#oh i spelled those wrong...
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Yuuto Akama icons for @yuuasulover
Reblog+Credit if using!
#i have no clue who this is but hes cute#âĄrequestsâĄ#yuuto akama#akama yuuto#yuto akama#akama yuto#mikagura school suite#mikagura gakuen kumikyoku#oh i spelled those wrong...#whoopsies
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Rowan B. â

Its the eldest of the goobers, Rowan Broflovski! He's finally drawn out! I've drawn so little of him, and what a crime that was! Sweet, tired son boy!
Harper | @patchoululi
đ - As mentioned before, he was the first twin to make an appearance! Absolutely something he will never let Ronnie forget!
đ - The more introverted of the two. Most of the time he has major resting bitch face, most of the time it is on purpose.
đ - This does change when he's around Ronnie. It's a very small change, but his brows tend to relax more and he's more likely to smile.
-> This changes more when they're older. He finds himself actually smiling and able to be a goober in public.
-> Ronnie acts a bit like a security blanket for him. That thing when you're with your friend and can just relax because at least someone there gets your sense of humor
đ - Dry! The most dry humor you could have in a human being! There's a bit of a gallows humor in there, too. Which doesn't always go over well with other people, so he tends to keep to himself.
đ - While he got Jean's hair, he inherited his dad's nose and eyes. He relates to his father more on personality, too.
-> He didn't really get his father's temper, just that no patience for bullshit attitude. Ronnie tends to pick on him when he tries to give him the stare â˘.
"You know you look like Dad when you do that, right? You have no power over me. Put it away."
"I hate you."
"No~ you~ don't~"
-> That being said, the boy struggles with depression at a pretty young age. The tired look isn't always because he's bothered.
-> He's introduced to medication pretty quickly, something Jean is immediately on top of. As he gets older, he stays with his therapist for as long as he can.
đ - Does very well in school. He has a heavy hand in Ronnie passing any of his classes. Rowan will accept nothing less than perfection. Straight A student the whole time.
đ - He's got a small phobia of failure. A small compulsive need to be the very best because messing things up stresses him out. He gets caught up in his head over the slightest fuck up.
đ Hobbies Inclide-
đ¸ - Rowan plays bass! He loves music just like his brother! But unlike Ronnie, he doesn't just stop at one instrument.
đš - Piano is his guilty pleasure. He loves classical music sure, but just about anything that can be played on those ivory keys puts him at peace. He'll often use this to calm down if he's going through it.
âžď¸ - Rowan found himself really enjoying baseball! He likes basketball, too, but only when he's playing with his family. But with baseball, it's his. He doesn't share that with anyone else. A lot of nights when he's supposed to be sleeping spent at the field.
đ - Writing! Writing! Writing! Oh god does the boy write! Poetry, stories, lyrics, even plays! You name it, Rowan dabbles in it!
âşď¸ - And of course, just like Ronnie, he loves camping. It's quiet. Most of the time, it's relaxing. Most of the time, he's alone. No expectations. Just nature and maybe finally getting some sleep.
đ - He sleeps very poorly. A lot of that comes from that he feels like he's wasting time when he's asleep. Rowan can't accept anything less than perfection as stated above, so that means every moment MUST be dedicated to doing something.
đ - Most times, you'll find him with his headphones in. He's not shy about it either. He buys the big ones that go over your head so you know he doesn't want to be messed with.
-> That isn't to say he doesn't want the company. He very much does. He's just afraid.
-> Living with depression is hard. Especially when you have your downs. Rowan often feels like he's too much to deal with, so he doesn't let many people get close.
-> That part of him that feels like he needs to be good at everything he does doesn't translate well with social encounters. He often feels he's not as good as Ronnie is, so it stresses him out.
-> Eventually, if he's around you enough, he'll loosen up. It just takes time.
đ - His relationship with his grandparents is very special to him. As is his relationship with his religion. Rowan keeps to himself about it for the most part. After all, it's his relationship with his religion... no one else's.
đ - Spends a lot of time with his grandparents, helping them with the holidays and learning as much as he can from them. He loves his grandma Sheila very much.
đ - As much as Ronnie is a mama's boy, Rowan gets along with their father more. Kyle is one of the few people where Rowan can just be at peace around.
-> So his relationship with Jean isn't rocky, like Ronnie and Kyle's is. It's more like... both of them are walking on ice around each other.
-> There's a lot of times when Rowan feels like he can't compete with Ronnie. He sees how his twin brother and his mother get along so well, and it kind of hurts sometimes.
-> Jean fully blames herself for any and all of Rowan's mental health. She struggles with depression and now her baby boy has it. It's heavy stuff.
-> So these combined insecurities just cause them to dance around one another. But, just like how Rowan had to call his brother out, Ronnie calls him out for it when they're older. Telling him to talk about it and stop holding it in!
đ - Rowan does, however, think his "Uncle" Stan is the coolest guy ever! He grows up listening to all of those old Crimson Dawn albums. Steals his mom's old shirt and watches every recording.
đ - Even though Ronnie gets the reputation for being a bit of a flirt. It's Rowan, who's a bit of a heartbreaker. He turns a lot of people down, usually using the excuse that he's too busy. (The real reason is that fear mentioned above.)
đ - Rowan is demisexual. It's takes him a while to get comfortable with another person, even more so when it comes to romance. Like his twin, he doesn't care what gender you are...it's who you are that matters.
-> He is very protective over his people, though. A very big, protective older brother figure.
-> But when he falls, he crashes. If he catches feelings, that's it. He's done for. There's a tight feeling in his chest, he mistakes for anxiety, and he's a certified fumbler.
đ - His voice claim is the singer Sawyer Hill! A few of his songs are on Rowan's playlist for a reason!
đ - He very much wants to be an author when he's older. I definitely share the headcanon that Kyle becomes a professor later on in life, namely English.
-> But I think Rowan puts that to the side when he's a young adult in favor for Ronnie's dreams.
-> It's not something he'll ever bring up to his twin, but Rowan sacrifices a lot of himself for his brother.
-> The whole reason he picked up bass in the first place was FOR Ronnie. The bass is often the instrument that holds the band together, but it takes more of a background role to say, the guitar. Even though he was named after Dio's guitarist.
-> And that idea sort of represents their relationship as a whole. Ronnie relies on Rowan to keep him grounded and put together. While Rowan relies on Ronnie to sometimes take that step into the unknown, to remember to breath.
-> A lot of Rowan's personal story is growing up too fast, and like his brother, finding your own identity in all of it.
-> On a more uplifting side, it's also about accepting that your feelings are valid and depression is a struggle, but you're so very strong for overcoming it. For learning to live with it!
-> Rowan often feels indebted to his brother. For as much as Ronnie thinks he needs Rowan. He feels it to be the other way around.
Hey, once again, thanks for reading this far! I truly adore you, and I'm floored every time I read those kind tags! I hope you enjoyed it and thanks for sticking around! Here's a Playlist for your troubles!
#south park#south park oc#sp oc#my oc stuff#next generation#Rowan Broflovski#oc x canon#that's right baby; Jean names her kids after TWO members from Dio#Rowan's post is a little more sad than his brothers#I actually had a hard time writing this one up#I've rambled about it before; but mental health - namely depression - is something I take very seriously#I hovered over that with Rowan and Jean because I wanted to tell a story that connected me to other people.#A way of me kinda going - hey I get it#you're not alone; those struggles you feel everyday; that exhausted uphill and down hill swing; I fucking get it#If just once person feels heard; or seen from these little brain action figures; then I've done my job#these are topics that are rough and hard to read and I may not always articulate them well#But I DO care; I care so very much.#I feel that way about my religion too; I gave Rowan a little bit of my quiet love for that too!#Find what makes you feel good; love it because its apart of you; because there is no one in this world like you#And I love you; I think your soul is contagious~!#oc art#oh yes; btw I did spell idiot wrong the first time in Ronnie's pic#CAPITALIZE ON YOUR OWN FUCK UPS BABY#HE GETS IT FROM MEEEEEE#bro has chronic 𤨠face#Spotify#sp-growingpains
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the pipeline of using like 20000 different labels because none of them really fit exactly how you view your identity then just going âfuhk itâ and scrapping all of them and being (mostly) unlabeled is real
#just in my experience if you use a ton of labels ur super cool#i usually just say im gay transmasc but technically im aroace gay oriented transmasc genderqueer#like i still have those in my identity but yk#unlabeled pride#unlabeled#unlabled pride#unlabled#unlabled sexuality#unlabled gender#how the hell do you spell unlabeled. oh autocorrect there it is#hm whatever all the auto tags came up spelt wrong so like its fine
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My translyrics for Salamander, written out under the cut :D
This one was much more difficult than the last, but I'm still very satisfied with it! đ¤ I'm both sad that my version lost a lot of the fun soundplay of the original, and also waaay more impressed with the lyrics and vocals after digging it like this! I tried to keep it balanced between the original and Fuuta's version, though maybe it ended up leaning more toward the cover, idk. Leaving my specific notes in the tags đ
Salamander~ Hot's nice, don't you agree? This pa- passion's fine, see?
"But" isn't what I wanna hear, so say "more" loud and clear.
It's heating up all through my mind when I'm with you.
I want a taste, but all this spice may prove more than I can take, (eh?)
Something's on your mind. So spit it out and tell me, don't waste my time, kay?
I'm hooked on this, pass me a dish.
The way I'm starving here without you -- it's a crime
A spicy treat, put on repeat,
Can I get seconds with the same heat? One more time!
Salamander~ Hot's nice, don't you agree? This pa- passion's fine, see?
"But" isn't what I wanna hear, so say "more" loud and clear.
It's heating up all through my mind when I'm with you.
I can't stop anything, although I wouldn't want to stop, oh no --
Take a breath, it's best to cool down or you earn yourself a burn.
I want a bite, I can't help giving in to this new appetite.
Again, again, I want to be on fire when I get to the end.
We live too fast, we burn to ash,
I never handled spices well and it's a crime.
A spicy treat, put on repeat,
Can I get seconds with the same heat? One more time!
I want to burn bright red
I want to burn bright red
Salamander~ Hot's nice, don't you agree? This pa- passion's fine, see?
"But" isn't what I wanna hear, so say "more" loud and clear.
Tell me I'm not alone in my mind!
Salamander~ Look what's happened to me. This pa- passion's crazy
Tell me I'm not delirious, I'm being serious.
It's heating up all through my mind when I'm with you.
I can't stop anything, although I wouldn't want to stop, oh no --
Take a breath, it's best to cool down or you earn yourself a burn.
I want to leave I want to go, but I can never stop, oh no --
Take a breath, it's best to cool down or you earn yourself a burn.
#milgram#fuuta kajiyama#deco*27#this time i can confidently say this is my fav milgram song lmao#literally the hardest line of the whole song was the very first one#still not 100% satisfied but compared to my dozens of draft lines its pretty good#i really wanted the 'po's to be within a word like the original and went digging through so many words with the sound in the middle LMAO#i wanted something focused more on heat/spice but alas it had to be passion -_-#there was very little space to get across the idea of 'its not a big deal right?' so i hope 'fine' conveys what i want it to hmm...#forever missing the sound of 'ripiccha itai/ piriccha itai' but the treat/repeat lines still worked out well!#so mad english doesnt have a nice onomatopoeia like 'fuu' :(#i needed to keep the long u to finish of the first stanza the long o in a few lines -- i absolutely love how arthur lounsbery sings those#my ace ass appreciates his commitment to singing such a steamy song so harsh and turning the seductive whispers into angry grumbling đ#me too man#the struggle of trying to write fun food lines and going 'oh NO that sounds even dirtier now' đđđ#i actually did record myself singing and i knew it was gonna be bad but it was Really Awful adsfdsfd so sorry#just take my word for it!!! it all works perfectly!!!#(once again if anyone wants to cover it hmu hehe :3)#oops spelled delirious wrong in my chart shhhhhh#lyrics
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#pjo hoo toa#will x nico#solangelo#will solace#nico di angelo#trials of apollo#I'm sorry it's just that TMR meme is hilarious#my pinterest is so randomđ¤Ł#the maze runner#<-just gonna tag it because#rachel elizabeth dare#shoutout to whoever drew those draws#and memed thag meme#ik i spelled *that* wrong it's whatever#oh and shoutout to who quoted that quote#love ya POOKIES#so how was your day?
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I would say that the United States, as of right now, has three main food groups (aside from junk food) and those are, Italian, Mexican, and Chinese. All of which have been Americanized here to some extent but differently in different parts of the country. I find this very funny because I have heard people from Italy be indignant about what weâve done with the stuff (and about good restaurants too!) like, sorry if you guys werenât creative, mixing things up a bit is great. âWhat about (regionally popular food)?!â I know we all have those, I havenât heard of bitches in the south eating lefse, but thatâs not my point! What was my point actually? I think I was going to say that, even if we bastardize stuff a lot, Iâm super glad we have, as a country, agreed that more seasoning is good. Because if this place had been like âfuck immigrant food forever, we are eating British styleâ I think I would die.
This country has historically treated immigrants like shit, but we do tend to cave eventually and go like âactually,
your food is really goodâ a kind of shallow prize I guess, but Iâm glad we actually start doing it eventually because I WILL mock British food and I WILL be sad that the only good family recipes my family has from before immigrating are all desserts. Donât get me wrong, I love sweets, but Iâm pretty sure there is a reason we stopped making other stuff
Wait, I re-read this today and realized I sound like my family is British. We are not. What even are British desserts? I bet they donât have enough cardamom. Although lefse doesnât have cardamom and i like a lot of things without it, my point is that their holiday and special event foods probably donât have enough! Which wouldnât surprise me tbh because apparently the only place that went crazy for the stuff outside of where it originated seems to have been Scandinavia for some reason. At least some maps I looked at seemed to suggest it. Which rocked me to my core
#emma posts#and I know that there are Native American foods that were really here first#but the three most popular quisenes (idk how to spell that) on a country wide scale#are those three#and also. Iâve seen a few Italian recipes from Italy and you guys donât always use enough seasoning#I donât care if thatâs insulting#foods should have depth if they are going to be good#and I think people (at least around here) rely too heavily on cheese#even aside from the vegan thing. since i have diversified my diet more I am like#cheese is not a substitute for other flavors#this is my hot food take#my take on hot foods though is that I thought I couldnât handle hot spiciness but then#I heard about British people reacting and also ate with older people here and was like âoh my god. thatâs so sadâ#my mom thinks udon is too spicy :(#i hope this doesnât come across wrong but this IS the bad reading comprehension website#going to a local Scandinavia festival and admiring the arts and the sweets and then they start talking about other cultural foods and Iâm#just like âwhy would you do that to fish?â and judging my ancestors#in THEORY I understand why. food preservation and all that. but in practiceâŚ#like I said. there is a reason dessert and bread recipes are what my family still has from before America and Iâm not really mad about that#being the only food#weâve all heard the old people talk about lutefisk and we are like ânopeâ
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Man getting into Madoka Magica (again) and Starwars (for the first time) is such a weird combo.
Anyway
inspo below:

#i've got like an entire pmmm witch design for this guy#oh god the colors look ASS on mobile whyyyy#star wars#the clone wars#I got the shoulder thing wrong fuuuck#arc trooper fives#gekidan inu curry#puella magi madoka magica#those are madoka magica witch runes; they spell out 'fives'#i like using sketchier lineart sometimes#its not 1 to 1 but thats alright#and i put blue there cuz i could!
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Youâd think that by learning that reading depressing fanfics does not benefit me in any way and probably just makes things worse is stop reading them but nope. Not. a. chance.
#hold on I need to psychoanalyse me self#I mean I see the warning and I keep saying that those warnings donât affect me but then the fic is so beautifully witten and Iâm an empath#so wuh oh#ao3#everytime I go to add that tag I always spell it wrong likeâŚ.. 3 timesâŚ.
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#there's this whole sequence of these buildings getting dragged into one place with people running with rubble falling on them#but i wanted to highlight this moment specifically#when i used the phrase 'silliest 9/11' committed to children's television or otherwise#i was talking about this specifically#the sign coming on like a neon light after the city destruction sequence is some delicious tonal whiplash#oh huh the sign spelled bandora wrong thats funny too#im watching zyuranger for the first time and I'm afraid I'm going to be subjecting you to my impressions of it#while im here look at those models. like you can tell that they're models. but theyre really good models.#i really enjoy how you can metaphorically see the seams in this show it feels like a stage production#ive got subtitles but you almost don't need them everyone is doing over the top theatre acting and a lot of stuff is conveyed visually
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I want to start posting more stuff about my ocs and I decided I'd start with some piccrews I already made. From top to bottom they're Achillies, Holly, Luke, Mordecai, Roxie, and Victoire. I also have a post here with some more info about each of them, although I want to talk about them more too. And maybe post some art but we'll see if I actually get around to doing that.
Edit: the pictures are super big and it annoyed me so they're under the read more now!
#ive actually made them in a lot of piccrews but i did not want to post all the photos at once lol#ive made memes with them too so maybe ill post those at some pt#i rlly hope the pictures don't look too big when i post this otherwise im going to have to immediately edit it lol#anyways i used to think i was really cringe for having ocs (sometimes i still kinda do lol) but i also like talking about them so#what better place to be annoying about them than on my tumblr blog#my ocs#lol yeah i did immediately have to edit it :P#also yes i know achilles is spelled wrong but that's how i spelled it when i made him up and that's just his name now#oh wait I should link the piccrew but Iâm about to go to sleep so hopefully I remember to do that tomorrow
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THE WAY I LOVED YOU â park sunghoon
Years after a quiet, painful breakup, you are assigned to write a profile on South Koreaâs most elusive figure skater, Park Sunghoon, who just so happens to be your ex-boyfriend. What was supposed to be a byline quickly spirals into a collision of unresolved feelings, buried emotions that are edging too close to the surface, and the slow thaw between two people who once meant the world to each other. With every step you take back into his orbit, the line between story and truth begins to blurâand the version of him you thought you knew starts to unravel.
word count: 44k (LMFAOOOOOOO)
pairing: figureskater!ex!sunghoon x sportsjournalist!afab!reader
featuring: yunah, minju, and moka from illit
genre: figure skating au, exes to lovers, the one that got away, sunshine x midnight rain, second chance romance, right person wrong time but also becomes right time(?), opposites attract, slow burn, ANGST
warnings: this story contains miscommunication at its PEAK, emotional distress, mentions of injury, past breakup, abandonment, and themes of regret, long-distance, sunghoon ice prince stereotype, mutual pining, girl putting more effort than guy, hopeless romantic core, emphasis on love language, usage of profanities, slight indication of intimacy (literally like one paragraph if you squint), angst, angst, angst, and oh! angst, also maybe slight inaccuracies to real life sports delegations(?)
disclaimer: this is a work of pure fiction. If any context is similar to any other stories, it's either inspired (in which credit will be given) or just a coincidence. the characters' personalities, words, actions and thoughts do not represent them in real life. any resemblance to any real life events or person, present or past, are purely coincidental. i apologise in advance for any spelling or grammar mistakes. characters are aged up for plot purpose.
notes from nat: ngl. i almost didn't want to put this out. but I know people have been waiting and I can be overly critical with myself sometimes... and 44k words is ALOT to just leave it in the drafts, so here you guys go! highly recommended to read with the playlist i curated in order! without further ado, enjoy!
tags: #tfwy thewayilovedyou #tfwy au
perm taglist. @m1kkso @hajimelvr @s00buwu @urmomssneakylink @grayscorner @catlicense @bubblytaetae @mrchweeee @artstaeh @sleeping-demons @yuviqik @junsflow @blurryriki @bobabunhee @hueningcry @fakeuwus @enhaslxt @neocockthotology @Starryhani @aishisgrey @katarinamae @mitmit01 @youcancometome @cupiddolle @classicroyalty @dearsjaeyun @ikeucakeu @sammie217 @m1kkso @tinycatharsis @parkjjongswifey @dcllsinna @no1likeneo @ChVcon3 @karasusrealwife @addictedtohobi @jyunsim @enhastolemyheart @kawaiichu32 @layzfy @renjunsbirthmark13 @enhaprettystars @Stercul1a @stars4jo @luvashli @alyselenai @ididntseeurbag @hii-hawaiiu @kwhluv @wonjiya @gabrielinhaa @milkycloudtyg @kristynaaah @cripplinghooman

The office is louder than usual for a Monday morning. Keyboards clatter like a percussion ensemble, and the faint hum of printers competes with the buzz of hurried conversations. The aroma of coffee lingers, sharp and bitter. You sit at your desk, staring at your laptop screen, fingers hovering over the keyboard but typing nothing.
Your new assignment email glares at you with a subject line you never thought youâd see: "Profile Piece on Park Sunghoon."
Park Sunghoon. Even his name feels heavy in your chest.
Memories surge to the surfaceâhis laughter ringing through late-night phone calls, the sparkle in his eyes when he spoke about skating, and the tension in his voice during those last arguments before everything unravelled. Itâs been years, but the ghost of him lingers like a song stuck in your head.
âY/N, youâve got the Sunghoon piece, right?â your editor, Yunah, calls out, snapping you out of your trance. Sheâs a whirlwind of energy, dressed in a sharp blazer with a coffee mug permanently glued to her hand.
âYeah,â you reply, trying to sound casual, though your voice wavers slightly. âIâve got it.â
âGood,â she says, striding over to your desk. âThe storyâs got legs. Everyoneâs buzzing about his reappearance and return to Korea. Olympic dreams, media darling, potential scandal⌠youâve got to dig deep on this one. Make it personal.â
âPersonal?â The word makes your stomach churn. âIsnât that more tabloidy than what weâre used to?â
âSports tabloids pay the bills, sweetheart,â Yunah says with a shrug. âAnd youâre the perfect person for this. Youâve got the knack for human stories, and Sunghoonâs story is nothing if not human. Besides, you went to the same university, right?â
The question hangs in the air, deceptively light. You hesitate for a moment too long, and Yunahâs brows lift, a knowing smirk tugging at her lips. âAh, I see,â she says teasingly. âWell, use it to your advantage.â
Of course. You forgot you're surrounded by people who read body language for a living. Thereâs no hiding anything from her.
She walks away before you can respond, leaving you with the sinking realisation that sheâs not entirely wrong. Who better to cover Park Sunghoonâs meteoric riseâand whatever personal demons heâs carryingâthan the girl who once loved him?
By lunchtime, youâve done enough digging to know exactly what youâre up against.
Sunghoonâs name is everywhere.
His faceâstill frustratingly photogenicâplastered across articles, feature spreads, and fan-edited clips with dramatic music overlays. They all show a polished, confident man, far removed from the awkward boy you used to know. His dark hair is perfectly styled, his tailored suits scream sophistication, and his trademark smirk has only grown more enigmatic.
You scroll through write-ups that gush about his triumphant return to the ice. They speculate whether heâll qualify for the next international season, drop cryptic mentions of a ânew fire in his eyes,â and cite sources that canât seem to agree whether his hiatus was due to injury or personal issues. Or both.
There are whispers about a reality show stint during his time in Spainâsomething lowkey, never officially aired, but leaked through blurry screenshots and strategically placed fan theories. A training arc in disguise, if you had to guess. Classic Sunghoon: disappearing, reinventing, and re-emerging like nothing happened.
And now? Heâs starting to make headlines again.
Which makes sense, you suppose. He hasnât been in the public eye for months. Not since that withdrawal from the Grand Prix final. Not since the buzz about that infamous tussleâthe one that sports reporters avoided naming outright but loved to allude to. The speculation only made him more mysterious. More magnetic. The kind of story that writes itself: the fallen star, re-forging his crown.
Yunahâs rightâthe storyâs got legs. You just wish you werenât the one chasing it.
You stare blankly at the screen, lips pressed together as your cursor hovers over yet another article about him.
You were supposed to be over this.
And yet, you canât deny the tightness coiling in your chestânot jealousy, exactly. Not regret, either. Just something far messier. The kind of feeling that comes from watching someone you once loved be glorified by the same world that never saw the nights you spent waiting for him to call. The world that didnât witness the quiet crumbling of a girl who poured so much of herself into someone who didnât know how to hold it.
You slam your laptop shut.
If heâs back on the ice, fine. Good for him.
But youâre not the same girl who used to cry over his missed calls and make excuses for his silence. You have a job to do. A byline to earn. And if this rink ends up being his comeback stage, then so be it.
Youâll be thereânot as the girl who once loved him, but as the reporter who can write his rise without flinching.
The first step is setting up an interview, which means reaching out to his management. This whole thing could very well end here. Youâll send the email, Sunghoon will reject the requestâjust like he does with every other news agency or tabloid that thinks they can score an exclusive interview with him. Yunah will realise youâre not some journalistic prodigy, and sheâll move on to the next big headline.
That should comfort you. When Sunghoon says no, itâs overâno awkward reunions, no dredging up memories youâve spent years trying to bury. And yet, you hesitate, fingers trembling as they hover over the keyboard.
The email stares back at you, every word perfectly composed, detached, professional. It doesnât betray the tangle of thoughts fighting for dominance in your mind.
From: You Subject: Interview Request for Park Sunghoon Profile Piece Dear Ms. Yoon, I hope this email finds you well. My name is Kang Y/N, and Iâm a journalist with Manifesto Daily. Our team is planning a profile piece on athlete Park Sunghoon, focusing on his inspiring journey as a professional athlete and his return to Korea. I would like to request an interview with Mr. Park to discuss his career, his aspirations for the future, and any personal insights heâd be willing to share with our readers. The piece aims to highlight his achievements and provide a deeper understanding of the person behind the athlete. Please let me know a time and date that would work best for Mr. Parkâs schedule. I am happy to accommodate and can meet at his convenience. Should you require any further details about the story or our publication, please donât hesitate to reach out. Thank you for considering this request. I look forward to your response. Best regards, Kang Y/N Senior Journalist (Sports Division) Manifesto Daily +82 XX XXXX YYYY
Highlight his achievements and provide a deeper understanding of the person behind the athlete. You scoff. As if you donât already have enough material to craft an in-depth exposĂŠ on Park Sunghoonâcomplete with anecdotes, vivid details, and a treasure trove of receipts that youâve kept buried at the back of your mind, and perhaps in a folder on your computer.
You know the kind of person Park Sunghoon is. Youâve seen him at his most passionate, the fire in his eyes when he spoke about mastering a new routine, and at his most vulnerable, when doubts about his own abilities kept him up at night.Â
Youâve also witnessed him at his ugliestâthose moments when he seemed completely disinterested during your calls, only for you to catch glimpses of him laughing unabashedly in his training mateâs Instagram stories. When he sent curt, dry texts that cut to your insecurities, leaving you questioning if you were the problem. And yet, now here you are, facing the daunting question: Who is he today? A polished media darling, exuding poise and confidence, or a jerk who simply broke your heart?
Youâre not just writing a profile; itâs about untangling the complexities of the boy you once loved and the man he has become, all while confronting the version of him thatâs lived rent-free in your head for years.
When you finally hit send, you lean back in your chair, exhaling deeply. Itâs done. Now all you can do is wait.
The reply comes faster than expected.
For a moment, you stare at the screen, rereading the email as if the words might change.Â
He said yes. The one answer you hadnât prepared yourself for. A mix of relief and dread washes over you in waves, leaving you momentarily frozen.
From: [email protected] Subject: Re: Interview Request for Park Sunghoon Profile Piece Dear Ms. Kang, Thank you for reaching out. Sunghoon has reviewed your request and is happy to make time to participate in the interview for your profile piece. We appreciate your interest in highlighting his journey and achievements. The interview can be scheduled for this Thursday at 3:00 PM at the Olympic Training Rink in Seoul. Please confirm if this timing works for you. Additionally, let us know if there are any specific topics or questions youâd like Sunghoon to prepare for in advance. Should you require further assistance, feel free to contact me directly. Best regards, Yoon Ji-eun Executive Assistant, Park Sunghoon +82 XX XXXX YYYY
âHappy to make time,â you mutter under your breath, staring at the email on your screen. A bitter laugh escapes before you can stop it. Does he even remember you? Or are you just another journalist to him now, a faceless name lost among the countless people chasing for a headline?
He must remember you. Right? After all, you were together for over four yearsâfour long, formative years that shaped so much of who you are. And out of those four, at least three were good years. Happy years. The kind of memories that even if you wanted to forget, you couldnât.Â
He isnât just part of your past; he is your past. From the moment you met him in freshman year college during orientation, to your graduation, and all the way up to the day he left for Spain to chase his dreams, Sunghoon was a constantâa gravitational force you couldnât escape.
Late-night study sessions that turned into early-morning phone calls. The excitement of travelling to watch his competitions, where his focus on the ice was matched only by the way his eyes would light up when he found you waiting in the stands. The quiet moments, tooâthe ones where heâd rest his head on your lap after a long day of training, eyes closed, his walls momentarily lowered.Â
You remember all of it, vividly. How could you not? Itâs etched into the foundation of who you are, whether you like it or not. He alone made up your youth.Â
And he alone crushed it.
The day of the interview arrives quicker than youâre ready for. The sky is overcast, mirroring the grey swirl of nerves in your stomach as you make your way to the Olympic Training Rink. The moment you step inside, a wave of cold air hits youâcrisp and unforgiving, seeping through your coat like a reminder of why you're really here.
The rink is quieter than expected. No coaches shouting instructions, no background music blaring. Just the sharp, rhythmic slice of blades on ice echoing through the vast, open space. The sound is hypnotic.Â
You spot him immediately. His movements are unmistakableâprecise, elegant, detachedâjust like the version of him the world sees now. Itâs surreal. For a moment, you're frozen. Heâs always been like this on the ice, as if he belongs to a world the rest of us can only watch from the sidelines.
When he finally notices you, he skates over, his expression unreadable. Up close, heâs both familiar and foreign. The boy you loved is still there, but heâs hidden beneath layers of polished professionalism and years of distance.
âY/N,â he says, his voice even. âItâs been a while.â
You force a smile, clutching your research papers like itâs the only thing tethering you to professionalism. âIt has. Thanks for agreeing to this.â
He nods, gaze unwavering. âAnything for the press, right?â
The faintest curl of his lip accompanies the words, not quite a smirk, but it lands somewhere between sarcasm and civility. Thereâs a hint of irony in his tone, and you canât tell if heâs mocking you, the situation, or himself. Either way, it stings in a place you wish was long numb.
You follow him as he skates toward the side lounge near the rink, where a table and chair have been set up for you. You set your things down, press the recorder button, and glance at your questions. But already, you can feel itâthe reckoning of something unspoken humming beneath every word, every breath.
The breakup was as cold and sharp as the ice he mastered so effortlessly. Sunghoonâs inability to express himself had always been a quiet undercurrent in your relationship, but distance magnified the cracks until they became impossible to ignore.Â
At first, you told yourself it was temporary. A phase. Just the price of loving someone whose dreams demanded everything of him. While he trained under the Spanish sunâchasing medals, perfection, legacyâyou remained behind, stuck in the grey stillness of routine. Every morning was a quiet scroll through his tagged posts: flashes of sunlight on ice, arms slung around new faces, effortless smiles captured in perfect golden-hour light. He looked happy. Free. And you⌠you were still waiting, clinging to half-hearted apologies and empty reassurances.
The timezone difference was a fact of life, yesâbut it wasnât the hours that made him feel far away. It was the way he spoke with one foot already out the door. Every call became more strained, the conversation shallow, like he was rationing his energy and you were the last on his list. His words were careful, rehearsed, as if emotional honesty was a risk he couldnât afford on top of training and public scrutiny.
Sometimes he wouldnât even call, and when they did come, they hurt more than the silence. His eyes flickered elsewhere on the screen, distracted by movement off-camera or the notifications lighting up his phone. His voice was flat, barely warm, like he was speaking to a colleagueânot someone who used to fall asleep to the sound of his heartbeat. The nickname "Ice Prince" had once made you laugh, made you tease him during post-practice ramen dates. But it wasnât funny anymore. It became a prophecy fulfilledâhe had built walls you could no longer scale, frozen over the places you used to call home.
When the arguments came, they were frigid and brittle, snapping under the weight of unspoken frustrations. You started to memorise the pauses in his speech, the way he hesitated before saying your nameâas though he wasnât sure how to feel about it anymore.
It wasnât just the miles between you that drove you apartâit was the glacier of his guarded heart, one you couldnât thaw no matter how hard you tried.
And then one night, wrapped in a hoodie that still smelled faintly of him, you sat curled up on the steep edge of your windowsill, your knees pulled tight to your chest, eyes scanning the city like it might offer you answers. The lights blinked on like constellations you couldnât name anymore, and you realisedâwith a crushing, reluctant clarityâyou were holding him back.Â
But more importantly, he was holding you back.Â
Your lives had become separate timelines that only intersected on screens and stilted calls, and even then, it felt like you were orbiting each other with no gravity left to pull you close again. The connection you once cherished had thinned until it became a thread you had to squint to see, and even then, it felt like a lie.
So you did the one thing that felt more honest than any of your recent conversations: you typed out the words youâd been avoiding for weeks, hands shaking, eyes blurry.
âMaybe weâre both better off letting go.â
And hit send.
Just like that, another four years passed without him.Â
Time, as always, moved in quiet, unremarkable waysâthrough the steady ticking of clocks and the dull rhythm of workdays blending into each other. You had slowly, stubbornly, climbed the ranks of your publishing company, carving a name for yourself as a senior reporter. It wasnât glamorous, but it was yours.Â
Unexpectedly, you had found yourself swept into the whirlwind of sports journalismâironic, in retrospect, considering how closely that world is being tied to him. But you told yourself it was coincidence. That it was your choice now. That your world, your career, your interests, were no longer shadowed by Sunghoon's orbit or shaped by the way he used to talk about the thrill of competing and nailing six-minute routines like they were sacred.
You insisted you were free. And maybe that was true. But in the quiet spaces between deadlines and press boxes, in the few spare seconds before interviews began or crowds broke into applause, you couldnât stop that lingering, almost shameful thought from blooming: that maybe, just maybe, some part of you had always hoped to run into him again.
Not to rekindle anything. Not to reach for what had already slipped through your fingers.
But to show him. Show him that you had thrived. That you were still standing after everything. That the girl he left behind was long gone, replaced by someone sharper, stronger, more whole.
But nowânow that you find yourself in this predicament, frozen in place on the edge of a rink you never expected to be at, watching the familiar curve of his form cut across the ice with the same breathtaking graceâyou feel like a fool for ever thinking you were ready.
You want nothing more than for the ground beneath you to crack open and swallow you whole. Because seeing him again doesnât fill you with triumph. It doesnât validate anything. It just hurts.
Worse than it should.
And it terrifies you how easy it is to fall back into that ache.
âHello? Earth to Y/N.â
You blink, startled out of your reverie by the sight of Sunghoon waving a hand in front of your face. You hadnât even realised you'd spaced out.
âSorry,â you murmur, clearing your throat. Your fingers fumble with the papers you had so meticulously preppedâhighlighted, annotated, sorted in orderâyet now you pretend to look for something among them, just to avoid his gaze. You know itâs a weak cover. And karma hits fast.
A gust of air from the heater overhead flutters your stack of papers, and before you can react, a dozen sheets slip from your grip and scatter. Some land across the floor. Others fly dramatically over the rinkâs low barricade, drifting like paper snowflakes onto the pristine ice.
âOh, shitââ you hiss, already scrambling to gather them, crawling after loose pages that slip under chairs and along the skirting of the rink. Youâre mumbling curses to yourself under your breath as you pick up the pieces of paper off the floor when your eyes zone in on a particular page that landed upright. Your breath catches.
Reference 4: Compilation of Netizensâ Impressions on Athlete Park
+62 -12 wow as expected park sunghoon! young, rich and handsome. must be a dream to date someone like him Dream or nightmare? Not really sure but okay.
+120 -24 kyaaaa heâs so handsome!! Iâm a fan! Whatâs the point of being handsome? Heâs a jerk!
+82 -4 wow how can someone look so perfect⌠he looks like a disney character Correct. More specifically, that giant ice golem from Frozen -.-
+32 -6 i wonder if he has a girlfriend. There must be so much pressure dating someone as perfect as Park Sunghoon. Itâs okay, iâll volunteer!! No pressure. He doesnât open up enough for you to feel pressure. Still, may the odds be ever in your favour.
Your stomach drops. Youâd forgotten those were even thereâyour sardonic, late-night annotations scribbled in red pen. Bitter, sharp, personal. And littered all over your research stack.
You snap your head up, and horror freezes your limbs.
Sunghoon is on the ice leaning casually against the rink barricade, one of the annotated pages in hand. His expression is a cocktail of amusement and disbelief, and worst of allâa hint of knowing. He reads aloud in a slow, deliberate tone, his voice dripping with mockery.
ââPark Sunghoon is a block of ice personified. If you want to know what it's like dating a block of ice, 10/10 recommend.ââ
He scoffs, dropping the page slightly to meet your eyes.
âInteresting research.â
Your blood rushes to your ears. You feel exposed, raw, like someoneâs just peeled the skin back from every nerve ending and left them pulsing in the open air. You canât even remember writing that annotationâbut of course itâs in red, underlined, and impossible to ignore. One of many off-handed comments scrawled across your notes, never meant to be seen. Certainly not by him.
âIâI didnât mean for that toââ You falter. What can you even say? You were angry when you wrote those, bitter and alone at 2 a.m., trying to turn pain into sarcasm.
Sunghoon studies you, his expression unreadable again. But thereâs something in the way he watches youâlike heâs trying to figure out if youâre the same girl he once knew, or someone entirely new. Someone just as guarded now as he once was.
âDidnât mean for what?â he drawls, raising an eyebrow. âYou mean you didnât mean to write all these berating comments in bold red ink all over your research paper?â He plucks up another sheet from the scattered pile, the corners of his mouth twitching. âLetâs see what else weâve got.â
You instantly recognise that one. Your heart sinks. Itâs that pageâthe one where youâd printed promotional shots of him modelling for an active sportswear brand. Not only had you annotated it with snide remarks about his âunnecessarily photogenic jawline,â but youâd also drawn little devil horns and moustaches across his face like a deranged kindergartener with a vendetta.
âOh my god, give me that!â you blurt out, reaching instinctively over the rink barricade in an attempt to snatch it back. But of course, Sunghoon is Sunghoonâa whole seven inches taller and built like someone who only lives and breaths protein. He easily keeps the paper just out of reach, lifting it higher with an infuriating flick of his wrist.
And then thereâs the bloody barricade. Cold, unyielding metal pressing against your ribs as you lean further than you probably should. Youâre close enough now to see the faint smirk tugging at the corner of his lips, the smug glint in his eyes that says heâs enjoying this far too much.
âWow,â he muses, inspecting the doodles with mock appreciation. âYou even gave me fangs. Thatâs new.â
âSunghoon, I swear to Godââ
âRelax.â He folds the paper with exaggerated care and waves it around in the air, taunting you. âIâm flattered you still think about me. Even if itâs in your own⌠special way.â
You feel a slow, rising heat on your cheeks, accompanied by the realisation that youâre no longer sure whoâs in control of this interview anymoreâyou or the boy you once loved who is now laughing at your annotated emotional breakdowns.Â
Youâre burning with embarrassment. Mortification. But more than that, youâre furiousâat him, at yourself, at the stupid page still clutched in his hand like a golden ticket. Without thinking, you shove open the rinkâs side gate and step onto the ice.
âY/Nââ he calls, warning laced in his voice. But you donât listen.
Your flats hit the ice and your body immediately regrets the decision. Youâre not dressed for this. The soles of your shoes slip against the surface, and gravity betrays you in a matter of seconds.
âShitâ!â
You yelp as your foot skids out from under you. The papers in your hand fly upward in a dramatic arc, and your arms flail as you lose balance completely. A part of you braces for the impact, the cold bite of ice against your back and the guaranteed humiliation thatâll follow.
Four years since youâve seen your ex-boyfriend, and youâre about to face-plant onto the very place that drove him away from you.
Damn this ice rink. Damn you, Park Sunghoon.
But the fall never comes.
Instead, thereâs a sudden blur of motionâfast, practiced, effortless. Arms wrap around you just in time, steadying your momentum as your body lurches forward. You slam into something solidâsomeone solidâand for a moment, all you hear is the rapid pounding of your heart and the low whoosh of his skates cutting against the ice.
You look up.
Sunghoon stares down at you, jaw tight, one arm around your waist and the other gripping your wrist where he caught you. The smirk is gone now, replaced with something quieterâunreadable.
Youâre close. Too close. You can feel the steady rise and fall of his breath, the lingering warmth of his touch against your coat sleeve. He steadies you like muscle memory, like no time has passed at all.
âYou never change,â he mutters under his breath, but thereâs something indecipherable in his toneâannoyed, maybe. Or amused. Or maybe he just doesnât know what to feel either.
You pull away quickly, too quickly, slipping again slightly before you regain your footing with a shaky huff. Your palms are planted against his chest, and you can feel the familiar beat of his heart under all that armour of fabric and calm. It rattles you more than the near-fall did.
You open your mouth to snap something bitingâmaybe about how you didnât need his help, or how youâd rather eat the ice than owe himâbut then you see it.
A flicker of pain across his face. A wince.
Itâs subtle. So quick that anyone else mightâve missed it. But not you. Youâd studied that face for years. You know what his mask looks like when it slips.
He straightens a little too stiffly, his jaw tightening as he shifts his weight from one leg to the other. Itâs slight, but telling. Your brows draw together as a thought rises, uninvited and stubborn.
The rumours about his injury.
It wasnât reported officiallyâjust whispers that circulated through the sports journalism grapevine. A rumoured altercation in Spain with another figure skater. A "tussle," they called it. No names, no details, just speculation buried in a few poorly sourced articles and message board threads that vanished almost as quickly as they appeared. Some even said it was the real reason he disappeared from competition for two entire seasons.
At the time, it had seemed like nothing more than gossip. Now, watching the way he stands with deliberate caution, the rumour doesnât seem so far-fetched.
âYou okay?â you ask before you can stop yourself.
He pauses, then gives a short nod, not meeting your eyes. âFine. Youâre the one slipping all over the place.â
You bristle. âWell, maybe if you didnât dangle incriminating evidence over the ice like a Bond villainââ
He actually laughs at that. Itâs quiet, caught off guard, and so startlingly familiar that it sends a jolt through your chest. For a second, just a second, you forget everything elseâthe sarcasm, the history, the sharp wordsâand remember how that laugh used to feel like home.
But it fades quickly. And in its place is that wall againâthe carefully constructed version of him the world sees.
You dust yourself off, avoiding his gaze as you mutter, âThanks. For not letting me faceplant.â
âDonât mention it,â he says, voice neutral again. âWouldâve been a liability issue.â
You roll your eyes and crouch to pick up another page, trying to focus on your scattered notes rather than the ache settling low in your chest. He doesnât say anything, but you can feel his eyes on you, can feel the weight of everything unsaid pressing down between you.
Your mind also lingers on the way he wincedâon the possibility that something deeper still lurks beneath the polished exterior.
âIâm on a tight schedule today. Letâs get the interview started, shall we?â Sunghoon says coolly, handing you the last of your scattered notes.
You take it from him, eyes briefly flickering to the page. Another cringe ripples through youâmore scribbled sarcasm in the margins, barely legible under your rushed handwriting. Fantastic. But you school your expression, swallowing the urge to snatch it back and set it on fire.
âThanks,â you say evenly, forcing composure into your voice as you tuck the page into your folder. âLetâs begin.â
You sit back down, smoothing the creases from your notes as you click the recorder on again. Your pen hovers above the page for a second too long.
âAlright,â you begin, adopting your neutral reporter tone, âletâs start with something simple. Youâve been back in Korea for a little over three months now. How has the transition been, returning after so long abroad?â
Sunghoon leans forward slightly, arms crossed in that easy, guarded posture you remember all too well.
âBusy,â he says. âFamiliar, in some ways. But the pace here is different. Everyoneâs watching. Everyone expects something.â
You jot that down, even though it doesnât say much. Itâs a good warm-up answer. Controlled. Polished.
âDoes that pressure ever affect your performance?â you press gently, eyes flicking up to catch his expression.
He shrugs, gaze fixed somewhere over your shoulder. âPressureâs part of the job. If it affects you, you donât belong here.â
You resist the urge to raise a brow. There it is againâthat edge in his voice, so calm it almost passes for indifference. Almost.
You move to your next question. âYouâve recently partnered with Belift for their new activewear line. What drew you to them over the other offers on the table?â
A pause. A flicker of amusement tugs at the corner of his mouth. You realise too late that this is the same line of questioning printed on the devil-horned page still sticking out of your folder.
âI liked their vision,â he says, but the glance he gives you is pointed. âSomething about... sharp lines and ice tones. Felt on-brand.â
You cough lightly, ignoring the jab. âAnd the photoshoot?â you ask, pen poised again. âYou received quite a response online. Some say it marked a shift in your public imageâless âIce Prince,â more...â
ââDevilishly handsome and emotionally unavailableâ?â he offers, arching a brow.
You shoot him a look. âThatâs not exactly what I was going to say.â
âSure it wasnât.â
A beat of silence passes before you recover. âLetâs pivot. In Spain, you were training under Coach Morales. How did his style compare to what you were used to in Korea?â
Sunghoon exhales, shoulders dropping slightly. For the first time, his answer comes without a filter.
âHe was tougher. Stricter, but less traditional. He didnât care how I was perceivedâonly what I delivered. And if I didnât deliver, he made sure I knew it.â
Something flickers in his eyesâsomething heavy and lived-in. You donât push. Not yet.
You scribble a note before asking, softer this time, âWas that hard for you?â
He pauses. âNo,â he says after a moment. âWhat was hard was unlearning everything I thought I already knew.â
The sentence lands with a thud in your chest.
You nod slowly, tapping your pen against your notebook. âUnlearning can be the hardest part,â you say, and youâre not sure whether youâre talking about figure skating... or each other.
You glance at your next question, fingers tightening slightly around your pen. The rhythm of the interview is shiftingâbalancing between surface-level poise and the weight of everything that hasnât been said.
âYour return to Korea has been a hot topic amongst our readers,â you begin, tone level. âItâs been a solid three years since the last time you were in the country for the Winter Olympics. Naturally, people are curiousâwhat brought you back? Especially considering the new season is starting soon.â
Sunghoon leans back in his seat, arms loosely crossed. âI can't give away too many details,â he says, gaze cool but not unkind. âLong story short, Iâm in the country for some personal reasons that I'd prefer not to disclose.â
You nod, jotting something down even though itâs barely usable. Your next question hovers on your tongue, heavier than the others. âI see. Well, there have been some rumours⌠surrounding an altercation with another figure skaterâsomeone else under Coach Moralesâ regime. Do you have any comment on that?â
His eyes flick to yoursâsharper this time. He doesnât respond right away. You hear the faint rustle of paper, the soft crunch of his skates shifting on the ice. âIs that part of the interview? Or just personal curiosity?â
You look up at him, your expression unreadable. âDoes it matter?â
âWell, I assure you there was no altercation,â he says smoothly. âJust minor disagreements.â
You tilt your head slightly. âCare to elaborate?â
âNot really.â
The tension in the air thickens, more palpable than the chill radiating off the ice behind him.
You clear your throat. âAlright. Then what about your injury? Howâs recovery? Two seasons is a long time to disappear. Many fans were concerned when you missed the CS Lombardia Trophy in Italy last year. That was a pretty high-profile absence.â
You donât even know where that came from. The question is not on your listânot even in the margins. But the words slip out anyway, fuelled by instinct more than intention. A part of you just wants to know. Wants to see if heâll flinch again, if heâll tell the truth, if heâs still capable of letting someone inâeven if itâs just for a moment.
At first, heâs stoic. But then you see itâthe shift in his posture, the twitch of tension in his jaw. He doesnât deny it. Doesnât even flinch.
Instead, he says, âThatâs not the story youâre here for.â
âMaybe not,â you murmur. âBut itâs the one people would care about.â
A long silence stretches between you, taut as a drawn wire. Heâs no longer smirking. No longer deflecting. Just staring, as if weighing something inside himself.
âI donât believe I ever mentioned being injured,â he replies, with a short, hollow laugh. âThese rumours get way too out of hand and invasive sometimes, donât you think, Reporter Kang?â
That tone againâplayful on the surface, barbed just beneath.
You lower your pen slowly, your professionalism fraying at the edges. âLook,â you say, voice quieter, firmer. âIf you're not going to give me anything to work with, why'd you even say yes to this interview in the first place?â
The recorder is still running. The room is still silent. But something in the air has shiftedâsubtle, but irreversible. The space between you no longer feels professional. It feels personal.
Not reporter and subject.Â
Just you and him. Two people orbiting the same history, waiting for someone to say the next honest thing.
He moves first. Exhales through his noseâalmost a laugh, but not quite. âYouâre still the same.â
âNo,â you say softly. âIâm really not.â
He studies you at that, eyes narrowing slightly like heâs trying to read a story written in a language he once knew by heart. âYouâre bolder now,â he admits. âSharper around the edges.â
âAnd youâve learnt how to talk like a press release.â
He huffs a short breath, amusement flickering in his eyes. âComes with the territory.â
âRight. Just a clean-cut, polished professional athlete now.â You tuck a paper into your folder, but your eyes linger on him a moment longer.
Still so familiar. Still so far.
You slide the last paper into your folder, but your hands donât move to close it. You just sit there, the silence pressing down between you again. Your gaze drops to the recorder, still blinking softly.
âDo you want me to turn it off?â you ask quietly.
Sunghoon doesnât answer right away. His jaw tenses, like heâs debating something with himself. Then, slowly, he nods.
You reach forward and press the button. The soft click echoes louder than it should.
For a while, neither of you speaks. Itâs not awkward, but itâs weighty. Careful. Like standing on a frozen lake, knowing one wrong move could crack the surface.
âI didnât come back for a sponsorship,â he says eventually, his voice lower than itâs been all day. âOr to prep for the season. Not really.â
You glance up, meeting his eyes.
âI came back because I didnât know where else to go,â he admits. âI needed to feel... something familiar. Just for a while.â
His fingers tap a slow rhythm against his thigh, a nervous habit you remember well. The same one from when he used to sit beside you during exams, whispering under his breath that he was going to flunkâonly to ace the paper every time.
You just nod, not sure how to respond to this sudden vulnerability. Truthfully, throughout your four years of dating, he had never truly let himself be vulnerable in front of you. Not fully.
Sure, youâd seen him tired. Youâd seen him frustrated. Youâd seen the cracks on the surface when pressure pushed too hardâbut he always wore his pride like armour, always bounced back with a smirk or a shrug, always insisted he was fine, even when you knew he wasnât.
But thisâthis quiet confession, this barely-audible tremor in his voiceâit feels different.
Feels like he's reaching out to you.
And it guts you more than youâd like to admit.
You shift slightly in your seat, unsure if youâre meant to comfort him or just bear witness. âIs that why you said yes to this?â you ask. âTo the interview?â
His eyes flick toward you, then away again.
âI wasnât sure,â he says after a beat. âMaybe I just wanted to see you.â
Your breath catches. The words arenât said with romantic flourish, not laced with sweetness or longingâbut they still land squarely in your chest, knocking something loose.
You donât know what to say. For once, your head isnât filled with questions or comebacks. Just the ghost of a hundred conversations you never had, and the echo of all the things that could have been different if either of you had said the honest thing first.
But itâs too late for that now.
You glance down at your folder, lips pressed into a thin line. âThanks for your time,â you say, and itâs so formal, so distant, it might as well have come from someone else entirely.
"I'm assuming I'll hear from your legal representative if I use any of these in my piece."
Your voice is calm, steadyâtoo steady. The sentence lands like a wall slamming back into place between you, brick by brick. You donât say it to be cruel. You say it because you need to anchor yourself in something safe, something distant. Because the moment felt too raw, too real, and you donât know what to do with the part of you that wanted to reach across the table instead of retreat.
Sunghoon stiffens. Just slightly.
âNo,â he says after a moment. âYou wonât. Off the recordâs fine. Not like it matters now, anyway.â
You nod once, curt. âGot it.â
And just like that, the spell breaks. The weight in the room doesn't lift, but it shiftsâmuted now, buried again beneath layers of detachment and professionalism. The kind youâve both grown too good at.
You donât look at him when you stand. Donât give yourself the chance to. Your hands move on autopilotâclosing the recorder, tucking your pen away, zipping your coat with fingers that tremble ever so slightly. And then youâre moving, steps brisk and deliberate, the sound of your boots against the concrete floor too loud in the quiet.
Behind you, you hear nothing.
No apology. No explanation. No plea.
Just silence.
Sunghoon opens his mouthâhis hand halfway raised, like heâs about to call your name. But the words never make it past his lips. He watches you go, jaw clenched, the moment slipping through his fingers before he even realises he still wanted to hold onto it.
For him, seeing you again was something he knew he would never truly be prepared for, no matter how many times he rehearsed this conversation in his head. Because you were never a script he could memorise.
You were always unpredictable. Slipping through moments like sand through his fingersâtoo quick, too sharp, too full of feeling. He remembers how your emotions came in layersâsome loud and impulsive, others quiet and impossible to decipher. And maybe thatâs what scared him the most.
Because he never quite knew how to meet you where you were.
You made decisions faster than he could process. You said the things he only thought about. And you demanded a kind of presence, a kind of emotional honesty, that he had spent most of his life trying to avoid. A part of him had admired that about you. Another part? It drove him insane.
Now, as your figure disappears through the doors without so much as a backward glance, he feels that same ache blooming in his chest againâfamiliar and bitter.
He told himself that this would be closure.
But it doesnât feel like the end. It feels like a page he never finished reading.
And youâre already gone.
You spend the next few hours drafting the profile piece that was supposedly meant to âprovide a deeper understanding of the person behind the athlete.â Though with the material youâve managed to gather, itâs unlikely youâll even graze the surface.Â
Whatever. Just give them the Sunghoon they want: the enigmatic comeback king, the prodigy turned recluse turned headline again. Youâll quote his stats, mention his precision, maybe even throw in a poetic metaphor about how the ice has always been his canvas. Youâll do your job. Professionally. Neutrally.
Youâve done harder things. Covered messier stories. Interviewed athletes who could barely string a sentence together. Sat through twelve-hour matches just to get three lines of gold. Writing about Sunghoon, someone you knowâknewâshould be easier. Right?
Wrong.
So incredibly, painfully wrong.
Because the moment you sit down to outline your first paragraph, every sentence you draft sounds clinical. Distant. Like youâre trying too hard to keep your voice out of it. But your voice is in it. Itâs everywhere. Between the lines, in the phrasing, in the careful omission of details only you would know.
You stare at the blinking cursor on your screen like itâs mocking you. Because no matter how objective you try to be, thereâs no deleting the fact that the man skating his way back into the spotlight is the same one who once skated straight out of your life.
And now you have to write about him like heâs just another assignment. Like he wasnât the one story you never really finished.
Still, youâre a professionalâand Park Sunghoon is nothing if not a compelling subject. Enigmatic, polished, untouchable. Every photo released of him looks like itâs been run through three rounds of edits and an entire PR teamâs approval. His public image is a masterclass in controlled narrative, curated to the last detail, but his backstory remains a blank canvas to most.
Well, not to you.
You have a folder of photos from when he was still just Sunghoonâbefore the endorsements, before Spain.Â
Sunghoon also never said you couldnât dive into his university life. And itâs not like he gave you much to work with anyway.
Thatâs fair game.
No media-trained responses, no glossy interview clipsâjust a black hole of the years he spent quietly grinding through lectures and training sessions, tucked far from the spotlight.Â
To the public, itâs a blank space. But to you? Itâs fertile ground. You were there. You knew the version of him who lived off convenience store food and energy drinks, who stayed up late tweaking final projects and icing swollen ankles at the same time. You knew the boy who forgot to reply to emails but remembered to text you good luck before your presentations.Â
You know the difference between the way he smiles for cameras and the one that used to slip out mid-yawn, when his guard was down. You know the scar above his ankleânot because itâs ever been mentioned in press, but because you were there when he got it, wrapping it in gauze while he hissed through gritted teeth. You know how he taps his fingers when heâs nervous. How he tightens his jaw before speaking truths he doesn't want to admit. How his laugh used to crack in the middle when something really got to him, how his voice used to trip over words when he was excited or flusteredânot like the carefully paced cadence he gives the media now.
He may have grown into a mystery, but once upon a time, he was the most knowable person in your life.
So yeah, you dig. Not out of spite. Not exactly. Youâre just doing your job. Sourcing old event flyers, class photos, public records, and a few strategically placed emails to former professors and classmates. You tell yourself itâs just researchânothing personal. Just building a fuller picture for the piece. The audience deserves depth. Authenticity. A glimpse of the man behind the athlete.
Besides, itâs not like youâre digging for scandal. Youâre just⌠revisiting old ground.
Still, there's something undeniably sharp about the way your fingers move as you pull up archived yearbooks and student publication blurbs. How your lips twitch at the memory of him stumbling through a group presentation in first-year psych, cheeks red, voice shaking as he tried to explain semiotics with a skating metaphor. The same boy who once dropped his cue cards and muttered, âIâm better on ice, I swear,â to a room that actually laughed with him.Â
And maybeâjust maybeâit wouldn't hurt to slip the story into the draft. Tactfully. Casually. A humanising touch. A reminder to the world that he wasnât always so untouchable.
You add a line about his time at university, his balancing act between training and lectures, the quiet discipline that preceded his fame. And though itâs not in your style to get sentimental, you let yourself write one soft line, just one:
You keep it sharp. Clean. Balanced. The words come easily, like muscle memory. You stitch together the facts, layer in the charm, and add a sprinkle of speculation where itâs appropriateâjust enough to give readers something to chew on. You reference his decorated track record, his quiet re-entry into the spotlight, the way his name is starting to echo through rinks again like a whispered rumour of greatness returning.
You even write about the growing murmur among commentators: that Park Sunghoon might just be gearing up for a full-blown comeback.
Even though he told youâspecifically, clearlyâthat he wasnât prepping for the season.
But facts donât sell as well as fantasy. And heâs always been better as a myth than a man.
So you keep your voice light. Objective. Not too close, not too distant. Just enough ambiguity to make it seem like youâre on the outside looking in. Just enough plausible deniability to protect you from the truth threaded beneath every line. You write him like a legend resurrected. Like someone who left the world breathless, disappeared, and is now daring to return.
Before you know it, you're signing it off.
And as you read over the final draftâflawless, well-paced, and entirely detachedâyou canât help but feel the faintest pulse of something beneath your skin.
Because this isnât just a story about Park Sunghoon.
Itâs a story about how well you still know him.
And how expertly youâve learned to pretend you donât.
You donât even attempt to read it over another time. You just hit send.
The email whirs off to your editor, and with it, the story. Not the whole one. Not the one you carry in your chest like an old wound. Just the one the world gets to see.
And if he reads itâ
Well.
Let him wonder how much of the truth you chose to leave out.
[MANIFESTO EXCLUSIVE] The Ice Doesn���t Melt: A Closer Look at Park Sunghoonâs Return to Korea

By Kang Y/N, Manifesto Daily
Three years since his last appearance on home soil, South Koreaâs beloved figure skater Park Sunghoon has returnedânot with the fanfare some expected, but with a quiet presence that speaks volumes. After a two-season absence from competitive performance, Park, now 27, has chosen to settle in Seoul again, sparking both curiosity and speculation among fans and professionals alike.
âI needed something familiar,â he said during our brief but telling interview, when asked about his decision to return. He didnât specify more than that, and true to form, left the rest hanging in the air unsaid.
Park Sunghoon has always been a study in restraintâon and off the ice. From the moment he first captured public attention as a prodigious teen gliding across the rink with terrifying precision, he has maintained an image both pristine and impenetrable. Nicknamed âThe Ice Princeâ by fans and media alike, Park built a reputation not just on technical skill, but on his ability to keep the world at armâs length.
His return to Korea comes on the heels of years spent overseasâSpain, to be exactâwhere he reportedly trained under a discreet but rigorous programme with world renowned Coach Alex Morales.
Park was last seen in competitive skating during the 2023 Grand Prix, where he shocked the world by abruptly withdrawing from the final. At the time, he was considered a strong contender for the gold, making his sudden exit all the more startling. The incident was never formally addressed by his management, and Park himself has avoided discussing it altogether. The silence that followed only fuelled speculationâinjury, burnout, conflictâbut no answers ever came. Just absence.
Still, those whoâve recently spotted him during early morning solo sessions at the Seoul Ice Arena report that his technique is sharper, cleanerâalmost startling in its control. But what truly draws attention is the absence of spectacle. No press conference, no sponsor-driven welcome, no grand statement announcing his intentions. Just quiet re-entry.
âHe doesnât skate like someone preparing for a comeback,â one former coach, who requested anonymity, shared. âHe skates like someone trying to remember why he loved it in the first place.â
Yet, itâs not just his time abroad that shaped the man returning now. Long before the endorsements and Olympic buzz, Park had quietly juggled his dual identity as both athlete and student. Few fans are aware that between competition seasons, he completed a degree in media and communication at a local university. Classmates from that time recall him as a quiet presenceâalways punctual, often reserved, but not unfriendly. He kept to himself for the most part, but those who got close remember his dry humour, his encyclopaedic knowledge of classic film, and a surprising tendency to ramble nervously during group presentations.
âHe once tried to explain a semiotic theory using a skating routine as an analogy,â one classmate laughed. âIt didnât make much sense, but he was so earnest about it, we just let him finish. After that, he was known as the âsemiotic boyâ among our coursemates.â
Those stories paint a softer, more human picture of the man the public still views as near-mythic. But those who knew Park Sunghoon before the spotlight remember someone more boy than mythâequal parts unsure and brilliant, like he hadnât quite figured out how to carry the weight of his own potential. Just a young man balancing essays and exhibitions. Late-night editing sessions and early morning ice drills.
This return has reignited questions about what Park wants nowâwhat comes after the medals, the global tours, and the silence that followed. His name still commands weight, still trends with the slightest public appearance, yet thereâs a noticeable shift in how he carries it. Less prince. More person.
Thereâs been no official word on whether Park will rejoin the competitive circuit, though murmurs within the skating community suggest heâs been quietly invited to participate in the upcoming 2026 Winter Olympics team tryouts. Whether he intends to accept remains unclearâPark has neither confirmed nor denied the rumours, keeping his future as intentionally unreadable as ever.
And perhaps thatâs the story. Not a triumphant return. Not a redemption arc. But presence. The act of being. The quiet audacity of choosing stillness in a world that only ever celebrated his movement.
In many ways, Park Sunghoon remains an enigma. But for those whoâve followed his journey, that isnât new. Whatâs new is the version of him that doesnât seek to melt the iceâbut instead, has learned to live with it.
Only time will tell what that means for the future of figure skatingâs most elusive son.
âOur dear Y/N, youâve done it again.â
Applause breaks out the second your foot crosses the threshold of the office. Itâs 9 a.m.âtoo early, too loud, and at least three hours behind the amount of sleep you need to properly function. You blink, trying to place what exactly youâre being celebrated for.
âBravo. That was an excellent article,â Minju, the teamâs ever-enthusiastic publicist, grins as he pats you on the shoulder in passing.
Oh.
That was going out today?
You didnât even have your morning coffee yet.
By the time youâve dropped your bag onto your desk and opened your laptop, your inbox is already a mess. The subject lines blur together:
[RE] Manifesto Exclusive â Park Sunghoon IS HE BACK FOR REAL?? The Ice Prince has feelings?? Thank you for this. I cried.
You open a few out of morbid curiosity. Fans are flooding your public inbox with praise, speculation, andâbecause the internet is the internetâseveral unsolicited theories about a secret marriage and a love child. Your copy editor, Moka, forwards you one with the subject line: âif he doesnât want to melt, iâll melt FOR him.â
On social media, itâs even worse. Or better. Youâre not sure yet.
His name is trending. #ParkSunghoon.
Followed closely by #IcePrinceReturns, and the truly cringy #TheColdDoesntBotherHoonAnyway.
Tweets fly across your feed:
@/ice_princess: this article just made me want to lie face down in the snow and whisper Park Sunghoonâs name to the frost
@/manifesto_daily_stan: Kang y/n iâm free on thursday if you want to do godâs work again
@/plscomebackhoon: she said he doesnât need to melt. he just needs to exist. do you HEAR that??? DO YOU.
You rub your temples, overwhelmed, equal parts proud and terrified. It was just a profile piece. A quiet one. No exposĂŠs, no scandalsâjust a man and the silence he didnât bother filling.
And somehow, thatâs exactly what everyone needed.
Editors are thrilled. Readers are emotional. Former skaters are sharing it. Someone on Twitter even called it âthe most human thing written about an athlete in years,â and you donât know whether to be flattered or panicked.
Because it wasnât meant to be that personal.Â
Not really.
And yetâhow could it not be?
You told the truth, sure. The visible one. But between the lines, there were pieces of you too. Tiny, hidden echoes of everything you remembered and everything you refused to say. And now itâs out thereâimmortalised in print and pixelsâbeing consumed by people who will never know what you left out.
Youâre halfway through scrolling a tweet thread titled â25 Times Park Sunghoon Looked Like a Heartbroken Studio Ghibli Protagonistâ when a new email notification pops up.
From: [email protected] Subject: That Article
You squint.
How... tacky.
You open it, already bracing yourself for either legal threats or sarcasm.
Hey. Took your email off the internet, hope you don't mind. Nice article. Although, I don't think I approved any of those pictures you used in it. Especially the one where Iâm mid-blink and look like I just saw God. Bold choice. P.S. You really quoted my classmate calling me âsemiotic boyâ? Thatâs... deeply unnecessary.
You stare at the screen, lips twitching despite yourself.
Itâs so himâpassive-aggressive, smug, and annoyingly charming. The kind of email only Park Sunghoon would send instead of just texting like a normal person.
At the bottom, thereâs no sign-off. No best regards, no sincerely, not even a name.
Just one final line, added like an afterthought:
You still overuse em-dashes, by the way.
You exhale a laugh. God, of course he noticed that.
You stare at the screen, blinking. Once. Twice.
Of all the emails you expected todayâfrom eager fans, nosy editors, one conspiracy theorist convinced Sunghoon is a time travellerâthis was not on the list.
You lean back in your chair, arms crossed, rereading the message like it might change if you blink hard enough. But no. Still the same. Still signed off with zero punctuation, zero emotion, and 100% Sunghoon.
You scoff.
[email protected]. You canât get over it. You donât know whatâs worseâthe fact that he still uses the nickname heâs allegedly ânot fond of,â or the fact that he sent this at 9:46 in the morning, as if heâs just casually emailing his accountant and not the ex-girlfriend who roasted his public persona to poetic effect.
Bold choice, he says.
This, from the man who once wore leather gloves indoors during summer and called it âa vibe.â
And semiotic boy? That quote was gold. If anything, he should be thanking you for making him sound like an emotionally tortured academic with cheekbones.
Still⌠your fingers hover over the keyboard.
The sensible part of you says to delete it. Or at the very least, archive it and go refill your coffee. You already got your exclusive. You did your job. The storyâs out there, and itâs done.
But the curious part of youâthe one that still knows how he takes his coffee, still remembers the shape of his laughâcanât help but wonder what this email really means.
You donât respond. Not yet.
But you donât delete it either.
You just stare at the screen, lips pressed together, and whisper to yourselfâ
"I need a coffee break."
With that, you grab your cardigan, slip on your trainers, and leave the email open on your desktop as if stepping away from it might somehow make it disappear. The air outside bites at your cheeksâcrisp, early, and a little too cold for spring. Your mind buzzes more from the lack of sleep than caffeine, and your only plan is to make it to the cafĂŠ on autopilot.
The cafĂŠ is still quiet at this hour, the kind of place where the clinking of ceramic cups and the occasional low murmur of conversation hums like white noise. The bell above the door chimes softly as you enter, and immediately you're greeted by the warm, grounding scent of roasted coffee beans and sugar syrup.
You exhale, shoulders easing slightly when you notice the queue is short. You move toward the counter, already calculating how much espresso you can legally ingest in one sitting, when a voice calls out from the seating area.
âDidnât get my email?â The tone is casualâannoyingly casual. âOr did you read it and purposely decide not to respond?â
You freeze mid-step.
No wayâŚ
You turn, slowlyâlike you're afraid if you move too fast, the moment will solidify into something real youâre not ready for.
And there he is.
Park Sunghoon.
Heâs standing just a few feet away, leaning with practiced ease against the edge of a table like he belongs there, like he hasnât just completely upended your morning, looking frustratingly well-rested for someone who supposedly prefers early ice sessions. Heâs dressed casuallyâblack coat draped over a fitted charcoal jumper, those black-rimmed glasses he used to wear in university when he was trying to be invisible. But he was never very good at that.
His gaze locks with yoursâcalm, steady, unreadableâand it takes everything in you not to let your expression betray the punch of memory hitting you square in the chest.
âYouâve got to be kidding me,â you mutter, half under your breath.
âSorry?â he says, feigning innocence.
âNothing,â you say quickly, crossing your arms, trying to compose yourself. âJust⌠surprised...â
âSurprised to see me,â he says, finishing the thought as if heâs been rehearsing it in his head.Â
âYeah, at my coffee spot,â you sneer, narrowing your eyes. âWhat, are you stalking me?â
He gestures lazily toward the table behind him, where a half-drunk latte sits beside a copy of some obscure paperback youâre certain heâs only pretending to read. âI was here first. Technically.â
You smile, tight-lipped, the professional mask slipping neatly into place. âWell, I apologise if you felt like I had something against you. I get thousands of emails every dayâyour mail mustâve just gotten lost in the flood of junk mail. If it was really that urgent, you couldâve just texted.â
Itâs a big, fat lie. You wonât even pretend otherwise. You read it. Multiple times. But youâre not about to give him the satisfaction of knowing that.Â
His response is immediate. âYou changed your number a few years ago. Didnât leave much choice.â
The way he says it is deliberate, a little too sharp around the edges, like heâs been holding onto that fact longer than heâd care to admit. And what is he implying? That heâs tried contacting you over the years? What for?
You raise an eyebrow. âRight. And instead of, I donât know, asking your assistant for itâyou know, the same assistant I literally emailed last weekâyou thought it would be less invasive to go digging through old contact forms and hope I still checked my public inbox?â
He shrugs again, shameless. âIt was surprisingly easy. And I figured itâd be less awkward than asking someone for it directly.â
You narrow your eyes. âBecause nothing says respecting boundaries like showing up at my local cafĂŠ after sending a mildly passive-aggressive email.â
âOh?â he says, a faint smirk tugging at his lips. âSo you did read it?â
âNo.â
âThen howâd you know it was passive-aggressive?â
You tilt your head, eyes narrowing just a touch. âBecause I know you.â
The silence that follows is dense and immediate, settling between you with the weight of everything left unsaid. It hums beneath the chatter of the cafĂŠ, a fragile thread stretched so tight that you swear it might snap if either of you so much as blinked wrong.
Then, mercifully, the barista calls out for the next person in lineâthatâs you.
You move instinctively toward the counter, but before you can even begin to open your mouth, heâs already there, casually stepping beside you.
âLong black,â Sunghoon says, voice smooth as ever. âMake it a double shot.â
You turn your head slowly, eyes wide. âYou remember my order.â
He doesnât flinch. âSome things are hard to forget. Especially if it's the most atrocious coffee order known to mankind.â
And just like that, youâre thrown. Not by the gesture, but by the way he says itâlike it means something. Like maybe he's not just here to pester you about emails and profile photos. Like maybe thereâs something else behind those carefully guarded eyes.
But you're not ready to unpack that. Not here. Not now.
So instead, you nod stiffly, and say nothing.
Not because you have nothing to sayâ
But because you know, with Park Sunghoon, even the smallest word might start something youâre not sure youâre ready to finish.
Youâre still reeling from the fact that he remembers minuscule detailsâlike the exact way you take your coffeeâwhen he casually steps in front of you and pays for it before you can even open your mouth to protest.
âYou didnât have to,â you say, surprised but keeping your voice neutral.
He waves it off, already pocketing the receipt like itâs no big deal. âStill have no idea how you even drink that shit,â he mutters, eyeing the dark brew with a look of theatrical disgust. âBut consider it a compliment. For the article. It was⌠good.â
You glance up at him over the rim of your cup as you take your first sip, letting the heat hit your hands before the taste even registers. âJust good?â
He shrugs, nonchalant, but thereâs a flicker of amusement in his eyes. âYou didnât use my best angles.â
You pause, lips curving slightly. âOh, donât worry,â you reply smoothly. âIâm saving those for the next feature: Park Sunghoonâs Top 10 Most Smug Expressions.â
That earns a laugh from himâgenuine and unguardedâand it catches you off guard. Not the manufactured chuckle he gives in interviews. Not the polite, PR-approved smile. This is real. Honest. The kind of laugh you havenât heard in years, the kind that used to sneak up on you in moments that felt weightless.
It hits you like hearing a song you forgot you lovedâfamiliar and warm, laced with a nostalgia you werenât ready for. A reminder of the version of him that existed before all the distance, before the silences, before the press statements and polished answers.
You donât say anything in response. Just shoot him a look over the rim of your cup. A quiet donât push it.
He meets your gaze, and for a beat, neither of you speaks. Then he nods, like he understands exactly what youâre not saying.
And somehow, that nod feels like the most honest thing exchanged between you all morning.
Youâre back at your desk, the cafĂŠ detour doing little to clear your head. The email is still open, still flashing on your screen like itâs waitingâmocking you, almost. You stare at it for a long moment, fingers hovering over the keyboard.
You shouldnât. You donât need to. But something in you itches to respond anyway.
So you do.
From: You Subject: Re: That Article Hey. Glad you thought the article was good. Iâll be sure to file that glowing endorsement under âcareer highlights.â Also, I stand by the photos. Especially the one where you blinked mid-sentenceâyou looked relatable for once. Anyway. Thanks for the coffee. â Y/N P.S. Donât ambush me at my local cafĂŠ again. Only if itâs urgent: +82 XX XXXX YYYY
Sunghoon is lying on his couch, one arm draped over his eyes to block out the soft afternoon light filtering through the curtains, the other still loosely holding his phone against his chest. The cafĂŠ encounter from earlier keeps playing in his mind on a slow, involuntary loopâyour face, your voice, the way your brows lifted when you saw him, and especially that look you gave him when he ordered your coffee like he had any right to still know that.
He knows he probably shouldnât have emailed. The moment he hit send, there was a part of him that regretted it. But then again, heâs never been particularly good at letting things go quietlyânot when it comes to you. Not when the silence between you has always felt more like a wound than a clean break.
Itâs been years since the breakup. Long enough, he thinks, that you should both be able to function like civil adults. Maybe not friends, but at least... acquaintances. Whatever that word means when itâs wrapped in history and the kind of silence thatâs never quite neutral.
His phone buzzes once against his chest, and he lifts it almost automaticallyâmore out of habit than hope, not expecting much. Maybe a curt response, a one-liner soaked in professionalism, something non-committal that closes the loop without opening any new ones.
But what he finds isnât quite that.
His eyes skim the message quickly the first time, catching on your usual clipped humour, your dry phrasing. Then he sees the P.S.âand it stops him cold.
Donât ambush me at my local cafĂŠ again. Only if itâs urgent: +82 XX XXXX YYYY
He stares at the line, the digits at the end anchoring his attention. His thumb hovers over the screen, then lowers.
He reads it again. Then again.
It takes him a moment to process that you didnât just replyâyou invited a reply. Not in so many words, but you didnât have to.
He blinks, the message still glowing softly in the palm of his hand, and feels something shiftâsubtle, but undeniable.
You had tried to play it off with that lineââonly if itâs urgentââlike it was a formality, a throwaway detail tossed in for the sake of convenience. But Sunghoon knows you better than that.
You donât do anything without intention.
Even back then, when things were good, your words were measuredânever careless. Whether it was drafting an essay or choosing what to say during a fight, you always calculated the weight of your words before you let them go. He used to admire that about you, even when it frustrated him. Especially when it frustrated him.
So no, he doesnât believe the number was a casual addition. Not from you. Not after all this time. You wanted him to see it. You wanted him to know.
He sits up slowly, the email still open in his hand, thumb brushing absentmindedly over the edge of the screen. For a second, he considers calling. Just to hear your voice againâto see if it sounds any different now that everything between you has changed.
But he doesnât.
Instead, he just quietly saves the number into his contactsâY/N, no emojis, no titles. Just your name, plain and familiar, like itâs never really left his phone at all.
His thumb hovers for a moment as the screen confirms the entry, and then he leans back, eyes flicking toward the ceiling, letting his mind wanderâalmost involuntarilyâthrough an absurd list of scenarios.
He snorts softly.
What counts as urgent, exactly?
Would âit was raining and thought of youâ qualify? Or maybe, âaccidentally bought your favourite chips at the convenience store and theyâre expiring tomorrowâ?
His mouth twitches at the thought, the corner of a smile he doesnât let fully form.
Heâs not going to reach outânot tonight. Whatever this fragile, undefined space is between you now, he doesnât want to risk crowding it too soon. He knows better than to force something still learning how to exist.
But the number is there now, quietly saved, tucked away like a folded letter waiting for the right moment to be opened. And thatâsimple as it isâis more than he had before.
So he stays where he is, stretched across the quiet of his apartment, letting the silence lingerânot as a weight, but as something strangely tender. Something almost sacred. Because it no longer feels like the end of something.
It feels like the pause before a beginning.
And he waits.
Just like you did for him all those years ago.
The airport is chaos, as airports always areâthe dull roar of overlapping conversations, the mechanical drawl of flight announcements overhead, the clatter of suitcase wheels rolling over the slick, polished floors. But somehow, in the middle of it all, it feels like thereâs a bubble around the two of you, a quiet space carved out by the sheer force of everything youâre not saying.
Sunghoon stands a few feet away from the security gate, backpack slung over one shoulder, his boarding pass crumpled slightly in his hand from how tightly heâs holding it. Mr and Mrs Park are with him, tearfully fussing over their sonâMrs Park tugging at the hem of the jacket that's too big for him, hanging awkwardly off his frame in a way that makes him look both older and younger at the same timeâlike heâs already halfway into another life and trying to pretend he isnât scared.
You stand nearby too, arms crossedânot out of defiance, but because itâs the only way you can keep yourself from falling apart. You donât trust your hands otherwise.
When Sunghoon finally turns to you, you force yourself to smile.
âYouâll do great,â you say, forcing your voice to stay steady even though the lump in your throat makes it hard to breathe.
He smiles at thatâa soft, tired thing that doesnât quite reach his eyes.
âI donât know about that,â he says, laughing under his breath, glancing down at his shoes like the words he really wants to say are hiding somewhere in the scuffed leather.
Your heart twists painfully at the sight.
And then he steps closer, close enough that you have to tilt your head back to look at him properly, close enough that you can see every crease of worry etched into his usually smooth expression.
âCan youâŚâ he starts, then falters, running a hand through his hair the way he always does when heâs nervous. âWill you wait for me?â
The words hang between you, raw and clumsy and completely un-Sunghoon-like. No flourish. No ice. Just a boy asking for something he doesnât know how to promise in return.
You look at him thenânot the rising athlete, not the polished skater everyone else seesâbut the boy who once spent three hours helping you build a wobbly IKEA desk, who remembered exactly how you take your coffee, who mumbled useless astronomy facts at two in the morning when neither of you could sleep.
And you nod.
Because how could you say no?
âOf course,â you say.
He exhales, and for a moment, it looks like he wants to say something moreâsomething that could make this easier, something that could anchor you to the idea that this distance will be temporary, survivable. But whatever it is, he swallows it down.
Instead, he squeezes your hand once, quick and clumsy, like heâs afraid that if he holds on any longer, he wonât be able to let go at all.
Then he steps back. One step. Two. The space between you widens in a way that feels irreversible.
You stand there, rooted to the spot, as he turns toward the security line, his figure blending into the tide of travellers wheeling suitcases and juggling passports. He doesn't look back, and you tell yourself thatâs a good thingâthat itâs easier this way.
You donât realise youâre holding your breath until his silhouette finally disappears around a corner, swallowed up by the sterile white lights and directional signs pointing toward Departures.
Only then do you let yourself breathe out, shaky and slow.
The airport continues moving around youâannouncements, crying babies, the low thrum of engines preparing to carry people across oceansâbut somehow, it feels like everything inside you has stilled. Like the moment he walked away, something small and quiet inside you went with him.
You watch another plane lift off in the distance, disappearing into the clouds. And even after his parents insists you go home, you stay a little longer, long enough for the ache to settle, long enough to be sure you wonât cry until youâre safely back in the taxi home. Pretending that saying âof courseâ didnât cost you more than you could admit at the time.
Because if thereâs one thing you promised him, and yourself, itâs that you would be strong enough to wait.
Except you didnât know what waiting would mean at that time.
You were confident this long-distance thing could work.
After all, at that point, you and Sunghoon had been dating for over three years. You knew each otherâs routines, each otherâs moods, each otherâs silences. You had weathered exams, competitions, internships, stupid fights about stupid thingsâsurely, you thought, an ocean between you couldnât undo what you had built.
You believed that love, real love, was supposed to be enough.
But love, you will learn, isnât always louder than distance.
And sometimes, people leaveânot because they stop loving you, but because their dreams need a bigger sky than you can give them.
You told yourself the time difference was just an inconvenience. That the occasional missed calls, the shorter texts, the longer silences were normal. That he was just busy. Tired. Adjusting.
And for a while, you made it work.
You sent each other photosâyour morning coffee, his late-night practices. You had clumsy video calls where the signal dropped and youâd laugh and call each other back like it was no big deal. You celebrated tiny victories over Wi-Fi connections, reassured yourselves that the months would pass quickly, that this was temporary.
You even started saving for plane tickets, bookmarking dates and circling holidays on your calendar, telling anyone who asked that yes, it was hard, but yes, it was worth it.
You meant it.
You meant every word.
But what they donât tell you about long distanceâthe thing you only learn the hard wayâis that sometimes love isnât enough when the other person starts building a life youâre no longer part of in the daily, ordinary ways. When your names are still tied together but your days stop overlapping. When missing someone becomes part of your routine instead of your exception.
And Sunghoonâsweet, steady, ambitious Sunghoonâwas chasing a dream that required all of him.
There wasnât much left over.
Not for you. Not for the late-night phone calls he stopped picking up. Not for the promises that started to stretch thinner and thinner until they broke without either of you realising it at first.
You waited.
You waited longer than you should have.Â
And even now, some stubborn, aching part of you still remembers how sure you were at that airport when you said, of course.
Because you werenât just waiting for him to come back. You were waiting for the version of him that leftâto stay the same.
But some things, youâve learned, arenât meant to be held in place.
And some people, no matter how tightly you hold onto them, will always belong to a future you donât get to walk into with them.
Now, sitting at your desk, staring at the faint glow of the monitor, you canât help but drag a hand over your face in frustration. God. What was I thinking?
You lean back in your chair, the cheap leather groaning under the movement, and close your eyes for a moment, wishing you could rewind the last ten minutes and snatch the email back before it left your outbox. Before it could make you look like the fool you swore you wouldnât be again.
Because re-reading it now, all you can see is desperation threaded between the lines. You might as well have stamped please still care about me in bold at the bottom.
You told yourself it was nothing. A witty reply. A polite thanks for the coffee. A number offered up casuallyâas if you wouldnât notice whether he used it or not.
But you know better.
And so would he.
The truth is, no matter how many years have passed, no matter how much you've convinced yourself you've moved on, a part of you still folds too easily around him. Still softens at the memory of a boy who once asked you to wait for him, and the girl you wereâthe one foolish enough to believe that waiting would be enough.
You hate that about yourself sometimes. Hate that a few casual words from him, a coffee, an email, still have the power to make you feel like youâre standing in that airport all over again, arms crossed against your chest, watching him walk away.
You open your eyes, exhaling slowly. The office hums around youâphones ringing, fingers tapping on keyboards, Yunah shouting about deadlines across the bullpenâand youâre struck by how absurd it is that your life has continued without him, and yet he still feels like an unfinished chapter you never really closed.
You tell yourself itâs fine. That heâll probably ignore the number. That heâll chalk it up to courtesy and leave it at that.
But deep down, you know itâs too late for pretending.
Because no matter how you dress it upâwitty, polite, indifferentâyou handed him a door. And now, whether he steps through it or not, youâll have to live with the fact that you opened it first.
The days pass, slow and uneven, the way they always do when youâre waiting for something youâre trying to pretend youâre not waiting for.
You throw yourself into workâchurning out profiles, editing pieces that arenât yours, picking up assignments nobody else wants just to fill the spaces in your mind. You sit through endless editorial meetings, nodding at all the right moments, scribbling half-hearted notes in the margins of your planner like it matters. You grab late-night convenience store dinners with Minju and Yunah, laughing at their jokes even when your chest feels hollow.
You live.
You function.
You check your email more often than necessary, always under the excuse of work, even though you know exactly what youâre hoping to find. You flick through your phone sometimes tooâhalf-scrolling through newsfeeds, half-wondering if maybe, just maybe, thereâll be a notification that isnât there.
But Sunghoon doesnât reply. No email. No text. No missed call.
Nothing.
And slowly, inevitably, you start to fold the hope away. The way you fold an old jumper you know youâll never wear again but canât quite bring yourself to throw out.
You told him he could reach out only if it was urgent. And clearly, youâre not urgent.
Maybe you never were.
And you take it as a signâmaybe the only sign youâre going to getâthat you should finally do yourself a favour and move on.
Because apparently, you havenât. Not really. Not after all this time. You didnât expect his return to unravel you like thisâto pull at threads you thought you had stitched up long ago. But it has. And you canât pretend anymore.
So youâll move on for real this time. Not the half-hearted version where you paste on smiles and throw yourself into late nights at the office, where you tell your friends youâre fine while secretly checking your phone at red lights, while pretending you donât still wonder if he thinks about you too. Not the kind where you fold the memory of him into smaller, quieter compartments of your mind, pretending it's just nostalgia, not hope.
No, this time, you tell yourself, it will be the real kindâthe clean break, the neat ending.
And for a while, you almost believe it.
Until your phone buzzes, cutting through the quiet.
Just a single, unremarkable vibration against the desk, one you almost ignoreâbecause itâs late, because youâre tired, because youâre used to the world asking for pieces of you at all hours now. You glance at the screen without thinking, already preparing to swipe it away like a dozen other notifications.
But then you see it.
Unknown Number.
For a moment, your brain stalls, fumbling for a rational explanationâmaybe itâs a delivery update, maybe itâs a scam, maybe itâs one of those automated text from some subscription you forgot to cancel.
Still, your hand moves on instinct, betraying every rational excuse you try to conjure.
You unlock your phone.
And you read:
Hey. Itâs me. Not sure if this counts as urgent. But... I saw something today that made me think of you. Do you have time?
Your breath catches in your throat, sharp and sudden, and the world around you blurs for a secondâthe hum of fluorescent lights overhead, the muffled buzz of printers, the distant tap-tap-tap of someone typing across the officeâall of it fading under the weight of those few simple lines.
You read it again. And again. As if the words might rearrange themselves into something else if you look long enough.
But they donât.
Itâs him. Sunghoon.Â
Reaching out not because he had to. Not because it was "urgent."
But because he thought of you.
And even though your mind races ahead with every reason you should be cautious, with every reminder of how long it took to rebuild the parts of yourself he once splintered, you already knowâdeep in your chest, in the place you don't let logic touchâthat youâre going to answer.
You donât let yourself overthink it this time.
No typing, erasing, retyping. No staring at the blinking cursor until it mocks you into silence. You just move your thumbs over the screen, letting instinct take the lead before the part of you thatâs scared has a chance to intervene.
You type:
You: You should probably introduce yourself next time. "Itâs me" doesnât really help if I donât already know how you text. And depends. Is it something worth hearing about?
You barely have time to set your phone down before it buzzes again.
Sunghoon: Definitely something worth hearing about.
Another message follows almost instantly:
Sunghoon: Iâm free tonight if you are. Just coffee. Nothing crazy. If you want. There's also a favour I'd like to ask.
You sit there, blinking at the last line, reading it twice as your mind scrambles to catch up.Â
A favour?
It throws you off more than the coffee invitation itself. Coffee is easyâcoffee is surface-level, casual, the kind of thing you can chalk up to old acquaintances being civil. But a favour? A favour means intention. A favour means heâs thought about this. About you.
Your fingers hover over the keyboard, your pulse quickening in that annoyingly familiar way you wish you had outgrown by now. Youâre not naive enough to think this is anything more than it is. He probably just needs help connecting with someone, getting a contact, maybe even needs something for the press if heâs easing back into the public eye.
Still, a part of you hesitates.
Not because you donât want to go. But because youâre not sure if you trust yourself not to want more.
You take a breath, steadying your thumb over the screen.
You type:
You: Where and what time?
The message sends before you can talk yourself out of it, and you drop your phone onto the desk, face down again, like itâs too hot to hold onto for even a second longer. You exhale a long, slow breath, staring up at the ceiling, trying to calm the restless beat of your heart.
Because tonight, you realise, youâre going to see him again.
Not as professionals. Not as a lingering what-if. Not as a name floating in your inbox or coincidental meetings.
But real. Present.
And no matter how much you tell yourself that youâre readyâthat youâre different nowâyou know a part of you is still bracing for impact.
Sunghoon arrives at the cafĂŠ first.
Itâs your spotâhe knows that now. He also knows you probably donât come here because the coffee is any goodâyou always made that clear with a scrunched nose and a dry comment about âcaffeine being caffeineââbut because itâs close, convenient, easy to fold into your day without having to think too hard.
He settles into a table near the window, where the soft spill of the sunset stretches across the tabletop in muted golds and pinks. He sits with his backpack slung over the back of the chair, a cup of hot tea resting untouched in front of him, and for a brief moment, he looks less like the man youâve been writing aboutâand more like the boy you used to know.
He wasn't a hundred percent sure you'd say yes to meeting him. When he sent that message, part of him assumed it would disappear into the void, swallowed up by everything unsaid between you.Â
But you answered. And you did in the way you always didâdry, sharp, a little guardedâbut underneath it all, you answered.
And now, sitting here in this too-bright, too-loud cafĂŠ with a lukewarm tea and a racing heart he canât fully rationalise, Sunghoon feels the weight of it settle in his chest.
He glances at the door again, even though he knows itâs still early. His knee bounces under the table, betraying the nervous energy he canât shake, no matter how carefully he tries to hide it under indifference.
Maybe tonight wonât fix anything. Hell, itâs not meant to.
But youâre showing up.
And somehow, that already feels like more than he deserves.
The bell above the door chimes, sharp and familiar, cutting through the low hum of conversation and clinking cups.
Sunghoon looks up almost instinctivelyâand there you are, stepping into the cafĂŠ with a kind of restless energy tucked into the set of your shoulders, like youâre already bracing yourself for something you canât name yet.
You donât see him at first.
Of course you donât.
Because out of pure, unconscious instinct, youâre scanning the corners of the cafĂŠâthe tucked-away tables, the quieter spots shielded from the main crowdâjust like you always used to.
Sunghoon feels a tight tug in his chest, something that pulls and aches all at once, because he remembers.
He remembers how you used to tease him for always choosing the seats against the wall, how you said he acted like a cat looking for the best vantage point, somewhere he could see everything without being seen himself.
He remembers you pretending to sulk when he dragged you to the corner booths instead of the bright window seats you preferredâand how, secretly, you never really minded.
And now, without even thinking, youâre still looking for him in the places where you remember him being.
And without even realising, he had chosen a place where he remembered you liking.
He doesnât call out to you.
He just watches.
Watches the slight purse of your lips when you donât spot him right away. Watches the way your fingers tap lightly against the strap of your bagâan old nervous habit heâd forgotten he rememberedâlike your body is leaking out the anxiety you refuse to show on your face.
And God, you lookâ
You look pretty.
Not in the polished, deliberate way people try to look when they know theyâre being watched.
You look real.
Soft in the fading light, like the world around you hasnât quite caught up to you yet. Your hair a little mussed from the breeze outside, your cheeks flushed with the leftover heat of the setting sun. Thereâs a quietness to you, a rawnessâlike youâre still made of the same stubborn hope and sharp edges he used to love, except time has worn them softer, gentler, more dangerous in ways he doesnât even have the words for.
You look like a memory heâs been trying not to miss.
You look like the version of you heâs been carrying around all these yearsâ
Real. Tired, maybe. A little guarded. But still luminous in a way he canât describe without sounding ridiculous, without pulling old, unfinished feelings up from the place he thought heâd buried them for good.
Something shifts in his chest, painful and sweet all at once.
Because in the handful of minutes heâs spent sitting here convincing himself to stay calm, convincing himself that this was just coffee and nothing moreâyouâve walked through the door and reminded him, without trying, exactly why forgetting you had never really been an option.
He straightens slightly in his chair, the leg of the table bumping softly against his knee.
And for a momentâjust a momentâSunghoon forgets why heâs here at all.
You shift your weight from one foot to the other, adjusting the strap of your bag on your shoulder, scanning the cafĂŠ with a quiet frown starting to settle between your brows.
Sunghoon watches the hesitation flicker across your faceâthe way you linger a fraction too long at every corner booth, the way your fingers brush nervously against the hem of your jacket, like youâre grounding yourself without even realising it.
And thenâfinallyâyour gaze catches his.
The moment stretches, taut and delicate, like a held breath.
You blink, as if to double-check itâs really him. Your lips part slightly in surprise, a faint hitch of breath visible even from where heâs sitting, and for a second, neither of you moves, both suspended in that thin, brittle space where time slows down just enough to make you feel the weight of it.
You glance at the window beside him, your eyes catching the reflection of the streetlights bleeding into the glass, and for a moment, confusion flickers briefly across your face.
Thatâs why you didnât spot him immediately when you walked in.
You werenât looking by the windowsâyou never had to.
Sunghoon never sat there. He hated it. Hated having his back exposed, hated being on display. Youâd spent years weaving through crowded cafĂŠs and restaurants, instinctively scanning the corners, the quiet spaces tucked away from the flow of people, because thatâs where he would always beâwhere he could watch without being watched, where the world couldnât reach him unless he let it.
But tonight, heâs here.
By the window.
Plain as day.
And without him saying a word about it, you realise itâanother small, unconscious version of Park Sunghoon you were still holding onto without even realising it.Â
A version you thought was set in stone, carved into your memories.Â
A version you never prepared yourself to outgrow.
Sunghoon doesnât smile. He doesnât look away.
He just meets your gaze head-on, steady and quiet, letting the moment settle between you without rushing to fill it with anything easy or safe.
You square your shoulders after a heartbeat too long, forcing your body into motion, and start making your way towards him. Your steps are measured, careful, almost cautious, but thereâs no mistaking the way your fingers clench slightly against the strap of your bag, no hiding the guarded look in your eyes that says youâre still ready to turn around and walk away if this goes wrong.
He stays seated as you approach, watching you close the distance between you, something tight and aching lodged in his chest, something heâs too afraid to name yet.
When you reach the table, you donât sit down right away.
You just stand there, staring at him for a moment longer, as if trying to gauge how much of the boy you used to love is still sitting there, underneath the polished surface heâs learned to wear like a second skin.
Sunghoon clears his throat lightly, a small, awkward sound that feels jarringly loud in the otherwise soft hum of the cafĂŠ.
âYou found me,â he says, voice low and almost shy, like he's not sure if he's allowed to sound relieved.
You shrug, shifting your weight onto your other foot. âDidnât think youâd make it so easy,â you reply, your tone light, almost teasing, but thereâs no real bite behind the wordsâjust a tired kind of fondness that feels too familiar, too stubborn to shake.
And just like that, some of the tension splintersâ
Not all of it.
Not enough to call this easy.
But enough to remind both of you why youâre here.
Wordlessly, you pull out the chair across from him and sit down, setting your bag carefully by your feet.
Sunghoonâs hand twitches slightly against his cup, the tea inside long cold by now, but he doesnât seem to notice.
You fold your hands in your lap, lift your chin just a little, and say, âAlright. Youâve got my time. Letâs hear it.â
âYouâre not even curious what reminded me of you?â Sunghoon asks, one brow lifted, his voice dipping into that familiar, teasing cadence you used to know so well.
Of course youâre curious. Of course your mind has been spinning endless possibilities from the second you read his first text. But youâre not about to hand that over to him so easilyânot when youâre still trying to convince yourself youâre not sitting here half-holding your breath.
You lean back slightly in your chair, crossing one leg over the other in an easy, breezy posture you absolutely donât feel, and shrug. âWhat reminded the oh-so-charismatic Ice Prince of me?â
The corner of his mouth lifts into a smirkâthe same infuriating, boyish smirk that once had the power to completely undo you, the one you thought time and bitterness would have dulled. It hasnât. Not even a little.
He doesnât say anything right away.
Instead, he reaches into the inside pocket of his coat, moving slowly, drawing out the suspense just because he knows itâll get under your skin.Â
When he pulls out a small box and sets it gently on the table between you, you blink down at it in surprise.
Itâs a Popmart blind box.
The exact kind you used to collect like trophies after long study sessions or bad days, back when you needed small, ridiculous joys to get you through.
You stare at the familiar design, the cutesy pastel art printed on the cardboard, the gleaming plastic seal still unbrokenâand for a second, itâs like the years peel away and youâre back in a different time, a different version of yourself. One who used to drag Sunghoon to random mall kiosks and lecture him on the probability rates of getting the secret rare figure, completely oblivious to how patient he was being with you.
He watches your reaction carefully, elbows propped lazily on the table, but his eyes are sharpâsearching.
âYouâre kidding,â you murmur, finally breaking the silence, your voice somewhere between disbelief and something softer, something a little too close to fondness.
He shrugs, that infuriating smirk deepening. âSaw it at a convenience store on my way to practice this morning.â
You shake your head, the smallest, almost unwilling laugh slipping out of you. âYou used to roast me for buying these.â
âAnd yet,â he says, tapping the box lightly with one finger, âI bought one almost every time I passed that Popmart near my place. For research purposes, obviously.â
You roll your eyes, but you canât fight the smile pulling at your lips, nor the way your chest tightens at the thought of itâhim, in another city, another life, still thinking of you in the small, quiet ways that mattered when words werenât enough.
For a moment, neither of you says anything. The box sits between you, unopened, full of some stupid, mass-produced trinket that somehow feels heavier than anything else in the room.
You glance up at him, and heâs already looking at youânot with expectation, not with the smugness you were half-braced forâbut with something quieter. Something careful.
âThank you,â you say, the words slipping out before you can overthink them, barely more than a whisper, but somehow steady. Itâs the only thing you can conjure in the moment, the only thing that feels honest and real enough to offer. Youâre a little surprised you manage to say it out loud at all, your throat tight with all the other things youâre not ready to admit.
Sunghoon leans back in his chair, his eyes bright with something that looks dangerously close to amusement as he tilts his head at you.
âItâs the least you could say,â he teases, tapping the box again with his fingertip, âafter I spent almost twenty dollars on that.â
The exaggerated grumble in his voice cracks the tension like a hairline fracture, and before you can stop yourself, a laugh escapes your lipsâshort, surprised, but real.
The sound of it seems to hit him harder than you expect.
For a second, he just stares at you, like heâs been momentarily stunned, like some long-frozen part of him is trying to remember how to breathe properly.
And if you werenât so caught up in trying to pull your own defences back into place, you might have noticed the way his posture softens, just slightly, as if the laugh is something fragile heâs afraid of shattering.
You smirk, shaking your head as you reach out and nudge the box with two fingers, sliding it just slightly toward you.
âYou bought this to bribe me into helping you with that favour, didnât you?â you say, lifting your gaze to meet his fully now, your voice laced with teasing accusation but your heart still hammering too hard against your ribs.
He has the audacity to look mock-offended, clutching his chest like youâve wounded him. âBribe?â he echoes. âWow. No faith in me at all.â
âYou literally showed up with a Popmart like some kind of peace offering-slash-negotiation tactic,â you point out, arching an eyebrow.
âAnd yetâŚâ he trails off, a slow grin tugging at his mouth, âyouâre still sitting here. Youâre still talking to me.â
You roll your eyes, but you canât help the way the corner of your mouth betrays you, tilting upward just enough for him to catch it.
He sees it.
Of course he does.
And somewhere, buried deep under the layers of sarcasm and half-healed scars, you know he feels it tooâthe tiny, reckless flicker of something that neither of you is quite brave enough to name yet.
âSo?â you prompt, your fingers idly tracing the rim of the coffee cup in front of you, the casualness in your voice a little too forced even to your own ears.
Sunghoon shifts in his seat, the easy smirk fading just slightly as he straightens, as if the weight of what heâs about to say demands a little more gravity.
âI wanted to ask if you could help me write another article,â he says, the words slow and deliberate, like heâs weighing each one carefully before letting it leave his mouth.
You blink, surprised but trying not to show it. âWhat about?â
He leans back, exhales once through his nose, and says it:
âIâm going to be participating in the Olympic tryouts.â
The announcement hits harder than you expect, knocking the air from your lungs for half a second. You sit up a little straighter, your mind racing to process it, because the last time you talked he was adamant he wasnât preparing for the season. He said it so easily, so convincingly, that you hadnât thought to press harder.
Sunghoon must catch the flicker of confusion across your face, because he adds quickly, almost defensively, âItâs not a comeback. Not really.â
You narrow your eyes slightly. âWhat do you mean?â
He pauses.
You can see itâthe hesitation. The way his shoulders tense just the slightest bit, the way he looks down at his hands like the answer is written somewhere in the faint lines of his palms.
âIââ he starts, then stops, chewing the inside of his cheek in frustration. His fingers curl lightly against the table, the same nervous tic heâs had since he was a teenager trying to explain why he bombed a practice session.
âI just need you to write the article for me,â he says instead, voice softer now, almost tentative. âPlease?â
Hereâs the thing about Sunghoon.
Heâs always been good at giving you just enoughâjust enough smiles, just enough softness, just enough quiet promises without ever saying the words aloudâto make you feel like maybe, just maybe, there was something sturdy here.
Something real.
Something worth holding onto.
And then, just when you reached for it, just when you let yourself believe you were on solid ground, he would pull back.
Carefully.
Effortlessly.
Leaving you standing there, empty-handed, wondering if you were the one who had leaned in too far, if you had asked for too much, if you had misread all of it from the start.
It wasnât cruelty.
It was worse than cruelty.
It was kindness, just enough to hurt. Just enough to make you doubt whether it was ever real.
You lean back slightly, arms crossing over your chest, not because you want to be defensive but because you need the distance, need something to ground you against the sudden rush of old feelings. âWhy me?â you ask, genuinely. âThe last time I wrote something for you, you were too busy complaining about the photos I used to actually say thank you.â
Itâs a weak jab, but you both know the real question youâre asking has nothing to do with photos.
Itâs why now?
Itâs why me, when you could have gone to anyone else?
Sunghoon meets your gaze without flinching, his expression surprisingly earnest.
âBecause,â he says simply, âI trust you.â
You open your mouth to say somethingâsomething sarcastic, something to deflectâbut he cuts you off before you can.
âI trust that you wonât spin this into something else. I trust that youâll tell it the way it is. Not the way people want to hear it. Not the way the sponsors or the federations want it dressed up.â His voice stays calm, but thereâs something raw underneath it, something that edges dangerously close to vulnerability. âJust⌠the truth. Thatâs all I want.â
You stare at him across the table, your fingers curling slightly around the rim of your cup, and for a moment, you don't say anything. You just sit there, letting the request hang in the air between you, heavy and trembling like a thread pulled too tight.
Part of youâthe part that's bruised and still sore from all the years of learning the hard wayâwants to say no. Wants to lean back in your chair, laugh it off, tell him to hire a better PR team like every other professional athlete with something to prove. Wants to remind him, and maybe yourself, that youâre not the same girl who would have dropped everything the moment he asked.
Because you know better now. You know how this story goes. You say yes, you step closer, you open the door just a crackâand he slips through, quietly, effortlessly, until you're standing in the wreckage again, wondering how you didnât see it coming.
But another part of youâthe stubborn part, the hopeful part you haven't managed to kill off no matter how hard you've triedâcanât quite look away from him. From the way heâs sitting there, tension riding his shoulders, fingers tapping a restless rhythm against his cup. From the way he askedâno bravado, no posturing, just a simple, almost clumsy honesty that feels so rare you almost don't know what to do with it.
You glance toward the window, watching the way the last blush of sunset catches against the glass, and for a moment you imagine what it would feel like to say yes.
Not because you owe him. Not because youâre chasing the past.
But because, somewhere deep down, you still believe in telling stories the way they deserve to be told.
You still believe some promises are worth making again, even if it terrifies you.
Your stomach twists, your chest aching with the sharpness of it, but you find yourself already knowing the answer before your mouth even moves.
You inhale slowly, letting the silence stretch for just a beat longer than necessary, then exhale through your nose, pushing aside the complicated tangle of feelings you don't have the energy to unravel tonight.
"Fine," you say at last, voice even, businesslike, like you're trying to convince both of you that this is just another assignment and not something heavier slipping under your skin. "Get your assistant to email me the details. Iâll personally send over the draft before pushing it to the editorial team."
You reach for your cup as you say it, needing something to do with your hands, something to anchor yourself to this new line youâre drawing in the sand.
But before you can even take a sip, Sunghoon leans forward slightly, resting his forearms on the table, his expression soft but firm in a way that pins you in place more effectively than anything else could.
âDon't bother,â he says simply. âYou can just publish it directly.â
You pause, the cup poised halfway to your mouth, his words hanging there between you like an invisible thread youâre not sure you want to pull. You lower the cup slowly, setting it back down against the saucer with a faint clink, buying yourself a second to think. To breathe. To understand.
You search his face for the catch, for the usual hesitation he so often laced into moments like thisâthose little cracks where you could see him calculating the safest move, the one that let him stay just close enough without ever being vulnerable.
But this time, thereâs none of that. Just him, sitting there, arms folded over the table, looking at you like heâs already decided.
"Are you sure?" you ask, the words slipping out lighter than you feel them. "No proofread? No management red flags?"
Sunghoonâs lips twitch into a smileâsmall, wry, but not mocking. If anything, he looks... relieved that you asked. Like he was expecting the pushback, maybe even hoping for it, because it means youâre still cautious enough to take this seriously.
"Iâm sure," he says simply.Â
A muscle ticks once in your jaw, the urge to press further bubbling up, but you force yourself to stop. And in itâs place, a lump forms in your throat, sharp and unexpected, because if thereâs one thing you didnât expect to find tonightâcertainly not here, not like thisâit was trust.
Not just trust in your professionalism. Not just trust in your writing.
Trust in you.Â
Because whatever else has changed, you can feel it: This matters to him.
Not the article. Not the media coverage.
This.
Reaching out to you.
Trusting you with the fragile, unfinished thing he's trying to build for himself again, knowing full well you could burn him with it.
And somehow, hearing him say itâso plainly, so quietlyâmakes it harder to breathe for a moment. Because even after everything, even after the distance and the silences and the growing pains you both carried separately, some part of him still sees you as the person who would protect his story. The way you once protected his heart.
And you donât know what terrifies you moreâthe fact that he still trusts you, or the fact that, deep down, you still want to be the person worthy of that trust.
It rattles something loose inside youâthe version of yourself you thought you had to kill off to survive him once.
You shift slightly in your seat, trying to hold onto your composure, trying not to let him see the way those simple wordsâthose few inches of offered faithâshake the foundation youâve been standing on for years.
"Alright," you say at last, keeping your voice light, controlled, even though your hands tremble ever so slightly beneath the table.
"But don't blame me if you don't like how candid I get."
Sunghoon smiles at that, the edges of his mouth curling in that way that makes your chest hurt for reasons youâre too tired to name.
"I wouldnât ask if I didnât mean it," he says simply.
You let out a soft breath you hadnât even realised you were holding and glance down at your watch, the second hand ticking steadily forward. Itâs getting late. And even though neither of you says it, you both know this fragile truce youâve built tonight can only stretch so far before it snaps under the weight of everything youâre still not ready to talk about.
You stand, gathering your bag with slow, deliberate movements, and Sunghoon rises too, out of habit more than necessity. Always the gentleman, even when he had no right to be.
You sling your bag over your shoulder, tucking a stray strand of hair behind your ear, and look at him one last time.
Thereâs so much you could say. So much you shouldnât.
So instead, you just offer a nod. Small. Measured. Almost formal.
"Iâll be in touch," you say.
And before he can say anything that might make this harder, you turn and walk toward the door, the cool night air rushing in as you step outside.
You donât look back.
But you feel itâthe weight of his eyes following you, lingering in the space you leave behind.
Youâre back in that tiny, overheated apartment off campusâthe one where the windows always fogged up too easily and nothing ever really dried properly unless you left it near the fan. The scent of burnt popcorn still clings faintly to the air from earlier that evening, and the dull hum of traffic bleeds in through the thin walls, but even that doesnât distract from the tension steadily rising in the room like pressure before a storm. Sunghoon is slouched on the couch with one hand tangled in his hair, exhaling yet another sighâhis fifth in the past ten minutes. Youâve been watching him carefully from across the room, patiently waiting for him to reach out first. But after three years together, you know better. Park Sunghoon doesnât do well with vulnerability. He never has. "Somethingâs on your mind, isnât it?" you ask, finally breaking the silence as you settle down beside him on the couch. He flinches at your sudden proximity, as if this isnât your apartment, as if heâs only just realised youâre still here. He doesnât look at you when he answers. "No, Iâm just tired from training, thatâs all." You let out a breathânot quite a laugh, not quite a sigh. âYou know, three years is a long time. Long enough for me to know when youâre lying to me. Just because I donât call you out on it doesnât mean I donât see it happening.â That makes him freeze. His hand stills in his hair, and his jaw goes tight. âPark Sunghoon,â you say slowly, letting each syllable settle like a weight between you. The name sounds foreign in your mouthâformal, distant, pointed. He flinches. Not visibly, not dramaticallyâbut you see it. A slight stiffening in his posture. The barest flicker of guilt behind his eyes. Because he knows what it means when you use his full name. You only ever say it like that when youâre done waiting. âYouâre keeping something from me.â The words come out flat and exhausted, with none of the softness youâve been clinging to for weeksâbecause whatever this thing is, whatever heâs hiding, itâs starting to rot the air between you. And youâre too tiredâtoo frayed around the edges from all the late-night phone calls that ended too early, the dinners where he barely looked up from his plate, the countless conversations that brushed against the truth but never quite touched it. He blinks at you like youâve just blindsided him. "Babe, what are you talking about?" "Donât do that," you snap, your voice rising before you can stop it. "Donât act like Iâm imagining things. Youâve been distant for weeks. You barely look me in the eye when we talk, and every time I try to ask whatâs going on, you throw me the same half-hearted excusesââIâm tired,â âTrainingâs been intense.â You expect me to just accept that forever?â His jaw flexes, and this time you see itâclear as dayâthat flicker of guilt he canât hide fast enough. Your stomach sinks. You soften your tone, even if it cracks on the way out. "Sunghoon, weâre supposed to be in this together. I want to be there for you. Please." He hesitates, swallowing hard like the words are caught in his throat. "IâI received a training offer." For a second, you just blink at him, caught off guard. "Thatâs great, Hoon. Why would you hide that from me?" He doesnât answer right away, and for a second you thinkâmaybe itâs nothing. Maybe he really is just tired from training and youâre overreacting. But then, almost reluctantly, he says it.
âItâs in Spain.â
The words land heavy between you.
Spain.
Not just a different city. Not even just another country. Another continent. Another time zone. Another life.
The air leaves your lungs before you can stop it. Not in a dramatic gasp, not in a theatrical wayâbut in a slow, silent collapse, like something inside you just quietly folded in on itself.
If the offerâs in Spain⌠then itâs not just about training. Itâs about moving.
Leaving.
Staying gone.
âWhen were you planning on telling me?â you ask, your voice cracking at the edges despite your best effort to keep it steady. âWere you going to let me find out through someone else? Or just⌠let me sit here, waiting for you to come clean?â
He winces, just slightly. âI didnât know how.â
And thatâs when it really hits you. The worst part isnât the distance. You could handle distance. Youâve done long hours. Late-night calls. Time apart.
Noâthe worst part is that he didnât tell you. That heâs been sitting with this, carrying it silently, while showing up in your apartment like nothingâs changed.
Because this isnât just about fear or nerves or awkward timing.
This is about trust. About the fact that somewhere, deep down, he didnât believe youâd understand. Didnât believe youâd stay.
You feel the sharp sting of that realisation clawing at your chest. Youâve always known Sunghoon wasnât great at talking about hard things, but you thought⌠you thought you were past that stage. You thought you were partners.
âI didnât want to make you worry before I even knew if it was real,â he adds, and the moment stretches thin between youâjust long enough for the ache to settle in properly.
Your voice comes out quieter this time, more hollow. âHow long ago?â
He hesitates. Again. And you already know the answerâs going to hurt.
âA month.â
You blink. Once. Twice. Trying to understand what kind of person holds onto something that big for thirty daysâsharing meals, messages, kissesâwithout so much as a hint.
"A month,â you repeat, because you need to say it out loud to believe it. âYouâve known about this for a month, and you didnât think to tell me?â
He doesnât answer.
And in that silence, your mind fills the blanks for him: You werenât part of the decision. You werenât part of the plan. You were just⌠something temporary. Something not worth factoring in.
You want to yell. You want to cry. You want to disappear.
But instead, all you can do is ask, barely above a whisperâ
âHow long would you be gone?â
âI donât know,â he says. âThe contractâs renewable. Season by season.â
So not just gone.
Possibly gone for good.
Your vision blurs for a momentânot from tears, but from the force of everything hitting you at once: the betrayal, the loneliness, the terrible, gnawing possibility that heâs been slowly easing himself out of this relationship long before Spain ever came into the picture.
"I'm sorry for not telling you earlier... I was scared.â His voice is low, almost breathless, like heâs only just admitting it to himself. His hand reaches out, tentative at first, before settling over yours where it rests on the couch. And you hate itâhow that simple gesture, plain and quiet and embarrassingly overdue, still makes something inside you soften. The bare fucking minimum, and it still sways you.
"Hell, Iâm scared too, Sunghoon," you whisper, not bothering to hide the shake in your voice. "But you shouldâve told me. I deserved to hear it from youânot from the silence thatâs been stretching between us for weeks."
His other hand comes up to run through his hair, eyes squeezing shut for a second. "I donât even know if I want to take it up. I mean, I could stay. I could keep training here in Korea."
You shoot him a lookâsharp, disbelieving, almost angry.
"Are you crazy?" Your voice wavers on the edge of breaking, not because you donât mean it, but because meaning it hurts more than you want to admit. "Itâs a good opportunity, Sunghoon. One youâve worked your whole life for. You should go for it."
He doesnât answer immediately. Just stares at you, searching your face like it holds the answers to every impossible question he hasnât dared to ask. And you know the moment he finds itâthe flicker of fear. The tightness in your smile. The regret you tried so hard to keep buried shows in every inch and crease of your face and he sees it as clear as day.
"I love you, Sunghoon." You say it firmly. Desperately. "And loving you means being there for you. Supporting your dreams. Thatâs what this is. It's not like weâre breaking up, right?"
He reacts instantly. "No! God, no.â
His grip tightens over your hands, voice urgent, pleading.
"I love you too, and I never want to lose you."
You hold his gaze. Let yourself believe himâfor now. Because in this moment, with his hand wrapped around yours and his eyes wide and scared and filled with something real, you need to.
"Thatâs all I needed to know," you say softly.
And it is.
At least, thatâs what you tell yourself. You eventually came to terms with itâbecause youâre good at rationalising things that hurt. You tell yourself that dreams come with sacrifice. That love, real love, isnât always about staying closeâitâs about staying with someone, even when theyâre far away. That maybe love isnât about convenience, but compromise. But still⌠you guess, even then, even in that moment where you let him go with your blessingâa part of you already had that small flicker of doubt gnawing quietly at the back of your mind. Did he see you in the life he was chasing? Or were you just the thing he had to let go of to chase it faster? The cursor blinks at you, tauntingly. A small, persistent beat on a completely blank page. Like itâs waiting for you to figure out how to write about someone youâve spent years trying not to think about. Itâs not like this is your first article about him. In fact, the last one made the rounds faster than you expected. People called it raw, honest, even moving. They praised your ability to write âauthentically,â like youâd peeled back layers no other reporter had dared to touch. Like you knew him. And you do. Or at least you did. Canât be that hard to churn out another article about him. Your gaze drifts to your desk, where a small, unopened box sits tucked to the sideâinnocent, pastel-coloured, with a soft shimmer under the lamp light. The Popmart. You blink at it, then let out a quiet laugh. Not bitter. Just tired. Surprised. Of course he didnât know. Youâd already completed this series over a year ago. Bought the final missing figure off some reseller at a ridiculous markup. Youâd even double-sleeved it in plastic wrap and stuck it on the corner of your shelf, not because you still cared about the collection, but because it had started to feel like proof of something. Proof that you could finish something on your own. That you could love somethingâand walk away when you needed to. That you didnât need anyone else to give you closure. And yet⌠here it is. Sitting unopened on your desk, brought to you by the very person you spent years training yourself not to miss. A memory in a box. A joke you both once shared, delivered too late and too gently. You pick it up slowly, turning it over in your hand, and smile to yourselfâsmall, worn, a little sad. He still thinks he knows you. Still buys you things like heâs allowed to remember you this closely. And maybe thatâs the problem. Because part of you still wants him to.
You're back at the ice rink, your breath catching slightly as the cold air settles into your lungs the moment you step inside. The familiar scent of ice and rubber greets you, sharp and sterile. Itâs quieter todayâno full team practices or busy skaters gliding across the surfaceâjust the soft, distant hum of the facility and the occasional sharp cut of blades against ice. You texted Sunghoon earlier this week, asking for a favour. A simple photo op, you saidânothing serious. You needed fresh shots for the article. Every news outlet had been recycling the same tired gallery of him from years agoâarms raised in victory at the 2022 Winter Olympics, a candid smile from a post-win press conference, that one dramatic shot with his head bowed in slow-motion grace during a routine. Beautiful images, sure, but outdated. You needed something that showed the version of him now. And if you were being honest with yourself, a small, treacherous part of you just wanted to see him in motion again. To see the Sunghoon that only existed when he was skating. The one who couldnât hide behind polished interviews and measured words. He agreed with barely a pause.
Sunghoon: Sure. Come by Thursday. Iâll block the ice for an hour.
So youâre here. The camera you borrowed from your illustrator slung over your shoulder, scarf tucked under your chin, fingers already tingling from the cold. You set your things down near the boards, scanning the empty rink until you spot him. And there he is. Sunghoon is already on the ice, warming up with long, fluid strides, his blades carving out familiar patterns beneath him. He hasnât seen you yet. Or maybe he has, and he's just letting you watch first. Either way, for a moment, you forget youâre here to work. Because seeing him like thisâalone on the ice, body moving like muscle memory itselfâit tugs something loose in you. Something old and buried but not entirely gone. And you remember: this is what he was born to do. Even if it broke both of you along the way. Without wasting another second, youâre already moving to unzip your camera bag and pull your gear out. You work methodically, slipping off the lens cap, adjusting the settings, checking the battery with a practiced flick of your thumb. Itâs almost muscle memoryâthis part of you that lives in quiet attention. The last time you held a professional camera like this was for a university project, one that had taken weeks to prepare and execute. Back then, Sunghoon had been your muse tooâsharp lines, steady movement, that inexplicable sense of stillness in motion that made him impossible to look away from. And now here you are again. The lens finds him at centre ice, where heâs stretching out a tight muscle in his leg, movements slow and careful, like he knows youâre watching now. Maybe he does. Sunghoon always had a sixth sense for thatâfor when eyes were on him, especially yours. You angle your lens slightly, tracking the curve of his body, the set of his jaw. Click. The shutter snaps. He glances over at the sound, a half-smile tugging at his mouthâmischievous, unbothered, almost like heâs posing without trying. But thatâs just how heâs always been. You used to call it his camera face. He used to call you dramatic.
Click.
Sunghoon starts skating again. He doesnât ask for direction, and you donât offer any. You donât need to. You track him through the lens as he glides through a spin, body coiled and precise, before he launches into a clean double axel that lands with barely a sound. The shutter clicks with each motion, capturing his lines, the angles, the fleeting expressions that flash across his face like sunlight through a curtain. You capture the way the light reflects off the ice, how the blade flares white against the surfaceâitâs all a picture youâve seen before, but never quite like this. Never with this strange ache nestled beneath your ribs. Thereâs a momentâbetween the leap and the landingâwhen he looks directly at you. And it almost knocks the breath out of you. Because in that split second, it feels like the ice disappears, the years disappear, and itâs just you and him again, the version of him that used to look for your eyes in every crowd. The version that used to skate not just for medals, but for you. You lower your camera slowly, heart thudding a little louder in your chest than it should. âDonât tell me that was your good side,â you say, aiming for lightness, adjusting your grip on the camera as you lower it from your eye. The teasing is automatic, familiarâthe kind of banter you used to toss back and forth like a tennis ball, soft enough not to bruise, sharp enough to mean something. Sunghoon coasts to a stop near the boards, blades carving a soft arc in the ice, his breath visible in the cold air. His chest rises and falls steadily, not from exertionâheâs not pushing himself yetâbut from the kind of focused calm he only ever shows on the ice. âIt was all my good side,â he replies, deadpan. You roll your eyes and let out a soft, incredulous laugh, more fond than you mean it to be. Of course it was. Heâs always been like thisâsmug and quietly self-aware in the way only someone who knows theyâre good can be. You roll your eyes, but your lips are already curling upward. You glance down at the display screen, reviewing the shots, already knowing youâve got what you came forâand maybe a little more than you meant to take. âTell me I donât look good,â Sunghoon says, a quiet challenge in his voice as he raises an eyebrow, still watching you. You scoff, lifting the camera again mostly to hide the expression threatening to spread across your face. âJust try not to look like youâre holding a grudge against the ice,â you reply, letting the words land somewhere between playful and pointed. âI donât,â he says, and this time, thereâs something else there. Something softer. A hesitation in the space between his words. And for a second, it sounds like he means it. You lower the camera slightly, eyes on him through the frame but not taking the shot. Your voice drops without you meaning it to, just a notch lower, quiet like a memory surfacing. âYou always looked best when you werenât trying,â you murmur, mostly to yourself. A truth youâve always known but never said aloud. But he hears it. And he doesnât say anything. Doesnât laugh. Doesnât tease. He just turns back toward the centre of the rink, pushes off without a word, and starts skating again. You track him as he speeds into another combinationâa triple toe loop followed by a clean step sequence, blades carving elegant arcs into the ice. Youâre almost lost in it, the way the movements catch light, the shutter syncing to the beat of his pace like muscle memory. Then it happens. Itâs subtle. Barely a misstep. But you catch itâthe way his landing falters, how his right skate wobbles just slightly before he corrects. It wouldâve been imperceptible to most. But not to you. Your fingers freeze on the camera, instinctively holding your breath as you watch him pull out of the sequence early, gliding to the boards instead of continuing.
Heâs hiding it. But not well. His right leg drags just a fraction longer than it should with each glideâbarely noticeable to the untrained eye, but youâve spent too many hours watching him skate not to catch it. Itâs the kind of minute detail only someone whoâs memorised his movement would notice. And it makes your stomach lurch. You lower the camera, resting it carefully at the edge of your bag, the weight of it slipping from your fingers like the moment itself is slipping from your grasp. Your eyes track his every motion as he skates to the edge of the rink, bends lowâtoo low, too carefullyâand begins adjusting his laces. A decoy. A deflection. His back is to you, but the lie is written all over the tension in his shoulders. You step closer to the rinkâs edge. âSunghoon.â He doesnât turn. Doesnât acknowledge you with anything more than a vague, distracted, âOne sec.â Itâs the way he used to respond when you caught him avoiding a question. The same rehearsed calm, the same nonchalance that always made you feel like you were overreactingâuntil the truth came out in pieces. âDonât do that.â A pause. Then, reluctantly, he straightens and looks over his shoulder. His face is composed, but you see itâthe twitch at the corner of his mouth, the way his hands clench a little too tightly around his laces like he needs them to steady himself. Itâs in his eyes too. That flicker of guilt. That stubborn need to pretend. And for just a second, you see it flash across his faceâthat same look he wore four years ago in your apartment. When you said his name with a tremble in your voice. When you caught the lie before he could even shape it with his mouth. It hits you all at once: the dĂŠjĂ vu, the sick familiarity of it. Heâs doing it again. Tucking pain behind a polite smile. Folding the truth into excuses he hasnât said out loud yet. And this time, itâs not your relationship thatâs frayingâitâs his body. âItâs nothing,â he says. You wait for him to add on, say somethingâanythingâto reassure you. A quiet I promise or the donât worry about it. But he doesnât. Doesnât matter if he did anyway. You know heâs lying. And just like that, the rumoursâthe whispers that had floated through the sports forums, half-buried in speculation and dismissed by press statementsâcrash into your chest with brutal clarity. The injury. The reason he pulled out of finals. The reason he disappeared. You cross your arms. âThat ânothingâ looked a hell of a lot like something.â âI just landed weird.â âBullshit,â you snap before you can stop yourself. âYouâre injured.â
He freezes. The sound of your wordsâsharp, laced with something dangerously close to panicâhangs between you. The silence between you stretches like taut wire, thin and sharp and ready to snap. You watch the way his jaw locks, the way his arms hang stiffly by his sides, like heâs bracing for a blow you havenât decided if you want to deliver. And maybe thatâs what hurts more than anything elseânot the lie itself, but the fact that heâs willing to let it hang in the air. Unchallenged. Unexplained. Like your concern isnât worth the truth. Your hands clench into fists before you even realise it, nails digging into your palms as you watch him turn fully now, the faintest strain in his movement betraying what his mouth wonât say. He doesnât even meet your eyes. And thatâthat makes something hot and sharp rise in your throat. Anger. Thatâs the first thing that hits. Because he knew. Knew this wasnât something he could hide foreverâand still, he didnât tell you. Not when you asked. Not when you agreed to write the article. Not when you sat across from him in that cafĂŠ, trusting him with something you werenât sure you even had left to give. And he did this again. Like back then. When Spain was just a pin on a map and you were left in the dark, forced to make sense of a future he already knew he wasnât going to share with you. But right on the heels of that fury comes something elseâsomething slower, heavier. Worry. Because you know him. You know how much the ice means to him. You know what it took for him to get here. And you can see it now, etched into every tight movement and every silent wince he tries to bury beneath composure. Heâs skating on borrowed time. The sadness creeps in after, quiet and cruel. Because maybe you were hopingâfoolishlyâthat this time would be different. That this new version of you and him, cautious but healing, would be built on honesty. And yet here you are again. Watching him lie to you, not with words, but with silence. Because youâve been here before, havenât you? Waiting on him to meet you halfway while he stands still. And still, a part of youâstupid, stubborn, impossibly softâwants to close the gap.
You take a step forward. Itâs instinct more than decision, your feet moving before your pride can catch up. The edge of the rink is cold against your palms as you lean over the barricade slightly, just enough to close the space between you. He looks like he might flinch againâlike heâs caught somewhere between preparing to argue or retreat. But you donât raise your voice. You just say, quietly, firmly, âDonât do this.â His eyes flickerâjust barely. But you see it. âDonât shut me out like Iâm just another reporter,â you continue. âDonât feed me lines like âitâs nothingâ when you know I see through that better than anyone.â Still, he says nothing. So you press harder, voice trembling nowânot with anger, but with the weight of everything youâre holding back. âI watched you limp, Sunghoon. I saw it. And you think Iâm just going to nod and take your word for it?â He exhales slowly, but you can tell heâs holding his breath in all the places that matter. You shift again, trying to find steadiness in your words, even as your chest tightens. âIf the rumours were trueâif youâve been skating on an injury this entire timeâwhy wouldnât you just tell me?â A pause. A breath. A crack. âDo you really think I wouldnât have cared?â That lands. Because his eyes dropânot in shame, but something closer to fear. Not of you. But of what his silence mightâve already cost him. He doesnât answer, not yet. He just stands there, your words still echoing in the space between you. He opens his mouth, but nothing comes outâjust a soft, frustrated exhale. His jaw works like heâs chewing on the words, trying to force them out, but they keep getting caught somewhere between his chest and his throat. Itâs like heâs standing at the edge of somethingâsomething terrifying and unchartedâand he canât bring himself to take the final step. You can almost see the war going on inside him: the urge to speak versus the instinct to protect himself, to guard the parts of him that still feel too raw to share. For a moment, you think heâs going to brush it off the way he always doesâwrap it up neatly with a nonchalant shrug and a quick change of subject. Like heâs too proud or too scared to let you see that raw, unguarded part of him. It wouldnât be the first time. After all, thatâs what heâs always doneâdeflect, dodge, build walls where there should be bridges. He couldnât be honest with you when you were dating. What makes you think heâd be any different now, when thereâs even more distance between you? You almost let him off the hook. Almost open your mouth to tell him itâs fine, that you donât need him to explain himself. Youâre already bracing yourself to swallow the ache, to bury it with everything else thatâs gone unspoken between you. Youâve become good at thatâpretending it doesnât hurt. Pretending the disappointment hasnât lingered all this time, festering quietly just beneath the surface of your every breath. And Sunghoon sees it. Sees the way your eyes begin to glaze over, the way your posture shiftsânot quite closed off, but tilting in that direction. A half-given-up look that reads like surrender. Like youâre moments away from letting go completely. And something in him panics. A wave of it crashes through his chest, sharp and suffocating. Because if he fucks this upâif he lets you walk away now, after everythingâitâs really over. No more second chances. No more waiting. He feels the weight of it settle on him all at once. That thisâyouâis the moment he canât afford to lose. So, unexpectedly for you, he speaks.
âA year after we broke up,â he says, his voice quiet but steady, like heâs forcing himself to stay composed. âI was sent onto a new reality programme in Spain. Kind of like a training feature-slash-documentary series. Mostly for sponsorships.â He swallows hard, his jaw clenching as he gathers his thoughts. He doesnât look at you when he speaksâhis eyes fixed on some far point beyond the rink, beyond this moment, as if the memory itself is something he canât look at head-on. âDuring our break⌠there was this skater, Hugo.â The name clicks instantlyâHugo Franchez. Youâve heard of him. Heâs one of Coach Moralesâ other students, known for his flamboyant public persona and his tendency to stir up drama both on and off the ice. Brash, talented, and unapologetically loud. The kind of guy who thrives on attention, whether itâs positive or negative. Before you can fully process what that connection means, Sunghoon cuts through your thoughts, almost as if he knows exactly whatâs running through your mind. âDoesnât matter who he is,â he mutters, voice sharper now, almost defensive. âOne day during practice, that prick made a comment. Said my standards had dropped since you left me.â âI didnât care at first,â he says. âIt was petty. Stupid. Iâve heard worse. And honestly, he wasnât wrong. I was a mess back then. I didnât care what anyone said.â Thereâs something tight in his expression, like heâs forcing himself to stay detachedâto treat it like a story heâs telling rather than a wound heâs reopening. You stay silent, but you feel your stomach twist into a knot, cold and heavy. The words settle like stones in your chest, bitter and suffocating. You donât know what to sayâdonât know if anything you could say would make a difference. âBut then he said something else,â Sunghoon continues, and his voice tightens like itâs physically difficult to push the words out. âHe started talking about you. Jokingâif you can even call it that. Said maybe heâd try you out next. That someone like you didnât need love, just a goodââ He cuts himself off, hand flexing slightly at his side. You donât need him to finish. Your breath catches in your chest, a mix of disgust and disbelief building behind your ribs. Your hands tighten on the rinkâs barrier, knuckles turning white. You canât seem to move, your mind struggling to make sense of the sheer audacityâthe venom laced into words that shouldnât even exist. Sunghoonâs fingers drum restlessly against his thigh, a telltale sign that heâs more upset than heâs letting on. His mouth presses into a thin, unforgiving line, and for a moment, he just breathesâdeep and controlled, like heâs trying not to let his frustration seep through, but thereâs a tremor in his voice that betrays the anger still simmering under the surface. âHoonâŚâ you whisper, your voice barely audible, raw with sympathy and anger that doesnât know where to land. Sunghoonâs heart leaps at the familiar nickname, but the feeling doesnât last long as heâs reminded of the story heâs telling. âThatâs when it happened,â he continues, finally lifting his gaze to meet yours. Thereâs something broken there, vulnerability seeping through the cracks in his usual calm. âI snapped. Took a swing at him. Next thing I know, weâre being pulled apart. Cameras everywhere. People yelling. Coach Morales losing his mind. The programme was discontinued after that.â You take a small, steadying breath, unsure of whether to feel relieved that he defended you or angry that it came to this.
âAnd your injury?â you ask, the words careful, soft, like youâre afraid of breaking whatever fragile, rare occurrence is happening between you. He hesitates, the tension in his posture growing taut again. âWhen we went down, I didnât even notice it at first. Adrenaline, I guess. I thought it wasnât a big deal. It hurt, yeah, but I could still skate. I figured itâd pass. I didnât want to make it anything more than what it was.â You watch the shift in his expressionâthe shame, the defensiveness, the echo of pain heâs tried so hard to bury. âThatâs why you pulled out of the finals,â you say, the pieces clicking together all at once. He nods. âTurns out I tore a ligament when I landed wrong. I didnât realise how bad it was until I couldnât even put weight on it. Rehab took months. Had to retrain my whole posture. Thought Iâd never land a clean jump again.â The silence that follows isnât emptyâitâs heavy with everything unspoken. You can feel the ache settle in your chest, not just for him but for the both of youâthe version of him who tried to hold it all together, and the version of you who never knew. You want to scream at him for being reckless. For not telling you. For carrying all of this alone when he didnât have to. But instead, you just stare at him. And he stares back. Both of you standing there, in the middle of a truth that neither of you asked forâbut one thatâs been waiting, quietly, to be told. âBut youâre better now, right?â Your voice comes out more hopeful than you intended, a tight, almost desperate note clinging to the words. âI mean⌠youâre skating fine. Youâre prepping for the tryouts, right?â Sunghoon hesitates, his eyes dropping to his hands where his fingers are still restlessly drumming against his thighs. He swallows hard, and the tension in his jaw doesnât ease. âBarely,â he admits, the word thick and reluctant. âThe injury relapses whenever I overexert. Some days itâs fine, and other days⌠itâs like Iâm right back to square one. Thereâs no pattern. No warning. Just pain.â You feel a hollow ache forming in your chest, and you canât help the frustration that bubbles up alongside the worry. âWhy didnât you tell me?â
He looks up at you then, a flicker of something pained and conflicted crossing his face. âBecause it wasnât your problem to deal with. You didnât need to know. I couldnâtââ He breaks off, running a hand through his hair in a way thatâs almost angry. âI couldnât stand the thought of you worrying about me. Not after Iâd already messed things up between us.â You open your mouth to argue, to tell him thatâs not how this worksâthat you wouldnât have seen him as a burden. But you canât find the words, because deep down, you know Sunghoon has always carried things alone. Itâs just who he is. Protecting people from his own mess, even when it tears him apart. Heâs still watching you, shoulders tense, waiting for the backlashâlike heâs already bracing himself for the worst. And you canât help itâyou laugh. Not a happy laugh. Not even a bitter one. Just a short, exhausted sound that slips out before you can stop it. âThatâs it?â you murmur, shaking your head. âThatâs the reason you didnât tell me? Because you didnât know how to believe that Iâd want to help you?â Sunghoonâs jaw clenches, and his eyes flicker with something like hurt. âYou donât understandââ âNo, I donât,â you cut in, and your voice wobbles despite your best efforts to sound composed. âI donât understand how the guy who always told me to be honest, to be open with him, just decides on his own that I wouldnât care? You didnât even give me the chance, Sunghoon.â He doesnât respond. Just lowers his gaze, looking at his own skates like they might hold an answer. You take a slow breath, forcing yourself to ease back the frustration threatening to spill over. âYou think I wouldnât have cared? That I wouldâve justâwhatâwritten you off as some failure because you got hurt? After everything?â His silence feels like an admission. And it hurts more than it should. âWas I really that easy to leave behind?â you ask, softer now. Your hands curl tighter around the edge of the boards, knuckles turning white. âDid I make it that easy for you?â He finally looks up, and his expression is raw, stripped down to something you havenât seen in years. âNo,â he says, almost too fast. âIt wasnât easy. Nothing about leaving was easy. I justâI didnât know how to handle it.â You swallow the lump in your throat, letting his words sink in. Youâre speechless, your mind a whirlwind of the why and the how and the what ifs that heâs not giving you. Then you zone into what he said: Not after Iâd already messed things up between us. Heâs aware that the reason for your falling out was because of him. âNever mind after we broke up. In the last few months of our relationship, why were you so distant then? Why wouldnât you tell me anything? Why did we break up, Sunghoon?â His head jerks up, eyes widening. For a second, he looks like he didnât expect you to ask, like he thought youâd just let it stay buried. But you canât. Not anymore. âI didnât mean to lose you,â he whispers, like itâs something heâs only just now realising. âBut by the time I figured out how to come back⌠it felt like I didnât deserve to. Not after everything.â You open your mouth, then close it again, the words heavy on your tongue. Thereâs a long pauseâweighted, expectant. You shift slightly, pressing your palms against the edge of the rink as if to steady yourself. And then, quietlyâbecause you need to understand, because you deserve toâyou ask:
âWhat happened in Spain? Please, I need to know.â Sunghoon meets your gaze and for a second, it really felt like he was finally meeting you halfway. He lets out a shaky breath before he speaks again, voice low and unsteady. âWhen I left Korea, it was like everything just⌠fell apart. I thought skating would fix it. That if I just pushed through, everything would fall into place. It was going to be worth it, Iâd feel like myself again.â His voice is quieter when he continues, almost like heâs talking more to himself than to you. âAfter we broke up, I kept telling myself it was for the best. That I needed to focus on skating. But⌠after a while, it didnât matter anymore. I wasnât happy. I wasnât even skating because I loved it. I was just⌠doing it. Because I didnât know what else to do. Because I didnât know who I was if I wasnât moving forward. And without you⌠I just felt stuck.â The weight of his confession presses down on both of you, heavy and unforgiving. You let your hands fall from where theyâve been gripping the rink barrier, flexing your fingers like youâre trying to shake off the coldâor maybe just the ache creeping into your chest. Sunghoon skates closer, not enough to close the gap entirely but enough that you can see the way his eyes are glossed over, the pain heâs too proud to let fully show. âI lost you. I lost skating. And I didnât know how to come back from that.â You donât know how to respond. You donât even know if thereâs anything left to say. So you just stare at him, taking in the vulnerability on his faceâthe way heâs finally, finally letting himself be seen. And despite the anger, despite the sadness, a small part of youâthe part that never really stopped missing himâstarts to unravel. Because this isnât the Sunghoon you remember leaving. This is someone whoâs been tryingâfumbling, falling, but tryingâto find his way back. You donât move, but you donât push him away either. You just stand there, caught between wanting to reach for him and wanting to protect yourself from being hurt again. And Sunghoon sees itâthat hesitation. He takes a shaky breath, his hands falling to his sides, fingers flexing like he doesnât know what to do with them. Heâs still looking at youâeyes wide, raw, like heâs afraid of what your silence means. Finally, he forces the words out, voice rough and unsteady. âI know it doesnât mean much now, but Iâm really fucking sorry, Y/N.â
His eyes drop again, like he canât bear to see your reaction. âI was an emotional wreck when I realised I was falling out of love with skating. It felt like I was losing the only thing Iâd ever been good at, and I didnât know how to handle that. And in the middle of that mess⌠I didnât know how to give you the love you needed.â The admission hangs between you, heavy and unguarded, and itâs like youâre seeing the cracks in him for the first timeânot the public figure, not the professional skater, but the boy who had once loved the ice so much that he didnât know who he was without it. You bite the inside of your cheek, fighting the tremble threatening your voice. âYou should have just⌠told me. You didnât have to go through it alone. I was right there, Sunghoon. I would haveââ âI know,â he cuts in, voice almost desperate. âI know you would have. But I didnât know how to let you. I kept thinking if I just pushed harder, trained longer, it would click again. That the love for it would come back. But it didnât. And the more I kept failing, the less I could bring myself to tell you.â You swallow down the hurt lodged in your throat, forcing yourself to stay steady. âSo instead, you just shut me out? Kept me in the dark?â âI couldnât handle it,â he says, a bitter edge cutting through his tone. âAll of it. You being so damn supportive. Telling me I could do it when I knew I couldnât. I was falling apart, and you kept telling me I was going to make it. It justââ He shakes his head, lips pressing into a tight line. âIt made me feel like a fraud. Like I was dragging you down with me.â You stare at him, disbelief and frustration mixing with the ache in your chest. âYouâre kidding. And suddenly it's my fault? That I cared too much?â
âNo! I didnât mean it like that,â he says quickly, voice hoarse, trembling around the edges of regret. âGod, thatâs not what I meant at all. Fuck.â
He grips the back of his neck like heâs trying to ground himself, eyes flickering everywhereâwalls, floor, ceilingâanywhere that isnât the firestorm in your gaze.
âI meantâŚâ he finally forces out, lowering his hands. His shoulders sag. âI meant I didnât know how to handle it. You gave so much and IâI didnât know how to match it. I was scared Iâd ruin it. So I pulled back. I shut you out instead of admitting I couldnât keep up with the way you loved me.â Your heart clenches, torn between anger and sympathy. You take a deep breath, forcing the words out even though they taste like heartbreak. âYou didnât have to make that choice for me. I wouldâve stayed, Sunghoon. Even if it hurt. Even if you were falling apartââ âThatâs why I didnât tell you!â The words burst out of him, louder than he meant them to. The sound echoes slightly in the quiet of the rink, raw and cracked at the edges. You flinchânot because youâre afraid, but because itâs the first time heâs raised his voice with you in a fight. Sunghoonâs expression falters the moment it leaves his mouth. His chest rises and falls unevenly as the weight of what heâs said settles between you. He blinks fast, and for the first time, you see the glassiness in his eyesâthe way his lashes tremble under the strain of holding everything in. âI didnât want you to feel guilty,â he says again, softer this time, like heâs trying to undo the sharpness from before. âOr worse⌠like you had to fix it. I couldnât bear the thought of becoming something you felt responsible for instead of someone you just⌠loved.â He swallows hard, gaze falling to the floor as if heâs ashamed of the outburst, the truth, or maybe both. Your chest tightens at his words, but not out of anger. Not even sadness. Just this overwhelming ache for the boy in front of youâthe boy who thought love was something that had to be earned only when he was okay. You exhale slowly, trying to steady the crack in your voice. âYou think I loved you because you were strong all the time? Because you had it all together?â He doesnât answer, but the tension in his shoulders says enough. âSunghoon, I didnât want to fix you. I just wanted to be there with you.
For a moment, he just stares at you, like heâs trying to understand why youâre still here, still fighting to know the truth. And in that silence, you realise that heâs never really stopped carrying the weight of that decisionânever really forgiven himself for it. The guilt. The loneliness. The fear. Itâs all still there, buried under years of trying to pretend it didnât matter. And it hits you thenâhow much of himself he gave up just to make sure you didnât drown with him. Youâre not sure whether to scream at him for being so stupidly self-sacrificing or cry because he thought pushing you away was protecting you. His next words come out in a whisper, like heâs afraid of breaking the fragile truce between you. âI wasnât trying to hurt you. I swear. I just⌠didnât know how to love you and love skating at the same time. And when skating stopped feeling like love, I didnât know how to love myself either.â Something inside you softens, and you feel the fight drain out of your body. You lean back, exhaling shakily, trying to process it all. Maybe you thought the anger would feel good. Like if you just yelled loud enough, it would drown out the ache thatâs been festering since he left. But now, standing here with himâraw, exposed, finally admitting the truthâyou just feel tired. And maybe, just maybe, a little relieved. Because at least now you know. It wasnât that he didnât care. It was that he didnât know how. Without thinking, you reach out over the barricade, your fingers brushing against his. When he doesnât pull away, you take his hand in yours. His shoulders slump, the fight draining out of him, and for the first time in what feels like forever, he lets himself lean into youâno walls, no distance, just the raw truth of it all between you.
He lets out a rough, almost bitter laugh. âFunny, right? I spent so long trying to protect you from my problems that I ended up creating a whole new one.â You squeeze his hand gently, feeling his warmth seep into your skin. âYou didnât have to go through it alone,â you whisper. âYou didnât have to push me away just because you thought you were sparing me.â His eyes dart down to your joined hands, but he doesnât pull away. âI know that now,â he says quietly. âBut back then, I thought keeping you out of it would make things easier. For both of us.â You swallow the knot in your throat, wondering how many more pieces youâd have to unearth before you finally made sense of everything that went wrong between you. âBut it didnât, did it?â you murmur, half a statement, half a question. Sunghoonâs shoulders sag, like the weight heâs been carrying finally buckles under your words. He breathes out slowly, shaking his head, a rueful, almost self-deprecating smile tugging at his lips. âNo. It didnât.â Sunghoon takes a deep, trembling breath. The kind that rattles from somewhere deep in his chest, like heâs holding back more than just words. Slowly, carefully, his fingers slip from yours. The absence of his touch is immediateâsharp, cold, like the air around you shifted. He stuffs his hands into his pockets, like maybe thatâs the only way to keep them from shaking, from betraying just how unsteady he really feels. His gaze drops to the ice at your feet, avoiding your eyes with an almost boyish kind of shame, as though looking at you would only make the truth harder to say. âAnd I didnât reach out to you after my injury becauseâŚâ He pauses, swallows. His voice when it comes out is brittle, like heâs forcing it through a throat full of glass. âBecause I didnât want you to feel like you were a second option. Like I was only coming back to you because skating was no longer viable.â Your breath catches. The words hit in a place you didnât expect, a sharp, unexpected pang that lodges deep beneath your ribs. You blink, startled, searching his face like maybe you misheard him. âWhat?â you whisper, barely audible. The word is soft, too soft. It slips from your lips like a secret, afraid to make the moment any heavier than it already is. He lets out a laughâbut itâs dry, hollow, laced with bitterness and self-loathing. âItâs stupid, I know. But I didnât want you to think that⌠that I only wanted you because skating didnât work out. I thought if I showed up after everything fell apart, youâd look at me and think I was just using you to fill the gap.â You shake your head slowly, the motion dazed, your thoughts struggling to keep pace with the revelation. âSunghoon⌠I neverââ âI know,â he cuts in, quickly, almost harshly. His voice cracks, raw and unfiltered. âI know you didnât. But I was so fucking lost, Y/N. I didnât know who I was without skating. And the idea of crawling back to you, looking for comfort when I had nothing left⌠it felt selfish. Like I was just dragging you into my mess because I couldnât handle it on my own. You deserved better than that.â Thereâs a silence that followsânot the empty kind, but the kind that weighs down the air like fog. Heavy. Still. Unavoidable. Your arms fold in tightly against your chest as if bracing for something colder than the rink air. Thereâs a tightness there, something fragile pressing hard against your ribs, and it takes you a moment to recognise it for what it is. Itâs the part of you that never really stopped caring. âYouâre an idiot,â you say, voice thick, the words catching on the knot in your throat. You almost choke on it, the mix of pain and tenderness. âA complete idiot.â He finally looks up.
And itâs the way he looks at you that undoes you. Eyes rimmed red, glassy with unshed tears, but wide openâunguarded in a way heâs never let himself be. The vulnerability in them is devastating. It makes your own eyes sting, and you press your lips together hard, willing yourself not to break down in front of him. You canât afford to. Not after everything. But the way heâs looking at you, the way heâs baring his heart after years of hidingâit hurts. The ice rink is eerily quiet now. The distant hum of the arena lights above buzzes like white noise around you, but everything else is still. Time feels like itâs slowed down, like the two of you exist in a bubble suspended in grief, in truth, in the aftermath of everything that wasnât said when it mattered. You donât know what to sayâdonât know how to put into words the mess of emotions clawing at your chest. Itâs tangled and bruised and beating far too loudly. Thereâs relief, yes. A bit of anger too. But mostly, thereâs just this deep, aching sadness for the boy who thought he had to fight his battles alone. But eventually, you find your voice. Quieter. Softer. âI never needed you to be perfect, Sunghoon.â Your voice wavers despite how hard you try to steady it. âI just needed you to be honest.â He closes his eyes for a moment, like the words hit him physically. The mess inside his chest doesnât have clean edges. Itâs tangled and bruised and beating far too loudly. His brows pull together, and his shouldersâalways so tight, so high, like heâs been bracing for impact for yearsâfinally sink. The tension in him melts, slow and subtle, like heâs deflating under the weight of finally letting the truth out. Then he nods. Once. Barely. But itâs enough. Enough to know that he heard you. And that alone makes your heart ache. You know you shouldnât give in. Not this easily. But youâve never been one for restraint. Itâs always been your fatal flawâfeeling too much, too fast, letting your heart speak before your head can catch up. And maybe thatâs why this moment feels so inevitable. Because despite everythingâdespite the heartbreak, the silence, the yearsâyou still want to close the distance. Itâs a mystery how you and Sunghoon even started dating in the first place, how two people so fundamentally different found their way to each other. You, all fire and instinct, and himâquiet, composed, like he was always walking a tightrope with his heart tucked out of reach. You were sunshine, and he was midnight rain. You wanted comfort, but he was chasing medals and glory. Well⌠he used to. Back then, he didnât know youâd come into his life. Didnât expect that your laughter, your stubborn heart, your ability to see straight through him would start to matter more than medals ever did. Didnât realise that somewhere along the way, it wasnât skating he was chasing anymore.
It was you. And by the time he figured it outâby the time he realised you were the thing heâd always been reaching forâyou were already slipping through his fingers. Not because you didnât love him. But because he didnât know how to stop running. Not for the crowd. Not for the gold. But from someone who wouldâve stayed if only heâd asked. Maybe thatâs why it worked for a while. Maybe thatâs why he never stopped yearning. His eyes are still fixed on the ice, refusing to look at you, like if he stares hard enough, he can will himself invisible. His posture is closed in, like heâs trying to shrink himself, like if he folds in far enough, he can disappear into his regret. You take a step forward. Then another. Your shoes click softly against the rubber mats until the last one slips onto the smooth, glinting surface. You cross the threshold onto the ice without thinking, heart first, fearlessâlike always. The cold greets your ankles instantly, the faint burn of it rushing up your calves. Your feet come into his view, and he startles slightly, blinking as he realises how close you are now. âWhat are youâ?â His brow furrows, alarm flickering in his expression. âCareful, youâre gonna fall again ifââ You hug him. Thereâs no warning. No speech. No careful calculation. You just move, because your heart gets there before anything else can stop it. Your arms wrap around himâfirm, groundingâand his breath stutters as if the contact knocks the wind out of him. He stays frozen for a second, like his body doesnât believe itâs real, like he thinks if he moves, youâll vanish. "It's okay," you murmur against his shoulder, your voice soft but steady. "I know you'll catch me even if I fall." And somehow, thatâs what does it. That quiet faith in himâeven now, after everythingâcracks something open. He exhales, the breath hitching on its way out, and you feel the tension leave his body piece by piece. Slowly, hesitantly, he melts into you. His chin dips to rest against the curve of your shoulder, and his armsâthose shaking, unsure armsâwrap around your back and hold on. Not tight. Not desperate. But like someone whoâs been cold for far too long, and finally, finally found warmth. Like your presence alone is something he's relearning how to deserve. You close your eyes, steadying yourself with the quiet rise and fall of his chest against yours. Then you speakâgently, but with purpose. "Donât take this the wrong way," you say, your fingers curling slightly into the fabric of his jacket. "This isnât forgiveness. Iâm not there yet. This is just⌠me showing you that I still care. As a friend." He stiffens slightly, but you donât let go. You press on. "Iâm sorry this happened to you," you whisper. "I know skating meant the world to you." Sunghoon doesnât answer. Not out loud. But his arms tightenâjust a littleâand his breath shudders, and the thought echoes in his mind with a force that nearly brings him to his knees: You mean the world to me, still. He doesn't say it. He doesnât need to. Itâs thereâin the way he holds you now, in the way he leans into your warmth like itâs the first real thing heâs touched in years. And for a moment, you let him. You both do. Not as the people you once were. But as the broken, rebuilding versions of yourselvesâstill trying, still reaching, still here. This quiet moment.
You remember this feeling. The stillness. The unspoken. The way the world seems to hush when youâre in his armsânot because everything is perfect, but because somehow, even in the mess, it feels safe. You used to crave more. Words. Reassurance. The kind of affection you could point to and name. But as time passed, you learned to understand him in these smaller, quieter ways. The way heâd wait for you after late classes just to walk you home, even when he never said why. The way heâd leave extra pairs of gloves in your bag before competitions. The way he never quite let go first. Itâs the way Sunghoon has always shown love to you. Not through grand gestures or flowery words, but through presence. Through the way he leans in, silent and steady. Through the way he holds you like you're something heâs afraid to break. Through the quiet weight of his hand resting at the small of your back, like a promise heâs never quite been brave enough to say out loud. This right hereâthis silence filled with meaningâhas always been his way of saying Iâm here. I care. I love you. And thatâs why, when his presence stopped feeling like loveâwhen the silence turned from comfort to distanceâyou felt discarded. Unwanted. Like love had quietly exited the room and no one bothered to tell you. His inability to say what he felt, to put to words what you meant to him, only made it worse. Because you were still there, waiting for somethingâanythingâto hold onto, while he kept retreating behind walls you couldnât climb. But now, standing here, with his arms around you once again, you feel it. All of it. Even if he still hasnât found the words. You realise thenâhe never stopped caring for you, too. The silence. The omission of truth. The way he held everything in, thinking he was protecting you by keeping you out. You used to mistake it for distance, for disinterest. But maybe that was just the way he loved you. Complicated. Flawed. Quiet in all the places you needed noise. It wasnât the way you lovedânot loud and vulnerable, not open and all-consumingâbut it was still love. Just⌠his version of it. And youâall heart before reason. You loved like it was oxygen, like holding back would be the same as holding your breath. You said too much, felt too deeply, asked for honesty even when he didnât know how to give it. You needed presence, yesâbut you also needed words. Needed something solid to hold onto when his silence left too much room for doubt. And stillâthat was the way you loved him. Messy. Unfiltered. Brave in all the ways he wasnât ready for. You offered him your whole heart without a safety net, while all he wanted was to protect you from his fall. And it hits you then, in a way thatâs both soft and sharpâthis was always the story. The gaps, the miscommunication, the mismatched ways of showing up. It was never about not feeling enough. It was about feeling too much, in entirely different languages. You, speaking in open wounds and raw confessions. Him, answering in silence and distance. Two people standing on opposite ends of a love that was realâjust not always right.
And maybe thatâs the tragedy of it.
Not that you didnât love each other. But that you did.
Just in ways the other didnât know how to hold.
You and Sunghoon spend the next few hours sitting on the cold bleachers, catching up on the last four yearsâwhat was said, what wasnât, and everything that existed in between. Itâs not an invitation to get back together. That much is clearâspoken and understood without the need for awkward disclaimers. This is something else entirely. A truce, maybe. An unspoken agreement to lay the past to rest without erasing it. An invitation to let go of the bitterness. To make sure the four years you spent loving each otherâmessy and imperfect as they wereâdonât go down the drain as nothing but regret. And anyway, nobody ever said ex-lovers couldnât stay friends⌠You learn that Hugo SĂĄnchezâthe skater Sunghoon had that infamous tussle withâwas caught up in a drug scandal just a few months later. It never made headlines, swept under the rug with hush money and quiet handshakes behind closed doors. But word still got around. Coach Morales blacklisted him, and by extension, so did every major name in the circuit. âGuess karmaâs real after all,â you mutter, brows raised as Sunghoon nods. âHe got what he deserved,â he replies quietly, but thereâs no real satisfaction in his tone. Just a kind of weariness. The kind that says it still wasnât worth what it cost me. You offer a small, understanding smile, then shift the conversationâgently. You tell him about your career. How you fell into sports journalism by accident, how you hated it at first. How you stuck with it anyway. About the sleepless nights, the thankless deadlines, the rush of chasing a story and the heartbreak of killing one. You tell him how strange it is, writing about athletes when you once dated oneâhow sometimes you catch yourself comparing their routines, their postures, their voices to his. You donât mean to say that last part. But it slips out, unfiltered. Sunghoon glances at you then, a soft crease forming between his brows, and for a moment, you think he might say something. But he doesnât. He just listens, the same way he always used toâquietly, intently, like your voice alone is enough to anchor him. Youâre halfway through telling him the story about your first major reporting slip-upâsomething about mistaking a gold medalist for a retired curling coachâwhen Sunghoon breaks into laughter.
Real laughter.
Not the polite kind. Not the breathy exhale heâs used to giving when heâs holding too much in. But the kind that lights up his whole face. His head tips back slightly, shoulders shaking, eyes squinting in disbelief as he nearly doubles over from how hard heâs laughing.


âYou what?â he wheezes, clutching his stomach. âPlease tell me you didnât salute him and ask about his war medals too. He probably thought you were calling him a grandpa, not an Olympian!â Youâre laughing too, unable to help it. âListen, the man had a beard and a windbreaker and that very âI peaked in Vancouver 2010â vibe.â âAnd that screams retired Olympian to you?â he chokes, still catching his breath. âYou probably set athlete-media relations back a decade.â âI was nervous, okay?â you defend, wiping at your eyes, the kind of laughter that makes your ribs hurt already fading into little aftershocks. You lean back against the bleachers with a sigh, finally calming downâonly to notice heâs gone quiet. You turn to find him just⌠looking at you. Not with amusement anymore, but something softer. His expression has shiftedâgentle, open, a little vulnerable in a way that makes your breath catch. Heâs watching you like he forgot what it was like to see you laugh like that. Like heâs trying to memorise the shape of your smile and hold onto the sound of it. You raise a brow, playful. âWhat? Do I have something on my face?â He blinks, startled, like you caught him in a secret. âNo,â he says, quickly averting his gaze. Then, quieter, âJust... forgot what that sounded like.â âWhat did?â you ask, even though you already know. âYou. Laughing like that.â He shrugs, keeping his eyes on the rink. You pause, suddenly aware of how close youâre sitting. How his knee brushes yours every so often when he shifts. How the warmth between you lingers even in the chill of the arena. âWell,â you finally say, nudging his shoulder with yours, âdonât get used to it. Iâm a very serious journalist now. No more giggling.â He glances at you with a crooked smile, eyes full of mischief. âSure. Iâll believe that when you donât snort the next time you laugh.â You gasp, scandalised. âI do not snort.â Sunghoon leans in slightly, teasing. âYou literally just did.â You stare at him, lips parted, fully ready to argueâuntil you realise heâs right. And then youâre laughing again, shaking your head as you gently shove his arm. âAsshole,â you mumble through your grin. And just like that, the weight between you both lightens againâstill present, but tucked neatly beside something warmer. Familiar. Almost like the beginning of something new. Or maybe just the gentler end of something old. Either way, itâs something.
That night, when you finally reach home, your cheeks are still warm. Youâre still smiling a little too easily at nothing in particular. The chill of the ice rink has long worn off, but Sunghoonâs laughâlow, genuineâlingers in your ears like a recent vocal stimulation. Itâs been years since that sound last came from him, at least directed at you, and it sits somewhere in your chest now, unexpectedly soft and stubborn. You kick off your shoes, shrug off your coat, and collapse onto your couch with a sigh thatâs half-exhaustion, half-daydream. Your mind is foggy, a little giddy. Like youâve just had caffeine on an empty stomach or youâve stepped into some alternate version of your lifeâone where the worldâs been tilted just a few degrees off-centre and nothingâs quite the same anymore. Then your eyes fall on your laptop. Still open. Still glowing. And suddenly, reality tugs you back down. Youâd forgotten about the article. The one you had barely started drafting. The one with Sunghoonâs name in the headline. The one meant to announce his participation in the Olympics tryout. You sit up straighter, the comfort in your muscles draining fast as a chill crawls up your spine. Because all you can think about nowâover and over, like a stuck recordâis the way he said it: âThe injury relapses whenever I overexert.â Heâd said it so casually, like it wasnât a big deal. Like it was just a fact of life now. A quiet asterisk next to his name. He said he wasnât planning a full comeback. He said he wasnât sure. But heâs still showing up to tryouts. Still skating. Still pushing. And suddenly, what once felt like a career milestoneâthis exclusive, this rare chance to write the first profile on Park Sunghoonâs inevitable return to the iceâfeels... invasive. Too sharp. Too personal. Your fingers hover over your phone, the urge to text him immediate.
You type somethingâdelete it. Type again.
Hey. Are you really okay to skate?| | Are you sure youâre not pushing too hard?| | Let me know if thereâs anyway I can help.| | But none of them feel right. Because you barely just started talking again. Because one evening of laughter on a set of cold bleachers doesnât erase four years of silence. Because youâre not sure if checking in now would cross a line you donât have permission to step over anymore. So instead, you lock your phone screen and place it face down on the table. And you sit there in the quiet, trying not to worry. Trying not to think of the pressure on his leg, the sting in his joints, the way heâd smiled when he told youânot proud, not hopeful, just... resigned. But worry, of course, doesnât ask permission. It settles in the pit of your stomach like lead. Because you know him. And you know heâll keep skatingâeven if it breaks him again. And worst of all, heâll do it without ever asking for help.
[MANIFESTO EXCLUSIVE] Park Sunghoon Announces Participation In 2026 Winter Olympics Tryout

By Kang Y/N, Manifesto Daily Itâs been nearly two years since figure skating prodigy Park Sunghoon last performed on Korean ice.
Once heralded as one of South Koreaâs most technically refined athletes, Park disappeared from the public eye following an abrupt withdrawal from the 2023 Grand Prix Final. No formal statement was ever released. No interviews, no explanationsâjust a silence that, for a time, swallowed even his most devoted fansâ questions.
Until now.
This week, Parkâs name quietly reappeared on the athlete roster for the upcoming 2026 Winter Olympics tryouts. And in an exclusive conversation with Manifesto Daily, Park has officially confirmed his participation.
Parkâs return marks a significant moment in the national figure skating circuit. Known for his precision, control, and signature composure on the ice, his performances have long drawn praise from both domestic and international judges. His participation is expected to bring renewed attention to the men's singles category in the upcoming season.
Tryouts are scheduled to take place early next month, where top-ranked skaters will compete for coveted spots on South Koreaâs Olympic delegation. While Park has kept a low public profile in recent years, anticipation surrounding his return remains high. His past record includes a gold medal finish at the Four Continents Championships, a bronze medal at the Beijing 2022 Winter Olympics, and consistent placements in the Grand Prix circuit, making him a strong contender as the nation gears up for Olympic selection.
Fans and officials alike will be watching closely as Park takes the ice againânot only for his technical capabilities, but for what his presence brings to a new generation of skaters: legacy, poise, and a renewed standard of excellence.
Further details regarding the tryout schedule and national team lineup are expected to be released by the Korean Skating Union in the coming weeks.
For now, one thing is clear: Park Sunghoon is officially back in contention.
The day of the Olympic tryouts arrives cloaked in a biting chill, the kind that slips past your collar and lingers in your bones. You arrive earlier than necessary, nerves already humming beneath your skin. Not as a reporter this time. Not officially, anyway. Sunghoon had pulled stringsâquietly, discreetly. A whispered favour here, a signature there. He got you in as âinternal support staff,â listed under his teamâs management, though youâre carrying nothing but your notepad, your name badge, and a heart that wonât sit still. Reporters arenât allowed inside the venue during these closed sessions. Thatâs the rule. But Sunghoon has always had a way of bending the edges when he really wants something. And today, he wanted you there. You flash the ID badge at the security checkpoint, and it works. Youâre ushered in with the rest of his teamâcoaches, assistants, the tech specialist checking his skates for calibration. You keep your head down, hands wrapped tightly around the warm paper cup of coffee you didnât finish. You donât think you could stomach anything right now anyway. You find yourself blinking a little harder than necessary as you take your seat in the shadows of the side bleachers, tucked away from the officials and judges gathering near the front. Your hands grip the edge of the bench automatically. Your eyes find the centre of the rink without thinking. And there he is. Sunghoon. Hair slicked back, posture impossibly straight, wearing a crisp black jacket with his countryâs emblem stitched just above his heart. He hasnât noticed you yetâheâs locked in, eyes narrowed, lips set in that focused line you know too well. Itâs not his competition face yet, but itâs close. You feel a rush of dĂŠjĂ vu so strong it makes your chest ache. Because youâve been here before. Not here exactly, but in a hundred different rinks just like this one. Sitting in the same quiet corners. Watching him from a distance. Sometimes holding your breath without realising it. Sometimes the only person in the arena clapping when he stuck a landing during rehearsal. Back then, you knew his routines by heart. Knew the way his fingers twitched before a jump. Knew when he was proud and when he was pretending to be. And now, somehow, you're here again. Only this time, there are four years of silence sitting between you and the memory of who you used to be in his orbit. Still, when he glides to the edge of the rink and spots you in the stands, his expression softens just a fraction. He doesnât smile. Doesnât wave. But he holds your gaze long enough for you to know: He sees you. The same way he did four years ago.
When you used to wait by the edge of the rink with a scarf and a warm drink. When heâd skate over to you before practice just to tap your forehead with his finger and say donât blink this time. When he was still learning how to balance pressure and affectionâand you were still learning how to love someone who rarely said what he felt. The way heâs looking at you nowâitâs not loud. Not grand. But itâs enough to pull at the thread of every memory you thought youâd neatly tucked away. Sunghoon exhales slowly, eyes trained on the centre of the rink as the announcerâs voice fades into the cold, echoing silence. The blades of his skates feel heavy beneath himânot because theyâre any different, but because he is. His heartbeat thrums steadily beneath the layers of his costume, fast but controlled. A familiar rhythm he used to draw comfort from. Now, it only reminds him of everything riding on this final run. He flexes his fingers once, then again. The nerves are thereâno point pretending they arenât. Theyâve settled deep into his bones, coiled tight like springs. But thereâs no fear. Not of falling. Not of losing. Because he already did that. He already lost the version of skating that once consumed him. Already stepped away from the spotlight, already let go of the expectations. What remains now is something simpler. Smaller. This isnât about medals anymore. This is the end of something. Or maybe the beginning of what comes after. He guesses thatâs the one thing he was keeping from you. Not because he didnât trust you, but because saying it out loud wouldâve made it realâthat the dream he built his life around had slowly started to unravel. That somewhere along the way, skating stopped being love and started feeling like obligation.
You think heâs here to chase after redemption. To reclaim what was lost. To silence the whispers, the speculation, the question marks that trailed behind his name for years. You think heâs here to prove that he still has itâthat the boy wonder of South Koreaâs figure skating circuit never truly fell from grace. But youâre wrong. Because redemption implies he owes something to someone. And Sunghoonâs done with owing. This tryout isnât about reclaiming his reputation. Heâs not here for the judges. Not for the headlines. Not even for the crowd that once screamed his name. Heâs here for something far quieter. Something far more difficult to earn. Closure. Not the kind that comes with medals or press conferences, but the kind you feel in your chest when you finally stop running. When you stop skating to meet expectations, and start skating to meet yourself again. This is not a comeback. Itâs about reclaiming why he ever skated in the first place. Itâs about the quiet mornings on empty rinks. The way cold air fills his lungs and clears his thoughts. The ache in his legs after hours of training that no one ever saw. Itâs about the pieces of himself he left scattered in every routine he never got to finish. He shifts his weight slightly, grounding himself. This routine isnât built for spectacle. It doesnât chase applause. Itâs clean. Honest. Unforgiving in its simplicity. And if this is the last time he performs under Olympic lightsâif this is the closing chapter of a decade-long pursuitâthen he wants to be the one who chooses how it ends. Not the injury. Not the press. Not the silence. He takes one last glance toward the bleachers. And there you are. Watching. Just like you used to---back then, when his world was still laced with possibility, and your quiet presence was the only constant that ever kept him sane.
And with this last performanceâwith this one final actâitâs not about the world. Itâs not about redemption.
Itâs about himself. About stepping onto the ice one final time not to impress, but to release. To mourn. To honour everything this love once was
And maybeâjust maybeâitâs for you too. The girl who believed in him before the world knew his name. The one who stayed long after the spotlight dimmed.
He wishes he could say that. Wishes he could turn and tell you: This is for you.
But Sunghoon has never been fluent in the language of declarations.
So instead, he skates, The music beginsâsomething classical, restrained, just a touch mournfulâand Sunghoon moves. No flourish. No dramatic opening gesture. Just a quiet push forward, blades slicing into the ice with the same precision you remember from years ago. But this time, thereâs something different. Thereâs stillness in him. Control so complete it doesnât screamâit whispers. He doesnât rush. Doesnât force it. He lets the music carry him, lets the silence in the arena wrap around him like a second skin. One edge. Then the next. Arms extended, posture flawless, his body slicing through space like he belongs to it. His first jumpâa quad toe loop. Clean. Effortless. His landing doesnât so much hit the ice as it touches it. The blade barely sings as it connects. The motion is seamless, and for a second, no one breathes. Not the judges. Not the staff. Not even the other skaters whoâve trained beside him years ago and know just how good Sunghoon really is. They fall quietâeveryone doesâbecause what theyâre seeing isnât just a routine.
Itâs artistry.
His movements are elegant, measured. Each spin folds perfectly into the next, centre tight, shoulders relaxed, neck lengthened. His step sequence flows like waterâno excess, no hesitation. And then the triple axelâthe jump that sidelined him years agoâcomes out of nowhere.
He lands it perfectly.
Not a wobble. Not a check. Not even a breath out of place.
Someone in the stands exhales sharply, as if they forgot they were holding their breath. One of the younger skaters watching from behind the boards drops their phone in shock. Even the coachesâstoic, experienced, always hard to impressâexchange glances. Subtle, but wide-eyed. No one expected this. Not from someone who hasnât competed in years. Not from someone they assumed was skating on borrowed time. But there he is. Moving like the ice never betrayed him. Like the injury never happened. Like heâs not returning from anything, but arriving exactly where he belongs. The closing spin beginsâslow, low, deliberate. He lowers into a final sit spin so clean it looks animated, the motion a perfect blur. Then he rises, centres himself, and ends in silence. No dramatic bow. No fist in the air. Just Sunghoon. Standing still, chest rising, eyes closed. Like he just let go of something heâs been carrying for years. And for a momentâjust oneâno one claps. Not because it wasnât brilliant. But because brilliance demands reverence. The applause comes late. Staggered. And then all at once. But even then, it feels too small for what they just witnessed. Because what Sunghoon gave them wasnât just a performance. It was a goodbye disguised as grace.
The moment the tryouts conclude, the applause still echoing faintly in your ears, you donât hesitate. Youâre already halfway down the stands before your brain catches up with your legs. You weave through rows of folding seats, shoulder past lingering staff and curious onlookers, scanning the crowd of skaters, coaches, and judges now spilling onto the ice and rinkside floor. Your heart is racing. Not from excitement. From urgency. Like if you donât find him now, this momentâhis momentâmight slip away before you get to say anything. And then you spot him. Near the far side of the rink, his posture relaxed now, his jacket back on and unzipped. Heâs speaking to someone. You recognise the man instantly: Coach Im, his university coach. Stern but warm. Always had a thermos in hand and a stopwatch around his neck, even when he wasnât timing anyone. You saw him oftenâback when you used to sit through Sunghoonâs practice sessions, bundled in jackets, pretending to read while keeping your eyes on the ice. Sunghoon laughs at something the coach says, his shoulders shaking with a lightness you havenât seen in years. You feel something stir in your chest as you step closer. Coach Im spots you first. His eyes light up in recognition as you approach, his voice lifting cheerfully over the din. âOh heyâisnât this Y/N?â he says, clapping a hand on Sunghoonâs shoulder. âSo lovely to see that the two of you are still going strong!â The words hit you like an unexpected gust of wind, warm and jarring all at once. Sunghoon startles slightly, glancing quickly in your direction with wide eyesâlike even he didnât see that coming. You blink, then laughâjust a breath, soft and awkward. âOh, um⌠itâs not like that. Weâre notââ But Sunghoon doesnât say anything right away. He just looks at you. Not surprised. Not embarrassed. Just⌠thoughtful. A crease forming between his brows like heâs considering what to say nextâif he should say anything at all. Coach Im looks between the two of you, clearly confused, then lets out a warm chuckle. âEither way, itâs good to see you again. I remember you always being there in the bleachers during Sunghoonâs training sessions. It was nice knowing he had someone by his side. Kept him grounded, you know?â You smile politely, heart doing a strange little dance in your chest. And as the coach excuses himself to greet someone else, you and Sunghoon are left in a bubble of silence.
Just like old times. Only now, everything feels different.
And yetâsomehowâexactly the same.
You clear your throat, stepping a little closer, nerves fluttering at the base of your spine. "Hey, I just wanted toâ"
"I'm sorry, Y/N," Sunghoon cuts in, his tone gentle but clipped. He avoids your gaze, already half-turning away. "I promised to meet some old friends from uni to catch up."
You pause. Blinking. The words take a second to land.
"Oh. Right. Yeah," you say, forcing a small smile as you nod, even though your chest tightens. "I'll... see you around?"
"I'll text you, yeah?" he offers, already moving backwards, already fading into the crowd.
You nod again, slower this time. "Huh? Oh. Yeah. Okay." And just like that, heâs gone. Swallowed up by the familiar buzz of coaches, skaters, and congratulations. You stand there a beat longer than you should, the cold of the rink creeping back into your fingertips. The moment you thought you were chasing slips quietly through your handsâunfinished. And all you can do is exhale. Pretend it doesnât sting. Pretend it isnât you whoâs waiting for him againâwhoâs standing here with something halfway between closure and hope tangled in your chest. You tell yourself itâs fine. That he skated beautifully. That this day wasnât about you. But beneath all that composure, you feel itâthe ache of almost. Because maybe you expected too much. Or maybe, for a second, you forgot you were just someone he let in againânot someone he kept.
But the truth is, Sunghoon didnât know how to face you without tearing up. Didnât know how to walk toward you without pulling you into his arms and asking you to stay, to say somethingâanythingâthat might ground him after what just happened on the ice. But the moment Coach Im said your name, smiled like it was still you and him, like time hadn't split everything in half, Sunghoon panicked. Because heâs not sure what this is. Not yet. And heâs not sure youâre open to confronting it, eitherâwhatever it is, this delicate thing hanging between you like a conversation neither of you has found the courage to start. Maybe he read too much into your eyes during warm-up. Maybe the way you looked at him wasnât about wanting him back. Maybe it was just nostalgiaâsoft, forgiving, but not something you wanted to carry forward. Maybe you were just proud of him. Maybe you were just letting go. He doesnât blame you. Because deep down, Sunghoon knows he never really forgave himself for the way things endedâfor the silence, the confusion, the months where he let you carry the weight of a love he couldn't name, let alone hold properly. He knows he hurt you in the worst way: by making you feel like you had to ask to be chosen. And though time has passed, and the ache has dulled, another part of him still isnât sureâstill isn't confidentâthat heâs capable of giving you the kind of love you deserve. But then againâthis. This miscommunication. This habit of circling around instead of stepping in. This assumption of what he thinks you wantâwhat you donât wantâitâs what drove the two of you apart in the first place. All the things he never said. All the things you tried to. All the maybes that built a house out of hesitation and called it home. He thought silence would spare you. You thought silence meant indifference. And somewhere along the wayâbetween protecting and pretending, between misreading and mistimingâyou both forgot how to meet in the middle.
And now here you are again.
You, still waiting.
Him, still too afraid to walk closer.
Each of you assuming the other doesnât want more. Each of you convincing yourselves that almost is close enough.
Even when it never was. Even when it never could be.
And as usual, the text he promised never really came. At first, you gave him the benefit of the doubtâtold yourself he was probably just busy, caught up in post-tryout formalities, in media briefings, in reconnecting with old friends or navigating the aftermath of a performance that stunned everyone in the arena. But deep down, you knew the silence wasnât unfamiliar. It never had been. After all, the foundation of your relationship in those final months was built on this same cycle Sunghoon giving just enough. Just enough warmth, just enough apology, just enough softness to keep you waitingâto keep you hoping that maybe if you held on a little longer, heâd choose you fully, finally, without hesitation. And youâGod, youâwith your foolish heart that had only ever known how to love in full measure, never halfway, never with one foot out the doorâyou waited. You waited like you always did. And maybe thatâs why, when the Korean Skating Union releases the official roster of Olympic athletes and his name is printed boldly at the very topâlike it never left, like it was always meant to be thereâsomething in you shifts. You feel it, a spark lighting in your chest, sharp and sudden and wild, and before youâve even thought it through, youâre already reaching for your coat, already grabbing your keys, already walking out the door with your heart hammering too loudly in your chest. You couldâve texted him. Couldâve called. Couldâve sent a simple message like âcongratulations,â couldâve played it safe the way people do when theyâre pretending not to care as much as they do. But you donât. Because something in you needs to see himâneeds to see his face, his eyes, the way he stands now that the weight is off his shoulders, now that heâs done it, now that heâs reclaimed skating the way he always wanted to. Because if any part of what you shared still mattersâif any part of him still looks at you the way he used toâyou want to be there to see it. Not through a screen. Not in a message thread that never starts.
But in person.
So you go. Because maybe this time, you're done waiting.
You stand just inside the entrance of the skating arena, the cold air hitting your skin like a memory. The official delegation is supposed to make a public appearance todayâan Olympic tradition of sorts. Which means Sunghoon should be here. Somewhere. Your eyes scan the crowd. Clusters of athletes in sleek national jackets, coaches and press weaving through them like old threads. But it doesnât take long before you spot him. Tucked away in a corner, half-shadowed by the edge of the bleachers. Heâs deep in conversation with one of the national Olympic coachesâCoach Baek, if you remember correctly. The older manâs expression is tight, gestures sharp with frustration. You canât hear whatâs being said, but the energy between them is tense. Sunghoon stands there, arms crossed, nodding slowly, his jaw tight but unreadable. He doesnât argue. Doesnât flinch. Just listens. When the coach finally exhales, the tension softensâbarely. A few more words are exchanged, and then a hand lands on Sunghoonâs shoulder, firm and final. A goodbye, or maybe a warning softened into encouragement. Then the coach walks away. And as Sunghoon turns slightly to see him offâshoulders still drawn tight from the conversationâhis eyes land on you. You freeze for half a second, caught mid-step, unsure whether to wave, speak, or turn back the way you came. But before the indecision fully settles, he starts toward you, closing the distance with a familiarity that shouldnât feel as natural as it does.
âHey,â he says, breath a little visible in the rinkâs chill. âI was just about to call you.â You arch a brow, tilting your head. âYou were?â His mouth lifts, half a smile, half something else you canât quite name. âYeah,â he says quietly, like heâs testing the weight of his own words. You cough, trying to mask the genuine surprise, and maybe joy in your tone. âWhat was that about? He looked like he was about to throw you back into juniors. Training hasnât even started and youâre already pissing the coach off?â Sunghoon laughs, and for a second, it lightens his whole face. âYeah⌠about thatâŚâ You narrow your eyes. âWhat now?â He takes a small breath, then meets your eyes. âWhat do you think about writing another exclusive?â You blink. Once. Twice. âWhat, that you made the Olympic team? Thatâs hardly exclusive.â His smile fades into something more serious. âNo, thatâs not it.â You watch him carefully now. âIâm retiring.â Your breath catches. âWhat? When?â âEffective immediately,â he smiles as he says. âIâve officially pulled out of the Olympic delegation.â
You just stare at him, stunned. âButâSunghoon. You worked so hard for this. Recovery took years. Youâve been training nonstopââ âI know,â he says, not unkindly, but firm. âAnd thatâs exactly why.â Youâre still trying to catch up, your brain scrambling to make sense of it. âI donât understand. Then why did you go through the tryouts? Why fight so hard just to walk away?â He exhales, like heâs been carrying the answer for a while. âBecause I needed to know it was still there. The feeling.â His eyes meet yours, steady. âI wanted to remember what it felt like to skateânot for medals, not for judges, not for anyone elseâbut just for me. To feel that I could still love it, even if it no longer loved me back the same way.â Then, softerâalmost apologeticallyâhe adds, âIâll never be able to skate like I used to, Y/N. Iâve already accepted that.â It hits you thenâthat his silence, the tension with the coach, the performance that felt too clean, too perfectâit was all part of a farewell. Youâre quiet for a moment. âSo this was⌠what? A planned goodbye?â He nods once, steady. âMaybe not from the beginning. But somewhere along the way, yeah. I think I knew I needed to end it on my terms. Not when the pain told me to. Not when the judges did. When I decided it was enough.â âButâskating. It meant the world to youââ Your voice comes out softer than you expect, the disbelief tangled with something else. Not anger. Not disappointment. Just the ache of watching someone walk away from something that once lit them up from the inside out. Ironic, since you were once someone that lit him upâmaybe still is. Sunghoon doesnât flinch. He just looks at you, eyes steady, voice calm in a way that tells you heâs already made peace with it. âIt did,â he pauses, breath curling in the cold, as if he's choosing his next words carefully. And in that moment, you realise that his performance wasnât a comeback. It was a love letter.
And a goodbye. âWhich is why,â he continues, quieter now, âthis is the last thing I can do for myself. To leave it the way I want to. I didnât want my last memory of skating to be hospitals, setbacks, or walking away because I had no choice. I want to remember it the way Iâve always loved it. For what it gave me. For who I was when I first stepped on the ice.â And youâre hit with a painful ache in your chest as he says itâsharp, sudden, the kind that lodges itself between your ribs and blooms quietly like grief. Because if this is the ending he chose for skatingâon his own terms, with love and clarity and closureâthen what about you? Where is your ending?
Where is your closure? The question surges up before you can catch it, before you can bury it under composure or timing or prideâand it spills out of you, raw and quiet and too honest. âIn that case, what do you remember me by?â Sunghoon freezes. His shoulders tense, breath catching so subtly that only someone whoâs known himâreally known himâwould notice. âY/NâŚâ he says, and you can hear it in his voiceâhow he didnât expect that. How he doesn't know what to do with it. You didnât even realise youâd said it out loud. The weight of it lingers in the air between you, heavy, uninvited. You straighten your posture, instinct snapping back into place. Professional. Controlled. Detached, even if your pulse is anything but. âI should go,â you say briskly, already taking a step back. âIâll email your management the article draft. Or⌠do I not need to?â He opens his mouth, but nothing comes out fast enough. âAnyway,â you continue, your voice clipped but polite, a shield you know too well, âfeel free to have your assistant text me. Thanks.â You donât wait for his reply. You turn. And this time, youâre the one walking away from something that once lit you up from the inside out. Even if it hurts to do it. Even if every step feels like itâs tearing something open again. Because you canât keep standing in spaces where youâre only half-held, half-answered, half-remembered. That evening, you write the article. You sit at your desk long after the sun has dipped below the skyline, long after the city has quieted into its nighttime hush, and you start typing with steady fingersâtrying, desperately, to be as professional as you can be. Because this is big news. A world-class athlete pulling out of the Olympic delegation at the peak of national anticipation. A retirement no one saw coming. Itâs the kind of journalism that gets you recognised. That fills portfolios and lands bylines in places that matter. But none of that crosses your mind. Because all you can think aboutâdespite the ache still blooming in your chest, despite the lingering bitterness of unanswered questions and things left unsaidâis how to honour him. You still feel the weight of him on the page. Still feel the obligation to present him in the best light. To tell the truth, yes, but also the quiet partsâthe parts no one else saw. The discipline. The years of pain. The choice to walk away, not out of defeat, but dignity. You write him with care. With empathy. With the kind of understanding that only someone who once stood in the inner orbit of his world could ever give. And no matter how hard you try, you canât stop your heart from leaking into the words. Because telling his story means telling yours, too. Not the public version. Not the headlines. But the quiet history of two people who once thought love alone would be enough. The version of you that sat in cold arenas, waiting for him to look up. The version of him that carried the weight of a dream too heavy for his body to bear. The version of both of you that was too young, too scared, too stubborn to survive it back then. Itâs almost midnight when you finish the piece. And when you read it back, you realise itâs not just about skating.
It never was.
Itâs about letting go of something beautifulânot because it wasnât enough, but because it ran its course. And for the first time, you understand what he meant.
To end it your way.
To remember the love, not the loss.
So you click send.
And in doing so, you decideâquietlyâto let it go.
To let him go.
Ms Yoon (PA): Reporter Kang sent over the article draft. PR said it was good, but thought you might want to read it for yourself. [Attachment: 1 File]
Sunghoon is mid-workout when the message comes in. His hands are chalked, his hoodie damp with sweat, breath still recovering from his last set of strength drills. The notification buzzes faintly against the speaker where his phone sits docked, half-muted beneath the beat of the music pulsing through the rinkâs private training gym. He almost ignores itâfigures itâs a reminder or scheduling updateâuntil he catches the preview of the senderâs name: Ms. Yoon. He wipes his palms on a towel, walks over, and unlocks his phone, chest still rising and falling in slow recovery. The file is there, bold and unopened. His fingers hover over the screen a moment longer than they should, suspended in a strange quiet. Heâs not sure what heâs expecting to feel. Pride? Closure? Guilt, maybe. But whatever it is, he taps the file. And begins to read.
FINAL DRAFT [MANIFESTO EXCLUSIVE] The Final Bow: Park Sunghoon Withdraws from Olympic Delegation and Announces Retirement By Kang Y/N, Manifesto Daily . . . . . In related news, Parkâs withdrawal comes just days after the delegation announcement, and in his place, 19-year-old rising star Han Jihoon has been selected to represent Korea in the menâs singles category. Han, who placed fourth at the national tryouts, is widely regarded as one of the most technically gifted athletes of his generation, with a growing fanbase and a reputation for innovation on the ice.
As for Park Sunghoon, he leaves behind a legacy not of statistics, but of stillness. Of dignity. Of skating that always seemed to say what words could not.
His career was never loud. But it was unforgettable.
Goodbye, Park Sunghoon, And thank you for everything you didnât have to say.
Before he knows it, heâs halfway out the doorâkeys clenched in one hand, the other rapidly typing a message to his assistant.
Sunghoon: Do you happen to know Y/Nâs address? Forward it to me asap. Thanks.
The article is still echoing in his head, playing back in quiet waves he canât shut out. Lines that hit too close. Lines that cracked open things he thought heâd buried for good. Words that sounded like truths he never gave you the spaceâor the safetyâto say out loud. Because was it just himâor did your article sound like a defeat? Not the kind written in bitterness, but in surrender. An epiphany dressed in grace. Like you had finally laid everything downâyour hope, your waiting, your quiet what-ifsâand decided that telling his story was the only closure you were ever going to get. His heart pounds harder now than it did during his entire workout. Not from strain. From urgency. From the sudden, all-consuming fear that he might be too lateâtoo late to explain, to show up, to fix the way silence unraveled everything. Too late to ask for something he didnât know he was still allowed to want. Something that had always lingered just beyond his reachânot because it wasnât there, but because he never dared to reach out and take it. That you were still willing to give after all these years, If only he had asked. If only he had trusted that maybe, just maybe, love wasnât about timing or pride or silenceâbut about the courage to choose it anyway. And now, with your words still ringing in his head and the ache of what-ifs pressing into his ribs, he runs. Because for the first time in a long time, he isnât afraid of falling. Heâs afraid of missing the chance to fall with you. A notification lights up his screen, and itâs from his assistantâyour full address, no questions asked.
Sunghoon doesnât waste a second. He tosses his phone onto the passenger seat, starts the engine, and drives like his heartâs pacing himâfast, frantic, barely keeping rhythm. The city blurs past in streaks of gold and grey, and his knuckles grip the steering wheel like itâs the only thing holding him together. By the time he reaches your apartment, he doesnât bother fixing his hair, or the way his hoodie clings to him, soaked from sweat and adrenaline. Or the fact that its well-past midnight and heâs here at your apartment building. He takes the stairs two at a time, too restless for the lift, too afraid the silence will make him second-guess what heâs come here to say. You open the door mid-knock, eyes wide, mouth parting in surprise. âSunghoon?â your voice is a mix of concern and disbelief. âHow did you know I lived here?â You stare at him, bewildered, heart stammering against your ribs. He looks at you like youâre not real. Like heâs been chasing something impossible and suddenly, impossibly, itâs standing right in front of him. Thereâs yearning in his eyesâraw and unguardedâand when he takes a step closer, you notice it. The limp. Subtle, but there. âDid you run here? Godâyour injuryââ But you donât get to finish. Because he closes the distance and pulls you into himâarms wrapping around you in one fluid, desperate motion, like his body moved before his mind could catch up. There are no words. No explanations. Just the solid, trembling weight of him anchoring himself to you, like heâs been carrying the absence of this moment for too long, and can no longer bear it. You stand frozen, caught off guard by the heat of him, the quiet urgency in his embrace, the way he fits against you like heâs spent the past four years trying to unlearn the shape of thisâand failing. âSunghoon,â you say, your voice fragile, unsteady, trembling at the edge of disbelief. âWhat are youâ?â But he doesnât let go. âDonât leave me,â he chokes out, the words low and fractured, muffled into the fabric of your t-shirt. You feel his breath at the side of your neck before you hear his next words. âPleaseâŚâ You feel it thenâhow hard heâs shaking. How tightly his fingers clutch at the back of your shirt like a lifeline. The weight of his body pressed against yours isnât just exhaustionâitâs grief, longing, guiltâall of it simmering under the surface and spilling out in a single, vulnerable plea. Your hands hover awkwardly at your sides, unsure where theyâre allowed to go. Unsure if theyâre still his to reach for. And somehow, that hesitationâyour silence, that flicker of doubtâit splits something open inside him. âIâll wait,â he blurts suddenly, pulling back just enough so he can look you in the eye. His own are red-rimmed, glassy, but thereâs a sharp kind of clarity there too. âIâll wait for you, Y/N.â âSunghoonâŚâ you whisper, your voice unsteady, caught somewhere between confusion and something that feels dangerously close to hope. âWhere is this coming from?â His chest is rising and falling against yours, uneven. He swallows hard, and you see itâthe way his jaw flexes like heâs trying to keep himself steady. His eyes flicker, not away from you, but like heâs searching for the words heâs never learned how to say out loud. His breath catches once, then again, before he finally forces himself to speak. âI read the article,â he says, quiet but clear. And immediately, you understand. Because you know exactly what part heâs referring toânot the skating analysis, not the announcement of his retirement. He means the parts laced with goodbye. The parts where your words stopped being objective and became soft, tired farewells tucked between the lines that only he would recognise. It was a goodbye to skating. But more pressinglyâfor Sunghoonâit read like a goodbye to him.
âLet goââ you start, trying to get some space, to breathe, to make sense of the tangle youâve both fallen into. But his grip only tightens. âThat articleââ You pause, biting down the rush of emotion rising in your throat. âThat article wasnât meant to change anything.â âI know,â he says, his arms still around you. âBut it did. It made me realise just how much Iâve tried to pretend I could move on from you.â You freeze. Not because you donât understand him, but because you do. Too well. And that terrifies you.
âLet go,â you say quietly, voice strained, like you need to put space between you before you drown in everything heâs saying. âJust⌠let go so we can talk.â He hesitates, then releases you with reluctance, his hands falling to his sides like he doesnât know what to do with them now that they arenât holding you. You catch the way his shoulders rise, tense and uneasy. How his hands shake slightly at his sides. And when he blinks, thatâs when you see itâhis eyes glossing over, the shimmer of something threatening to spill. âI never stopped loving you,â he says, his voice cracking at the edges. âEven when I left. Even when I convinced myself it was better that way. I still loved you. I just⌠didnât know how to be with you and still be okay with myself.â âNow suddenly youâve figured it all out?â you ask, and the bitterness in your tone surprises even you. But itâs real. Youâre not trying to punish himâyouâre just scared. Scared of falling back into something that once left you hollow. âNo,â he says immediately, and thereâs no defensiveness in his voiceâjust quiet truth. âNot suddenly. But Iâve had time. And space. And it turns out neither of those things taught me how to forget you, Y/N.â You look at himâreally lookâand it hits you just how much effort itâs taking him to say these things. How his shoulders are drawn tight, how he canât keep still, how his fingers twitch like they want to ball into fists but wonât. Heâs not used to thisâexposing himself, risking the quiet between you. And you hate how much you want to believe him. How even now, your heart betrays you by leaping at his words, melting at the sound of your name in his mouth like it still belongs there. You press your lips together, trying to swallow the ache building in your throat. You want to scream, to cry, to ask why heâs doing this nowâwhy he always waits until itâs too late. Why he only finds the words once your heartâs already been rearranged around his absence. But all that comes out is, âYouâre saying everything I wanted to hear back then, Sunghoon. But thatâs the thingâitâs back then. Iâm not the same girl you remember. Iâm not the girl who was always waiting for you to show up.â And yet, even as the words leave your mouth, you know that was a blatant lie. Because the truth is, you were that girl. For far longer than youâd ever admit.
âYou asked me then,â he starts, voice barely above a whisper, âWhat do I remember you by.â You freeze. Itâs not the sentence itself that gets youâitâs the way he says it. Careful. Almost reverent. Like the question has been haunting him all this time, long after you threw it into the air thinking it would vanish unanswered. âI remember you as the girl who poured her entire heart into everything she touchedâyour academics, your friendships⌠me, even after I left for Spain. You were relentless in the way you showed up for people, even when they didnât always know how to show up for you.â He doesnât look at you immediately. His gaze drifts somewhere over your shoulder, like the weight of the memory is too tender to hold eye contact just yet. Your heart clenches. You hate how easily those memories come flooding backâthe all-nighters, the deadlines, the way you clung to structure and control because it was the only thing you could manage while everything with him felt like trying to build a home on sand. âI remember our first day. Freshman orientation. You couldnât even look at me properly when we got paired up. I thought you hated me,â his lips twitch, faintly, like heâs caught between a smile and something sadder. âBut then you offered to carry half the pamphlets because I looked tired from training, and I realisedâyou were just shy. You were this quiet, nervous girl who still somehow managed to be kind when she was uncomfortable.â Now his eyes return to yours, and thereâs something in them that makes your chest ache. Heâs remembering you, in detail, like he carried those moments with him even when he left you behind. And that shouldnât make you feel warm. But it does. And you hate that. âI remember the blush on your cheek when you asked me out for the first time,â he says, smiling faintly. âYou were so nervous I thought you were going to change your mind halfway through. But you didnât. You stood there, eyes wide, hands shaking, and still said it anyway.â You hate how clearly you remember that moment too. The way your heart had raced. The way he smiled at you like youâd surprised him in the best possible way. âI remember you sitting in the bleachers,â he continues. âHead down, focused on your notes, your laptop. But you were watching me, too. Even when you didnât say anything, you were always there. And God, that meant more than I ever told you.â Your grip tightens over your sleeves, arms crossed to stop your hands from shaking. âI remember how your eyes would light up when you opened those Popmart boxes, like it was magic every single time. Youâd show me the little figurine like it was gold. And youâd smile at me like you wanted me to be excited with you. I didnât always get it. But I remember thinking, I hope she knows how loved she deserves to feel for the rest of her life.â Your eyes sting. He shifts, like the next words are heavier, harder to pull from his chest. âI remember your words,â he says now, gaze locked on yours. âThe ones you gave so freely when I was too buried in pressure to ask for them. I remember your voice when you encouraged me, when you believed in me, when I didnât believe in myself.â âI remember the warmth of your hugs. I remember the shape of your lips when you kissed me. And everything in between.â His eyes lower for a beat. His tone changesânot dimmer, but honest in a way that hurts.
âAnd I remember the fights too. The arguments. The silences. The doors that closed too hard, and the words that came out sharper than we meant them to. I remember how frustrated you got. I remember how I pulled away. And I remember that, tooâbecause even those moments mattered. Even those were you loving me in the only way you knew how: by fighting for us.â He looks back at you now, fully, like heâs trying to hand you all of itâevery memory, every piece. Your chest tightens, breath caught between inhale and collapse. âYou loved me enough to care. Even when it got messy. Even when I made it hard. You cared when I didnât know how to. You stayed when I didnât make it easy to be around me.â The tears come then. They track down his cheeks slowly at first, then faster, like somethingâs come loose inside him that he canât hold back anymore. He doesnât wipe them away. He just stands there, crying in front of you like heâs spent years trying not to.
âAnd I think about that version of us all the time,â he says. âNot just the good. Not just the beautiful. But all of it. The whole you. The real you.â âThatâs how I remember you, Y/N. I remember you as the girl who loved me when I didnât know how to love myself. And even now, Iâm still trying to figure out how to be someone who was worthy of all that love."
Your breath catches, but you donât let it out. Not yet.
Because something in you knows that if you exhale, if you react, you might fall apart entirely.
His words are still hanging in the air, soft but sharp, like silk laced with barbed wire. Theyâre gentleâbut they hurt. Because theyâre real. Because theyâre him. The him you waited for. The version you wanted to hear from long before all the damage was done. And now heâs here, finally saying all the things you once begged for in silence. And you donât know what to do with it. You feel a tear slip down your cheek before you even realise itâs there. Your heart is making too much noise in your chest. Every beat sounds like a memoryâof those bleacher nights, of ramen cups shared between lectures, of the small, quiet joy of feeling seen, even when he never said it out loud. You remember all those things too.
And thatâs the problem.
Because part of you wants to believe it. Wants to step forward. Wants to reach for him and say, I remember you, too. Not the public figure. Not the Ice Prince. But the boy who once laid his head in your lap after a long day and asked you to stay, even if he couldnât say the words. But another part of youâolder now, wearierâpulls back. Because love wasnât enough the first time. Because his silence hurt. Because you were the one who waited. Who stayed. Who forgave and forgave and slowly lost parts of yourself trying to hold everything together while he figured out who he was without ever asking who you were becoming. And now, here he is. Saying the right things. Crying real tears. Standing still when he used to run. But what does that mean now, when youâve taught yourself to survive without him? You feel your throat tighten, your arms crossed like a shield, like maybe if you just hold yourself hard enough, the years between you will stop trembling through your spine. You want to speakâbut nothing comes out. Because how do you respond to something so tender when all youâve learned since him is to protect yourself from softness? You blink up at him, your eyes burning, and part of you whispers, He means it this time. And another voice, quieter but steady, asks, But is that enough? So you say nothing for a moment. Just stand there. Your whole body a battlefield between memory and survival. And then, softly, you speak.
âI donât know what to do with this,â you admit, eyes flicking away from him. âI donât know how to trust what youâre offering. You hurt me, Sunghoon. You left. And I carried that.â You see the hope falter just a little in his eyes. But he nods. âIâm not asking you to do anything,â he says. âI justâŚÂ I couldnât let your words be the last thing between us. I needed you to know that I remember you. That I never stopped loving you.â You donât respond right away. You donât know how to. Your heart is loud in your ears, screaming all the things youâre too scared to say. Because this feels like standing on a cliff again, and this time, youâre not sure if thereâs anything on the other side to catch you. âIâll wait,â he says suddenly, voice rough, but steady with something fierce. âIf you need time, Iâll give it. If you need space, Iâll step back. But justâpleaseâ Your throat tightens. âAnd what if I donât have anything left to give you?â âThen Iâll understand,â he says, voice rough. âIâll carry that. But I had to say it. I had to try. And I know it doesnât make up for anything, but itâs all Iâve got. Iâm standing here, telling you I love you, and I will waitâfor however long it takesâbecause I donât want to live the rest of my life wondering if you ever wouldâve said yes.â And just like that, you feel the air leave your lungs in one long, shaking exhale. Not from panic. Not from pain. But from a bittersweet relief. The sincerity in his voice is unmistakableâstripped bare of pride, of performance, of everything he used to hide behind. This isnât the Sunghoon who pulled away, who stayed silent when it mattered. This is the boy who finally understands what it means to show up.
After four years of silence, a leg injury that will never truly heal, and a heart broken into a million piecesâyours, his, bothâshattered by time, by distance, by everything neither of you had the words to fix back then. And Sunghoonâyour Sunghoon, the one who knows you better than youâd like to admitâwatches you carefully, like heâs afraid youâll misinterpret everything heâs just saidâafraid youâll think this is another case of bad timing or misplaced nostalgia. Then, after a long, tentative pause, his voice softensâbut thereâs no doubt in it. âAnd I know we already talked about this the other day,â he says, his voice careful. âBut just so weâre clear⌠I need you to hear it again.â You look up, heart thudding as he meets your gaze head-on. âThis⌠us⌠me being here,â he says slowly, deliberately, âitâs not because skating didnât work out. Itâs not some knee-jerk reaction because the ice stopped being kind to me.â His throat bobs as he swallows, blinking back the weight behind his words. âI fell out of love with skating a long time ago,â he continues, âbut I never fell out of love with you, Y/N.â The silence that follows is immediate. Heavy. Because no matter how hard youâve tried to bury the thoughtâor pretend it never crossed your mindâit still lingers in the quiet, persistent and sharp: If he hadnât lost skating⌠would he have come back at all? But now, with that truth laid bare between you, your breath catches.âand for the first time in a long time, you donât feel like someone he remembered too late. You donât feel like the consolation prize. Or the safe fallback.
You feel chosen.
Heâs here. He finally ran to youânot out of impulse, not out of guilt, and most certainly not because he had nowhere else to go. But because he wants to stay. In the mess he created. In the aftermath. In whatever comes next.
He made sure to communicate that clearly to you. And for the first timeâheâs the one offering to wait. Heâs not asking for guarantees. Heâs not walking ahead, expecting you to catch up. Heâs right here. Meeting you halfway. The same halfway that, truthfully, youâve never walked away from. Not really. Not fully. Because even in the silence, even in the years you spent convincing yourself youâd moved on, there was always a part of you standing in placeâwaitingâin every version of yourself you tried to become without him, wondering if heâd ever meet you there. Now he has. And the truth is, you still want him just as much as he wants you. You donât know the exact moment the clarity came. Maybe it was the way his voice cracked when he said your name, like it physically hurt to speak it aloud. Maybe it was the way he remembered every tiny, unremarkable piece of youâthe girl who sat in the bleachers, who lit up at Popmart figurines, who loved so loudly it scared him. Maybe it was the way he criedâopenly, without shameâor how he waited for your silence like he was willing to carry whatever your answer might be. But when it hit, it was quiet. Gentle. Unmistakable. You still love him. You never stopped. You tried. God, you really tried. You built a life without him, crafted a version of yourself that didnât flinch at his name, convinced yourself you were fineâthat you could breathe without the weight of his absence crushing your ribs. But even on your best days, there was always that ache. That dull, ever-present ache that no one else ever quite touched. âIâm sorry for making this complicated for you,â Sunghoon says suddenly, voice so soft it nearly gets swallowed by the quiet. âIâll give you time to think.â He starts to turn away, the line of his shoulders already retreating, his eyes cast to the ground like heâs ready to disappear again. You should say something. But you donât. You just moveâmore instinct than anything. One step, then two, and wrap your arms around him from behind like youâre anchoring yourself to the only thing thatâs ever felt simultaneously this terrifying and this right. Sunghoon freezes. Completely still. You feel it first in the way his shoulders tense, tension rippling through his body like your touch startles something buried too deep to nameâthen the slow, excruciating way he exhales, as if heâs been holding his breath the whole time.
You press your forehead lightly into his back. Heâs warm. Solid. Real.
Sunghoon shifts, beginning to turn toward you but your grip tightens ever so slightly. âNo. Donât turn around yet,â you say, your voice trembling. âNot yet. Just⌠listen.â His breath catches again, but he nods, hands limp at his sides, letting you press your heart against the shape of his back like it might finally say all the things your mouth never could. You close your eyes and let the words comeâraw and unpolished, everything youâve buried for far too long. âI hated how you shut down when things got hard between us. I hated how I always had to be the one to reach out, to fix things, to guess what you were feeling when all I wanted was for you to just say it.â His shoulders flinch slightly. You can feel the guilt settle into the line of his spine. His heartbeat picks up, echoing between you like thunder. Still, he doesnât move. âI hated how you always made decisions on your ownâlike I wasnât part of the picture. Like love was something you had to protect me from instead of something we couldâve fought for together.â Your voice cracks on the last word, but you push through. âI hated how you walked away without telling me the truth. How you let me believe I wasnât worth holding onto.â Your grip loosens as your voice softens. And as you do, Sunghoonâs fingers twitch near yours like he wants to reach for your hand but doesnât know if heâs allowed.
âAnd worst of all I hate that even after all of thatâafter the silence, the heartbreak, the wonderingâI still canât forget you.â His fingers curl slightly, not quite fists, but as if holding himself in place. As if your words are the only thing keeping him from falling apart. âI love the way you lace your skates, the way you scrunch your nose when you laugh, the way you never let go of your childhood dreams even when they broke you. I love how you tried to protect meâeven if it hurt. I love how you remember everything about me, even the things I thought didnât matter. Even the things I was sure you forgot.â
You speak.
âI love how you cuddled me in my sleepâI hate how you let the quiet speak for you. I love how you loved me, even when you didnât know how to show it. Even when I hate the fact you didnât know how to show it.â
He listens.
And with every word you spill, every confession you finally give voice to, something in him unknots. His spine softens against you, leaning back into your embraceâjust enough for you to feel the weight of him, the way he surrenders to the moment. His heartbeat thrums steadily beneath the fabric of his hoodie, loud and alive where your cheek presses lightly into the space between his shoulder blades. âAnd I hate how I still love all those parts. The beautiful ones, the difficult ones, the ones that tore me apart.â Sunghoon doesnât speak right away. Doesnât even move until heâs sure youâre done. âI never stopped loving you, Sunghoon. Thatâs the problem.â When you whisper those words, you swear he stops breathing altogether. You feel it rush out of him, like the weight of that truth floors him where he stands. âI donât need time,â you add, barely audible. âI just needed to be sure this was real. That you were.â You take a shuddering breath, close your eyes, and press your cheek more firmly against himâhoping, in some impossible way, that you can feel him even closer than he already is. âIâm scared,â you admit. âI donât know how to do this again. I donât know how to trust what we were, or what we could be. But I know I still care. I know I still want you.â âAnd Iâm tired of pretending I donât.â God, you want to laugh. Or slap yourself in the face because of how terrifyingly easy it was to believe him again. How a few trembling words and tear-soaked confessions cracked through years of hurt like they were never there to begin with. How your heart, traitorous and stubborn, still knows the shape of him like a story it never stopped rereading. And your stupid, foolish heartâbruised from all the almosts and maybesâis choosing to continue writing that story.
You donât say anything more.
And thatâs when he moves.
Slowly, cautiously, Sunghoon turns in your arms, and the look in his eyes nearly shatters you. Hope. Guilt. Wonder. All of it, all at once. His eyes are glossy, lips parted in disbelief. His hands rise, trembling as he cups your faceâso gently, like heâs afraid youâll slip through his fingers if he blinks. You feel the pulse in his fingertips where his thumb brushes your jawâstill racing, still loud. Like your presence alone is enough to send it surging. Like heâs never been more alive than in this quiet, fragile moment with you. He gently rests his forehead against yours, the space between you shrinking until it barely exists. His hands are trembling, but his touch is impossibly tenderâthumb brushing against your cheek, catching a tear, and then another. You hadnât even realised you were full-blown crying until his fingers found the evidence. And thenâjust when you think your heart canât take any moreâhis next words knock the air from your lungs like a punch and a prayer all at once. âCan I kiss you?â he whispers, voice hoarse and breaking with every syllable. âPlease⌠tell me I still can.â The plea hangs between you, fragile and breathless. His chest is rising and falling in shallow, uneven rhythm, his pulse frantic beneath your fingertips as you reach upâslowly, instinctivelyâand wrap your fingers around his wrist. You can feel it there: the raw, aching thrum of his heartbeat, louder than words. Like your touch alone is enough to undo him. Heâs never looked more vulnerable. Never more real. Thereâs no mask, no distance, no practiced calmâjust him. Just Sunghoon, standing in front of you with nothing left to offer but his whole heart, held out in both hands. You let out a shaky breath, the corners of your lips lifting despite the tears still wet on your skin. And thenâsoft, quiet, but certainâyou say, âYes.â
As soon as the word leaves your lipsâsoft, breathless, and trembling with everything youâve held back for yearsâSunghoon moves. Thereâs no hesitation. No time wasted. The moment he hears your yes, he closes the distance like a man starved for something he thought heâd never taste again. His hands frame your face with a yearning so delicate it makes your heart ache. And thenâheâs kissing you. It isnât hurried or rough. Itâs deep and devastating, like an apology and a promise all wrapped into one. Like heâs trying to pour four years of silence, of longing, of every missed chance into a single touch. He kisses you like itâs the first time and the last time all at once. And youâgod, you melt into it. Into him. Into the feeling of home rediscovered, of time folding in on itself. Your fingers find their way into the hem of his hoodie, clinging onto him like youâre afraid he might vanish if you let go. But he doesnât.
He stays.
And so do you. When you finally find it in you to pull away, you do so slowlyâreluctantlyâas if your body hasnât quite caught up with your mind yet. As if some part of you still isnât ready to let go. Your foreheads stay pressed together, breath mingling in the narrow space between you, warm and uneven. Youâre both breathless. Messy. His hair is damp at the edges, your cheeks are flushed, and your eyes sting with the remnants of unshed tears. His thumb lingers at your jaw, gently tracing the skin as if to memorise the feel of you all over again. You feel the tremble in his breath when he exhales, feel the soft thud of his heart still racing beneath your fingertips. He doesnât speak right away. Neither do you. Because in that moment, thereâs nothing to say that could possibly match the weight of what just passed between you. Youâd been broken once. Both of you. But right nowâin this quiet, tangled stillnessâit feels like the pieces are finally trying to come back together. You lean in again, lips parted, drawn to him like gravityâlike your heart still hasnât had enough. But just as your breath brushes against his skin, he gently places a hand on your shoulder and eases you back. The moment stalls. You blink, startled. A flicker of panic rises in your chestâwas this a mistake? Did he change his mind? But then he smiles. Soft. Steady. The kind of smile that anchors you. He pulls you into his arms, wrapping you tight against his chest, one hand cradling the back of your head like heâs afraid youâll shatter if he holds you any less carefully. âBelieve me,â he murmurs into your hair, voice thick with restraint, âI want you so bad.â He pulls back just enough to look at you, thumb tracing your cheek, his gaze unbearably tender. âBut not like this. Not when your heartâs still racing and your thoughts are a blur. I donât want this to be another moment we look back on and wonder if it was real.â His forehead rests gently against yours again, breath fanning over your lips. Youâre stunned by his honestyâby the weight of his restraint, the care in his voice. And you canât help but compare him to the Sunghoon from four years ago. The boy who never quite knew how to sit still in the presence of raw emotion, whoâd grown so used to skating past vulnerability that he forgot how to let someone in.
Back then, he wouldâve kissed you anyway. Not out of selfishness, but out of fearâfear of the silence that might follow, fear of what waiting might reveal. He didnât know how to confront intimacy without flinching. But thisâthis Sunghoon in front of you nowâisnât running from the stillness. Heâs standing in it. Letting the quiet settle between you like a promise. Heâs not rushing. Heâs not deflecting. Heâs choosing you with intention. âI want to do this right. Slow, if thatâs what it takes. With all of youânot just the part thatâs still reeling from the fall. â You nod. âYou can stay the night if you like⌠on the couch, of course.â He grins, eyes flickering with something fond, something teasingâbut there's warmth behind it, restraint. âStarting from ground zero, I see.â He lets out a breath, gentle and steady. âIâm grateful. Really. But I wonât overstay tonight. I thinkâŚâ he pauses, gaze dropping to the floor for a brief second before finding you again, more grounded now, âI think we both have some thinking to do too. And frankly speaking, if you look at me like that any longer, I might actually lose my shit.â You laugh, soft and disbelieving, the sound muffled by the sleeve you raise to your mouth. And as much as your heart aches to keep him close, to fall back into the comfort of familiarity, you both know tonight canât be about slipping into old rhythms too soon. Not when everything between you is still new and fragile in its honesty. He reaches out and brushes a hand over your arm. âLet me put you to sleep,â he says, voice lower now, softer. âAnd then Iâll go.â And you donât fight him on it. Because for the first time, he isnât leaving to run. Heâs leaving to give you room to choose. The moment your head hits the pillow, and you feel his lips press a gentle kiss to your forehead, your body sinks into the mattress like it's exhaling. You're not sure if it's the exhaustion from everything thatâs unravelled between you earlier, or the undeniable familiarity of having him close againâhis scent, his warmth, the quiet hum of his breath near yoursâbut sleep finds you almost instantly. It's as if your body remembers him. Trusts him.
Sunghoon lingers. He sits by the edge of your bed, watching the rise and fall of your chest, the soft creases of worry smoothing out from your brow now that you're resting. A small, breathy chuckle escapes him as he leans down, brushing a few strands of hair from your face. âSo peaceful,â he whispers, almost to himself, âand still somehow managing to look like you carry the weight of the world.â He stays a second longer than he should. Maybe two. And then, quietly, he stands to leaveâonly to catch the soft glow of your laptop screen still open on your desk. He walks over, intending to shut it, give you the rest you deserve. But as his eyes flicker toward the screen, he recognises the subject line immediately. It's the email to your editor. The article draft. The cursor blinks steadily at the end of the draftâthe same paragraph that started it all. Goodbye, Park Sunghoon, And thank you for everything you didnât have to say.| The words land like a quiet echo in his chest. He glances back at your sleeping form on the bed, a faint, solemn smile tugging at his lips. Then he turns, quietly taking a seat at your desk. His fingers hover above the keyboard for a moment. And thenâbackspace. Letter by letter, he deletes the final paragraph. In its place, he types slowly. Carefully. Like each word is a stitch trying to mend whatâs been frayed for too long. When heâs done, he hovers for a moment, rereading every wordâthen clicks âSend.â The email spins off toward your editor. He stands, casts one last look in your direction, and quietly lets himself out.
The next morning, you wake groggy but oddly clear-headed, like your body is still catching up to the storm of feelings it weathered the night before. The room is quiet. Sunlight spills in softly through the blinds, casting golden slats across your blanket. For a moment, you wonder if any of it was realâif he really came, really stood in your doorway, cried in your arms, asked to kiss you like it meant everything. But the slight indent on the couch cushion. The mug he used. The scent that still lingers faintly in the airâall of it confirms: he was here. It was real. Your heart thumps at the memory, but itâs interrupted by a harsh vibration rattling on your nightstand. You blink at your phone, screen flooded with notificationsâdozens of missed calls, texts, and pings from your editorial team.
Chase headlines, not men. Catch exclusives, not feelings. âď¸
Yunah: @/you I know you're off today, but I just wanted to say CONGRATS on your story!! See, I knew you could pull this off. [Attached: 1 Link]
Moka: The internet is LOSING it over the article!!!
Minju: Still canât believe you landed exclusive on top of exclusive with Park Sunghoon. Legend behaviour.
Yunah: Iâm equally shocked heâs been hiding that injury all this time đ
Minju: I donât want to stress you out but⌠our public inbox is full of people sending selfies of themselves crying. Literal tears.
Moka: I mean did you READ that last paragraph??? I sobbed too.
You blink at your phone, stunned. Messages keep pouring inâsome from colleagues you barely know, others from strangers outside your publication, all echoing the same thing: the article hit them hard. Which is⌠strange. Because you donât remember sending the draft. Brows furrowed, you scroll up through your texts until you find the link Yunah sent. You tap it. The article is live. You hold your breath as you read through the bylineâyour name, front and centre. The formatting. The intro you agonised over. The quotes, the story, the soul of it. And then you scroll to the end. A smile tugs at your lips, and you pull up your chat with Sunghoon.
You: [Attached: 1 Screenshot] Was this your doing?
His reply is almost instant.
Sunghoon: Good morning :) Maybe? PR said they wanted to switch it up.
You: And by PR you mean... you?
Sunghoon: đ I meant every word. Itâs what I wanted to say to you and to the world. Why⌠was it too corny? Iâm sorry if I overstepped.
You bite your lip, heart stupidly fluttering as you reread his words.
You: No no. Just kinda mad I didnât think of that myself đ
Sunghoon: Well, you canât beat years of media training đ¤ˇââď¸
You: Sunghoon, I WORK for the mediaâŚ
He replies almost immediately, like heâs been waiting for your comeback.
Sunghoon: Let me make it up to you for one-upping you. Dinner tonight? My treat.
Your fingers hover over the keyboard for a beat before you reply.
You: I would not accept otherwise.
You set the phone down, unable to contain the quiet laugh that escapes you. Because despite everythingâthe heartbreak, the years apart, the mess of it allâyouâve never felt more like you were exactly where you were meant to be.
The two of you walk slowly along the riverbank, hands gently entwined, his thumb occasionally sweeping across your knuckles like he's still making sure you're real. The evening is still, like even the world has paused to listen. A breeze brushes past, gentle and cool, carrying the scent of spring and something sweet that lingersâsomething that smells like beginnings.
You glance down at your interlocked fingers, how naturally they fall into placeâlike no time has passed at all. The rhythm of your footsteps syncs without effort, the silence between you not heavy, but full. Comfortable. Honest. Familiar in all the ways that matter.
âThis feels like our first date,â you say, smiling without meaning to, the corners of your lips tugged by something warm and indescribable.
He laughs under his breath, a soft, breathy sound that makes your heart swell. âMaybe it is,â he replies. âThe first one where I finally know what Iâm doing.â
You donât reply. Not because you have nothing to say, but because every part of this moment already says it for you.
The sky above is endless, dark velvet speckled with stars. The world moves quietly around youâboats drifting in the distance, couples passing by, the faint sound of laughter from a nearby cafe. But for the first time in a long time, it doesnât feel like youâre watching it all from behind a glass wall. Youâre here. Present. With him.
And heâs here tooâreally here, not as a shadow of a memory, not as someone you're chasing or mourning. But as a man who's finally choosing to stay beside you.
And you thinkâif the world ended right now, if the river froze and time stopped stillâyou would not ask for more than this. Not more than his hand in yours, his voice low beside you, his presence finally steady after years of disappearing acts and empty spaces.
You look at himânot the athlete, not the headline, not the boy who once walked awayâbut the man who returned with no armour, no excuses, only truths. Who stood in front of you trembling, terrified, and still chose to stay. And when you speak, your voice is quiet but certain.
âYou couldâve come back with promises, with charm, with all the right words at the wrong time. But you didnât.â
Thereâs a small beat of silence where he stops walking and you do too, feet planted at the edge of the path where the river glistens. He faces you fully now, his hand still holding yours.
âYou came back to me with everything I ever needed,â you continue.
He opens his mouth, but no words comeâjust the subtle tremble of his chin, the storm of emotions flickering behind his eyes. You take a step closer, pressing your forehead against his, feeling his breath shudder out as though even now, this is too much to believe.
âThis,â he says, almost to himself, âis what I shouldâve fought for back then.â
"All that matters is you are now," you whisper. "You left, and then you learned. You grew. And then you came back.â
And thatâs the difference. Thatâs everything.
This isnât about returning to the past. This is about two people, standing in the aftermath of everything they werenât ready for then, finally finding each other in a version of the world where they are. Choosing to begin againânot from scratch, but from everything theyâve carried and learned and lived through.
His hand stays in yours, steady and warm, like a vow made without words.
You kiss him.
And this time, the kiss isnât a promise or an apology. Itâs not an act of desperation or regret. Itâs a homecoming.
It tastes like relief. Like forgiveness. Like all the years that tried to pull you apart finally surrendering to the truth that you were always meant to find your way back.
When you pull away, he doesnât say anything right away. He just holds you closer, like letting go would unravel the universe itself.
You rest your head on his shoulder, and in that embraceâquiet and undramatic, warm and steadyâyou finally understand what it means to be loved not just in the way you wanted, but in the way you deserved.
Because he loves you now in the way that matters most.
Not as the boy who left. Not as the echo of a love lost to time. But as the man who finally came back to put every broken piece back together with his own hands.
This isnât the love you spent years waiting for.
Itâs the love he had to fight to grow into. The kind born from mistakes, shaped by time, and strengthened through absence. Itâs messy. Flawed. Earned. Real.
It's the kind of love that's loud in his words as much as it is in his presence.
Itâs the kind of love that sees all of you. Not just the polished, loveable parts, but the fractured ones tooâand stays anyway.
And for Sunghoon, this is the love he has worked to deserve. The kind of love that took almost losing everything to understand.
Skating. Himself. You.
Skating was his first loveâthe kind that demanded everything and gave just as much, until it didnât. And like most first loves, it burned bright, glorious, then quietly slipped beyond reach.
And when he said he fell out of love with it a long time ago, something inside you aches.
Because you remember. God, you remember how much he loved it. How much it meant to him. You were there for the early mornings, the ice-burned skin, the sacrifices. You watched him speak with his body when words failed, carve art into frozen ground like it was the only way he knew how to breathe. Skating wasnât just something he did. Itâs his compass. His language. His sanctuary.
You mourn the love he lostâbecause it was beautiful. Because it made him who he was. Because you can only imagine what he mustâve gone through to lose that love. To say it out loud. To bury it. And because it hurts to know that even something so beloved can slip away.
And yet⌠here he is. Standing in front of you, offering up the ashes of what once fuelled him, just to prove that loving you never burned out. That you outlasted the thing that defined him for most of his life. That somehow, someway, you came out on the other sideânot as a consolation, but as a constant.
Even now, you donât know what to do with that kind of love. A love that gave up the world just to come home to you.
Because you know what it cost him. What it cost you.
And even though some part of you swells at the thought that he never stopped choosing you, thereâs another part that grieves for everything he lost along the way.
But one thing is certain:
While skating may have been his first love, Sunghoon intends for you to be his last.
So youâll love him with both hands open. With reverence for the boy he used to be, with gratitude for the man heâs become, and with tenderness for all the versions of him in between.
You will carry the echoes of the boy who once chased gold on the ice and hold space for the man who let it go.
And thatâs the way youâll love himâ
The way he loves you.
[MANIFESTO EXCLUSIVE] The Final Bow: Park Sunghoon Withdraws from Olympic Delegation and Announces Retirement

By Kang Y/N, Manifesto Daily
In a move that has taken the sports world by quiet surprise, South Korean figure skater Park Sunghoon has officially withdrawn from the 2026 Olympic delegation and announced his retirement from competitive skating.
Park, who recently stunned audiences with a breathtaking performance at the national Olympic tryouts, was widely anticipated to lead the menâs singles category for Team Korea. His name sat at the top of the final athlete roster released by the Korean Skating Union, cementing his spot after years spent away from the competitive spotlight.
However, behind the seamless technique and poise he displayed during the tryouts, Park had been skating through pain. After sustaining a severe tendon injury to his right leg during training abroad in 2023, he underwent a long and difficult recoveryâone that, according to the athlete, never fully restored his capacity to train at the level he once held. Despite managing the condition in silence, Park made the decision to step away before risking further damage to his body.
Having spent the last few years recovering and training quietly overseas, Park re-entered the national circuit not to chase medals, but to rediscover what skating meant to him beyond the pressure of podiums and public expectation. His performance at the tryouts was not only a technical feat but also a statement. A reclamation. A reminder that skating, at its core, was always more than a career. It was a language of feeling.
In his official statement, Park expressed gratitude for the opportunity to return to the ice one last time: âI want to remember it the way Iâve always loved it. For what it gave me. For who I was when I first stepped on the ice.â
Parkâs career has never been defined by loud declarations. He was known for his quiet discipline, his ability to translate stillness into power, grace into precision. From his early victories on the junior circuit to his more introspective, mature performances in recent years, he has remained one of the few athletes whose artistry often spoke louder than any press release.
Though his departure from the delegation was unexpected, it wasnât without intent. Parkâs decision to step back at the height of anticipation is a reminder that not all victories are won under stadium lights. Some are claimed in the quiet resolve to walk away on your own terms.
In related news, Parkâs withdrawal comes just days after the delegation announcement, and in his place, 19-year-old rising star Han Jihoon has been selected to represent Korea in the menâs singles category. Han, who placed fourth at the national tryouts, is widely regarded as one of the most technically gifted athletes of his generation, with a growing fanbase and a reputation for innovation on the ice.
As for Park Sunghoon, he leaves behind a legacy not of statistics, but of stillness. Of dignity. Of skating that always seemed to speak in the spaces where words fell short.
And maybe that was the point all along. Maybe it was never about the podium. Maybe the real victory was simply finding your way back to loving something you once thought you had to leave behind.

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#enhypen#heeseung#jungwon#sunghoon#jay#sunoo#jake#ni ki#enhypen x reader#enhypen sunghoon#enhypen fluff#enhypen angst#enhypen au#enhypen scenarios#park sunghoon x reader#park sunghoon#sunghoon x reader#sunghoon au#enha angst#enha au#kpop fanfic#enhypen smut#enhypen smau#enha#enhypen sports#figureskater!sunghoon#tfwy thewayilovedyou#tfwy au#Spotify
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satoru gojo is cocky, top of the class, and one passive-aggressive emoji away from tears.
a/n: nerdjo is so easily rage baited itâs actually embarrassing. one compliment from you and heâs rewriting his entire thesis out of spite. i love bullying him gently.
satoru is going to break his keyboard.
his fingers twitch above the keysâhesitating, retreating, returning againâhovering like they might snap the poor letters clean off. the skin on his knuckles is taut, his jaw clenched so hard it ticks like a time bomb, and his mouth is parted just barely, like heâs one saccharine comment away from spontaneously combusting.
strands of white hair keep falling over his foreheadâstatic-charged from his hoodieâand he shoves them back, again and again, increasingly violent about it, like maybe the hair is conspiring with you. his glasses have slipped halfway down his nose. the gleam of his lenses barely masks the pure, incandescent rage in his eyes.
those eyes, now glassy with disbelief, are locked on the latest reply from youâthe class discussion boardâs reigning empress of emotional terrorism. his academic rival. personal poltergeist. a sugar-coated demon in pastel lip gloss.
oh satoru, i think itâs so admirable how you stuck by that article! not many people would be brave enough to defend a source thatâs been debunked four times. itâs honestly kind of inspiring. keep doing you!
his vision goes white.
that is not a compliment. it is a tactical airstrike in a pink envelope. he knows it. you know it. and worst of all, you signed off with a heart emoji. a heart. he can see your face in his headâtilted just slightly, like youâre too sweet to possibly mean harm, but your eyes glint like youâre holding a scalpel behind your back.
his reply has already died and resurrected five times. the first version read like a cease-and-desist letter. the second had footnotes so aggressive it required double-spaced disclaimers. the third almost made it to the post button, until he remembered your last reply that ended with, âhope this clears it up, prof said some people struggle with statistical nuance.â
you are not just baiting him. youâve turned it into an art form. a spiritual practice. and your weapon of choice is niceness so passive-aggressive it should be federally regulated.
back in first year econ, you sat beside him, humming under your breath and tapping your pen against the desk in tempo with his unraveling sanity. you kicked his bag under the table. you leaned close just to whisper, âyour equationâs wrong, but donât worry, i wonât tell anyone! not everyoneâs meant for regression models.â
you once highlighted his errors in the shared google docâin pink. pastel pink. with cheerful comments like âuh oh!â and âalmost got it!â he swears he could hear the sparkle emoji implied in your tone. the worst part? your spelling was immaculate.
he still thinks about it in the shower.
now?
now heâs two seconds away from flinging his laptop across the room. the labâs overhead lights buzz like mosquitoes. someoneâs typing across from him, calm and steady, and it only amplifies the sound of his own frenzied assault on the keyboard.
his typing is violent. the spacebar clacks like gunfire. heâs halfway through a paragraph when he snarlsâactually snarlsâand deletes the whole thing. he writes another. more venomous. more precise. then pauses, eyes narrowing.
because youâve edited your post.
p.s. just reread your old comment and i think i finally get your logic now! i mustâve been too slow before. thanks for your patience <3
he makes a sound. an animal sound. itâs somewhere between a wheeze and a gasp. his knee bounces under the table, leg jittery with restrained rage.
âi hate her,â he breathes.
from across the lab, shoko doesnât even glance up. âyou said that yesterday.â
âi mean it today.â
she lifts her eyes only slightly to peer over her laptop, one brow arched in apathy. âyou said that yesterday too.â
âno, no, noâyou donât understand, shoko.â he shoves his glasses up the bridge of his nose, the frames skewed slightly to the left from stress. âshe thanked me.â
âchilling.â
âshe made it sound real. like she appreciated it. like she didnât just nuke my thesis and then bake me a fucking muffin.â
âdid she add sprinkles?â
âa smiley face.â
he slumps forward, head in his hands, glasses slipping again. his breath fogs the screen. itâs like youâre thereâhe swears he smells that damn peach shampoo you use. he hears the echo of your voice cooing, âaww, did i mess up your graph again?â like a knife wrapped in a silk ribbon.
heâs haunted. infuriated. heâd rather be insulted outright, mocked, cursed at, anything but this sweet, syrupy condescension that drips like poison into his every academic wound.
then his inbox pings.
a private message.
hey, sorry again for misunderstanding your point in the thread! i know you work really hard on these. if you ever want to explain it to me one-on-one, iâd love that. i learn best from people who are smarter than me :)
his soul ascends. his body remains.
he stares at the message, slack-jawed. horror prickles under his skin like cold water. one hand twitches toward the power button, but he hesitates. you know what youâre doing.
and he hates that itâs working.
âwhat did she say now?â shoko asks, sipping lukewarm coffee from a chipped mug labeled âproperty of shoko: touch and perish.â
he doesnât look up. âshe wants me to teach her.â
âsounds like flirting.â
âitâs not flirting.â
âshe called you smart.â
he pauses. then squints at the screen like it just insulted his bloodline. âshe called me smart the way you praise a goldfish for finding the glass.â
he types:
sure. let me know when.
deletes it.
types:
thatâs⌠fine. i guess.
deletes that too.
his fingers hover over the keys.
he types, each letter hammered with the weight of pride swallowed whole:
if you need clarification, i can walk you through it. though i'm sure you'll figure it out eventually.
hits send.
wants to die.
he sags back, hoodie bunching around his shoulders. his sleeves fall over his knuckles. his knee taps against the metal chair leg in a relentless rhythm. he stares at the blinking cursor like itâs counting down to his doom. the little grey dots appear. youâre typing. again. youâre going to be worse. he knows this. the anticipation is psychological warfare.
he watches anyway.
this is war.
#gojo satoru#satoru gojo#gojo fluff#gojo crack#gojo drabbles#gojo x reader fluff#gojo x reader crack#gojo x reader#gojo x female reader#satoru gojo x reader#gojo satoru x reader#gojo satoru x you#satoru gojo x you#gojo satoru x y/n#satoru gojo x y/n#jjk drabbles#jjk crack#jjk fluff#jjk x reader
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ă
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¤ I SAY THINGSă
¤ âŠă
¤đ đ˝đđâđ đđžđşđ



đđđđââââđđđžđ đđđžđ đđşđ đđđđđđ đđđžđ đ˝đđâđ đđžđşđ.
⪠GALLERIA ⍠・ enhypen x fem ! reader đđđđ angst, comfort, skinshipă
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¤wrote this in a hurry, hope you enjoy reading :3
HEESEUNG
he says it mindlessly, words spiked with venom and vitriol. he doesnât even realise until itâs a little too quiet, until he looks at you in the eyes and sees tears brimming at your waterline. thereâs an ache in his heart when he sees hurt spelled all over your face. and you would try to walk away but heeseung wouldnât let you, trying to hold onto your arm, hand, fingersâ anything. anything to fix the damage he has done. he would wrap his arms around you from behind to stop you from leaving and would whisper endless apologies, each one an exhibit of how much he needs you. âi did not mean any of that, i could never.â
JONGSEONG
âoh, dear,â is all he can mutter when he returns home later that night, cheeks flushed from the cold outside. he wanted to put off the conversation till the next morning until his gaze lands upon you sitting at the dining table with food, dozing off, and he feels his break breaking into a thousand pieces. he feels like a coward for hurting you and then leaving out of fear of facing you. when you wake up due to his footsteps, concern and relief glistening in your red, puffy eyes, he finds himself kneeling on the floor in front of you and taking your hands in his, afraid you might not want him close. âiâm sorry, darling. i was being stupid, i never meant to say those things,â
JAEYUN
it is hurting him too, knocking the breath out of his chest. he regrets those words as soon as they leave his mouth, watching your eyes widen in disbelief. his heart cracks when he sees a single tear roll down your cheek. he chokes on his own sobs when he watches you close the bedroom door behind you, wanting to reach out despite knowing you need space. but when he hears quiet sniffles and cries from across the door, he canât help but walk inside and instantly wrapping you in his arms, sharing every wail and tear with you, rocking you gently while pressing tender kisses on the top of your head. âiâm sorry, angel. i love you, please forgive me,â
SUNGHOON
he hates how he does it over the phone, saying youâre hard to talk to only to end the conversation. he knows he has messed up when you arenât even leaving him on seen like you do when you are upset. sunghoon feels dread creep under his skin when itâs midnight and he hasnât heard a word from you, when every thing he said starts ringing in his head like a ugly reminder. itâs two in the night when he finds himself at your door, breathless, drenched, desperate, yet relieved to see you. he feels sick in his own skin when he sees you tear up at his mere presence, when your voice cracks up even before you could utter a word, and he finds himself gulping in guilt and remorse before whispering. âyou always listen to me. iâm sorry for not knowing how to talk,â
SUNOO
he cries with you, before you. arguments with him go eye to eye, but when you stop looking at him, when he catches a glimpse of your shiny eyes as you crumble downâ he breaks. he immediately reaches out to hold your hands when you take a step back, the action feeling like a sword through his chest. his grip is firm as if you would disappear if he let loose and his heart is in shambles when he sees you breaking down, bits and pieces. heâs ready to get on his knees and beg, apologies pouring out between your sobs twined together to prove just how wrong he was. he lets you cry against his chest, hugging you close and realising he has a lot to make up to when you donât hug him back.
JUNGWON
he doesnât realise the impact of his words until he hears absolute silence from you. usually, you respond, you fight back, but you are quiet. and then he sees you standing at a distance looking so small and broken with your lips quiveringâ itâs all that takes him to drop whatever he is doing and run to you and hold your face ever so gently in his hands. he wants you to argue, to curse him out, but you look away, holding back your sobs and it shatters his entire world. jungwon fears he might have done something irreversible and despite his consoling words and warm caresses, you can feel his hands shaking. he wipes your tears and kisses their remains off your cheek, his chest feeling tight at every sob that falls off your lips. âyou know i did not mean any of that, right?â
NI-KI
he says it in defence, only to save himself from getting hurt, but it comes back to him ten times worse when he realises he has broken your heart. he freezes in his stance, unsure of what to do. he feels panic rise within himself when you start walking away. your boyfriend can feel his knees going weak and he feels so ashamed of not being able to say anything when you were probably expecting him to stop you from leaving. it takes him a while but he finally finds the courage to face you, even though you are lying with your back facing him. itâs scary, his arms are shaking when he wraps them around you. and when he feels you relax despite the silence, he pulls you closer to his chest. âlet me fix this, please,â
#âapproved.#enhypen#enhypen fluff#enhypen angst#enhypen headcanons#enhypen x reader#enhypen imagines#enhypen scenarios#enhypen drabbles#enha x reader#enha fluff#heeseung#heeseung x reader#jay#jay x reader#jake#jake x reader#sunghoon#sunghoon x reader#sunoo#sunoo x reader#jungwon#jungwon x reader#riki#riki x reader#enhypen reactions#enha scenarios#enha imagines#enhypen soft hours#enhypen soft thoughts
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don't get me wrong if there are no figayda defenders then i am dead but equally important to me is the fact that adaine was the one who reached out to ayda in the first place. from the very first moment, while the other bad kids were either unsure if ayda was even a person or if she was a bird or something else altogether, while they were making jokes, adaine was the one emphasizing ayda's personhood and acknowledging her as an individual deserving of respect. minute one, adaine has clocked ayda's deal and is completely on the level with her.
like, just to break down their interactions solely from the episode where they meet (2x07):
Adaine: Oh yes, I have a piece of paper.
Ayda: Why, are you bragging? I have many slips of paper.
Adaine: It's a specific piece of paper with a letter from Garthy on it.
> speaks too vaguely, sees that ayda did not understand her meaning, and immediately clarifies with specific language, without being glib or making a joke out of ayda's response
Ayda: Do you give this as a gift or as a message?
Adaine: I give it as a message. I would never give you a gift, you've made it clear that you do not want one.
> heard ayda's clearly expressed opinion on gifts and took her at face value, once again without any hint of mockery
Ayda: I wish for no gifts.
Adaine: But if you would like to buy this message off of me, you're more than welcome to.
> reframes the offering of the message as a transaction to eliminate any concern ayda may have about putting herself in debt, something she'd just expressly communicated she did not desire to do
jump to:
Adaine: I can teach you a spell if you teach me a spell. Then the transaction is clear.
> says in no uncertain terms what the transaction is. she is communicating on ayda's terms.
jump to:
Adaine: We can hang out if you like.
Ayda: What?
Adaine: I don't have any wizard friends.
Ayda: Why? [...] Are you hard to be around?
Adaine: No, I, no? Are you hard to be around?
Ayda: Yes.
> you just know ayda is repeating back words she has been told.
Adaine: Oh, do you want a friend?
Ayda: (pauses, intense stare) Desperately.
> this entire exchange is spoken in clear words and without subtext. adaine says what she wants and why she wants it. she is not put off by ayda. she doesn't find ayda hard to be around, but she also doesn't say anything to give ayda something to argue against. on the heels of ayda saying she's hard to be around, adaine asks anyway, "do you want a friend?" which communicates (1) the answer to whether or not you're hard to be around does not in any way modify my desire to be your friend, but also (2) i don't want to force friendship on you so i will ask you a clearer question: do you want a friend?
Adaine: I'll be your friend. Would you like to hold my frog? It's not a gift.
> "i'll be your friend" = adaine clarifying the result of the preceding line of questioning. "do you want a friend" could be taken by ayda to mean that adaine will present her with some third party friend, and adaine puts that to rest: she will be the friend. also doesn't assume ayda will remember adaine's earlier words or generalize her earlier sentiment of never offering ayda an unwanted gift; this is a new situation and conversation so adaine simply repeats her promise
Ayda: What level spell is this?
Adaine: Oh, it's just Find Familiar, it'sâ
Ayda: How?
Adaine: I can teach you it. It'll cost you 50 gold per level.
Ayda: (laughs screechingly) Very good.
> friendship notwithstanding, adaine does not assume that the transaction of spells for money is negated, but suggests it in such a way that ayda laughs, potentially sensing that adaine has created an inside joke for them, and potentially not being on the inside of too many of those.
all of this is FIRST MEETING. and the difference between how the other bad kids interact with ayda vs how adaine interacts with her in this episode is so stark. when adaine learns that they're both divination wizards, she is genuinely delighted. she thinks ayda is cool from basically their first interaction. adaine doesn't have any wizard friends!! and she's respectful towards ayda and meets her where she's at without any hesitation or difficulty. day one ride or die.
brennan likes to say that fig was the one who brought ayda out of side quest territory and into the main story, but it was adaine who extended the offer/request for friendship, it was adaine who reached out when she needed help at the row & the ruction, and it was adaine whom ayda immediately dropped everything to go and rescue the moment she knew adaine was in trouble. fig was an incredible friend and eventual partner for ayda, but adaine was ayda's first friend, the hand that reached out and grasped ayda to bring her into the bad kids fold in the first place, and nobody better forget it.
#stuff#dimension 20#d20#fantasy high#fantasy high sophomore year#fhsy#adaine abernant#ayda aguefort#so so normal about ayda at all times. you can be sure of that#d20 meta#fantasy high meta
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Things That Bind Us

Summary: in which student mage!choso encounters a spell that binds oneâs body to an object of their choosing and he can't resist trying it out on an unsuspecting you⌠with a magically conjured sex doll?! Warnings: porn with little plot, 18+, mdni, fantasy au, fem!reader, a little hogwarts-esque, non-con/dub-con but it's really more cnc, sex toy usage, tit slapping, cunnilingus, quick pĂşssy job, penetrative sex, unprotected sex, spitting, pĂşssy slapping, creampie, brief ass play/rimming, dĂck piercing, squirting, overstimulation, portrayal of a possibly unhealthy fwb scenario, reader seems abusive but I swear she's not TT, she just needs to reign Choso in, not proofread Word Count: 3.3k
Itâs stupid really.
Choso wasnât even looking for a way to get back at you for leaving him high and dry after you rode his face to three orgasms. In fact, he was searching the archives for some textbooks he could use for the five thousand word essay he has due tomorrow, though it seems like itâll have to wait now that heâs found something much more interesting and helpful.Â
Throwing the last ingredient into his portable cauldron, he watches red fumes puff in the air, signalling that heâs ready to get the other half of his plan in motion.Â
Hidden in his dorm room, door locked and walls reinforced with a shield spell, he climbs into bed and douses the potion all over a temporary conjurement. If anyone found out what he had done and is going to do, heâd both be the laughing stock of the academy and the one guys would turn to for help with their own deviant desires. But no one will knowâŚexcept, of course, for you.Â
What is the temporary conjurement?
Why, itâs a soft, almost life-like recreation of the female body. Heâs sculpted it in his mind to look just like you, at least the you he remembered as well as he could given that he was a little preoccupied with gathering the ingredients necessary for his potion. Long limbed, smooth-skinned, bearing your complexion, and completely bare, it can do nothing as the wayward student douses the thing with the gloopy concoction, massaging it in thoroughly and leaving the body shiny and slick.Â
Smelling of lavender and perversion, he doesnât miss a single inch of skin with the potion, oiling the body up to the point where it glistens temptingly. Then, just as naked as his conjuring, Choso mutters a binding spell none had uttered in centuries and will not for longer.Â
Nothing happens.Â
He frowns, the black mark spanning cheek to cheek over his nose twitches with the movement. Did he say it wrong? Were the frog eyes he used expired? Or maybe he forgot to boil the snail mucus for a minute longer than usually recommended?Â
What a shame. He was so looking forward to getting some payback â too often is it the case that heâs the one chasing after you, flushing an embarrassing red in the face when youâve embarrassed him by pointing out that heâs drooling or that he already came by humping the bed from just your mere scent. Oh, what Choso wouldnât give to render you just as flustered and dizzy as you leave him.Â
You two have an agreement â nothing is too weird or sick. You love it when he touches you as you sleep and his cock drips like a leaky faucet when he pretends he doesnât want you to suck his dick at the back of the pegasus stables. An odd pair in everyoneâs eyes, his friends remain surprised that you two have stayed together as partners in lewd crime for so long. There are many times you two have broken things off, promising to do better, to be better, but those breaks never last very long before heâs bending you over backwards in the toilets.Â
Sighing, he curses out the stupid spell book. No wonder it was dusty and hidden away in the library; whoâd use a book full of faulty spells and empty vows?
Just about to wave the thing away, something catches his eye: a slight rise and fall of the chest.Â
WaitâŚ
No wayâŚ
It worked!
Your body is actually connected to the one he has in his bed. And, judging by the rhythmic breaths youâre taking, you must be asleep. That means youâre in your room too and wonât be caught in a compromising position because of him. Choso pretends he isnât disappointed.Â
Carefully, he planks over you and inhales at your neck. His eyes shut tight. Even with the distance, even when this isnât your real body, he can still smell you and it sends blood rushing straight to his cock. He begins mouthing at the skin, sucking marks and smiling when your breathing quickens, just a little.Â
Nipples flat, his fingers tweak at them, wanting to see them pebbled under his touch. You wear shirts to bed and he wonders if you can feel the flicking through the material or under â he hopes itâs the former since you like the friction. Either way, whatever heâs doing is having an effect on you: your heart is beating faster, breath irregular, skin warmer, back arching ever so slightly, and your nipples poke his palm.Â
His memory was right. The breasts he cups weigh the same and feel practically the same. How often had he cradled your body like this for him to know the sizing of your tits perfectly?Â
Chosoâs mouth waters. Unable to help himself, he suckles a nipple into his mouth, tongue rolling the bud around. The potion is surprisingly tasteless though it is oily. That doesnât put him off at all, however. Though youâre asleep, you still feel him, almost like a sixth sense. Thatâs sweet. He can tell youâre still asleep; youâre only ever this docile when in the land of slumber. Well, he wonât complain. Instead of shaking you awake, he trails a hand down your torso, tickling your belly button before it curves downwards to your pussy.Â
Youâre not very wet yet.Â
Undeterred, he pets your cunt to waken that part of your body before your mind does. He loves the warmth and the plumpness of your pussy lips. Truly, he could spend eternity making out with it if only youâd let him.Â
Your juices are leaking now and he spreads it around, smearing your skin with your wetness. The potion eases the tight circles he rubs against your clit, still hidden under its hood. Mouth full, Choso grunts. âCome on, baby. Come out for me. Thatâs it.â
Jostling, he watches your body come to life. Youâre waking up. He wonders how youâll react to the feeling of your tit being sucked and your clit being rubbed. Would you scream? Would you frantically search your textbooks for an explanation to the sensations youâre feeling? OrâŚwould you indulge in the pleasure for a little longer than you should?
How long will it take you to figure out that heâs up to no good? What punishment will you give him?
He gasps.Â
Without realising it, he had been grinding down onto your body doubleâs thigh. His cock is dribbling pre cum onto the skin. Can you feel that too? Can you feel the throbbing of his dick against your leg? Can you count the veins? Feel the length? Does it seem familiar?
Choso shoves two fingers into your pussy, burying them right up to the knuckles and getting his silver rings coated in your juices; he loves when the smell of you lingers and he can sniff the memory in class. Sometimes, he even absentmindedly takes a ring into his mouth and plays with the remaining taste of you whilst he studies.
Itâs not really your body, he reminds himself. Itâs not your pussy but, in the haze of pleasure and shame in knowing heâs doing something wrong, he canât seem to care. The difference is marginal. Youâre tighter but the heat is all the same, so are the pleats heâs rubbing. That gummy spot that has your toes curling is at the same place too.Â
The body can only lie limp, the dusty spell book he found was clear on that â your arms wonât be wrapping around his back, wonât be clawing red lines down his spine that get his cock rising to full mast in the hallways when his shirt grazes them, and your legs wonât lock around his hips the way you usually do when you want him to cum inside and not on your stomach or back.Â
Still, thereâs something crazily hot about that. You canât fight him off either. Canât argue with him or boss him about. He gets to decide what position he wants you to be in, to control the pace and says when this ends. Surely heâll pay for this later but he just canât bring himself to think about the consequences, not when youâre tightening around his fingers and the tangy scent of your pussy is reaching him.Â
âI bet youâre so confused right now,â he mumbles. âYou might even be scared. Donât be. Iâve got you. Always.â
SLAP!
SLAP!
Heâs smacked each of your tits just to watch it bounce; you usually hate it when he does that. By now, heâd be sporting a bump on his head as you push him over to ride him until heâs overstimulated and begging for mercy. But you canât do anything. And that fact is going to make him cum on your thigh.Â
Shaking his head, he hurriedly grips the base of his cock. He canât cum. Not yet. And not here. He didnât go through the trouble of climbing up the whispering willow tree for the tallest branch in front of, what felt like, the entire student body, to not feel your pussy clench around his dick.Â
First things first, thoughâŚ
With haste, he scrambles down the bed to dive between your legs. Like a dog, he laps up your juices. You taste sweet, forever so sweet. Itâs why he doesnât complain when you teleport into his room at random times of the day and beckon him over without even speaking to him. Itâs why he doesnât mind when you leave his cock untouched; he can cum just fine with the taste of you lingering on his face, lips, and tongue.Â
Using the tip of the long appendage, he plays with your clit, coaxing it out of the hood so he can suck hard at it. More cream drools onto his tongue. His eyes roll to the back of his head. Fingers digging deep into the fat of your thighs and threatening to bruise, he holds you in place and licks and sucks and licks again.Â
âHmm, youâre such a good girl when youâre getting what you wantâŚcome on then, you pretty little devil, take what you need. Bet youâre riding the air on your bed right now -hah- I wish I could see how pitiful you look.â
His fingers return inside, feeling the quivering of your pussy around the calloused digits. Youâre close. He doesnât need to hear you scream it out. He can simply tell from the way your clit is jutting into his mouth. A disappointment blooms in his chest â he so badly wishes he could hear you whine and whimper. The only consolation he has is that youâre not squirming out of his hold; youâre prey to his monstrous thirst.
SLUUUUUURPPP!
Heâs shameless in the sounds heâs pulling out of your pussy. In fact, heâs fuelled by the squelching of your greedy cunt. Itâs overwhelming him. Youâre overwhelminghim. All of his senses are filled with you, dragging him down into the depths of pleasurable mania.Â
âTastes so -hah- good. I love your pussy so much. Sheâs so nice to me, not like you. No, youâre so -fuck, give me more, baby- so mean.â
Mischievously, his other hands treads further down. A thumb skims the rim of your asshole. You hate it when he does that too. Well, you can't do anything about it. Slowly, he pushes in the thick digit, laughing to himself when he feels the tight hole tense around it. Oh, you're definitely biting down on your fist right now. You're thinking Choso Kamo is a dead man walking, or rather, a dead man wanking. If he had longer, if you aren't such a clever student who can solve a puzzle within seconds, then he'd shove his tongue in there too.
Another day perhaps.
Hips rutting against the mattress, he feels like he can follow you to the edge just like this but this âthe depravity, the power, the controlâ will likely never happen again and so he must make the most of it. When your orgasm erupts all over his face, soaking his cheeks and sheets, he desperately licks up as much as he can before he lays a kiss on your pulsing clit.Â
âFeel good? I wish I could see your face. You always look so pretty when you cum. Itâs okay though. You did such a good job. Well done.â
Choso positions himself between your legs. Youâve cum twice now but he hasnât yet. Now, itâs his turn. Pushing the thighs back and feeling resistance, he slides his cock through your soaked slit, catching your pulsing clit. âI know you donât like it when I -hah, youâre so -heh- wet- when I push your legs like this âcause you think it makes your tummy look silly but -ah fuck- b-but I love it. I love spreading you nice and wide for me like this. So, bear with me, âkay? Donât get mad. Iâll do your homework for another week, I promise.â
You canât hear him, he knows that. Yet, somehow, whispering comforting words to you brings him some peace of mind. He doesnât want you to feel scared or panic. Ever. But you deserve to feel even just a little bit of what you make him feel on a regular basis. A balance must be struck somewhere and somehow. Youâll understandâŚor not. Either way, he doesnât care anymore.
Slowly, he enters you. The stretch is as it always is: slow, maddeningly tight, and perfect. Youâre wrapping around his length with expert skill. Maybe now youâve caught on. Maybe now you know exactly whatâs happening. Thereâs no way you donât know itâs his cock thatâs filling you up. Only he can push all this cream out of you. Only he can reach your deepest parts, can stimulate your g-spot and grind against your clit as he bottoms out.Â
Heâs sure you can feel the piercings on his frenulum. You once said itâs your favourite part of him. Something about the coldness at first and then the hardness whilst it rubs at your walls.Â
If the feel of his cock stretching you to your limits doesnât clue you on, then his piercings will. Now, you must be absolutely out of your mind with both bliss and anger. The very best combination when it comes to you.
âOh, Merlin, youâre so tight. Fuck, I swear you do it on purpose.â Already his hips are stuttering, body and mind engulfed with the scent, feel and scalding burn of your doughy pussy. Everything about you is perfect, even the memory of you, which has manifested into a mindless sex doll and pales in comparison, is perfect. âYou always m-make me want to cum so quickly. Not fair.â
Thrusting with a furious pace, Choso curses and flicks his wrist. A vibrator manifests in his hand. Itâs your turn to be overstimulated, to cum again and again, and beg for mercy. He wonât hear you. Canât. And a good thing, too; If he could, heâd give in. He always does. Heâs pathetic. You make him pathetic.Â
Cruelly, he presses the toy down onto your clit.Â
âFuck! T-too t-tight. Ah shit.â The immediate clenching of your pussy almost made him cum. Needing to ground himself, he holds onto a bouncing breast, still pummelling his cock inside you. It feels good for him too. The vibrations rattle your bones, sending it straight to him. Choso usually hates it when you use a vibe on him but he doesnât right now. How could he when itâs making his abs flex and his vision blurry?Â
At least now youâre not here to mock him for the drool trailing down his chin. He gathers it up and spits it down on your clit, landing with an obscene SPLAT! before he mixes it in with your frothing juices using the toy.Â
The bed is banging against the wall. Thankfully heâs mastered that sound shielding spell; being a third year without having done that would make you a runt of the pack. No one will hear the salacious squelching of your pussy, his filthy moans and whimpers, or the foul slapping of skin against fake skin.Â
You tighten impossibly around him as you cum again. He fucks you through it. No one can resist the devious power of a vibrator, not even you. âBet youâre r-regretting all the times youâve tortured me with this, h-huh? Itâs not nice being on the receiving end, is it? Is it?â
When he doesnât receive an answer, he pouts and smacks your clit.Â
âItâs rude to ignore someone.âÂ
SMACK! SMACK! SMACK!Â
Each ruthless slap has your pussy pulsing hard, hugging his cock like it could offer reprieve. It only angers him more. His thrusting goes deeper and harder, wanting to punish you to the point of tears.Â
Then, he laughs. âHah, I forgot. You canât -ngh!- reply. Sorry, baby. I didnât mean to be so -hah hah fuck- mean to your pretty pussy. Let me a-apologise.â
There is no apology. Not really. Heâs ramming into your cunt at an unrelenting pace, balls smacking against your ass. At least now heâs let go of your legs, has stopped slapping your clit, and discarded the vibrator. Thatâs as kind as he can manage to be at this present moment. Heâs sure heâll pay for that too.Â
Nearing his end, delirious and manic, he suckles at your tits once more. He could spend eternity worshipping them too. Something about how soft and warm they are, and when he lays between them, itâs like theyâre welcoming him home. Choso licks up the sweat under your breasts. Itâs something he canât do with you even though heâs been wanting to for years. Now, he can live out his deepest fantasies, can fuck you how heâs how wanted to for a long time.Â
Youâre probably furious despite the euphoria channelling through your veins. Mentally, you must be cursing him out, planning all the hexes youâll attach to him. Whatever you have planned for him, heâll gladly take it. No matter how bad, how humiliating and stupid the punishments he receives are, he takes them with a smile â the fact that you spent time thinking about him at all makes him so happy.Â
Oh, he canât wait to see you.Â
âH-hurry up and find me already! I miss you -sooooo fucking t-tight- miss you so so much.â
Thereâs no longer any rhyme or reason to his thrusting. Heâs just chasing his high, fuelled by images of you. And when he cums, he swears he sees you appear in his room with a face one can only describe as livid.Â
âShit shit shit shit!â Chosoâs orgasm makes him whine. Itâs too much, too strong and too good. He slumps over your body, drooling all over himself and muttering confessions of adoration into your skin. Hot cum floods around his cock, pooling out. Itâll be a mess to clean up but all he can think about is how youâll feel it.Â
With a poof, the conjurement disappears. Heâs left humping his bed, riding out the remnants of his orgasm. Totally worth it.Â
âHad your fun, Kamo?â
He stills.Â
Youâre not a figment of his imagination. You really are in his room. Dressed in just a shirt â his shirt â you stand there, hands on your hips, hair a mess, tears on your cheeks, and wetness glistening down your thighs. Much prettier and better in every way than the doll, the sight of you in his room again urges his hips on. He winces at the raw and painful pleasure bolting through his body but he canât stop.
Weakly, he waves at you, too tired to even feel panicked. All his survivorâs instincts have fled at the sight of your wrath, apparently.Â
âDonât act cute. Youâre so dead, you pervy asshole.â Jumping on the bed, you rain down punches on his back, tickling him more than anything. He can feel the soaked warmth of your pussy on his back and itâs reawakening his softening cock. âIâm gonna rip off your stupid dick piercing, mark my words. Iâll tear you a new pair of balls, Choso.â
Pouting, he looks back and meets your eye. Your cunt pulses. âIs that before or after you ride me?â
Choso doesnât leave the room until the next day. He doesnât answer when his friends ask him about his limp, the frightening hickeys on his neck, and the self-satisfied grin on his face, which, of course, falls when he receives detention for not having a five thousand word essay to hand in.
He has no regrats.
#jjk x reader#jjk smut#jjk choso#jjk x you#jjk oneshot#choso kamo#choso x reader#choso smut#choso oneshot#choso fic#fem!reader
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ăུኧă THE OLDER THE BETTERRRR !

âËࡠtws : dilf mydei x fem!reader. nsfw/smut, creampie, clit play, clit slapping, dumbification, pet-names, dacryphilia, boob obsessed mydei, overstimulation, size kink, mentions of reader drooling, age gap, degradation, man handling, aftercare, slight fluff, multiple of rounds, body worship and praise kink.
âËࡠsynopsis : You shouldâve known better than to follow Mydei home. That deep voice, those sharp golden eyes, the smirk that spelled troubleâyou were his before he even laid a hand on you. Now, youâre beneath him, wrecked and trembling as he fucks you open, every slow thrust leaving you dazed and drooling, lost in his teasing words and the pleasure he drags out of you. (Modern au)
âËࡠnote : not proof read. header is a doujinshi and you can find it on X/Twitter from : sakuranotomoru !! also I wrote this half asleep.
You shouldâve known what you were getting into when you followed Mydei home.
The way he looked at you across the cafĂŠ table, the way his deep, smooth voice wrapped around his words like he already had you figured outâit was enough to make your mind hazy before he even laid a hand on you.
Now, you were here, stretched out on his bed, your body trembling beneath him. His hands, large and firm, roamed your skin with possessive ease, his golden eyes drinking in every inch of you.
âSuch a pretty thing,â he murmured, his voice thick with amusement and something darker. âDidnât think youâd be this sensitive. Just a little touch, and youâre already shaking.â
You whimpered, barely able to respond. Your thoughts had melted the moment Mydei had started touching you, his fingers expertly teasing your clit, slow and deliberate. His size alone overwhelmed you, his body covering yours completely as he loomed over you, his broad chest firm and warm against your skin.
âWhat's wrong, sweetheart?â he teased, dragging his fingers through your slick folds before pressing a thumb against your clit again, making you jolt. âCanât even answer me? Is it too much?â
You tried to speak, but all that came out was a pathetic whimper. Your lips were parted, a thin string of drool trailing down your chin as your mind turned into nothing but static under his touch. Mydei clicked his tongue.
âOh, sweetheart,â he chuckled, low and pleased, âYou really are dumb for me, huh?â
You didnât even care how embarrassing it wasâyou were dumb for him. Everything he did felt too good, too intense. His fingers were thicker than anyoneâs youâd ever had, stretching you open with ease, pressing against the deepest parts of you. And he wasnât even inside yet.
Your back arched as his thumb circled your clit again, this time with more pressure. The sensation sent a fresh wave of pleasure rolling through you, and you whined, grabbing at his wrist in desperation.
âToo muchââ you gasped, legs trembling.
âToo much?â Mydei repeated, tilting his head. "You're already making such a mess, and Iâve barely even started."
He pressed a soft kiss against your cheek, deceptively sweet, before his other hand came up to wipe away the tear that had slipped down your face. His thumb smeared the wetness across your cheek, his eyes dark with satisfaction.
âCrying already? Thought you could handle this,â he cooed mockingly.
Your response was a choked sob, half-pleasure, half-overwhelmed, as he pressed his fingers deeper inside you, curling just right. You felt lightheaded, pleasure building too fast, too sharp.
âMydeiââ you gasped, your body tightening around him.
âShhh,â he hushed, lips brushing against the shell of your ear. âLet me take care of you, sweetheart. You donât need to think. Just let me use this pretty little body, yeah?â
His words made your walls flutter around his fingers, and Mydei chuckled at how easy you were to read. âOh? You like that? Being my dumb little thing, just here to feel good?â
You nodded weakly, your mind blanking out completely as another wave of pleasure crashed over you. Your body trembled under him, mouth falling open in a silent cry.
âThatâs it,â Mydei murmured, his pace never slowing. âCum for me, sweetheart. Show me how much you need me.â
Your release hit you hard, your body jerking, breath stuttering as the pleasure washed over you. But Mydei didnât stop. His fingers kept moving, coaxing you through it, overstimulating you as you writhed beneath him.
âToo much,â you whimpered, eyes hazy with tears, legs twitching.
âI know, sweetheart,â he cooed, but there was no mercy in his voice. "But Iâm not done with you yet.â
And as he finally pulled his fingers out, only to replace them with the thick press of his cock, you realized he meant it.
Your body felt like it was floatingâweightless, boneless, completely wreckedâand Mydei had only just started.
His fingers left you empty, leaving a desperate ache behind. Your walls fluttered around nothing, your body still twitching from your last orgasm, and yet, when he pressed the thick head of his cock against your entrance, another needy whimper slipped from your lips.
âThatâs a good girl,â Mydei murmured, his voice smooth, approving. He rolled his hips forward just enough to tease you, letting you feel the impossible stretch that was about to come. âLook at you. So fucked out already, and I havenât even given you my cock yet.â
You could barely process his words, your brain foggy with pleasure, but the feeling of him pushing inside you was all-consuming. He was bigâof course he wasâand the stretch made your thighs tremble around his waist.
âOh, sweetheart,â he groaned, his voice raspier now, roughened by restraint. âYouâre squeezing me so tight. Youâre gonna let me fit, arenât you?â
You gasped, barely nodding, tears welling in your eyes again as he pushed deeper, filling you inch by inch. His cock stretched your pussy open so perfectly, so overwhelmingly, that for a moment, all you could do was clutch at his shoulders, nails digging into his skin.
âFeels good, doesnât it?â Mydei whispered, his lips grazing your temple. âYour pussyâs drooling all over me, sweetheart. You were made to take me.â
A broken moan escaped your lips. The feeling of him stretching you, of him owning the space inside you, made your mind slip further into the haze. You could feel yourself spiralingâthoughts slipping away, leaving nothing but the pleasure, nothing but him.
âThatâs it, sweetheart,â Mydei praised, rolling his hips forward again, sinking deeper. âGive in. Donât think, just feel.â
Your body obeyed him before your mind could even catch up. Every inch of you belonged to him nowâevery moan, every twitch, every tear that spilled down your cheek as he finally bottomed out inside you, his cock stretching you to your limit.
âThere we go,â he groaned, his hands gripping your hips, keeping you steady. âSo full now, huh? Look at you, stuffed so perfectly.â
Your head lolled to the side, drool slipping from the corner of your mouth, your body completely limp beneath him.
âFuck, youâre so cute like this,â Mydei murmured, his thumb reaching up to wipe the wetness from your chin, his expression dark with satisfaction. âAlready gone for me. Just a dumb little thing, huh?â
You whimpered, nodding weakly, and Mydei smirked.
âGood girl.â
And then he moved.
His first thrust was slow but deep, pulling almost all the way out before sliding back in, making you sob at the sheer intensity of it. His cock dragged along every sensitive spot inside you, the stretch making your walls clench down on him instinctively.
âTch,â he clicked his tongue, voice filled with amusement and something darkerâsomething possessive. âSqueezing me so tight, sweetheart. Itâs like your body doesnât want to let me go.â
Your only response was a choked sob, your walls fluttering around him as he dragged his cock out agonizingly slow before sinking back in, deeper this time, hitting a spot that made your vision blur.
âOh, thatâs the spot, isnât it?â Mydeiâs voice was velvety smooth, dripping with smug satisfaction. He kept his pace slow, teasing, letting you feel every inch of him as he stretched you open again and again. âYouâre already cock-drunk, and Iâve barely even fucked you yet.â
You whined, the pleasure too much and not enough at the same time. Your nails dug into his shoulders, as if holding onto him would keep you grounded, but Mydei wasnât letting you have control. Noâhe owned this moment, owned you, and he made sure you felt it.
âCâmon, sweetheart,â he coaxed, his thumb brushing away the fresh tears rolling down your flushed cheeks. âTell me how good it feels.â
âIâIââ Your words crumbled the second he snapped his hips forward, burying himself to the hilt, making you cry out. Your mind was blank, reduced to nothing but the feeling of himâhis cock splitting you open, his weight pressing you into the mattress, the rough drag of his breath as he restrained himself from outright ruining you.
âPoor thing,â Mydei cooed, his tone mockingly sweet as he pulled out almost completely before slamming back in, his hips meeting yours with a sharp smack. âToo dumb to even talk now?â
Your back arched, a garbled whimper spilling from your lips as pleasure overtook you completely. You felt the wet heat of drool pooling at the corner of your mouth, your body limp and pliant beneath him.
Mydeiâs golden eyes darkened as he took in the sight. âLook at you, sweetheart,â he murmured, voice thick with approval. His thumb swiped along your lower lip, collecting the slick before pushing it back into your mouth. âSuch a mess. So fucking cute when you fall apart for me.â
The sound you made was desperate, wrecked, and Mydei groaned, his control snapping. His pace turned rougher, deeper, hungrier, his hips grinding against yours with each thrust. You felt everythingâthe stretch, the fullness, the way his cock nudged that perfect spot inside you over and over again, sending waves of heat flooding your veins.
âMydeiâ!â His name broke from your lips in a sob as the coil in your stomach tightened, pleasure crashing over you so intensely that your whole body trembled.
âGood girl,â Mydei growled, feeling the way your walls clenched around him, your pussy pulsing as you came hard around his cock. But he didnât stop. If anything, he sped up.
The overstimulation was immediate, your body shuddering as his fingers found your clit again, circling it with firm, calculated strokes. âOne more, sweetheart. I know you can give me one more.â
You shook your head, gasping, tears spilling freely now. âTooâtoo muchââ
Mydei leaned down, his lips brushing against your ear as he purred, âYou can take it.â His voice was commanding, his pace relentless as he fucked you through the aftershocks, dragging out your pleasure until you were babbling, lost in it.
Your body tensed again, that unbearable heat coiling inside you too fast, too much, but Mydei didnât let up.
âThatâs it,â he groaned, his own voice strained, his grip tightening on your hips as his thrusts grew erratic. âCum for me again, sweetheart. Give it to me.â
You had no choice but to obey. Your second orgasm ripped through you, even stronger than the first, leaving you sobbing in pleasure as your whole body shook beneath him. Your vision blurred, stars dancing behind your eyes, and you barely registered the deep, guttural groan Mydei let out as he finally spilled inside you, his cock pulsing with each wave of his release.
The room was filled with the sounds of heavy breathing, the lingering echoes of pleasure still humming between you. Mydei kept himself buried inside you for a moment, his hands smoothing over your trembling body, grounding you as you came back down from the high.
âShhh,â he murmured, pressing a slow, lingering kiss to your forehead. âYou did so good for me, sweetheart.â
You barely had the energy to respond, your body spent, your mind hazy, but the warmth of Mydeiâs embrace was enough to lull you into something soft, something safe.
And as he pulled you close, tucking you against his chest, one thing was clearâthis wasnât the last time.
You didnât know how long you laid there, pressed against Mydeiâs chest, your body still humming with the aftershocks of pleasure. Your skin was warm, oversensitive, and yet you didnât want to move. His hands, broad and steady, traced slow, soothing circles along your back, grounding you in a way that made your heart ache.
He was still inside you, still sitting so perfectly against you, as if he belonged there. As if you belonged to him.
And maybe you did.
The thought sent a flicker of something nervous through your chest, something that made you hesitate before you spoke, voice hoarse from crying and moaning his name.
âYouâre too old for me, Mydei.â
His body went still, just for a second. Then he chuckled, the deep, velvety sound vibrating through your bones. âOh? Thatâs what you're thinking about now?â
You felt his smirk before you saw it, the way his lips brushed against your temple, the way his arms tightened around you, as if daring you to pull away.
âYes,â you huffed, though it was hard to sound serious when your voice was so weak, so utterly spent from everything heâd done to you. âYou are.â
Mydei tilted your chin up, making you meet his gaze. His golden eyes glowed in the dim light, sharp with amusement and something far more dangerous.
âSweetheart,â he murmured, his thumb stroking over your kiss-swollen lips, âIf Iâm too old for you, why are you still lying here, all warm and satisfied in my arms?â
You opened your mouth, but no answer cameânot when his fingers slid lower, trailing down your waist, over your hips, reminding you of just how easily he had wrecked you.
His smirk widened. âThatâs what I thought.â
You should argue. You should remind him that the age gap was there, undeniable.
But the way he looked at you, the way his hands owned your body, the way he had just pulled you apart and put you back together againâhow could you even deny it?
ââŚShut up,â you mumbled, feeling your face heat up.
Mydei chuckled again, pressing a slow, lingering kiss to your jaw, his lips trailing lower, teasing.
âMake me, sweetheart.â
And just like that, your exhaustion melted away.
Because you knew he wasnât done with you yet.
And you knewâdespite everythingâyou didnât want him to be.
You barely had a moment to recover before Mydei moved again, his lips trailing down your jaw, then lower, ghosting over your collarbone with lazy intent. His hands, large and warm, smoothed over your waist before sliding up, cupping your breasts with an appreciative hum.
âYou know,â he murmured, pressing an open-mouthed kiss to your throat, âIâve been holding back.â
You barely had time to process what he meant before he squeezed, his thumbs brushing over your sensitive nipples, making you whimper. Your whole body twitched, still sensitive from everything he had put you through, but that only seemed to amuse him.
âSo fucking perfect,â Mydei groaned, his fingers kneading your soft flesh as his lips followed, trailing wet, hungry kisses down to your chest. âCould touch you for hours and never get tired of this.â
You whined, trying to squirm away, but he just tightened his grip, pressing you further into the bed.
âOh, sweetheart,â he chuckled darkly, finally dragging his tongue over your nipple, flicking it before pulling it into his mouth. You gasped, back arching as the heat in your core sparked again, too fast, too soon.
âToo sensitive,â you whimpered, voice barely above a breath.
Mydei just smirked against your skin, pulling away with a wet pop before rolling his tongue over the swollen bud again, teasing. âYou can handle it,â he murmured. âYou were made to handle me.â
You shuddered as he switched to the other breast, giving it the same slow, thorough attention. His hands squeezed and kneaded, his mouth warm and wet, sucking bruises into the soft flesh, claiming you in a way that made your head spin.
âFuck,â he growled, pulling back just enough to admire his workâthe way your nipples were puffy and wet from his mouth, the way your chest rose and fell with every shaky breath. âSo pretty when youâre like this. All needy and soft for me.â
You bit your lip, trying not to let another whimper slip, but Mydei wasnât having it. His fingers pinched your nipples, rolling them between his fingers, making you gasp.
âThere she is,â he cooed, pleased. âMy pretty little thing.â
You felt lightheaded again, completely at his mercy, your body responding to his every touch like it belonged to him.
And judging by the way he looked at you, eyes dark with hunger as he leaned in to capture your lips in another deep, slow kissâ
You had a feeling he wasnât letting you go anytime soon.
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