I had to make up for it.”
Dinner’s warm and loud, your mom doing most of the talking while Seungcheol listens, chimes in with small jokes, and praises her cooking so sincerely she beams every time he opens his mouth. He’s relaxed here, blending in like he’s done it a hundred times, and somehow that’s the part that gets you.
Later, after helping clean up and exchanging stories with your mom, the two of you step out into the cool night air.
He walks beside you in silence for a moment, then glances over. “So... still thinking about replacing me with someone from a crime documentary?”
You laugh. “I don’t know. That guy probably wouldn’t have brought dessert and flowers.”
He nudges you gently. “Damn right.”
You turn to him, slowing a little on the steps outside your building. “Thanks for coming tonight.”
“I wouldn’t have missed it.”
And there’s that pause again—that loaded, quiet moment. You can feel it, humming between you. All the things unsaid but understood. No labels, no big declarations. Just gestures and quiet moments and the space he fills beside you like he’s always belonged there.
You lean in and kiss his cheek. He’s already smiling before your lips brush his skin.
“Don’t make me wait forever, Mr. CEO.”
He grins, eyes flicking to yours. “Patience, pretty girl. I’ve got a plan.”
And somehow, you believe him.
The moment you step back inside, your mom's perched on the couch like she never moved. She's got a cup of tea in hand and a look on her face that immediately makes you nervous—too calm, too unreadable, which only ever means she’s up to something.
Seungcheol follows behind you, quietly helping carry the dessert box into the kitchen, but before either of you can pretend the evening is winding down smoothly, your mom speaks up—tone light, but very deliberate.
“So…” she starts, gaze sliding over to Seungcheol like she’s just making small talk, “are you gonna marry my girl, or what?”
You nearly choke on air. “Mom!”
“What?” she shrugs, totally unbothered. “You’re both at the right age. You like each other. He’s handsome, polite, he brings flowers and dessert. I don’t want to wait another five years for grandchildren.”
“Oh my god—” you groan, half-burying your face in your hands.
But Seungcheol? Not flustered. Not even close. In fact, the traitorous man has the audacity to smile. A slow, confident one that only makes your embarrassment worse.
“Well,” he says, glancing at you before looking back at your mom, “if she keeps letting me stick around, who knows?”
Your mom raises a brow, then nods approvingly. “Good answer. You’re growing on me more and more, you know that?”
Seungcheol laughs, and you’re halfway to combusting. “Okay! Time to say goodnight, this interrogation is over,” you declare, grabbing his wrist and tugging him toward the door.
“Bye, Mom,” you grumble over your shoulder.
Your mom just waves, clearly pleased with herself. “Bye, future son-in-law!”
Seungcheol chuckles under his breath all the way down the hall. When the elevator doors close, he glances at you, amused. “So… how long do I have before she starts dress shopping?”
You glare up at him, still pink in the face. “Don’t you dare encourage her.”
“Too late.” He leans a little closer. “But if it helps…” His voice dips, teasing. “I am starting to like the sound of it.”
The elevator hums quietly as it takes you both downstairs, your hand tucked into Seungcheol’s without thinking. You walk him out to his car, the evening air crisp and still, soft with city quiet. He unlocks the door, but neither of you moves just yet.
“I’m just warning you,” you say, voice teasing, glancing up at him through your lashes. “Next time you come over, she’s not going to be asking if you’re marrying me.”
“No?”
You shake your head, grinning. “Nope. She’s skipping right ahead to asking when you’re giving her a grandchild.”
He chuckles low in his throat, eyes twinkling. “That so?”
“I can see it already,” you continue dramatically, “She’ll be standing in the kitchen, apron on, casually stirring soup while dropping 'So when’s the baby due?' like it’s small talk.”
Seungcheol leans against the car, folding his arms, that amused smile never leaving his face. “Well… we have kissed now,” he says, playful but soft. “I guess that means I should be prepared for her to start knitting booties.”
You swat his arm, trying not to laugh. “You’re too comfortable with this.”
“I’m comfortable with you,” he replies easily, gaze settling on you in that way that makes your heart skip and stumble all at once.
Seungcheol shifts closer, one hand brushing your hip before resting there, gentle but sure. “And hey,” he says, voice low, “about that kiss…”
Your breath hitches, and before you can even answer, he dips his head and brushes his lips against yours—slow and deliberate, nothing rushed, like he’s memorizing the shape of your mouth all over again.
He pulls back only slightly, close enough that his nose still brushes yours. “Still got more where that came from.”
You manage a breathless laugh, fingers curling in the front of his shirt. “Dangerous man.”
He grins. “Only for you.”
When he finally slides into the driver’s seat, you linger by the open door. “Text me when you get home.”
He reaches out to tuck a strand of hair behind your ear. “Of course I will.”
You step back, watching as he pulls out of the lot, his hand lifting briefly in a lazy wave. And as you head back to your apartment, you already know: your mom’s going to be impossible next time.
You barely make it three steps into your apartment before your mom, still lounging in the living room like she owns the place (she kind of does, considering she brought over food and stayed uninvited), looks up from her tea and levels you with that look.
Not smug. Not surprised. Just deeply, motherly knowing.
“Oh,” she says, setting her cup down with an audible clink. “I see what this is.”
“What’s what?” you ask, walking past her, pretending to be busy as you head toward the kitchen.
But she doesn’t let you off that easy. She turns in her seat and calls out—voice just a touch singsongy.
“You love the guy.”
“What?” You laugh, unconvincing. “I don’t—what? That’s a lot, don’t you think?”
She stands, follows you to the kitchen like a shark who smells blood—or in this case, feelings.
“I’ve been watching you all day. You were smiling at your phone like a teenager,” she says, opening the fridge like she owns that too. “And when he came over? You lit up like someone plugged you in.”
You open a cabinet just to have something to do with your hands. “He’s just… nice.”
“Oh, no. Not just nice. He’s thoughtful. Respectful. Tall. Brings flowers. Carries dessert. Helped you move furniture. That man looked at you like you’re the only person on the planet.” She shuts the fridge.
“And you my sweet girl, you looked right back like he hung the moon.”
You groan, leaning against the counter. “You really don’t pull punches, huh?”
She smiles, proud. “I’m your mother. It’s my job to see through the nonsense.”
The smile that crept onto your face when Seungcheol kissed you tonight is still there. You feel it even now, this warmth that’s settled behind your ribs. It’s soft and terrifying and real.
And when you look back up, your mom’s just watching you with that soft expression, the one that says she’s been waiting for this kind of happiness to find you.
You sigh, eyes rolling, voice barely above a murmur. “Fine. I like him.”
She raises a brow.
“Okay,” you grumble. “I really like him.”
Her smile widens as she turns back toward the living room. “Took you long enough.”
=
The phone barely rings once before he picks up, voice warm and low like honey over gravel.
“Hey, baby.”
You swear your brain short-circuits for a second. The word hits you with a quiet thud right in the chest, catching you off guard even though you should be used to it by now.
“Hi,” you say, a beat late, already smiling into the receiver. “Okay, I forgot what I was gonna say for a second.”
There’s a soft laugh on his end, the kind that rumbles just under his breath. “That’s a good sign.”
You roll your eyes, cheeks warm. “Don’t flatter yourself.”
“Too late.”
You lean against the kitchen counter, heart still doing that embarrassing little flutter. “I was just calling to see if you were gonna be busy later… I was planning to cook dinner.”
He goes quiet for half a second. Not because he’s hesitating—just because you know he’s already rearranging his whole evening in his head.
“Do I get to watch you cook?” he asks, voice lighter now, teasing.
You smirk. “That depends. Are you just gonna stand there looking pretty and touching nothing?”
“Depends. Can I taste-test?”
You scoff. “You’re just in it for the food.”
“Not true,” he says, soft again now, “but it is a very nice bonus.”
You pretend to sigh. “So… does that mean you’re coming?”
“I’ll be there,” he says without skipping a beat. “Tell me what time and I’ll bring wine.”
The ease of it makes your chest feel full, like the kind of full that wraps around your ribs and stays there.
The knock on your door is right on time—because of course it is. You’re still smoothing down your shirt when you open it, and there he is.
Wine in one hand. Flowers in the other. And that stupid smile on his face that already has you forgetting whatever it was you were about to say.
“Hi,” you breathe, just a little breathless at the sight of him. He’s in a casual button-down, sleeves rolled, hair a little messy like he ran his hands through it on the drive over. He looks good. Too good.
“For you,” he says, lifting the bouquet
“You really don’t have to keep bringing these every time, you know.”
“I know,” he says easily, already slipping out of his shoes and placing the wine on your counter. “But I like watching you smile when I do.”
You open your mouth to come up with a witty response, but it never makes it out. Because he’s suddenly in your space arms curling around your waist as he presses a kiss to the side of your head.
Clingy. He’s so clingy tonight. And you love it.
“You okay?” you murmur, hugging him back.
“Just missed you,” he replies against your hair, like it’s that simple.
“You’re really not gonna let me cook, are you?” you ask, laughing as you try to wiggle out of his grasp.
“Nope.” He grins, chin resting on your shoulder. “This is a hostage situation now.”
“You’re clingy.”
“You love it.”
You glance at him over your shoulder. “I do.”
That earns you a kiss to the cheek. Then the temple. Then your neck. He’s shameless tonight. Unapologetically soft.
You try to cut up onions, but his arms stay wrapped around you the entire time, body warm at your back, like he can’t stand to be even an inch away. By the time dinner’s ready, he’s seated too close at the table, knees brushing yours under it, foot tapping against your ankle.
And when you pass him a bowl, he doesn’t let go of your hand right away. Just holds it for a second longer, thumb brushing your wrist.
“I could get used to this,” he says softly.
You smile, eyes locked with his.
He’s standing at your sink, sleeves rolled up to his elbows, strong hands buried in soapy water. Your purple apron is tied securely around his waist. your apron, the one with little hearts embroidered along the hem and a faint stain from that time you spilled sauce and never quite got it out.
You’re halfway through wiping down the counter when you glance up and pause, arms frozen mid-motion. Because this scene in front of you is almost too much.
Choi Seungcheol, your moody, broody, suit-wearing, don’t-mess-with-me CEO, is currently humming under his breath while washing your dinner plates in a heart-covered apron like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
You wrap your arms around his middle from behind, chin pressed against the back of his shoulder. He pauses.
Then smiles, water still running as he leans back just slightly into your hold. “You done cleaning?”
“Mostly,” you hum. “I just needed a break to admire this sight.”
He chuckles, voice low, the sound vibrating through his back and into your chest. “What sight?”
“You. Domestic. In my kitchen. In my apron.”
“You mean your very fashionable, extremely purple apron?” he says, glancing down at it with mock seriousness.
“Mhm. It suits you.”
“Does it?”
“Yeah,” you say, drawing out the tease. “You look like the type of man who says things like ‘dinner’s ready, honey’ and then washes the dishes without being asked.”
“If you wanted to brag to someone, you could’ve just taken a picture.”
=
It’s a little surreal, stepping into the bar again after all these months.
The lighting’s still dim, the music low and pulsing in the background, familiar laughter echoing from the same corner booth the guys always seem to claim. Only this time, there’s no desperate escape from a stranger’s attention, no half-baked plan to use the intimidating guy in the corner to save yourself.
This time, you’re walking in hand-in-hand with him.
Seungcheol is dressed down, a fitted black tee and jeans that still somehow manage to make him look unfairly good. His hand is warm in yours, thumb drawing absent little circles on the back of your palm as he greets the guys already mid-round of drinks.
Jeonghan spots you first, grinning like he’s been waiting. “There they are! The king and queen have arrived.”
You roll your eyes. Seungcheol just chuckles, guiding you into the booth beside him. His arm slides across the back of your seat, casual and easy, but his fingers find your shoulder and rest there, grounding you like always.
It’s comfortable—normal, now.
You catch Joshua glancing between you two, a little smirk tugging at the corner of his mouth. “Kind of wild to think it all started here, huh?”
You raise a brow. “What, the bar?”
“The act,” he teases, nodding toward Seungcheol. “Captain Broody pretending to be your boyfriend.”
“Oh,” you laugh, nudging Seungcheol playfully. “Right. That little performance.”
“Wasn’t much of an act,” he mutters, just quiet enough for only you to hear.
You turn your head, surprised—and he’s already looking at you, eyes dark and soft under the warm glow of the bar lights. You swear you feel it in your stomach, that little flutter you still haven’t quite gotten used to.
He leans in closer, voice a little rougher. “What? Don’t tell me you forgot.”
You arch a brow, teasing. “Forgot what?”
“That you strut your way right up to me. All wide-eyed and bold like I wasn’t five seconds from leaving.”
“Oh please,” you grin. “You loved it.”
His smile widens. “Still do.”
The music dips into something slower, something smoother. Around you, the bar hums with noise, glasses clinking, someone laughing too loudly near the bar. But in this moment it’s just you and him.
He tugs you gently, pulling you into his side until you’re almost in his lap. You go easily, leaning into him, resting a hand on his chest.
“So,” you say with a smile, tilting your head up, “is this the part where you tell me you’re no longer my pretend boyfriend?”
He pauses like he’s considering it, then leans in until his lips are barely a breath away from yours. “Mm... maybe.”
You lift a brow. “Maybe?”
He kisses you then, slow and sure, like there’s nothing pretend about it.
Like there never was.
His hand comes up to cradle your jaw, thumb brushing your cheek as he pulls away just slightly, lips still grazing yours.
“I’m not your pretend anything,” he whispers. “Haven’t been for a long time.”
You smile, cheeks warm, fingers curling into the front of his shirt.
“Well good,” you say, heart fluttering, “because I’m pretty sure my mom already considers you family.”
He laughs, the sound low and unguarded, and kisses you again—just because he can. And you kiss him back—because it’s him.
And because this time, there’s no act, no games.
Just the two of you—right where it all began.
#fic#story#svt#seventeen#svt imagine#svt scenario#svt fluff#svt slowburn#svt fic#svt x oc#svt x reader#seventeen imagine#seventeen scenario#seventeen scoups#scoup imagine#svt scoups#scoups fluff#scoups#seungcheol#choi seungcheol#seungcheol imagine#seungcheol fluff#seungcheol scenario#seungcheol x reader
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The Brush Off
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Felicity Leong-Piastri (Original Character)
Summary: 5 Times people flirt with Felicity and 1 time Oscar sees it happen.
Notes: Big thanks to @llirawolf , who listens to me ramble 😂 Also, check out my new divider!
School Library, Haileybury
Felicity was tucked into her usual corner of the school library — second floor, far left, just behind the dusty shelf of outdated atlases no one ever touched. It was quiet there. Untouchable. Sacred.
Her legs were curled under her in a frankly illegal way that made the librarian twitch every time she passed by.
But Felicity didn’t care. She had more important things to worry about. Like finishing her own chemistry coursework, writing the conclusion to her robotics team report, and, most importantly, rescuing Oscar’s history grade from what could only be described as a stylistic disaster.
Her copy of The Selfish Gene sat open next to a packet of sticky notes and five highlighters arranged in rainbow order. Oscar’s essay draft was sprawled beside it like a corpse in need of resuscitation.
She was six pages in.
She had already marked five run-on sentences, circled three historical inaccuracies, and scrawled “comma splice?” in angry red ink on the header. Next to that, she’d added, in smaller print: “This is a run-on sentence and also a war crime.”(This was three lines after “I am not sure if child labour can be considered a “perk” of the industrial revolution, Oz.”)
She was muttering to herself about how Oscar consistently forgot the difference between a primary and secondary source when a shadow fell across the table.
“Hey,” a voice said. “You always sit here?”
Felicity glanced up — just barely — and immediately clocked the newcomer.
Mateo.
The Spanish exchange student.
Hair swoop. Too much cologne.
He had the vibe of someone who thought reading The Secret History made him profound. Like the kind of guy who bought Moleskines but didn’t write in them. Like a walking Instagram profile captioned “Fluent in Nietzsche.”
She didn’t answer immediately. Just scribbled a note in Oscar’s margin (“use a stronger thesis here or face the wrath of every historian who’s ever lived”).
“On Wednesdays, yes,” she replied eventually, eyes still on the page.
Mateo didn’t take the hint.
He leaned in a little too close. She caught the movement out of the corner of her eye and already regretted not bringing headphones.
“What are you working on?”
She lifted Oscar’s paper slightly, as if it were obvious. “This.”
He squinted. “You’re helping a friend?”
“This is my boyfriend’s essay.”
Mateo’s face lit up, but not with recognition — with opportunity. “Wow. You’re that good a friend?”
Felicity blinked. “I’m that good a girlfriend.”
He paused. Smiled like she’d just told a cute joke at a party. “Sure. But, like, if you ever wanted to… hang out? Or study together? I’ve been struggling with philosophy.”
She stared at him. “You’re struggling with philosophy?”
He nodded eagerly. “It’s so dense, you know?”
“You mean… reading?”
He chuckled. “I just thought it might be easier with someone like you. Someone sharp. Smart.”
She just stared at him.
Still, he didn’t leave. “I’m just saying, if you ever get bored of helping your boyfriend… I wouldn’t mind a little attention.”
That’s what made her pause.
Because for a moment, Felicity genuinely didn’t understand what he meant.
Attention? What kind? Did he want her to edit his essay, too? Help him structure his arguments?
Was this a mentorship request? A tutoring thing? Was he trying to hire her?
Because from where she was sitting — wearing one of Oscar’s sweatshirts over her school uniform with her hair up in a pencil-stabbed bun, ink smudged on her fingers… There was no way this boy was flirting with her.
She finally looked up, expression flat. “I’ve been with my boyfriend for two years. I rewrite his footnotes. I know the number of his racing sim’s USB ports by memory. You think I have time for recreational idiocy?”
Mateo blinked. He stammered something that might’ve been “Sorry” or “Your loss” or possibly just the start of a philosophy quote he didn’t finish.
Then he turned and slunk away, disappearing into the nonfiction aisle like a man who needed to Google what a footnote was.
Felicity exhaled slowly, turned back to Oscar’s essay, and drew a tiny skull next to a sentence about Napoleon.
Ten minutes later, Oscar appeared — bottle of water in one hand, hoodie sleeves half-pushed up, curls slightly mussed.
“Hey,” he said, flopping into the seat beside her and nudging her ankle under the table.
Felicity didn’t even blink. She just slid his paper across the table.
“Yours,” she said, tone dry. “Try not to get seduced by misused commas.”
Oscar grinned, leaned over, and kissed her temple.
***
Engineering Library, Imperial College London
The engineering library at Imperial had a very specific kind of silence — dense, utilitarian, and just slightly stressed.
It didn’t have the hushed reverence of a humanities space or the open nervous energy of undergrads cramming in a group. No. This room buzzed with tension.
It smelled like soldering fumes, pencil shavings, leftover caffeine, and the faintest echo of ambition-turned-despair.
Most students had packed up hours ago, but Felicity remained in her fortress of design textbooks, open CAD diagrams, three kinds of scrap paper, and a crumpled granola bar wrapper that she’d been meaning to throw away for at least forty-five minutes. Her water bottle was dangerously low, her laptop fan sounded like it was preparing for lift-off, and her cursor had been blinking in the same spot on her thermal stress simulation for the last twenty-seven minutes.
She wasn’t stuck. She was just… tired.
Tired in the bone-deep way only a mechanical engineering student in her second trimester could be.
She shifted slightly, legs curled beneath her, one hand resting absently on the curve of her bump. Not because it hurt — not tonight — but because Beatrice had just kicked her in the ribs again, like she was trying to crawl out through Felicity’s diaphragm.
Her phone buzzed next to her laptop:
Oscar: Don’t forget dinner. Please. You always forget when your sim models hate you.
She smiled faintly but didn’t reply. Not yet. She still had heat sink values to triple-check.
That was when it happened.
A voice—too close, too casual—sliced through the stillness.
“Hey.”
Felicity looked up, blinking.
A guy was standing across the table. Probably mid-twenties. Tall, in that I stretch for photos, way. Crisp haircut. Slim jeans. Water bottle with a “No Bad Vibes” sticker on it — ironic, because he was currently radiating intrusive energy like a malfunctioning microwave.
He didn’t wait for permission. Just slid into the chair opposite hers like this was a first date she didn’t know they were having.
“I saw you in Thermo this morning,” he said. “That fluid mechanics question you asked? Insanely clever. I was going to say something after class, but you ducked out too fast.”
Felicity blinked at him. “I had a tutorial.”
“Oh, right,” he said. “Should’ve guessed. You seem like you’ve got everything scheduled down to the second.”
“I also needed chips,” she added, because both things were true.
He laughed like she’d made a joke. “You seem intense. I like that. Women in engineering? You don’t see that every day. Rare combination of intimidating and hot.”
She stared at him.
The words rolled around her brain like loose screws.
What… did he want?
Was this a compliment? An insult? An offer?
She was six months pregnant, her knees hurt, her thesis was trying to kill her, and she was wearing Oscar’s hoodie with a faint grease stain across the front.
What exactly was the goal here?
“I mean—don’t get me wrong,” he rushed on, clearly sensing the silence and trying to recover. “You’ve just got that… serious vibe. Like the kind of girl who rewires her own dishwasher.”
“I did,” she said flatly. “Last week.”
He blinked. “Seriously?”
“And the kettle. And Oscar’s sim pedal when it failed under full brake.”
There was a beat.
“…Who’s Oscar?” he asked, smirking now. “Your roommate?”
Felicity paused.
And for a moment—just a moment—she considered laughing.
Then she closed her laptop slowly. Deliberately.
“Oscar’s my husband.”
The guy blinked.
Stood up slowly. Her hoodie shifted, and with it, the full curve of her pregnancy became unmistakably obvious. Not theoretical. Not ambiguous. Imminent.
The guy’s eyes widened. “Oh.”
She adjusted the hem of her sweater, not breaking eye contact, slung her bag over one shoulder, and smiled — cold, clean, efficient.
“If you’re gonna flirt with a mechanical engineer,” she said, “maybe do a better job at observational diagnostics.”
He opened his mouth. Closed it. Looked like he wanted to apologise and also vanish into the carpet tiles.
Felicity didn’t wait for a response.
***
Trinity College, Oxford
By the time Felicity Piastri was twenty-one, she had two things down to a science:
How to balance a toddler on her hip while rewriting entire sections of a doctoral thesis.
The exact number of times she could ignore the same man before it became a full-blown academic experiment.
Her Oxford doctoral project - Reinforcement Through Flexibility: Dynamic Adaptation in Composite-Structured Performance Environments. - had technically been finished for weeks. The simulations were done, the modelling locked in, her conclusions tight and triple-sourced. Now she was just revising. Editing. Wrangling footnotes into submission while Bee tried to paste glitter stickers into the margins of her printed draft.
She did almost everything from home.
The only reason she even stepped foot into Oxford was for fortnightly supervision meetings with Dr. Green, who was brilliant, terrifying, and the only person Felicity would willingly leave the house (and her toddler) for.
Which was, unfortunately, where Nathan lived.
Nathan — Dr. Green’s personal assistant — had been a PPE student once upon a time, which explained a lot. Somehow, he’d wheedled his way into a departmental admin role despite not knowing the difference between a torque curve and a coffee stain. His talents included:
Misfiling room bookings.
Brewing tea that tasted like despair.
Flirting with Felicity like it was something he was being graded on.
The first time he tried it, she’d thought it was just bad small talk. She gave him the benefit of the doubt. He seemed the type to flirt accidentally, the kind of man who said “babe” to baristas and thought it made him charming.
The second time, she was slightly annoyed.
By the fifth, she had moved on to anthropological interest.
How did he not see the wedding ring? The child’s drawings poking out of her folder? The exhaustion of someone whose idea of a wild Friday night was installing firmware updates for fun?
Today, she arrived two minutes early for her meeting. She’d barely stepped into the department lobby when he spotted her.
“Dr. Green is running a bit late,” Nathan announced, standing up from behind the reception desk like he was emerging for a curtain call. “But I can keep you company if you like.”
Felicity barely paused. “She’s not. She still has 2 minutes till our appointment time.”
He grinned like she’d just flirted back. “You know, I was thinking the other day… you never hang around after your meetings. You always rush off.”
“Yeah,” she said, expression unreadable. “Because I have a toddler. And a dissertation. And a husband. In that order.”
Nathan winced theatrically. “Oof. Brutal.”
She offered him a smile that wasn’t one. “Sorry. Was that too reality-based?”
Still, he pressed on, leaning against the desk like he thought he was on the cover of GQ.
“Still,” he said, “it’d be nice to talk about something other than drivetrain mapping sometime. Maybe grab a drink?”
Felicity blinked. Twice.
It wasn’t the first time he’d suggested it. But somehow, today, it caught her even more off guard.
“You’re asking me,” she said slowly, “a married mother of one, who is actively finishing a thesis and hasn’t eaten a full sit-down meal in two days, to go get drinks with you?”
He laughed, like she was being ridiculous.
“I didn’t think you’d take it that seriously. We could just talk—”
“About what?” she asked, genuinely baffled. “What, precisely, do you think I have in common with a man who once told me Elon Musk was just misunderstood?”
Nathan blinked.
Felicity continued. “Do you want help with your CV? Is this about office gossip? Are you confused and trying to network with me through reverse psychology?”
“I just meant—”
“I’m not trying to be rude,” she said, eyes narrowing in thought. “I genuinely don’t understand what outcome you’re envisioning here. Do you think I’m going to cheat on my husband with the guy who can’t pronounce ‘aerodynamics’ without swallowing the word halfway through?”
He flushed slightly. “You don’t have to be mean.”
“I’m not. I’m being efficient.”
The door to the inner office opened before he could reply. Dr. Green appeared, breathless and balancing two takeaway coffees in one hand and a folder in the other.
“Felicity, I’m so sorry. The grant committee meeting ran over. Here—” She handed over one of the cups. “Decaf oat, right? And I pulled the new journal submissions for you. There are a few I thought might intersect with your secondary chapter on hybrid systems.”
Felicity smiled as she took the coffee. “Thanks. I already reviewed the three most relevant ones and emailed you a summary chart with citations.”
Dr. Green blinked. “Of course you did.”
Nathan blinked, too, but for entirely different reasons.
Felicity turned back to him just before following her professor inside.
“Oh, and Nathan?”
“…Yes?” he said, still — somehow — hopeful.
She raised her left hand and tapped the wedding band with one finger. “This wasn’t a joke.”
And then she shut the office door behind her like it was a verdict.
The Door Handle Aisle of Homebase, Woking
Oscar was off racing.
Felicity was elbow-deep in a bathroom renovation.
Not the Pinterest kind.
Not the “new towels and scented eucalyptus and a little bamboo ladder for the aesthetic” kind.
No, this was the “rip out the vanity with a crowbar and discover the wall behind it had been sealed with hope and duct tape” kind.
The kind of renovation that required full battle gear: dust mask, gloves, safety goggles, and the controlled fury of a woman who had read the plumbing manual twice and did not need a man explaining pipe fittings to her.
And because she was who she was — stubborn, competent, and wildly intelligent— Felicity hadn’t hired anyone.
She could do it herself.
And she would.
Which meant… many, many trips to the hardware store.
The staff had started to recognise her by mid-April. A couple of them even learned to duck when she walked in, in case she asked for a specific size of tap washer they didn’t carry. But one guy — the guy from the sealant aisle—hadn’t learned that lesson.
Late twenties, overly friendly, perpetually wearing a toolbelt he definitely didn’t need, like he thought it made him look rugged instead of unconvincing. He hovered near the caulk and grout displays like they were a dating pool.
The first time, it was casual.
“You here again?” he’d asked, smiling like he was in a rom-com. “You must really like DIY.”
Felicity didn’t look up from the tile grout chart. “I like doing things properly.”
The second time, it was more confident.
“Doing a kitchen too?” he asked, spotting the tile adhesive in her basket. “You ever need help—”
“I’ve got it, thanks,” she said, already walking toward checkout before he could finish.
By the sixth visit, he had apparently decided they were bonding.
She was in the handles aisle, comparing brass finishes, when she heard him again — that telltale sneaker-squeak on linoleum, the voice turned up a little too loud, too performative.
“Wow,” he said, appearing at the end of the aisle. “If I didn’t know better, I’d say you keep coming in just to see me.”
Felicity didn’t look up. She held one cabinet pull in each hand and considered which one better matched the art deco lines of the mirror she’d thrifted.
“I assure you,” she said, tone even, “my interest in you begins and ends with your stock of brass hinges.”
He laughed, undeterred. “Come on. You’re always here. I figured, maybe you’re one of those cool builder girls. You don’t wear a ring or anything, so…”
That’s what finally made her pause.
Not the tone. Not the implication. But the logic.
She looked at him.
“You think I keep coming in here because… what? I’m lonely?” she asked, brow furrowed in genuine confusion. “I’m literally holding blueprints and a door handle.”
He shrugged. “You just seem like the kind of girl who could use a little—” (God help him) “—company.”
Felicity blinked. She wiped a smudge of pencil from her chin, set the handles back down, and reached into her tote bag without breaking eye contact.
She pulled out her phone.
“I’m going to walk you through something,” she said calmly, unlocking the screen. “Because clearly, you didn’t do any preliminary research before launching this… ill-conceived outreach attempt.”
She turned the lock screen toward him.
A photo.
Felicity, curled up on a sofa in a hoodie. Oscar was beside her, kissing the top of her head. Bee sprawled between them in footie pyjamas, holding a spoon upside down like a trophy. The lighting was soft. Domestic. Unmistakably intimate.
“This,” Felicity said, “is my husband. He is currently in Azerbaijan, driving a car at three hundred miles an hour. That’s our daughter. She is two. I do renovations during naptime.”
The man paled. “Oh. I—uh. I didn’t know—”
“No,” she agreed. “You didn’t ask.”
He opened his mouth like he wanted to say something else — possibly to dig the hole deeper.
But Felicity wasn’t done.
“I come in here to buy tile primer. I don’t come in here for unsolicited analysis of my marital status from men who think a toolbelt is a personality trait.”
Her voice never rose. It didn’t have to.
It was calm. Steady.
The voice of someone who had personally rewired her fuse box and once installed a dishwasher while on the phone and dealing with a crying toddler.
She smiled politely. Dangerously.
Like a woman who kept zip ties in her car and knew how to use them.
“I’ll take these, thanks,” she said, lifting the cabinet handles. “Don’t need help carrying them. But if you’ve got any more of that tile primer from last week in stock, that would be helpful.”
He mumbled something about checking the back and fled like a man pursued by the consequences of his own choices.
Felicity watched him go, then picked up the nicer brass finish.
She didn’t even roll her eyes. She was too tired.
Felicity just wanted her tile primer and to go home.
***
Rooftop Bar, Melbourne
Felicity didn’t go out much.
Not because she couldn’t — Oscar insisted she take breaks, even booked her massages that she always forgot to attend — but because she liked her life.
She liked being home with Bee. She liked sanding doorframes and painting walls and mapping out the next renovation with a pencil stuck in her messy bun. She liked curling up on the sofa with her laptop, trading stock options at 1 AM. She liked Oscar reading over her shoulder, pointing out line graphs he didn’t understand but wanted to. She liked the steady rhythm of their days. Naptimes and quiet dinners and Bee’s loud commentary on the existence of pigeons.
But they were in Melbourne over the Winter break, and Nicole had insisted.
“You’re getting out of the house,” she’d said, practically pushing Felicity toward the wardrobe. “You’ve been in Australia for five days, and the only places you’ve seen are the beach and Bunnings.”
And so here they were — rooftop bar in Melbourne, warm summer air, glass of chilled white wine in Nicole’s hand and a lemon-lime mocktail in Felicity’s.
Their dresses fluttered in the breeze; Her hair was up. Her arms were bare. She looked, Nicole thought proudly, like the kind of woman men write songs about.
Which was, unfortunately, the problem.
Because a man at the bar had noticed, too.
He made his way over with the swagger of someone who once played rugby in uni and still referred to it as “his prime.” White linen shirt. Too many rings. Hair with more product than structure. And that thing men did when they leaned on a table like they were presenting a TED Talk on their charm.
“Hope I’m not interrupting,” he said smoothly, eyes only on Felicity.
Nicole didn’t blink. “You are.”
Felicity raised her eyebrows, mildly surprised, but didn’t say anything. She just sipped her drink and let the lime catch on her tongue.
The man chuckled — the low, confident kind that assumed he was being flirted back with.
“I just thought I’d say—you’ve got a great smile,” he continued. Still to Felicity. Still convinced. “You local?”
“No,” she said. “Just visiting.”
He nodded toward Nicole. “With your sister?”
Nicole’s mouth twitched.
Felicity opened her mouth to clarify, but Nicole got there first.
“I’m her mother-in-law,” she said, swirling her wine.
That gave him a moment’s pause. But not enough.
“Well, she’s clearly not married—” he gestured vaguely to Felicity’s left hand, bare in the way most hands are after a morning at the beach with a toddler and too much sunscreen.
Felicity smiled. Slowly. Like a summer storm deciding whether to ruin your picnic or level your whole house.
“I took my rings off before swimming this morning,” she said, amused. “Didn’t want to lose them in the ocean.”
He still didn’t give up. “No offence, but… a girl like you? You don’t need to be tied down so young.”
Felicity furrowed her brow. “What does that mean?”
“I mean, you could have fun. Live a little.”
“I’m married,” she said again, a little slower. “I live a lot.”
“You know what I mean,” he said, grinning.
She genuinely didn’t understand.
What did he mean by that?
Was she supposed to say thank you? Defend her marriage?
Debate the merits of early commitment like she was on a panel?
“No,” Felicity replied honestly, “I actually don’t. What exactly do you think is going to happen? I abandon my family because you complimented my teeth?”
She had a three-year-old who could build better arguments about bedtime.
Before Felicity could figure out what to say, Nicole gently set her wine glass down.
“She’s not tied down, darling,” she said, tone perfectly pleasant. “She’s adored.”
She reached into her purse like she was pulling a weapon.
“Would you like to see a photo of her husband holding their daughter on the beach this morning?” she asked. “Or maybe the one where he flew eight hours just to make it to her thesis defence?”
The man’s face did a visible three-second software update.
“No, that’s okay,” he said, already backing up a step.
Nicole raised an eyebrow. “You sure? My son is very photogenic. His job likes to post him shirtless sometimes. It’s a whole thing.”
Felicity had to bite her lip to keep from laughing.
“Right. Uh—have a nice night,” the man muttered, vanishing like a bug under bright light.
+1 — The One Time Oscar Noticed
The garage was buzzing with that high-voltage energy unique to a U.S. race weekend — louder music, brighter cameras, fans pressed against every fence line like they were at a concert instead of a motorsport event. McLaren’s VIP list was stacked with influencers, sponsors, and the usual parade of celebrities trying to look like they knew what a downforce map was.
Oscar didn’t care about any of them.
He cared about the girls in the denim jackets with PIASTRI stitched across the back in big, white glittery letters. Their arts and crafts project for Silverstone.
Felicity was standing near the back of the garage, Bee balanced on her hip, and a pair of toddler-sized headphones slipped over her curls. The two of them had matching jackets, homemade and loud and perfect. Bee’s even had a sparkly iron-on chicken. Felicity’s had glitter stars. Oscar had never seen anything more beautiful in his life.
He was mid-chat with one of the engineers when he glanced over again.
And froze.
Because some guy—tall, tanned, fake-smiling, and clearly trying to look famous—was leaning way too close to Felicity. His teeth were too white. His shirt was unbuttoned halfway down his chest. He held a drink, and worse, he had sunglasses on inside. Oscar didn’t even know where he’d come from — but there he was, leaning against the garage railing like it was a club bar and Felicity was the drink special.
He was saying something. Laughing too loud.
Felicity frowned politely. She shifted a sleeping Bee on her hip and took a half-step back.
The man followed.
“I’m just saying,” he drawled, gesturing to her jacket, “if you’re gonna wear another man’s name on your back, he better be worth it.”
Felicity blinked. “He’s my husband.”
That didn’t deter him.
“Bet he doesn’t even know how good he’s got it,” the man said, still smiling, his gaze dropping briefly to her legs. “You ever get tired of being someone’s plus-one, let me know.”
Bee stirred a little, nose twitching, and Felicity rubbed her back automatically, like muscle memory. Her brow furrowed. “Excuse me?”
The guy tilted his head. “C’mon. You’re clearly the type who plays the sweet wife in public. But a woman like you?” He dropped his voice. “You need real attention.”
Oscar took a step forward, but someone else moved faster.
“Alright,” said a voice, sharp and Australian and impossible to ignore. “Let’s try that again — from six feet away.”
The man turned, surprised, and saw Mark Webber.
Mark didn’t need to raise his voice. His presence alone was enough to freeze a room.
He gave the man a smile that could cut glass. “You’ve got five seconds to back up before I make this very awkward for everyone.”
“Sorry, mate—”
“No, see, that’s the problem,” Mark said, stepping forward slightly. “You’re not her mate. You’re a stranger talking to a woman who’s clearly married, clearly holding a child, and clearly not interested. So unless you’re trying to get blacklisted from every paddock hospitality list from now until eternity, I’d walk away.”
The guy opened his mouth. Closed it. Then turned and slinked off like a coward in designer shoes.
Oscar finally got to them, face tight, fury in every step.
Mark nodded. “Handled.”
Oscar exhaled slowly. “Thanks.”
“No problem.” Mark looked at Felicity. “You alright?”
Felicity still looked baffled. “What was that?”
Oscar looked her over, checking Bee, checking her, like reassurance was the only way to keep his hands from shaking. “That guy was harassing you.”
“What? No. Was he?” She squinted after him. “He was just being weird.”
Oscar stared at her. “He was flirting. Badly.”
“He was being rude,” Felicity said. “And creepy. But flirting? Why would anyone flirt with someone holding a sleeping toddler and wearing a juice-stained T-shirt? Why does this keep happening?!”
Mark rubbed a hand over his face. “You’re wearing a custom denim jacket with your husband’s name on it in glitter. Holding your kid. And you still have men sniffing around. That’s not on you — that’s on them being idiots.”
Oscar exhaled hard.
Felicity, still gently rocking Bee, just sighed. “Maybe I should just get a flashing neon sign.”
Oscar stepped closer and kissed her temple. “You okay?”
She looked at him, tired but unbothered. “Yeah. Are you?”
“No,” he muttered. “But I will be once I get you both inside.”
***
They were tucked away in the quiet corner of the drivers' room now, post-session, Bee still fast asleep on the little sofa wrapped in one of Oscar’s hoodies. The chaos of the paddock had faded into muffled noise.
Oscar was sitting across from Felicity, one leg bouncing.
He was still rattled.
“What do you mean they keep flirting with you?” he asked, brows drawn together as he looked at her.
Felicity blinked up at him. “What?”
“You said it like it happens regularly,” he said, voice low and sharp with something he was trying to keep cool. “Like that wasn’t the first time.”
She paused. Shrugged. “I mean… it does? A little?”
Oscar stared at her. “Since when?”
“I don’t know. Since Haileybury, probably? Or Oxford. And, like… in the hardware store.”
Oscar made a noise that might have been a groan or a growl.
“And you didn’t tell me?” he asked.
“I didn’t think it mattered,” she said simply, brushing a hand over Bee’s curls. “They’re not you. So they don’t have a chance.”
He stilled.
That one sentence — calm, sure, like it was the most obvious fact in the world — hit him in the chest like a perfect downshift.
She tilted her head, studying him. “You really didn’t know?”
“I knew people looked,” he admitted.
Of course, they looked. He was aware of how Felicity looked: Sunglasses pushed to the top of her head. Hair windswept from the open pit lane. She had juice on her shirt, no makeup, and still — still — she looked like something out of a dream. Breakable and brilliant. All porcelain and fire.
Beautiful.
“I’m not blind. But I didn’t realise they were… like that.”
“I don’t even get why they are doing it,” Felicity snorted. “I look like someone who hasn’t slept properly since Bee was born. I have crusted juice on my shirt. I literally threw Goldfish crackers at our daughter to buy myself ten minutes.”
Oscar leaned back, exasperated. “And you still look better than anyone else here.”
She narrowed her eyes. “You’re just biased.”
“I’m jealous,” he corrected, then ran a hand through his hair. “God, I hate it. That guy didn’t even flinch when you said you were married.”
“He probably thought I was joking,” she said mildly. “People don’t really expect twenty-somethings to be married with kids.”
Oscar’s jaw tightened. “They should. You wear my name on your back.”
She shrugged. “They don’t matter. You’re the only one I’ve ever wanted.”
Oscar was across the space in a second.
He kissed her — slow, deep, a little desperate — hand sliding around her waist, pulling her in close. His other hand cupped her jaw, thumb brushing her cheek like he had to remind himself she was real.
When he finally pulled back, he rested his forehead against hers, breath shallow.
“You’re mine,” he said, voice low. “I know I don’t own you, but God, I feel it sometimes. Like you’ve always been mine.”
“I have. Since we were 15,” she whispered. “I love you. I’ve always loved you. Even before you had a Wikipedia page.”
Oscar kissed her. Not rushed, not messy — but firm. Grounded. A kiss that said mine. A kiss that would’ve been indecent if she weren’t already wearing his name and carrying his child and his whole damn heart.
When he finally pulled back, she was breathless.
And across the room, Bee stirred, let out a sleepy sigh, and snuggled deeper into Oscar’s hoodie.
Felicity leaned in, kissed the corner of his mouth, and muttered, “You’re ridiculous when you’re jealous.”
He grinned. “You love it.”
“Unfortunately,” she sighed. “Yes.”
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