#so I’M saying that same logic goes to everything on that list
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I hate to break it to you, but that Project 2025 list is very much legit in its entirety and to imply that it’s not simply because it seems outlandish is irresponsible. Project 2025 calls the FBI a “bloated, arrogant, increasingly lawless organization,” and wants to replace government employees with political appointees. There’s a lot of rhetoric about reviving traditional families and taking away financial and social support for single-parent families and redirect it towards “marriage education.” They explicitly talk about biblical marriage.
I understand where you’re coming from, but there’s really no need to downplay the severity of Project 2025. It really is just as bad as everyone says it is, and if anything on that list seems implausible to you, I suggest you fact check it yourself before spreading misinformation.
I didn’t spread misinformation. My questioning of the list doesn’t come from whether or not I think anything is going to happen, it stems from the disbelief that they’ll easily find a way to get rid of the FBI and Homeland Security. Like I said in my tags, there’s way too much to do in order to get stuff like that done anyhow.
#listen you guys have been saying ‘it’s bad’ since i was on this app almost a decade ago and the way i see it#it’s not gotten any better by voting blue#also it applies the same logic people use to defend biden not reinstating roe v wade#when people were on his neck his defenders came & pointed out that he can’t just do it whenever#so I’M saying that same logic goes to everything on that list#they can’t just sit him down on a chair twirl a magic wand and get all of that done#and whether you vote or not you’ve gotta keep back-up plans and safety measures regardless#politicians are liars - yes including the cop running for president now. not saying this is me against harris (i am i hope she also croaks)#but this is me saying everything cannot continuously be taken at face value without legitimate questioning esp when it comes to political#races. anyway idc hope they all die before they kill more of the global south#tag: asks
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All the Hard Things
Oscar Piastri x obsessive compulsive!Reader
Summary: sometimes OCD has a way of taking over your mind beyond all logic, but that’s okay because the love you and Oscar share goes far beyond all logic too
Warnings: depictions of obsessive compulsive disorder and inadvertent self-harm due to it
It happens like this: your cap is crooked, your tassel’s stuck in your hair, and your mum’s crying harder than you expected. You don’t even feel that proud. Just tired. Wrung out and blinking against the flash of someone else’s camera.
“Y/N!” A voice calls from behind a crowd of hugging classmates.
You turn, already smiling. Oscar is leaning against a brick column, arms folded, sunglasses pushed up on his head. He’s trying not to grin too wide, but he’s doing a shit job of it.
“There she is,” he says, and then, a beat later, “How’s my graduate?”
“I feel exactly the same,” you say, walking into him, arms wrapping around his middle. His hands slide up your back, and he presses a kiss into your temple.
“You smell like other people’s success,” he mutters into your hair. “It’s disgusting.”
You laugh. “You’re disgusting.”
Behind you, your dad’s saying something about parking validation, your brother’s holding a balloon that says “YOU DID IT!” and your mum’s trying to pull out her phone without dropping her purse.
Oscar pulls back. “You’re done.”
You nod. “I’m done.”
“Like … officially?”
“I walked across the stage. They pronounced my last name wrong. I think that’s the official benchmark.”
He tilts his head. “Y/L/N is not that hard.”
“They added a G in the middle.”
“That’s impressive.” He slides his hand into yours, lacing your fingers like it’s the most natural thing in the world. “I got you something.”
You blink. “I told you not to-”
“It’s not a gift,” he says. “It’s a … proposal.”
Your eyebrows shoot up. He catches it instantly.
“Not like that!” He says, laughing. “Jesus. No, I mean like, an offer. A plan. Sort of.” He reaches behind the bench near the column and pulls out a slim black binder.
You frown. “You made me a presentation?”
“I made you an itinerary.”
You stare at the front cover: in big, bold letters across a map background, it reads WORLD TOUR WITH MY FAVORITE PERSON.
Your stomach flips.
He says quickly, “You said once, like ages ago, that when you finished uni, you wanted to travel. No job yet. No responsibilities. Just a year off. And I thought … well, I’ve got all these races. All these cities. And it’s not really traveling if I’m just doing it without you. So … why not come with me?”
You flip open the binder. Inside, there are tabs. “First Half of the Season,” “Packing Lists,” “Important Travel Dates,” “Rainy Day Snacks”. And, in the back, a hand-drawn doodle of the two of you in front of a cartoon world map.
It’s stupid and sweet and meticulous and everything you love about him.
You swallow around a knot in your throat. “You made this.”
He shrugs like it’s nothing. “I also laminated the cover. For durability.”
“I-” You’re blinking too fast now. “I don’t even know what to say.”
Oscar’s voice softens. “Say yes.”
Your heart thuds.
“Yes,” you say, and it’s barely a whisper. “Yes, obviously yes.”
He lifts you, spins you in a way that has your brother making gagging noises behind you. But you don’t care. Your hands are in his hair, his arms around your waist, and the sun is catching his grin just right.
You’re in love. That terrifying, stable kind of love that doesn’t burn — it holds.
But when you step into the airport two days later, something shifts.
You know the moment it happens: the automatic doors slide open, the air conditioning hits your arms, and the white floor tiles stretch in front of you like a trap.
Oscar walks ahead, wheeling your shared suitcase. He turns to smile at you. “Gate 18. Let’s go.”
You nod, follow, but not before pausing. You have to.
Boarding pass in your hand. Tap it twice. Your fingers tremble. Tap. Tap.
You whisper his name under your breath. Quiet. Careful. “Oscar.” If you don’t say it, if you don’t get it exactly right-
“Y/N?”
You look up. He’s waiting near security, one eyebrow raised.
You step forward, but there’s a pattern now. Left tile, skip the crack, right tile. You count. Three steps forward. One step back.
You are not spiraling. You are fine. You’ve been fine for years.
Only … you weren’t in love then.
Back then, if you skipped the whisper, if you touched the door handle wrong, it was just … a mistake. A thought. A ghost.
But now there’s something to lose. Now, if you don’t do it just right, he might-
You touch the strap of your backpack twice. Tap. Tap. Breathe in. Hold for four seconds.
You’ve done this before. Since you were eleven. Since your brain decided it could protect people through ritual. Since the term magical thinking first entered your therapist’s vocabulary.
It’s been quieter these past few years. A murmur instead of a scream. Because routine was everything. Your days were built like puzzles — tightly shaped. No pieces missing. Study at 10, class at noon, walk back the same route. Sleep at 1:07 a.m. on the dot.
But now? Now the flight might be delayed. The hotel might smell wrong. Oscar might crash on a track in Italy because you didn’t count to eight before getting on the plane.
“Y/N,” he says again. “You good?”
You smile too fast. “Yeah. Sorry. Just spaced out.”
He takes your hand, squeezes it. “I mean, you’re allowed to be emotional. You graduated. You’re about to travel the world with your super-hot boyfriend. Big week.”
“Hmm. Debatable.”
“What, that it’s a big week?”
“That you’re super hot.”
“Rude.”
You exhale through your nose. Your pulse is still off.
Security is slow. You hate taking your shoes off. You hate the bins. You hate how close everyone stands. Your hands ache with the need to count something.
Oscar is pulling your backpack off your shoulders, placing it gently on the belt. “Don’t stress. We’ve got time.”
You nod. You don’t meet his eyes.
He’s so patient. Too patient.
He’s seen the worst of it. The meltdown in second year when you washed your hands until they bled. The days you didn’t leave your flat. The scripts you clung to like lifelines: tap twice, count backwards, check again, again, again.
He’s never flinched. But that was then. That was with structure. Now it’s airports and motorhomes and the whole world on wheels.
You touch your wrist once. Then again. Then again.
Oscar bumps his shoulder into yours. “You hungry?”
“Not really.”
“Wanna grab something anyway?”
“Sure.”
It’s a stupid dance, the pretending. The masking. It exhausts you before the flight even boards.
But then he says, “I put extra highlighters in the binder. You know. In case you want to color-code where we’ve been.”
You look at him.
He’s not teasing. He’s serious. Earnest.
You swallow. “Thank you.”
He shrugs, but his eyes are searching. “You’re sure you’re okay?”
You hesitate. Just one second too long.
He drops his voice. “Hey.”
You can’t speak. You can’t explain that if you say the wrong thing you might curse him.
He steps closer. “Y/N. You can tell me.”
You whisper, “It’s starting again.”
He doesn’t say what is? He knows. He just nods. Quiet.
“Okay,” he says. “So we take it slow.”
You nod, your throat thick.
“If the rituals come back, we deal with them. We make space. We adjust.”
“I don’t want to ruin it,” you say, and your voice cracks. “This was supposed to be-”
“You haven’t ruined anything.”
“But if I mess it up-”
“You won’t.”
You look away. “You don’t know that.”
“I know you.”
You cover your face with your hands. You want to hide in his chest. Climb into his suitcase. Dissolve into the binder he made you.
Instead, he steps forward and wraps his arms around you right there in the middle of the terminal.
“Tap my arm if you need to,” he says, mouth near your ear. “Count the tiles if you have to. Say my name twenty times. I don’t care. Just … do it with me. Don’t do it alone.”
You nod against him.
You feel him kiss your temple. “It’s us,” he says. “Just like always.”
And somehow, it makes it a little quieter in your head. Just enough to walk toward the gate.
***
The first thing you notice about Melbourne is the sky. It’s the wrong kind of blue. Too open. Too big. It glares down at you like it’s waiting for you to flinch.
And you do.
The second thing you notice is the noise — brash, bright, city noise. Not like back home, where even the chaos has a rhythm. Here, everything is fast and clashing and late.
You’re sweating in a hoodie because you weren’t expecting the heat, and you can’t remember if you packed your toothbrush, and Oscar’s already halfway to the garage.
“I’ll be back by five!” He calls over his shoulder, lugging a small bag that probably has six identical team polos and nothing else. “Don’t wait for me to eat!”
You nod, smile, wave, try to match his energy. But the hotel door clicks closed behind him and you just stand there. Still. In the middle of a perfectly lovely hotel suite with perfectly white sheets and a view of the track just three buildings over. You don’t move for a while.
When you finally do, it’s to unzip your suitcase for the fifth time and root through it like you didn’t already check it back at the airport.
You’re looking for the toothbrush. You know it’s not about the toothbrush. It’s about the fact that you don’t know. About the fact that maybe you packed it, maybe you didn’t, maybe it’s in the front pocket, or the side one, or maybe it fell out when security made you re-check your liquids and now it’s sitting on some conveyor belt collecting strangers’ breath and dust.
You touch your wrist three times. Check the bathroom drawer. Again. Again. Again.
By noon, you’ve unpacked and repacked the toiletries bag twice and lined all your socks up by color. You’ve opened the minibar, then closed it again without taking anything out. You’ve opened Instagram, then shut it. Twitter, then closed it.
Everything itches.
Oscar texts at 12:47.
Garage is chaos but I love you
Also tell me you remembered the sunscreen this time
You don’t answer. You pull the sunscreen out of the side pocket and line it up next to the tiny bottle of hand sanitizer. Then you sit down on the bathroom floor, back against the cool tile, and count the seconds between your breaths.
One. Two. Three.
You try not to picture the FP1 crash in Bahrain two years ago. The one where Oscar hit the wall and climbed out shaking his wrist.
You try not to imagine it happening again. Try not to think that if you forget to lock the door before 9 p.m., that if you don’t re-pack your bag in the right order, if you don’t wash your hands after touching anything metal-
You try not to think that he’ll die. But you do. You do.
The thought is sticky. Loud. It wraps around your ribs and tightens.
That night, he comes back wired and sweaty, a towel around his neck, still halfway through a story about someone’s brake sensor malfunctioning.
“And I swear to God, the look on his face — like, full terror — but then it just reset itself! Like boop, nothing happened. Which is either very reassuring or the worst thing ever — are you okay?”
You freeze in the middle of the room.
Your hand is on the lock. Click. Click. Clickclickclickclickclick-
Seven. Always seven.
“Hey,” he says, voice gentler now. “I didn’t mean to scare you.”
You nod. “No, you didn’t. It’s not — it’s nothing.”
His eyes flick to the door. Then to your hand.
He doesn’t say anything. Just walks over and kisses the top of your head. “Food?”
You try to smile. “Sure.”
You order room service because the idea of navigating a restaurant tonight is too much. You both eat cross-legged on the bed, watching reruns of some terrible home renovation show. He makes fun of the lighting choices and does impressions of the narrator.
You laugh at the right moments. You kiss him when he nudges your knee.
But after he falls asleep, the thoughts come back.
You get up. Check the lock again. Seven times. Seven always felt safe. Always felt symmetrical.
You wash your hands before getting back into bed. Then again. Then again. Until the soap makes your skin sting.
You press your palms to the towel. It’s soft. New. Not the one from earlier.
Your chest tightens. You turn on the bathroom light.
There’s a post-it on the mirror.
I love you more than the lock clicking 7 times.
Your legs give out a little. You sit on the edge of the tub and press your face to your knees.
You don’t cry. Not yet.
***
The next day is FP1.
Oscar’s in the car and you’re in the paddock with noise-cancelling headphones and a credential that still feels fake around your neck.
You wave at someone on the team. Try to remember their name.
Try to remember how to breathe.
The first time he comes out of the garage, your heart stops. Not figuratively. Not poetically. Actually.
Everything in your body goes cold, then hot. Your fingers twitch. Your legs feel heavy. You touch the metal railing in front of you.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
Someone else’s girlfriend is laughing nearby. Someone else’s sister is filming a TikTok.
You can’t move. Your skin feels like it’s crawling off your bones.
He flies past, and you don’t see the turn.
You don’t know if he made it. You check your phone. No texts. No alerts. You picture the worst anyway. A wall. A fire. A miscalculation.
You go to the bathroom and scrub your hands raw. You do it because the soap is thin and the water is too cold and you don’t trust any of it. You do it because maybe it will help. Maybe it will protect him.
When you come out, he’s already changed. Hair damp. Laughing with a mechanic.
You smile when he catches your eye. Walk toward him.
He kisses your cheek and asks, “Hungry?”
You lie. “Yeah.”
He holds your hand all the way back to the hotel.
That night, he doesn’t say anything when you check the door again. Or when you rearrange the toiletries by size. Or when you flick the light switch twice before turning it off.
But when you step into the bathroom to shower, the towel has been switched again. Softer. Thicker. No tag to scratch your wrists. And there’s another note.
I love you more than the thoughts that tell you I’ll crash.
You stand under the hot water for too long. Your shoulders shake, and the water hides the tears.
You don’t tell him.
When you come out, he’s already asleep, one arm stretched toward your side of the bed like he was waiting for you in his dreams. You climb in beside him and press your nose to his shoulder.
He stirs, just a little. Murmurs, “You okay?”
You whisper, “Yeah.”
He turns toward you, eyes barely open, and kisses the center of your forehead.
You’re not okay. But maybe you don’t have to be. Not alone.
***
The sun in Bahrain hits different.
It’s not just the heat — it’s the glare, the dry air, the way the sky never seems to turn fully blue. The way the desert hums under everything, invisible and endless.
Oscar tells you it’s one of his favorite places to race. You nod, pretend to agree, then ask if he remembered to pack his cooling vest. He didn’t. You repacked it for him two nights ago. It's already folded neatly between his gloves and his race boots in the side pouch of his duffel.
But you don't tell him that. You don’t say much at all anymore.
Now you sit on the floor of the hotel suite, cross-legged, a pile of his things laid out beside you: team gear, toiletries, gum, charger, sunglasses, protein bars, custom earplugs.
You fold everything the same way. Three creases, not two. Socks rolled, not folded. Charger coiled clockwise, not counter. And the gum has to go on top. Always the gum.
You’ve unpacked and re-packed this bag twice already. You’re halfway through a third round when the door opens behind you.
You don’t look up.
Not until he says, gently, “Didn’t we already pack that?”
You pause. The toothpaste is in your hand, and your chest starts to tighten. You forgot if you’d put it back in yet.
You can’t answer until you do. So you place the toothpaste in its slot, adjust the zipper mesh around it, and zip it shut — smoothly, not too fast, not too slow.
Only then do you look up. Oscar’s standing by the door. He hasn’t moved.
He’s wearing the black McLaren polo you like — the one that clings to his arms in a way that makes your brain short-circuit. His hat’s turned backwards. He looks like he should be holding a skateboard, not stepping into a hotel room thick with compulsions.
He drops his keys on the table. Steps forward.
“Hey,” he says, kneeling beside you. “Are you okay?”
Your throat tightens. You nod. Too quickly.
His eyes search yours, quiet. Not accusing. Just watching.
You say, “I’m just double-checking this stuff. Making sure everything’s where it should be.”
“You mean my stuff.”
You nod again. “Right. Yours.”
He doesn’t argue. He doesn’t make a joke.
Instead, he touches your knee, softly. You hate that it makes you tear up.
You blink fast, pretending to scratch your face. “I’m just making sure.”
“I know.”
“I didn’t want to forget anything.”
“I know.”
A silence falls between you. It’s not heavy. Not entirely.
He kisses your forehead. Not dramatically. Just once, warm and real.
Then he says, “Do you want help?”
Your laugh is brittle. “You’d pack the gum upside down.”
“That’s fair.”
You zip the bag closed again. Touch the zipper head three times. Oscar notices but doesn’t comment. He sits with you for a few minutes like that — shoulder to shoulder on the hotel floor, watching you breathe.
You don’t tell him about the prayer.
The one you whisper in your head every time he gets into the car. The one with no origin, no clear logic — just syllables. A rhythm. A bargain.
It’s not from any religion. It’s not even a complete sentence. Just words. A shape. One you’ve repeated over and over so many times it doesn’t sound like anything anymore.
Keep him safe, keep him whole, turn the wheels, pay the toll.
You say it twelve times. Every time. If you lose count, you start over.
Even during FP1. Even when the crowd cheers and music blares and your phone buzzes in your back pocket. Even when someone talks to you mid-mantra and you forget if you were on the seventh or eighth round, and suddenly you can’t breathe until you start from the top again.
You don’t tell anyone that, either.
It started three years ago. But maybe it really started back at school.
***
You were fifteen when you told him.
It was late. You were supposed to be in your dorm.
You were in the library, sitting under the long window seat in the back corner, knees pulled to your chest, hoodie sleeves covering your hands. The kind of night that felt infinite. The kind where your chest buzzed with thoughts you couldn’t get out of your head.
He found you by accident. Probably looking for somewhere quiet to FaceTime his mum.
He said, “Did you fall asleep here or are you just hiding from your roommate again?”
You didn’t answer. Couldn’t.
He crouched down, noticed your red hands. “Did you burn yourself?”
You shook your head. “Washed them.”
His brow furrowed. “With bleach?”
“Soap,” you said. “Just soap. Too much, maybe.”
He sat beside you without asking. Without flinching. Just crossed his legs and leaned his back against the bookshelf.
“I check the windows,” you said. “At night. Three times each. Left to right. Then the desk drawers. Then the closet.”
He didn’t speak. Just waited.
“If I don’t,” you said, “I feel like something terrible will happen. Like my brother will die in his sleep. Or my mum will get hit by a car.”
He was silent for a beat. “Is that why you were late to maths yesterday?”
You turned, startled.
He shrugged. “You checked the doors, didn’t you?”
“Three times.”
He nodded. “Yeah. I noticed.”
You blinked.
“You think I don’t notice stuff,” he said. “But I do. Especially about you.”
You didn’t say anything. The library was too quiet.
Then he said, “Okay, so what do we do?”
“What?”
“To keep your family safe. What’s the plan? You check the drawers, I’ll do the closet.”
And then he smiled. Crooked. Boyish.
You hated how much you wanted to cry.
But you laughed instead. “You would make a terrible closet checker.”
“I’m excellent. Thorough. Award-winning.”
“You’d leave the hangers crooked.”
He paused. “That feels like a personal attack.”
You looked at him.
He looked back.
“Okay,” he said softly. “We’ll straighten the hangers.”
***
Back in Bahrain, he leaves you alone with the travel bag.
You don’t repack it a fourth time. But you think about it. You feel guilty for lying to him. Even now. Even when you know it’s not really a lie — it’s protection. It’s control.
It’s survival.
That night, Oscar’s busy with press. You curl up on the couch with a throw blanket and his credential on the table beside you. It has his face on it. His smile.
You say the prayer once under your breath. Just once.
Keep him safe, keep him whole, turn the wheels, pay the toll.
You feel a little better. Until the guilt creeps back in. Until the soap on your skin starts to sting again.
Later, when he comes back, you’re brushing your teeth.
He wraps his arms around you from behind, rests his chin on your shoulder.
“You taste like spearmint and fear,” you say through the foam.
He snorts. “Only because I saw the tyre wear report.”
He presses a kiss to your jaw. You close your eyes.
“Did you eat?” He asks.
“Sort of.”
“What does that mean?”
“Popcorn,” you mumble. “And two Oreos.”
He makes a face in the mirror. “Dinner of champions.”
You lean into him. “I didn’t feel like going out.”
“That’s okay.”
“I just wanted everything quiet.”
“That’s okay, too.”
You’re quiet a long time.
Then you say, “Do you ever feel like … if you do things wrong, someone you love might get hurt?”
He meets your gaze in the mirror. “Like … jinx it?”
You nod.
“All the time,” he says softly. “Every time I get in the car.”
You swallow.
“I used to have this ritual,” he says, moving your hair back from your shoulder. “When I first started karting. I’d knock my helmet twice before putting it on. Thought if I didn’t, I’d spin out. I was eight. Super serious stuff.”
You smile, faintly.
“I still do it,” he admits. “Out of habit.”
“But if you forget-”
“I don’t die,” he says. “I just feel a bit weird.”
You stare at the sink.
“I know it’s different,” he adds. “But I’m just saying … rituals don’t make you broken. They make you human.”
You don’t answer.
But when you fall asleep that night, you whisper the words in your head again.
Keep him safe, keep him whole …
You lose count at ten. You start over.
Oscar stirs beside you and pulls you closer without waking.
You start over. And over. And over again.
Until sleep finally wins.
And for the first time in days, you don’t dream of fire.
***
You wake up late the next Saturday.
The hotel curtains don’t block the light the way they should, and your eyes snap open to the wrong kind of brightness, too early to be actual morning, too late to start over.
You sit up too fast. Reach for the watch on the nightstand.
It’s 9:07.
Panic squeezes your ribs. You were supposed to tap the face of the watch five times before 9:00. Five times. Right index finger only. In rhythm.
The rules are stupid. You know that. That’s the worst part — you know.
But it’s like knowing you’re not supposed to need oxygen. Doesn’t make breathing optional.
You tap it anyway. One, two, three, four, five. Then again. Then again.
Oscar stirs beside you, rubbing his eyes.
“Hey,” he says groggily. “Alarm didn’t go off?”
“No,” you whisper.
“You okay?”
You nod. “Yeah. I just … overslept.”
“You never oversleep.”
You manage a hollow smile. “First time for everything.”
***
Jeddah’s paddock buzzes with the usual pre-race chaos — carts clattering across asphalt, reporters huddled around coffee, engineers shouting over radio chatter.
Oscar kisses your temple before FP3. “Back soon. Don’t worry.”
You nod. Smile again. Fake it. You’re getting good at that.
As he disappears into the garage, you whisper it.
Keep him safe, keep him whole, turn the wheels, pay the toll.
Twelve times.
You lose count on the seventh. Someone brushes past you with a headset, jostling your shoulder. You whisper faster. Eyes closed.
Start again.
Once, twice, three times — you say the whole sequence over and over until your throat’s dry and your heart pounds.
You should have tapped the watch. You shouldn’t have overslept. You shouldn’t have broken the rhythm.
You glance up at the screen just in time to see the rear of Oscar’s car slide into the wall.
Not hard. Not catastrophic.
But jarring.
The commentators are already talking: “Oh, and that’s a little moment for Piastri — looks like a minor rear contact with the barriers coming out of Turn 13. Shouldn’t be anything major.”
He’s already out of the car. Helmet off. Shrugging. Fine.
He’s fine.
But your legs stop working. You sit on the concrete behind the pit wall and start to cry. Big, full-body sobs. Like your chest is folding in on itself.
You don’t care who sees. You cover your face and shake and shake and shake.
Someone says your name, distant and worried. A team liaison maybe. A reporter who’s seen too much. An assistant trying to help.
You can’t answer.
He’s okay. But it’s not okay.
Because it’s your fault.
You’re still crying when Oscar finds you, fifteen minutes later, hair wet with sweat, gloves still in his hands.
He crouches fast. “Hey, hey, what happened?”
You grab his arm.
“I forgot the numbers,” you choke out. “I didn’t — this morning — I didn’t do it right. The watch. I was late. I didn’t tap it right. I broke the pattern. I knew something would happen-”
“Stop. Stop. No — hey. Hey.” He cups your face with both hands. “Look at me.”
You don’t.
He doesn’t let go. Just presses his forehead to yours.
“I’m fine,” he says. “I’m here. I walked away. You see me? Still annoying. Still sweaty. Still very much alive.”
“I didn’t protect you-”
“Love.” His voice cracks. “That’s not your job.”
You break. Really break.
You bury your face in his chest and cry like you’re thirteen again and trapped inside your own mind, like you’re five and lining up your stuffed animals in perfect color order so your mum won’t crash on the drive home, like you’re you — messy and cracked and terrified.
And he holds you. Not like you’re fragile. Like you’re real.
The car isn’t totaled. The garage can fix it. He’s fine. You are not.
***
Back at the hotel, the lights are dim. He’s quiet. So are you.
He doesn’t say anything when you pick up your water glass, then put it down, then pick it up again just to hear the sound.
You sit on the bed with your legs folded under you. He’s beside you, back against the headboard, iPad in his lap.
When he speaks, it’s soft. Careful.
“Do you want me to read?”
You blink. “Read?”
“Out loud. Something gentle. You don’t have to talk.”
Your throat is raw. But you nod.
He opens a book. You don’t see the title. It doesn’t matter.
He reads something about quiet rivers. A woman feeding birds by a window. A person learning to sleep again.
His voice is low, even. Not like a performance. Like a promise.
You stare at the blanket. Listen.
You don't speak for a long time.
Then you say, “I feel insane.”
He doesn’t look up from the page. “You’re not.”
“I knew something would happen.”
“You didn’t.”
“But it did.”
He finally turns to you. “And if I’d stubbed my toe getting out of the car? Would that have been your fault too?”
You wince.
“Is every breath I take your responsibility now?”
“No. I just … I just needed something to matter. I needed something to control.”
He closes the book.
Silence swells between you.
Then he says, “You’re not a burden.”
You flinch. “I didn’t say I was.”
“I know. But I see it in your face when you fold my shirts six times. When you don’t eat until the toothpaste is facing the right way. When you cry over a crash that wasn’t your fault.”
You wrap your arms around your knees. “I hate that you have to see it.”
“I want to see it.”
“Why?”
“Because it’s part of you. And I love all of you.”
You swallow hard.
He leans closer. “You’re not a burden,” he repeats. “You’re a person. My person.”
You look down. The tears come again, slower this time. Like they’ve made peace with gravity.
“You’re not going to fix me,” you say quietly.
“I’m not trying to.”
“You can’t love it out of me.”
“I wouldn’t try that either.”
You finally look at him.
He smiles, small. Crooked. Devastating.
“I’m just here,” he says. “Reading badly-written novels and trying not to leave my gum upside-down in the bag.”
You laugh, just once. Sharp and surprised.
Then you lean your head against his shoulder.
“I want to get better,” you say.
“I know.”
“But I don’t know how.”
“That’s okay.”
He presses his mouth to the top of your head. “We’ll figure it out.”
You don’t respond. Not right away.
You just breathe.
It’s not better. Not yet. But for the first time in weeks, it’s not getting worse.
And maybe that’s enough. Maybe that’s where healing starts.
***
You start therapy on a Monday.
It’s raining in Tokyo — some poetic, cinematic drizzle that clings to the windows and makes the skyline blur into watercolor.
Oscar has back-to-back media obligations, which means he won’t be in the room.
You’re glad. You’re scared.
You’re both.
Your laptop is perched on the edge of the hotel desk, camera propped just above the little glass dish of paperclips you keep moving but can’t seem to throw away. Behind you, the bed is unmade. Oscar’s hoodie is draped over the chair. It still smells like him — clean and sun-warmed, like laundry detergent and the inside of a helmet bag.
You touch the sleeve once, for courage.
Then you click “Join Meeting.”
The screen flickers.
And there she is.
“Hi, sweetheart.”
Her voice hasn’t changed.
You swallow. “Hi.”
She looks older — maybe because she’s in a sweater and not a blazer, maybe because you are. But her eyes are the same: kind, clear, and sharp enough to see you even when you’re trying to disappear.
“Time difference okay for you?” She asks.
You nod. “Yeah. It’s weird being this many hours ahead.”
She smiles gently. “And how’s traveling?”
You hesitate.
“Hard,” you admit.
Then you take a breath. “I thought it would feel free. Like finally being with him full-time would make all the bad stuff … smaller.”
“And does it?”
“No.”
Her voice stays soft. “Does it make it louder?”
“Sometimes,” you say. “Sometimes it makes it everything.”
She nods. She doesn’t write anything down. She’s never needed to.
You stare at your hands.
“I have this thing,” you say, “where I think if I don’t do the right ritual, someone I love will die.”
She nods again. “That’s a pretty common fear.”
“But it doesn’t feel common. It feels — magic.”
“Magical thinking,” she offers gently.
“Yeah,” you say. “But it’s not like fairies and spells. It’s rules. Like … invisible math. And if I get the equation wrong …”
You trail off. Your throat burns.
“If I get it wrong,” you whisper, “he might not come back.”
***
In the next room, Oscar sits with headphones on, pretending to scroll.
He’s not eavesdropping. Not exactly.
But sometimes the walls in these hotels are thin, and her voice is just soft enough that he can’t make out the words — but yours carries.
Especially when it cracks.
He hears your pacing steps. The way the chair squeaks. The moment you stop and go still.
He doesn't move.
He just waits.
***
You tell her about the watch.
About the crash.
About the way your stomach hasn’t fully unclenched since Bahrain.
“I can’t tell what’s real anymore,” you say.
“What do you mean?”
“Like — okay. Oscar’s talented. Smart. He’s got a great team. All that. I know that.”
“Right.”
“But I also know he could die in the car.”
She nods slowly. “Both things can be true.”
“I don’t want to believe that I can control it. That a prayer or a tap or a word whispered at the right second could protect him.”
“But?”
“But I do. I believe it with everything in me.”
“And how long have you felt that?”
You pause. “Since I was a kid.”
“Do you remember when it started?”
“After the fire,” you say without thinking.
You blink, surprised you even said it out loud.
She doesn't flinch.
You go on, slowly. “We were on holiday in Cornwall. Someone left a candle burning in the hallway. No one got hurt. But after that, I started checking everything. Light switches. Stoves. Then it wasn’t just candles. It was — anything. If I left the bathroom light on, maybe Mum would crash her car. If I didn’t count the steps right, maybe my brother would fall off his bike.”
She nods. “And over time?”
“I stopped trusting anything random. Everything had to have meaning. Rules. Cause and effect.”
“And now?”
You rub your face.
“I know the crash wasn’t my fault,” you say. “But knowing doesn’t help. I still feel like I almost killed him.”
Her voice is steady. “That’s the trick of OCD. It doesn’t need logic. It just needs fear.”
You laugh, quiet and exhausted. “I’m so tired of being scared.”
***
Oscar waits until the door creaks open.
You step into the room with your arms wrapped around yourself, and he doesn't push. Doesn't ask.
He just smiles.
“Hey,” he says. “I ordered tea.”
You smile back. It doesn’t quite reach your eyes.
He nods to the tray on the table. “Chamomile. With honey. And one of those weird sugar cubes shaped like fish.”
“Fancy.”
“Only the best for you.”
You pick up the mug. Warm. Comforting. Just the right weight in your hand.
“Thanks,” you say softly.
He leans against the windowsill, watching the city blur behind glass.
“Do you want to talk about it?” He asks.
You shake your head. “Not yet.”
He nods. “Okay.”
Then he adds, “How are you feeling?”
That part makes your throat catch.
Not what did you say or what did she tell you to do or when will you be fixed.
Just: how are you feeling.
You sit on the edge of the bed. “Better, I think. Lighter.”
He smiles, small. “Good.”
You take a sip of tea.
He wanders to the TV. “Want to put something on? Something stupid?”
You glance up. “How stupid?”
“Rom-com level stupid.”
You raise an eyebrow. “Meg Ryan stupid?”
He gasps. “Ma’am, I will defend Meg Ryan with my life.”
“You’ve seen You’ve Got Mail like five times.”
“I was emotionally held hostage!”
You laugh into your mug.
He queues it up anyway.
You lie back on the bed, head resting just below the crook of his shoulder. He drapes an arm around you like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
Your hand finds his.
And for the first time in days, it doesn’t tremble.
The movie starts. Meg Ryan opens her laptop and narrates an email like it’s a Shakespearean sonnet. Tom Hanks appears with a golden retriever. The early 2000s flood the screen in pixelated nostalgia.
Oscar grins at the dumbest parts.
You watch him more than the movie.
Halfway through, he turns to you. “You good?”
You nod.
“You sure?”
You squeeze his hand. “Yeah.”
He kisses your temple and doesn’t say anything else.
And in the warmth of the blanket, in the quiet of the city that doesn’t know your name, in the tea mug cooling on the table — you realize you don’t feel like a walking emergency.
Not right now.
Right now, you just feel held.
***
Monaco smells like salt and champagne and pressure.
You’ve been here three days, and it’s already too much. Everything glints. Everything shines. Even the people — white linen, Cartier sunglasses, voices pitched to carry. You haven’t seen a single stain or out-of-place thread. It’s like the whole city got polished for camera.
Oscar laughs at the absurdity of it, but even he is sharper here. Quieter. Hungrier.
You don’t mind that. It’s part of the deal.
You love that about him — that locked-in look in his eyes when he’s half-listening, half-chasing the apex in his head.
But today, it’s harder to watch.
He qualifies P2.
You watch from the hospitality deck, hands wrapped tight around a sweating bottle of water, trying to look normal. Trying to stay still.
There’s celebration, but subdued — the kind that says good job, now finish it tomorrow.
Oscar waves once toward the team’s box. Gives you a small grin. You smile back. You hope it looks real.
“You alright?” One of the junior engineers asks, nudging you with a gentle elbow. He’s no older than twenty. Looks like he still does math homework on Sunday nights.
“Yeah,” you say, clearing your throat. “I’m good.”
You’re not.
But it’s Monaco.
And you’ve got it under control.
***
Sunday starts slow. Oscar leaves early for prep. You kiss his cheek three times — once at the door, once at the elevator, once at the paddock entrance.
Just in case.
The numbers are tight today. No room for error.
You eat half a croissant, then stop. The knife next to your plate isn’t aligned.
You move it. Then move it back. Then again.
“Fuck,” you mutter.
Then you put the knife down and walk away.
It’s not about the knife. It’s never about the knife.
***
You think you’ll be okay until Lap 47.
He’s still holding P2. Holding it well. It’s a processional race, like always, but still — one tiny mistake in Monaco and it's done. He brushes the wall near Tabac once and your throat clamps shut. But he saves it. He always saves it.
Until the chicane.
The car twitches. A flicker — half a second of skid, of oversteer, of what if-
He catches it.
But your brain doesn’t.
You start counting before you even know you’re doing it.
Twelve, twenty-four, thirty-six.
By the time he crosses the line — P2, perfect, unhurt — your nails have left crescent moons in your palm.
You try to clap. You try to smile.
You can’t feel your hands.
You can’t feel your face.
***
You don’t remember leaving the viewing area.
Somehow you’re in the hospitality tent — empty now, except for the cleanup crew and a tray of untouched macarons that looks radioactive in the light.
You sit. Then stand. Then sit again.
Your chest feels like it’s locked in a vice.
Forty-eight, ninety-six, one hundred forty-four.
The pattern slips.
You start over.
Twelve, twenty-four, thirty-six-
“Hey.”
A voice. Close. Familiar.
Kim.
Oscar’s performance coach.
He’s crouching a little, not touching you. His voice stays calm, neutral.
“You with me?”
You nod. Then shake your head.
He sits on the ground next to you. “Alright. We don’t have to talk. Just breathe.”
“I’m trying,” you rasp. “I-I can’t-”
“You don’t have to get it right,” he says. “You just have to stay.”
You squeeze your eyes shut. “It’s my fault. I didn’t — I started too late — if I’d just counted faster-”
“Hey.”
He looks you in the eye.
“I’ve worked with athletes for twelve years. I’ve seen crashes. Injuries. Worse.”
He keeps his voice even. Gentle. Like he’s talking to someone learning how to walk again.
“You didn’t cause that twitch at the chicane. Oscar just got a little loose. It happens.”
Your breath is coming too fast. Your ears ring.
“I can’t stop counting,” you say. “It feels like if I stop — he’ll — he’ll-”
He doesn’t let you finish.
“C’mon.”
He stands slowly. Offers you a hand.
You hesitate.
Then take it.
***
He brings you behind the McLaren motorhome, around the side where the generators hum and no one bothers to look.
Oscar is already there.
Still in his suit, helmet tucked under one arm, hair damp with sweat.
He doesn’t speak.
He just kneels down on the pavement beside you and sits.
Right there. In the dirt. In Monaco.
You lower yourself next to him, legs crossed, breathing shallow.
He sets his helmet down. Rubs your back in slow circles.
Not trying to fix. Just being here.
Minutes pass. Maybe ten. Maybe thirty.
You lose track.
But eventually your breath evens.
Your hands stop shaking.
You lean against him. He adjusts to fit you in like muscle memory.
“Better?” He murmurs.
You nod. Barely.
He presses a kiss into your temple.
“I left the media pen,” he says, like it’s a secret.
You blink. “You didn’t have to-”
“Yes, I did.”
He turns to look at you, eyes clear, steady.
“You’re not broken,” he says softly. “You’re just trying too hard to keep me safe.”
You bite your lip.
“Isn’t that a good thing?” You ask.
“It is.”
He tucks a strand of hair behind your ear. “But not at the cost of you.”
You let out a long breath. “I don’t want to ruin this.”
“You’re not.”
“I just … I want it to be perfect.”
Oscar smiles faintly. “It is. It’s messy and weird and real and ours. That’s perfect enough.”
You lean your head on his shoulder.
“Kim found me,” you say.
“He told me. He said you were trying to multiply by twelve.”
You laugh, wetly. “It felt important.”
“It’s not.”
“I know.”
You sit in silence for a moment longer.
“Are people mad?” You ask. “That you left?”
Oscar shrugs. “Probably.”
“Are you mad?”
He turns to you fully. “I’ve known you for eight years. I watched you line up your pencils at boarding school until your hands hurt. I listened to you explain how you couldn’t eat dinner until you’d washed your hands exactly four times. I fell in love with that girl.”
You blink at him. “Why?”
“Because she never gave up. Even when her brain told her the world would burn if she blinked wrong.”
He pauses. Takes your hand.
“And because she saw me. Not the driver. Just me.”
You stare at your joined fingers.
“Okay,” you whisper.
He kisses your knuckles. “Okay.”
***
Later, in the hotel room, he brings you sushi in a to-go box and lets you rearrange the soy sauce packets until it feels right.
You eat sitting cross-legged on the floor.
No counting.
Not tonight.
Not here.
***
Rain slicks the track like oil.
The kind of cold, wet weekend where nothing dries, not even your bones. Where you feel damp under your hoodie, in your socks, in your lungs. It’s the kind of weather that makes you want to retreat somewhere soft and warm, and not come out until August.
But you’re in the paddock.
And Silverstone doesn’t care how cold your fingers are.
The air smells like diesel and coffee and nerves. Fans press up against barriers in plastic ponchos, teeth chattering, makeup smudging, still screaming for photos.
Oscar waves as he walks past. You trail a few paces behind him, hood up, hands shoved deep into your coat pockets.
He’s already soaked. Hair curling at the edges. The drops slick down his race suit like they belong there.
You pretend you're fine.
You smile when Lando jokes about the weather.
You sip the tea someone offers in hospitality.
You kiss Oscar goodbye before FP1 and tell him to drive safe.
But your fingertips ache from being scrubbed raw under the bathroom faucet, and your left wrist still has a faint red mark from the band of your watch — tightened, loosened, tightened again until the numbers added up to eight.
***
You wash your hands again after FP1.
Twice after FP2.
Four times before dinner.
You pack and repack your overnight bag even though you're not going anywhere. Move your toothbrush from one pocket to another. Align the zippers. Count them.
Oscar notices.
He doesn’t say anything, not at first.
But you feel it — the way his eyes stay on you a second longer, the way he sets down the takeaway containers a little more gently, the way he exhales when he thinks you won’t hear.
You sit on the edge of the bed that night, brushing your hair with a plastic comb you almost threw away this morning. The bristles aren't even, but the sound is soft and repetitive and helps you think.
Oscar’s on the other side of the room, scrolling through weather updates.
“I don’t think quali’s even gonna happen tomorrow,” he mutters. “They’re saying 80% chance of thunderstorms.”
You hum a reply.
Keep brushing.
He sets down his phone. “You okay?”
“Yeah.”
“You sure?”
You force a smile. “Just tired.”
But your voice is off. You know it. He knows it.
He gets up slowly, walks over, and crouches in front of you.
You pause the brush.
“I can tell when you’re not okay,” he says softly.
You look away. “I said I’m fine.”
He doesn’t move.
You hate how kind his face is.
“Please don’t hide from me,” he says. “I want all of it. Even the hard.”
The comb slips from your hand. It clatters on the floor.
You don't reach for it.
“What if all I am is the hard?” You whisper.
He swallows. “You’re not.”
“You don’t know what it’s like.”
Your voice comes out sharper than you mean. But now it’s out, and you can’t stop.
“You don’t know how exhausting it is to be terrified all the time,” you say. “To feel like if you look the wrong way, or touch the wrong thing, or think the wrong thought, someone dies.”
“I know it’s not easy-”
“No, you don’t.” You stand. “You get in that car and everyone’s scared for you. But you’re ready. You choose it. I don’t choose this. I don’t want this.”
“I didn’t say you did-”
“I feel insane half the time,” you snap. “And the other half I’m pretending I’m fine so I don’t drag you down with me.”
“You’re not dragging me-”
“Yes, I am!”
The words echo. Not loud, but final.
You stand there, hands shaking, breath shallow, eyes burning.
Oscar doesn’t yell back. He just looks at you.
“I never said you had to protect me,” he says quietly. “I never asked you to.”
The silence between you stretches.
“I know I can’t understand exactly what it feels like,” he says. “But that doesn’t mean I don’t want to help.”
You wrap your arms around yourself. “Helping me means watching me fall apart.”
“No,” he says. “Helping you means holding your hand while you put yourself back together.”
You don’t say anything. You walk into the bathroom and close the door.
***
You don’t cry, not really.
But you stand under the hot water until it runs cold, and when you crawl into bed later, you don’t say a word.
Oscar's already under the covers. Facing the other way.
You lie on your back, staring at the ceiling, counting the shadows.
Eight. Sixteen. Twenty-four.
The numbers don’t fix anything. They don’t stop the ache in your chest. They don’t bring him closer.
You close your eyes and try to sleep.
***
At some point in the early hours, you feel the mattress shift.
He’s turned toward you now. Closer.
You feel his hand brush yours under the duvet.
“I don’t need you to protect me,” he whispers.
His voice is hoarse. Sleep-rough.
“I just need you to be with me.”
You don’t say anything. But you curl toward him, just a little. And he wraps his arm around you, just enough.
***
The next morning, the rain’s still coming down sideways.
Oscar has meetings.
You have a session on Zoom with your therapist.
You sit on the floor of the hotel closet — because it’s quiet, and dark, and small enough to feel safe — and talk about shame.
Not about fear. You’ve done fear. This one’s newer. This one's sharper.
“I hate that I still struggle with this,” you admit. “I hate that I can’t just … fix it.”
Your therapist nods slowly. “What would being fixed look like?”
You blink. “I don’t know. Quiet?”
“Do you think Oscar wants you quiet?”
“I think he wants me better.”
“Has he said that?”
You don’t answer. You don’t have to.
***
That night, you leave a note on his pillow.
It’s on the back of a receipt from a sushi place in London.
You write:
I don’t know how to be better yet.
But I want to be.
And I want to do that with you.
If you’ll still have me.
When you come out of the bathroom, Oscar’s holding the note.
He doesn’t say anything. Just opens the covers and waits.
You slide in beside him. He doesn’t let go of your hand once.
***
ERP sounds gentle.
Exposure and Response Prevention.
Like a soft wind brushing against a windowpane.
But it’s not gentle. It’s brutal.
It’s standing in the middle of a war zone and refusing to put your armor on.
It’s choosing not to do the thing that makes your chest stop clenching … on purpose.
It’s sitting still while your mind screams.
And today, your therapist wants you to watch Oscar leave the garage without doing anything.
No numbers. No taps. No whispered names, no aligned bracelets, no rearranged backpack straps.
“Let the thought come,” your therapist says calmly, over Zoom, earbuds tucked in. “Let it exist. Don’t push it away. Don’t answer it. Just … sit with it.”
You nod.
Because logically, you understand. The rituals don't actually keep Oscar safe. They just give the illusion of control.
But logic and compulsion do not live in the same house. They barely exist on the same continent.
So you sit there, perched on a low stool beside the monitors in the McLaren garage, heart clawing at your ribs, and you don’t tap your fingers against your knee. You don’t whisper his name seven times under your breath.
You just watch.
Oscar gives you a thumbs up before putting on his helmet.
He doesn’t know what you’re doing.
Or maybe he does. Maybe the way your hands are clenched and your breathing is off is enough for him to guess.
But he doesn’t say anything.
He just gives you that quiet little nod — I see you.
Then he’s gone.
The car whines out of the garage and into the pit lane.
Your vision blurs.
You keep breathing.
You count each second until the radio crackles with his voice: “Car feels good.”
And then … nothing happens.
He’s okay. He’s okay.
You don’t unclench right away. You sit there through all of FP2, sweat prickling down your spine, nails digging into your palms. But you don’t give in.
***
That night, you go out for dinner.
It’s nothing fancy. A little tapas place near the hotel, wood-paneled walls and pitchers of sangria, tables squished too close together.
Oscar lets you pick the table.
You choose the one by the window.
You don’t swap the silverware. You don’t ask him to move the glass an inch to the left. You don’t tap your wine glass before drinking. Your hand trembles a little when you lift it, but you do it.
He doesn’t say anything right away.
Just nudges the plate of croquetas closer to you and smiles.
You eat one.
You don’t count your bites. You chew. You swallow.
You’re still alive. He’s still alive.
***
On the balcony later, you pull your legs up to your chest and wrap your hoodie tighter.
Oscar sits beside you, ankles crossed, drink in hand.
The sky is a watercolor blur — deep blue bleeding into velvet black. You watch a plane pass overhead.
“I didn’t do it,” you say quietly.
He turns his head toward you.
“The thing,” you clarify. “I didn’t tap. I didn’t whisper. I didn’t check the floor tiles in the garage before he left.”
Oscar’s quiet for a second.
“Yeah,” he says. “I noticed.”
“You did?”
He nods. “You were shaking so hard I thought you might bite through your tongue.”
You laugh, startled.
He grins. “Not that I blame you. Watching me drive is terrifying even without OCD.”
You swat his arm. “You’re an excellent driver.”
“Lando says that’s debatable.”
“You are.”
“Well,” he shrugs, “you’re braver than me.”
You snort. “You drive a car at 300 km/h.”
“And you sat still while your brain told you I might die.”
He looks at you then. Really looks.
“You’re brave,” he says. “Not because you keep the thoughts out. Because you let them in, and still stay.”
Your throat goes tight.
“That’s not how it feels.”
“I know.”
He shifts, slides a little closer, shoulder brushing yours.
“But I saw you tonight,” he murmurs. “You didn’t tap. You didn’t check. You didn’t sit facing the door, which I know you usually want.”
“I wanted to.”
“But you didn’t.”
“I was scared.”
“I know.”
He nudges your leg with his knee.
“I’m proud of you.”
Your eyes sting. You look away.
“Hey,” he says softly.
You glance back.
He’s watching you with that same look he gave you during that second-to-last boarding school dance — the one where you wore that ugly purple dress with the uneven hem and he said, quietly, like it was a secret I like this version of you best.
Not the polished one. Not the presentable one. Just you.
“I don’t want perfect,” he says.
You whisper, “What do you want?”
“You.”
His voice is firm. Simple. Undeniable.
“I want you. Even when your hands shake. Even when you’re afraid. Even when you’re angry with me for not understanding something I’ll never fully live.”
You blink fast.
“I don’t want to be hard to love.”
“You’re not hard to love,” he says. “You’re hard on yourself. That’s different.”
***
You lie in bed later that night, curled under the blanket he tucked around you.
Sleep doesn’t come easy. It hasn’t for a while. But it comes. Eventually.
Without a single ritual.
Without a single tap.
And when you dream, it isn’t of the car crashing.
It’s of rain on the window, Oscar’s hand in yours, and your own voice whispering, not out of fear, but faith.
You are safe. He is safe. You are safe.
***
The sky over Spa is angry.
Charcoal clouds roll over the hills like they're in a rush to be somewhere else. The forest holds its breath. The grandstands hum with tension. And in the paddock, everything feels slower. Heavier.
You always forget how much this place looms — how the trees crowd the circuit, like spectators themselves. Spa has history in its bones. And ghosts in its corners.
Oscar says, “Weird energy, yeah?”
You nod, fingers tightening around your coffee cup.
“Want to skip the garage today?” He offers, already knowing the answer.
“No,” you say. “I’m okay.”
You’re not sure if that’s a promise or a hope.
***
It’s FP2 when it happens.
Not Oscar.
Someone else.
A pink car. A snap. A spin. The wall.
The crash is hard enough that everyone on the pit wall stands. Hard enough that your stomach drops and you forget how to breathe for a second.
You don’t even realize you’ve stood up until Oscar’s hand brushes your elbow.
He’s out of the car already. Session red-flagged.
“They’re saying he’s okay,” he says, voice low. “Shaken up. But talking.”
You nod. Swallow. Your pulse still drums in your ears.
“I know that was scary,” Oscar adds, gently. “You want to step outside?”
You look down at your hands. They’re steady.
Your thoughts are loud — God, they’re so loud — but they’re not screaming. Not like before.
You don’t need to count. You don’t need to tap your thigh seven times. You don’t need to start the prayer, or walk out on only even tiles, or hold your breath and close your eyes until the silence passes.
“I think …” You take a deep breath. “I think I’m okay.”
Oscar just nods, eyes warm. He doesn’t call it progress. You don’t want him to. But he squeezes your hand once — tight and sure — and doesn’t let go.
***
That night, the paddock is quieter than usual.
No one likes to see a crash, even if it ends with thumbs up and waving arms. Everyone’s reminded. How fragile this is. How fast it can go wrong.
You and Oscar eat dinner in the motorhome. Leftover pasta, half-warm, eaten cross-legged on the little couch with Netflix playing softly in the background.
You rest your chin on your knees, fork dangling from your hand.
He nudges your ankle. “You’re quiet.”
“Just thinking.”
“About?”
You shrug. “Everything.”
“Wanna share with the class?”
You glance at him. He’s got sauce on his cheek.
You wipe it away with your sleeve before answering. “I think … I stopped counting.”
He tilts his head. “Like today?”
“Like … this week. I don’t know when. But I didn’t realize it until now. There wasn’t a number in my head when he crashed. There wasn’t a ritual I forgot. I just felt scared. And then I didn’t.”
Oscar watches you, patient and careful.
“I’m not saying it’s gone,” you add quickly. “The thoughts are still there. But I didn’t obey them. That’s a win, right?”
He smiles. “That’s a huge win.”
You laugh, a little surprised. “I kind of want to cry.”
“That’s allowed.”
“But I also want cake.”
“That’s especially allowed.”
You set the plate down on the floor. He stretches his legs until his toes bump yours.
“So,” he says, tone casual, “what else have you been thinking about?”
You hesitate. “I think I want to go back to school.”
He blinks. “Yeah?”
You nod. “Not right away. Next year, maybe. My therapist says the structure could help. And I miss it. I miss the library. The lectures. The … I don’t know. The me I used to be, when I wasn’t just surviving.”
“What would you study?”
You pause. “Psych. Maybe. Or public health. Or something with writing. I want to help people who think the way I do. Maybe not as a therapist. But … something adjacent.”
Oscar doesn’t speak for a moment. Then he smiles. “That sounds like you.”
You tilt your head. “Yeah?”
He nods. “You’re good at seeing people. Even when they don’t want to be seen.”
“Must be all the years I spent hiding.”
“I don’t think you were hiding,” he says. “I think you were surviving. And now, maybe, you get to do more than that.”
You feel tears prick again. You press your palm against your cheek.
Oscar leans closer. “Whatever you want,” he says. “I’m here.”
You whisper, “Even if I go back to school?”
“Even if you move to the other side of the world.”
“Even if I’m not on the circuit every weekend?”
“I’ll FaceTime you from parc fermé.”
You smile. “I might get boring.”
“You’ve never been boring a day in your life.”
***
Later, you sit on the hotel balcony.
It’s cooler than usual. The wind rustles the edge of the curtain behind you. Oscar’s inside, brushing his teeth, humming something off-key.
You hold your tea in both hands and breathe.
No counting. No compulsions. Just a breath. A moment. A you.
You’re still not fixed. But maybe that was never the point. Maybe you don’t have to be perfect to be whole. Maybe being human is messy and uneven and a little cracked.
And maybe love is what happens in the spaces between.
The sliding doors open. Oscar steps out, barefoot and sleepy.
“You,” he says.
You raise an eyebrow. “Me?”
He grins. “You’re my favorite part of all of this.”
You laugh. “Even when I rearrange your backpack contents for the third time?”
“Especially then.”
He pulls a chair closer and plops down beside you, hair damp from the shower, skin warm from the room. You rest your head on his shoulder.
“I’m proud of you,” he says, again.
You don’t respond right away. But you reach for his hand. And this time, yours isn’t shaking.
***
The air smells like engine heat and sunscreen. The paddock hums with end-of-season energy — tired mechanics, championship points being tallied in real time, drivers swapping hats and handshakes. This is where everything ends and begins again.
You lace your fingers through Oscar’s as you step out of the car.
It’s nothing dramatic. No stage directions. No swells of music. You just walk next to him, flats hitting the concrete like you belong there. Because you do.
You don’t walk beside him because the compulsion told you to. You walk beside him because you love him. And because he loves you.
“First one to hospitality gets control of the Spotify queue tonight,” Oscar says, trying to jostle ahead.
You deadpan, “Do you really want to lose that badly?”
He shoots you a look. “I’m sorry, who introduced you to German techno at 3 a.m. in Singapore?”
You arch a brow. “I believe I blacked that out for my own wellbeing.”
Oscar grins. “Sure you did. But if I win, it’s five hours of vibraphone jazz.”
You pretend to gag. “You’re a menace.”
He kisses your temple. “A menace with good taste.”
And then he lets go of your hand just long enough to jog ahead. You roll your eyes and walk slower, the early morning sun warm on your back.
You’re not racing anymore. You don’t have to.
***
The garage is a tangle of nerves.
Oscar straps in for the final qualifying of the season with calm precision. You sit just outside the chaos, headset looped around your neck, not because you have to be close, but because you want to. You sip water and trace your finger along the seam of your jeans.
Your therapist calls it a “grounding gesture.”
It’s a better alternative than the numbers.
He goes out. He flies.
You breathe. You do not count.
***
P3.
It’s not a win. But it’s enough.
He comes back beaming, helmet off, suit unzipped to his waist. His smile splits his face in half, flushed and real and bright.
You run straight to him. He catches you easily, arms slung low around your waist, forehead pressed to yours.
“I’m proud of you,” you say, before he can.
He laughs. “I’m proud of you too.”
You don’t have champagne. You don’t have fireworks. You just have a hotel suite where the lights are low, and the room service is still warm, and his socks are mismatched, and you’re both slightly delirious with exhaustion.
But it’s perfect.
***
“Do you remember,” you say, voice soft, legs tangled with his beneath the sheets, “when you made that binder?”
Oscar feigns offense. “You mean my meticulously curated romantic gesture?”
“Yes,” you murmur, smiling. “That one.”
“You mean the one with the tabs labeled ‘Y/N’s Favorite Snacks by Country’ and ‘How to Spot When She Needs a Break But Won’t Say It’?”
Your throat tightens.
“Yeah,” you whisper. “That one.”
He squeezes your fingers. “Still carry it in my backpack.”
You blink. “You don’t.”
“I absolutely do.”
“That’s so-” You break off, covering your face with a pillow. “God, I love you.”
His voice is steady. “Good. Because I love you too.”
You drop the pillow slowly. “I don’t know who I’d be if I hadn’t come this year.”
“You’d still be you,” he says. “Maybe not the same version. But still you.”
You press your cheek to his shoulder. “You know it’s not over, right?”
“I know.”
“I’ll still have days when it’s hard to touch doorknobs. Or leave the house. Or when I’ll cry because I saw a number I don’t like and convinced myself it means something bad.”
“I know.”
“I’ll still panic. And count. And spin. Even if I try not to.”
“Yeah,” he says gently. “I figured.”
“But I’m trying,” you say, voice cracking.
Oscar doesn’t hesitate. “You don’t have to try to be lovable. You already are.”
You blink fast.
“You’re not my problem,” he adds. “You’re my person.”
The tears fall, warm and quiet.
“Come here,” he says, and pulls you against his chest. “I’ve got you.”
***
Later, when he’s in the bathroom brushing his teeth and making obnoxiously loud slurping sounds just to make you laugh, you sit on the edge of the bed, phone in hand.
A message from your therapist buzzes through.
How did the weekend feel?
You start typing.
Loud. But not terrifying. Beautiful, actually. Still had the thoughts. Didn’t follow all of them. Still me. Still learning. But better. I think.
You hesitate. Then send.
Oscar flops onto the bed beside you, fresh from the shower, towel draped over his head like a cartoon ghost.
“Boo,” he says.
You roll your eyes. “You're ridiculous.”
He peeks out from under the towel. “I’m adorable and you know it.”
“You’re something.”
You lean over to kiss him, soft and slow. He kisses back like there’s no hurry. Because there isn’t.
***
The next morning, your suitcase is packed. The flight home is in five hours. The sky outside is pink and pale gold. You stand at the window, watching the light change.
Oscar’s still in bed, one leg thrown dramatically across the blankets, face smushed into a pillow.
You reach for your bag. Your ring — just costume jewelry, something you found in a Azerbaijani flea market and now wear on instinct — is on the table.
You slip it on. And you tap it twice.
Habit.
Your brain registers it, but not as danger. Not as control.
You pause. You exhale.
Then you whisper, almost to yourself, “You’re safe.”
You close your eyes.
“Even if I don’t do anything.”
And for the first time, you believe it. The fear doesn’t vanish. It just … takes a back seat.
You walk back to the bed. Slide under the covers.
Oscar stirs, barely awake.
“Hey,” he mumbles, reaching for you. “You okay?”
You press your nose into the crook of his neck.
“Yeah,” you say.
And this time, it’s not just a hope. It’s the truth.
#f1 imagine#f1#f1 fic#f1 fanfic#f1 fanfiction#f1 x reader#f1 x you#oscar piastri#op81#oscar piastri imagine#oscar piastri x reader#oscar piastri x you#oscar piastri fic#oscar piastri fluff#oscar piastri fanfic#oscar piastri blurb#f1 fluff#f1 blurb#f1 one shot#f1 x y/n#f1 drabble#f1 fandom#f1blr#f1 x female reader#oscar piastri x female reader#oscar piastri x y/n#mclaren#oscar piastri one shot#oscar piastri drabble
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Pregnancy Headcanons
(Benjamin Pointdexter (Bullseye) x reader) (sfw)

summary: how i imagine Dex in a relationship where reader gets pregnant.
warnings: this is mostly fluff, but i think mental illness (OCD, anxiety, trauma), panic attacks, emotional dysregulation, pregnancy and childbirth, therapy mentions, fear of parenthood, co-dependency…i’m pretty sure i wrote reader as gender neutral
language: english
!link to ao3!
notes: justice for dex, we need more content about him. Dex is referred as Ben.
#ThereWereNoNewFanficsAboutHimSoIJustWroteOneMyself
─━━━━━━⊱ 𖦹 ⊰━━━━━━─
Telling him / Early Pregnancy
• When you first tell Ben about the pregnancy, there’s a pause that feels like it lasts forever. Not because he’s angry, he’s just…stunned. His brain immediately races with two competing voices: one picturing a future he never thought he deserved, and the other screaming that he’s going to ruin it all.
• He tries to stay calm, but his hands twitch. He’s overwhelmed with emotions like love, fear and hope, but it all clashes with his deep-rooted fear of becoming his worst self. He asks you: “Are you sure?”. It’s not about the pregnancy, but about him. Are you sure he could be a parent?
• You reassure him with honesty, not sugarcoating. You don’t say it’ll be easy. You don’t say he’ll never struggle. You say you will do this together. Build something stable, something real, even if it’s messy. That earns his trust.
Mid-Pregnancy
• This is the stage when Ben really starts showing quiet protectiveness. He doesn’t make grand gestures, but he always makes sure he walks on the outside of the sidewalk. He memorizes the ingredients in everything you eat. He keeps his hands on you more, just small touches, grounding himself.
• There are nights when you’re asleep and he lies awake, staring at the ceiling, wondering what kind of father he’s going to be. He’s afraid of messing up, afraid that the darkness in him could bleed into this new life. But instead of spiraling, he gets up and quietly writes letters to the baby, just in case he never gets to explain himself in person.
• OCD symptoms start showing more here, not in a stereotyped way, but in how he fixates on routines. He checks the same door locks five, six times before bed. Repeats affirmations out loud (“I’m going to do this right”) like mantras. If you break his rhythm, even gently, he can spiral into a moment of agitation, not at you, but at himself.
• Mood changes are especially sharp during this stage. One moment he’s calm and focused; the next, he’s withdrawing, convinced he’s “too much” or “failing.” You also learn not to challenge those moments with logic right away, just sit with him until it passes, sometimes placing a hand over his so he knows you’re still there.
• His first panic attack during the pregnancy isn’t even about something big. It’s a sensory overload moment at a store when too many people are around and someone brushes past your stomach. His breathing shortens, his focus tunnels, and he starts to go into fight-or-flight. You guide him out of it, slowly, and afterward he feels ashamed. But you make it clear: It’s not a failure. It’s normal. He’s worried. It’s something you’ll face together.
• He goes to therapy more consistently now, not just for himself, but because he promised you he’d try. And even after several sessions he still slips into silence sometimes, disappears mentally into guilt or fear, but you never try to "fix" him. You just remind him: “You don’t have to be perfect. You just have to be here.”
• He starts obsessively reading books about pregnancy, parenting, infant development, anything he can get his hands on. Not in a passive way: he takes notes, underlines passages, makes lists of what he thinks you two should do. It’s part of his coping, but also part of his desperate need to be good enough. He even signs you two up for parenting classes, not because he thinks you need them, but because he does. At first he’s stiff, too quiet, watching how the others touch the dolls or speak about boundaries. But slowly, he starts asking questions. The moment he successfully swaddles the practice baby, he beams, just for a second, and glances at you like: “Did you see that?” That night, he fell asleep with a parenting manual still open on his chest.
• Feeling the baby kick for the first time is a turning point. At first, he doesn’t even believe you when you say it’s happening. He hesitates to put his hand on your stomach. But when he does, and he feels it, he freezes. Then breathes in, shakily, like it’s the first real, good breath he’s taken in months. He doesn’t say anything right away, just kisses your forehead and mutters, “It is real.” From that day onwards he starts referring to the baby by the name you two chose.
Late Pregnancy / Birth
• The closer you get to the due date, the more he starts keeping a quiet distance, not emotionally, but physically. He’s terrified he’ll hurt you or the baby by accident. You have to gently pull him back in, remind him that your body isn’t fragile glass, and that what you need the most in that moment is for him to be present.
• He builds things for the baby. It’s not perfect, sometimes not even safe, but it helps him feel involved. He obsesses over assembling furniture for the baby’s room and triple-checking the baby car seat. It’s not just care, it’s control in a moment where everything feels uncertain to him.
• When labor comes, Ben is calm on the outside, for you, but his nails dig into his palm the entire time. He’s not afraid of the pain you might feel, he knows you’re strong. He’s afraid of losing you. But the moment he sees the baby, it’s like something resets in his brain. Not like a movie “cure,” but like a weight leaves his heart and lungs. There's something grounding in seeing this new life, that you and him created together. He cries, not from breakdown, not from panic, just because he is overwhelmed. He softly sobs and smiles into your shoulder.
• After the birth, Ben also doesn’t hold the baby right away. It is not because he doesn’t want to, but because he doesn’t trust himself yet. He stands near the bed, eyes on both of you, hands clenched at his sides. It’s only when you call his name, just once, quiet but sure, that he steps forward and lets himself hold the baby.
• He trembles the whole time. Not out of weakness, but because something about this moment feels impossible. He’s still here. You’re still here. And the baby is breathing. He kisses the baby’s forehead. Then kisses your hand. He doesn’t say “thank you,” because it feels too small. But you see it in his eyes.
#fanfic#daredevil#bullseye#benjamin poindexter#bullseye x reader#bullseye x you#heacanons#pregnancy#pregnancy headcanons#sfw#benjamin poindexter x reader#benjamin poindexter x you#ben poindexter#dex poindexter#poindexter
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Quit smoking
Pairing: Austin Butler x reader
Warning: smoking, arguing, cursing, crying
Word count: 1.5k
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“Hi babe!” Austin says, kissing my cheek, his pillowy lips touching my warm skin. I breathe in deeply, having missed him for the day, but that feeling going away too soon and being replaced by anger. Though he feels me tensing and my attitude change, he chooses for now to just walk past me, his hand caressing my waist. “So how was your day darling?” He asks, hanging his jacket in the coat hanger, already staring to unlace his boots. “Fine.” I say shrugging my shoulders, picking at my nail polish, nervous about the conversation I want to start. I mean he has to know he reeks of cigarettes and he has to know I’ve sniffed it on him.
I don’t care about smoking much, it never bothered me in other people, but when it comes to him, it’s drives me nuts, because I want him to be healthy. I need to cool off, I can’t let anger get the best of right now, I have to approach this lightly, so my best move is to turn around on my heels without answering his question and going straight to the bedroom. “Y/n?!” Austin shouts behind me, confused probably by why I would just leave him standing there in the hallway. “Y/n?” He calls after me again, but I don’t respond, putting my headphones on and getting back to the book I was reading before he came.
I feel the vibration of his angry stomping towards the bedroom and I take a deep breath trying to calm myself down. “Y/n? What’s wrong baby?” He sits on the bed, placing a hand on my book to move it down a bit so he could get a good look at my face. “No outside clothes on the bed!” I scold him, motioning for him to get off the bed and already, starting on changing the duvet. “Y/n babe, what the hell? Are you ok?” Austin asks, brushing a hand through his hair.
“Fine, everything is fine!” I say, my voice getting louder than I wanted it to. “Y/n?!” He speaks low, careful, watching me react. “Stop saying my name over and over again, Austin.” I sigh, taking the duvet over to the wash room to start washing it. I reach for the detergent but I’m too short, so Austin comes behind me, grabbing the bottle for me and handing it to me. “Thanks!” I say, a bit more sarcastically than I’ve anticipated. “You know I don’t appreciate you having an attitude with me, without saying what’s wrong.” Austin points out, as he places the bottle back in the shelf. I rub my forehead, feeling a headache coming in, my patience snapping. “And I don’t appreciate you making promises to me that you can keep.” I throw back, storming out of the washroom, going to the balcony to get some fresh air. “That’s not fair, I’m not, what are you talking about?”
Oh the nerve he as to act like he doesn’t actually know what it is I’m saying. “You don’t know? Really?” I shout, going back in, straight for his jacket and fishing out the packet of cigarettes from the pocket I know he keeps them in, throwing it at him. He catches it before it hit his face. “Baby it was just one, you can check!” He defends, opening the pack to show me, but I don’t care to see it.
“One today, one tomorrow, then is a pack then you’re dead! And I’m stuck here, saying over and over again “I told him he’d die!”” Tears prick my eyes and wipe them away frustrated, I hate when angry cry. Austin’s face softens, and he puts a hand in his hip, placing the cigarette pack in the garbage bin by the door. Coming my way he stands in front of me, his hands brush along my arms, but I’m having none of it, brushing past him. Austin throws his hands up in frustration, huffing. “Oh come on, this is ridiculous!” He screams.
“No ridiculous is me having to have the same conversation over and over again. It’s your health I’m concerned about!” I poke my finger at his chest and on of his hands grabs my wrist to stop me. “Stop that, it’s annoying.” Austin says and every logical part of my brain goes dead silent. “Yeah cause I’m annoying” I twist his words immediately regretting for acting childish, but there’s no going back now. “Don’t don’t do that, twist my words make me sound like a fucking asshole! You said it it’s my health, what do you care!” Austin’s face gets red, anger quickly getting to him. He passes a frustrated hand through his golden locks of hair, pulling at roots. “For fucks sake am I asking for too much to just come home to a quiet apartment after a long day?” Something clicks in my head and there’s this burst of sadness in me. He hates me, I made him hate me. I did it. I ruined it, me and all my blabbering, my stupid mouth.
My mouth opens and closes, my feet feel cemented to the floor, but I move them somehow, going to the bathroom, wiping away my tears in the way there. “Y/n I’m sorry, hey hey!” He catches up to me, placing a hand on my shoulder, looking at my face, but I try to hide. “Don’t!” I beg, sniffing, my fists shaking at my sides with shame and anger. Shame cause I’ve caused all this, anger cause he can’t keep a promise and I can’t make myself to care less. “Come here!” He says, pulling me to his chest, burying my face in the soft cotton of his shirt. It’s comforting for a second, but the I breathe and the smell of smoke makes me want to gag. I push against him and free myself of his hold. “Shower!” I say, going on the balcony and sitting down on the lounge chair, looking at the blurry sky line.
I don’t know how long I’m here for, but by now the tears have dried on my cheeks and the atmosphere has gotten a bit chilly for my summer outfit, but I’m not ready to get back in the apartment and face Austin. I’m lost in my chain of thought, when I hear the door open, then Austin comes into sight, carrying a tray. “Truce?” He asks, showing me the treats he bought. “Maybe.” I grumble, taking the hot cup of cocoa. “Careful it’s hot!” He says, handing me a cookie. “You understand why I was mad?” I ask, sipping at the drink. “I guess, I mean, I do, but it’s just I didn’t mean to do it. I just sometimes feel like I need to have just one.”
I sigh, closing my eyes. “Ok, what if we make a deal? Hm?” I propose, eating some of the cookie. “Ok let’s hear it.” Austin says, drinking some of his cocoa and rubbing my leg. “I don’t want to fight over this anymore, I just want you to try and smoke as little as possible, that’s the deal, just try! Don’t promise you’ll stop, just try to reduce it.” I propose, smiling softly. Austin seems like he thinks about it for a minute, sipping slowly from his cup, obviously dragging this to get a stab at me. “Ok, it’s a deal, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to upset you!” He rubs my knee, his hand going up my thigh, raising goosebumps on my spine.
“I’m sorry too, I promise to get better at talking these things out.” I say, putting my cup on the side table. Austin chuckles and grabs my hips, pulling me on his lap, to straddle him. I play with his hair, smiling at him, leaning down to kiss him. Our lips dance together, soft and wet. His hands wonder up my body and under my shirt, cupping my breasts over my soft bralette. I moan into his mouth, pressing down on him, feeling him grow hard under me. “Now that we are all made up, think I could get lucky tonight?” Austin asks, making me burst out laughing. “Yyyeah yes, sure.” I laugh, giggling as he gets up with me wrapped around him, as he walks into the apartment and straight into the bedroom, how cocoa long forgotten, just like our argument.
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2: Coffee is the Answer to Everything
series masterlist
This is the single thought that goes through your mind as you exit the hotel early the next morning. Showered, dressed in a fresh set of clothes, and a freshly brewed cup of coffee in hand. You take a deep breath of the crisp morning air, savoring the feeling of waking up rested and ready to start the day.
Looking around, you realize the town isn’t as gothic horror as the late night arrival had made it seem. The buildings in town are fairly nice and well together, the houses could use a bit of external love and maintenance but clearly lived in.
With a purposeful stride, you headed towards the sheriff's station, which was a short walk away down the empty streets.
Perk of a small town.
As you approach, you do noticed the town does seem slightly ominous in the pale light of the early morning, or maybe it’s just the lack of towns people wandering about.
Charming.
You step into the sheriff's station, footsteps echoing off the linoleum floor.
An officer who’d been sat at her desk stands, setting the folder in her hands down on the wooden top and makes her way over.
As she approaches, she seems to radiate authority and a cautious nature. Her gaze is steely and her expression was one of guarded skepticism.
"Can I help you?" she asks in a brisk tone, her eyes roaming over you with an assessing look.
“I’m the Private Investigator hired and sent out here to help with-“
“Right. The city slicker” she cuts you off, dark brown eyes cutting into your soul.
You only hum, not necessarily offended. This isn’t your first time with small town folk, they’re the careful type with strangers, even more so after some of their people have gone missing.
“The sheriff around?” You ask, she doesn’t immediately offer a response as she turns to head back to her desk.
“Did he at least leave anything for me to go over?” You try again, sipping your coffee to hope it helps with the slight cotton mouth you have. It doesn’t.
“He’s out with a few other deputies doing another sweep of the woods, should be back soon” she says as she grabs a few files off her desk, turning to you expectantly.
She definitely is the “all-business no play” type, so you quickly walk over to accept the files from her.
But as you reach for them, she pulls them just out of your grasp, “these don’t leave this building, understand?”
You narrow your eyes, squaring your shoulders “look officer-“ you glance down to her nametag stitched into her uniform, “Carpenter. I’m not a goddamn rookie alright? I’m here for the same reason you are, we don’t have to be friends, we just have to find your people.”
Her eyes narrow, top lip twitching as if she’s going to rebuttal. Instead she cools her expression and shoves the files into your chest, making you stumble a step back and let out a surprised grunt.
“Don’t talk to me like you know me, you wanna help? Go back where you came from.”
And with that, she heads off further into the station. You take in a slow, calming breath, jaw muscle twitching as you clench your teeth and exhale.
With no guidance and no one to talk to, you head for one of the more empty desks and set yourself up.
You shuffle through the stack of files, flipping through them quickly to get a sense of the information contained within. The reports were detailed and thorough, listing each victim's name, age, occupation, and the last known sighting of each individual before they disappeared.
As you go over the files, you can’t help but feel a sense of unease. The town's history was steeped in superstition and folklore, and the disappearances fit the unpredictable pattern of those stories a little too well.
It might be damn near impossible to convince these people of a logical explanation, if and when one is found.
You pause as you notice a name appearing repeatedly in the files: Ghostface.
It was the name of a local urban legend, a specter that supposedly haunted the town and was blamed for the disappearances.
The name sent a chill down your spine. You’d heard of the legend before taking the case, of course, but seeing the name in every single report made it feel a little uncomfortably possible. In theory.
So focused on reading the reports, you fail to notice the front door opening and someone entering. It wasn't until a voice spoke up that your attention is pulled away from studying them.
"You aren't my sister," the voice said, making you turn your head to see a woman standing in the doorway “is Sam here?”
She’s pretty. Unfairly pretty. She has to be young, mid 20’s if anything, her hair a neat tangle of brown curls that framed her sharp facial features. She assess you almost exactly how the officer from earlier had, her arms crossed tightly over her chest as she stared at you with a look of wariness mixed with curiosity.
You smoothly collect yourself, set the files down on the desk and stand, addressing her with a smile “no I definitely am not, I’m Private Investigator (Y/N)-“
“I didn’t ask, what I did ask was if Sam is here” she cuts you off, and that’s when you realize she also has the same dark brown eyes as the officer from earlier. Now that you’re actually taking a second to observe rather than gawk, you see the similarities.
“She’s in the back” you say as you jut your thumb over your shoulder, she offers nothing and walks right past you.
You watch her go, tongue clicking against the top of your mouth “I definitely see the resemblance.”
Once she’s gone, you sit back at the desk and resume going through the files. Memorizing the locations, going through all the records of every person missing and how they could be connected.
A bit of time passes when your stomach growls, you sigh and rub your eyes as you sit back in your chair, taking a peak at the time on your phone. Damn, noon already?
You hear footsteps behind you, making your ears perk as you hone in on it. Lighter footsteps, an unprompted smile tugs at your lips as your gaze goes up to the ceiling.
“So you’re our saving grace then huh? Big city hot shot?”
You hum as she approaches, head tilting to the left as she leans back against the side of the desk, arms crossed yet again. At least this time her expression seems to be a bit more open, curious if anything.
“It’s always a team effort” you say as you stretch your arms over your head, back popping and making you hum in approval.
She looks at you incredulously, “you, a Detective who’s investigating a multiple missing persons case, aren’t a lone wolf?”
You scoff, not bothering to correct her as your arm drapes over the back of the chair and the other resting on top of the desk, angling your body towards her.
“How stereotypical of you.”
“Me? Please, I’m sure you’re already picking me apart with your own assumptions” she says as she pushes herself off the desk, casually making her way around the front of it.
Again you turn and face forward once more, arms crossing, “unfortunately for you, that’s my job” you say easily, but the look she gives you makes something in you stir.
She lays her palms flat on the desk in front of you, looking down at you with those piercing eyes that seem to read through your carefully constructed exterior.
“Why is it unfortunate?” she questions, head tilting slightly.
You purse your lips, eyes trailing down her arms and back up to her face, “what’s your name.”
The corners of her mouth quirk, but she doesn’t answer. Instead she wraps her knuckles to the top of the desk and then pushes away from it once more, pointing a finger at you.
“My sister is right, you should get lost. Haven’t you heard? The Boogeyman is on the loose” she makes a point of dramatically making jazz hands, turning away from you and heads for the front door.
“Another cliché, telling me to go knowing I won’t” you call after her, and again she says nothing.
But she does offer one last glance at you over her shoulder, a half smile displayed across her face before she slips out the door.
You find yourself staring at the now closed door, a sliver of curiosity picks at the back of your brain but you ignore it.
Just as you look back down at the files, the door opens again, only this time when you look up your expression instantly shifts to something serious.
A man, if his badge and stature didn’t tell me enough of who he is, walks in followed by two deputies that hurry past and further into the station.
“You must be the Detective” the man says, reaching up to take the hat off the top of his head, offering a nod to you, “I’m Sheriff Riley.”
You stand, flattening down your shirt and walking over to him, “pleasure” you return the nod and accept a quick but firm handshake from him “and I’m a Private Investigator, sir, not a Detective.”
He makes a face, “it’s the same thing” he says with a tilt of his head side to side, “I’m gonna assume you’ve brushed up on the files I left you, let me show you what we’ve got so far on the guy we believe responsible.”
As he gestures for you to follow him in the direction all his officers had gone to, you can’t help but mutter “it’s not the same thing.”
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The Murderbot Diaries and Gender: Not nearly as progressive as you think it is.
(And, no, people, this is not an excuse for you to misgender Murderbot.)
Reposting again because people are once again lying about it to trick people into reading these books.
A fucking update is that it turns out, Murderbot is literally not a robot. It is in fact a cyborg. Which makes all of this even worse. So yes the original post here will keep getting interrupted by me pointing out all the ways this makes everything so much fucking worse.
Here’s a list of things Martha Wells needs to do before The Murderbot Diaries can in any way be considered trans representation at all, let alone good trans representation. Feel free to add on anything I missed.
And keep this in mind: I am nonbinary, I use it/its pronouns, I’m aroace, and I have read other, older books by Martha Wells, I have seen more examples on her views regarding gender/sex than appear in The Murderbot Diaries. (I’m not saying this to like, one-up anyone, I’m just saying I’ve had to read through her protagonist arbitrarily assigning genders and pronouns to other characters and it was agonizingly bad to read, okay)
And if for whatever reason someone decides to steal this post and put it on Twitter, since apparently people have done that with my posts about books and shows in the past, (like, what the hell, people, you could have at least asked) let me just say: Martha Wells, hire trans and nonbinary people to read over your books for you before you publish them. These are very basic problems with very simple solutions.
1) Have Murderbot explicitly state that it uses it/its pronouns. Have some asshole try to assign Murderbot different pronouns as a way of patronizing it while pretending they’re being respectful and nice. Show how absolutely bigoted and wrong this is. State it explicitly that Murderbot’s pronouns are it/its and it hates being called by other pronouns.
2) Have a cyborg or robot be trans in that they have a very definitively binary gender, even though they have the same “lack of gender or sex related parts” as the other cyborgs or robots. Give us a trans woman robot or cyborg. Give us a trans man robot or cyborg.
Preferably one who hasn’t or doesn’t alter their configuration at all until well after their gender and transness has been established.
Because lets set one thing straight: Martha Well’s grasp of gender so far is very blatantly that sex = gender, or lackthereof.
As far as Martha Wells is concerned, Murderbot is agender because it has no “gender or sex related parts”. This is an established pattern in her writing.
She is still very much on the train of “sex = gender”, and is now just applying that “no sex = no gender”. as the logical conclusion.
Except it’s still the same transmisic idea, now just assigning gender (specifically, its lack thereof, because they have no sex) to robots who were built without genitals, and cyborgs who were mutilated at birth to have their genitalia removed.
She is pretty much pointing at a brick wall and going “That thing is genderless”.
She is pointing at people who have been mutilated and saying that because of their mutilation they can never be anything except genderless and inhuman. "because biology"
Just like her protagonist Moon in the Books of the Raksura sees a person with breasts and goes “oh that person I thought was a man because of their deep voice is actually a woman. Got it.” without ever once stopping to ASK, or even considering asking, even though he’s literally interacting with hundreds of species who interact with hundreds of other species on the daily. If Martha Wells had any understanding of gender, none of these characters would bat an eye at explaining their gender to different species, or having different sets of pronouns for each species and group. Especially because they’re all already speaking multiple languages. The failing is in her nonexistent understanding of gender beyond “gender = sex”.
Martha Wells has Moon go “Breasts = woman, deep voice = man” and we’re just supposed to go along with this because this is as far as her grasp of gender went when she was writing The Books of the Raksura.
And the same exact thing is happening in The Murderbot Diaries, except now she’s doing the bioessentialism of saying the protagonist and all other people lacking genitals are therefore inherently lacking gender, instead of having the protagonist literally go around arbitrarily assigning genders and pronouns to everyone he meets. (And by “he” I am of course referring to Moon, not Murderbot.)
Except it’s still the exact same problem. It’s still the exact same form of transmisia, even though she’s trying to make it work. It does not.
And now it's even worse than when it was just Murderbot seemingly being a robot, because these people are explicitly humans who were mutilated at birth to have their genitalia removed and dehumanized. And we're meant to go along with degendering them all as part of their violent dehumanization.
Martha Wells needs to learn that gender does not equal sex. She needs to have characters whose genders do not match their sex (or lack thereof). She needs to stop assigning characters genders based on their sex.
She needs to stop presenting all of these cyborgs having been mutilated at birth to make them literally sexless as just a natural normal thing no one should think about.
She needs to actually talk to and interact with and learn from trans people, especially nonbinary people. So many things in The Murderbot Diaries could have easily been avoided by just having a trans person read and go “hey just fix this thing quick” and it’d be done. Like, these are short stories for crying out loud. It wouldn’t be difficult to fix these problems at all.
We need robot and cyborg characters who are binary trans.
We need more main, reoccurring human characters who are confirmed nonbinary, and we need more main reoccurring characters who are confirmed nonbinary specifically in ways that are not already socially established and accepted.
We need a character who is nonbinary who is from a planetary system where only male and female are recognized, no free pass with tercera–which literally translates to “third”– already being a socially accepted mainstream thing. Having a gender trinary is not better than having a gender binary. Shoving people into three boxes is not better than shoving them into two.
Tercera could be a great idea as part of the world building, if it were one of many countless examples of both established and new nonbinary genders across many planetary systems.
And hell, for the binary robot or cyborg I mentioned earlier? If she wanted to show a character transitioning….ART literally has a fully equipped medical suite. ART or its drones could literally perform whatever gender-affirming surgery this robot or cyborg wanted.
3) again it goes with the above. Having characters list their genders (or rather, knowing Martha Well’s view of gender what with all the reoccurring characters to date being cis, their sexes) in the feed is not enough. Especially when Murderbot lists its gender as “indeterminate” or “not applicable”. That does not tell anyone anything about what pronouns it uses.
If someone lists their gender as “nonbinary” that does not tell you anything about what pronouns they use. Even if someone listed their gender as “man” or “woman” or “male” or “female” that literally does not tell you anything about what pronouns they use!
The characters should not be listing their sex (because let’s be honest, that’s what they’re doing, because unless Martha Wells starts talking to trans people and educating herself about these sorts of things she’s not going to suddenly reveal that one of the reoccurring human characters has actually been trans this whole time), they should be listing their pronouns! This is their internet profile! People need to know what pronouns to use for them!
Have Murderbot add it/its to its feed profile! Kill multiple birds with one stone! Explicitly state Murderbot’s pronouns! Fix the fact that the characters list their sex on their profile rather than their pronouns! Metaphysically punch the transmisic readers in the face!
Because there are people reading these books who purposefully fucking misgender Murderbot because they think calling it by it’s actual fucking pronouns is insulting! And that is an idea Martha Wells needs to snuff out! Explicitly! These people will literally argue with you that it’s good for them to misgender the main character of this series!
4) Have one of the main reoccurring human characters (Pin-Lee, Ratthi, Gurathin, Mensah, Overse, Arada, ect.) come out as nonbinary. They figured out they were nonbinary from hanging out with Murderbot so often. Look at that! We have a main reocurring nonbinary human character whose gender does not equal their sex! Killing several birds with one stone!
They can literally even change their name and pronouns and medically transition if they fucking want because it’s not like they don’t live on Planet Free Healthcare™ and more importantly it’s literally never too late to question or explore your gender and you’re never too old or too anything to realize you’re nonbinary and that is a kind lesson many people need to hear!
So many people think they aren’t “allowed” to be nonbinary because they’re “too old” or “been married for too long” or “had kids” or any other number of things that have absolutely nothing to do with whether or not you’re nonbinary!
The only thing you have to do to be nonbinary is be nonbinary!
And again, we need cyborgs and robots that are binary trans as well! We need more explicitly trans human characters too, not just characters who we can literally only assume Murderbot is assigning they/them pronouns to since no one lists their pronouns in their feed profile, and Martha Wells has never bothered to say anything like “and their feed profile said they use they/them pronouns”, so we literally just have to assume that Murderbot is assigning them pronouns but instead of being Moon and assigning everyone he or she, it’s assigning people they/them like that’s any better. Hint: it’s not. It’s the same problem but now with a slightly wider range.
Like. I love Martha Wells’ writing. It’s great. But she really needs to start talking to and listening to trans people because there are so many problems that have absurdly easy solutions.
She has improved since she wrote The Books of the Raksura, but it’s not enough improvement for these books to be called trans representation at all, let alone good trans representation, not even considering great.
Murderbot isn’t trans, it is the cyborg equivalent of being cis. It is a cis cyborg who agrees with the genderlessness it was assigned at birth when it was literally mutilated, and the fact that it was mutilated will never come up or matter and we're not supposed to care about it.
This is not trans representation. It's horrifying, violent levels of dehumanization and literal mutilation masquerading as nonbinary representation.
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To summarize:
The Murderbot Diaries won’t be representative of trans people until there are actually trans recurring characters, both human and nonhuman, binary and nonbinary. The Murderbot Diaries won’t be representative of trans people until Martha Wells learns to stop equating sex with gender and the lack thereof with the lack thereof.
We need cyborgs and robots who are trans in binary male or female direction.
We need main reoccurring human characters who are nonbinary.
We need the characters to list their pronouns in their feed profile instead of their sex.
Martha Wells needs to talk to and listen to trans people if she wants her stories to actually be representative of trans people and our experiences.
Originally I ended this with "she has improved since writing the Books of the Raksura" but no, we're seven fucking books into this series, and no, she has not, at all. She'd rather shit on the idea of asking people for their pronouns than just have Murderbot or any other character tell someone their pronouns.
#The Murderbot Diaries#trans#transgender#nonbinary#agender#The Books of the Raksura#Rjalker reads The Books of the Raksura#Rjalker reads The Murderbot Diaries#SecUnit#Martha Wells#gender#pronouns#Murderbot#The Murderbot Diaries and Gender#Rjalker writes essays#is another new tag#because i can almost guarantee you Tumblr will hide this post from me#transmisia#exorsexism#Queer#Pride#Queer books#nonbinary books#trans books#bioessentialism#biological essentialism#harmful stereotypes#harmful tropes
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I'm not rlly hating on Style or your opinion, just like cuz Stan isn't good in a relationship(seen with Stendy), and Stan and Kyle appear to have a 'good' friend relationship, so what makes you think that Stan wouldn't treat Kyle the same if they were dating?/gen
That’s a good question. Why would Stan be any different in a relationship with Kyle? How do I know it wouldn’t be a rinse and repeat? Well, looking at their dynamic in the overall show is a big part in getting the answer to why it would be different.
There’s a lot of uniqueness in their friendship especially when it comes to what Stan does. Stan used to seek out Kyle when he’s emotional, seeing him as someone to go to. He didn't and still doesn’t really do that with anyone else. He’s also readily willing to sacrifice for Kyle, doing everything he can for him whether it be him almost dying or because he felt insecure about his looks due to a tier list. He would value Kyle’s word a lot too, often going along with what he says because of this. Stan doesn’t really do any of this with anyone else, further highlighting their dynamic as something that stands out.
When you compare this to the relationship that Stan has with Wendy, it’s notable the care and effort Stan puts in isn’t nearly on the same level. (Even more when you think about the chat gpt episode). So with all this in mind, logically it would make sense that if he was placed in a relationship with Kyle, it would probably go better.
Honestly, though, despite all this I don’t think that’s exactly the case either though. I can explain why (but it's gonna be very long and a deep dive into style's dynamic):
Hot take, but I think when it comes to Stan being in a relationship, I see it always starting off rough no matter the person involved with him due to his mental health. The obvious reasoning is his depression that's untreated, but I believe there's even more to it than this.
I mentioned this briefly, but I see Stan as a very accidentally bpd (borderline personality disorder) coded character. A lot of the behaviors that he exhibits with Kyle feel reminiscent of how one would act with their favorite person. This is most seen with how he acts when he loses Kyle, he goes through an extremely rough withdrawal period. Stan also gets sensitive easily, possessive, can switch emotions quickly, behave irrationally, prone to addictive substances, makes impulsive choices, and tried to shove Kyle out of his life before he could when his depression got severe, etc. It would explain the way he acts out whenever anything concerning Kyle happens.
Then, stay with me, Kyle strikes me as very npd (narcissistic personality disorder) coded, albeit, again, by accident. Despite Stan being his most important relationship and someone he cares for, he constantly dismisses his feelings, pokes fun at him, and tends to try manipulating him into backing him up in strange circumstances even when he's not in the right. Then look at his other consistent traits like his need for attention and adoration, strong refusal to accept when he's wrong, fearing being ostracized/abandoned, thinking himself morally superior at all times, and behaves manipulative often, etc. I feel like these traits get overlooked a lot because he's framed as the good/right one by the show, but when you really think about it, it feels like a strange line up for him until that coding is considered.
I’m no professional, but I’ve looked into this a good amount and know people with these things and it feels like it aligns pretty well the more you look into it. I won’t ramble on explaining this further, but I could if asked. It’s really interesting to think about.
So if they got together um...it's gonna be complicated, especially with an fp involved. These kind of pairs in relationships are notorious for going bad, terrible even. The start is always sunshine and rainbows though...but then it sort of explodes. But I mean, their friendship has kinda already gone bad in modern day. Their actions with each other have left wounds. They don't seem as cheery with each other as they once were nor do they even talk much, but they do still go to each other. Even when looking at early seasons, they kept going through ‘break up’ arcs due to setting each other off. Yet they come back to each other still each time.
So my point is…yes it would be different, Stan would behave different for sure. Would it be better? Not for a long time, in fact it’d be worse for a while. Here’s the thing though, I think that’s not necessarily what matters. I think what really matters is whether it stays rough or if they manage to break out of it. I think style can and will manage to get better. Especially if Kyle gets a psychology degree, awareness goes a long way.
And as I was saying, they have this inner want to go back to each other no matter what happens. They’re only truly happiest when together and we see a clear example of this with the two pc timelines. But we also see how complicated this can be for them within the same specials. This is why I like them. They’re complicated and messy, but really do care for each other a lot and at the end of the day prefer to try mending their bond then leaving it to die out. They just need more support and communication with each other.
#veespeaks#anon ask#south park#stan x kyle#style retrospective/analysis#bpd/npd discussion#this got way too srs for this ask lol but lowkey wanted an excuse to talk about this haha#anyway tldr: technically it wouldn't be different in the sense its still a rocky relationship#but the difference is i dont think they'd stay that way forever
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I don't understand why some fans, not all mind you, think that Shouto should be this abuse rights activist. I have seen takes about him not doing anything, how he didn't save Touya and Rei, and that he doesn't care. (He abandoned his family) but he spent most of his teen years trapped in that hellish family, so should he go back in? He never smiled that big around them, which sucks but he seems more happy with his friends. Which shocked some fans that his story ended with the class and not his family, I guess because his goal was to reconnect with them. Also it's Hori fault for putting Rei with Enji again, making her passive once more and it's his fault he is killed off Touya. I guess they expected the hero of the family to do more since that title was given to him but the family broke apart anyway and not even Shouto nor Touya could fix it. What do you think? I also hate how much was given to Ochako with her new quirk counseling program because now you run into people asking why Shouto or even Izuku isn't helping society like her. (Some fans do not like that Izuku is a teacher btw as this has nothing to do with Tenko I am told.)
Hum… you mean human rights activist, right? Because I don’t see how could a sweet and caring soul like Shouto promote or defend abuse…
Now… first of all sorry for the late reply but I lost count of how many times I rewrote my answer to you writing things in details about canons and interpretations but none of my answers felt satisfying to me so I’ll try again and I’ll try to stay short.
The reason why I rewrote my reply so many times is I’m not really sure what you want me to say.
I’ve read many meta from other people, people who has the same opinion as me and people who has the opposite opinion as me, I do reblog the ones that to me look the best even when I don’t necessarily agree with them because I do think their opinion is well articulated and interesting enough to be worth being read.
This gives me an idea of why they think the same or different from me… but I can’t really speak for all the fandom so I can’t tell you why person X thinks that.
My suggestion, if you really want to understand why people think differently from you, is to read their meta or ask them for explanations if they don’t write meta… or just accept that sometimes we’ve to agree to disagree.
If you want a list of the things I think can cause different readers to have different opinions, here it is:
You explains some things happening in the story using a Doylist explanation, as in giving explanations outside the story with particular attention to the author's intentions (ex: it’s Horikoshi’s fault if Rei goes with Enji) and others giving a Watsonian explanation, as in giving explanations in-story that function function within the logic of the narrative (Shouto shouldn’t go back to his family because he never smiled there while he’s happier with his friends).
Some people just prefer to use Watsonian explanations for everything (ex: Rei went back with Enji because she’s passive) or the Doylist explanation for everything (ex: it’s Horikoshi’s fault Shouto didn’t go back to his family).
Always in regard to Horikoshi, he wrote a story for Japanese readers meant to fit with his culture. He’s responsible of all the characters do, the good and the bad, having Shouto do this or Rei do that. Part of his message goes messed up because if you’re not Japanese you’re going to miss some important cultural bits that are tied to why he has the characters do the things they do. Also Horikoshi retconned the story plenty of times and was overworked so he was bound to make mistakes and create expectations he wasn’t going to fulfill.
This means who is trying to give a Watsonian explanation of why things go in a certain way (aka why the characters decided to do this or that) is going to crash into troubles if his culture isn’t the same as Horikoshi (ex: in Japan divorce is highly stigmatized, the woman is blamed for it and the shame will fall on the children too… never mentioning is very difficult to obtain it if the husband doesn’t agree and Rei would have risked losing custody of her children… hence her going back with an Enji who claims he won’t be abusive anymore isn’t her just being passive, or Horikoshi forcing her, it’s just divorce wasn’t a solution she could employ) or if we try to work a logical situation on things that were retconned (ex: Rei tells her mother she’s scared mainly of Shouto when it was Touya the one who creeped her out).
Also, as readers we also deal with translation problems that lead us to think differently from what the original text intended and, according to which translation you’re reading, you can come to different conclusions (ex: in the official English version Rei claims she wants Shouto to be happy, save people and continue his life without being tied down by anything. Another possible translation to that sentence is she tells Shouto it would be her salvation and happiness if he were to continue his life without being tied down by anything… as you can see the meaning chance as in the first version she’s basically telling him not to worry about her and live his life, in the second that he’ll save her by living his life).
We also have expectations that make sense for our culture but not necessarily for Horikoshi (ex: the fandom expected Hawks would be punished for killing Twice and that Enji would be punished after it turned out what he did to his family… but this wouldn’t be the case in Japan).
In addition to this there are narrative devices to which readers are or aren’t familiar with and that they end up expecting to be used in the story because if they aren’t the meaning of the story change.
The perception of the ending (Uraraka and her Quirk counseling project, Midoriya becoming a teacher, Shouto being a Hero and taking up how to make eating utensil) was impacted by the lack of use of two important narrative devices.
The first one for example is that when someone fails to save someone, this will have consequences on his life and change said character or his life and this is proof that he was effected by such death (and if this doesn’t happen it’s taken as a meaning he wasn’t effected) and, at the same time, that such death was necessary to generate such change.
Of the three over mentioned characters, only Uraraka seems to focus on something that’s connected to the death of her Villain, the other two don’t. Hence some fans don’t like it due to THIS narrative problem that influences they Watsonian explanation.
The second one is even more important and it’s foreshadowing. When a twist is not properly foreshadowed it’s often accused to be an ‘ass pull’ (not my words this is the ‘technical’ name).
For none of the three it was foreshadowed what they would do, we’ve no idea how Uraraka figured out Quirk counseling had been one of Himiko’s problems, as when Quirk counseling was first introduced by Midnight she presented it as something positive that would have avoided Tomura to become a Villain, and it was only the MLA who criticized it, for Midoriya it was never showed he had an interest in teaching and to justify it Horikoshi had Midoriya claim it was Mawata Fuwa who inspired him in chapter 425… which is way too later, for Shouto it was never shown he has interest in something else that wasn’t being Hero or talent in making eating utensils and it was explained his sudden interest came suddenly while he was praying at Touya’s altar, as if Touya’s spirit has suggested it to him. So it’s not that what they decide to do is bad per se, it’s it feels like it came out of nowhere and this can upset many.
Then there are cases of fans not remembering canon right (ex: people claiming Natsuo was born BEFORE Touya started to burn or that it was solely Rei’s idea to have Fuyumi), using anime canon instead than manga canon (ex: in the manga it was said when Touya escaped from the orphanage his flames were quickly disposed by Sun-sun Haruaki and no real harm was done so that the police didn’t even notice it… in the anime the whole place seems to take fire and it’s hard to imagine the fire escaped to the attentions of worried neighbors, firemen and the police as well as that it made no harm to the kids inside) or deciding to interpret it in a way or in another when canon is vague (ex: the whole case of Shouto deciding to remain in the dormitories is due to people deciding to use the vagueness of canon to claim Shouto won’t return home).
There’s plenty more, of course, but I think this might give you a starting idea on why we have opinions about facts in the story that are often wildly different… and sometimes wildly different opinions might even be equally valid because based on tastes or on how canon is vague so everyone is free to interpret it as they prefer.
So again, if you want to understand why someone think differently from you, they’re the best source of that information… if their reason still doesn’t make sense to you, my humble suggestion is to just agree to disagree. We aren’t all the same and that’s what makes the world interesting.
Sorry if I couldn’t really give you the answer you were hoping for. If you want to pick up one of the topics you mentioned and know my opinion I’ve no problems sharing it, I’ve fun doing so but if you want me to tell you why other think this or that, I’m really at loss and not the right source for this info. Sorry again and thank you for your ask!
#my hero academia#boku no hero academia#mha meta#bnha meta#bnha spoilers#Todoroki Shouto#Todoroki Rei#Todoroki Touya#Midoriya Izuku#Uraraka Ochako#Ask#shou chibi
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World Order -- Excerpt Lore Drabble
Dude!
You graduated from your apprenticeship and how do I find out? Not through a surprise visit from my favorite Keyblade Wielder. Not a PS in a letter you sent TWO WHOLE DAYS after. No, I find out when your Master waltzes in, wanting to update your registry! Does our eternal bond mean nothing to you???
Seriously though, I’m happy for you. I know you’re due to set off on twenty dozen missions throughout the Worlds, but it’s your own fault if this response doesn’t make it in time. On the plus side: since you’re not an Apprentice anymore the Head Librarian accepted your questions as official business. So I got two whole days of pay to do what I always do. Read things so you don’t have to. Next time you’ve got questions, send me about two pages worth, would you?
No one’s really explored the true nature of the World Order in the past hundred years, which I can’t blame them for. There’s the old texts about it, which say it’s anything from a sentient protector of the borders between Worlds to the World Order ate my grandma. Personally, I think the accounts about it being some kind of magical cosmic influenza have the most logic to them, but hey, it’s just a theory.
In the meantime, the Masters of yore created a list of rules to abide by that protect the World Order. Blah blah honor blah blah sacred duty blah. Don’t tell people about other worlds, don’t let on about the Keyblade’s true nature- whatever else Masters feel like telling their first year apprentices. There’s a whole subset of laws revolving around the World Order that don’t really get held up that often. The amount of times someone actually got penalized for breaking these laws can be counted on one hand, and they usually involve some moron thinking they can take over the entire universe.
The thing is though, once you really look into the World Order, it’s pretty obvious why. These rules don’t really protect the World Order at all. They protect the dumbasses who think they can break it.
Here’s a good example. Records say that about a hundred years ago this demonic lord named Chernabog took over his entire world through, and I quote, phenomenal powers of Darkness. He was so strong that even a group of Masters couldn’t contain him, but then one had the bright idea to say to this guy “hey, buddy pal. If you’re so great, then how come you haven’t taken over the whole universe?”
Of course, the dude was super greedy, so he goes “THANKS FOR THE IDEA, I’M GONNA STEAL IT. MWAHAHA!” They have him speak in capitals in the text, so this is historically accurate. You’re welcome.
Anyway, Chernabog goes to the next world over, and suddenly all those phenomenal powers of Darkness disappear. Like, poof. Chernabog ended up Chernadone when all those Masters followed him over and tore him several new holes. He gets tossed into the World of Darkness, the universe is saved, happy ending.
What can we learn from this story? The same thing we learn from a lot of stories that follow the exact same plot. The World Order doesn’t care what you do when you’re in your own slice of the pie, but when you step out of it, you lose everything.
Unless you have a Keyblade. Because of course, even with possibly sentient possibly magical cosmic viruses that have it out for everyone, Keyblades are a loophole.
-A letter from an employee of the Library of Masters to an unknown Keyblade wielder, Scala ad Caelum P.W 225.
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Dude what the hell? I'm so sorry people are being weird as hell to you, that last ask accusing you of being Jewish (as if that's some kind of insult) and then concluding you must be a Zionist is insane and just shows how ignorance is the biggest weapon used in propaganda. The fact that people still think this is some kind Islam vs Judaism thing is insane. Palestinians can be and many are Jewish, please don't let people frustrate you. I'm glad you're willing to learn what is and isn't on the boycott list and I'm more than happy to give you a more simplified list if you're interested in boycotting more easily. Please don't let the loud minority of people make you think this is a boycott you shouldn't take part in, it's very important when our money is our only weapon in times like this,
Much love from a passionate person on anon :)
You’re completely right—this isn’t, and has never been, some simple "Judaism vs Islam" thing. That kind of framing is not only shallow and false, it’s also actively harmful. There are Jewish Palestinians. There are Muslims, Christians, and secular Palestinians. And above all, there are people in Gaza being slaughtered—regardless of faith, age, gender, or political affiliation.
What’s happening isn’t a “conflict.” It’s genocide. Israel’s actions have made their goal horrifyingly clear: they want Gaza wiped out. They’ve said it openly, and they’ve acted on it with relentless violence. Hospitals, schools, refugee camps—nothing is spared. Every ceasefire becomes an excuse to reload and return even more brutal. The sheer dehumanization required to justify what they’re doing is stomach-turning.
And what absolutely breaks my brain is watching people eat up the propaganda like it’s candy. The way everything gets framed around Hamas, as if the lives of 2.3 million people hinge on what one political group says or does. As if babies deserve to die because of who governs them. It’s like watching history repeat itself on loop. Eighty years ago, Jews were demonized, dehumanized, and targeted by mass propaganda. Now, the victims of that horror are spreading eerily similar narratives against another population. It’s gut-wrenching.
Religious justification makes it even more absurd. The idea that a dream, a divine vision, or a centuries-old scripture gives someone full claim to an entire land—no matter who lives there—is just... I don’t even have words. If Jesus appeared in my dreams and told me my neighbor’s house, car, and boat were mine now, I wouldn’t expect him to hand them over. But somehow, this same logic is supposed to hold up on an international scale? The mental gymnastics it takes to believe that is almost impressive in the worst way.
And yeah... I’m seeing the Islamophobia rise again too. It's post-9/11 all over. The suspicion, the profiling, the way Muslim lives are seen as somehow more disposable—it’s sickening. I still remember when Israel laid out demands to Hamas, got refused, and then responded by slaughtering thousands—only to laugh off a ceasefire proposal when Hamas reversed and said they'd accept. Babies were labeled as “terrorist threats.” It’s beyond dystopian.
That said, I agree with you about some of the ways the movement plays out online. The harassment of individuals—especially celebs—for not posting 24/7 or for not wording things just right feels counterproductive. If someone genuinely doesn’t care, call it out. But constantly demanding performative outrage or instant purity from everyone only pushes people away. It risks turning this vital cause into a purity contest, where people are afraid to speak out at all in case they get it slightly wrong and get dogpiled. That’s not justice—that’s fear. There has to be a better middle ground where we stay passionate, but also grounded and humane in our activism.
And yes, I’d really appreciate a simplified boycott list. I’m trying to be more intentional about where my money goes, and I’ve been looking into things on my own, but it gets confusing and overwhelming sometimes. If you have a clearer or easier version to follow, I’d be grateful to take a look. It really is one of the only tools we have right now—and it’s something tangible that does make a difference when enough of us commit.
Again, thank you for reaching out with kindness and understanding. Sending love back to you.
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I hope the rest of your day goes much better. Can you answer the ‘What's a line, scene, or exchange you've written that made you laugh?’ prompt
C
Thank you so much! Work was…well, brutal and war-like is the best way to describe it right up until the end today. Not only did we have the higher ups in the building today so we had to carefully follow every protocol to the letter, but the whole week has been insane when it came to customers. I swear people honestly do go crazy around the full moon! Everyone wants everything within minutes, we’ve had a surge of prescriptions (the filling queue was still over 100 when I left, meaning that I was leaving one person and one pharmacist to take new prescriptions, handle customers, and still fill those 100 prescriptions), and today was just balls to the wall crazy. One customer is demanding a refund on all her prescriptions for a particular medicine she takes for the last year because our new supplier for that medication is now cheaper than our old supplier so she’s pissed off that she was paying more for the same medication with our past supplier. We had a cluster of teenagers loiter outside today harassing customers, swearing at them and just being a pain and then a customer called in to complain about them with some very colourful language and some threats, we have had issues with a system update, and for some reason, my feet just hurt more than normal this weekend. By the time I got home today, my feet were swollen and it honestly hurts to stand on them. But I am now home, I have the weekend off, I’m writing, and, after a good night’s sleep, I’m sure I’ll be rested and fully happy again.
Now that I’ve ranted and vented and gone on a big, long paragraph, I’m going to smile, appreciate you sending in this ask, feel super flattered these are things you’re interested in learning about me, and try my best to answer this question! It’s actually a really hard question for me; I’m not going to lie. It’s not that it’s hard because there aren’t any places, lines, scenes or things along those lines that made me laugh, chuckle, giggle, grin like an idiot while writing them. The truth is that there’s simply too many of them. I could give whole lists.
The hard truth for me to accept, though, is that I think a lot of those scenes, lines, dialogues, and such that have always made me giggle as the writer or that cause me a ton of joy don’t really hit the readers the same way or are easily overlooked a lot of the time in my fics, original works, and all the little drabbles and headcanons I write on here. If I’m being honest, there’s probably something in everything I post that made me at least smile in delight and I’d say at least one out of every five times there’s a line or something that made me at least stifle back a little chuckle. The problem, I think, is that a lot of my humour, both in writing and just in general as a person is kind of more on the subtle side. It’s a mix of absurd humour, dark humour, self-deprecation, and sarcasm that doesn’t always translate well when writing to anyone but me I think. For example, there’s a story where there’s a throw away line about the character listening to Elvis sing Despacito on the radio and it was just the mental image and hearing the sound of it that struck me as stupidly absurd and somehow hilarious.
I don’t often write plain out and outright comedy very often. I’ve only done so once – a fic written as pure satire and it was really well-received, got put up on tvtropes fic-rec page for the fandom, but overall, I like adding little bits and pieces of subtle humour into everything I write. It’s how it flows the most naturally to me. There’s normally at least a throw-away line in even the most angsty of fics, a little piece of dialogue or a description somewhere in even the fluffiest of fics, a slightly absurd bit of logic or situation, wherever I can put it. Even if I am the only one who notices it, even if I’m the only one who laughs at it, while writing and then again while rereading, I’m happy with it and satisfied.
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✅️
✅ list one or two favorite lines you’ve written and explain why they’re your favorite
Ooo this is such a hard one! Since I started my blog way back in 2015 (wow almost 10 years!) I’ve written well over a hundred fics, maybe even closer to 200! So picking my favorite lines is gonna be hard! Especially cause I know there’s some really beautiful or profound stuff in some of my older fics, but I can’t remember which ones, so I’ll be choosing from more recent fics
But this line from my first game of thrones fic was really nice because it tied perfectly into the title & just felt like such a Tormund thing to say
"Don't wanna laugh one last time before the end of the world?" he asked, adding his other hand to the fray.
& these lines from the same fic because they legit made me CRY
Only now does he realize all that annoyance and playful torment had been out of love. All they ever wanted for him was to feel free, and happy, and... loved.
He didn't appreciate it the way he should've back then. He wasn't about to do the same now.
& I just HAVE to mention restless til we reach home. Hermes is always such a blast to write, & I adore the dynamic he has going on with Polites! So this lil interaction was one of my favorites to write
"They love you!"
Polites scoffed and turned away, "Who died and made you Aphrodite?"
Hermes scoffed at such a high pitch, it was more of a shriek. "You are so lucky that was funny, but how dare you speak to me like that!" he asked, hands on his hips.
& basically the entirety of the last chapter! I think it’s my favorite chapter so far if I’m being honest. I really enjoyed writing all the gore & body horror descriptions & the action flowed really nicely. My favorite interactions were Polites & siren!eurydice & Polites with Scylla, both for different reasons.
With siren!eurydice I love the twisted mashup of suffering/wait for me & I even sprinkled in a bit of open arms! It flows really well together, but the whole interaction feels wrong & unnerving & I just love it so much, especially the dialogue lines that match the tune of the song, so this one is a little longer chunk
The illusion flickered, and for a moment, he was standing aboard the ship. Men frantically moved around him, distracting him before the illusion slipped back in place. He hesitated, "Eurydice, something isn't right. I know that you shouldn't be here-"
For a split second, anger flashed across her face as he questioned her. It was gone so quick, Polites thought he imagined it. "Relax, everything will be okay. Jump in the water and we can wash your fears away."
"Well I would, but I already died, and you know you did too."
"I would take the suffering from you." She leapt off the rock, almost freezing in the air before slipping beneath the surface. She emerged with a genuine grin, pushing wet hair away from her face.
Polites wanted nothing more than to jump in after her. And yet, he still floated at the edge of the railing. "As good as that sounds, it's just too good to be true."
"I can take the suffering from you." She spun around in the water, twirling in a tight circle as a water spout brought her up to his level.
"You stayed under ground, and we said our goodbyes." He tried to cling to logic and reasoning, but Eurydice reached out to him, cupping his face in her gentle hands.
"I will take the suffering from you." She pulled him in closer, pressing their foreheads together. She ran her fingers through his hair, holding him as if she was afraid he'd disappear. He hasn't been held like that in so long...
"I wish I could do the same for you," he said, reaching out to cup her face as tears filled his eyes.
& with Scylla, basically the entire scene is one of my favorite things I’ve ever written! Specifically the fight, but I really love their interactions, & the way Scylla goes from asking who are you to what are you, & I just think it adds so much weight to what Polites just did & it’s setting things up for later chapters & I’m so excited for what’s to come!
Thirst.
The monstrous instinct took over and teeth puncture through scales and arteries to drink its fill, making sure to shred its prey to pieces in the process.
Hunger.
This one acts completely starved, slashing through thick muscle and bone with ease. It shook its head ferociously as it devoured its brother until its dying breath.
The other two heads were circling the boat as Scylla cried out in pain. The wolves grew anxious and angry, snarling and howling in sync with their mother's mournful wails.
Bloodlust.
It was easier by now. He knew what to expect as hot blood burst beneath the pressure of his jaws, splattering on the deck with a satisfying wet slap.
Feast.
He bit and ripped with everything he had, swallowing chunks of meat bigger than he was. Large hunks fell to the deck with disgustingly heavy thuds while others still hung on by a thick strand of tissue.
& of course, I really loved the cliffhanger I left off on & the sheer horror of the crew at the end
He looked at all of them, then looked at Odysseus, frozen in complete shock.
He thought of the sirens, how they begged for their lives, how he begged for their lives. How he had looked at all of them the way they were looking at him now. And then, he bowed.
"Polites, just what the hell was that? That wasn't what we talked about!"
"Oh, I'm sorry. Is excessive violence only okay when you're the ones doing it?"
Sorry, this is probably way more than you bargained for lmao, but I just couldn’t help myself!
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Hi scout im sorry i hope you don't mind im here to vent for a hot min
My best friend is a fan of Andrew Tate. She started sending me clips of him and whatever a few months before the first reports surfaced about him being involved in trafficking and SA and him getting arrested over it. I watched some of it but to me, it sounded absolutely bonkers from day one. I couldn't understand what her point was tbh to follow someone who deems one gender as lesser. Anyway, I later learned her boyfriend was also a fan of his. I started looking at him from a whole new perspective at that point. Anyway, she was getting more and more conservative by his side and I was having enough, so I figured I'd start distancing myself even though it sucked because she's my best friend. And then her boyfriend tragically passed away, so I thought no way am I letting her face this on her own. But omg I can not grasp an ounce of logic when she goes on about supporting Trump or Tate or Putin. Like, darling, these are people that not only would not see you as human if they knew of your existence and would more than likely end up assaulting you, but one of them has actually threatened to invade your land after he's done with Ukraine. So I do my best to change the subject whenever she brings up various conservative talking points she's come across on socials lately. I've tried "debating" some of the stuff (just breaking down whatever logic she's absorbed from them) but she keeps calling anything I say "fake news and propaganda taken out of context" and downright refuses to engage with any explanations I share her way.
She didn't used to follow global events or politics before this guy, and I know this for a fact because I was the one that was informing her of what was happening in the world before they got together. I am still the one informing her of what's happening so she's firmly supporting Palestine after hearing me out. But refuses to listen when I tell her the same thing is happening with Ukraine and Russia. It's obviously touchy things for her that her boyfriend left behind and it seems they're not going to change, and I really don't want to stop being friends with her over all this but I hate how she keeps crossing my boundaries whenever I ask her to talk about something else or not to bring politics to a conversation, where she'll let it go for a week or two and it's back at square one.
One positive thing I've noticed with her is that she started a rewatch of Sex and the city, and for the first time EVER, noticed how horrible the women treat each other and the people in their lives in the show. I've been telling her that for years, but just like everything else I've listed, she blatantly ignored it or told me I misunderstood them. It's the only thing that she's told me that's changed about her that has me grasping at the straws of hope.
i’m really sorry to hear about your best friend and the path she’s taking. i’m inclined to say as long as she keeps pressing boundaries that you’re trying to set about those topics, you’re not getting what you deserve from this friendship. but that’s only my perspective, i understand that with her being your best friend, there’s obviously more there than i know.
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first of all i am SCREAMING this fic is so fucking good i’m unwell 😭 i’m a sucker for catholic guilt and THIS?? THIS IS CATHOLIC GUILT EXCELLENCE. it’s so well written i’m gonna cry
i SCREAMED at the reddit post and hoon saying “Hoon: Also..??? Do you think you can jack your shit on the phone without thinking about her LIKE PLEASEEEE 😭😭😭😭 LMAOOOO
and then “He knows that phone sex and sex-sex aren’t the same thing, Matthew didn’t even have a phone—” MATTHEW DIDN’T EVEN HAVE A PHONE. BE FUCKING SERIOUS. i’m howling. this man is just spiraling in biblical guilt and rationalizing his horniness through new testament logic and i am HERE FOR IT
he is so down bad for her and i love that we don’t even fully know the details yet but you can TELL. like from the first interaction he’s like “we’re friends 🥰” but then goes and calls her “hey, gorgeous” when she’s wearing his hoodie AAAAAAAAAAA I’M TWELVE AGAIN. i’m in high school. i’m giggling. i’m kicking my feet.
and the way he keeps being all flirty and goofy just to get her attention??? like: “What? I’m not allowed to be a big, brave girl too?” i SHRIEKED. literally made little sounds. actual squeaks
AND THIS: “Jake knows now, from experience, that you absolutely bite, so your reassurance only concerns him.” STOPPPP i’m laughing so hard and simultaneously melting it’s perfect!!!
and then the Jesus-approved distance between you. I’M DEAD. THIS IS GENIUS.
their dynamic is chef’s kiss like he keeps saying they’re friends but you know he’s gone for her. and not in a “i’m sinning for fun” way but in a “i like you so much i can’t even function” way like actual soft boy energy
and then when he says “you’re more important to me than a college football game” LIKE. DO YOU UNDERSTAND. THIS IS A ROMANCE NOVEL it feels like a classic teen love story without being cliché and I EAT THAT SHIT UPPP i’m devouring this fic with both hands
also the music choices?? the MOOD?? the atmosphere??? i am LIVING in this fic and it’s 3am where i live and i literally CANNOT stop reading (nor do i want to)
AND THEN. when jay says she’s his girlfriend and jake just goes with it??? STOP. it’s too cute. TOO CUTE
and as a certified football lover myself i also have to say i LOVED the whole team dynamic and i laughed so hard at niki bc it reminded me of the jake/niki chaos from a fic i wrote too lmao like he’s my son
AND THIS LIST:
1. Mum warns Jake about premarital sex
2. Jake lies and says he’s not having it
3. Dad sits in silence, pretending he didn’t buy Jake condoms when he went off to college
4. Substitute sex for some other mostly harmless vice
5. Rinse and repeat.
LIKE HELLOOOO YOU’RE A GENIUS. AUTHOR YOU’RE A FUCKING GENIUS I’M OBSESSED
when sunghoon picks her up to keep jake company?? 😭😭😭 STOPPPPP TOO SOFT and her going to bible study with him??? BE SERIOUS. THEY ARE DATING UR HONOR
AND HIM INVITING HER TO GO FISHING WITH HIS DAD??? I’M GONNA SCREAM. THAT’S LOVE. THAT’S COMMITMENTTTTT
this fic is just SO SWEET and he is SO IN LOVE and they’re so lovely together i adore EVERYTHING about this story it just shot straight into my favorites also his friendship with sunghoon is SO GOOD it reminds me of me and my best friend 😭😭
i loved this fic SO MUCH it’s almost 4am and i just finished it and it was a spiritual experience sk thank you author thank you so much i don’t even know what to say i’m following you IMMEDIATELY 🫡🫡🫡🫡
things i know that i can't have
jake's life was hard enough before he fell for you—balancing uni, football, and being a good christian son. in some cruel twist of fate, sleeping with you has only made things harder—and, according to sunghoon (and scripture), damned him to hell the first time he thought about it.
pairing ✩ jake sim x fem!reader
genres: college au, (established) fwb to lovers, smut, fluff, angst
warnings: minors dni, mild religious exploration and guilt, strained parental relationship.......... deeply unserious and a bit melodramatic at times, jake's pov, jake crashes out every few paragraphs, football player jake (british), jakeyn are so nct dream (young and freaky), surface level gatsby analysis, creative liberties taken w the location of freshwater fish.. author loves jake so jake must suffer, and one peep show quote
word count: 33,666
playlist: ...what are we lizzy mcalpine, all my ghosts lizzy mcalpine, north clairo, 20191009 i like her mac demarco, 10:36 beabadoobee, lover/friend kaytranada and rochelle jordan
fic taglist: @heechwe @yunjardi @fancypeacepersona @skyearby @kimjkejyy @sanriowoozzz @ii-mimii @pochakkeu @xylatox @seung-log @anofi @immelissaaa @mssishipi @somuchdard @yuniesluv @m3wkledreamy @jakesimfromstatefarm
author's note: uhm.. if you have been tagged in this fic fifteen thousand times, i sincerely apologise 😭😭😭 the powers that be have been working against me, but im letting go and letting god 🤞 i had a lot of fun writing this and i hope you love bi disaster jesus lover jake as much as i do......i hope u all enjoy the fic! do let me know ur thoughts (positive only on this one), as always thank u emma for beta reading, miss u so bad :'(
But I say to you that everyone who looks at a woman with lustful intent has already committed adultery with her in his heart. If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body be thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body go into hell.
— Matthew 5:28-30, English Standard Version.
There it is, in black and white—red and white, since Sunghoon has a red letter edition. Jake skims the passage again, certain words sticking out this time: lustful intent, adultery, with her. Underlined, italics and bold, like they could be missed. If only. It’s too late now; they’re etched on his retinas, branded on his skin. Lodged deep in his chest, taken root already. It hardly seems fair that a single thought could hold so much weight.
Or, in Jake’s case, many, many thoughts.
Shuddering, he closes the leather bound book softly, a slow exhale ripping out of him as he glances up at his best friend. “You mean I.. can’t even think about fucking her?” he whispers, brows touching in the middle.
A crack of thunder splits the air. Jake flinches. The sound lingers, rumbling over the grey sky. Meant for him. An answer from Heaven—from God Himself. Condemnation, more like. With bated breath, he turns his head slowly, expecting his judgment to be scrawled in the clouds, true divine intervention. But nothing. Just grey. Heavy, oppressive grey.
Sunghoon laughs, a strange little chuckle Jake has never heard before, but knows immediately that he doesn’t like. He adjusts his tie. Shifting the Windsor knot, smoothing the blade—a calculation in his movements that leaves Jake wondering if his friend hasn’t orchestrated this whole situation, weather and all.
“Afraid not, buddy.” Sunghoon’s tone is light, but there’s something solemn about it all—the rain, the smart clothes, this terrible, terrible realisation.
March’s wind nips at Jake’s cheeks, stinging them red no doubt as rain splashes around his feet, wetting his socks in tiny, cold drops. He shivers but doesn’t leave, watching as a smirk spreads over Sunghoon’s lips. A pit stirs in Jake’s stomach as Sunghoon looks over both shoulders before leaning in.
His voice drops to a conspiratorial whisper. “But if thinking about it is as bad as doing it, you might as well just go ahead.”
Jake stares, incredulous, takes a step back as if Sunghoon’s suggestion might smite him where he stands. “Of course, you think that. You lost your virginity behind the worship tent at camp four years ago. Forgive me if I don’t consider you a sound moral compass, Sunghoon.”
“I prayed about it after.” He shrugs. “Clean slate.”
“Hoon,” Jake cries, exasperated, mortified. “You can’t intentionally sin and think you’ll be absolved because you prayed about it after.”
“Why not? Isn’t that what forgiveness is for?”
Glaring, Jake’s jaw works soundlessly. Where to start? At Sunghoon’s audacity or the fact he doesn’t even have a proper answer. Arguing won’t change anything. The whys-or-why-nots of it all are Sunghoon’s cross to bear. Not that he cares enough to. That’s his problem, and his saving grace, if you ask Jake—he makes everything sound so easy, like there isn’t a fuck load of consequence attached.
A frustrated sigh escapes Jake as he glances down at his watch, rain warping the digits on his Casio. It’s almost eleven. Almost an hour since service started, and they’re still standing at the door. A gust of wind whips through his coat.
“Just get inside,” Jake mutters, tone sharp, more from the cold than anything else.
Unmoving, Sunghoon frowns, lips pursed in genuine contemplation. Jake might be endeared if he didn’t know any better.
“Can I ask you something?” Sunghoon’s voice is lighter now, curious, sincere.
Jake doesn’t have time for this—but it's Sunghoon. So, he pinches his nose, bracing himself for whatever’s coming. “What?”
“Do you think you’re better than me because you lost your virginity in a bed?”
Taken aback by the question’s absurdity, Jake blinks. Wonders briefly if he misheard. A nervous laugh bubbles out of him, but Sunghoon’s expression morphs into something unreadable—calm, expectant maybe. Genuinely awaiting an answer. Jake tilts his head, considering it before letting out a short and decisive huff.
“Yes, actually. I do.”
r/Christianity
u/footballfan1511 | 2m
How bad is premarital sex, really? (Need quick answers!!!)
I (20M) have been having sex with my friend (20F) for three weeks now. I knew it was wrong, but she’s everything (very hot, totally, completely sexy), so I didn’t care. BUT I just saw this verse (Matthew 5:28-30) and apparently it’s a sin just to THINK about it???
The last time we did ‘it’ was this morning before church (sorry), and I was supposed to go over there tonight, but I’ve been freaking out about that verse all day…….. idk what to do but I really like her, so much, and I still want this, with her. Please give me advice ..
Every Thursday night. Ten p.m. sharp. Almost no exceptions. You call Jake, talking shit for as long as it takes one thing to lead to another. Tonight is an exception—you had friends over, rescheduled for midnight. Jake lies in bed, hair still damp from his post-football training shower, counting each minute as it passes. 23:55. His leg is shaking. 23:56. He sits up straight, jolting as if waking from a nightmare, nerves sharp and restless as his thumbs fly over the keyboard, texting Sunghoon.
Jake: What about phone sex?
Jake: Like if I don’t think about her while I do it?
Sunghoon’s groan reaches Jake through the thin walls of their shared flat. Drawn-out and long-suffering. Read receipt. 23:57. Three dots.
Hoon: I can’t tell you what to think, but if you’re asking me then you probably alr know
Hoon: Also..??? Do you think you can jack your shit on the phone without thinking about her 😭😭😭
Jake snorts despite himself, much too loud for the quiet. Echoing as if even the room disapproves. He closes his eyes, shakes his head. Palm to his cheek. A low smack, half-joking, half-sincere. Guilt snakes around him, a hot, unwelcome coil that won’t ease. Jake gets the sense that the choice ahead — to answer or not to answer — might drastically skew his life one way or another.
A minute early. 23:59. Your name on his screen. Phone humming in his hold, pulse lashing his throat. On the other end of the line, before he has the chance to weigh his options, you dead the call—making his decision for him.
Jake’s heart stumbles, clumsy in his chest. He thinks of the verse, sharp and prickly—crown of thorns on heavy head. He has been thinking about it since Saturday morning. Extra training with Team B, avoiding you, six-thirty wake-ups to join Sunghoon at the rink. Ice-cold mornings melting into afternoons. No matter what he tries, it always comes back. Lustful intent, adultery, with her. And despite his best efforts to pray for rapture, Thursday has come, and Jake has lived to see it.
A minute late. 00:01. Your name on his screen. Hovering thumb. He knows that phone sex and sex-sex aren’t the same thing, Matthew didn’t even have a phone—but if he could’ve, and he could’ve known you, and you wanted him? Jake sighs. He should answer. If your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off, and throw it away. The words sink their senile claws into him, holding on for dear, frail life. His phone stills in his palm.
You don’t call again. You never have. If this phone call is going to happen, it’s up to Jake to make it so. This knowledge and its weight multiply by the second. An itch he doesn’t try to scratch, knowing he won’t be able to reach it. Another agonising nine minutes trudge along. 00:10. His phone buzzes on his chest, and he knows it’s you before he looks. Two texts.
YN: Said you’d stay up for me Yunie :(((
YN: You don’t think I’m worth the wait?
Reading your messages through the notifications, he’s having a hard time convincing himself not to reply. Not to tell you he waited, that of course, you’re worth it. His guilt loosens, making space for his desire to reassure you—he cannot rule out the possibility that this desire outweighs his guilt. Silence settles in his room, stretched thin and strange around him. He sighs.
YN: Attachments: 2 images
YN: Wanted to hear your reaction, but you can tell me when you’re up ig.
YN: Night, loser :P
Butterflies, sudden and bright—teenaged. Foolish. Tucked under the notification, the photos dare him to look. His curiosity clicks it, and the first picture fills the screen, yanking his breath from his lungs.
Most of your face is cut off, showing only your lips—pouty and glossy and pretty. Pulling at him in a way he’s not quite equipped to name. This would be enough for him, an innocent selfie, you and those pretty eyes, that smile. More than enough—pulse quickening just thinking about it. His gaze lingers on your lips, stuck for a while. Then, unintentionally, his eyes flick lower. Hair fanned over your pillow, breasts peeking out from under black lace. Fuck. A sight he’s seen a million times, but somehow, each time feels like the first. Jake gulps. Holy shit. He ignores the throbbing in his pants, how much tighter they are—he won’t give in. No matter how badly he’s craving it. He’s stronger than that. With his eyes, he traces your lips. Ogles until his screen dims, locking the picture away again.
Picture two. Fuck. You on your stomach, grainy in your webcam. Arched back, black lace panties over your hips. Fuck. The lingerie, the shape of your body.. Seeing you like this, so perfect and all for him—it’s taking every last shred of his self-control not to get in his car and rush over to you. Want, need, tugs at him. A tether he can’t break. His phone locks.
Enough is enough. He drags his feet all the way back to the shower, oppressive cold water hitting him. Doing absolutely nothing for his revolting need. This isn’t working—not the water, not the attempt at self-control. Not when he’s already hard and aching against his stomach. Soft breasts. Round ass. Wet—his hand moves instinctively, forehead resting on the cool tiles. He closes his eyes, your body clear in the dark. Full lips. Arched back. He’s breathless when he finishes, head bowed as heat coils low in his stomach. The water carries his release away. Nose crinkled as it swirls around the drain, cringing at the sight—guilt, shame curling around him.
Again, he dries off, pulls on clean pyjamas, and drags his feet to bed. On his side, he closes his eyes, your body like a brand behind his eyelids, thoughts filling the quiet in his room. Exhaustion however, is its own kind of mercy, and eventually, pulls him under.
Everything is sharper in the morning, clear in the cool light of the college campus. Bare branches cast shifting shadows over stone paths, breeze stealing the sun’s warmth. The weight of his dreamless sleep clings to him, stalks him through the courtyard on his quest to find Jeno—until he sees you and stops in his tracks. Phone in hand, lip between teeth, standing by the library doors. You aren’t doing anything special, frowning at your screen, but Jake’s heart rate spikes anyway, cheeks heating against the cold. He blinks, taking you in. Hair billowing around you, sunlight caught in its edges. Affection bubbles under his skin, tugs him towards you before he knows it, his arm falling over your shoulder.
You flinch, glancing up, startled. Recognition narrows your wide eyes. “Ugh, let go of me, you asshole,” you say, freeing yourself.
Surrendering, Jake steps back, hands raised. “Me, asshole?” He points at himself, feigning offence. “What did I do?”
A frustrated laugh. “Are you serious?” Pressing your cute palm to his chest, you shove him. Not hard, but enough to make him lose his balance, rocking a little. “Yes, you, asshole.”
He doesn’t speak.
You scoff, blank faced, like you don’t care, like you didn’t just shove him. “I sent you those photos, and you ignored me.” Stoic. Detached.
Those photos. Even in reference, they work him up. Too vivid—mainly because he took another look when he woke up. He had to turn off his phone to stop, shoving it into the bottom of his backpack. He didn’t feel guilty about it then, but good grief, he feels like shit now. Shame burning his nape, creeping over his shoulders. At least he isn’t thinking about that Bible verse anymore. Lustful intent. With her. He wasn’t thinking about it. He tenses, sighing.
“I wasn’t ignoring you.”
“You were.” Your voice is quiet—vulnerability inching through your cool exterior. “At least turn your read receipts off if you’re going to pretend you didn’t see them.” Your arms drop stiffly.
A hesitant step towards you, gaze searching yours. “Hey.” Soft, whispered almost. “I wasn’t trying to ignore you.”
On-campus commotion scores the quiet between you — overlapping conversation, bike bells ringing — and you inspect him before you speak. “Right. So you saw the photos and came so hard you passed out?”
Jake licks his lips, embarrassed. Wonders briefly if he’s been so transparent about your effect on him, that you’ve quite accurately hit the nail on the head—even in jest. “Something like that.” At this, you scoff, shoving him again—lighter. He chuckles, breathy and relieved. “Sorry,” he says sincerely. “I really am sorry. I loved the photos, seriously. You know I did.”
Finally, you sigh, a reluctant smile twitching at your lips. “Whatever, asshole,” you say, voice a cute mumble with no real bite.
“How about I make it up to you tonight? Show you my reaction in person?”
“You’re not even free tonight,” you point out.
Shit. You’re right—he has a group project to work on. He should do the sensible thing and say no. “For you, I can be,” he says instead. He’ll figure it out.
“Shut up.” A grin stretches over your lips, and relief washes over him. Finally, a good answer where you’re concerned—until your face tilts into shock. Opening your bag, you bring out a tub. “Don’t overreact, but I made you something,” you tell him, voice lighter as you pull off the lid, pushing foil out of the way. “I know you prefer milk chocolate, but.. it’s White Day, so I just thought—” You cut yourself off, shaking your head. “It doesn’t matter what I thought.”
This isn’t the first time you’ve done something nice for Jake, this isn’t even the first time you’ve made him something, but it feels different—the way everything to do with you feels different now. He stares into the container for a second, suspecting he’ll wake up in bed if he blinks, so he tries not to. Eyes drying, hurting—nothing changes when he succumbs.
As far as he knows, you haven’t baked anything since your shared high school Home Economics class. He chose it to soften the blow of his STEM-heavy course load, you chose it because he did—getting all the way to lesson three before switching for Music. Scones were the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back. His weren’t perfect, he’ll admit it — softer than he’d have liked — but yours? Yours came out of the oven soggy and burnt all at once.
And now, here you are, handing him cookies you made. Edible-looking cookies. For White Day. For Jake. How is it White Day already? One whole month since you first made out with him on Jeong Jaehyun’s birthday—one whole month since you took him home and had your way with him.
He tears his eyes from the cookies to look at you again. You’re smiling, eyes wide, sparkling, and Jake has to remind himself to breathe. “Thank you.” Fondness flares against his ribs, too big to contain. He swallows hard, blinking too fast. “You—” His voice comes out faint, clearing his throat doesn’t help. “You didn’t have to.”
“I know..” You trail off. “I originally wanted to kill two birds with one stone and bake you a pie, but.. that was a little out of my depth.”
“A pie?”
“You know, March Fourteenth.. Three point one-four.. Pi day.” You tilt your head. “I’m surprised you forgot about that, maybe you’re not as much of a nerd as I thought.”
“I’m surprised you know about that.”
“You’re the one who told me.” Closing the container, you hand it over to him, fingers brushing his for long enough that he loses his train of thought. You’re smiling fondly, completely stealing his attention until, suddenly, a pair of hands clap down on his shoulders, making him flinch.
“I’ve been looking for you, dude. We need to go,” Jeno says, his grip firm, already steering Jake away.
Your name sounds weird coming from Jeno’s mouth when he greets you. Too bright, too happy. Jake can picture his shit-eating, Samoyed-esque grin, those cute smiling eyes—never so uncharming as they are right now. Not only has Jeno interrupted, he’s towering over Jake like he’s trying to prove a point, like being taller than 180 cm means anything to anyone. And you, tiny smile, soft wave—are you.. shy?
There’s a pang in his chest he can’t quite name. A protective instinct, maybe. Jealousy? He sighs. “I’ll see you later, yeah?”
You nod, eyes warm, fixed on Jake, and it’s enough to anchor him even as Jeno shoves him to class.
The moment Jake slides into his seat, he fishes his phone from his bag, turning it on. A message from you tops his notifications. Come over after class and make it up to me? A smirk curls his lips as he reads it, shaking his head a little as he reacts with a thumbs-up. The heat in his cheeks lingers longer than he’d like, even as his lecturer arrives and hands out the register.
Why Jake signed up for a residential architecture module, he has no real idea, but he met Jeno in this class, and he’ll take whatever wins he can get. Jeno likes architecture. Loves it—more than anyone else Jake knows. He designs structures in his free time, uses words like façade and fenestration when he catches Jake playing The Sims in class, and has a strong stance on panelised vs volumetric construction.
Jeno goes to Building Design and Technology to learn, and Jake goes so he can sign his name on the register and get marks for attendance.
Time slogs on, an endless mass, numbers added to the clock as his leg bounces under the desk. Thoughts of you consume him. After it happened, Jake thought often about that first night you shared—this one-off miracle. Five loaves and two fish. Lazarus resurrected. Never to happen again, but it did. And it has, so many times now that his memories are starting to bleed into each other. Details lost to frequency. Yet that night, those firsts — the softness of your lips on his, the birthmark on your right hip — always come back to him with such clarity, that he is, again, shocked to realise it’s been a month.
A bigger, more jagged thing haunts him too, cleaves through the sweetness—the way you acted the morning after. He woke up to you walking into your room, wrapped up in a towel and whatever you were typing on your phone. Hair damp, skin dewy. Jake still wasn’t entirely convinced he hadn’t dreamt the whole thing. You didn’t even glance at him until he cleared his throat.
“Are you hungry? I’m not really in a cooking mood, but I can order something for you. Or we could go to Samantha’s?” you suggested, voice remarkably clear, loud in the Saturday morning quiet.
Jake blinked, staring like you’d spoken another language—though the idea of a breakfast roll from your favourite spot was tempting. “Yeah. Cool. Sure. Whatever’s easiest.” And as if stumbling over his words wasn’t enough, his voice cracked.
You frowned like he was the one acting weird. “You okay, Jakey?”
A drop of water slipped down your cheek slowly, the way your sweat had last night. He sits up suddenly, tugging the duvet over his chest, oddly vulnerable in this position. “Yeah. Sure..” He hesitated, twisting the fabric around his finger. “Do you maybe.. want to talk?”
“Talk?” You tilted your head, brows furrowed. “About..”
Ungraceful silence trampled over you both as Jake racked his brain for something to say. “It’s just.. Last night, before.. You said you wanted to talk about something,” he said eventually.
“Hmm..” You sighed, thinking for a while before shrugging. “If it was important, I’ll remember.”
It was all your idea—to kiss, to invite him upstairs after he walked you home, to.. well. You know. It felt like something, like all those years of quietly pining after you hadn’t been for nothing. A real breakthrough, finally. But there you were, acting like… whatever that was.
When you got to Samantha’s, you let him pay for your roll and scone, and joked with him as usual while he drove you to your workout class as if you hadn’t been begging him to dick you down five hours prior. All while Jake was still there, stuck in the moment, replaying the feeling of your lips and your soft skin. In his car, parked outside your gym, you leaned over the centre console and kissed him, soft and fleeting.
“See you, Jakey!” you said, voice bright as you got out of the car and waved goodbye.
Sometimes, if he thinks hard enough, he can feel those first curious touches again, see the look in your eyes before you leant up to kiss him. And the butterflies in his stomach tangle, vicious flapping that scrapes his insides. Arguably, the worst of it all — the glaring detail he always fixates on — is that you were both completely sober. You didn’t want to feel like shit at Pilates in the morning; he was still recovering from his antics the night before. No distractions, no excuses, just you two.
Jeno calls out an answer, voice tugging Jake back into the present. Heat creeps up his neck as all eyes shift in their direction, and he sinks lower in his seat, hoping his laptop screen is enough to hide behind. He glances at his calendar widget, immediately reminded that he has to finish his part of his group research paper—a task he has to get done before he leaves for his away game tomorrow afternoon. A task he has to get done now if he wants to see you tonight.
All it takes is a few focused minutes, a couple quick messages to his group, and he’s sharing the finished document before class is over. So when his lecturer finally dismisses everyone, instead of heading to the library to go over the lesson, he finds himself here—on your doorstep, hands in pockets, pulse thudding in his ears. It’s not like he was running or anything, just walking with purpose, that’s all.
Seeing you does nothing for his breathlessness. You’re wearing one of his hoodies — when did you take that? — neckline slightly askew, showing part of your shoulder. It’s a little too big for you, the hem brushing the tops of your thighs and for more than a second, Jake tries not say, aww, out loud.
A grin stretches over his lips. “Hey, gorgeous.”
You cross your arms over your chest, squaring your shoulders, eyes cut in a way that screams, I’m mad at you, but not really. It’s a new dynamic that he’s still getting used to: your feigned disinterest, his irresistible charm. Your lips twitch, a short, reluctant laugh slipping out, and you roll your eyes like he’s inconvenienced you.
A split second passes before you wrap your arms around his waist, pulling him close. He hugs you tighter than he should, savouring the smell of his detergent on you.
“Can’t stay mad at me for too long, huh?”
“Get off of me,” you mutter, face pressed into his chest, grip on him tightening.
Eventually, you let him in, smiling as he takes off his shoes by the door. He follows you, your footsteps soft and familiar against the carpet. Sweetness lingers in the air, and when you reach the kitchen, his eyes land immediately on the containers stacked on the counter—both crammed full of cookies.
“Wow.” He brings a hand to his chest, feigning hurt. “And here I thought you made those just for me.”
You sigh, barely meeting his gaze as you approach the counter. “You’re so dramatic,” you murmur, the words almost lost under your breath. Opening the container, you tip it towards him. “Ever heard of a test batch?”
Laid out in shades of golden brown and charred black are your several attempts. Some are burnt at the edges, others rock-solid or collapsed into thin, brittle discs. Misshapen, imperfect—each a testament to your determination. His stomach flips, a pang of affection he tries not to wear too openly.
“I didn’t feel right about wasting them, so Jimin and I are going to be big, brave girls and eat them,” you explain. “This isn’t even all of them; she took some to Aeri’s this morning.”
“Oh,” Jake says with a slow nod, taking it all in. He takes one from the top—Communion wafer-thin, square. “See, this makes sense.” It crunches between his teeth, too crispy, but not bad. Honestly, he likes it, chewing with a smile as the sweetness hits all the same.
When he reaches for another, your hand swats his away, fingers firm but not unkind. “I made you twenty perfect cookies and you want to eat these?”
He shrugs, smiling down at you. “What? I’m not allowed to be a big, brave girl too?”
Your expression falters, the teasing edge giving way to something softer, warmer. You look at him for just a beat too long, and then your fingers are brushing the hair from his face. Your smile is a quiet, private curve on your lips. “You’re the biggest, bravest girl I know.”
Jake isn’t sure why, but the words settle nicely in his chest.
Before long, you’re standing side by side at the stove watching a pot of ramen simmer quietly, steam curling into the air. In an effort to avoid extra dishes, you snap apart two pairs of disposable chopsticks for the two of you to use—as if you ever have to worry about doing dishes when he’s here. He blames the steam from the pot for the warmth spreading all over him, eating bite after bite of spicy ramen. Gossip Girl plays on your laptop, your eyes glued to the screen as its glow dances over your face. He can’t ignore the fuzziness taking over him as you share your dinner straight from the pot, chopsticks and hands bumping occasionally.
Jake washes the pot in the sink. Gentle clink of steel on steel, soft murmur of running water, you in the doorway, eyes on him. He is overwhelmed by how domestic, how easy this is—and how desperately he wishes he could stay in this moment forever.
With his hands dry, he follows you to your room, neck flushing under his collar as he shuts the door. Leaning against it, he watches you sink into the mattress, setting up your laptop. Chuckling, you pat the empty spot on the bed. “I don’t bite, Jakey.”
Jake knows now, from experience, that you absolutely bite, so your reassurance only concerns him. But still, like the big, brave girl he is, he crosses the room and sits on the bed, leaving a respectful, Jesus-approved distance between you. The newness of this, its fragility, throws him off. Not too long ago, you were fighting men off with a stick. In fact, Jake was half-convinced you’d leave Jaehyun’s party with Na Jaemin. A guy you haven’t said anything about since pre-friends-with-benefitsgate—an observation he finds only mildly relieving. He’s too busy thinking about what it means, if anything, to relax into the fact that you’re with him now.
If whatever you two are doing can be considered ‘with’ each other.
Sharing a pot of ramen and watching Gossip Girl is easy enough though. Familiar. The two of you wouldn’t have made it to the middle of season four if he wasn’t enjoying it. Like this, far enough apart for an extra person to sit between you, two whole episodes start and finish with neither of you reaching out to touch the other. Jake would like to think — on his part — it’s only proof of his master level self-control, wanting you so desperately but holding back. Proving to himself, to you that this isn’t just about sex or whatever else for him. That Jake can behave and make rational decisions when it comes to you.
And maybe, if this was a different Friday, in a different week, or Sunghoon hadn’t shown him that verse, he might have believed that. But Sunghoon had shown him that verse, and Jake is thinking a bit too much about his right hand, and the sinning, the cutting off and throwing away of the whole thing. About Hell and the suffocating weight of one decision—an all-consuming decision, worth his potential damnation.
On your part, he has no clue what the hold up is, seeing as this is the first time you’ve made it through a Gossip Girl blast without starting something, never mind watching a full episode. By now, your hand would normally have found its way into his pants, or your lips to his neck. But there you sit, unmoving, focused as ever, like on your tenth rewatch you still care about whether Blair or Dan gets the internship at W Magazine.
As if you can read his mind, or the part of it that you occupy, you reach into his underwear and take a hold of his dick. You go through all the familiar motions — twisting your wrist while you stroke it, thumb over his tip when you reach it — and Jake, as always, eats it up, melting like wax in your fist. He is only mildly humiliated by how much you get to him, how quickly he loses his shit when it comes to you, shuddering and whining, hips bucking in a matter of strokes. And then, you stop—hand slipping away like nothing happened, like he’s not hard as a rock in his pants, precum staining his underwear because of you.
Jake — fighting for breath — can only stare at you, watching you ignore him for the show instead. A few minutes pass like this until you sigh, hitting pause with a dramatic motion. “What are you looking at?”
“You.”
At this, you roll your eyes, but Jake grabs your wrist. Somehow, he’s only now appreciating you in his hoodie. Admiring how it sits on you—sleeves too long, fit too baggy. Historically, Jake’s generally emaciated look hasn’t really lended itself to seeing you, or anyone else, in his clothes, so it’s tripping him out how much he likes it. The way the fabric pools around you, covering your body completely.
“Ugh,” you mutter, trying and failing to hide a smile. “Quit looking at me like that.” He’s not sure why you insist on playing this game, on why you make it seem like you’re doing him a favour when you want him just as much as he wants you—but he won’t pretend he doesn’t like working for it, like it’s not that much better when you cave.
“Like what?” he asks, playing along in a soft voice.
“All horny and.. weird.”
Jake laughs. “You think I look weird?”
“A little.” You shrug.
“Shit,” he mutters. “You’re not into that? I thought my off-putting nature was part of my charm.”
This makes you smile, leaning in without closing the gap. Instead, you tuck a stray lock of hair behind his ear, your touch making his stomach flip. He can’t take it any longer, being so close and doing nothing about it, so he wraps his fingers around your wrist to hold you there, and closes the gap himself. It’s everything—it’s always everything. The warmth of your lips against his, the way you hold him, like it’s more than just a kiss for you too.
There’s nothing he likes more than this.
Biting down on his bottom lip, you pull away a little. “Is this part of your grand plan to make it up to me?”
Jake hums, dick throbbing in his pants. “Yeah, baby.” He nods, still attached to your mouth. “Been thinking about it all day.”
“It’s working.”
A breathless laugh—amused, turned on, taken aback. He pulls away, patting his lap and you don’t hesitate to straddle him, sparks between your bodies. Palms on your hips, fingers grazing the soft fabric of your yoga pants. A stir in his chest—heart hammering when he looks at you, breathless. Thank you, God, he thinks, sincerely. I needed this. His gratitude tangles quickly with guilt, uncertainty. Am I doing the right thi—your hand rests on his, snaps him out of it. Eyes soft, lips parted, want written all over your face. So beautiful, and so different from the resting frustrated face you seem to wear whenever he’s around—which he won’t pretend to dislike.
“Wanted to come over here and see you last night.”
Sheepishly, you twist the cuff of your sleeve between your fingers. A stark change from your usual behaviour, rarely reserved about anything — at least not with him — and so mouthy until he gets his hands on you. “I wish you did,” you mumble, looking away.
“I should’ve, baby, but I’m here now,” he says softly.
Another kiss—deeper, slower. An act of restitution — one of many to come — the way his tongue moves against yours, eager to keep to his word. He reaches for the curve of your waist, fingers digging into the soft flesh under your hoodie. The swell of your breast against his palm, cool zipper brushing his knuckles. He tugs on it just enough for you to smile against his lips.
“Can I take this off?”
You nod, clearly flustered, worked up already.
Pulling at the zipper, he savours every inch of skin that comes into view. A shaky inhale seeing your bra—the same one from the pictures, having the exact same effect. Holy shit. Lace under his fingers, touching it as gently as he can manage like it’s sacred, because to him it is. He can’t look away, gaze fixed, reverent. Holy shit. Jake clears his throat, mouth suddenly dry, like he’s seeing you for the first time. The pictures don’t do you justice, not even close. And he loves the pictures.
You’re watching with lidded eyes, and swollen lips. He cups your cheek. “My pretty girl. So gorgeous,” he says, though it doesn’t seem enough. With two languages to choose from, Jake should have the words. But he doesn’t. Not for this—for you.
Heat diffuses beneath his hand, coating your cheek as you turn into his touch, hiding your face. Smiling lips pressing a muffled word into his palm. “And?”
“And I’m sorry about last night.”
You raise an intrigued brow, no longer hiding. “And?”
“I’m an idiot.”
A grin, a glorious grin as you nod. “I just wanted you to say it wouldn’t happen again, but this is way better.”
“Yeah, yeah,” he mutters, rolling his eyes. “I’m a big idiot, and you’re the smartest girl I know. It’s not going to happen again, I promise.”
Sudden betrayal in your squinted eyes, clutching your hoodie over your chest, his palm trapped against the cup of your bra—he almost thanks you. Deeply unimpressed, you scoff. “You know other girls?”
Charmed, Jake smiles, freeing his hand. “Don’t worry, baby. None of them make me as nervous as you.” A kiss before you can respond, pulling your chest flush with his. You hum against his lips, whimpering when he rolls his hips into yours. Hands on your back, quickly unclasping your bra. He nips at the spot below your ear, making you shiver. “And none of them get me this hard either.”
“I know,” you say simply, but your breathlessness undercuts your confidence, and steals his patience.
Taking your hoodie and bra off, he guides you onto your back, settling between your spread thighs like it’s where he belongs. At a loss for words, he squeezes your hip, eyes catching on every part of you. Hard nipples, soft plane of your stomach—nothing about you he doesn’t love. Jake gulps, awestruck, always awestruck. Overwhelmed by the weight of how much he wants this. Wants you.
“So perfect, baby,” he whispers, finally. “So, so perfect.”
A smile tugs at your lips, hands coming up to cover your face. “Shut up,” you grumble.
Huffed laughter slips out of him, endeared. Aching slightly, wondering if you don’t know you’re the most breathtaking thing he’s ever seen. He tugs your hands away, holding them in his, lips brushing your knuckles before he leans in and pecks yours.
Slow, desperate kisses along the curve of your jaw, trailing the length of your neck to your shoulder. He lingers, sucking pretty love bites onto your collarbone, soothing the skin with his tongue after. A shudder, as you pull his hair, whimpering under him. He could stay like this all day, forever if you let him. Lips on your nipple, finally, licking, biting.
Your moan is instant, pulled from somewhere deep, and he groans at the sound, tongue flicking just to hear it again. “Jake,” you say, breathless. Even better. “Jake, please.”
“Tell me what you want, baby,” he says, nosing between your breasts, the warm skin there heady, dizzying.
“Want your mouth—can’t wait any longer.”
His dick twitches as he lifts his head. Takes you in—your pouty lips, ruffled hair, sweat beading on your skin. Jake is not going to come in his pants again because of you. No matter how much it feels like he is. That won’t happen. It can’t. He’s an adult man with self-control. He tells himself these things over and over, willing them to be true, even though he knows better.
Jake leans up, pressing a kiss to your lips. He can’t get enough. “I’m not going to make you wait,” he says—a blatant lie. He has every intention to make you wait, at least a little.
His fingers toy with the waistband of your underwear, slipping beneath, eyes wide when he feels the heat of you. Fuck. You take his middle finger easily, pulling him in, clenching around it, and the choked sob you let out sends a sharp spike of need along his spine. He lets his thumb brush your clit, slow, deliberate. You’re too worked up to focus on kissing now, squirming underneath him, nails digging into his forearm. His lips trail your throat again, more marks, his own breath coming faster, a little unsteady—almost as wrecked as you.
“I feel like—” You pause, mouth falling open to let out a harsh exhale. “I’ve been waiting for a while, baby, need it.”
For reasons he doesn’t fully understand, there’s just something about hearing that word. Baby. So rare from you, uttered only at your most vulnerable, that always undoes him. Has him acting at your beck and call without a second thought—so it can’t come as a surprise when he tears your pants off, presses his lips to your core, and groans hungrily, breathing you in.
There’s a certain reverence to it all, he can’t help it—it just comes naturally with you, a need to please you, worship you. His arms wrap around your thighs, keeping you in place, savouring the soft whine you let out when his nose brushes your clit.
Fuck.
He likes this a lot more than kissing. Likes the way you moan and cry out his name, the way you tug his hair, and crush his head between your soft thighs. Loves the way you fall apart on his tongue, and the way you taste. The wet look in your big eyes — chest heaving, breath ripped out of you — after he licks you clean.
The tension lingers, sweet and heavy, pressing in on Jake from all angles when he finally pulls away, leaving a kiss to your inner thigh before sitting back on his heels. He watches you, sinking into the sheets—lashes fluttering, bottom lip pulled between your teeth. Spent and glowing as you look at him. Jake pulls off his shirt, cool air pulling goosebumps along his skin. A deep breath, a few deep breaths. You ask in a quiet voice if you can wear it. He nods, hands moving instinctively, fingers brushing your skin as he helps you put it on.
“Did so good for me, baby. Didn’t you?” he asks, pulling you into his arms, hand stroking your back.
You lift your head from his chest, a dreamy look in your eyes when you look up at him. “Does that surprise you, Jakey?”
His breath hitches, heat spreading on his cheeks and neck. He doesn’t have the upper hand with you, not at all. But he does have the option to kiss you instead of answering so he does that. Kissing you until you say, one minute, against his lips, and leave the room.
Soft warmth settles in Jake’s chest as he heads to the kitchen, smiling. All of this, these moments after sex, makes his heart race. Makes him want to get on his hands and knees and beg you to love him back—though he would settle for like. This routine, this quiet afterwards might honestly be his favourite part of it all. The two of you, inhabiting this tiny world you’ve carved out together—big enough for you and him only. The flat to yourselves. Your head on his chest. You even asked to wear his shirt! These moments when the thought of being your boyfriend doesn’t seem so out of reach. When he feels like he is your boyfriend.
He can’t stop smiling.
At the sink, he washes his hands before pouring you a glass of water, and when you step out of the bathroom, he’s already there, leaning against the wall. He melts at the sight of you—barefoot and sleepy-eyed, a smile on your face. His favourite sight in the whole world. He can’t believe his blessings, that you would want him — even if only for sex — and each day he spends with you makes it harder for him not to test how far he can push it.
“Hey, pretty girl,” he says, handing you the glass. “You feeling okay?”
You hum in response, thanking him. Your fingers slip around his, warm and delicate, and he has to remind himself to breathe as you lead him back to your room. Jake’s eyes are glued to you, addicted to the way you fill out his shirt. It’s senseless—how a piece of his own clothing, something so familiar, suddenly looks brand new just because you’re the one wearing it. Looks better. Nipples nudging the soft cotton, hips curving out into the hem, ass hanging out of it. He lies down on the bed, watching you, each movement entrancing him. His heart stills in his chest when you tie your hair back, shirt riding up enough to show off the lace of your underwear. It’s too much. It’s perfect. He clasps his hands in his lap, trying and failing to cover the effect you have on him.
You get into bed, body molding to his like a second skin. Head on his chest, ear pressed over his heart—hearing it thud, no doubt. Jake wraps his arm around you, fingers splaying over your back, holding you close. He exhales slowly, wondering how much longer he can lay here like this, with you, before he overstays his welcome. He’s made good on his promise, done what you invited him here to do, and it’s not late enough that you’d object to him leaving at this time. Your breath is a steady lull on his skin. Asleep, probably. But then—your hand trails on his stomach, fingers resting on his waistband, and he can’t help feeling a bit bad.
He knows better than to think anyone could make you do something you didn’t want to do—but has no idea if that includes him, too. Novelty long gone. Your curiosity sufficiently sated, while he kills himself trying to pretend he’s fine being just a friend to you again. This is hardly a perfect arrangement, but Jake feels nice sometimes, worthy and handsome, knowing you want him too—even if it’s only sex. It’s really good sex.
As if you can hear his brain thinking his arousal away, you reach into his underwear. All of his blood rushes south, your soft palm wrapping around him. His mouth opens, then shuts. He wants you, he always will, and it’s all he can do to pray that won’t cost him this friendship—or you.
Jake clears his throat, shakes his head. “You don’t have to.”
“I know, Jakey. I want to.”
He kisses the top of your head with a soft, contented sigh, fingers curling around the back of your shirt. Eyelids fluttering shut. It’s good, more than—leagues better than when he does it himself. Perfect. A shiver runs through him when you kiss his stomach, leaving a mark on the ticklish skin. He wants to look, really wants to, but he doesn’t want to come yet. Your lips brush his belly button and the hair underneath. A mumble of his name into his skin that he hears, feels, but can’t address.
“Jake,” you say again, leaning off of him.
He hums, eyes snapping open when you whisper in his ear, “Do you want to stay over?”
A nod. “Yeah, baby. I’ll stay over.” The words spill out of him with no consideration for the long day he has ahead.
You pull his earlobe between your lips, nipping gently, a jolt down his spine. “Good boy.”
The praise makes him throb in your hand. Fuck, he thinks. Absolutely none of these words are in the Bible.
Jake wakes up in an empty bed, your door ajar. It’s only eight — too early to rush — and he stretches out his arms, twisting against the mattress. Fifteen lonely minutes go by without you, and so he gets up, dragging his feet through the apartment.
You’re in the kitchen, speaking in a hushed voice to Jimin—who seems to forget about the whole whispering thing for long enough that her voice rings through the hall when she says, “You need to get a grip before you get hurt!”
Sensing him, you whip your head towards the doorway, spotting Jake where he stands. Jimin wears a too-tight smile as he approaches. “Nervous about the game?” She doesn’t wait for an answer. “Great! Listen, I have to run, but good luck out there!” she says, patting his shoulder before leaving the room in a cloud of jasmine.
Chewing your lip, you follow her out with your eyes, blinking when the door clicks shut behind her. Jake shifts his weight between his feet, tensing his abs on instinct when your gaze trails over him. You don’t comment, but you linger before looking away. For a second, something unreadable passes over your face—gone as soon as you speak. “Do you want something to eat?” you ask, smiling, but it doesn’t reach your eyes. “We need to do a food shop, but I can make you some..” You trail off, pulling the fridge open. “Greek yoghurt with blueberries.”
“Is everything alright?”
You nod, not meeting his gaze. “Jimin just thinks I’m stretching myself a bit thin.” You huff a small laugh, trying to downplay it, but your shoulders stay tense. Pulling out the punnet, you frown at it. “Greek yoghurt on its own?” you suggest, throwing the blueberries into the bin.
Jake shakes his head, a small, appreciative smile tugging at the corners of his mouth. “I need to go soon, I still haven’t packed.” He fiddles with the drawstring on his pants, eyes lingering on you. Still so beautiful with a crease between your brows—he wants to reach out, smooth it over with his thumb. “Are you going to be alright by yourself?” It’s a bit of a useless question, he knows what you’re going to say. Knows you would tell him you were fine even if your arm was hanging off. You know it too, if the arch of your brow is anything to go by.
A chuckle. “Don’t worry about it, Superstar—you have a game to play.”
Jake hesitates, wondering if he should argue or just accept it. You’ll be fine. You always are. But something about leaving feels harder this time. Feels wrong. “You’re more important to me than a college football game.”
In theory, it’s true.
In practice, he’s not going to skip his game, not unless you ask him to—which you won’t. His football career is running on a clock that will only tick for two more terms after the summer. In his email, a timetable awaits, outlining all of his games for his last season. It’s provisional, for now, but bears weight regardless. He can’t afford to miss a game right now, but he’s a little shaken by the feeling that he can’t afford to leave you either.
You smile, a barely there curve of your lips as you close the fridge. Taking his hand in yours, you give it a squeeze, a steady reassurance. “Honestly, Jake. I’ll be alright. And if I’m not, I’ll still be here when you get back. So go.”
For someone so desperate to get rid of him, you’re having a hard time parting with his hoodie. He doesn’t want it back, but he needs something to wear to the car. It’s only fair, he showed up in only his t-shirt after all—his t-shirt that you’re still wearing and seem reluctant to return. You pull it close to your body like it’s yours now.
“It’s two degrees out,” he reminds you. “Do you want me shirtless in that?”
A sick and twisted silence passes, long enough to convince Jake you’re actually going to say yes. He watches your gaze flick downwards, want for him so clear that his dick twitches. Dragging your fingernail over the dip in his abs, your touch leaves a trail of fire in its wake.
He’s thankful for the discipline he’s developed in the new year—consistently following Sunghoon to the gym, eating unseasoned chicken breast and three eggs at breakfast because Sunghoon does, because Sunghoon is.. a lot. Wide shoulders, solid frame. Built like God put him on Earth to look good shirtless, and Jake—well. He eats the chicken. He lifts the weights. He does his best.
“No, not really,” you say, frowning as you shove the hoodie into his arms.
Jake smiles, glad you didn’t take too long to come around. He puts it on, zipping it slowly. Eyes on you the whole time, and when his abs disappear beneath the fabric, you sigh. His lips twitch, pleased.
At your front door, he hugs you—contemplates never letting go. The scent of coconut drifts up from your hair, and it tugs at something deep in his chest. His fingers tighten, pressing into your waist. He frowns. He shouldn’t miss you—not this much, not for one night. A night where, realistically, he wouldn’t see you even if he stayed home. But no amount of logic or reason is enough to make him feel better.
“I wish you were coming with me,” he says, mumbling into your collarbone.
You lean back a little, fingers carding through the hair at the nape of his neck. For a second, a desperate, fleeting second, he thinks that maybe you’ll say, fuck it, and come along, that you might see the appeal of sneaking around a four-star hotel with him. He can picture it already—matching fluffy robes, doing your skincare routine together at the end of the night, sharing a twin bed while Jay Park snores in the other one.
Instead, you look up at him with a smile that turns his knees to mush. “Not my fault you suck at planning, Jakey.”
He groans, tips his head back, feigning exhaustion. “Right, because everything is my fault, and I’m the villain in your story. I get it.”
You roll your eyes. “Get out of my apartment,” you say, but your grip doesn’t ease.
Jake exhales a laugh, but he doesn’t move either. Just stands there, holding you, memorising this like he’s shipping off to war—your hands on his skin, your vanilla scent under his nose. “Without a kiss?” His voice comes out quiet, hopeful—half teasing, half not. He’s stalling, trying to buy another second. Maybe two.
You push at his chest a little. “Out, Jake.” But you’re smiling and he feels your fingers tighten just a fraction before they let go.
Jake only smiles, his arms locked around you. He dips his head, pressing a kiss to your temple, and his voice is soft when he says, “I’ll text you when we get there.”
A sigh slips out of you, feigning annoyance, but the brush of your fingers down his arm gives you away. “Yeah, yeah. See you later.”
He grins. “You’ll miss me.”
A beat passes before you speak, just long enough for Jake’s smile to falter as he watches you. You pout, hand on his cheek, thumb moving tenderly over his skin. “No,” you say, shaking your head. “But you’ll miss me.”
“I already do.” He’s not lying.
Jake doesn’t kiss you before he leaves, which is okay. He tells himself it’s okay. But regrets it the whole drive home, drumming his fingers against the wheel as if he can tap the thought away. He regrets it while he stuffs his kit and toiletries into a duffle bag. And he regrets it on the bus, staring out at the passing motorway, the new Beabadoobee album blaring in his headphones. He’s so consumed by his regret that he doesn’t even have it in him to pretend he’s annoyed when Jay falls asleep with his head on his shoulder.
Not for lack of trying, Jake doesn’t sleep, and as it turns out, the protein bar he found in his backpack earlier is not enough sustenance for a three-hour journey. The bus rumbles on, road stretching out endlessly through the windscreen when he takes a look. He sighs, cracking his knuckles and willing himself to stop thinking about you. This doesn’t work either, and he’s typing out a text to you before he realises.
Jake: I hope you’re feeling better ❤️
Jake: I’ll see you soon, okay?
You reply with a picture of yourself in bed—glasses on, a book in your lap, lips curved into a soft, easy smile that makes something in his chest tighten. He stares for too long, caught up in the details. Gentle slope of your nose, loose strands of hair framing your face, dark love bites peeking out from under the collar of your shirt. His stomach flips, a giddy laugh slipping out. He wishes he could do something, turn the bus around, and go see that pretty face in person.
YN: All good, Jakey !!! Just needed to shower apparently..
Jake: My gorgeous girl :)
Jake: You did smell kinda weird when I hugged you
YN: ???
YN: Don’t even joke lad.
Jake snaps a quick selfie—grinning, a little flushed, hair messy from having his hood up. In the corner, Jay is dead asleep, mouth agape, face smushed into Jake’s shoulder. He laughs quietly, sending the picture, heat flooding his cheeks when you react with heart eyes.
YN: Such a pretty boy ☹️
YN: Jay obviously
Jake: Obviously.
It’s just past two when they start filing off the bus, the sharp coastal wind biting at Jake’s cheeks. He shoves his hands into his pockets, shoulders hunching against the cold. The hotel in front of them is huge—way nicer than anything they actually need. But still, it’s nice, knowing that the football budget is going to something tangible, that they enjoy. A small comfort. The younger boys he sees like brothers will be looked after when he’s gone, and that thought warms him despite the cold. Towering windows glint in the afternoon sun, the kind of place with sleek, startlingly shiny floors and crystal chandeliers that don’t make sense for a one-night stay. But he’ll take this any day over the dingy motels he remembers from first year, stained towels and plywood mattresses.
At the front desk, Jay stands in line next to Jake with his eyes shut, as if three hours asleep on the bus weren’t enough. Jake knows better than to say anything though — after three years on the same team — he understands that Jay isn’t tired. He’s following a ritual. The Rilakkuma band-aid on his wrist is proof of that. And in case that isn’t enough, Jay doesn’t touch the key card either. He claims the bed furthest from the door, sits on the edge of the mattress, and blasts Mama, You’ve Been On My Mind—the Joan Baez and Bob Dylan live version, not the Bob Dylan studio outtake. And he listens to it twice before saying a word to Jake. Of course, because they had a single brief conversation before that first away game three years ago, their post-check-in discussions are forever based around two subjects: food, and you.
Jake: We’re here :)
YN: Has Jay asked about me yet?
Jake: One more stream
YN: Ah, almost settled then, I see
Jake laughs at this, a small exhale from his nose as he watches you type.
YN: If you stayed home, would he just.. not play?
Jake: Never considered that but I’ll ask later
Jake: Kick-off at 5:30 btw
YN: Good luck 🥳🥳🥳
He reacts to the message with a heart and tosses his phone aside, pressing the heel of his hand to his empty stomach. It’s a lot, Jay’s routine, but Jake isn’t in a position to judge him too harshly. Ever since high school, he eats a bowl of brown rice, grilled chicken and vegetables before away games, like it’s a charm against failure. Because it is. Because the first time he did, he played the best game of his life, and now the thought of eating anything else makes his stomach coil. It might seem silly to believe that a bowl of rice could change the outcome of a game, but Jake has seen it first-hand and isn’t willing to risk it again.
Jay is humming, oblivious, bobbing his head slightly, and Jake can’t help the smile on his face as he watches. Music spills from his headphones��Dylan’s voice a scratch against the air, Baez’s softer, sweeter. It’s almost grating, a taste he’s yet to acquire. They don’t talk much outside of football, not really, but there’s a closeness anyway. Built from hours of drills, sharing meals after training, and rooms for away games, retreats. A sudden rush of dread hits Jake, remembering that after next year — after graduation — the two will likely never share a room again. Even more hauntingly, they may never share the pitch again. Jake shakes his head. The plight of the student athlete, he supposes.
A happy sigh comes from Jay as he takes his headphones off, standing up. He stretches his arms out over his head, turning to Jake, grinning. “Hey, buddy.”
Jake would never admit this to him — or anyone — but he has a lot of respect for Jay. He takes training seriously, giving his all even during warm-up games, he’s got killer technique, and is (unfortunately) really nice. If Jake couldn’t make captain, he’s glad it went to Jay.
“I was talking to your girlfriend the other day.” The grin doesn’t fall from Jay’s face when he speaks, wagging his brows.
The G-word makes Jake roll his eyes—even though he likes hearing it, praying that God is listening and taking notes.
“She cornered me in the library to ask if I knew how to make a pie.”
“That sounds like her,” Jake says, smiling too.
His cheeks burn thinking about what you said yesterday—about how you’d wanted to bake him a pie. The memory jolts him. He digs through his bag without thinking, quickly finding the tinfoil abomination he made sure not to leave the house without. Jay catches it easily in his left hand when he tosses it over, eyeing it suspiciously before unwrapping it.
“She ended up making cookies, but I guess you knew that.”
He blinks at them like they might explode. “Wait, she made these for you?” Jay tilts his head, impressed. “You might not be as hopeless as I thought.”
Giddiness overwhelms Jake as he nods. It’s weird, a bit ridiculous even, how a batch of cookies can feel like a championship win—better. He likes it though, and doesn’t try to fight his smile.
His stomach rumbles into the silence. “Do you want to come get food?” He always extends an invitation to Jay.
“I’m good, man.”
And Jay never accepts.
This meal is a sacred one. As soon as Coach announces the hotel, Jake pulls up Uber Eats and Google Maps on his desktop to meticulously survey the surrounding area. And if his work reaps unfavourable results, he’ll call the hotel to enquire about the microwave arrangements. And if that doesn’t work out, he calls the convenience shops nearby to ask them.
He knows how he must seem, but before the first away game of this season, he brought his rice bowl in tupperware, had to eat it cold, and sprained his ankle on the pitch. So to say he was delighted when he found it on the menu of a local place would be an understatement—an independent Mexican restaurant with a 4.7 star rating only twenty-minutes away on foot. Perfect. His Promised Land. He applauded the monitor when he saw it.
Tres Mesas—a quaint restaurant, with three tables and a TV in the corner playing the news on mute, but damn if that wasn’t the best bowl of brown rice, grilled chicken, and pico de gallo he’s eaten in his life. The rice was fluffy, the grilled chicken tender, smoky. Even the pico de gallo was incredible—he only ordered it because he hadn’t looked at the vegetables yet, and panicked when the waitress sighed. Luckily, it’s the one component of the meal he’s willing to play fast and loose with. He can’t actually remember which vegetables he ate that first day, just that he enjoyed them.
When he finishes eating, he gets up from his table with half a mind to go to the kitchen and ask for a photo with the chef. He settles for going to the cash machine across the road and taking out a tenner for the tip jar by the till. On the walk back to the hotel, he texts his dad a photo of the bowl, looking at it lovingly as he sings its praises via text.
Jake: Kick-off is at 17:30 💪 will let you know how we get on, love you
On the way to the other school, again, Jay rests his head on Jake’s shoulder—whether he’s awake or not is anyone’s guess. But when Jake’s phone vibrates in his pocket, he retrieves it with as little motion as possible, just in case.
Dad: I’m glad you enjoyed your meal. Was it hot? 😂.
Dad: You do not need luck, son. You are always wonderful. Love you.
Jake: It was hot, dad 😭😭😭 of course, it was
Jake: Way too soon…………..
Warm-ups go by in a blink, a blur of sweat and jump squats until Jake finds himself standing in the tunnel with everyone else. Muscles humming, heart racing. He shakes out his limbs and prays to God for a miracle.
At church, when someone gives a testimony, they say, “God is good,” and the rest of the congregation responds in unison, “All the time.” Then, that person says, “All the time,” and in unison, the congregation says, “God is good.”
Jake doesn’t know why he finds it so grating, but week after week, he sits in his seat suppressing an eye roll while muttering the responses along with everyone else. However, when the ref blows the whistle to call full-time — scoreboard reading: HOME 0, AWAY 4 — ‘God is good’ sits on the tip of his tongue. He covers his mouth with his collar, pressing his lips together so it doesn’t slip out.
Thankfully, he doesn’t have time to dwell on it, because Kim Sunoo comes running up and jumps on his back, looping his arms around Jake’s neck, and he nearly topples over. The rest of the team come rushing towards them, loud and triumphant. Jay reaches them first, his eyes gleaming with pride as he ruffles Jake’s hair. Adrenaline courses through him, dulling the ache in his legs.
And as they start to leave the pitch, heading for the locker room, he kisses his hand, points to the sky, and mouths, thank you.
People are often surprised to hear Jake admit that the best part of winning a game isn’t the roaring crowd, his coach’s praise, or even personal satisfaction. No, the best part of winning a game is laughing at the dinner table with his teammates after, and washing down a tomahawk steak — mushrooms and potatoes on the side — with a glass of champagne. And all on the university’s dollar at that.
Winning the first away game of the spring semester was more than enough cause for celebration, and Jake — full-bellied and alcohol glazed — has been keeping an eye on his drinks all night. He glances at his empty glass, pleased with his restraint. Someone had to keep a level head, and it wasn’t going to be Jay. O Captain! Our Captain!—for whom the only thing between tipsy and shit-faced is a whiff of vodka. Maybe less.
Turns out, Jake was worried about the wrong guy.
Nishimura Riki, 186 cm of arms and legs, dawdles over, red in the face (and ears and neck) and stumbling. With each step, his well-consumed IPA sloshes dangerously in his glass, splashing the back of his hand when he comes to an abrupt halt. “Sunoo, move,” He starts. “Need to talk to Jake.” His voice is slow and syrupy, at least an octave higher than normal.
Their youngest — their scrawny Goliath — only turned eighteen a few months ago, and (quite bravely) attended his first three months of college parties completely sober until then. He’s still figuring out his limits, and Jake can’t help but be endeared by this large child—if not a little alarmed.
“Knock yourself out, kid,” Sunoo says, amused, as he stands up. He sticks around for long enough to make sure Riki doesn’t fall over trying to sit, and takes his empty seat at the other end of the table.
This conversation he came stumbling over for is a request — delivered in a harsh whisper, hand over his mouth — to sit beside each other at the next meal. Jake flinches, too startled to respond, when Jay stands abruptly from his chair. “Get up, Riki. I’ll swap with you.”
Childlike delight floods Riki’s flushed face, looking up at his captain like manna from the sky, and wrapping his gangly arms around him when they cross paths. Jake shares a look with Jay as he sits in front of him—equal parts amusement and concern.
“Do you think I could finish that off for you?” Jay asks, gesturing to what’s left in Riki’s glass.
He nods quickly, extending it. “Of course, I’ll just get ano—”
“No!” Jake all but yells, cutting him off. “I mean, Coach is limiting us to three drinks tonight, so, no more.” A lie he deems more than necessary, a lie he wishes someone had already told.
Riki grins, leaning in. “That’s my sixth.” A laugh, and then another bubbles out of him as he sinks into his seat, shoulders racking. This disclosure seems as surprising to Jay as it is to Jake—not at all. He is extremely lucky that his teammates like him so much. Settled, finally settled, Riki shifts, letting his bony knees dig into Jake’s thigh. “Did you see my tackle? What did you think? Am I getting better?”
Jake nods sincerely, Riki’s been working hard — eager to prove himself so Coach won’t regret signing a first-year — and it’s paying off. “It was clean, buddy. You did great,” he says, meaning it. And Riki doesn’t try to hide his boxy grin.
On his other side is Jungwon—head tipped back over his chair, knocked out after one mojito. Jake takes a photo, sends it to you. Lil bro can’t hang. You reply right away: AWWWWW cutie 🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹 how much did he drink lmao.
Jake: Mojito
Jake: Singular
YN: 😭😭😭
Jake can’t suppress his smile, taking a selfie at a high angle and sending it to you. What about me am I cutie ?
YN: Yes, very cutie !!! You look so handsome 🤒
YN: So blushy, baby, are you also very drunk?
Cutie. So handsome. Baby. Jake is as giddy as he is confused. All that in the span of two consecutive text messages—he can’t believe his luck, struggling to tamp down his sudden desire to buy a lottery ticket. You might even tell him you miss him if he plays his cards right.
Jake: Sweet girl 🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹🥹
Jake: Not drunk just a few glasses of champagne hehehehe
YN: So you’re drunk 😭😭😭
Jake: You can’t see but I’m rolling my eyes
YN: I believe you, Jakey 😐 put the phone down and celebrate w your friends, okay?
YN: We can talk when you get back to your room !!!
What an exciting suggestion—talking in his room. With you. Jake stares down at his phone, in awe. Wow, he thinks. So clever. He almost wants to get up and start bragging about you like a proud parent. Oh. That is not an image he likes.
Jake: Whatare you gonna do if I keep texting? Leave me on read?
Yes, apparently—you read the message as soon as it sends and don’t reply. Don’t even start typing. Thirty minutes pass by before they leave the restaurant. Jungwon on Jake’s back. Riki on Jay’s.
He was never very good at cards.
Finally in bed, light-headed and smiley after three glasses of champagne, Jake pulls up your contact and calls you. He waits, staring up at the ceiling, tapping his fingers against his phone case. The room hums softly around him. After a few rings, you answer, and he smiles at the sound of your voice. “Hey, Superstar! Congrats!”
“Thanks, gorgeous,” he says, eyes fluttering shut. “What are you doing tonight?”
“Jimin and I are going to pres at Yizhuo’s and then the club. I actually think we’re leaving soon, but it should be good—Yizhuo hasn’t come out since Valentine’s.”
The mention of Valentine’s makes Jake’s breath hitch, fingers tightening around his phone as the memory comes rushing back—relentless. He hasn’t been out since then either, now that he thinks about it. That night. The dance floor. Your breath fanning his neck when you asked him to kiss you.
Jake froze, caught off guard. “What?”
“Don’t be a kid about it, Jakey,” you said in his ear. “If you don’t kiss me, Jaehyun will.”
The thought of Jaehyun kissing you, again, while Jake was stuck at zero kisses in ten years, made him sick. Historically, he had always been unlucky when it came to you—countless games of spin the bottle spent kissing the person to your left, watching as you kissed his friends. Yet there you were, asking him to kiss you and he was hesitating. Stupid, really. Ridiculous.
He cleared his throat, heart pounding. He’d read too many romance novels, seen too many films, to believe that you two could kiss once and it wouldn’t change everything—but he liked you, and he suspected he always had. So he asked, “You really want me to kiss you?”
“Please,” you said, voice small, vulnerable, as if you were giving him a piece of yourself and begging him not to break it.
Through the phone, your voice hits his ear, bringing him back. “Did you fall asleep?” You don’t sound anything like you did last month.
“No, no, I was just thinking,” he says faintly, a distracted beat passing as something crosses his mind. “Hey, what was that about with Jimin earlier?”
“Nothing,” you say quickly, and he's certain that’s the end of it. “She just thinks I’m going to get hurt when you go off, and use all your new experience on someone else.” You laugh, and he can’t tell if you’re amused by the notion of getting hurt, or there being someone else.
Jake wasn’t expecting you to tell him anything, never mind that. The thought that you, or Jimin — or anyone — could think there was someone else. That there could be someone else, hollows his chest, grinds an ugly gear in his brain. But it clears up a lot about this morning, she wasn’t being weird, she was.. warning you? His thoughts race, a million and one questions rattling in his head.
“Are you?” Is the one he asks, not fully equipped for any of the answers you might give.
A long quiet beat passes. “Are you?”
This feels like an opening, an opportunity for him to set some things straight. How could there ever be anyone else? To confess, maybe. You’re it for me, you’ve always been it for me. He can’t bring himself to—it doesn’t feel right to say over the phone. “If something was seriously wrong, you would tell me, right?” he says instead. At your silence, he continues. “The world won’t end if you open up to me, you know. That’s what I’m here for.”
“Of course. You’re my best friend,” you say belatedly.
“Yeah,” he says, ignoring the ache in his chest. “Always.”
You don’t reply right away, a minute passing before you clear your throat. “I have to go, okay? But I’ll text you.”
Jake nods even though you can’t see. “Have fun tonight.”
“Thank you, Jakey.” You hang up.
His phone vibrates with a text from you. Fit check 🤧. You’re wearing a lace tank top and a little black skirt. I’ll have a drink for you since you’re staying in! He stares at the photo—flutter in chest, heat on cheeks. His screen locks, and his reflection grins back at him, clear-eyed, flushed. Happy. Unlocking his phone, the photo stares back at him—you, so beautiful, and so far away. His thumb brushes the screen absentmindedly. Gosh, he misses you.
Jake: You look so perfect……wish I was there 🤒
Jake: Look after yourself, cutie
YN: Haha thanks me tooooo
YN: Yes sir 🫡
He types out that he misses you but thinks better of it, clearing the message and leaving a heart-react on your response.
“Was that your girl on the phone?” Jay asks, closing the bathroom door behind him.
Smiling, Jake turns the phrase over in his head. My girl. Butterflies erupt just thinking about it. Another silent prayer. “It was.”
Jay only nods, taking his charger from his bag and plugging it into the wall by his bed. He takes a long sip of water from his bottle and sighs, relieved, Jake thinks. For a long time, Jay looks at him from the other end of the room, saying nothing.
Until. “You’re a good guy, Jake,” he says, his tone a bit too serious for Jake’s liking. “And it’s fine that you like her, it’s good that you like her, but how much longer are you going to keep that to yourself?” he asks, looking at Jake like he actually wants an answer.
Sighing, Jake pinches the bridge of his nose. “I get that you think you’re helping, but just—maybe stay out of it.”
Jay blinks, his brows twitching together for the briefest second before smoothing out. Jake hadn’t meant for it to come out so sharply. Silence stretches out over them, long and heavy, and before he can take it back, Jay exhales slowly, looking away.
“I’m not trying to hurt your feelings. It’s just—” A pause. When he finally speaks, his voice is softer, like he’s saying something that will cost him to admit. “Look, I’ve tried sleeping my way from friend to boyfriend, and it doesn’t work. At some point, you’re going to have to show her you care about more than just sex, and I hope, for your sake, as your friend, that you do it before it’s too late.”
Jake stiffens, every muscle in his body tensing up. Heat spreads from his ears down the back of his neck, sharp and unforgiving. His first instinct is to argue, to say something to get on Jay’s nerves, but he relents—there’s no point in arguing over something they both know is true.
He clears his throat, sighs deeply. “Thank you, Jay, for your unsolicited advice,” Jake says, turning around and screwing his eyes shut, willing for sleep to pull him under.
It doesn’t.
Jay shuffles around the room for a bit before flicking off the light. Jake wonders if he should say something, but he knows there’s no need. Grudges don’t belong in their friendship—it shows on the pitch when something’s off. So they get everything off their chests, yell at each other if they have to, and move on like it never happened.
And yet, he feels bad for meeting Jay’s vulnerability with sarcasm. He goes over the things he could say, again and again, until he hears snoring over his shoulder.
With a sigh, Jake rolls onto his back and rubs a hand over his face. He sends a text to Sunghoon—a question he already knows the answer to: Do you think I’m fucking things up w YN? It’s only after hitting send and putting his phone under his pillow, that sleep finally overtakes him.
In the morning, he stirs before waking up, dragged from sleep by rustling fabric and soft, persistent thuds. A moment later, something light smacks him in the face, jolting him from his slumber. He squints into the morning light, a blurry shape above him. A pillow. To the face, again. When Jake’s eyes finally focus on Jay, he has the faintest idea that he’s being rewarded for something. He’s standing there, looking down at him, all tan skin and toned stomach, arms flexing as he swings the pillow again. It’s annoying, really, how effortlessly put-together he looks, and Jake forces himself to look away, covering his face with his hands.
“Morning, princess!”
Jake groans. “What, Jay? What is it?” he asks, sufficiently disturbed.
“They wouldn’t let me bring a plate for you, so you need to get up before breakfast is done,” Jay says, aiming another hit at Jake’s chest.
Still trying to get his bearings, Jake slaps at the pillow and pulls the blanket over his head. Jay isn’t having it. He smacks him with what Jake suspects is all of his might. At this point, it’s hard for Jake to stay touched by the fact that Jay had wanted to fix him a plate.
“Fine, fine!” Jake’s voice isn’t quite working yet, the words coming out in a low rumble as he sits up. “I’m going.”
“How’d you sleep?” Jay asks, hugging the pillow to his chest.
Jake shrugs. “Pretty good. You?”
“Same.”
Jake inspects Jay, searching for a sign that last night is still hanging over him too. But he looks.. fine—bed already made, bag packed, hair still damp from the shower. Jake knows Jay well enough to tell when something’s wrong, and there isn’t even a trace of tension on his face. No irritation, nothing at all—he’s over it. It should be a relief, but instead, it makes Jake’s heart sink.
“I have to tell you something, but you can’t make a big deal about it,” he says, stretching a little as Jay nods. “You have to promise, dude.”
Jay rolls his eyes, but extends his pinky anyway, curling it around Jake’s. “I promise.”
Jake is struck by how still the room feels, like it’s holding its breath. Why is he doing this? Jay has already moved on, and now, because of Jake and his lack of self-regulation, they’re standing around shirtless in a hotel room, miles away from home, holding hands. It’s all very bizarre, and he is looking forward to stepping down from the top of this mountain-sized molehill he’s made.
He sighs, tired of himself. “You were right, about.. everything. And I’m sorry,” he admits.
Jay grins, his smile smug, almost feline, in a way that entrances and confuses Jake at once. “About everything?” he asks, amusement in his tone, making Jake wonder whether he’s taking this seriously.
“Come on!” Jake says, incredulous, holding up their locked fingers.
Jay’s smile falters, and he rolls his eyes. “Oh no. I broke my promise,” he says, voice dripping with sarcasm. “I suppose you’re going to make a scene now? Tell me, Jake, what are you going to do? Tell me off? Spank me? Amputate?”
Irritated – flustered, maybe — Jake yanks his finger free, cheeks hot. He pulls on a shirt with a little more force than necessary, not bothering to look at Jay as he does.
“Listen, if it makes you feel any better, I already knew I was right,” Jay says, and the smile on his face is audible. “I do accept your apology, though.”
Jake exhales, a tension he hadn’t even noticed unwinding from his shoulders. He steps out into the hall feeling lighter, relieved, so chipper he takes the stairs instead of the lift, practically skipping down them. The air in the stairwell is crisp against his skin, the smell of coffee drifting up as he gets closer and closer to the dining hall. His phone vibrates in his pocket, lighting up with three messages from Sunghoon when he checks it.
Hoon: You are definitely handling things in a way I wouldn’t even recommend to my worst enemy!
Hoon: But things have a weird way of working out for you so
Hoon: Don’t worry too much 💪
Jake: Thanks?
The morning rush has thinned, and the emptying buffet trays aren’t his favourite sight—congealed scrambled eggs at their edges. He fills his plate anyway, hungry and happy enough to ignore how yellow the eggs are. At the nearest table, he chews absently, crunching crispy bacon, sipping pulpy orange juice, and his mind drifts. Jay’s voice, Sunghoon’s text, the lingering hum of a hundred past conversations—background noise. He pulls out his phone before he even registers the impulse, thumbs flying over the screen.
Jake: Hey, pretty girl :) how was your night?
YN: It was good! And then Yizhuo threw up all over the smoking area which was.. terrifying
YN: But I was in bed at 1 a.m. which I’m counting as a positive!
Jake: Sorry about Yizhuo, how’s she feeling? How are you feeling?
Jake: Damn it’s early, are you okay?
YN: Okay, 20 questions 🤨 Like shit. Good. On my way! To Pilates.
Still hungry after breakfast, Jake leaves the dining hall to take a shower and pack his bag before they leave. He sleeps for the whole journey, head on top of Jay’s.
When they step off the bus at uni, Jake waves goodbye to the team and heads straight for his car—he doesn’t go home. The drive is endless, knee bouncing at every red light, grip tight on the wheel. When he reaches your building, an older couple lingers by the entrance, hand in hand, giggling. He slips past them, taking the stairs two at a time. At your door, he stops, hunching over to catch his breath before knocking.
It takes a while, but Jimin opens the door, her smile falling when she sees him. “Jake, hi,” she says quietly, though it sounds like a question. She doesn’t step aside to let him in. “She’s not home, you just missed her actually. Jaemin picked her up.”
Just hearing Jaemin’s name is like a stake to the chest. Jake tenses without meaning to, jaw tight. He’s been avoiding the guy like the plague since Jaehyun’s birthday, when he cornered Jake in the kitchen. “Are you two, like, serious, or what?” he asked, voice low even though they were alone.
Throughout ten years of friendship, Jake had been asked that question more times than he could count. Throughout four years of pining, it was one of two questions that made him want to throw himself into oncoming traffic. He didn’t need to follow Jaemin’s eyeline or hear another word to know exactly what he meant. Who he meant—you, of course. In the living room, laughing with the birthday boy, Jake’s jacket slung over your shoulders as you waited for him to bring you a can of Sprite.
Jake only shrugged, the red cup of water in his left hand crunching a little under his tightening grip. “We’re friends.”
“So I’m allowed to ask her out?”
That was the second question that got under Jake’s skin—not just because it was reductive, but because it wasn’t his decision to make. And yet, there came Jaemin, like every guy before him, asking as if they really think that if Jake had any say in it, you’d be with anyone but him.
With a sigh, he said, “I’m not her father, Jaemin. It’s up to her.”
Jaemin smiled, pulling a cigarette from behind his ear. “You got a light?”
“No.” He shook his head, shoving his clenched fist into his back pocket, the cool metal of his lighter grazing his right knuckle. “Can’t smoke in here anyway, mate.”
The memory slams into him, full-force, knocks the wind out of him. “He did?”
“She didn’t tell you?” Jimin tilts her head. “Weird.”
His brain stalls, unsure which thought to torture himself with first: that you’re seeing Jaemin, or that you didn’t tell him. As it turns out, the more hurtful thought is of the text you sent him an hour ago while he was asleep on the bus, the reason he’s even here.
YN: Travel safe, Jakey, I can’t wait to see youuuuu <3
Jimin’s hand reaches for the door. “Goodbye.”
His lips part, trying to gather his thoughts, to say something before the door clicks shut in his face. Nothing comes to mind, but your voice rings out into the silence. “Who’s at the door?” The sound of it rattles through him, curious, gentle as ever, and the seconds that pass stretch out in front of him, vast and unending.
Jimin only frowns, her shoulders slumping. She seems more disturbed by the fact that now she’ll have to let him in than the fact that she’s been caught lying. “Oops,” she says simply, leaving the door open as she goes back to her room.
Sighing, Jake leaves his shoes next to yours and locks the door behind him, his fingers fumbling a little as he twists the key. Smelling food, he goes straight to the kitchen where he finds you. You’re standing by the stove, hair covering your face, lost in the task at hand: trying to tear open a bag of cheese without scissors. You succeed. Before he says a word, you look over at him, and the grin that spreads over your lips makes his stomach swoop, butterflies tumbling around like they’re looking for a point of exit. You’re perfect. There’s something about that smile that brightens everything around you, grounding and dizzying him all at once.
“Hey,” he says, breathless, smiling too.
You turn off the stove before stepping into his space, arms looping around his waist like you need this as much as he does. “Jakey,” you mumble into his chest.
It’s nice to see you, he can’t overstate that, and he suspects it always will be. Yet, even with you in his arms, he can’t smooth out the crease in his brows, can’t relax into your touch like he wants to—like he’s been thinking about since he left yesterday. The only thing on his mind is whatever the fuck is going on with Jimin, and how to ask you about it.
“I see you’ve done your food shop,” he says dumbly, looking over your head at the pot on the stove.
“Uh huh.” You nod, tilting your head back to look at him. “I even got those chocolates you like.”
Jake smiles, his hand coming up to cup your cheek, liking the way you lean into his touch. “You didn’t have to do that.”
You shrug, but the softness of your voice betrays your attempt at nonchalance. “I wanted to make sure you had a reason to come and see me.”
“You’re being really sweet,” he says, frowning. He doesn’t mean to sound suspicious, but for some reason, it’s easier to question you than to believe you might actually want him here. He presses the back of his hand to your forehead. Your skin is warm, but not feverish. Normal. Still, he keeps it there. “You feeling okay?”
You roll your eyes, catching his wrist and pulling his hand away. “Are you okay? You look like Jimin caught you out there praying for pussy.”
It would have been less mortifying if she had. He chuckles, an awkward huff of air that sounds more like a strangled cough than anything close to a laugh. Pressing his fist to his mouth, he clears his throat as if it will somehow clear the feeling in his chest, too. As if summoned simply by Jake thinking about her, Jimin comes into the kitchen, buttoning up her coat. Her eyes skip over him like he’s not there, her smile reserved for you.
“I have to go, but I’ll see you tomorrow, okay?” she says, opening her arms.
You step forward without hesitation, slipping into her embrace like it’s second nature. The hug is warm and sweet, the two of you in your own world while Jake is stuck in its orbit, watching it spin without him. “I’ll miss you,” you say sincerely. “Text me when you get there.”
Jimin ruffles your hair when you pull away, smiling when you protest. “I miss you already.” And with that, she squeezes your wrist affectionately before turning on her heel without so much as a glance in his direction.
At the sound of the front door swinging shut, Jake sighs, glancing at it like he expects her to reappear. To say it was all a big joke, that she was doing a bit, and hug him too—the way she would have done a month ago, before..
It’s quiet in the flat—just you and him. He shifts on his feet, shoving his hands into his pockets, watching you watch the pot on the stove. You take off its foggy lid, steam curling out as you sprinkle grated cheddar into it—cheese dakgalbi. His mouth waters.
Silence persists. Not awkward, not quite comfortable. He has to ask. “Did you ask Jimin to pretend you weren’t home?”
A laugh bubbles out of you, amused by the mere suggestion. You shake your head. “No.”
Jake sniffs, his voice quieter than before. “Is she mad at me or something?” He tries for casual, but he sounds a bit pathetic.
You give him a look—confused, as if you didn’t see the way she’d ignored him. “Did she tell you I wasn’t home?”
He nods slowly, saying nothing about the Jaemin-shaped elephant in his proverbial mind-room. Instead, he reaches into the cupboard behind him, the hinge creaking softly as he pulls out a bowl for you. He hands it over without meeting your eyes.
“Aren’t you hungry?”
There’s too much going on in his head to navigate your line of questioning. “What are you talking about?”
You hold up the dish like the answer to his question is written on its base. “One bowl,” you say—it isn’t, by the way, the answer. He looked.
“I’m not staying,” he says without meaning to, though now that he’s thinking about it, he likes the idea of going home and being alone with his thoughts. It might even be nice to sit in silence on the couch with Sunghoon if he’s home.
Putting the bowl down, you take a step back, and scoff. Defensive. Hurt, he thinks. You sigh. “Why are you here then?”
Your question, your tone, makes him feel a little silly. Silly for cancelling his plans with Jay to come here. Really silly, actually. For thinking you missed him too. For thinking, can’t wait to see you, meant anything more than just something nice to say to a friend who’s been away.
“Well.. I don’t know.” Jake shrugs. “I just wanted to look at you or something, I guess. Make sure you were alright.”
Your expression softens, a step towards him, eyes — wide, searching — meeting his. “Stay, Jake. Please.”
His breath catches, taken aback by this unprompted offering of vulnerability—asking him to stay because you want him to, not because he asked if he should. He wonders if it could always be like this. If you could be like this with him again. Open. Gentle. Like before.
“Did you miss me?” Jake asks, greedy for you to open up. To give him more than just a little. “While I was away?”
“It was one night.”
“So? I missed you,” he admits.
Your eyes flicker over his face, but you don’t answer. No, you roll your eyes like he’s being ridiculous—it bothers him though he knows it shouldn’t. He approaches you before he can think better of it, hands finding the counter on either side of you, caging you in. You don’t resist or pull away, only tilting your head to meet his gaze. And fuck, you’re right there and so beautiful. Close enough for him to see the way your eyes widen ever-so-slightly. Close enough that his pulse trips over itself.
“Why won’t you tell me you missed me?” he asks.
You arch a brow. “Why do you want me to tell you if you already know?”
Jake exhales sharply, tilting his head, pressing his fingertips into the counter like it’ll ground him. “I just—” He pauses. Swallows. Tries again. “Please.”
A hesitation. He feels your hand on his waist, your fingers squeezing. Sees the way your lips part, like you might actually say it. But you don’t. “Why?” you ask instead.
He blinks, throat working around an answer that won’t come out. And suddenly, he feels stupid. Standing here, begging you to say something he already knows, something that shouldn’t matter so much. His eyes flick to yours, and he tries again, softer this time, whispering, “Please, baby.”
Finally, you break, quietly confessing, “I hate being away from you.” And it’s a million times better.
A startled breath escapes him, soft and disbelieving. His heart stumbles over itself, warmth flooding his chest. He blinks at you, processing, the words replaying in his head, sweeter each time. His fingers twitch against the countertop, resisting the urge to touch you, but you’re looking at the floor, and that won’t do. Gently, he tilts your chin up, your eyes meeting his—all wide and pretty, uncertainty flickering in them.
He swallows, voice unsteady. “Say it again.”
A slow smile curves your lips, and he sees the flash of realisation in your eyes—you’ve got him, you know you do. “I hate being away from you, Jake,” you repeat, confident now.
The shape of the words on your lips, how they roll off your tongue, hitting him with so much affection it’s a wonder he doesn’t burst into tears. Those words spoken to him, in your voice, by you. He takes a deep breath. “See? That wasn’t so bad,” he says, trying to tease but his voice is too soft.
You roll your eyes, but your lips are twitching, fighting a smile. “It was excruciating.”
Jake hums, brushing his thumb along your jaw, memorising the feel of you, liking the way you gulp. “My poor girl,” he teases, a pout on his lips. “I was about to drop it, you know. One more why, and I’d have let you off the hook.”
And then — before you can fire back some sharp remark — he kisses you.
He takes his time, desperate — quite frankly — to make up for what he missed yesterday morning. His hands find the small of your back, pulling you close as if he can’t bear being away from you again. Every touch is a relief, his gratitude and adoration poured into the warmth of his lips against yours. A tiny sound, low and wanting, slips from your mouth to his, stirring his chest. When he pulls away, your lips linger, and he almost can’t find in him to break the connection. You chase his kiss, whining a little—so cute it weakens his knees, and he can’t help but smile, liking the flutter in his stomach.
Looking down at you, he exhales shakily, heart pounding. Overwhelming warmth fills him up, crams itself into every single part of him, knowing that this is real. That you’re real, and you’re here, with him.
“That wasn’t so bad either, huh?” he asks, giggling, his voice almost as light as he feels.
You beam at him before hiding your face in his chest, letting out a giddy laugh as he rubs circles on your back, chin on top of your head. You hate being away from him. The words echo in his head, surreal, sweet.
He’s not convinced he’ll ever stop smiling.
Until his stomach growls, loud, slicing the quiet. Another laugh from you, the sound vibrating through him — too real to be imagined — as you pinch his waist. “Come on, baby,” you say, eyes sparkling. “Let’s eat.”
You slip out of his hold, and Jake, helpless to do anything but follow, wraps his arms around your waist at the stove. His chest is pressed to your back, fingers curling into your sides so you don’t leave again. If you mind, you don’t voice it. You sway a little against him, humming the same song he was listening to on the bus.
Why can’t he stay here, with you, like this, forever?
His bowl warms his lap while you put your glasses on, turning on the TV. Gossip Girl fills the screen, the voices familiar, comforting, fading into the background when you sit, your thigh pressed against his. He wonders if you realise how much of the space in his head you occupy. The flavours are rich, familiar, perfect—he’s never had cheese dakgalbi as good as yours. He sighs happily. Heart skipping a beat when he glances over at you, finding you already looking at him. You hate being away from him. Lips kiss-bitten, lenses foggy from the steam. You give a tender smile.
Jake bites back a grin, stuffing chicken into his mouth so he doesn’t speak and admit to something crazy—the future in his head, with you. Your child (children if you want them, a dog if you don’t (hopefully a dog even if you do)), and countless nights together like this for the rest of your natural lives.
Beside him, sane, you give commentary—perfect outfits, Serena’s hair, ugh, why is Chuck here? He nods, too far gone to do anything but copy your homework and change the answers a bit. That dress is beautiful, there’s probably tutorials if you look, why is Chuck here?
After he clears his bowl and what you couldn’t finish from yours, you make a pillow out of his shoulder. Sighing, you get comfortable while he inhales the familiar scent of your shampoo, your hair brushing his cheek. Shifting closer, you press into him, his arm tightening around you. It doesn’t take long for your breath to even out. Jake’s chest swells, overwhelmed by how much he likes this. He presses his lips to the top of your head, the softest kiss of his life, and lets his eyes flutter shut.
He hates being away from you too.
Jake has rescheduled this dinner with his parents so many times, his mother actually called him. He didn’t answer. Instead, he flinched, threw his phone to the other end of the couch and waited for the ringing to stop. If it weren’t for his dad texting to ask about it, he wouldn’t be standing on the doorstep of his family home doing breathing exercises.
He takes one last deep breath before putting his key in the lock. Inhale. One, two, three. Exhale. One, two, three. Open the door. “I’m home!” he calls out, stepping inside and taking off his shoes.
Jake’s mother gasps in the kitchen as if she’s surprised, jogging out into the hall. “Jaeyun!” she cries, arms flung around him. “Oh, my boy, it’s so good to see you.”
He only nods, letting go prematurely, long before she releases him.
“It’s just a shame you’re harder to reach than the Prodigal Son.”
“Yeah.” Jake gives her a tight smile, a slow nod. “Just got a lot on at the minute with uni. Good to be home though.”
She’s already heading back to the kitchen, talking over her shoulder. “Dinner’s nearly ready, so you’ve come at the perfect time. You might think about changing?”
With furrowed brows, he looks down at his outfit. Jeans. Jumper. Hardly unpresentable. “I think I’m alright, actually, Mum,” he says, following behind her.
Seeing his dad stand up from the table tugs Jake’s lips into a boyish grin. “Dad,” he whispers, breathless, pleased, allowing himself to be pulled into a hug, his dad’s unchanged cologne hitting his nose. Floral, warm. Strong arms around him.
“How are you, son?” he asks, quiet, private, just for them.
“I’m good, Dad. I’m good.”
The simmer of broth. Oil frying eggs in a pan. The smell of beef strikes him, turning his hunger fierce. His stomach rumbles quietly, unsoothed by his attempts at rubbing it. He asks if his mother needs a hand, and she waves him off, shakes her head, it’s her pleasure to cook for her son. She’s wearing her apron, the same red checkered one she’s had for as long as he remembers, stirring a pot by the stove. She looks so motherly like this. As if she might come over and kiss the top of his head just because. Pat his back and say good job for simply existing. It’s all very maternal of her, like that instinct has finally kicked in, twenty short years postpartum. Maternal in a way that digs a nasty pit in his stomach. The mum-in-a-million, best-mum-ever figure he always thought Big Mum made up to push Mother’s Day cards.
“Are you seeing anyone?” his dad asks.
That word choice sticks out to him, it’s almost been a full year of anyones and peoples from his dad and it still warms his heart in a way he’s not sure he’ll ever adjust to. There had been some.. concerns when he was younger and innocently introduced his first school friend, Jaehyun, to his parents as his boyfriend. Concerns that were not entirely baseless, as Jake’s teenage years would soon reveal to him.
“Any nice girls?” his mother corrects from the kitchen, not looking away from the drawer as she takes cutlery out. “Oh, who was that girl you used to be friends with? What was her name? From school, Jaeyun? Funny girl. Her mother used to teach you, what was she called?”
Jake mumbles your name, reminds her that the two of you are still friends. He’s not sure why she insists on this song and dance, when both of them know she wouldn’t exactly be happy if he brought you — or anyone — home. He bites the inside of cheek remembering you — age fourteen — sitting at this very table, passing Jake the salt shaker and scrunching up your nose at the mention of church. Church? No, my parents said church is for people who think they’re better than everyone else. Only Jake and his dad found that funny.
She puts cutlery down for all three of them, looking down at him after placing his chopsticks. “The atheist?” she asks, saying the A-word with a certain level of distaste that Jake can’t help find amusing.
“Yes, mum. The atheist,” he confirms, holding back a laugh at the amused smile his dad — the other atheist — wears.
There’s a look on her face when she hums, as if satisfied he acknowledged your lack of faith out loud. “I mean, you’re a bit young for a relationship, anyway.”
“I’m twenty,” he points out.
She raises her brow from over the kitchen island, stopping in her tracks with a steaming pot in hand. “Do you want to get married?”
Jake shrugs, watching as she puts the pot on the table, letting the smell of short ribs envelop him. “I mean.. not right now, but at some point? Maybe?” The words leave his mouth unthinkingly, seeming wrong as soon as he says them.
“So why would you be looking for a girlfriend?”
His mouth opens and promptly closes again, unsure of what to say. Jake glances at his dad, but he only takes a sip of his water. He’s not going to argue with her—he never does.
“Look.” His mother sighs, tucking her hair behind her ears as she takes a seat at the table next to his dad. “A lot of people your age are out drinking and having sex, and I understand that’s how this country is, but that is not how we raised you, Jaeyun—we didn’t bring you here for that. Sex isn’t about your age; it’s about marriage. And until then, you shouldn’t even be thinking about it, never mind having it.”
Mortified, he runs a hand over his face. “I’m not having sex. Jeez, Mum.” It’s a lie that only gets harder to say the more he tells it. He might actually abstain — even from hand stuff — until marriage, if he has this conversation again.
“Are you drinking?”
“No, I’m not drinking.” This lie is easier. “I’m an athlete.” Because half of it is true.
His mother tilts her head, affronted. “Jaeyun, you’re a Christian first.”
A familiar tension wraps around him, not any easier to manage for how often he feels it around her. “You’re right, Mum. Sorry.”
She seems pleased enough with this, her eyes lingering on him for a beat before they narrow. “I heard from Sieun’s mum that you weren’t at church this week.” Of course, she heard. She is always hearing things about Jake, and Sieun’s mum always seems to be the one saying them.
“I had a game.”
“On Sabbath?”
There is, for Jake, no winning where his mother is concerned. Because, of course, his breaking of the Sabbath is what matters right now. Never mind that he’s playing at a level she used to brag to her friends about. Never mind that he’s doing that, and getting top marks in his classes, and still finding time for family dinner every other week. Never mind that last term he spent two days with an IV drip in his arm from overworking himself and she didn’t text him back when he told her.
Jake’s jaw tightens, teeth grinding as he forces himself to swallow the words burning on his tongue. A glance at his dad, who’s staring down at his empty plate, pretending not to hear. Finally, he clears his throat, setting his glass down with deliberate care, a delicate arm over his wife’s shoulders. “Honey..” He trails off, eyes flicking to his son quickly. “How about we say grace before dinner gets cold?”
Conflicted relief settles over Jake’s shoulders at this. He knew his dad would step in eventually. He had to. This is the man who sat him down at thirteen and explained consent to him in careful, measured words—again at seventeen before he moved out. The man who passed him a beer on a fishing trip when he was sixteen, told him to sip slowly, to learn the taste so he wouldn’t feel the need to prove anything to anyone later. Who had wrapped him in a hug, kissed the top of his head last year when he said he likes boys too. You’re my only son, Jaeyun. I want you to be happy. He can’t look at his dad, see the hard lines of his face, the silver strands of his hair, without seeing that too.
He nods obediently when his mother tells him to pray, holds hands with his parents, closes his eyes. His dad’s rough hand squeezes his and he smiles. “Dear Lord, thank you for giving us the opportunity to sit around the table tonight as a family. Please bless the food we’re about to eat, and the hands that made it. In your name’s sake we pray, amen.”
With that, they eat ugeoji galbitang—Jake’s favourite. He likes it too much to let anything, even his mother (who makes it best), ruin it for him. Luckily, his dad steers the conversation, shares his wins at work, compliments Jake’s highlight tape from the game over the weekend, talks about the trash movie he’s got lined up for them to watch tonight.
Tonight. Together. As a family. Jake always spends the night after dinner, no exceptions. But he’s certain that if he spends any longer than he needs to in this house, he’ll die. He needs to come up with something, an excuse, a lie, something suddenly remembered. A commitment heavy enough that he must leave at once to attend to it. He thinks about Sunghoon, about you—but Jake’s mother is a blood is thicker than water kind of woman, and in her eyes, the only things thicker than blood are God and school.
He clears his throat, takes a sip of water, keeps a hold on his glass even when he puts it down. “That sounds great, Dad—I mean Operation Christmas Drop sounds truly awful, but I have a paper due tonight and it’s saved on a USB so I’ll have to go home to submit it.”
His mother continues to eat, unbothered. It’s hard to watch his dad’s smile falter, but he nods, understanding. “Another time, then.”
Dinner continues, marked mostly by the clatter of cutlery—chopsticks on side plate, spoon on bowl. There are a lot of negative things Jake could say about his mother, but she’s the only woman in the world who could call him an embarrassment for quitting violin at fifteen, then console him with her cooking. Even the simplest sides — her fried eggs and white rice — move Jake beyond words.
He clears the table when they finish eating, his parents packing up the leftovers while speaking quietly to one another as Jake washes the dishes. He strains his ears over the running water, but it’s no use, only catching murmured honeys and nos. Coming home is a bit like being caught in a loop sometimes, like he’s checking off boxes on a list:
1. Mum warns Jake about premarital sex
2. Jake lies and says he’s not having it
3. Dad sits in silence, pretending he didn’t buy Jake condoms when he went off to college
4. Substitute sex for some other mostly harmless vice
5. Rinse and repeat.
This absurd script they’re following, these roles they all fall into, time and time again. He can’t be the only one exhausted by this.
Jake dries his hands with the dish towel hanging from the oven door and scratches at the back of his neck. “I’d really better go,” he says. “Thanks again for dinner, Mum.”
He doesn’t hang around for her response, taking the stairs two at a time until he gets to his room. Slipping on his jacket, he looks around at the walls again. Certificates, postcards. Barer now since he took some of his favourite posters with him when he moved. Still, his Dune poster, brought home from a midnight showing, hangs above his bed. He’d stayed at Jaehyun’s house that night—his mother would never let him out so late with friends. As much as he loves it — the outline of Timothée Chalamet, Paul, tall and trim in his stillsuit — he left it behind. A quiet reminder of his small rebellion.
Leaving always feels so final, like he has to memorise the details of his childhood room even though he’ll be back in two weeks. A sighs, more than ready to leave, but stops short, seeing the photo booth strip under his light switch. You and him, frozen in the pink frames of a four-cut photo, sixteen forever. In the last shot, your arm is around his shoulders, lips pressed to his cheek. Back then, he didn’t think he liked you—not the way he does now. But his skin had burned where you kissed him, and he hadn’t washed his face that night, afraid to lose the trace of your clear lip gloss.
After four years, the memory sends a swarm of butterflies through his stomach, his fingers reaching up to brush his left cheek. He takes the photo, slipping it into his jacket pocket before joining his parents at the door.
“I just want you to make good decisions,” his mother says, hugging him. Her perfume is floral, familiar. He breathes it in, holding on just a second longer than normal.
“I’m trying.”
“Come on, I’ll walk you out,” his dad says, already putting on his shoes.
Jake’s chest tightens. He gulps, nodding, waves at his mother. Her eyes burn holes into his back as he follows his dad out. March’s breeze whips his jacket, lunchboxed leftovers warm his palms. They walk in silence to Jake’s car.
“Are you happy, Jaeyun?” His dad’s voice is soft, careful. “None of this matters if you aren’t.” His calloused fingers rub at the back of Jake’s neck—a comfort. “Not your grades, not football, not church.. It’s no use working so hard if you’re not happy.”
Jake nods. “I am usually,” he admits.
A grin. Crinkled eyes. “That’s all I ask of you.”
“Are you happy, Dad?”
His dad’s face softens, shoulders relaxing. “With you as my son?” A chuckle slips out of him. “How could I not be happy?” He pulls Jake into a tight hug, his arms strong and steady. Jake squeezes back, fingers gripping his dad’s shirt.
“I love you,” Jake says, the words muffled against his dad’s shoulder.
His dad holds him even tighter. “I love you, son.”
They pull apart slowly, reluctant. A shared exhale. Breeze biting, still.
“Drive safe, okay?”
Jake nods, unlocking the car. “I will.”
His dad smiles again, giving him a nod before heading back to the house. The porch light is off when Jake starts his car.
Thirty silent minutes pass by in a blur, unregistered until he’s taking off his seatbelt outside his building. Backpack on, leftovers in hand, he goes inside, dragging his feet up the stairs to the eighth floor. He doesn’t even have to slow his pace or catch his breath at the door to his flat—at least the gym is paying off.
Sunghoon isn’t home. Monday night. Evening practice. Jake leaves the food on the kitchen counter to cool down and goes to his room. His bed, neatly made, fresh sheets, looks tempting, but he has other plans for the night. He gets changed and sits on the couch, waiting for Sunghoon.
For the next hour, his phone goes off regularly, but none of the notifications are from you so he doesn’t care. It only dawns on Jake that he can simply text you when he wants to see your name in his phone.
Jake: Can I come over?
YN: I thought you had family dinner tn?
YN: Oh. I’m not at home but you can call me!!! My signal is a bit shit on the train rn but you can always call me, Jake
Jake: It’s okay, usual shit w my mum lol
Jake: Idk why I always think things will be different when I go there and always get surprised when they’re not
YN: I’m sorry she gives you such a hard time, baby
YN: I know you don’t feel like it but you’re doing such a good job. You’re juggling shit I don’t even want to imagine and you still make time for football and all your uni stuff and to make everyone in your life feel special. I promise you’re not fucking anything up at all.
YN: You don’t have to keep going over there, you know.. I get you like seeing your dad but surely you two can hang out alone? Another fishing trip, maybe? I know you had a really good time in the summer
The summer—the fishing trip, the beer, the hug. He smiles.
Jake: Yeah, maybe
When he hits send, a key turns in the lock. Sunghoon—whistling to himself after practice. It’s nice one of them had a good Monday, that’s half of the people in the flat. Much better than thirty seconds ago, when a hundred percent of people in the flat were having a terrible day. His footsteps pad down the hall and he freezes in the doorway, brows raising in surprise. A beat. “Hey, buddy. I didn’t know you’d be back tonight.”
Jake clears his throat, but the roughness of his voice persists. “Left early.”
Sunghoon hums, nodding once before he leaves, coming back in a t-shirt and sweatpants, two beers in hand as he sits on the couch. He hands one to Jake, pulls the tab on his own, and takes a long, slow sip. “Do you want to talk about it?”
“Not really.” Jake shakes his head. “I put some ugeoji galbitang in the fridge for you. I don’t know if you saw.”
“Nice, man, thanks.”
These are the last words from either of them for hours. Even when one of them gets up to use the toilet, or Sunghoon goes to get more beer. It’s not until two a.m. that they speak again.
“Are you alright if I turn in? I need to be up soon.” Sunghoon yawns, arms stretched out in front of him.
Jake nods, yawning too. “Yeah, of course. I should get some sleep anyway.”
Sunghoon lingers, his hand curling and uncurling on the edge of the couch. “You sure?” he asks, only standing when Jake nods again.
Jake collects the cans, flicking the lamp off on the way out. He turns towards the kitchen but stops in his tracks, looking over his shoulder. Sunghoon’s heading to the bathroom, hand on the doorknob when Jake says, “Thank you.” For being my best friend. For doing nothing with me for hours, he doesn’t say.
Yet Sunghoon seems to understand. He always does. In three steps, he reaches Jake, a reassuring pat on his shoulder. “You’re my best friend,” he says, matter-of-factly, and leaves Jake in the hall, locking the bathroom door behind him.
When Sunghoon is done, Jake goes to the bathroom, brushes his teeth. He steps into the shower, appreciating the heat of the water on his skin, how he reddens under it. Washes his face, his hair. Stands aimlessly under the spray until he starts worrying about the planet. He feels a bit better after this. Moisturises in his room, puts Vaseline on his lips, gets into bed.
He’s lying on his side, staring at the wall. He pats around the mattress for his phone, finding it and calling you without thinking. It rings out, because, of course, you can always call me, Jake, does not mean: call me at three in the morning.
He looks at his screen for so long it locks. Too dark to see his reflection on it. Thankfully. He opens your text thread, drafting a message. Called by mistake HAHAHAHAHA dw! Delete. Sorry for calling so late, maybe we could hang out when you’re up? Coff—there’s a knock at his door and he locks his phone, tucking it under his pillow like a child.
“What is it?” he calls out.
The door clicks open behind him, closes softly. Your voice. “Hey, Jakey.”
He sits up immediately, your name falling out of his mouth like a question. You’re standing there in your pyjamas, angelic, everything he’s ever wanted, blued by the moon shining through his window. And if he wasn’t so upset, so convinced he’s making this all up, he would scold you for coming over at this time in only a vest and shorts. He doesn’t speak, doesn’t move too abruptly, so as not to disrupt the dreamscape. Slowly, carefully, he lifts the end of his duvet, a silent invitation. You step towards him, crawling into his arms, soft skin warm on his, a kiss to his chest.
This is.. real?
You are real?
Turning on his lamp, he pushes your hair from your face, studying you. Soft bow of your lips, gentle slope of your nose, flutter of your lashes when you blink. Lamplight cuts sharp orange angles over your cheekbone, carving you out of the dark. He kisses you, a fleeting press of his lips to yours. To check.
You are real, and breathtaking, always so breathtaking, and here, with him.
“How did you..?” He trails off, unsure what to ask—get here? Know I needed this?
“Hoon called and came to pick me up,” you say, answering both of his questions at once.
This is.. overwhelming. Beyond. That Sunghoon would think to call you, go so far as to pick you up at this hour. That you would get out of bed for this—for him. That there are people in his life, bound only to him by choice, who care this much. Jake swallows around the lump in his throat, eyes stinging with hot tears, desperate to spill.
“I’m sorry,” you whisper, cupping his cheek in your palm. “I’m so sorry, baby.”
Baby. Your baby. He has half a mind to tell you he loves you, but he’s touched, not insane, so he bites his tongue. Hides his face in the crook of your neck.
“Oh, Yunie,” you say, stroking his back, your touch a grounding force. “I wish there was something I could do.”
He kisses the spot where your neck and shoulder meet. Lifts his head. Smiles as the first tear slips from his cheek onto yours. “You’re here.”
Jake kisses your lips—soft, fleeting, hardly more than a peck. It’s not enough. Another kiss, longer, lingering, your warmth undoing him. Wrapping you in his arms, he tucks you close to his chest, clinging onto you like a lifeline. I love you. Over and over, he thinks it. Prayers on a rosary. So loud in his head he’s not convinced you can’t hear him. His eyes flutter shut, and with your steady breath on his skin, he lets himself fall asleep.
Jake wakes up first, grinning at the sight of you curled against him, your face squished into his chest. His arms tighten instinctively, as if to keep you there, as if you might slip away. He watches you, still as he can, taking in the quiet, the warmth, you. As if sensing his gaze, you open your eyes, sleep-heavied blinks as you look up at him. You shift in his hold, turning your head enough to see his alarm clock. 08:46. A groan leaves your lips, and you bury your face back into his chest.
He kisses the top of your head, mumbling against it. “Morning, baby.”
Your groan doesn’t stop, drawn-out, dejected, rumbling against his skin until you tip your head back. “Come shower with me.” Your voice is thick with sleep, the words said as if you think it might be the only solution for your suffering.
And it would be rude of him not to at least help you find out.
Jake has definitely had more productive showers, but he’s never had a better one than this. Skin on skin. Lips on lips, and neck, and chest. Slippery hands all over each other. Wet heat overwhelming him—press of bodies, rush of water. Trembling breath, racing heart. Your fingers around his wrist, guiding his hand between your thighs.
By the time you’re clean, and moisturised, there’s only twenty minutes until your class starts. Pulling a pair of his sweatpants over your hips, you make a joke, laughing to yourself as you blame Jake for what you started. He’s a terrible influence, using his masculine wiles to seduce, corrupt, and make you late.
He snorts, shaking his head. “So I’m a pervert in this fantasy of yours?”
“I think you like it, Jakey,” you say, walking towards him, arms looping around his neck, fingers in his hair, chuckling. “Making a harlot out of an honest woman.”
Jake pinches your waist, liking the way it makes you jolt and squeal—trying to focus on that instead of the sharpness of the word harlot against his ears. He almost shudders, jarred by its dissonance. Sounding more like a word that might share a page with some of the other words that have disturbed him recently. Words he’s done a good job of pushing to the back of his mind—words he’s putting in a lot of effort to keep there. He sniffs, leaning down to kiss you. It was a joke, Jake. You were joking. It was a Christmas joke.
“Alright, Virgin Mary,” he mumbles against your lips, pulling away before you accuse him of further debasing. “Let’s go.”
He drives you home so you can get your stuff, and you make a beeline for your room when you arrive. He doesn’t follow. Instead, he takes a deep breath and knocks on Jimin’s door.
She groans when she sees him, head falling back. “What?” she huffs, voice thick with irritation.
“Can we talk?” he shifts on his feet. “Please?”
Jimin’s answer takes a while. She eyes him with her arms crossed over her chest. He can’t help looking over his shoulder, at your closed door, wondering how long you’ll take to change and pack your bag. With a sigh, Jimin steps aside, and he takes a cautious step in, making a point to stay near the door as he closes it—unsure how welcome he really is.
“What did I do to you?” he asks hesitantly, watching as she sits on the end of her unmade bed.
“You didn’t do anything to me.” Jimin shrugs, continuing when Jake opens his mouth to speak. “But I’m sure you’ll forgive me if I don’t trust the ‘innocent’ guy best friend who pounces at the first chance he gets.”
“Pounces?” he repeats, like it’s his first time hearing the word. “I’m not an animal, Jimin. There was no pouncing. If anything, she pounced on me.”
“So she’s an animal, is that what you’re saying?”
Jake sighs, seeing there’s no way to win here. “Sure,” he says dryly. “She’s a tiger. Happy?”
This doesn’t amuse Jimin. “What do you want with her?”
He shrugs like he hasn’t given it much thought. “I want whatever she wants. If she wants to hook up, we’ll hook up. If she doesn’t, we won’t.”
“You like her.” It’s not a question, but an accusation that softens her voice, raises her brows.
Jake chews his lip, and that’s enough. Jimin’s jaw drops. “Oh, my God. I was worried you were going to hurt her, and this whole time I should’ve been worried about her hurting you.” She shakes her head, a laugh of disbelief coming out. “Good luck.”
He’s not sure what he was expecting, but it wasn’t this.
Until it involved him, Jake hadn’t heard much about your sex life since first year. Thankfully. Kim Mingyu — Hot Mingyu, as you and Jimin still call him — is the last name he remembers. Older, massive, lived up to his moniker. He was always talking about the gym or his tech start-up, and eventually, he ended things because he didn’t believe Jake was just your friend. Jake suspects that the memory of Hot Mingyu will stick with him forever, because it was the first time it ever occurred to him that he didn’t want to be just friends with you.
Jimin apologises, opening her arms and approaching him. She says that she should’ve known. Quiet, sympathetic, Jake thinks, hating it. But the door swings open, hitting his back before she can hug him. You poke your head into the room with a smile, oblivious. “Ready to go?”
Back in the car, you try to peer pressure Jake into speeding, and he appeases you, doing thirty-two miles per hour in a thirty zone. Giving up with a huff, you turn your body away from him, knees against the passenger door. He’s too busy thinking about what Jimin said to comment—what the fuck does good luck mean?
And he’s so busy trying to figure that out, he doesn’t even realise you’re still wearing his sweatpants until you get out of the car. “Thanks for the lift, Jakey.”
Jakey smiles. Jakey waves. Jakey watches you leave. Jakey sits in his car for an hour before going home.
He finds Sunghoon—home from practice, and eating an early lunch by the kitchen window. Standing, like he always does when he eats alone. “Hey, buddy,” he says, glancing quickly over his shoulder. “Feeling better?”
Without a second thought — or a first one — Jake charges towards him, tackling him more than he hugs him. “Thank you.”
Sunghoon goes stiff, completely tense in Jake’s hold. A shrug, slow and unnatural. “Don’t mention it,” he says, voice strained. A single, awkward pat of Jake’s back. “Could you please let go of me now? For a minute?”
Apologising, Jake quickly releases him, feeling bad for the ambush. “I’m going to thank you again for last night, and I need you to accept it this time. You didn’t have to do that for me, but you did it anyway.”
Sunghoon turns, amused, leaning against the wall and taking a spoonful of yoghurt to the mouth. “I’m waiting.”
“Thank you, Sunghoon. Really.”
“You’re welcome, Jake,” he says, monotone, but his eyes are soft and he’s smiling. “And if you’re going to the library today, can we go together? I’m slacking, man—I need to lock in. Quickly.”
Jake chuckles at his deflection, but nods and says, “Of course.”
They have different approaches to studying — Sunghoon puts his headphones on, and hyper-fixates on his task for as many consecutive hours as he can; Jake swears by Pomodoro, twenty-five minutes on, five minutes off — but they work alongside each other quite effectively. Jake squints at AutoCAD. Sunghoon scrolls through physio clinic listings. Jake texts his dad, asking if they can go fishing soon. Sunghoon continues to look for summer placements. Parallel play.
His Pomodoro timer goes off silently, a notification in the corner of his laptop screen, and he lets out a relieved breath—he has high hopes not to study anything architecture related after this term, in a perfect world, he’ll never have to so much as look at a building again. When he checks his phone, his dad has replied, suggesting that they go next weekend, and he’s still typing when Jake opens their thread.
Dad: And if you want, you can bring that ‘friend’ of yours. It would be nice to see her again.
Dad: The atheist. 😆.
Jake: Yeah, dad, that sounds good haha. I’m sure she’d love to! I’ll ask
Sunghoon takes off his headphones, thick brows furrowed as he looks over at Jake. “Training starts, like, now, no?”
The time is bright and reproachful on Jake’s screen. 19:55. Five minutes to get to Coach’s office on the other end of the building. A jolt of panic launches him out of his seat, shoving his laptop and notebooks hurriedly into his bag while Sunghoon watches, yawning.
“Can I come?”
The question catches him so off guard, his hand freezes over the zipper of his backpack. “What? To training?” Jake asks, cocking his head. “I mean, probably. We have analysis before we start so I’m not sure about that, but you can definitely watch us on the pitch if you want.”
A sigh of relief, as he stands. Firm hand on Jake’s shoulder. “Thank God, bro—can’t be fucked walking home.”
They’re the last to arrive, but thankfully Coach isn’t there yet. None of the guys question Sunghoon’s presence, they’re actually more pleased to see him than they are their own teammate. He leads Sunghoon to the end of the room, instructing him not to draw attention to himself—he gives a thumbs-up, whispering, got it, when the door clicks open.
The first thing Coach says is, “Who the fuck is this guy?”
Why he thought his gargantuan best friend could be inconspicuous anywhere, never mind standing right behind him, is anyone’s guess. Sunghoon, for some reason, says nothing. Jake clears his throat. “He’s—uh—he’s my flatmate, Coach.”
Coach sighs, rubs his face with his hand. “Whatever. Don’t speak unless I speak to you. Understand?”
“Sir, yes, sir.” Sunghoon gives a firm nod, raising a hand in salute.
Another sigh from Coach, wrinkles in his forehead showing as he mutters something to himself. “We have a lot to cover, so let’s not waste more time.” He pulls up the match video on his laptop—always calling them the highlights, but criticises them aggressively. “Yang, what have I told you about hogging the ball?”
Jungwon’s smile is audible. “That I’ve improved a lot, and you’ve never seen a better sportsman than me.” This answer wins him a death glare. “Fine, I hogged the ball a little, but we won!”
This seems to amuse Coach, who laughs and looks around the room. “A little, the boy says.” The video starts—a minute long clip of Jungwon with the ball at his feet, neglecting multiple opportunities to pass. No cuts. “Give me one reason why I shouldn’t bench you.”
“I’m not seeing the big deal here. We literally won.”
“You didn’t win this weekend because you have a selfish striker,” Coach says coldly. “You won because the other team was incompetent. And if you keep playing like that, you’ll cost us the season.”
Jungwon isn’t smiling anymore.
Analysis goes on like always. Backhanded praise; thinly-veiled insults; Coach is pleased with his decision to appoint Jay Captain—words that no longer form a lump in Jake’s throat. In fact, he even pats Jay on the back, smiling sincerely when he looks over.
Jake: Post-match went well 💪
Dad: Of course, son. You played brilliantly! So proud. 😆.
Training flies by in a blur of five-a-side games and recreations of some of the poorer plays from Saturday’s game, Coach giving real-time corrections with varying degrees of rudeness. And before he knows it, the final whistle blows, dismissing them. Jake jogs off the pitch, legs heavy with exertion, mind buzzing with the rush of playing. His shirt is damp with sweat, sticking uncomfortably to his stomach, but he can’t look away from his reflection in the locker room mirrors. Cheeks and neck flushed, glowing. He looks good. Feels good—too good to just stand there staring at himself. So, he takes his shirt off, and without much thought sends you a photo.
YN: Day 537727272724733 without dick: I came just from seeing this picture
Jake: Has it been that long?
YN: I can’t count how many times I squirted while looking at that
YN: Fr though come over rn. Need that bad.
Jake: Are you objectifying me?
YN: Is it working .
Jake: Yes. But I need to drop off Riki and Hoon then shower so……..
Jake: Wait up for me?
YN: Fine.
The drive to Riki’s place has never been so long, and Sunghoon sleeps the whole way. Growing impatient, Jake almost starts driving off before his teammate is even all the way out of the car. Every light is green on the way home, no traffic at all—a blessing, Jake thinks. He takes a quick shower, brushes his teeth, and leaves the flat in a hurry, sprinting down the stairs to get back to his car.
He buckles his belt with shaking hands, a text lighting his phone screen. Checking it immediately, he sees that Sunoo sent a Reddit link to the team group chat: like palmer’s not one of the best players in the league rn. Curious, he clicks it, the app’s familiar logo colouring his screen orange, and before Sunoo’s video has the chance to load, something else catches his attention—the number 54 sitting on his notification tab. His heart sinks to his stomach, he knows exactly what’s waiting for him under there. But he clicks it anyway, rereads the post he made only two weeks ago now. And looks straight at the comments, knowing what they’ll say before he sees them.
It is a sin, brother. And there is a demon inside of you that wants you to keep committing this sin. You need to repent and flee from fornication at once. This sin is extremely demonic, it took me away from Christ completely, and I was on my way to h*ll.
The Holy Spirit is working in you. Thank God for giving you a conscience and do not go through with it no matter what.
You want advice? Turn to 1 Corinthians 7:2 and Hebrews 13:4. The Bible is very clear that the only acceptable time for sex is after marriage.
Honestly bro, just marry her lmao
I lost my job, my girlfriend left me, and I got hit by a car after indulging in fornication. It is not worth it, my brother, take heed. I will pray for you.
Jake’s brain buffers, the words blurring together as he scrolls, searching for a different answer. Someone, anyone in the comments telling him it’s okay, that he will be okay, and he’s not going to hell for simply wanting to have sex.
Nothing.
A humourless laugh comes out of him, an exhausted huff. He rests his heavy head on the steering wheel—he can’t be bothered anymore. This isn’t just sex for him. There’s a future here—he’s not sure what it is, or how he’ll get there. But surely, surely, something good, something worthwhile is at the end of this. And isn’t that worth something? Wouldn’t God want him to enjoy himself?
Jake takes a deep breath, white-knuckle grip on the wheel, and says a prayer. “Dear Lord, thank you for all you’ve done for me—but I’m not waiting any longer. I’m really going to do this, Jesus. And there’s nothing you can do to stop me.”
Jake pauses, peeking around the car with one of his eyes to check for hellfire—the coast is clear.
“I’m sorry,” he says. “Amen.”
It’s the most cautious drive of his life, checking every mirror and blindspot thrice, hands sitting firmly at ten and two—kissing twenty miles per hour the whole way. Parked outside, he climbs over the centre console to use the passenger door because it opens out onto the pavement, and no way one of those cars that’s going around striking down the sexually immoral is going to spawn there. He uses the stairs instead of the lift, and makes it to your flat in one piece.
He doesn’t even have a chance to knock before you pull the door open, telling him he took so long as you take him by the hand and tug him over the threshold. “My fault, baby,” he says, apologetic. Jake bites his lip, eyes trailing over you. Fallen strap of your tank top, nipples pressing through thin fabric, shorts riding up. Good God. He gulps, dick stirring in his pants as you drag him to the living room.
Sinking into the couch, he looks up at you, eyeing him like you want to eat him alive—he’d let you, he wants you to. He pulls you into his lap, kissing you. A moan tugged out of his chest when you grind down on him. At this, you pull away, chest heaving. Lips swollen, wet. He can’t help but reach out and touch them, tracing your mouth with his thumb, pressing down on your plush bottom lip, before pushing it past your teeth. Fuck. Your eyes meet his, hazy, unfocused as you suck on his thumb, letting your tongue graze the tip. Holding his wrist, you stroke it and take his finger all the way to the knuckle, looking at him the same way you do when you’re kneeling between his spread thighs.
You tug at his shirt, mumbling around his finger. “Why are you still wearing this?”
“Waiting for you to take it off of me, baby.”
An imperceptible hitch of your breath before you reach for the hem, tugging it over his head. You bite your lip, admiring him and his cheeks burn scarlet under your gaze. “Can’t believe you look like this.” Warm hands on his skin, fingers trailing his abs and the fading love bites you’d left behind. “Such a lucky girl,” you whisper, awestruck as you kiss him urgently.
Emboldened, eager for more praise — and frankly, extremely turned on — he stands, grip firm on your ass when he does.
“Holy shit,” you utter, pulling away, eyes blown and unguarded. “Have you always been this strong?”
This acknowledgement of his efforts makes his entire body flush, hot and bothered from head to toe. As he shrugs sheepishly, he can’t help wishing he could be more nonchalant when it comes to you. Wishing he could just nod, say yeah—even though you both know the strength and the muscle definition are new. Jake’s stomach flutters when you smile, leaning back into him, kissing and mumbling against his lips that he’s so hot.
In your room, the two of you collapse onto the bed, attached at the hips and mouth. He begins to understand some of those freaks in the subreddit, how this — how you — could easily knock him off-kilter and take over his life. You grab his wrist, tugging his hand towards the spot between your legs, and killing his train of thought in the process.
Nothing else registers except your soft cotton shorts, drenched against his fingers and stuck to you. “Holy fuck,” he mumbles.
“Do something about it.”
Nodding, he pulls the fabric off of you, moves it to the side. Sucking a breath through his teeth, he stares straight ahead. Shocked, turned on by how wet you are, and his fingers slip around so much he has to focus to keep them on your clit. It’s worth it, more than, for the way you whine, rutting your hips on his hand. Groaning, he lets his finger slip into you, adjusting his pants when you moan, his thumb working your clit in circles. Another finger slips inside, so easy, so slick and so warm, your walls clenching around him. The sound alone makes him dizzy. “So fucking wet,” he says, pressing deeper, fingers curling, watching your mouth fall open. “You’re killing me, baby.”
Completely under your spell, he can’t look away from the spot where his fingers disappear into you. “My pretty girl.” He hums, licking his lips. “So pretty all over.” Jake’s dick actually hurts looking at you, straining against his pants, darkening the fabric with precum. Adding a third finger, he presses harder on your clit, groaning when your back arches off the bed. “You like it, huh? Feels good?”
You only moan in response, clutching the sheets in your fists as you shake against them. It doesn’t take long for you to gasp, letting out a cry of his name as your body gives in, release spilling out around his fingers all while he stares in awe, open-mouthed. The soft curves of your body, flushed and shuddering and perfect.
Panting, you look up at him with sparkling eyes and tug lightly at your waistband. He guides your hips up gently, pulling your shorts down and leaving them at the end of the bed. “Your turn,” you breathe out. Jake stands up from the bed to take his sweats and underwear off without a second thought. Your gaze traces his body, tongue wetting your lips, eyes caught on his dick as it smacks his stomach. “Need a minute.”
“Course, baby.” He needs a minute too, hardly able to tear his eyes off the cum painting your pretty pussy white. As gently as he can, he runs his fingers through it, bringing them to his lips and humming around them. Oh, my God. “Tastes so good.”
A lazy smile curves your lips and you nudge his chest with your foot, leaning up on your elbows. “Twelve days. It’s been twelve days, Jake.”
Confused, he tears his eyes from between your legs, looking up at you instead. Sweat-slicked skin glowing in the dim lamplight. No one has ever looked so beautiful, he’s certain. “Of what?” he asks, stroking himself absentmindedly.
Your eyes follow the movement of his wrist, chewing on your bottom lip for a beat before your gaze flicks up to meet his. “Earlier, I said some stupid number and you asked if it’s been that long.”
“Twelve days,” Jake repeats, hardly believing it. Hardly believing the fact that you’re laid out in front of him, glowing, gorgeous, and he’s still waiting—for what, he’s not sure. “Whoa,” he mutters, leaning over you, his hand on your cheek. “Twelve?”
You nod, pouting. “Twelve,” you repeat, holding onto his wrist, kissing his palm. “Don’t make me wait any longer.”
“Condom, baby.” He pulls away, but your grip on him tightens.
“Don’t need it.”
Jake raises a brow. Sceptical. Horny. “Are you sure?”
“Certain. But I’ve never..” You trail off, clearing your throat.
He knows what you mean, and his stomach flips over. “Same,” he admits. “Where should I..?”
“Inside. Please.”
His eyes widen, searching yours, staring. You nod again, saying, please.
Leaning down, he kisses your cheek. “Missed this, baby. Missed you,” he admits. He feels you shudder under him, a shaky breath fanning his skin when he nudges your clit with his tip. Lifting his head, he looks down at your face, taking you in. Lidded eyes blinking heavily, fluttering lashes, sweat beading along your hairline. “Still can’t believe it—how lucky I am, getting to see you like this.”
“Never wanted anyone this much.”
His breath ceases, butterflies tumbling in his stomach. “Me neither.” The words feel bigger than they should, heavy as they settle between you. A beat passes slowly, his heart shifting in his chest. He leans in, pressing his lips to yours and hoping this kiss is enough to tell you everything he can’t quite say out loud.
“Please, Jake,” you say, mumbling against his lips.
So hot and so soft and so wet. Holy fuck. He sinks his teeth into his lip, freezing. It’s his tip, literally just his tip, but it’s enough to leave him lightheaded. He wonders if he’ll even last long enough to get to the part where he’s all the way in. “Won’t last long like this,” he says out loud, his own voice seeming distant.
You’re looking up at him with wet eyes, shaking—breath harsh, shallow. “Good,” you whisper. “We can go again, however you want it.”
Again, he thinks, looking forward to it. As if he’s not already losing his mind.
“Need more,” you breathe. “More, baby. Please.”
Rocking his hips forward, slow as he can, he holds his breath at the feeling of you opening up around him, inch by precious inch. It’s incredible he went so long without this. Twelve whole days. Unfathomable now—impossible, surely. Both of you whine as he bottoms out, a ragged sigh coming out of him, his head falling. Relieved. Wound up. He opens his eyes and regrets it immediately—you, mouth agape, eyes screwed shut. Holy shit. “You okay, baby?” he manages.
A smile spreads over your lips, a content breath slipping out of you. “Perfect, Jakey. Always forget..” You trail off, shaking your head, struggling to get the words out. “Forget how big you are.”
His entire body flushes, set alight. “You always take it so good, though. Such a good girl, yeah? Fit me just right.” He knows how it sounds, but he means it. Truly. It’s never felt like this. He didn’t even know it could feel like this — so perfect, so right — until you. The rightness of it all is so intense he almost comes then and there, biting his lip so hard he tastes copper on his tongue.
The clench of you around him is raw and startling, forcing stars behind his eyelids with each blink. There’s a brief, stunned silence when Jake finally pulls his hips back, like neither of you quite believe it. There’s nothing between you like this, no clear distinction between your body and his. Your hands skim his back, delicately tracing the column of his spine with your nails, careful, venerating, plump lips apart as your eyes meet.
Before he knows it, he’s thrusting all the way back in, one smooth, desperate stroke. A half-gasp, half-sob cry of his name comes out of you, unravelling him entirely as your legs wrap around his hips. Breath staggered, shallow, he tries to keep his cool, letting his mouth find your neck—trailing the distance from top to bottom. Four kisses long.
Not bothering to suppress his own moans and whimpers, he sets a steady rhythm, relieved that you seem to be enjoying this as much as him, mewling and clawing at his skin. Trembling, gasping, you — cut and pasted from his dreams — pull him in and the need to spend forever like this consumes him. With another cry of his name, you tense around him, head tipping back into the pillows as your orgasm hits. And he’s right there with you, skin burning from the inside out as he falls apart, gasping your name when he comes, filling you up.
He doesn’t move right away — he’s not sure if he can — staying on top of you while you card your fingers through his hair, panting. As his heartbeat steadies, he leans up on his palms. You look at him, all soft and sleepy and perfect, still catching your breath.
“Hi,” you whisper, smiling.
“Hey, baby.”
Neither of you seem to be in any rush to move, so he rolls you onto your sides, all tangled up and face to face. You press a soft kiss to the corner of his mouth before curling into his chest, your skin damp and hot. Bowing his head, Jake offers a silent prayer—not seeking forgiveness, but giving thanks.
A week goes by as usual—football, uni, seeing you. No pestilence or famine. No mark of the beast branded on his chest. Two suspiciously placed pimples on his forehead that have not sprouted into horns. No vehicular retribution. So far, no smiting.
The spring sun sets slowly, pinkening Jake’s wall through the cracks in his blinds. He has the apartment to himself while Sunghoon’s at training, so he’s making the most of his alone time. Head on pillow, phone in hand, switching through apps every few minutes as it nears time for him to leave. It’s a dangerous game, his favourite perhaps — doomscrolling time in bed — one that typically ends with him missing his plans, or staying up into all hours of the night watching Cole Palmer edits, and eighty-seven part Tiktok storytimes.
Tonight’s plan — every Wednesday night’s plan — is Bible study at church. And it’s not like he doesn’t want to go, honestly, he’s looking forward to it. It’s just that Chelsea played Arsenal yesterday, and won, so the edits are extra good, hot off the press and populating his for you page. Jesus would understand, surely. Would do the same, probably. As it stands, he’s watched this one edit of Palmer’s last-minute goal four times, and finds himself reciting, City’s boy is Chelsea’s man, with the commentator as your name pops up on his screen. A phone call.
“Jakey, hey,” you say, voice so sweet his lips curl up. “Can I see you? In like, an hour, maybe?”
“Are you alright?”
You hum in response. “Just want to see you.”
Something about the words, their softness, sincerity, knocks the wind out of him. He clears his throat, pulling the phone from his ear to check the time. 18:30. His stomach flutters, his heart racing, suddenly struck by your absence as if he hadn’t realised he was alone. A voice he’s gotten good at tuning out reminds him that he already missed church this week because he slept in, so he should at least go to study tonight.
“I have Bible study in an hour, and it’s on until like half eight, but I’m free after that.”
“Ugh,” you groan, and you sound so genuinely perturbed by this news that he has to fight a smile. “Jimin and I are having the girls over at nine.”
“Thirty minutes is plenty,” he points out.
You sigh. “I don’t mean sex, Jake. I just.. want to spend time with you,” you say softly, “I’m kind of missing the friends part of this whole thing.”
Jake shifts against his pillow, a pit in his stomach. He frowns, pinching the bridge of his nose. “Okay, yeah, I’m sorry. Of course.” The words come out quickly, tripping over his tongue. “I’m all yours tomorrow, I have nothing on,” he says, only slightly lying—he has football training in the evening.
“I’m not free until Sunday..” You trail off. “What if I come to your Bible study? Can I do that?”
A slow moment passes while he considers this. You? Come to Bible study? “But you’re.. an atheist.”
“So what? If your church friends are as hot as you, I’d like to see for myself.”
“They aren’t, but I’m happy you said that.” This is.. only slightly untrue. If you ask Jake, his church friends are hotter than him. In a silent prayer, he wishes ill on Mark Lee and Hamada Asahi. Nothing major, of course, just enough that they can’t make it tonight—an itchy throat, runny nose. Anaphylactic shock, maybe.
“Do I have to dress up or anything?”
He shakes his head even though you can’t see. “You can wear whatever you want, it’s casual. Do you need a ride?”
“A ride home, maybe?” you say, sounding unsure. “I’m out right now.”
“What are you doing?”
You hesitate, stumbling over your words to say, “I’m—uh—I’m looking at records with Heeseung.”
This information makes Jake’s stomach tense—just a little. Lee Heeseung. Tall. Older. Freakishly handsome. Sits at the friends-you’ve-kissed table with Jake. And Jaehyun. And Yizhuo. An—have any of your friends gone unkissed? Sigh. He feels significantly unspecial.
“Oh..” he offers, trailing off, unsure what to make of that. “Find anything cool?”
“Like you won’t believe!” The excitement in your voice is not lost to the phone, in fact, it’s so clear he can picture you rocking on your feet as you speak. He grins at the thought, distracted enough not to worry about when Heeseung graduated from drunken makeout to sober hangout. “Okay, I have to go, but I’ll see you in an hour!”
Jake laughs on an exhale. “See you in an hour.”
With the end of the call, his Palmer edit starts again, and Jake falls back into the for you page like nothing happened. Edit after edit, each more creative than the last slip by at the swipe of a thumb, but now he’s starting to think that maybe he should wash his hair before he sees you, and you know, put on a suit, or something. In a casual way. Hair washed. Suit on hanger. It only takes four tries to settle on the perfect hoodie and baggy jeans, and with a spritz of his good cologne, he leaves the flat.
It’s colder out than he’d like, the March chill nipping at him as he sits on the church steps, worsened he’s sure by his lack of a jacket. He prays you had the foresight to wear a jacket. If you didn’t—well, there’s not much he can do if you didn’t. Why didn’t he bring one for you? Jake sighs, breath clouding in front of him like smoke. Logically, he knows he’d be better off waiting in his car or inside, but he’s glued to the spot. What if you get lost? What if you miss the massive, traditional cathedral with the steeple and the steps? Or his car in the parking lot? What if you somehow miss all of those things located at the address he sent you?
Bible study starts in ten minutes, but time stops when he sees you. Wearing a jacket, zipped all the way up to your chin. He exhales, relieved, a part of him unravelling. Before he realises, he’s jogging over, pulling you into a hug. He can’t resist breathing you in — all soft vanilla and coconut — glad to see you. Your arms loop around his neck, hands — ice cold — on his skin, making him shiver. You pull back, just a touch, and press your lips to his cheek in a soft kiss. Jake stiffens, his breath catching as the warmth of your lips lingers on his skin.
As you walk ahead towards the church, he can’t stop focusing on the spot where your lips brushed his skin, resisting the urge to reach up and touch it. You’ve been talking, he realises, and he hasn’t heard a word—a distant hum until he catches the question in your voice.
“What did you say?” he asks, eyes flicking up towards you as you turn to face him on the steps.
You’re a whole head taller like this, gaze trailing over every inch of his face. “Are you alright? You look a little sick.”
Jake forces a smile, nodding. “All good,” he says, trying to convince himself more than you.
He moves ahead, deliberately putting space between you, avoiding any chance for you to press further. His stomach flutters when you take his hand, the touch small, soft, but he smiles nonetheless as you give it a gentle squeeze. The foyer is empty when you arrive, but the murmur of voices from the Parish hall reaches his ears, grounding him.
Jake holds the door open, gesturing for you to go in first as he follows behind you, taking stock of the room. No Asahi (thank gosh), but Mark is here, beaming, talking to—is that Park Jihoon? Back from college? Today? (What the fuck???) Sunghoon, at least, is a grounding sight, a sigh of relief slipping out of Jake when he sees him—sitting with.. Kim Chaewon? Of ‘Park Sunghoon, you’re dead to me,’ fame. Incredible. Somehow, your being here is the least surprising part of this whole affair.
Sunghoon grins when he sees Jake, but he jumps from his seat seeing you, and jogs across the room to say hi. Much to Chaewon’s displeasure, he throws his arms around you, and Jake sees her eye twitch. With his hands on your shoulders, Sunghoon looks at you like it’s been years, genuine delight on his face. “I hope you feel blessed tonight, really.”
Jake eyes his friend, trying to suss him out, but he can’t discern the source of his elation, which makes him wary. If he knows his friend—Sunghoon’s happiness is coming at Jake’s expense.
“May God bless you, Jake.”
He can’t help rolling his eyes. “Thank you, Mr Chaewon.”
“It’s not what it looks like,” Sunghoon says wearily, shaking his head.
Jake’s brows touch his hairline, hardly believing his ears. He leans in, asking quietly. “You’re not sleeping with her?”
“Okay, yeah, it’s exactly what it looks like.” Sunghoon scratches the back of his neck, excusing himself before going back to his seat and leaning toward Chaewon, whispering something in her ear that makes her smile.
Quiet lingers in Sunghoon’s absence, just long enough for Mark to come over, elated, as he daps him up. “Hey, man! Good to see you,” he says, grinning. He means it. It really is good — for Mark — to see Jake. And to think, Jake had been praying for this guy’s demise just an hour ago. Guilty, embarrassed, he echoes Mark’s sentiment, smiling at this ray of sunshine man in front of him.
“I’m Mark,” he says, extending a hand for you to shake. He repeats your name when you say it, nodding, that warm smile on his sweet face. “Thank you for coming, I’m so glad you made it,” stupid, charming Mark continues, still holding onto your hand.
You lean up to Jake’s ear when Mark leaves, whispering. “I thought you said your church friends were a bunch of ugly, incel freaks.”
He snorts, eyes on his shoes. “They are.”
“Mark definitely isn’t.”
“He’s abstaining,” Jake blurts out, looking around to make sure no one’s close enough to overhear. “Which is fine,” he adds, trying to play it off. His gaze catches on Jihoon and his new college biceps, and in a panic, he stumbles over his words trying to deter you from him too. “And Jihoon.. well..” Jake’s voice falters. A pause. “He’s in love with Mark.”
“How convenient.” You roll your eyes, sitting down in the empty seat behind you. “Who’s Jihoon?”
Jake shakes his head, checking his phone as he sits. “Nobody.”
Hoon: You brought her to Bible study bro?
Jake: She wanted to come
Hoon: You picked a good night, I’m excited to get into tonight’s study!
Hoon: Godspeed, brother. Amen.
He sighs, shaking his head as he tucks his phone into his pocket. Beside him, you shift a little, your knee bumping his.
Mark clears his throat, pulling Jake’s attention back to the circle. “Is there anyone who wants to say a prayer to get us started?” he asks, looking around the room.
From the other side of the circle, Sunghoon’s hand shoots up, and Jake has to stop himself from sighing in relief. Some of the other more.. enthusiastic members of the church pray for a while, but Sunghoon has a certain way of getting to the point. Bowing his head, he clasps his hands neatly in his lap. “Dear, Lord. Thank you for bringing us here safely this evening,” he starts, voice steady and sincere. “Please bless the study we’re about to take part in and help us to understand. Thank you for touching Jake’s heart and allowing him to bring a friend, may she be filled by your word.” He pauses, clearing his throat.
At this, Jake steals a glance up, eyes flicking to Sunghoon, only to see him staring already, a wide grin on his face. What the Hell? Jake’s stomach twists as he looks away, focuses on his hands in his lap, the white-knuckled grip he has on his pant legs.
“In your name’s sake we pray, amen.”
A resounding amen follows, and when Jake looks at you, you’re shooting Sunghoon a thumbs up like he just delivered the prayer of the century—not a terrifying snippet of what the night might entail if he has anything to do with it. In his seat, Sunghoon crosses one leg over the other with a smirk, winking at Jake.
Who needs enemies with a best friend like this?
“Uh, thank you for that, Sunghoon,” Mark says, taking a seat. “Jake, can I ask you to open 1 Corinthians 6:18, and read it out for us?”
“Of course.”
Jake ignores Sunghoon’s eyes on him as he pulls out his phone, searching for the verse in his Bible app. 1 Corinthians. Perfect. He’s at ease, trying to remember its exact wording, something about how love is patient and kind. Sunghoon was right, with a study topic like this — light, inoffensive — tonight is a good night to have brought you along. Who knows? Maybe divine intervention will have you confessing your undying love for him before the night’s over.
He sits up straighter in his seat when he finds it, smiling. “Reading from the New International Version, 1 Corinthians 6.18: Flee from sexual immorality—” Wait. What? Jake stops short, his stomach dropping. He skims the rest of the verse and offers a silent prayer, suggesting to Jesus that now is a perfect time for His second coming—you know, if He’s planning on it. Amen. There’s a choked-off snicker from the other side of the circle. Sunghoon.
“Uh—sorry. Going on.” Jake clears his throat, ignoring the heat creeping up the back of his neck. “All other sins a person commits are outside the body, but whoever sins sexually, sins against their own body.”
Before he has a chance to lock his phone or launch himself out the window, Jihoon starts speaking. “I think it goes without saying that this is not a space for judgment. Everyone’s journey is their journey and no one here is without sin.”
“Exactly, Hoon,” Mark says, nodding. “So now that I’ve scared you all into abstinence, is there anyone who wants to talk about what they think that verse might mean?”
Silence. Everyone glances at each other, waiting for someone else to speak. No one does.
Mark exhales, slumping in his seat. “Really? Nothing? Great. Well—uh.” He rubs the back of his neck, his eyes flicking to the ceiling as if God might come down and help him out. Maybe even rapture him. That could be cool, and Jake could maybe be raptured next. “Look, I didn’t pick this topic to scare anyone. I mean, I don’t even pick the topics—there’s a whole timetable, and, well.. some of your parents are freaking out about you.” His mouth twists like he shouldn’t have said that. “Anyway—that’s not the point. What I mean is..”
He straightens up, trying again. “If you don’t want to wait, that’s your choice. I’m not here to judge anybody—it wouldn’t be fair. And honestly? I think there are ways to have sex that can honour your body, you know? Staying safe, using protection, getting tested. Being clear about consent, setting boundaries, being open with your partner.”
Mark’s words hang in the air, oddly light, completely unexpected—quieting the uncertainty in Jake’s head for the first time in weeks. Sex as an act of honour to the body. Not negative, nor neutral, but.. positive. That this idea could exist at all, never mind be voiced in church of all places, seems so absurd that he looks around the circle to see if anyone else is as surprised as him—but they aren’t.
“It’s about making choices that protect you — emotionally and physically — while respecting whoever you’re with.” Into the silence that follows, Mark clasps his hands together. “How about we wrap things up here, and go home early, huh?” More silence. “Great. Okay. Does anyone have any prayer requests? Anything they want to thank God for?”
It takes a while, but mentions of sudden illness and new jobs go in one of Jake’s ears and out the other as Mark prepares to say the closing prayer, and Jake hardly realises everyone’s standing up and moving their seats until you nudge him.
“You okay?”
Clearing his throat, Jake nods, stacking your chair on top of his and adding them to pile in the corner of the room. He introduces you as his friend to a seemingly unending carousel of the nosey people he grew up around. Of course, you already know Sunghoon, and Chaewon is extremely pleasant when she realises you’re not vying for his attention.
In his car, you tell Jake about the records you found—loads of folk stuff, first-press hip-hop LPs from the mid-’90s, obscure bootlegs people had brought in going for dirt cheap. You didn’t get anything, but it was a great trip. Heeseung got this insane home-pressing of songs by Laufey and the Black Eyed Peas for the girl he’s seeing. When Jake parks the car, you show him the picture you took of the jacket—a poorly Photoshopped monstrosity of the Monkey Business cover with Laufey’s face over all the members.
“We’ll have to go together when you have time.” You shake your head, laughing. “Oh, and thanks for letting me crash—it can’t have been easy having the Whore of Babylon sitting next to you, but I had fun tonight. It was funny.”
“Funny?” Jake repeats.
“Yeah.” You shrug. “I don’t know, it just seemed like Mark was trying to be nice about the whole.. premarital sex is damning thing.”
The thought doesn’t even make him cringe. No pit in his stomach. Steady heartbeat. Is he.. cured?
Jake hums. “He was, wasn’t he?” A mumble, spoken more to himself.
“Don’t you find that phrase sort of funny? Premarital sex—as opposed to the pure and moral matrimonial sex.” You laugh, head falling back against the headrest. “I’m not trying to be rude about it or anything, I just find it amusing.”
Shaking his head, Jake smiles. “No, I know.” A beat. “I think I do too.” He means it.
You reach for your seatbelt, pressing the button and taking it off. Jake does the same, hesitating before reaching for the door handle. “Are you free next weekend?” he asks, chewing on his lip.
“Yeah, how come?”
“I’m going fishing with my dad, and he was wondering if you’d want to join us.”
“Your dad was wondering, but..” You trail off, looking out over his shoulder, like you’re checking for pedestrians or anyone else who might behold your Jake-related vulnerability. “Do you want me there?”
“You know I do.”
Turning your body to face him, you lean against the door. “Mm.” A sage nod. “But I want you to tell me.”
“You mean a lot to me, so it would mean a lot if you came with us.” Jake takes your hand in his, giving it a reassuring squeeze. “I really want you there.”
At this, your gaze falls to your linked hands, fingers intertwined in your lap. Holding his breath, he waits for your response, half-expecting you to brush him off, roll your eyes. Traffic flows outside, heavy, Jake thinks, for this time on a Wednesday evening. More quiet—too many clumsy beats passing to count.
Finally, your eyes find his, a smile on your lips, voice soft under the hum of cars passing in the street. “You mean a lot to me too.”
The lake house—his dad’s childhood home. Unchanged. Perfect. Dark wood floors that bear the scuffs of time—some from Jake’s own football boots as a child, others older, carved by lives before his. Faint scent of saltwater and old books with cracked spines. Frozen in time, but not untouched.
Three months have passed already since Christmas, the last time he and his parents were here. No gifts, no tree, just shit films and quality time. But the lake house always strikes him anew. The fleeting nature of this solid structure, this sanctuary where his father had been a boy. Eight-year-old handprints immortalised in the patio concrete, height marked on the living room doorway. The boy in the photos that Jake will never meet, though looks exactly like—his broad-nosed, full-lipped father.
Your voice is sudden over his shoulder. “Whoa.” Jake almost flinches despite its softness. He can’t believe you’re here.
“Yeah,” he utters, finally looking at you.
Jake has never dared to imagine you here, worried it wouldn’t ever live up to the real thing. And he was right. His heart stutters like a skipped stone. In your winter coat, chin hiding under your fluffy scarf, hair frizzed on the left side from where you’d slept against it in the car. The spread of the trees, vastness of the lake peeking through them, all framed by the open door behind you like something from a postcard.
Jake carries your bags upstairs, and you follow, getting a tour. The master bedroom is the last stop—queen-sized bed, en-suite bathroom, a space meant for two. You’ll be sharing it for the night—news that would mortify his mother if she found out. A thought that, only in theory, delights Jake.
In the kitchen, you prep ingredients for dinner while discussing Gatsby—his dad’s favourite. Materialism. Affluence. The American Dream. The excitement is mutual. You, eager to pick his brain. His dad, grateful for an audience more responsive than his students. Jake listens in silence, peeling carrots—heart warmed by the ease with which you converse. Comfortable, unmarred by years apart.
“Gatsby could’ve had anything he wanted in the world—but he never got to have Daisy,” his dad says, checking the fridge.
You hum in response, a soft sound of disagreement. “He had Daisy in some ways, I suppose,” you offer, sounding hopeful, seeking approval, Jake thinks.
“I think that might be more tragic than if he’d never had her at all.”
In the corner of his eye, Jake sees you tilting your head, brows furrowed. His dad laughs, not mean-spirited, no, an endeared sound he remembers from childhood—too scared to get back on his bike after his first fall; first wobbly tooth wrenched from his mouth by his own hand.
“A taste doesn’t make a meal, sweetheart—it just leaves you hungry,” he says after a moment.
In the same split second that Jake looks up at you, your eyes flick over to his. He can’t be hungry forever, surely not, that would just be cruel. His stomach curls in on itself at the thought. For a single, fully indulgent second, he lets himself believe that you might be hungry for him too.
“Jesus, kid,” his dad says suddenly, gripping Jake’s wrist and dragging him towards the sink. “You’re bleeding.”
Surprised, Jake blinks down at his hand, vivid red spilling from his index finger down the drain—carrot still half-peeled and bloodied.
“Fuck, Jaeyun,” his dad goes on. “That could’ve been really nasty. Are you alright?”
Jake only nods, distantly hearing his dad tell you where to find the first aid kit. Your footsteps disappear upstairs. Quickly, the stinging behind his eyelids turns into a pathetic flow of tears, his shoulders wracking as his dad wraps an arm around him. A kiss to the top of his head. “You’re alright, kid. Everything’s going to be alright.”
He doesn’t want to be hungry anymore.
All thanks to Jake’s little episode, the two of you are banished from the kitchen, and decide to take a walk. His feet lead you toward the dock, and you light up—jogging ahead, eager to reach the water. Standing at the edge, swaying, wind whipping your hair around your head. Leaning forward, you point out a green shed in the distance. A smile in your voice. “East Egg,” you say happily.
Jake remembers enough from the film to at least understand this reference, smiling too. “Alright, Mr Gatsby.” He wraps a protective arm around your waist, pulling you back. “That’s enough, baby, you’ll fall in.”
You laugh, turning in his hold. He’s hooked on your lips, their shape, how they part to form your words. “I do say, Old Sport.” You start. “You’re looking rather flushed.”
Air flees from his lungs, stolen. You — his Daisy — wrapped up in his arms, palms flat on his chest. Everything he wants, but can’t have. Tragic maybe. But wasn’t Gatsby brave, at least, to want in spite of what was feasible? Isn’t Jake? He shakes his head slightly, clearing the thought—you are not Daisy, nor is he Gatsby. There need not be tragedy here.
For a second too long, your gaze lingers on his lips—you’re waiting for a kiss that you won’t initiate. Everything about this moment feels primed for it. Alone on the water, the steady crash of lake against rock, virtually no space between you. But he’s stuck. Unmoving. The wind stings his ears. You shiver, teeth chattering before you press your lips together. Jake can feel the window shutting, but still, he does nothing.
Clearing your throat, you blink up at him. “Let’s head back, Jakey. We’ll freeze to death out here.”
Jake opens his mouth. Falters. Then, softer than he means to, he asks, “Will you kiss me?” The words startle him, borrowed from you and that night—almost two months ago now.
You nod, smiling. No hesitation, no second-guessing. Just the curl of your fingers around his jacket, the tipping of your chin. The steady, certain, press of your lips on his. Relief crashes into him, unfurling the tension in his chest. Warmth, soft and overwhelming all at once, sinking into his skin.
By the time you get back from the dock, dinner is almost ready—late lunch, really. Budae jjigae curling through the air, filling the house completely. The three of you eat together at the table, conversation weaving in and out between bites. Jake eats like it’s his first meal in ages, tearing into the steaming jjigae like it might disappear.
Full to the point of fatigue, he washes the dishes and sinks into the couch, head resting against the cushions, limbs loose and heavy with contentment. He twists the cuff of your sleeve between his fingers when you cuddle into his side, nursing a glass of water. In the armchair, as always, is his dad, book open in his lap, though he’s hardly reading. You keep pulling him into conversation, peppering him with questions about lecturing you must have been holding onto for years.
Eventually, the wind settles, and armed with fishing rods, and bait his dad picked up on the drive over, the three of you make your way back to the dock. Empty-handed, you run off ahead, giddy laughter, and a called out, come on, over your shoulder.
“She hasn’t changed a bit,” his dad says fondly, gaze lingering on Jake. “You haven’t either.”
He gives him a curious look. “Is that a good thing?”
A shrug, warmth in his dad’s eyes. “I think so.”
On the dock, Jake kneels by the tackle box, patient as ever as he shows you how to hook the bait, and hold the rod steady. His voice is quiet, calm, guiding your hands with his own until you get the hang of it. Following his instructions, you take it quickly, your cast smooth—a smile in his dad’s voice when he tells Jake you’re a natural. Pride swells in his chest as if the compliment was for him. Your line tugs almost immediately, breath catching in your throat as Jake scrambles over to you, an incredulous laugh from over his shoulder.
“You’ve got one!” he calls out, more excited than you are. “Reel it in, you have to reel it in!”
You fumble a little bit, but get it when you calm down. A flash of silver breaks the surface, water scattering in drops. Jake grins from ear to ear, like you’ve made the biggest catch of the season. Or at least caught something slightly more inspiring than a fifteen centimetre ssogari.
His dad chuckles, clapping you on the back. “Wow, sweetheart. Great job!” he says, nodding affectionately.
With some help, you hold up your catch, shaking with excitement — fear, maybe — while Jake snaps a photo, capturing the moment and sharing it with Sunghoon.
Jake: Baby’s first catch 😭😭😭😭😭
Hoon: So cute, no way !!! Where’s yours?
Hoon: Bring me next time I miss your hot dad :(
Jake furrows his brows, locks his phone without replying, and turns back to you.
“Are we going to cook it?” you ask, curiosity piqued.
“Uh, no.” He shakes his head, laughing softly. “We just look at them for a bit and then put them back.”
It’s a busy day in the water apparently, for you and Jake’s dad at least. Jake, for all his enthusiasm, catches nothing—the fish did not choose him this weekend. Eventually, as the sun starts to dip, you all pack up, leaving the water behind in exchange for something warmer.
In the garden, the night settles over you, thick with cold as the fire pit does what it can to fight off the chill. Flames flicker, snapping into the quiet, soundtracking your laughter and stories, the smell of smoke curling around you. In the seat beside Jake, your arms are wrapped around his, your head resting on his shoulder. His dad across the fire, its glow catching in the lines of his face, softening them and showing off his fond smile.
Eventually, Jake’s dad rises, brushing off his hands with a yawn. He leans down, pressing a kiss to the top of Jake’s head, and one to yours. A quiet goodnight, familiar, unhurried. In the doorway, he pauses, pointing a finger at his son. “Make sure the fire’s all the way out before you go to bed, okay?”
Nodding, Jake wishes him a goodnight again. Through the glass door, his dad moves through the kitchen, checking the sockets before flicking the light off, and disappearing down the hall. Resting his head on top of yours, he exhales. “You want another drink?”
“No, thank you.” You lift your half-full can, cider sloshing noisily. “I’m good, baby.”
Jake gets up, stretching his arms and legs before heading into the house, enveloped by the quiet of the kitchen. Pulling open the fridge, harsh light spills across the tiles as he reaches for a beer. Cold beads of condensation slip against his fingers, a relief as he lifts it, presses it to his cheeks to quell the heat blooming there. Baby. He giggles. Will he ever get used to that?
Opening his can, he sits back down and kisses your temple. A sip of beer warms his insides, he looks at you and smiles. “Did you have fun today?”
You nod eagerly, then seem to think better of it. Tilting your head. Pursing your lips. “I’m a little disappointed though.”
“Oh, yeah?” He arches his brow, leaning back in his seat. “How so?”
Your lips twitch. “It’s stupid but I guess I had it in my head that you were like—I don’t know, actually good at fishing, or something. But wow, Jakey.. You suck.”
“Ever heard of beginner’s luck?” he says, rolling his eyes, too endeared by you and the grin on your lips to bite back. “You’re lucky I like you too much to take that personally.”
A suggestive lift of your brow, a smug smile. “Oh, so you like me, huh?”
Briefly, Jake entertains the thought of telling you — finally fucking telling you — that he like-likes you. It seems simple enough, only three words. Four technically if he says ‘like-like’ out loud the way a child might. He watches you, searching—do you already know? And if you don’t, and he tells you, will anything change?
Firelight flickers over your face. Jake shrugs. “Yeah, quite a lot, actually.”
Chuckling, you bring your cider to your lips and take a long, slow sip. Over the edge of the illustrated can, you eye him. Gaze steady. Unnerving. Like you’re in on something he’s not.
You shrug.
Reaching out, his fingers curl around your wrist, gently lowering the can. His lips find yours, soft, insistent. Pineapple and raspberry, artificial and sweet, from your tongue onto his. He hums against your mouth, a quiet, come here, before pulling you in, guiding you into his lap. You straddle him easily, arms draped over his shoulders. The kiss deepens, slow at first, then desperate as heat pools in his stomach.
Hands mapping skin through your layers, fingertips pressing, still curious, eager after so long. Your chests rise and fall in sync when you pull away, trembling breath clouding together in the cool air. Blinking down at him, an expression he can’t read takes over your face. “You really like me?” you whisper. Your question clarifies the look on your face—expectant, waiting for an answer he’s scared to give.
As he sees it, there are only two ways for this to go—worst case: you laugh, cackle, call him insane for thinking he has a chance with you; best case: his confession doesn’t repulse you. Clearing his throat, he tries to calm the storm in his chest. “I do,” he says after too long, startling himself with his volume.
You don’t take off running for the hills, which he can only assume is a good thing. Instead, you smile. Cradling his face in your hands and kissing him. Then, movement. Slow shift of your hips back and forth against his—maddening. Press of chest to chest, hushed moans shared between you. A kind of tender desire that turns the cold night sweltering.
After too long, dazed and sleepy — fire extinguished — the two of you giggle, hand in hand, all the way upstairs. Brushing your teeth together in the en-suite, letting peppermint kisses turn warm and lazy as you pull Jake into the shower with you.
He pinkens in the heat, warm water slipping over your bodies in rivulets. Skin sliding over skin, pressed together. Steam curls, fogging the glass. Hands on your cheeks, holding your face to his—lips locked. Slow, lazy, taking his time. Trying his best to make the morning last forever like this. Kissing. Smiling. Your fingers card through his hair, tugging the wet strands, pulling groans from his mouth into yours.
Breathless, he pulls away, tucking his head against your neck. His arms fall around your waist, keeping you close. Noses along the sensitive skin there, inhaling your shower gel—syrupy sweet, so painfully you. He presses his lips together to keep from saying something stupid. Your touch is delicate, tender, on the back of his head, fingers curling around the overgrown locks at the nape of his neck.
It’s unfair to be going home so soon, the shortest trip of his life. Behind closed eyes, Jake can’t help picturing weeks here in the summer with you. Long days spent swimming in the lake. Short nights spent cuddling despite the heat. Sunscreen on hot skin. Aloe vera on burns. Tan lines and salt air. Summer. He’d be your boyfriend by then, right?
“I don’t want to go home,” you whisper.
He kisses your damp skin. “Just say the word and I’ll bring you back, baby.” His voice is low, muffled into the base of your neck. “In the summer, maybe? We can stay for ages if you want.”
Saying it out loud, this partial voicing of his thoughts for you to hear, summer feels much bigger than just a word, a season. Much bigger than anything he can imagine. An almost confession. A promise to you. To himself. He clears his throat, feeling exposed.
Your eyes are wide when he looks at you again, cupping his face in your palm, thumb stroking his cheek. You lean up, pressing your swollen lips to his. “Summer,” you repeat, smiling.
Jake doesn’t sleep, he’s not sure if he could if he tried. He’s laying there, flat on his back, your head warm and sleepy on his chest. His fingers move absently through your hair, slow and repetitive, more for him than for you. Your breathing is steady, relaxing him. A thought comes to mind—the sunrise. He shifts carefully, not wanting to wake you yet as he reaches for his phone. 05:47. Smoothing his palm over your shoulder, he whispers your name. You only hum in response, stirring.
“Come on,” he mumbles, pressing a kiss to your hair. “I want to show you something.”
“The sun isn’t even up yet,” you grumble into his skin, eyes still shut.
“That’s the point.” His voice is gentle but insistent. Leaning in, he presses his lips to your temple. “It’ll be worth it, baby.”
You groan, rolling away from him, face in the pillow. “Fine.” And as if in protest of the early morning, you don’t say much else. You do let him help you into your jacket though, smiling as he zips it up and kisses your forehead.
Hand in hand, the two of you trudge slowly along the trail, footsteps soft in the grass. Saltwater and pine fill the air, seeming stronger in the waning dark. Finally, through the trees, the lake unfolds, a glassy mirror of the brightening sky above, day’s first light stretched thin over the horizon.
When you reach the rocks, you whisper, “Whoa.” Taking a seat next to Jake, pulling your knees to your chest and leaning into him when he wraps his arm around your shoulders.
The sky splits open above your heads, dawn unfurling in soft brushstrokes of pink and orange. A dreamlike shimmer in the water—silken ripples of gold rolling towards the shore, crashing against the dock. The hues grow deeper and more vibrant, shifting quickly before his eyes. For years, this sunrise has been his favourite view. But now, with you sitting in it, soft and golden, hair ruffled from sleep and the wind? Fuck—he couldn’t think of anything better if he tried.
Whispering, he asks, “Worth it?”
You turn to him, eyes soft, smiling. “Very.” You let a long beat of silence pass before asking. “How many hookups have you brought here, Jakey?” Your voice is soft, a little more than curious.
Breathless, Jake laughs, suddenly nervous as if there’s a right and a wrong answer. “Hookups aren’t really my thing,” he admits, shaking his head. “So, zero.”
Your brow lifts, sceptical, but you don’t press. Not immediately, anyway. You even let Jake turn back to the water, following his gaze when he nods towards the horizon, and mumbles, look. You let the colour bloom for so long he thinks you’ve dropped it.
You haven’t. “Are you lying to me?” you ask quietly.
“You of all people should know I wouldn’t even kiss someone, never mind hookup with them, if I wasn’t losing my mind over them.” The words slip out before he can stop them, before he can think better of it. If you’re overthinking what he said, you don’t show it.
He doesn’t have anything more to say, so he doesn’t say anything at all. But in his peripheral, you’re still watching him. There’s something in your eyes he can’t decipher. At least not correctly. It reads love. It reads you want him how he wants you, and it’s disarming.
A while passes before Jake is ready to speak, his voice coming out softer than he means for it to. “What’s up?”
“It’s—” You cut yourself off, looking around. Amused, hesitant somehow, as you laugh—soft, and content, and nervous, he thinks. “Your dad thinks we’re together, you know,” you tell him eventually.
Jake puts a lot of effort into keeping his eyes from rolling, knowing exactly what his dad is up to. The prospect of his dad acting as a wingman is both relieving and mortifying. He arches his brow. “Together how?”
You sniff, eyes on his. “He thinks you’re my boyfriend, and I didn’t correct him.”
For a second, he forgets how to breathe, heart hammering against his ribs. Brain scrambling to catch up with you and what you just said about not correcting him. A thousand questions threaten to spill out at once, but none of them make it past his lips. Why not? Do you want that? Do you want me? It would be easier, he’s sure, to say nothing and kiss you instead. But your eyes are still on his, steady, not giving anything away, and he has to ask, voice low, cautious. “Are you going to correct him?”
“Do I need to?” You sound so calm, so relaxed about it all that Jake’s skin heats under your gaze.
He shakes his head. “I don’t think so.”
“Then no,” you say, smiling—small but certain, like you’ve made up your mind. Like you made up your mind long before this conversation. Your hand finds his cheek, thumb tracing his jaw. “I’m not going to correct him.”
And before he can reply, your lips are on his. Soft. Gentle. Everything he wants for the rest of his life.
By the time you make it back — boyfriend and girlfriend, hand in hand — Jake’s dad is sitting on the couch, curled around a cup of coffee and his book. He’s smiling, eyes gleaming as he makes a joke, something about the love bird catching the worm, and Jake is too happy to do anything but grin from ear to ear as you hide your face in his chest.
Upstairs, you share the shower, eager hands tracing dips and curves innocently until you leave with pruned fingers. Skincare, then moisturiser, then clothes. Stolen kisses whenever he has the chance. Jake’s dad is flipping pancakes at the stove when you get to the kitchen, forbidden bacon crackling beside him. Despite his best efforts, morning slips into afternoon with no regard for what he wants. Breakfast is eaten. Bags are packed. Your lips have been sufficiently kissed. It’s time to leave already.
The drive is fine, uneventful mostly, until his dad pulls into a rest stop. “Alright, everybody out. Stretch your legs, use the toilet if you need,” he says, cutting the engine.
You rush out of the car, yelling, one minute, over your shoulder as you run towards the building. Standing by the passenger door, Jake stretches his arms above his head, exhaling long and slow. Over the car’s roof, his dad clears his throat. “I’m sorry I haven’t done more for you—about your mum.” He hesitates, then says, quieter, “I love you, son. We both love you so much. I’m on your side, okay? You’re my only son, Jaeyun.”
Jake’s arms drop. He feels silly for having them up at all. Overwhelmed, he nods once, sniffing. “I love you, Dad.”
Smiling, his dad gets back into the car and Jake follows. Hardly a moment passes before he sees you through the windscreen, running back, so beautiful and all his—finally, actually his. Your eyes are sparkling when you open the door.
“They had these awesome keychains at the gift shop—look, Mr. Sim, it’s an angler!” You thrust the plush fish toward him, grinning like you caught it with your bare hands.
A chuckle, hand squishing it. Jake’s dad ruffles your hair, a gesture so familiar, so lived in, that Jake can’t shake the feeling that he’s dreaming. The fondness in his dad’s smile is overwhelming. “That’s great, sweetheart. I love it,” he says, voice thick with pride—again, like you caught the fish with your bare hands.
“It’s yours.”
“Oh, I can’t accept this.”
“Mr. Sim, it’s a keychain that cost me a pound, not real estate.” You hesitate, then add, quieter, “I actually got one for all of us. My father never took me on any kind of trip, so..”
At the mention of your father, Jake’s jaw tightens. His fist clenches in his lap, memories pressing in—too many nights spent comforting you over the phone, or sneaking out to do it in person. A quiet beat passes, stretched taut and straining at the edges, your words lingering, heavier than you probably meant them to be. Closing his fingers around the keychain, his dad clears his throat before he speaks, firm and sincere. “The three of us can go wherever you want, alright?”
You don’t say anything, but your nod is enough. And with a small smile at Jake, you hand him a matching angler, fingers brushing his. He can’t resist bringing your hand to his lips, kissing your knuckles.
From the driver’s seat, a quiet exhale. “Now’s as good a time as any I suppose.” Jake’s dad reaches into his jacket pocket, pulling out two keys. “Got these cut this morning. It’s ours, kid. Use it whenever you like.”
Jake feels the cool metal against his skin. Turning it over in his hand as his dad presses the second key into your palm. He can’t look away from it, silver catching the light. No big speech, no song and dance—just his dad extending a promise, sharing this part of him with Jake, and with you. The weight of his uncertainty melts away. Swallowing past the lump in his throat, he glances at you, lips twitching up. Safe and familiar, solid and long lasting—the lake house. Yours. His. Ours. A future that doesn’t feel quite so far, or so unattainable anymore.
EPILOGUE
The lake house. Summer, finally. You’re sitting on the countertop while Jake makes breakfast—a view that has quickly become your favourite.
He reaches up into the cabinet, newly formed muscle shifting under tan skin. Shoulders solid and broad, the visual representation of all the strength he’s been using on you—picking you up and tossing you around like it’s nothing. His hair is still messy from bed, longer than ever and curling around his ears. Plaid pyjama pants sitting low, showing off the love bites staining his hips in pretty blooms of red and purple.
Sighing, he runs a hand through his hair. “I know how to scramble an egg,” he says, so long after your comment, you’d forgotten you said anything at all. His voice is low, thick with sleep even though you’ve been up for a while now—he’s definitely playing it up, but you like it too much to complain.
“I know you do, Jakey. I just—”
He interrupts you with a kiss, faint peppermint clinging to his lips as he mumbles, “I want to cook for you. Will you let me do that, darling? Please?”
Darling. Your heart does a flip, abrupt and ungraceful. “Fine,” you concede, twirling his hair with your fingers. “But I’m making dinner.”
Jake groans, resting his forehead on your shoulder. “Right, because I’m an idiot sandwich, and you’re Little Miss Gordon Ramsay.”
“Mm.” You smile. “Exactly.”
Nodding, he tips his chin up towards yours until your lips brush. “Yes, Chef,” he says, and it makes you laugh too much to keep on kissing him. But he tries anyway, teeth bumping as you share giggles. Eventually, he gives up, pressing his forehead to yours, hand on your waist. “Going to miss having this place to ourselves.”
You can’t even remember the last time you spent so long away from Jimin, and as much as you’re looking forward to seeing her — and Sunghoon — again, you’d be lying if you said you won’t miss being alone too, and the freedom of walking around the house in varying degrees of undress. A soft smile pulls at your lips. “It’s only one weekend, baby—Hoon has his placement to get back to,” you say, a voice of reason even though you feel the same.
Two weeks. Two whole perfect weeks with Jake—entire days spent out by the lake. Swimming or reading Emily Henry while he tries to fish. Big hands smoothing sunscreen over your back, plump lips pressing kisses to your tan lines. The press of solid muscle on soft flesh, sweat-slicked skin on sweat-slicked skin.
Jake’s lips curl into a grin, wide, boyish. So handsome—unbelievably so. “A lot can happen in one weekend.”
Unfortunately, he raises a good point, but you won’t admit that for him to hear. A lot can happen in one weekend—it did. But it wasn’t the time frame, it was the lake. You’ve deduced it has magical properties. An ability to make days slip into each other, to draw large feelings out before you can properly think them through. Yesterday, while Jake tied your bikini back up — deft fingers slick with the sunscreen he’d just rubbed on your back — you told him that you want this, with him, for the rest of your life. The words tumbled out of you, tugged from your brain by the lake. And so, like any mature twenty-year-old girl would, you promptly rolled off of the dock and into the water, refusing to emerge until it hurt to hold your breath. Jake only smiled when you came back up seconds later, pushed your hair from your face and kissed you. Told you that he wanted it too.
“What are you thinking about?” he asks, big brown eyes staring deep into yours.
“My boyfriend.” It’s a word that still makes your stomach flutter, that hasn’t lost its novelty even after three months.
“Your boyfriend,” Jake repeats, nodding along. “Mm, handsome guy, I’ve heard. He’s super lucky.”
Heat floods your cheeks, and you can’t help but look away, biting back a smile. “Easily distracted too,” you point out. “He’s burning my breakfast.”
With wide eyes, he glances over his shoulder, a horrified look on his face. “Fuck,” he mutters, turning back to you. He doesn’t move though, only leaning in to kiss you again. His soft lips on yours, unhurried, like he’s got all the time in the world.
Admittedly, you’d let him kiss you like this forever if it weren’t for the smell of burnt egg — and burgeoning fire hazard — drifting between you. You pull away, shoving his shoulder with a laugh. “Go, Jake.”
“They’re already burnt.” He shrugs, unconcerned, as a lopsided grin spreads over his lips. “I’ll eat them.” With that, he returns to the stove, turning off the burner and flipping the charred eggs onto a plate.
Outside, you sit at the wooden table Jake built when you first arrived. You’d made an offhand comment, said it might be nice to have breakfast out on the deck, and he went off in search of scrap wood. He was successful, putting together a neat little table for the two of you to eat at—your initials and his etched into the grain, housed in a wonky love heart that gives you butterflies every time you see it. The sun warms your shoulders through one of his t-shirts, your legs crossed in your seat, and his palm heavy on your knee. You can’t look away from him. You don’t want to. There’s something about Jake, this way. The patch of raw skin on the bridge of his nose, scattered freckles dusting the centre of his face, faint band of pale skin where his sunglasses have been living recently. Jake. Your Jake. Leaning in, you press a kiss to his soft lips—your local heaven.
© zreamy (2025), all rights reserved. do not repost, translate, or plagiarise my work. do let me know your thoughts !
extra note: happy zreamy blog birth omgggg my first fic nothing to lose came out two years ago today (apr 3 2023) and i can finally say i've written at least one fic for each member 🙂↕️🙂↕️🙂↕️ thank u sm to everyone for being so lovely, it means a lot !!! all my love, zo xoxo
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#ronnie recs ⠀ ⠀(⸝⸝ᵕᴗᵕ⸝⸝)#RONNIE ABSOLUTE FAVORITES#BIG ASS FIC I AM NOT JOKING THIS IS SO FAWKING GOOD#CANT SLEEP CANT BREATHE
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"I’m very solitary, that’s all… I can’t dismiss it. Inside, I’m very much in communication with a lot of people and things who absolutely don’t know I’m in communication with them."
- Jean Luc Goddard
When I am ridden with depression or anxiety, I remind myself that I am not living in the moment. But without completely disregarding both as I believe everything has its place in the world, I make allies with them and negotiate a compromise on how to go about what I am living in the now. I use depression as a form of an archaic compass. It detects patterns easily. But I need to outsmart my mind-- while I recognise a pattern similar to the past, it doesn't necessarily mean that it's the same circumstance that would yield the same results. In my experience, it only becomes a pattern when I write it off as a pattern. And so if something seems to be recurring, I treat it like a video game level that needs to get past no matter how many times I need to do it. Anxiety is something that I need to rename in my head. I read somewhere that anxiety and excitement are both aroused emotions with the same symptoms. And so I simply call anxiety excitement or anticipation --- it's friendlier that way.
Defensiveness is another challenge I face with. It is trickier because it is masked in ways that come off differently such as anger, withdrawal or control. It takes awhile for me to realise that they all boil down to fear. And it's not so much the defensiveness that I need to process because it is only a symptom. It's fear that I need to get to know more. Hello, fear, who are you? Where did you come from? What do you need?
While it became a habit for me to easily cut off people and disengage from situations harshly, I realise it is not completely possible to go about life shunning away unpleasant experiences. At some point, it always comes back in another form. They only stop haunting me when I finally recognise what I had disregarded and somehow make amends with it. Even radically, it is only when I could recognise how I am the same that I make peace with it.
And so there I was again, in a seemingly similar situation. This time, I thought I was smarter to have called it out before it could have the slightest possibility to manifest in the same way (or so I thought). I gave myself a pat on the back. Job well done. But it didn't feel like the level was completed. Little did I know, it has not even started. I'm older and smarter now. I have learned that while anything can be real, not everything is true. I can outsmart this with logic. I listed down questions (and valid ones at that) to confront the subject. Could the subject have answered my questions that would satisfy me? Absolutely not. Because my questions were not questions to be answered but questions that were disguised as a form of attack. There goes my defensiveness.
In between pregnant pauses, I kept asking the same why's which met no answer. I just groaned in resignation saying "I just want to understand you.."
To which was responded with "Me too."
And that was it. I had my answer. It was the kind of honesty that I could recognise because that was true for me too. While I feel like a scientist in search for truth, approaching the subject separate from me, I am actually not separate from the subject because I am also the subject that I am trying to figure out.
"But why are we trying to be separate from fear? Because we are afraid. In other words, fear is trying to separate itself from fear, as if one could fight fire with fire. Man has to discover he everything which he beholds in nature – the clammy foreign feeling world of the oceans depths, the wastes of ice, the reptiles of the swamp, the spiders and scorpions, the deserts of lifeless planets – has its counterpart within himself. He is not, then at one with himself until he realises that this “underside” of nature and the feelings of horror which it gives him are also “I”."
- Alan Watts
It's like when I was capturing photos on film. The process took longer and focusing was a lot more tedious. There were more factors to consider like light, film ISO, shutterspeed, aperture of the camera, mechanism, battery -- was it still in good condition? It was easier to get past through all those factors with a digital camera or even a smartphone with preset filters. Film photography taught me that how I see the world is different from how my camera lens see the world. And in understanding how my lenses see the world, I can find ways to work with it and come up with a shot that is closest to what I had envisioned. But honestly the best ones were pure accidents.
Anyway, I remind myself to normalise conflict. Normalise the natural ebb and flow of relationships and growth. Normalise the push and pull, the ups and downs. Conflict is natural. It is when we completely write off people that we lose our chance to know them and ourselves deeper.
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Song of the day
Sheeple - Tom MacDonald
I’m not trying to get political or make myself out to be some sort of conspiracy theorist on this platform, but Tom has a point with this song. If you haven’t heard the song yet, essentially the gist of it is that he is calling out everybody who just does what they’re told without question and just follows along, without actually logically thinking about what they are being commanded to do. The people that have more reliance on the government, political figures, people who apparently have our best interest at heart, he’s calling those people out to tell them that what they’re doing is stupid, ridiculous, moronic, and the list goes on.
I grew up in a society where you’re supposed to trust the actual science and question everything at the same time. There is such thing as trusting the science, but not blindly following what people say based on the science. If that makes any sense whatsoever.
One of the biggest gripes that usually comes with something along the lines of the song, is the coronavirus pandemic that we had in the year 2020 to 2022-ish. The fact that the government kept going on and on and on about us needing to stay inside, us needing to get the vaccines that were not FDA approved as thoroughly as everything else that we put into our bodies, the fact that we had politicians using the coronavirus to help push their wants, desires, and agendas, the fact that if you didn’t listen, or you questioned what the majority of what mainstream media was telling you, you were labeled as a conspiracy theorist, a hater, a piece of trash on the side of the road essentially. The idea and concept of taking logic out of information being told, is really what this song is about. And the fact that people are listening to what they were told and they’re doing so without logic in mind.
What did you think about this song? What do you think about Tom? Do you like his music? I don’t want the comments of this to turn into a heated argument but more of a conversation between people. Please keep an open mind and no hateful comments or they will be removed. 
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