#work from home 2019
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tfw you forget to plug in your phone the night before
#fnaf#five nights at freddy's#security breach#fnaf sb#gregory#vanessa#glamrock freddy#freddy#comic#my art#every time i draw freddy and greg i just yolo it#like yeah i barely remember what you look like and i'm just gonna hope i remember how i drew you like over a year ago#except greg looks different in each post#but well#also i keep using vanessa's first shown design from like 2019 or 2020#with the loose hair#since the first time i drew her when was when she was first revealed and it just cemented itself in my mind#so she's probably gonna have loose hair at home and a tighter ponytail at work or sth
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Star Trek Completionism:
TOS: 🟩🟩🟩 100%
TAS: 🟩🟩 100%
TOS Movies: 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟥 83.3%
TNG: 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 100%
TNG Movies: 🟥🟥🟥🟥 0%
DS9: 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟨🟥 84.2%
VOY: 🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩🟩 100%
ENT: 🟥🟥🟥🟥 0%
AOS: 🟩🟩🟩 100%
DISCO: 🟩🟩🟩🟥🟥 60%
PICARD: 🟨🟥🟥 3%
LWD: 🟨🟥🟥🟥 7.5%
PRODIGY: 🟩🟩 100%
SHORT TREKS: 🟥🟥 0%
SNW: 🟨🟥🟥 42%
#I've seen so much and yet sometimes it feels like I haven't made a dent#getting into star trek in 2019 shortly before they announced a bunch of shows was the rick roll of my life tbh!#I've seen the last half of the first episode of picard because my dad was watching it when I got home from work one night#I'm excited to finish disco but sad that it must end etc :(#Star Trek#media#media completionism
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The Sketcher: A Portrait of Mlle. Rosina, a Jewess, 1858 - Daniel Huntington
#normally when I talk about judaism + art on this blog I specifically highlight the work of Jewish artists instead of sitters#like come on we all know who Rembrandt is.#but this one is very dear to me I used to visit her on my way home from school#little femme Jewish teenager with a sketchbook ….#it used to be right off the atrium but I’m sure they’ve changed it by now! last time I was at the Brooklyn Museum was 2019#and they rotate their collection really frequently#Daniel Huntington
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"Ohio is NOT a Midwestern state," my Illinoisian wife once hissed—and yes, she meant that in a bad way.
I'm going to have to disagree about the "not Midwestern" part, but I can see what she means, after a decade in Illinois for comparison. The vibe here is different (in a better way, I would add), and there are traces of New England cultural influences sometimes in funny ways—there are Blue laws!
For the USAmericans and foreigners alike: access to alcoholic beverages is tightly controlled in New England. You have to go to a specialty liquor store ("package store"), and these have limited hours of operation. Alcohol is NOT sold in supermarkets or gas stations, etc. They may have relaxed the laws slightly, but when I was growing up, liquor sales were forbidden on Sunday. (I remember my elderly alcoholic co-worker begging the boss to sell her a bottle of wine from the restaurant on Sunday.) When you're used to this milieu, the rest of the country seems positively awash in booze.
Fast-forward to shopping in the Ohio Walmart, where they do have beer and wine: but no hard stuff. Weirdly, rather than not selling it, it's available in a diluted to 20% ABV or less version. (Surely there are other states in this bizarre diluted hooch zone...?) You have to go to a dedicated liquor store to get things like whiskey or rum not watered down.
I was looking at a local paper in the break room and saw an ad for a liquor retailer, calling it "carryout" just like Massachusetts lmaoooo. And that stupid roundabout I always have to drive through—if Ohio is so determined to channel Massachusetts, can we at least get some more Dunkies?
#have fun! ...but not TOO much fun >:(#alcohol#ohio posting#shaun talks#i have a feeling this is something like feeling homesick from the lighthouse (2019)#[sees odd puritanical attitude about hard liquor] awww just like home! :')#i also love my very industrial work area but wish it had more restaurants and shops#local new englander misses factory towns
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me and the generic extra strong Tylenol and the pure rage in my system
#Every once in a while I think. It’s not too bad home. I’m over dramatic. It’s not bad and it won’t be bad when I go home and never been bad#Then actually think and remember#I shouldn’t have been hit as a small child. I thank god that my parents stopped that with me.#But also. I should have been taken seriously when I went To them with concerns and shouldn’t have been brushed off.#But also to be a 14 something year old and to realize your parents aren’t in love is a crushing feeling#Since that must have been when. 13-14. Appa passed. Pandemic times. I’m sure my father. Since this would have been the last time I saw Appa#We went down to visit. Dad didn’t go he had work. He sent us off. I remember sitting in the passenger seat by mom in driver#Dad praying for our safe travel and for him going in for a kiss and the moment of hesitation and unwant from my mother#And the awkward silence and the way everything seemed to just shift to the side#That was summer of 2019. My first time realizing my parents weren’t both in love happened when I was 13-14.#I wouldn’t wish that on anyone.#And going to college has me feeling so guilty. Like I fucking ditched my siblings? The kids I raised as a child myself?#(I had to go. I don’t know if my scholarship would have held I don’t know if my financial aid would have held. I couldn’t have waited. )#(I would have likely done something bad to myself. Genuinely. If I weren’t able to be here. If I had to stay. I wouldn’t survive that.)#my siblings are fine. They have no responsibilities. My sister is manipulative. They will manage. They want me to get the education I need#They aren’t going to have to use their own college money to pay to be able to eat because the parents won’t feed them for the summer#I went into college with at least a couple hundred less than I should have. Because I had to parent. I had to feed my siblings.#And I had to pay to fill the gas tank on my father’s gas eater truck. We couldn’t be home because of the selling home situation.#I had to do something to get us out and to feed us but I didn’t get paid back for anywhere near all of it#I don’t regret it. But a kid shouldn’t have to pay for them and their siblings to live.#But then I remember the dread I have for returning ‘home’ for the breaks. I don’t know what I’m going to do.#If I can’t work all of the breaks then I either won’t be able to pay next semester#Or I’ll have almost no money in savings. Like nothing to my name. Can’t buy gas. Can’t do anything. Can’t buy food.#Unless the next scholarship stuff I’m doing pulls through. But I’m willing to work the whole break just to get away from either house.#I want to violently shake my parents and get them to comprehend#Father you have dropped 260$ into my bank account in the last two weeks. Why could this not be earlier in the semester.#Why couldn’t that be in the time and fashion you FUCKING PROMISED for helping me pay my schooling?#You have money to spare. Stupid. Why couldn’t you help like you promised.#Mom you fucker. I get that you are kinda with a new man now. But you’re leading yourself into a relationship with a man you said yourself#You don’t want to date because he wants to move away with his sister and because he hates it here
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“hey so there’s been a bunch of exposures recently but we’re gonna have the volunteer party this week bc it’s outdoors so we’ll be fine. yeah it’s a bunch of people all talking maskless face to face in relatively close proximity but we’re outside so any transmission would of course be impossible” be so fucking for real
#i love this place i love volunteering there. they have air purifiers around the center and tell people in no other words that if they’re#feeling unwell in the slightest they shouldn’t come in. they’re offering free tests to anyone exposed. they’re doing so much more than so#many other places and a lot of times it’s a place im able to relax a bit#but im just. exhausted. a week from tomorrow will be the three year anniversary of my dad dying from covid so im already in a bad place#plus covid in general is a trigger for me because. yknow. i watched it slowly strangle the life from my father until he was a grey#breathless husk who couldn’t walk three steps or say three words without panting. and that was when we made him go to the hospital#and then the next time he came home it was just his ashes in a bag#but it’s been four years. five if you count the early cases that popped up in 2019. and we’re still dealing with this shit#im just tired of it. im too exhausted to have a full sobbing shaking breakdown so ive gone to the other end of the spectrum and just feel#heavy and hollow. i should probably have a big cry but i don’t have the tears or energy#vent tw#im just hoping my n95 and the air purifiers were enough to keep me from contracting it at all. the worry is the n95 could’ve been loose and#sometimes the metal on the nose loosens slightly but the mask was pretty new overall so im hoping it worked to its full capacity and kept#out any covid molecules so that i didn’t contract any#only time will tell i suppose. in the mean time#im just praying a lot bc that’s the only control i have. i will be saying the shema whenever i get too stressed about it
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If you get this, answer with 3 random facts about yourself and send this to the last 7 people in your notifs! Let’s get to know each other better! (Anon or not, it doesn’t matter)
THREE whole facts??? alright LFG
the current #1 song on my on repeat is the cure for breathing by voilà (great song everyone in the world should know it)
in 2021 i drank a grand total of 598 cups of tea
my only piece of stranger things merch is a racerback tank top that says "i dump your ass" in super colorful 80s font that i bought at an it'sugar in nyc like four years ago. after some intensive googling i have been completely unable to find any evidence that this tank top even exists much less was sold by it'sugar, but i guarantee it exists, because it is in my closet right now. it's possible i am the only person in the world who possesses this shirt
ETA: found a picture i took right after i bought the shirt so you can all see what im talking about
i realize this doesnt matter to anyone but it matters to me. a mystery that doesnt need solving but damn if etc etc
#bestie it took me so long to think of three facts and megs had to help me#im useless#i seriously cant find proof of this tank top existing#but i VIVIDLY remember buying it#it was intersession at camp so it mustve been 2019 bc thats the last time we had an intersession#my sister and i were in the city staying with cousins. that was also when we saw spiderman far from home (i think? or maybe homecoming?)#whichever one came out in 2019 lol#anyhow i remember thinking how funny it was of me to go into a candy store and naturally buy basically the only thing that wasnt candy#no regrets tho i love that shirt i wear it often#would wear it more often but it is (1) winter and (2) i work at a school for children now lmao#anyway. the closest i can get to evidence of this shirt's existence and legitimate shelf life is#that itsugar DID have a stranger things line#and the write up MENTIONS tshirts and stuff but i cant find photographic proof of this anywhere#so who knows!!!#i wonder if i can find a picture of it from when i bought it hang on#AHA#ok editing my answer to include the picture#ask#denizoid#this was so silly lmao#btw. that tank top looks a LOT worse for wear these days lmfao#it is loved <3
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My brothers in Craft I drank more tequila than I ever have in my entire life today in the span of 2 hours and I almost met God
#tw alcohol#GIVE ME ONE MARGARITA AND I'M GONNA love all of my friends dearly and forget that my water bottle is open and it explodes everywhere and#IM OKAY IM JUST A LIGHTWEIGHT#that was the most buzzed ive ever been like...even more when me and my friend started scream/singing Macavity from hit movie Cats 2019#God truly almost called me home tonight but I said “Nah man I'm good I have work on Monday”#I'm rambling#how many tags does tumblr even let you post???#is there a limit???#600 if you dont have the checkmark?#haha wrong website#do people read the tags anyways#hello?#hellooooo??#damn I would kill a man for In-N-Out right now
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"The first modern attempt at transferring a uterus from one human to another occurred at the turn of the millennium. But surgeons had to remove the organ, which had become necrotic, 99 days later. The first successful transplant was performed in 2011 — but even then, the recipient wasn’t immediately able to get pregnant and deliver a baby. It took three more years for the first person in the world with a transplanted uterus to give birth.
More than 70 such babies have been born globally in the decade since. “It’s a complete new world,” said Giuliano Testa, chief of abdominal transplant at Baylor University Medical Center.
Almost a third of those babies — 22 and counting — have been born in Dallas at Baylor. On Thursday, Testa and his team published a major cohort study in JAMA analyzing the results from the program’s first 20 patients. All women were of reproductive age and had no uterus (most having been born without one), but had at least one functioning ovary. Most of the uteri came from living donors, but two came from deceased donors.
Fourteen women had successful transplants, all of whom were able to have at least one baby.
“That success rate is extraordinary, and I want that to get out there,” said Liza Johannesson, the medical director of uterus transplants at Baylor, who works with Testa and co-authored the study. “We want this to be an option for all women out there that need it.”
Six patients had transplant failures, all within two weeks of the procedure. Part of the problem may have been a learning curve: The study initially included only 10 patients, and five of the six with failed transplants were in that first group. These were “technical” failures, Testa said, involving aspects of the surgery such as how surgeons connected the organ’s blood vessels, what material was used for sutures, and selecting a uterus that would work well in a transplant.
The team saw only one transplant fail in the second group of 10 people, the researchers said. All 20 transplants took place between September 2016 and August 2019.
Only one other cohort study has previously been published on uterus transplants, in 2022. A Swedish team, which included Johannesson before she moved to Baylor, performed seven successful transplants out of nine attempts. Six women, including the first transplant recipient to ever deliver a baby back in 2014, gave birth.
“It’s hard to extract data from that, because they were the first ones that did it,” Johannesson said. “This is the first time we can actually see the safety and efficacy of this procedure properly.”
So far, the signs are good: High success rates for transplants and live births, safe and healthy children so far, and early signs that immunosuppressants — typically given to transplant recipients so their bodies don’t reject the new organ — may not cause long-term harm, the researchers said. (The uterine transplants are removed after recipients no longer need them to deliver children.) And the Baylor team has figured out how to identify the right uterus for transfer: It should be from a donor who has had a baby before, is premenopausal, and, of course, who matches the blood type of the recipient, Testa said...
“They’ve really embraced the idea of practicing improvement as you go along, to understand how to make this safer or more effective. And that’s reflected in the results,” said Jessica Walter, an assistant professor of reproductive endocrinology and infertility at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, who co-authored an editorial on the research in JAMA...
Walter was a skeptic herself when she first learned about uterine transplants. The procedure seemed invasive and complicated. But she did her fellowship training at Penn Medicine, home to one of just four programs in the U.S. doing uterine transplants.
“The firsts — the first time the patient received a transplant, the first time she got her period after the transplant, the positive pregnancy test,” Walter said. “Immersing myself in the science, the patients, the practitioners, and researchers — it really changed my opinion that this is science, and this is an innovation like anything else.” ...
Many transgender women are hopeful that uterine transplants might someday be available for them, but it’s likely a far-off possibility. Scientists need to rewind and do animal studies on how a uterus might fare in a different “hormonal milieu” before doing any clinical trials of the procedure with trans people, Wagner said.
Among cisgender women, more long-term research is still needed on the donors, recipients, and the children they have, experts said.
“We want other centers to start up,” Johannesson said. “Our main goal is to publish all of our data, as much as we can.”"
-via Stat, August 16, 2024
#infertility#uterus#organ transplant#reproductive health#public health#medical news#childbirth#good news#hope#pregnancy#cw pregnancy
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Things the Biden-Harris Administration Did This Week #39
October 18-25 2024.
President Biden issued the first presidential apology on behalf of the federal government to America's Native American population for the Indian boarding school policy. For 150 years the federal government operated a system of schools which aimed to destroy Native culture through the forced assimilation of native children. At these schools students faced physical, emotional, and sexual abuse, and close to 1,000 died. The Biden-Harris Administration has been historic for Native and Tribal rights. From the appointment of the first ever Native American cabinet member, Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland, to the investment of $46 billion dollars on tribal land, to 200 new co-stewardship agreements. The last 4 years have seen a historic investment in and expansion of tribal rights.
The Biden-Harris Administration proposed a new rule which would make contraceptive medication (the pill) free over the counter with most Insurance. The new rule would ban cost sharing for contraception products, including the pill, condoms, and emergency contraception. On top of over the counter medications, the new rule will also strength protections for prescribed contraception without cost sharing as well.
The EPA announced its finalized rule strengthening standards for lead paint dust in pre-1978 housing and child care facilities. There is no safe level of exposure to lead particularly for children who can suffer long term developmental consequences from lead exposure. The new standards set the lowest level of lead particle that can be identified by a lab as the standard for lead abatement. It's estimated 31 million homes built before the ban on lead paint in 1978 have lead paint and 3.8 million of those have one or more children under the age of 6. The new rule will mean 1.2 million fewer people, including over 300,000 children will not be exposed to lead particles every year. This comes after the Biden-Harris Administration announced its goal to remove and replace all lead pipes in America by the end of the decade.
The Department of Transportation announced a $50 million dollar fine against American Airlines for its treatment of disabled passengers and their wheelchairs. The fine stems from a number of incidences of humiliating and unfair treatment of passages between 2019 and 2023, as well as video documented evidence of mishandling wheelchairs and damaging them. Half the fine will go to replacing such damaged wheelchairs. The Biden administration has leveled a historic number of fines against the airlines ($225 million) for their failures. It also published a Airline Passengers with Disabilities Bill of Rights, passed a new rule accessible lavatories on aircraft, and is working on a rule to require airlines to replace lost or damaged wheelchairs with equal equipment at once.
The Department of Energy announced $430 million dollars to help boost domestic clean energy manufacturing in former coal communities. This invests in projects in 15 different communities, in places like Texas, West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Kentucky, and Michigan. The plan will bring about 1,900 new jobs in communities struggling with the loss of coal. Projects include making insulation out of recycled cardboard, low carbon cement production, and industrial fiber hemp processing.
The Department of Transportation announced $4.2 billion in new infrastructure investment. The money will go to 44 projects across the country. For example the MBTA will get $400 million to replace the 92 year old Draw 1 bridge and renovate North Station.
The Department of Transportation announced nearly $200 million to replace aging natural gas pipes. Leaking gas lines represent a serious public health risk and also cost costumers. Planned replacements in Georgia and North Carolina for example will save the average costumer there over $900 on their gas bill a year. Replacing leaking lines will also remove 1,000 metric tons of methane pollution, annually.
The Department of the Interior announced $244 million to address legacy pollution in Pennsylvania coal country. This comes on top of $400 million invested earlier this year. This investment will help close dangerous mine shafts, reclaim unstable slopes, improve water quality by treating acid mine drainage, and restore water supplies damaged by mining.
Data shows that President Biden's Inflation Reduction Act (passed with Vice-President Harris' tie breaking vote) has saved seniors $1 billion dollars on out-of-pocket drug costs. Seniors with certain high priced drugs saw their yearly out of pocket costs capped at $3,500 for 2024. In 2024 all seniors using Medicare Part D will see their out of pocket costs capped at $2,000 for the year. It's estimated if the $2,000 cap had been in effect this year 4.6 million seniors would have hit it by June and not have had to pay any more for medication for the rest of the year.
The Department of Education announced a new proposed rule to bring student debt relief for 8 million struggling borrowers. The Biden-Harris Administration has managed despite road blocks from Republicans in Congress, the courts and law suits from Republican states to bring student loan forgiveness to 5 million Americans so far through different programs. This latest rule would take into account many financial hardships faced by people to determine if they qualify to have their student loans forgiven. The final rule cannot be finalized before 2025 meaning its fate will be decided at the election.
The Department of Agriculture announced $1.5 billion in 92 partner-driven conservation projects. These projects aim at making farming more susceptible and environmental friendly, 16 projects are about water conservation in the West, 6 support use of innovative technologies to reduce enteric methane emissions in livestock. $100 million has been earmarked for Tribal-led projects.
#Thanks Biden#Joe Biden#Kamala Harris#politics#US politics#American politics#Native Americans#indigenous rights#lead paint#reproductive rights#reproductive health#lead poisoning#disability#infastructure#climate change#drug prices
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Charles is less than two days away from being deported to Kenya and fears for his life. He needs every Canadian's help by signing this petition. Please don't let him down.
Charles Mwangi is a bisexual man who has spoken openly about his sexuality and has worked for years to help so many vulnerable people in his community.
MWAC says the absolute best you can do to support him right now AND I MEAN RIGHT NOW is to sign this petition that will automatically send a letter begging the minister in charge of his case to allow Charles to stay in Canada.
This is realistically a life or death scenario. if you are Canadian, or have a canadian address you can sign from, please, help Charles. it is literally the least a good person should do.
Read more about Charles and sign here:
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Help I'm crushingly homesick for somewhere I lived for two years four years ago
#am i homesick for the place or the period of my life during which i lived there?#it was my first home away from my parents so the heady mix of complete independence combined with my first 'real' job in an office#where i was making bank and was frankly doing amazing work#2019 was the best year of my life ngl#then i quit my job after covid changed everything & had to move out of my apartment & ended two separate long-time friendships#and now i'm here a fat alcoholic living in a fucking pig sty because i don't have any energy or motivation stuck in the most soul-sucking#job on earth
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OVERPROTECTIVE




pairing: max verstappen x fem!leclerc!reader
word count: 1.6k+
summary: the story of how you and max met . . . and how protective he and your brothers can be
request: max verstappen and leclerc!reader : overprotective charles and carlos, very domestic and protective max while theyre int he paddock during race, maybe hes also very affectionate. just some fluff and comedy
warnings/contents: swearing, sexual innuendos
author’s note: maybe took it too far with the beginning but i couldn’t help it, plus that’s something that max would do

As the youngest sibling and only girl, you knew your family would be protective ━━ especially your brothers. Sometimes you liked it, and used it to your advantage by scaring off random guys at parties and being a little less afraid of walking home at night with them there, but you also hated it sometimes. You knew they just wanted you to be okay and not have to experience the same things they did, but it still sucked. Your parents stuck up for you when they could, but when you first moved out and stayed with Charles there wasn’t much they could do.
They had managed to scare off almost every guy you liked or started a relationship with, saying they were ‘too mean’ or ‘impolite’ or just little things like they didn’t like the way he dressed or how he talked. The longest you had been with a guy was two weeks before he got annoyed at your brothers and left. You ignored them for a week as you only went to school, your job, and hid in your room when you were home. And you bet the got a stern talking to from your parents ━━ especially your mom.
That was the longest you had been with someone . . . Until you met Max. You had heard , and knew of, Max Verstappen as him and your brother did karting together as kids and Charles joined Formula One only three years after, but you had never interacted.
The first time you met was in 2019. You had moved to Monaco for university and were living with Charles. Though Charles had invited you to races before, you always declined busy with school work or your job, where Charles would respond with something along the lines of ‘i don’t know why you have that job anyway’ which you would roll your eyes and flip him off. It was the Austrian Grand Prix that you finally agreed to go, one of the races that Max had won that year. You had gotten some time off from your job and you didn’t have too much work so you agreed.
When you arrived, you were a little overwhelmed so you mostly stayed in the Ferrari garage, talking to Charles and sometimes Sebastian, though they were pretty busy. The next couple days you didn’t have too much time to go out and explore, to worried about watching free practices and qualifying, and you didn’t even think about leaving during the race until it was over.
It wasn’t until the after party that you actually talked to him. You originally weren’t going to go, you were going to stay in and work on homework, until Charles begged you and you agreed . . . but only because he came second and you were proud of him. You were nineteen, so you were legal, but you were sure even if you weren’t you’d be allowed a few drinks, albeit with Charles hovering over you more than usual.
It was about twenty minutes into the party ━━ with you and Charles getting drinks and being introduced to other people ━━ when you got introduced to Max. “Max!” Charles had called over the thumping bass of the music. At first, the Dutch man didn’t hear until your brother yelled right into his ear. He turned around, surprised, before calling a ‘Charles!’ and congratulating him. He didn’t see you until he pulled away from the hug, turning to see you. “This is my sister! Y/n!” He told Max, again yelling. You loudly introduced yourself as you put your hand forward. “Max! You came to watch Charles karting when you were younger right?” You nodded. “I recognize you!”
Max eventually got pulled away by some people, you assumed technicians or mechanics as you don’t recognize them as drivers, and didn’t see each other for another hour. You had stepped outside for a minute, overwhelmed, though you made sure to tell Charles where you were going. When you had, he immediately became concerned but you waved him off, telling him you were okay and just needed some fresh air.
You were leaning against the wall of the building, bottle of water in your hand as you heard footsteps. You quickly turned your head, though calmed once you saw it was only Max. “Scare you?” He asked. You got to hear his voice clearer now, taking in his accent slipping out due to the alcohol. “Can never be too careful. Dangerous for women.” He nodded, but didn’t say anything for a little. As you were taking a sip of water, he started to speak. “First race?” You nodded, “yeah. I’ve watched, obviously, but I’ve just been too busy with school that I haven’t had the chance. It’s been a little overwhelming at times ━━ hence why I’m out here.”
“I get that. It was for me too.” You turned to look at him. “You were seventeen, right?” He looked surprised that you knew that. “Yeah . . . I was.” You could see in his eyes that remembering that was heavy. “That must’ve been hard.” You told him but didn’t plan on talking anymore about it. “It was, but that’s life.” You nodded. You offered him a sip of your water bottle, knowing he must be getting thirsty. He replied with a small ‘thank you’ before taking a sip. “Want to get out of here? I’m done for the night.” You raised your eyebrow, “wow. What a gentleman.” He must’ve realized what that sounded like before he started to sputter, apologizing and saying that’s not when he meant. He look confused when you started to laugh. “I know what you meant. But you are drunk and I don’t have a car.”
He lowered his eyebrows. “Right.” You pulled out your phone, getting ready to call a cab. “I’ll call you a cab and get you one while I tell Charles where I’m going.” “You’re coming with me?” You nodded, “yeah, I’m don’t for tonight too. I’ll help you to your room because you are not as sober as you think you are and then I’m heading back to my hotel.”
You went in, telling Max with a stern finger in his direction to ‘stay where he was’ while you went to grab a bottle of water and tell Charles where you were going. He didn’t approve, warning you to be careful and not fall for anything, but you assured him you were fine.
That night you helped him to his hotel and to his room, finding a bottle of water and aspirin that was in your purse to set on his beside table. While you were leaving, he grabbed your wrist. “Will you take up my offer? Dinner sometime?” You smiled at him. “Sure, but ask me again when you’re sober so you know what you are doing.” The next morning on the plane, you got a text from Max, letting you know he got your number from someone and that he still wanted to take you out for dinner. You agreed, setting a time and place.
That eventual dinner date led to now, almost five years into your relationship. Charles was a bit upset, but after a ‘talk’ with Max, he felt a little bit better about it, and he warmed up after awhile. Your brothers didn’t manage to scare him off. You had warned him, and talked with them about it, so that helped a little.
It was the 2024 Bahrain Grand Prix. You sat in the Ferrari garage talking with your brother and Carlos while also keeping track of your boyfriend during the free practice. You were sitting down in one of that chairs with the two men standing. You didn’t even notice something was happening until you felt something hit the back of your head. You let out a small ‘ouch’ while rubbing the back of your head. You tried not to make a scene, but the mechanic who had hit you let out a big ‘oh shit!’ which pulled everyone’s attention. I
Immediately your brother was on you making sure you were okay while Carlos went to chew out the mechanic. Through the pain in your head, and Charles calling for ice and a medical staff, you heard a mix of fast English and Spanish. It wasn’t until the ice was placed on your head that you started to refocus. “Est-ce que ça va (are you okay)?” You nodded, though regretted it immediately. “Ouais. Tout va bien (yeah. I’m fine).” Carlos eventually came over and pulled Charles away to let the doctor examine you. You told them you were fine and that Charles was exaggerating ━━ which they laughed at ━━ before checking you out anyway and clearing you.
Though you know better, you thought that Charles and Carlos would leave it, but you were wrong because later when you got back from the bathroom, you saw the two men talking to a very angry looking Max. When Max saw you, he left the boys and headed straight for you, using his hands to bend your head down and check the back of your head. “Are you okay? Were you hurt?” You rolled your eyes even though he couldn’t see it. “I feel like a monkey being inspected by another monkey.” He pulled your head back up so your eyes met his.
“Schatje.” “Max. I swear I’m fine, it was a mistake.” It was his turn to roll his eyes, “a mistake that shouldn’t happen.” You stars at him, unimpressed. “Max Emilian Verstappen if you do anything I’m not scratching your head tonight.” You told him as you walked away.
“Liefje! That’s not fair!”
#emma writes#imagine#x reader#x fem!reader#max verstappen#max verstappen x reader#max verstappen x you#max verstappen x y/n#max verstappen imagine#f1#f1 x y/n#f1 x you#f1 x reader#f1 imagine#f1 fanfic#formula one#formula one x y/n#formula one x you#formula one x reader#formula one imagine#formula one fanfic#formula 1#formula 1 x y/n#formula 1 x you#formula 1 x reader#formula 1 imagine#formula 1 fanfic#leclerc!reader#f1 fic#formula one fic
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pick your poison | wicked games series
“You know—when you're still hurting from one person and find someone else to patch you up?” Changkyun said. “One poison drives out another.”
☾ pairings: jeon wonwoo x female reader ☾ genre: angst, fluff, smut (18+) ☾ aus: bartender wonwoo, bartender mingyu, rebound fucking, "enemies" to fucking, messy love triangle ☾ word count: 17.3k
› PREVIOUS CHAPTERS – READ MORE
🎧: enemy – jiselle, gemini | not sorry – i.m | kiss&tell – ethan low | excuses – twlv | fuxxin' love (2019) – OoOo | ghosts – highvyn | guilty – taemin | his car isn't yours – wendy | love is banned – gemini | divine – hyejin | 28 reasons – seulgi
☾ warnings: smut with plot, alcohol consumption but no dubcon, hurt/comfort[?], spiraling, unprotected p in v sex, body worshipping, pussy eating, fingering, creampies, hickeys. reader is chubby. pet names: ma'am, baby (hers)
☾ author's note: i'm sorry.
☾ disclaimer: minors DO NOT INTERACT. this post is intended for 18+ readers ONLY. please have your age stated in your blog description and do not to look like a bot 🙂
pick your poison
The basketball court was empty. The night was still, as though hurt by the echo of the conversation you kept replaying in your head.
Puddles of water glistened on the pavement, reflecting fragments of the moonlight as it shone on the dark sky.
You sat there alone, motionless. Waiting.
You didn’t know what you were waiting for. Or maybe you did.
You looked down at your hands. They were wet. Wet in tears of a dream that was lost.
The sky shifted, and light poured into the basketball court. The sun rose too quickly, too bright. It brought with it the cruel reality to your broken heart. Like a thread pulled from your chest.
But then you woke up.
Your breath caught before you could open your eyes. You were lying on your bed, too exhausted to move. Your throat was dry, and every beat of your heart ached like it had a thorn right in the centre of it.
You were at home. But in your heart, you were still sitting on the bleachers. At the basketball court.
Waiting for him.
Time passed in a blur after that night.
Days and nights went on, time slipping through your fingers like water. But despite that, you felt like your life had been perpetually put on pause. Your mind, body and soul were on standby, waiting for his call, even though you knew that he was set on his choice.
Being on standby also meant that you didn’t feel a thing.
You made a promise to yourself—the moment you left the court, you would never cry for Kim Mingyu again. And you would never cry for another man ever again.
What used to be your routine melted into a continuous, numbing train of activities. Work, home, eat, sleep. One after another. Suddenly, you found yourself moving without thinking. Acting without really being there.
You kept yourself busy, believing that work might save you from the aching hole in your chest threatening to pull you in.
There is an undeniable negativity around setbacks, around change.
But in this situation, you didn’t know whether you had stumbled upon a setback or a change. Mingyu had never been your actual partner, in the sense that you never solidified a real relationship with him. The thing that was making you feel incomplete was that he walked away without ever knowing how you truly felt about him.
So there was one thing you could do. Bury it.
You would bury your feelings and bury yourself if need be. It felt like rewriting bits and pieces of yourself that you were once willing to put into a relationship with him. Only to find out that you were idealizing a relationship that was never going to happen.
A part of you felt resentful. You felt used. Like he just came into your life, wrapped you in and then left you hanging. Alone.
But the other part felt grateful that he reappeared in your life and graced you with the ability to love again. Even though he left you with a heart full and brimming with love that you will never be able to give him.
The truth was, you didn’t feel any wiser. Forever stuck repeating the same mistakes over and over again.
Autumn had you yearning for snow. Anything that would make the puddles of water along the sidewalks freeze over.
Everywhere you turned, you saw him. Even the faintest smell of coconut made your chest ache. Even the sound of rain reminded you of him.
You opened the door to a coffee shop, walking inside with an umbrella in one hand and grabbing the straps of your tote bag in the other.
You didn’t have to go to the other side of the city to get coffee. But lately, sitting in the small office you rented was suffocating. And being in your apartment made you think too much about the same thing.
And when you weren’t working, you avoided sitting in your own apartment. You couldn’t stand the silence of your space. Not then, and not now.
So you wandered. Searching for places you hadn’t ruined yet with memories.
The coffee shop was small, cozy, and humming with soft R&B music. The scent of fresh ground coffee and pastries hit you immediately. Warm, bitter, and sweet all at once. You stepped inside, suddenly feeling like you had crossed into a different reality. While outside was bleak and it looked like it threatened to rain again, inside was a wave of color. Splashes of pastels, warm colors, and warm yellow lights overhead.
For a moment, it almost felt like you could breathe again. Like the gaping hole inside you was replaced by a different thing.
But this feeling was fleeting.
There were only a handful of people inside the coffee shop. But one of them turned slightly toward you, the movement drawing your gaze to him.
Jeon Wonwoo might’ve sensed you, because he turned over his shoulder, spotting you instantly. He stood near the menu, hands shoved into the pockets of his hoodie, glasses sliding slightly down the bridge of his nose.
He moved awkwardly, bowing his head politely when he caught your gaze.
His lips moved, but you couldn’t make out his words.
This was the closest you’d come to anything connected to Kim Mingyu since the night he broke up with you.
Wonwoo flicked his gaze over your face—a hint of confusion, of something almost unreadable.
“Excuse me,” you cleared your throat, stepping closer to the counter.
“I said, do you want to order first?” he asked using a polite tone, but there was a usual dryness to it. “I am still deciding for myself.”
“I uh,” you fumbled, feeling the nerves prickling down your spine. “I-I’ll have an iced americano, please. And a cookie. Please.”
You sent a glance at Wonwoo, trying to come off as unbothered as you could. But there was no way you could mask the trembling of your fingers when you extended your hand to pay.
Wonwoo stood behind you, his hands shoved inside the pockets of his dark hoodie. “I’ll have a strawberry yogurt smoothie, please,” he said, pulling out his wallet and taking out a card with his nimble fingers.
You held your reaction. It was obfuscating to you that he would order such a fun and non-plain beverage like that.
But you both stood at the end of the bar, waiting for your beverages. None of you made eye contact again. But you could feel his furtive glances every ten seconds, when he thought you were too distracted looking at your phone.
But you were just staring at your phone, pretending to move your thumb down the screen.
Deep inside, you wanted to run. You wanted to crawl into the nearest, safest place you could find. You wanted to conjure up a way to disappear into thin air. But at the same time, you wanted to stay. To admire the closest thing that reminded you of him. Of Mingyu.
Your heart thumped in your ears. You wanted to hold onto the space where Wonwoo stood. Even as your order came down the bar and you picked it up.
But without meeting his gaze again, you grabbed your cup and turned around, heading to the door.
Wonwoo was there, pushing the door open before you could do it yourself. In one hand, he held his pink smoothie cup, and in the other, he held the door open for you. “Thank you,” you mumbled politely, exiting the coffee shop and joining the slow influx of people walking down the street.
“Don’t mention it,” Wonwoo replied. He looked like he didn’t expect to see you today. And in such a random part of the city.
After a beat, you realized that Wonwoo had fallen into step with you, forced to walk close to you due to the heavily transited sidewalk.
“Are you heading down to the station?” Wonwoo asked curiously, motioning down at the stairs that led to the underground subway.
“Yeah. You too?” you replied. Your tone sounded suffocated. Like you were struggling to breathe properly.
“Yeah,” he said casually. He raised his gaze, surveying his surroundings like he was looking for a quick exit to leave you on your own.
But you tried to ignore it. A part of you was glad to have someone so familiar, but at the same time, so different from Mingyu. You never felt like Wonwoo liked you, so it was weirdly comforting that you had stumbled upon him. It was having someone so close to Mingyu, but different enough not to expect any questions coming from him.
The stairs were slick, wet with rain as you made your way into the station.
At the platform, the silence stretched. Wonwoo shifted his weight awkwardly, adjusting the strap of the bag slung across his body.
“I’m sorry,” Wonwoo said after a minute, smiling shyly. “I promise I’m not following you or whatever.” He pushed his glasses up his nose and looked down at his feet.
“It’s okay. I don’t mind the company,” you admitted with a little bit of struggle.
Wonwoo raised his eyes to you, studying you for a moment. “Okay,” he said, appearing to ground himself next to you. And for a moment, you thought that if you hadn’t said that, he would’ve stepped away.
The train arrived, and you both watched it as it slowly came to a stop. The doors hissed open, and you both went in after waiting patiently for it to clear out.
But it was still very packed with people, forcing you to remain on your feet and close to him. You hooked an arm around the pole, still holding on for dear life to the straps of your tote bag and sipping carefully from your iced coffee.
“Do you—okay,” Wonwoo blurted, opting to stay at your side. He raised an arm over his head to grab onto one of the handles.
The wagon hissed and beeped as the time to get in or exit ran out. The doors closed, and you were gently swayed in motion with the car. Your body was gently moved forward, awkwardly bumping into Wonwoo.
“Sorry,” you whispered nervously, trying not to disrupt the peace and quiet from inside the wagon.
“Don’t be,” he whispered back, avoiding your eyes.
You tried to keep at least half an arm’s distance. Every time the train came to a stop, you tried to ground yourself as best as you could, clenching all of your muscles to the point it exhausted you.
And for a moment, the silence wasn’t uncomfortable. It was in fact more normal than you had expected it to be.
“Where do you get off?” you asked after he didn’t exit for three stops. It was then that you started to feel that your plans were about to change. And collide with his.
“In the next one.”
You nodded slowly, trying to hide your doomed smile.
“You?” he asked, pausing and then, “You too?”
“Yep,” you replied.
Wonwoo let out an amused breath through his nose. “Museum?”
You blinked. “Yes,” you chuckled awkwardly. But then, you looked at Wonwoo, like really looked at him. He was sporting a camera bag across his shoulder. “Don’t tell me—”
“Sculpture showing?” he raised his eyebrows, huffing a tiny laugh when you nodded.
“Yeah,” you sighed, looking down at your shoes.
The museum was half empty. A quiet, bustling series of sounds followed you inside as you moved towards the wide lobby. It was still beginning to rain again as you went inside, making you hope that it’d stop by the time you came out.
You and Wonwoo moved without talking. As you went into the showing, you realized that it was organized so that you looked at each sculpture in a particular order, starting from the right side of the long room.
The showing was called A Human Connection.
Wonwoo lingered a few steps away from you, his hands gripping his very expensive-looking camera, his head tilted like he was studying every bit of the sculptures, and looking for the perfect angle for a photo.
You wandered through the first few sculptures, pausing every so often to glance at him out of the corner of your eye. You realized he never strayed too far from you. But he didn’t speak, he didn’t voice the curiosity that showed behind his eyes every time his gaze flitted towards you.
The sculptures were beautiful, in a broken way. Bodies twisted in longing, hands that stretched to ghostly partners. Some figures leaned toward each other, sharing frozen and untouched kisses. A male figure knelt in front of a female figure, his arms clinging to her thighs, and he appeared to be hunched over her. Begging.
You continued walking, trying not to think too much, otherwise it would begin to show on the features of your face. You were beginning to feel deeply affected.
And then—you were forced to stop in front of one that caught your breath.
It was two human figures carved into smooth white stone, sitting back-to-back. The male figure had a hand stretching back, looking for the female figure who was leaving. In the stone where they both sat was a fracture, separating them definitively.
The woman was leaving. The man was trying to stop her. But beneath them, there was something broken.
You stared at it, feeling like life was playing a sick joke on you. Laughing at your pain.
Wonwoo joined you, standing beside you in utter silence.
You felt his eyes on you, but you pretended to be too enthralled by the sculpture to notice. For a while, neither of you spoke. And you tried your best to push all of your thoughts away.
“Do you think we’re all like that?” Wonwoo asked, his voice so quiet that you barely caught it.
You turned your head slowly. “Like what?”
He shrugged. “People who want to reach out. But only do it when it’s too late.”
You blinked at him, thrown off by the rare glimpse of vulnerability. “M-maybe.”
Wonwoo shifted, fixing his glasses awkwardly. He looked almost embarrassed, as though he, too, had been enthralled by the sculpture, and he didn’t realize who he was talking to. He appeared to be ready to move on to the next sculpture, but you opened your mouth, bringing him to a halt.
“I think that there are some people who still try,” you said. “People who reach out before it’s too late.”
Wonwoo looked at you. And you felt little under his scrutiny. You thought for a moment that he was going to take this as an opportunity to talk about what happened with Mingyu. To say something.
But he just stayed beside you. He had lowered his camera, deciding to absorb the beauty displayed in front of you. The warm light pouring from the skylight overhead created a shadow over the male figure, while the female figure glistened beautifully.
You slowly peeled off from the sculpture and moved onto the next. Wonwoo followed you silently, and you realized that his company was not at all what you had half-expected it to be. It was welcoming, something different and new. Like a silent truce that none of you were ready to acknowledge.
Wonwoo tipped his head toward the exit. “Are you heading back?” he asked when you had toured all the showing from start to finish.
You nodded quietly.
Outside, the sky had darkened. It had stopped raining, but it was considerably colder than before. The sidewalk was wet, and it glimmered under the streetlights, the pavement hissing loudly under the movement of the cars passing through.
You wrapped your arms around you, hugging your sweater tighter. You sucked in a breath, just as your teeth clattered quite dramatically, and loudly.
“Are you cold?” he asked, laughing lightly.
A small but meek smile tugged at your lips. “No, I’m not,” you lied through your teeth, laughing when the answer was obvious.
Wonwoo shrugged his leather jacket off, offering it to you without saying a word.
“I can’t” you said, blinking at him, alarmed.
“Take it,” he said simply. Like it was nothing to him and not something pregnant with meaning. He rolled his eyes, clearly getting why you were hesitant. “You’re shivering, come on.”
You hesitated, but took it anyway.
The fabric was warm, carrying the faintest trace of the laundry detergent that threatened to remind you of someone else. But as you let the jacket sit on your shoulders, another scent brushed against your senses. It was sweet, peachy, and warm. Oddly comforting.
You pulled it over your wrists, hiding your hands inside the sleeves.
Wonwoo didn’t say anything about it, but he looked at your sweater paws, now accompanied by his leather jacket. And the ghost of a smile appeared on his lips.
For a few blocks, you walked side by side, trading furtive glances when you thought that he might go away, or when you thought he wasn’t looking. He walked slowly, carefully taking each step to keep up with your slow pace. It was a quiet walk. Easy.
When you reached the station, he gave you one inquisitive look.
You knew he was dying to ask—because deep inside, you wanted to ask too. You wanted to know how Mingyu was faring, you wanted to know if he had been working on healing in all these weeks of no contact. A part of you wanted to know if he had tried to look for you.
But you couldn’t do it.
When you reached the station, you hesitated at first, but then you asked, “Are you heading home too?”
He nodded quietly.
“Same line?” you asked, though it was obvious. You knew where he lived and that he would have to use the same line to get there.
“Yeah.”
You both stepped inside the car, the floor wet with the dampness of all of the wet coats and umbrellas.
You quickly found a corner spot, standing close enough to Wonwoo that you could get that peachy scent coming from him too.
You both fell silent again. And it was okay.
As you both made your way out of the station, you realized that it had started raining again. You reached for your umbrella, preparing it as you climbed the stairs to the street.
Wonwoo paused, huffing a light laugh when he realized that it was raining harder than it was before.
You nudged him lightly with your elbow. “We can share,” you said, raising the umbrella above your head.
Wonwoo raised his eyebrows. “Are you sure?”
You found yourself rolling your eyes at him. “You gave me your jacket,” you shrugged. “Fair is fair?”
Wonwoo didn’t understand why the smile was wiped off your face. But your heart had stuttered after you uttered those last words, which echoed to some distant memory. To somewhere you didn’t want to go yet.
For half a second, he remained motionless. But then he stepped closer to you, standing under the umbrella. As you started walking, your shoulders brushed—and you were thankful to have accepted his jacket and couldn’t feel his skin properly.
You both moved down the street slowly. Rain pattered around you, creating a bubble of sound that felt almost too private, enclosing you both.
Wonwoo cleared his throat beside you, adjusting the strap of his camera bag so it wouldn’t bump against you. “Allow me,” he whispered, taking the umbrella from your hand and adjusting it to his height.
“Oh, sorry,” you laughed lightly, realizing that you were making him hunch to fit your size.
“It’s okay,” he replied, glancing your way. He was smiling too, and it was then that you realized that his glasses were starting to fog.
When you reached the next corner, Wonwoo hesitated. “Which way do you take?” he asked.
You realized that while you knew where he lived, he didn’t know where you lived.
“That way,” you pointed. Your shoes were getting soaked. The corners of the umbrella were dripping water all around you. Your shoulder was wet somehow.
“Maybe I could order a ride for you,” he offered, fumbling for his phone.
“No, my place is right down the street,” you said, bringing a hand to stop him, your fingers gently grazing his wrist.
You dropped your hand, as though his skin had burned you.
Wonwoo raised his gaze at you.
“Take it,” you motioned to the umbrella with one hand. “You’ll need it more than I.”
Wonwoo looked at your hand, then at you. Something flickered across his face, but you were too slow to read it.
“Then take my jacket,” he said.
You gaped at him. “Oh, no—”
“Fair is fair,” he cut in.
You couldn’t hide the way his words impacted you. It was as though your chest had turned into ice, making it impossible for you to breathe. You couldn’t stop it now. You thought of him. Of Mingyu, of the rains that had brought him to your life. The first kiss you shared. And your heart broke again.
You blinked repeatedly, expertly hiding your tears. “At least let me know how I could give it back to you,” you stuttered, raising your gaze to him.
Jeon Wonwoo was smart. He must’ve known what you meant. But his eyes read your expression, taking in your words. Returning his jacket was simple—you knew where he worked, where he lived.
“W-without having t-to see him.” You explained, and even though you didn’t utter his name, your heart churned.
Wonwoo took out his phone, handing it to you without a word. “Give me your phone number,” he said at once.
You sent him another alarmed expression. But he was not discussing it.
“Come on. Before we’re both soaked over,” he urged, almost as though it bothered him to know where your uncertainty was coming from.
Your heart twisted. But you took his phone, typing your number and swiftly calling your phone so you could register his number.
You handed his phone back, exchanging one lingering look that meant something. His eyes read your face, probably finding the vulnerable girl in your glinting eyes.
“Take care of yourself,” he muttered dryly, turning away once you nodded at him, too stunned to say something back.
You ran across the street, stopping under the awning before the entrance to your building. Looking over your shoulder, Wonwoo was walking down the street, your umbrella firmly in his grasp as he disappeared into the next corner of the street.
As soon as you came to your apartment, you peeled his jacket off. You saw Wonwoo’s face as the strong smell of peach and pachouli brushed against your senses.
The emptiness inside you started to ache at its edges.
Your apartment was dark, and dead silent. You closed the window to stop the rain from splashing inside and moved to the kitchen.
You had some leftovers from the night before. Curled up on one corner of the couch, watching something you have watched a thousand times already. There was a pause in the movie, and everything stilled in your apartment.
Maybe I should get a cat, you thought impulsively.
Your phone buzzed beside you, making your heart stop for a split-second.
It was past midnight. Nobody really texted you at this hour anymore.
You reached for it, expecting a dumb notification from some random app.
But it was Wonwoo.
“thanks for the umbrella.
you saved my camera. and me.”
You stared at the two text messages for a long second. A part of you wanted to acknowledge the strange, warm feeling you got from getting a text from someone. Even if it was Jeon Wonwoo.
You pulled your knees to your chest, gnawing on your lower lip as you pressed your thumbs on the screen. “You’re welcome. I’m glad.”
Almost immediately, the three little dots appeared. “did you get home alright?”
You didn’t take his text message as an invasion. But almost as a way for him to still be polite. A gentleman.
But you were still caught a little off-guard. It had been a while since you interacted with someone, so for him to be so… thoughtful made you take a pause.
You rested your chin on your knees. “Yeah, I did. Thank you.”
Wonwoo didn’t reply right away.
You stared at the screen for a while, half-expecting the conversation to die there.
But then another reply came, “have a good night.”
Something squeezed painfully in your chest. It was nothing. It’s nothing, you thought over and over. He’s being polite, nothing more.
A part of you felt ridiculed. Someone was being nice to you and your heart was already suffering, hurting as though you were running a marathon. Running away from something, more like.
“Thanks. You too,” you replied, acknowledging the way your heart faltered in stress with a big sigh.
It was nothing, yet you put your phone away as though it had suddenly burned your hands. The emptiness inside you warmed over such simple words. But just like that, the cocoon that you had wrapped to protect yourself was fractured.
Resurfacing meant that you had to give explanations to the people closest to you.
You pushed the door open to Casa Pump House, relieved to find it emptier than usual. Wednesday evenings were quieter. You’d been strictly coming to the gym around seven—avoiding Sundays at all costs. And so far, you’d successfully avoided Mingyu.
What you couldn’t avoid though, was Jungkook’s expert capacity for gossip. He’d known something was wrong after Mingyu broke up with you—your two-week disappearance and radio silence were louder than any verbal confirmation.
You only started coming to the gym sporadically, and you rarely caught Jungkook on shift. But the times you did, you avoided talking about it, about him. And Jungkook took the hint.
However, he could only keep it to himself for so long.
“Aaay,” Jungkook jogged over with a wide smile, softening the features of his face. “If it isn’t my favorite girl.”
You rolled your eyes playfully. “Is that what you tell every girl in here?”
He shrugged. “Just the ones that are evil to me,” he said with a light chuckle. But the grin slowly vanished, as his doe eyes studied you from head to toe. “Are you okay?”
Your heart faltered at the sound of his voice softening. He must’ve noticed the dark circles under your eyes. “I think you already know,” you mumbled, avoiding his eyes.
Jungkook pursed his lips slightly, giving you a short nod. “Yeah. He uh… he told me last night when I stopped by the bar,” he sighed, placing his hands on his hips. He chewed on the side of his lip that wasn’t adorned with piercings. “How are you handling it?”
You licked your lips and balled a hand into a fist, trying to hold yourself true to your promise. “I’m doing okay,” you said. But your voice came out thinner than you had wanted. You sounded brittle, and unsure. “As best as I can be.”
The features of his face shifted, and he took a tiny step towards you, having to tilt his head forward to look into your eyes. “Do you want to talk about it?” he asked quietly, even though you were the only ones in the gym at that moment, and no one would listen to you.
You shook your head, tightening your lips into a straight line.
“That’s okay,” he said, his tone still gentle and quiet. “If you ever need to talk about it—about anything at all—you know you can call me, right?”
You raised your gaze to his big eyes. You never expected someone so lively and fun to bring you such calm to your heart. You nodded. “Thank you, JK,” you whispered, unable to bring your voice any higher. “I appreciate it.”
He nodded. “Don’t mention it,” he said. And then, stepping back, he brought his hands together in a thunderous clap. “Alright, let’s put you to work. Let’s go!” he roared vigorously.
You smiled despite yourself, wishing you could just flip a switch like that.
But for the first time in weeks, you felt better.
The Spot was quiet, as expected from a rainy Tuesday afternoon. But being it being a slow day didn’t mean that the regular tasks stopped there.
Seungcheol had taken the day off with his girlfriend. So that meant that it was just Mingyu and Wonwoo handling the bar. But that was fine, since the only customers there were the three Tuesday usuals.
Mingyu had been trying not to fixate on his phone, but he had been struggling to keep himself present and found that looking at mindless things on his phone allowed him to escape his reality.
Lately, life had been suffocating. Work was alright, nothing Mingyu couldn’t deal with. No, the suffocating feeling came from not being able to stop wishing he had something that occupied his time, his energy and his mind completely.
Because every time that silence stretched and he found himself alone, he would see you in the eye of his mind. No matter how hard he tried to convince himself that he did the right thing, he still felt that he had made a terrible mistake.
His fingers itched—he wanted to call you, to open your chat and tell you to meet up. He wanted to tell you that he missed you every single day and night. When it got dark and quiet, he ached to call you. Even if it was the middle of the night, just to hear your voice. To hear your tiny, and sweet giggles.
He blinked slowly, breathing in deeply to try and get rid of the pain in his chest. It was as though the feelings that were beginning to bloom for you had withered and had grown thorns around them, twisting around his heart.
He was at that point in his heartbreak where memories were beginning to hurt, but he couldn’t keep himself away from them. Sometimes he wished he had taken photos of you so he could have your pretty face to look at when he missed you too much. But he resorted to just looking at your profile photo.
It was a photo that your best friend, Mona, had taken one night out. You were smiling at the camera, lifting your chin in a prim manner. Behind you was a colorful mural, painting two great wings behind you, spreading and merging with an array of wildflowers.
You were squeezing your eyes shut in the photo. And he could almost picture the moment—your friend convincing you to take the photo, and you standing there until something got a smile out of you.
His heart twisted painfully when the word Online appeared below your name. He exited the chat quickly, feeling ridiculous for a moment. He pocketed his phone, lifting his gaze to make sure that no one had seen him act so impulsively.
But as he resumed with his task behind the bar, he was consumed now with memories of you. A call wouldn’t hurt, a sneaky thought flashed across his mind. She would understand, she always does.
No, Mingyu told himself sternly. He has done enough damage to you. He came into your life just to make a mess of it. You were better off without him.
He was a mess. And he had to make himself better before he could seek you out again.
Because that was his plan, at least. Get better, heal his heart, and look for you when he were ready.
Maybe that’s why he felt so out of place. Because, in his heart, he wanted you. He wanted more with you, but just didn’t feel like he was ready to fully love you yet. He knew what he was capable of when his heart was in it. When he wasn’t backing away at the first sign of commitment.
He knew that you deserved better. And he could give you better.
But it wasn’t the right time.
Still, that didn’t mean that he wouldn’t think of you. Even though memories hurt, he was addicted to them. Like blissfully drowning in a violent river.
He thought of you, of your voice, of the smell of your hair. He liked to live in the memories where you looked at him lovingly. Those memories when he was inside your body, kissing you like you were his lifeline, because maybe you were.
In his mind, he hugged your body again, losing himself in you. Kissing you, telling you things he never got to in real life.
Something was beginning to rouse inside him when a hand came to his shoulder, patting him in a familiar, gentle way.
Mingyu turned around. Wonwoo was just coming back from his break, nodding to the kitchen door. “You have one hour,” he said promptly.
“What’s on the menu today?” Mingyu asked, not caring that he wasn’t even pretending enough to make his voice sound livelier.
“Sandwiches and fries,” Wonwoo replied, looking curiously at Mingyu, but didn’t ask any questions.
Wonwoo was a very patient friend. He would never intrude when he felt things were still stormy—so he hadn’t dared to pry since the night Mingyu broke up with you.
But Wonwoo was there to see the mess. Mingyu had come home that night and didn’t say a word. He locked himself in his room, and for two whole days, Wonwoo didn’t see or speak to him.
Ever since that night, Mingyu had seemed… hollow. Soulless. Like something in him was missing, and with each passing day, it only got worse—not better.
And ever since Wonwoo saw you at the museum, he’d wanted to ask Mingyu what really happened. But it still felt too soon.
“I’ll be back, then,” Mingyu said, patting Wonwoo’s back as he walked past.
Wonwoo nodded, his eyes following Mingyu until he disappeared through the kitchen door. He exhaled heavily, shaking his head before returning to the task he’d left off. He was in the middle of organizing the inventory, a routine so familiar, he could practically do it with his eyes closed.
The front door creaked open. Wonwoo would’ve normally glanced up to greet whoever entered, but he was too focused on counting boxes of beer.
“What are you serving tonight, sir?” a familiar voice called out.
Wonwoo smiled. Through the corner of his eye, he saw a familiar figure settling on the stool at the bar.
“Same as ever,” he said, raising his gaze to meet one of his oldest friends. Changkyun.
Wonwoo set his notebook aside and turned to the fridge, grabbing a beer. He placed the bottle on the counter just as Changkyun reached for the opener.
“It’s been a while,” Changkyun said with a tired groan.
“Well, since you started living your healthy life, I see you less,” Wonwoo quipped with a small smile.
“Healthy life?” Changkyun raised an eyebrow. “Getting up at five in the morning to host a radio show is not my definition of healthy.”
“Still, you get more sleep than I do,” Wonwoo shrugged.
“Shut up. You probably make more money in a week with those stupid girls’ nights you’re always advertising,” Changkyun said, narrowing his eyes and pointing at Wonwoo with the neck of the beer.
“That wasn’t my idea—it was Mingyu’s,” Wonwoo replied, raising both palms in mock innocence.
Right then, Mingyu came out of the kitchen. He didn’t acknowledge either of them. He walked straight past the bar and exited through the back door, a storm cloud in human form.
“What’s up with him?” Changkyun motioned toward the door Mingyu had just walked through.
Wonwoo kept his eyes on the door for a moment, ensuring it was shut, then turned back to Changkyun. “Same thing as last time.”
Changkyun raised his eyebrows. “Damn. That breakup hit him harder than I thought.”
Wonwoo furrowed his brow. “He and Gigi broke up months ago,” he said. “This is someone else.”
“Really?” Changkyun tilted his head. “Huh. One messy breakup can lead to an even messier one.”
Wonwoo remained quiet. His own experience with heartbreak was... limited, at best. If he could call it that. He had only ever had healthy, uneventful relationships. Nothing explosive. Nothing shattering. He even stayed friends with all of his exes.
“Please elaborate,” he muttered, resting his hands on the lacquered countertop.
Changkyun shrugged. “You know—when you're still hurting from one person and find someone else to patch you up?” he said. “One poison drives out another.”
Wonwoo didn’t respond right away.
But part of his mind replayed the memory of you—standing beneath the skylight at the museum. The distant look in your eyes. Like something wild and wounded, cautiously stepping into the world again.
He also remembered the night at the bar. When he’d warned you to be careful with Mingyu. Because at the time, he truly believed it was you who might hurt him. Now he realized you’d defended Mingyu so vehemently—only to be the one left behind. It wasn’t you who had been reckless. You weren’t the loose cannon. It was Mingyu.
“I don’t really like what you’re insinuating,” Wonwoo said, rolling his eyes. But deep down, he couldn’t deny that Changkyun might be right.
“Relax, I’m not saying he used her intentionally,” Changkyun replied, glancing at the back door. “But he could still care about her... and use her at the same time.” He shrugged. “Doesn’t make it easier. I’d hate myself too, if I were in his shoes.”
Wonwoo weighed this new idea in silence. He knew Mingyu—knew how deeply he could love. But ever since that breakup with Gigi, something in him had changed. He was more guarded, more distant. A little broken.
Still, to seek you out as comfort… only to discard you when things got too real? That was something Wonwoo never imagined his best friend capable of.
And now, he wondered. Had Mingyu ever really seen you for who you were? Or was he only ever looking for someone to fill the void?
Did he look for his ex in your eyes?
Wonwoo grabbed his phone, quickly finding your name in the list of chats he had ongoing. “there’s a bookstore right across the street from the museum” he wrote to you, his fingers quickly sending out the next words: “we could meet there if you’re free next monday”
You stared at the screen, your heart thudding nervously.
“Hello?” you typed back. “Not even a hi, good evening?”
The three little dots appeared on his end quickly. “hi” he replied.
“How very eloquent,” you mumbled to yourself, your thumbs hovering over the keypad, but you stopped yourself before you could think of what else to say.
“or maybe we could meet somewhere closer to yours, however you prefer” read his texts after some seconds went by.
Your breathing was uneasy. This wasn’t a date. Or something where you had to make yourself look pretty and presentable, you told yourself.
It was simple.
“I love bookstores” you wrote, and then: “And I’m free this Monday”
His reply came shortly after that. “good. see you then”
And that was it.
So Monday rolled around quicker than you probably would have wished for. The morning was wrapped in a chilly layer of mist from the rains overnight. The clouds hung low, dark, and almost threatening to rain again.
You wore a raincoat and packed an extra umbrella, just in case. Since the day was already cold, you made sure to dress appropriately, but as you made your way to the station, beads of sweat had started to gather on your forehead.
Inside the car, you could feel the warmth coming from the heaters below, making you wish you had worn lighter clothes. But with this treacherous weather, it was better to be safe than sorry.
You adjusted the strap of your bag nervously as you walked down the street. You were familiar with the bookstore where Wonwoo wanted to meet with you, but you had never gone inside. You were curious to know why he wanted to meet there—was it because it was so close to the museum?
You hesitated for a second before pushing the door open. You were immediately hit with a sense of wonder, and the questions in your head also piled up and doubled the size once you went inside.
The store wasn’t a typical one. It was just one floor, with rows of sandy brown bookshelves lined up and organized in a way that almost made it look like a maze. In the middle, there was a circular coffee bar. Low indie music played in the background, occasionally interrupted by the loud hiss of the coffee machines.
Wonwoo sat on one of the stools, his fingers wrapped around a small white coffee cup. He took a sip, then lowered the cup slowly. His glasses hung low on the bridge of his nose, and he pushed them up, raising his gaze.
He spotted you immediately, but his expression gave no indication of whether he was pleased to see you.
This was slightly perplexing as you approached the bar. Something stirred inside you at the scent of coffee—and the strong smell of peaches and pachouli.
“I didn’t think you’d come,” Wonwoo said quietly, turning to glance at the light book he’d been reading. He closed it, resting his palm on top.
You flashed him an alarmed look, but he didn’t seem to notice. “Why, am I late?” you asked, checking your watch.
“No, just—” Wonwoo shook his head lightly. He motioned to the blackboard menu in front of you. “Coffee?”
You gaped at him a little. “Yeah,” you sighed, discontent creeping into your voice. “You’re really confusing to me.”
Wonwoo arched an eyebrow, watching as you ordered. Once the barista took your request, he cleared his throat. “Why confusing?” he asked, lifting his cup again. You noticed he was drinking a double espresso.
“I don’t know,” you admitted, lowering the straps of your bag and placing it on your lap.
You looked up at the ceiling. The soft, orange glow from the lights above made the space feel warmer—almost like an eternal sunset. The room was also adorned with hanging plants that reached into every corner.
You could feel Wonwoo’s gaze on you, and when you turned to him, your suspicions were confirmed. He didn’t look away or pretend not to be observing you.
But you were the one who turned away first. “I thought you hated me,” you confessed, lowering your voice as shyness crept up your neck, making your face hot.
His lips curved in a tiny, downturned smile. “Why?” he asked gently.
The barista placed your drink beside you. You thanked them, wrapping your hands around the cup, even though your fingers weren’t cold.
“I just got the feeling you didn’t like me. When I was dating Mingyu,” you said, your heart stammering at your own boldness.
Wonwoo blinked, taking the last sip of his coffee. “I never disliked you,” he said bluntly, offering a solemn look that made you realize how quickly you had judged him. “Nor did I have anything against you. I thought I was looking out for him.”
“Yeah. I got that,” you whispered, nervously rotating your cup on its saucer.
He leaned in slightly, his face still serious—but now tinged with a quiet kindness. “I’m sorry.”
“Me too,” you smiled, unable to hide the hurt lingering behind your eyes.
He tapped his thumb against the cup and drew in a long breath through his teeth. “Are you doing okay?” he asked, his brows knitting slightly as he looked at you.
You met his gaze, surprised by both the question and the softness in his tone. You opened your mouth to lie—to say you were fine, better than ever.
But there was no escaping his expert scrutiny.
“I’m trying,” you finally admitted, your voice barely holding itself up.
Wonwoo nodded, gaze softening. But he didn’t push further. It was almost like he was waiting to confirm something he already suspected.
“Is he—” you swallowed hard, nearly choking on your spit as you turned your face. You sighed the nerves out of your chest.
“He’s doing okay,” Wonwoo said, understanding exactly what you meant to ask.
There was honesty in his eyes. But then he looked back down at his empty coffee cup.
“He’s kind of a mess, but he’ll be fine,” he added. Now his voice carried a raw edge to it. “Mingyu has a tendency to fall too fast. Gets hurt in the process. Always.”
The words rang with a heavy familiarity. You blinked, trying to recall where you’d heard them before. It was in your kitchen. One morning, after Mingyu had stayed over. The ache in your heart returned. “I know,” you choked out. “He told me.”
“I’m sorry it ended like that,” Wonwoo said. “For both of you.”
“Why are you telling me this?” you blinked, confused.
The light glimmered off his glasses. You saw his dark eyes searching your face, his lips parting ever so slightly.
“I guess this is me offering you an olive branch,” he said with a polite smile. “I never meant to intimidate you—or make you feel like I didn’t like you.” He straightened up in his seat, bowing his head slightly. “I regret being an asshole to you.”
You let out a laugh. “You’re forgiven,” you said, warmth creeping into your chest. “But don’t think we’re friends now,” you teased.
“Wouldn’t dream of it,” he replied with a grin.
You smiled—and your eyes drifted to the camera bag on the stool beside him.
The shop was nearly deserted. Two girls browsed the graphic novel aisle, while a few others lingered near the coffee bar. It reminded you of The Spot—except with bookshelves and hanging plants, instead of bright neon signs and loud rock music.
“Do you come here often?” you asked.
“Mm-hmm,” he nodded. “It’s quiet. Coffee’s good. Cookies are even better,” he added, pointing to the pastry case behind the glass.
“Have you tried them all?” you asked, eyeing the double chocolate cookie.
“I haven’t tried the pumpkin one,” he shook his head lightly.
You ordered a chocolate cookie, thinking that you were probably in need of a sugar rush. But deep down, you were wary, trying to protect yourself from more questions that you were sure were about to start.
“Do you carry your camera everywhere?” you asked instead, motioning to the camera bag on the other seat next to him.
“Just when I have days off,” he shrugged. “Mingyu pushed me to do this photography course online, and they’re very strict about the homework so,” he clicked his tongue, patting the camera bag with one hand.
You wanted to huff, getting the familiarity of his words yet again. “You don’t say.”
You took a bite from your chocolate cookie, humming in delight as the chocolate chips melted on your tongue. Wonwoo glanced your way, smiling softly as he outlined the corner of the book cover with one fingertip.
“Are you sure you’re okay?” he asked, and it was the gentleness in his tone that really grounded you in reality.
You shook your head, swallowing hard as you tried to keep yourself composed. “I’m not good at talking about things,” you pointed out.
But you didn’t know what it was. Maybe it was the chocolate dimming your good senses. Maybe it was the coziness inside the book shop that made you feel wrapped up in warmth and the smell of fresh coffee.
Or maybe it was the sound of Wonwoo’s voice. Inviting, soft and comfortable like velvet.
“I knew what I was getting myself into,” you said, your voice breaking in the middle of your sentence. “I knew Mingyu was still healing from his previous relationship. But I still decided to stay, to be there for him. And he was really reassuring, you know? Sometimes he made me forget about his situation.”
You risked sending a quick glance at Wonwoo, and he nodded to you. “Yeah, I know,” he said gently.
“But one day he would tell me he wanted to be with me, and then he would disappear for days,” you added, and your throat closed up, your voice sounding bitter at the end of your sentence.
The atmosphere stilled, like stopping to witness your heartache. Even though time had passed, and you hadn’t seen Mingyu or talked to him again—the wound was still fresh. Flashes from when you sat at those bleachers haunted you, threatening to swallow you whole.
“It’s crazy because we were never anything serious,” you shrugged as a defense mechanism, like trying to get rid of the burden around your shoulders. “It was casual. No strings, no expectations—” you huffed a bitter laugh, tears brimming in your eyes. “But it hurts even more than when I broke up with my ex.”
Wonwoo shifted beside you, turning slightly on his seat to look at you better. “Your ex?” he muttered, so quietly that you barely heard him.
You nodded slowly, chewing on your lower lip. “Before Mingyu, I was with someone for years,” you said, and somehow, it felt easier to tell Wonwoo. As though nothing could hurt you anymore. “We lived together. I had plans and dreams of building a life with him, but…” You looked away, sighing tiredly. “He told me he wasn’t looking for marriage, nor something more serious.”
There was a pause. And you were sure that Wonwoo was waiting for you to say something else, but you just took another bite from your cookie.
“I’m sorry to hear that. That must’ve been really difficult for you,” he said, shifting again on his seat as he sighed deeply.
But your words started to sink into his mind. What happened with Mingyu was even more hurtful than what your ex-boyfriend did to you. Breaking up with someone after an unreconcilable difference was something—and by the time you broke up with him, you were already emotionally resigned.
But the feeling of almost being something cut even deeper.
You laughed awkwardly. “I’m sorry I’m dumping all of this on you,” you told him, holding in your tears. “And after telling you that I wasn’t good at talking about serious stuff.”
Wonwoo shrugged, giving you a light, easy smile. “It’s the curse of a bartender,” he told you. “But I’m glad that you opened up. It’s already hard to deal with things, but to keep them all to yourself makes it suffocating.”
“Yeah, I guess you’re right,” you mumbled.
You placed your elbow on the counter, resting your chin on your fist. “So you took the photos that are hanging on your living room?” you asked promptly, making it obvious that you needed to change the subject.
And he caught it straight away. “A couple of them, yes,” he mumbled, looking down at his camera bag. “I’m actually thinking of taking a stroll near the river. I have this task I need to get done, and maybe I can snap some good photos there.”
Your tummy twisted. It was hard to read if it was an invitation or not, so you just nodded.
“If you wanna come and hang out, it’s fine by me,” he whispered, noticing the hesitation in your expression.
You saw the glint in his eyes, there was an easiness on the tiny smile he showed you.
You were almost about to decline. To tell him that you were busy and had a ton of things to do at home.
But you felt lonely. And there was nothing serious about his invitation. It was just hanging out.
“I’d like that,” you replied. But then you paused, “But before we go, I want to get some books.”
You stepped outside the shop and waited.
The pavement was slick with water from the light rain that had ceased moments before. The sky was still gray, blanketing the street with a quiet, gloomy heaviness.
Wonwoo followed soon after, now wearing the jacket he’d lent you. He glanced up at the sky and made a face. “This is not very ideal,” he muttered.
You nodded, adjusting the strap of your tote bag, which now hung heavy with books. “We could wait it out,” you offered with a shrug.
He looked around, scanning for shelter.
“Or,” you added, “we could just make our way to the river—take the opportunity while it’s not raining.”
Before he could respond, you were already heading down the street. Wonwoo fell into step beside you, a flicker of curiosity crossing his face.
“What did you get?” he asked, nodding toward your tote bag.
“A couple of graphic novels,” you said, peeking into the bag. “I’m also doing a course—learning tips and tricks about graphic design.”
He raised an eyebrow. “You also got convinced to take a course?”
You nodded. “Mm-hmm.”
Wonwoo patted his camera bag. “I see,” he murmured, voice low.
A silence fell between you. But it wasn’t awkward—not this time. It reminded you of that quiet day at the museum. Stillness, but not distance.
“This is nice,” you said.
He turned his head toward you. “What is?”
“Not trying to run off,” you answered. “Not pretending I’m okay.”
He blinked, visibly unsure how to respond. But he didn’t look away. Something about speaking plainly with him felt good. For the first time in months, you weren’t hiding. You didn’t have to pretend you weren’t hurting.
After a moment, Wonwoo pushed his glasses up. “It is nice,” he said softly.
Both of you walked in silence, the city slightly slowed and hushed by the cold rain. The river glinted ahead, catching what little light managed to break through the clouds.
Wonwoo paused, slipping his bag off his shoulder and unzipping it. “Wait,” he said.
You tilted your head. “You don’t want to get closer to the river?”
“This is okay,” he murmured, already adjusting his camera.
A twist tightened in your tummy when you realized the lens was pointing toward you. “Should I step away?”
He didn’t answer right away. He looked through the viewfinder with quiet concentration. “Don’t move,” he murmured.
You obeyed, though your nerves got the better of you—you shifted slightly, turning your head to the side to avoid meeting the camera’s eye.
Through the lens, Wonwoo saw you standing alone on the path that led down to the river. The pavement was scattered with the last of autumn’s leaves, but it was your face that caught him—the distant, thoughtful look in your eyes. The way you refused to look at him, even though he was really seeing you. All of you.
When he lowered the camera, you exhaled. “You could’ve told me you needed a model.”
The faintest smile tugged at his lips. “Maybe. But you would’ve said no.”
“True,” you admitted. “I’m not a model. I don’t know how to pose.”
“So you say,” he replied, brushing past you with a grin. “Stand over there.”
He pointed to a spot closer to the river, and you laughed under your breath.
“Fine. But you’re holding this.”
You shoved your tote bag full of books into his hands. He caught it with ease, the grin on his face widening.
“Yes, ma’am.”
You rolled your eyes, but your chest ached a little less. There was something in his boyish smile, in the gentle playfulness behind his glasses. And without thinking, you moved to where he asked, standing without questioning his order.
But the moment you stopped, you became overly aware of your body—your arms, your shoulders, your mouth.
“Look at me,” Wonwoo said softly.
You did. And in that moment, you forgot what it meant to pose. You weren’t smiling. You weren’t guarded. You just looked at him. And he looked at you, the shadow of a smile tugging at the corners of his lips.
The camera clicked. And you waited for him to take another shot, or to move.
“That’s it?” you asked, blinking away from him.
“I got it,” he nodded, his voice slightly hoarse.
He lowered the camera, and his eyes lingered on you for a second longer than they should’ve. His gaze softened. He looked thoughtful for a moment, until he gave you a sheepish smile.
“You’re surprisingly good at this.”
You snorted. “Surprisingly?” you said with a laugh, stepping toward him. “I probably look like those Renaissance paintings where they were still figuring out how to paint cats.”
He laughed out loud. “You’d make a very cute ugly cat,” he teased.
Your cheeks flushed, and you almost hated that you were smiling at him. But then his eyes met yours again, and you felt that same shift in your chest. That stupid pull, that traitorous flutter of your heart.
Wonwoo tilted his head slightly, motioning at his camera. “Would you like to see the picture?”
You hesitated for a second—unsure why it suddenly felt like it was a big deal to step in closer to him—but nodded. He stepped closer, holding out his camera. And you leaned in, your shoulder brushing his.
You tried to focus on the photo, but the proximity was almost dizzying, and the strong smell of peaches filled your head. Your breath hitched.
The photo wasn’t perfect. You instantly saw all of the little imperfections surrounding you. Your hair was windblown, your expression flat. But your eyes… there was a softness in your eyes. A realness in them.
“You see?” he said. “Surprisingly photogenic.”
“I look caught off guard,” you murmured sheepishly.
“That doesn’t mean you don’t look good,” he corrected gently.
Your heart thumped so hard that you were sure it was almost audible. But he didn’t look away.
You breathed in, trying to push the fluttering feeling out of you as you exhaled. “I should get going,” you said.
Wonwoo nodded, noticing the look in your eyes. “Your bag,” he said and unhooked the umbrella that you had lent him the other night. “Thank you for the umbrella and now the photos. I owe you one.”
You gave him a small smile. “You owe me nothing,” you told him. “It’s what friends do, right?”
Wonwoo paused, and for the first time, you wanted to get an in on what he was thinking. “Right,” he nodded.
Friends.
The apartment was dark when Wonwoo walked in, and only the faint light coming from the TV illuminated the way. Slipping off his shoes, he took his jacket off and hung it on the coat rack by the entrance.
Mingyu was on the couch, looking at his phone, not really watching anything. He was just sitting there, elbows planted on his knees, head bowed like he had been stuck in that position for a while before Wonwoo came home.
Wonwoo opened the fridge, took out a banana milk and punched the hole with the little straw. He sipped quietly, afraid to break the silence.
But it was Mingyu who spoke first. “You were out late.”
Wonwoo leaned against the counter, pressing his elbows against it. “Yeah. I went to the bookstore. Took some photos near the river.”
Mingyu nodded slowly, still not looking at him.
“Are you okay?” Wonwoo asked slowly, starting to feel worried.
Mingyu shook his head. “I ruined everything.”
Wonwoo didn’t say anything right away. The rawness in Mingyu’s voice made Wonwoo’s heart falter.
“I keep thinking about her. About what I did,” Mingyu said, putting his phone away.
Wonwoo caught a glimpse of your profile photo on the display. His heart dropped to his stomach. “So call her.”
Mingyu gave a small, empty smile. “It’s not that simple,” he said, rolling his eyes with an annoyance that Wonwoo was sure was directed towards something else, not him.
“No, I know it’s not simple,” he said. “But it’s a start.”
Mingyu finally looked up, his tired eyes finding Wonwoo’s. “Would you?” he asked, raising his eyebrows. “If you had broken her heart, would you do it?”
Wonwoo shrugged, like the answer was clear as day. “If I cared about her, yeah. I would.”
Wonwoo remembered your sad smile. He remembered the brittle sound of your voice when you talked about your past heartbreak.
Mingyu looked away, shaking his head. “She deserved better than the way I left things.”
Wonwoo’s throat tightened, it was hard to swallow. He thought about the photos in his camera. About you. Your eyes. The way you were finally starting to laugh again.
“Yeah,” Wonwoo said softly. “Yeah, she does.”
But Mingyu didn’t catch the shift in his tone. He locked his phone, deciding to not call you, nor text you. Not yet.
“I’m not ready,” Mingyu said, rising from the couch.
Wonwoo watched him walk to his bedroom, locking the door behind him.
After a moment, Wonwoo decided to head to his bedroom, closing the door with a soft click.
He leaned against the door for a long second, letting his head rest back, closing his eyes. The silence inside the apartment felt heavier—a hundred times worse than before.
He pressed the Enter button on his keyboard, bringing his computer to life. The hum coming from the fans of his computer started to fill the room. Wonwoo used the faint light coming from his double monitors to look for a change of clothes, something comfortable, before he sat down to work.
After he found a pair of black shorts and an oversized white t-shirt, he sat down on his chair, getting his camera out of its bag.
He scrolled through the different photos he got from the day at the museum. And then the photos he got from today. Photos of the wet pavement, the river, and the leaves scattered on the floor.
And you.
Wonwoo’s breath caught when he saw a photo he didn’t realize he had caught. In this photo, you weren’t looking at the camera. There was a softness in your features, a sad look in your eyes. The way you stood in the light, the shadows pooling at your feet.
Wonwoo stared at the photo, his finger hovering on the right click for a second before he moved the photo to another folder. One that wasn’t destined for the task.
He leaned back in his chair, running his fingers through his long, dark hair. He didn’t want to feel guilty. He hadn’t done anything wrong, he knew this. But the weight in his heart begged to differ.
Wonwoo reached for his phone as he chewed on his bottom lip.
Then, with a laboured sigh, he opened your chat.
The last message between you and him was a simple thank you after he asked if you had arrived home alright. It was simple, friendly.
Wonwoo hesitated, flexing his fingers over the keyboard before typing: “it was good seeing you today”
And that was it. He put the phone away, face down on his desk and dropped his head back against the chair. His heart was doing that stutter that it hadn’t done in a while.
In years, even.
Things happen randomly sometimes. You weren’t looking for your life to be derailed one Sunday night. Not on purpose, at least.
You were curled up on your bed, scrolling numbly through your phone, a thing that would eventually lead to falling asleep, but you weren’t having any luck yet.
Your phone started vibrating in your hands, and the picture of your best friend from college, Mona appeared on the screen.
You had been dodging her calls lately, feeling like your recent actions might bring her judgment. But something about her calling late at night spiked your intrigue.
You swiped your thumb across the screen.
“Hello?”
“Hey there,” Mona replied, and something about her tone was off.
“Is everything okay?” you asked curiously.
“I need you to sit down,” Mona instructed bluntly.
You sat up on your bed, reclining on the headboard. “What’s happening?”
“Listen, I’m only doing this because I don’t want you to find out by other means.”
“Please, Mona, just tell me,” you sighed tiredly, already feeling the weight of anxiousness seeping in.
“Jay is getting married.”
You stopped cold. It was as though you were abruptly submerged into a pool of ice-cold water. Your body was too slow and too heavy to muster a reaction.
“W-what?” you blurted. A part of you felt like your friend was playing a really bad prank on you.
“Jay just announced his engagement,” she repeated, and you could hear the raw rage in her tone.
“H-how do you know?” you stammered, trying to compose yourself with slow and deep breaths.
Mona didn’t get along with your ex-boyfriend. Or with anyone who was still related to him. You knew this.
“Someone sent me screenshots. Look—I don’t mean to put you in a bad spot, but,” she paused, and you could tell from the deep sigh coming out of her that she was debating to tell you more. “But you deserve to know. Before someone else tells you and makes it worse.”
You squeezed your eyes shut, your breath catching painfully against your ribs. “Thank you, Mona,” you told her.
“I got you,” she said right before hanging up.
It was about two seconds later that she sent you two pictures. There he was. Your ex. Smiling in a way you hadn’t seen in years, his arm slung around someone else’s shoulders. It was a girl you didn’t recognize. But she was cute. Glowing with a radiant smile on her face, showing off her brand new engagement ring.
The caption under the photo made your stomach lurch.
To a future together- Mr. and Ms. Bang 💞
You stared at the photo. Read the caption. Then stared at the photo again.
The screen blurred, and you realized that your hands were shaking.
No, no, no, no. This can’t be happening.
You left the phone aside, burying your face in your hands as though you could fix the stabbing pain in your chest.
You weren’t supposed to care anymore. You stopped caring about your ex long ago. But the pain was raw, eating at your heart quickly. It hurt so deep you couldn’t breathe.
It was like you were sitting at that basketball court again. With nothing but your aching heart in your hands.
The room was spinning, and everything felt wrong. You got out of bed, grabbed your hoodie, keys, and shoved your phone in your pocket. And without thinking, you scrambled to the door.
You needed to get out of there. You needed to move, to do something.
It rained again on the walk to the nearest convenience store. But you didn’t bother with an umbrella this time. You let the drizzle soak into your hair, your hoodie, your sneakers.
Maybe the rain could help wash this pain out of you. Maybe the rain could fix whatever was broken inside you.
You grabbed a couple of bottles of alcohol, not caring what you took with you and paid.
You were walking out of the convenience store when you bumped into him. A tall, hard frame that almost had you stumbling back onto the floor, weren’t for those hands holding you steady.
You looked up, your heart stopping at once when you saw the man who had helped you catch your step.
“Careful there,” Jeon Wonwoo said, helping you catch your step.
His gaze swept over you—taking in your soaked hoodie, your damped hair, your hurt, glassy eyes.
“Sorry,” you said awkwardly, looking down at your feet.
Rain continued to fall, slowly, trickling down the back of your head and soaking through your clothes. You were sure that Wonwoo had already spotted the state you were in, and the bag with bottles of alcohol inside.
He didn’t say anything at first. He just watched you, studied you.
And saying nothing was somehow worse. Because it meant that he saw all of you. He saw the way you could barely hold yourself together. Your lip quivered. You hated yourself. You hated the power that you had given to other people to make you feel this way.
You blinked rapidly, trying to fight the sting in your eyes. “Wh-what are you doing here?”
“I was heading back home but—” Wonwoo took a cautious step towards you, like approaching something wounded and dangerous.
“Hey,” he spoke quietly, his voice barely audible. “You’re okay?”
The stupid kindness in his voice snapped something inside you.
The first sob ripped from your throat without any warning. It was sharp, humiliating. It told of the many days and nights you contained yourself. You clamped a hand over your mouth, but it was far too late.
Wonwoo swayed towards you, closing the distance. He didn’t touch you, not right away. He just stood there, as though figuring out what to do. Figuring out what he wanted to do.
Something broke loose in you. Without thinking, you stumbled forward, crashing into his chest. Your hand clutched the front of his jacket, twisting the fabric.
Wonwoo caught you with not even a second of hesitation, wrapping you in a big hug. Like he was holding you to keep you from falling onto the ground.
You didn’t question it, and neither did he. It was a simple gesture. A human connection.
You cried against his chest, broken, shuddering gasps tearing out from your chest as the flood you had been containing finally broke loose. A part of you wanted to explain to him why you were crying. But you couldn’t make out the words—the pain was so great, greater than you.
You had broken your promise.
“I’m sorry,” you said disjointedly, backing away from him while wiping your tears.
“It’s okay,” he said, sending a look around. “Where are you going with that?” he asked, motioning to the paper bag you were holding in one arm.
“To my home,” you sniffled, pointing down the street.
“Do you need company?” he said politely, but you realized he wasn’t taking a no for an answer. “Let me walk you there.”
You wondered how messed up you really looked like that, he felt compelled to walk you home. “Okay,” you agreed, and started walking towards your apartment building.
The walk was quiet. Your head was so filled with different thoughts that you couldn’t bring yourself to say something.
You didn’t remember the walk to your building. But you remember standing beneath the awning, turning around, and sending a flitting glance up to his face.
“Do you need to talk?” he asked slowly. It was a simple question.
Your throat tightened, and burned. Gnawing on your lower lip, you nodded.
A worried expression flashed across the features of his face. It was for a second, fleeting.
“Come upstairs?” you asked, and the sorrow and desperation rose in your tone, showing in your eyes. “Please.”
His mouth parted ever so slightly. He surely must’ve realized the implications of him coming to your apartment. But what exactly was to be expected?
“Of course.”
Stepping inside your apartment with Wonwoo following you closely felt surreal. But everything else going on in your life made it shrink in comparison.
“Come in,” you whispered, leaving your sneakers at the front door, closing it once Wonwoo followed you inside, watching you closely.
You hadn’t even turned the lights off when you walked out of your apartment. You left the bag on the counter before grabbing a bottle, cracking it open and gulping down three large mouthfuls of straight alcohol.
Wonwoo blinked in shock. “Oh, God,” he stammered, watching you as though he needed to do something soon. “Calm down.”
You exhaled heavily, using the back of your hand to wipe your mouth. You motioned the bottle to him, raising your eyebrows.
But he shook his head. “I don’t drink,” he said politely.
“Okay, then,” you shrugged, drinking down another three large gulps.
Wonwoo watched you intently, crossing his arms as the muscles of his jaw tightened. “You’re scaring me,” he said finally.
You laughed—a raw and broken sound. It tore from your chest. “Good,” you said, putting the bottle down.
“What happened?” he asked, his voice low. He tilted his head forward, his eyes zeroing in on you.
You shook your head, commanding your gaze to look anywhere else but his face. But sadness started to seep in, like icy venom running through your veins. Anger and humiliation took over so fast that you couldn’t stop the muscles of your face from contracting.
“My ex,” you choked out. “Remember him? The one I spent years with, the one who swore he would never be ready for commitment?”
Wonwoo’s posture shifted slightly, his mouth parted with realization before you could even speak out the following words:
“He’s just got engaged,” you said, your tone breaking in the middle of your sentence. “He’s getting married to someone else. Someone good enough.”
The words were heavy, bitter on your tongue. And even if they weren’t true to some extent, they hurt to say.
Wonwoo’s gaze darkened, but he didn’t say anything. He blinked slowly once, breathing in through his nose. And when he opened his eyes again, you saw anger flashing in his eyes. But you also saw pity in them.
You laughed again, the sound dry and almost miserable. “It’s not like I care about him,” you spat. “It’s not about him.” You looked down at your hands, trembling around the bottle of alcohol. “It’s about me.”
You finally raised your gaze, making eye contact with him. You hated the broken worry you saw in his eyes. The way his eyebrows twitched, and his dark eyes searched your face. You wondered what he was seeing in your face that made him react that way.
“It’s gotta be me, right? I have to be the common denominator,” you whispered, your voice trembling. “It’s always me. I’m not good enough to stay for.”
You let out a sigh that sounded more like a sob. A broken moan of loneliness, heaviness. A storm that was brewing deep inside you, and it wasn’t just because of this recent turn of events.
“But that’s not it,” you said, hot tears brimming in your eyes as your voice rose: “It’s everyone. No matter what I do. I’m always someone’s almost.”
Your voice cracked in the last word, and you had to bit down on your lip to stop it from trembling.
Through the corner of your eye, you saw Wonwoo approaching, closing the space in your tiny kitchen. It was a cautious move, but steady. Determined.
“You’re not the problem,” he said firmly. “You’re better off without him. He’s an idiot.”
You laughed bitterly this time. “Right. Because Mingyu wasn’t another idiot who decided that I wasn’t enough either.”
Wonwoo flinched.
But you didn’t care if your words were harsh. You tipped the bottle between your lips again, downing the last bit of alcohol in it. You would feel its effects soon, and you were beginning to wonder if getting drunk was the right thing to do.
It would take the pain away. And you needed that.
“You really think I don’t know he fucked up?” Wonwoo said, his voice hard.
You blinked, your eyes snapping to his face.
But he continued, taking another step towards you. “You think I don’t see it? You didn’t deserve any of it,” he said, his voice raw, and there was an edge to it that you couldn’t understand. “Not from him. Not from anyone.”
You swallowed your tears, your heart thumping so hard that it was starting to hurt in your chest. “You don’t know me,” you whispered.
Wonwoo didn’t skip a beat. “I know enough.”
Perplexion hit you, and part of you wanted to pause and listen to what he was saying. The look of pity painting the features of his face made you think that you were probably looking more broken apart than you had initially imagined.
But before you could stop yourself, you huffed a laugh, letting your tears go. “And what happens when you get to know me more?” you snapped. “You’ll leave like the rest of them.”
The features of his face contracted slightly, your words hitting somewhere he wasn’t letting show. “You don’t know that—”
“Save it,” you cut in, but the sharpness in your voice had lost its edge. “You don’t get it. You don’t know what it’s like—” your voice broke, and you blinked away from his gaze. “—to never be enough. To love someone and then watch them walk away to someone new.”
His expression hardened. “Don’t turn this on me,” he said, his voice sounding rough. “Don’t tell me I don’t get it.”
“Then why do you have that look on your face?!” you shot back, wiping the tears with the back of your hand.
He ran a hand over his mouth, as though trying to smooth out the quiet rage that you had sparked. “You really think I don’t care,” he spat, the snappiness of his words making you flinch. He took another step, so close to you now that you could sense the storm shaking inside him. “You still think that I'm an asshole.”
Your breath hitched, making your brain swim inside your head. You were sure that it was the alcohol starting to take effect.
But you were also not equipped to hear this. You didn’t want to hear this. You didn’t want to feel this. Not now.
But it was too late. You had fractured the only thing that held Wonwoo’s composure. It was then that you saw him. His hair was ruffled, wet with the few droplets of rain he had caught on the way here. His glasses had slipped down the perfect bridge of his nose. He looked messy, angry, and out of control.
He pointed at his chest. “You think I like sitting on the sidelines?” he said darkly. He never raised his voice at you, but he was breathing hard. “You think I like to watch you like this over the people who hurt you?”
You froze, your heart stammering painfully against your chest. His words had hit you like a slap. “W-what?” you breathed, so shocked that you had stopped crying.
His breathing turned ragged, he looked torn. Like he was trying with everything in him to stop himself. Every inch of him trembled with the force of what he wasn’t supposed to say to you.
“You’re not a second choice.” He rasped, letting out a short sigh through his nose. It was done now. Too late to take it back.
His words stunned you. You should’ve reacted quicker, were it not for the feeling making your heart flutter. “Wonwoo—” you pleaded, but you didn’t realize that your body was moving. Moving towards him.
His hands grabbed your face, his fingers burying themselves in your wet hair, just as your hands found the front of his jacket.
And then he kissed you.
The kiss was messy. Desperate. The kind of kiss that neither you nor he wanted, you could feel it in him. His lips captured yours with a vehemence that overpowered you completely. But your hands moved to the back of his neck, pulling him down into you like you needed him to breathe.
And Wonwoo kissed you back. He kissed you like he waited for so long to do that, his tongue brushed against your lip as he rolled it inside your mouth, tasting the alcohol in your tongue. He breathed out softly when he heard the broken moan he got out of you, and stopped.
You broke apart, panting. Wonwoo pressed his forehead against yours, and you realized as he dropped his hands from your face that he was shaking.
“I.. I’m sorry,” he said, his voice raspy, low. He sounded lost. “I didn’t mean to, but...”
“I know,” you whispered back, your voice breaking.
But neither of you pulled away.
You didn’t dare to open your eyes. You wanted to cry. The very feeling that had made your heart flutter went wild, beating against your chest. You wanted to get rid of it—you wanted to rip your own heart out.
Slowly, Wonwoo peeled off your body, lifting his forehead from yours. You stepped back, your hands falling at your sides.
And with one deep breath, you raised your gaze to his face.
You had to put a hand on the counter for support. Your head started to swim with a remorseful pain. You knew this was wrong, but didn’t exactly know why. “Wonwoo—” you said, unable to raise your voice any higher.
“I should go,” he cut in, as though the weight of what he had done just caught up with him. “This was wrong. I shouldn’t have come here.”
But Wonwoo looked torn. His face was painted in sick worry, his eyebrows were drawn, his mouth slightly twisted. Somehow, his words cut you deeper. You nodded, agreeing with him, but it cost you to breathe normally.
However, he did not attempt to move. His eyes read your face, and his gaze softened when he saw your eyes brim with tears again.
“I understand,” you whispered, bringing your fingers to cover your mouth to hold in your sobs.
Except that you couldn’t understand. Not really. You couldn’t understand why kissing you was such a bad thing. Mingyu left you.
And you were always the one who made it easier for everyone to go.
You could feel Wonwoo’s scrutiny on you. The way he silently absorbed every emotion showing on your face. Your face tickled with shame, the sensation spreading and lingering all over you. You shrank under his gaze.
The rain pattered lightly on the windows, the quiet, distant lightning illuminated the room for a second. But the space between you was heavy with everything neither of you wanted to say, despite it being obvious.
You had crossed a line you wouldn’t be able to come back from.
“I-I’ll walk you to the door,” you said, your voice breaking in the middle of your sentence.
Then, you motioned to the door, walking past him in your tiny kitchen. Your shoulder brushed against his arm, feeling the way he moved towards you, his hand catching yours in one second.
You snapped your gaze to him, having no time to move or to stop him.
There was something in his eyes when you exchanged a short glance with him. He paused, but only to make sure that you wouldn’t back away.
Wonwoo kissed you again—this time more certain. There was no fumbling, no scrambling to get the kiss done in a rush. You closed your eyes, your hand searching for his wrist as he held your face, kissing you deeper.
His other hand found your waist, grabbing you to pull you into him. You could feel the warmth coming from his body, the way it seemed that he was still shaking, but it felt different this time. Like the quick beating of his heart wasn’t out of anxiousness of kissing you, but from finally doing it because he wanted to.
When you broke apart, both of you were panting, but Wonwoo didn’t stop kissing you. His lips brushed against your lower lip, giving you tiny, but feathery kisses that trailed to the corner of your mouth and to your cheek.
You could feel his quick breathing brushing against your skin, making it prickle. His hand moved from your cheek to the back of your head, his fingers tangling in your wet hair.
“This is wrong,” he repeated with a whisper, but now there was an air of finality in his tone. “But I want it.”
Your eyes fluttered closed again. The sound of his voice so close to your ear sent shivers down your spine. “W-what—I don’t understand, you said—”
“I wish I had answers right now,” he said, pulling back softly from you. He gave you a solemn look, his glinting eyes searching yours, searching for reasons to pull away from you, from this. “But I don’t think I can pretend any longer.”
“What?” you breathed warily, your heart skipping a beat.
He shook his head softly. “You don’t have to say anything,” he whispered, taking a tiny step towards you. “I know that this is a lot for you right now. And I don’t have issues with stepping back, if that’s what you want.”
Everything inside you raged. It was a split-second of realizing that everything was upside down, everything was wrong. No matter what you felt, no matter how hard you tried, there was always something in the way.
And this time, your broken heart was the thing in the way.
“You deserve better,” you whispered. It slipped out before you could even stop yourself. You sounded raw and vulnerable.
His face shifted, his eyebrows knitted softly, his eyes reading your expression. “But I want you,” he said.
His words were like a thousand bricks falling on you. Everything that he told you came crashing down—about him being tired of being sidelined, of watching you torn apart for other people.
“I’m broken,” you whispered, and you wished to sound less angry about it, but there was an undeniable venom coating your words.
His fingers clenched your waist, resting his forehead against yours. “And I still want you all the same.”
You went still while your mind reeled with all the possible consequences that this might bring to your life. You were a mess.
“This is not a good idea,” you finally whispered. You were giving him all the reasons to walk away, to choose for himself before he let himself get involved with you.
His breath hitched slightly. “I know.”
You stepped back, but not far. You just wanted to look into his eyes, to get a read on what he so jealously protected with his mask. “Please…” you started, trying to select your words carefully, but your mind was swimming. “I don’t want to hurt you.”
One poison draws out another. Wonwoo remembered his friend’s words carefully.
His brows narrowed. “Don’t worry about me,” he whispered. And you realized that his hands had stopped shaking, but you knew he was still nervous about holding you this close.
You wanted to say something. You wanted to list out all of the reasons why you were not good for him.
But, God, you were lonely. And angry.
Wonwoo saw the quiet determination settling on the features of your face, making him step closer to hold you tightly to his body. “Are you sure about this?” he asked, one last confirmation before crossing that line, permanently.
Your head was swimming, but the determination weighed heavily in your heart. “I am,” you nodded. Then you slipped a hand on his nape, pulling him into a kiss just as he leaned towards you.
He circled your neck with one hand, holding you to kiss you fully, deeply. His lips fit with yours perfectly, moving seamlessly in a passionate way. This kiss was different, it was burdened with a heat that made you suspect he wanted to kiss you for a long time, but couldn’t.
This was wrong, but it felt so good.
And now, neither of you could stop.
It soon dawned on you that Wonwoo wasn’t stopping either. A wave of need and arousal rose within you, wrapped with a bitterness that you should’ve stopped to pay attention to.
Your hands skirted over the pads of his jacket, starting to peel it off. He helped you, shrugging off his jacket and letting it drop to the floor. Wonwoo didn’t stop kissing you, and he did this with such force that you thought you could break.
Because that’s what you wanted. You wanted to be bad, to give in to the sticky feeling spreading inside your chest.
Neither of you stopped to talk, it was clear where the moment was leading down to.
Your movements were rushed, as though if you paused for longer than a second, you might start to regret this. You took his t-shirt off, messing up his glasses in the process.
Wonwoo smiled sheepishly, fixing his glasses back up. As he looked at you, there was an undeniable feeling that made your heart stutter.
You took his hand, staggering towards your bed, but Wonwoo pulled your body in before you could make it, quickly grabbing your hoodie to strip it off your body.
The hesitation, prudence, and any morsel of sanity that was holding you back evaporated. You fully gave in to the craving inside you once your clothes started to drop on the floor.
Wonwoo grabbed you by your bare waist, pulling you closer to his body to kiss you again. His hands roved all over your back, finding the clasp of your bra to undo it.
It happened fast, one by one, both of your clothes were discarded in between rushed kisses. None of you spoke a word, and you were thankful for that.
“Sit on the bed,” Wonwoo said with a rasp, his hands leaving your waist.
You obeyed without a second thought, sitting on the foot of your bed. Wonwoo pressed a knee on the edge of the bed, leaning over you and pushing you to lie back. His arms towered next to your shoulders, serving for support as he pressed his bare chest against yours.
He watched you for one long second, his gaze dark and lascivious. His hand returned to cup your jaw, his thumb brushing your lower lip softly. “Stop me if you don’t want any of it,” he said.
“Wonwoo.” You called, feeling like you might just pass out from the wanton need brimming inside you.
“Mmn?” he raised his brows, his eyes studying your face.
You grabbed his face, holding his gaze. “Fuck me,” you whispered.
His eyes widened slightly. “How?” he replied.
“Just do it,” you said. But then, swallowing hard, you reconsidered. “Fuck me hard.”
He showed you a grin. It looked wicked, almost feline. But before he could explain where the smile was coming from, he was leaning again, brushing his lips against yours slowly, lightly. “Dirty girl,” he whispered into your mouth, kissing it softly.
A low, breathy moan escaped you at the sound of those words. “Please,” you begged, your lips still brushing against his.
You didn’t have to ask twice. Wonwoo kissed you deeply, removing his hand from your chin to find your waist. He sank down your body, leaving a trail of kisses from your mouth to your neck, then down to your chest.
His wet lips on your skin awoke something within you. It had been so long since you felt something at all that your skin was already prickling at the slightest touch. He kissed your chest, his hands cupping your tits, pushing them to make them bulge. He planted soft, slow kisses around your nipples, pulling out his tongue to glide it on your areolas.
“Fuck,” you whispered, your hands cupping the back of his head.
His lips wrapped around one of your perked nipples, tugging at it lightly as his thumb teased your other nipple, brushing his pad against it. He hummed lightly, giving your breasts a couple of open-mouthed kisses before he continued exploring your body further down.
Your head was spinning, and you had to force yourself to close your eyes. The sight of him getting down on his knees before the bed was so arousing to you that you shuddered from it.
He gently nudged your thighs apart, propping them on his shoulders as he leaned against your body to press his lips on your inner thighs. He taunted you with kisses, bringing out sweet moans from you as he came closer and closer to your dripping wet pussy.
“Please,” you whispered, feeling his breath fanning against your skin, the tip of his tongue brushing before he pressed another kiss on your inner thigh.
That was all he needed. His mouth was on you, licking you, tasting you. You arched your back off the mattress, your hands balling into fists around the covers. The first brush of his tongue against your folds made your whole body come to life.
You moaned loudly, closing your eyes so hard you saw stars. “Fuck, Wonwoo!” you cried out, already panting for air, making yourself dizzier.
He forced your thighs open, burying his mouth on your pussy like he had something to prove. He didn’t do the bare minimum, no. He licked every single inch of your cunt, exploring it with his tongue, and repeating the things that brought the loudest moans from you.
So he quickly realized that teasing your clit was the way to go. He wrapped his lips around your clit, pressing his tongue on it before starting to flick it from side to side.
You didn’t know what to do, between grabbing his hair or holding onto the covers, you felt like you were about to pass out from pleasure. Your head was spinning, your whole body tingling with your orgasm.
His fingers slid between your folds, finding your pooling entrance. The first slide of his fingers into you tipped you over the edge, tearing a loud, raspy moan from your chest. You went rigid, letting the fiery waves of your orgasm consume you wholly, making you whine and moan pathetically.
His fingers massaged into you, bringing out lewd, wet sounds from out of your cunt. He was now giving slow, thorough kisses, drinking in your arousal, moaning with you.
“Wonwoo…” you called weakly, brushing his hair back with tired fingers.
You were more than ready for him now.
So you sat up, trying to push him back so you could finish undressing him.
Wonwoo understood what you wanted without having to speak up. He rose to his feet, and your tummy twisted when you caught sight of his dishevelled form. His hair was ruffled, and his glasses hung low on the bridge of his nose. There was a glistening wetness on his chin.
Your thumbs fumbled to take his boxers off, tugging at the waistband clumsily. You raised your gaze, finding his eyes before you pushed the last piece of clothing he wore down.
A sudden rush invaded you. There was no going back now. And you wanted this, you needed this.
You swallowed hard, revelling at the sight of his naked body. Wonwoo was lean, the muscles of his abdomen were well-defined, dipping between his bulging pectorals. His shoulders were wide, and his biceps were toned.
There was a soft, dark trail of hair from his belly button, which you followed down with your gaze. Your breath hitched. He was huge—not that girthy—but the length of it almost made you doubt whether it would fit inside you.
“You’re very sexy,” you stammered, looking away in shyness.
But he used a hand to cup your chin, tipping your head back so he could meet your gaze. “You’re very sexy too,” he said.
You gave him a small smile, grabbing his hand as you lay back on the bed. Wonwoo followed you, his body towering over yours.
He pushed one of your thighs with his knee, crawling on top of you and framing your head with his arms. His lips trapped yours in a feathery kiss, smearing your arousal on your chin.
He tensed, his breath hitching when you wrapped your fingers around his hard cock. “Do you have condoms?” he whispered.
“Mm-mmn,” you shook your head, rolling your hand all over him.
You lifted your knees to your chest, gliding the tip of his cock between your folds.
“Raw?” he breathed, still giving you sweet kisses.
You didn’t trust yourself to speak, so you just nodded.
“Words, baby,” he said with a rasp, pulling away to look at your face. “Use them.”
You blinked at him slowly, not hiding the lust that was threatening to consume you whole. “Fuck me raw,” you pleaded.
Your words had an effect on him; his gaze darkened. He grabbed your wrists with one hand, driving them above your head and pinning them there. He notched his cock on your entrance, and that was the only warning he gave you before sinking inside you.
Your mouth dropped open, a silent gasp coming out of him as Wonwoo pushed his cock inside you, looking into your eyes, grabbing every detail, every reaction showing on your face.
Wonwoo blinked slowly, letting out a breath through his nose once he sheathed himself completely in your walls. “Fuck,” he whispered. And that might’ve been the first time you heard him cuss like that.
You closed your eyes, struggling to breathe. He released your hands, and you found his shoulders, your fingers shaking slightly against his skin.
Wonwoo trapped your lips with his, kissing you deeply, his tongue brushing against the roof of your mouth. Slowly, you felt your body relaxing, your walls fluttering and easing around him. You moaned into the kiss, just as he pulled his hips back slowly, making you feel every raw inch of his long dick.
You whimpered slightly as he pushed into you, still slow but deeper this time, his hips meeting yours with every thrust.
He slipped a hand beneath your head, his fingers curling around your hair. “You okay?” Wonwoo whispered, his lips lingering on yours slightly.
“Yeah,” you replied, breathing fitfully.
It was the only confirmation he needed before he drove into you, picking up a pace. Panting, he gave you a quick kiss on your lips before he started plowing on you.
He started fucking you hard, fast. As though the anger from the argument he had with you returned and he wanted to fuck the steam out of his system. His thrusts became rougher, calculated, knocking the air out of your lungs.
“Fuck, Wonwoo,” you whimpered, your mind going blank. “Please, please, don’t stop,” you were begging again, losing control. Pleasure started to build inside you again, and you were afraid that the alcohol you had consumed before was also pushing you closer to your second orgasm.
Wonwoo was panting, his breath brushing against your cheek before he kissed it. “Cum for me, baby,” he muttered darkly.
It was maddening to think that the shy, quiet and reserved guy could talk to you like that. Let alone, fuck you like that. And he was not slowing down, his thrusts were brutal, pushing his cock deeper each time.
You didn’t have the space to breathe, nor to give him any warning. You could only give him a couple of sharp gasps right before you orgasmed again. You cried out, the sound whiny, raspy, while your orgasm rippled through you.
Wonwoo groaned, feeling your pussy clamp tightly around his cock. Burying his face on the crook of your neck, you felt his laboured breaths, right before his lips latched onto your skin, sucking a lovebite into it.
“Fuck—Wonwoo,” you gasped. Unable to do anything else but give in to the sweet rapture.
Wonwoo heard you, peeling off your neck to kiss your lips swiftly. “Where do you want me?” he asked with a strangled tone.
You could feel your walls flutter around him at the sound of his words. You considered it for half a second, but then— “Inside,” you whispered. “Cum inside me, Wonwoo. Please.”
He grunted, leaning to press his forehead against yours. His fist tightened around your hair, just as his strokes became harder, and deeper, fucking his cum into you.
Wonwoo was panting tiredly as he dropped his face on the crook of your neck again.
You stared into the void, wrapping your arms around him, realizing that you body was shaking.
Slowly, as though coming to his senses, Wonwoo peeled off your body, but just barely. “Are you okay?” he asked gently. His glasses were slightly fogged, which he fixed with one hand. “Did I hurt you?”
You shook your head on your pillow.
Wonwoo’s brows knitted softly.
“I’m okay,” you replied, realizing your voice was hoarse, you swallowed. “I promise.”
He was still breathing hard, so he just smiled tiredly at you. He sat back on his haunches, gently pulling out of you. “I’m sorry,” he whispered.
You blinked at him dumbly.
He pointed with his finger to one side of his neck. “I did that,” he put in meekly.
You instantly brought a hand to your neck, right on the spot that was tingling and hot. “It’s okay,” you sighed.
Wonwoo paused, making sure that you were indeed alright. “Want me to bring you something to clean up?”
“No, I’ll just take care of it in the bathroom,” you said, rolling over on your bed. Once you stood on your feet, the whole room spun around you, making you giggle.
“Careful,” he said, springing into action. He rose from the bed, stretching an arm toward you to keep you from stumbling to the ground.
“I’m okay,” you said. Staggering to the bathroom, you got to see the red spot right on the curve of your neck.
But you couldn’t care less.
After weeks, you could finally feel something again. Something other than the fucking misery that seemed to follow you everywhere you went.
Part of you wondered when the moment would be to start feeling bad about this. But you realized that you were too tired to feel remorseful about fucking Mingyu’s best friend.
You’d feel dirty tomorrow.
Wonwoo’s phone buzzed somewhere on the floor. It was buried in the scattered clothes, beneath his jeans. He picked it up, his heart jolting nervously when he read Mingyu’s name on the screen.
“crashing late?” read Mingyu’s text.
Wonwoo chewed on his lower lip. “yeah, sorry, something came up” he replied.
You were back in the room, rummaging in your drawers, looking for a t-shirt to cover your bare body.
You didn’t notice the worry flashing across Wonwoo’s face. “Hey,” you called softly.
Wonwoo was already looking at you, thinking of what to do. “Hey,” he mumbled, giving you a tiny but sweet smile.
“Do you want to stay the night?” you asked meekly, realizing that your request might be too much, you added. “I don’t want to be alone,” you added with a note of sincerity.
The tight feeling trapping his heart eased. “Of course,” Wonwoo replied, locking his phone before climbing onto the spot next to you on the bed.
As you lay back, you sent him a fleeting glance, biting your bottom lip.
Wonwoo smiled when he saw the hesitation in your demeanor. “Come here,” he whispered, motioning you closer to him.
You gave him a light smile. “Okay,” you whispered, deciding to scoot closer to his body.
“We can cuddle, if that’s what you want,” he said with a knowing smile, despite the shyness he was exuding.
You let out a guilty giggle, realizing that you were subconsciously expecting aftercare with him. And Wonwoo was more than willing to give you just that.
“Don’t make it weird,” you mumbled shyly.
“We just had sex, and you think I’ll consider cuddling weird?” he laughed.
“Just… shut up,” you sighed.
He didn’t reply, just watched you as you moved towards him beneath the covers. You rested your head on his chest, just as he wrapped an arm around you, hugging you comfortably to his frame.
“Are you okay?” he asked quietly, his voice like velvet against your senses.
You tilted your head back, glancing at his face. “Yes,” you replied. “This is nice,” you told him, turning your head again to nuzzle against his warmth.
Wonwoo wrapped a hand around your shoulder, pulling you closer. “Rest up,” he whispered gently, kissing your brow.
But you were already dozing off, only being able to reply with a sweet hum before you were completely gone.
Wonwoo waited until the rhythm of your breathing deepened to raise his phone, unlocking it to read Mingyu’s last messages.
“I regret everything,” the first message read.
And then the last two read,
“I want to fix it.
But I don’t know how.”
☾ author's note: alexa, play bittersweet
this author's note is to once again, thank you for your support! the feedback i got from the previous chapter. i was amazed by the amount of comments and asks that i got! 🥺 i still can't believe the amount of people who commented, reblogged and came to my inbox to say something! i love you all!
this post has been in my drafts since january 2024 🫥 and since i posted the previous part of this series, a lot, and i do mean a lot of you guys came to me with questions about whether or not i had something planned for our wonwoo. i didn't want to give too much away because it would've ruined what i had planned.
well, this is how wonwoo is going to debut in his own series; in the wicked games series.
fun, right? 🙂
same as always, y'all know the drill. if you have something to say, comment it down below, share your opinions anonymously, reblog, like this post, share it with your grandma 🙂
yell at me, if that's what you want but keep it civil :D
i love you, thank you for reading!
toodles
☆ READ PART VI! ☆ | PREVIOUS CHAPTERS | BUY ME COFFEE? ♡
© TO HANNIEWEEN I DO NOT ALLOW TRANSLATIONS, CONTINUATIONS, REIMAGINATIONS OF MY WORKS OR THEIR REPOSTING ON OTHER WEBSITES.
#jeon wonwoo smut#wonwoo smut#svthub#ksmutsociety#k vanity#thediamondlifenetwork#seventeen smut#svt smut#seventeen x reader#seventeen fanfic#mingyu fluff#kim mingyu x you#mingyu angst#svt x you#mingyu fic#hannieween#ff:wicked games
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The Red Notebook
Pairing: Oscar Piastri x Felicity Leong-Piastri (Original Character)
Part of the The mysterious Mrs. Piastri Series.
Summary: Every season, Felicity Piastri keeps a red notebook—meticulously filled with race notes, corner analysis, and tyre data—not for the engineers, but for Oscar.
Warnings and Notes: This adds much needed context to a mention of the Red Notebook in the eventual Silverstone one shot. Big thanks to @llirawolf , who listens to me ramble 😂
Oscar knew every driver had their rituals.
Some tapped the side of the car before lights out. Some listened to the same playlist before quali. Some wore lucky socks. He wasn’t one for superstition. (Unless it was Felicity’s notes tucked into his gloves.)
Oscar was calm, calculated, precise. But if there was one thing in his world that carried the same sacred weight as a prayer before battle, it was this:
The red notebook.
Felicity had been keeping one since he was fifteen.
Oscar had never asked her to do it.
But she did it anyway.
Every season of his career, starting in 2016, from karting to F4 to now, had its own red notebook. Same brand, same size, same weight. Always red. The kind with a soft leather cover and a ribbon bookmark. He’d once asked why that colour.
Felicity had blinked. “Because Racing is in your blood.”
Every year, a new one. Lined up in a quiet row on the shelf at home. 2016. 2017. 2018. All the way through now.
The season’s notebook started the day before pre-season testing. She’d jotted down tyre compound data while he was still learning the steering wheel settings.
She never missed a race.
Even before they’d been married, even before they’d been anything more than best friends, she’d been the one watching grainy livestreams of karting races at three in the morning. She’d pause, rewind, scribble something, frown, rewind again. Always in pencil first. Always rewatching later with a cup of tea and writing with black ink.
Oscar still remembered when it started. One day he’d come back to Haileybury from a junior series race, his helmet still damp with sweat, and found her at the kitchen table with a notebook open beside her laptop. She’d been watching his onboard, pausing it at the exit of Turn 9.
"You were lifting earlier here," she’d said casually, as if they weren’t fifteen and chronically exhausted. "Were the rears giving out or was it just the balance shift?"
He’d stared at her. “How do you even—”
She’d shrugged. “I rewatched the last three races. Thought maybe it was setup. But I think it’s tire fatigue.”
She hadn’t been wrong.
She never was.
He’d protested, at first. Told her she didn’t have to. That she could sleep in. That she didn’t need to rewatch every one of his races in painstaking detail. But she’d just looked at him, calm and matter-of-fact.
“I like watching you work,” she said. “And I like knowing how to help.”
Since then, every race season had a notebook.
She’d never stopped. Not in F4. Not in Renault Eurocup. Not in F3. Not in F2. Not even now, when the races were streamed to millions, and Oscar had an entire team of strategists and data analysts and performance engineers.
By the time he got to F1, the habit was ingrained.
Every season had a new red notebook.
Neatly labeled with the year on the inside cover. Oscar – 2019. Oscar – 2020. Oscar – 2021.
All the way up to Oscar – 2024, tucked beside her laptop, the pen clipped to the side like always.
Each race had its own section—track map hand-drawn in the corner, weather data scribbled in the margins, key overtakes underlined in green, mistakes circled in blue.
Notes on setup balance, driver behavior, tire drop-off. Observations from free practice. Quali patterns. Sector deltas compared across weekends.
One red notebook for every season.
Lined pages, neatly labelled.
Her handwriting somehow managing to be both clinical and caring.
Oscar sometimes thought about all those notebooks. How they formed a silent record of his life—not the headlines, not the points on a screen, but the real story. The choices. The nuance. The growing.
Oscar had once asked what she’d do with them all.
She’d just smiled and said, “Maybe I’ll give them to you. When you’re old and don’t remember why you did all this.”
But he thought she was wrong.
Because all he’d have to do was look at her.
And he’d remember.
Every Monday night—after every race, whether he won, DNFed, or trundled home in P9—they’d debrief.
Not officially. Not in a team room. Just the two of them.
Over the phone. Or curled up on a couch somewhere. He’d grab a water bottle. She’d open the notebook. And they’d go through it—one sector at a time.
“You want the good or the bad first?” she’d ask.
And Oscar would always say, “Start with the bad.”
She never softened it. That wasn’t her style. But she never made it cruel. Just observations, always grounded in care.
“You were oversteering into Turn 4,” she might say. “You hesitated on the switchback in Lap 36. And you always get a little sloppy after safety car restarts.”
Then she’d pause. Let him breathe.
“Your tire management in the middle stint was beautiful, though,” she’d add. “And your dive on Lap 21? That was perfect.”
She always ended on that. Something kind. Something true.
It wasn’t just racecraft. She tracked patterns— behavior, tyre drop-off curves, pit wall communications.
She never shoved it in his face. Never acted like she knew better. She just… saw him. All of him. His driving, his instincts, his cracks, his triumphs. And she held it with reverence. She had, always.
That was Felicity.
Not loud. Not flashy. But constant. Fiercely observant. Quietly all in.
Oscar had always known Felicity was the kind of person who remembered things.
Not in the casual way, either—this wasn’t *oh yeah, I think you mentioned that once* kind of memory.
This was weaponized recall. Pattern-tracking. Observation to the point of quiet obsession.
She always said it wasn’t for coaching. She didn’t have the right license for that.
But they both knew—Felicity’s mind was the license.
Oscar hadn’t missed a single debrief with her since he was fiteen.
Even now — full McLaren kit, media commitments, a dozen engineers and strategists surrounding him — he still came home after every race and sat at the kitchen table with her, red notebook open between them, a cup of tea cooling by her elbow.
She’d never push. Never judge. Just turned a page and say, “I think you started lifting earlier here. Did it feel different?”
And she was always right.
He didn’t know what he’d do without her voice in his ear. Her notes. Her calm, razor-sharp logic that made him better every single season — not by force, but by faith. She believed in him like it was a given. Like his success was a shared equation they were solving together.
That notebook was sacred now. A quiet, red witness to every win, every loss, every hard-earned point.
Felicity never missed a race. Never skipped a page. Never stopped showing up, quietly and completely, with the kind of devotion that made him ache.
And Oscar knew how lucky he was to be loved like that. To be studied and understood and quietly backed with a red notebook full of margins and maybes.
By 2023, the red notebook wasn’t just Felicity’s anymore.
It was still hers in the way rituals are—quiet, sacred, consistent. But now it had new fingerprints on it. Smaller ones.
Bee had started watching races more intently after the summer break that year. Not just to cheer for “Papa’s car” or to spot “the man who always says ‘box box’ in the funny accent.” No—she started paying attention. The way Felicity did. The way Oscar did.
It began with questions.
“Why did the other car pit sooner than Papa?”
“Was he happy with that last lap?”
Oscar hadn’t thought much of it at first. Just curiosity. The kind of natural interest you’d expect from a kid who was surrounded by racing. And who could identify tyre compounds before she could spell tangerine.
But then, one day after the Dutch GP, he opened the notebook and found a sticky note wedged between Lap 28 and 29. Bee’s handwriting was still wobbly, more squiggle than letter, but it was there. Carefully written in her purple glitter pen:
“I think Papa was fast in the twisty bits. The Red car was slow. Tell him?”
He’d laughed. Soft and stunned and warm all over.
Felicity had just smiled. “She asked if she could help.”
After that, it became a thing.
Usually marked with a tiny star, or Felicity’s added annotation: “Bee’s call. She might be right.”
And the thing was — sometimes she was.
Bee had an instinct for rhythm. For flow. She couldn’t articulate it like her mother could, but she felt when something was off. Her feedback wasn’t technical, but it was honest. Raw. Oscar had learned not to dismiss it.
After the Japanese GP, she had scrawled, “Car sounded grumpy today.” Turned out there had been a small issue with engine mapping.
Bee’s contributions were scattered throughout the pages like little bursts of joy — added while Felicity reviewed footage with her on her lap or at the table. Sometimes Oscar came home to find the notebook open beside a half-drunk juice box and a crayon drawing of Turn 4 with a heart around it.
He never took them out.
Felicity never corrected them either. Never scolded Bee for scribbling in what had once been her own sacred system. If anything, she looked quietly proud.
“She watches with me now,” Felicity had told him once, her voice soft as she passed him the notebook. “She wanted to write something after Suzuka. Said she thought your car was sliding more than usual in the esses.”
Oscar had blinked. “She said esses?”
“Specifically. She said ‘I think it’s the bit where the car goes whoosh whoosh left right left really fast.’ So… the esses.”
Oscar had laughed. Then paused.
Bee was three.
Sometimes she asked questions that made even him pause — about racing lines and brake bias and why tyre wear seemed worse on warmer weekends.
Sometimes, when Oscar flipped it open after a race, he’d find a different kind of note squeezed into the margins — messier handwriting, uneven spelling, sparkly gel pen in place of Felicity’s precise script.
“You did really really good at the overtake!!” “I think maybe you were sad in the middle. Was it because the tyres were bad?” “Next time try even more zoom!!”
There was one he’d never forget — a page where Bee had stuck a neon orange post-it and written, painstakingly, in huge capital letters:
“I WAS SO PROUD I DID A LITTLE JUMP.”
Underneath, in smaller, steadier handwriting:
Same. – F
Other times she just wanted to draw pictures of his helmet and write “GO PAPA” in shaky block letters across the page. But she was watching. Really watching.
And the red notebook had become a shared ritual.
Oscar would come home after races and find them curled together on the couch, the replay paused mid-turn, Felicity with her pen and Bee with her toy car in hand, mimicking every motion.
And when the notebook was passed to him, it felt heavier. Fuller. Like legacy.
Because in those pages—lined with analytics and corrections and glittery three-year-old commentary—was something unshakeable.
A family.
A home.
And the quiet, unspoken truth:
They saw him.
Every lap. Every decision. Every tenth gained or lost.
They watched. They learned. They remembered.
And in between the margins and the tyre notes and the childish stickers that said "GO PAPAYA GO!!", Oscar Piastri could read something else:
He was never doing this alone.
And after all these years, Oscar still found himself sitting on the couch, a cup of tea in his hand, watching the girl he loved scribble something in the margin of the notebook — the red one, the current one — and thinking:
She knows me better than telemetry ever could.
He didn’t need a strategist when he had Felicity. He didn’t need a publicist, a hype reel, or a season highlight package.
He had a girl with a red notebook and a brain like fire — and a heart that chose to use it for love.
And when he won—really won—it would be written there, too.
In pencil first.
In ink, later.
With love, always.
Written down. Every season. Every race. Every lap.
#formula 1#f1 fanfiction#formula 1 fanfiction#f1 smau#f1 x reader#formula 1 x reader#f1 grid x reader#f1 grid fanfiction#oscar piastri fanfic#oscar piastri#Oscar Piastri fic#oscar piastri imagine#oscar piastri x reader#op81 fic#op81 imagine
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"On a freezing cold Wednesday afternoon in eastern Kentucky, Taysha DeVaughan joined a small gathering at the foot of a reclaimed strip mine to celebrate a homecoming. “It’s a return of an ancestor,” DeVaughan said. “It’s a return of a relative.”
That relative was the land they stood on, part of a tract slated for a federal penitentiary that many in the crowd consider another injustice in a region riddled with them. The mine shut down years ago, but the site, near the town of Roxana, still bears the scars of extraction.
DeVaughan, an enrolled member of the Comanche Nation, joined some two dozen people on January 22 to celebrate the Appalachian Rekindling Project buying 63 acres within the prison’s footprint.
“What we’re here to do is to protect her and to give her a voice,” DeVaughan said. “She’s been through mountaintop removal. She’s been blown up, she’s been scraped up, she’s been hurt.”
The Appalachian Rekindling Project, which she helped found last year, wants to rewild the site with bison and native flora and fauna, open it to intertribal gatherings, and, it hopes, stop the prison.
The environmental justice organization worked with a coalition of local nonprofits, including Build Community Not Prisons and the Institute to End Mass Incarceration, to raise $160,000 to buy the plot from a family who owned the land generationally.
Retired truck driver Wayne Whitaker, who owns neighboring land and had considered purchasing it as a hunting ground, told Grist he was supportive. “There’s nothing positive we’ll get out of this prison,” he said.
The penitentiary has been a gleam in the eye of state and local officials and the Bureau of Prisons since 2006. It has always sparked sharp divisions in Roxana and beyond and was killed in 2019 after a series of lawsuits, only to be quietly resurrected in 2022. Last fall, the bureau took the final step in its approval process, clearing the way to begin buying land...
In his book Coal, Cages, Crisis, Schept noted that mine sites are considered ideal locations for prisons or a dumping ground for waste, rather than places of ecological value, as some biologists have argued. The Roxana site has been reclaimed, meaning re-vegetated with a forest that now shelters a number of rare species, including endangered bats.
Opponents argue that a prison will bring more environmental problems than jobs. Letcher County was 1 of 13 counties ravaged by catastrophic flooding in 2022, a situation exacerbated by damage strip mining caused to local watersheds. The prison slated for Roxana will exacerbate the problem.
The Bureau of Prisons estimates it will damage 6,290 feet of streams and about 2 acres of wetlands. (The agency has promised to compensate the state.)
DeVaughan said the purchase also is a step toward rectifying the dispossession that began with the forced removal and genocide of Indigenous peoples. The Cherokee, Shawnee, and Yuchi made their homes in the area before, during, and after colonization, and their thriving nations raised crops, ran businesses, and hunted bison that once roamed Appalachia.
In all the time since, coal, timber, gas, and landholding companies have at times owned almost half of the land in 80 counties stretching from West Virginia to Alabama. Several prisons sprang from deals made with coal companies, something many locals consider the continuation of this status quo.
Changing that dynamic is a priority for the Appalachian Rekindling Project, which hoped to buy more land to protect it from extractive industries and return its stewardship to Indigenous and local communities. DeVaughn said Indigenous peoples throughout the region will be welcome to use the land as a gathering place...
DeVaughan sees its work establishing a new vision of economic transition for coalfields, one that relies less on “dollars and numbers” and more on “healing and restoration” of the land and the Indigenous and other communities that live there.
She is working with some personal connections in the Cheyenne and Arapaho nations to acquire a herd of bison and plans to work with local volunteers, scientists, and students to inventory the site’s flora and fauna."
-via GoodGoodGood, February 6, 2025
#kentucky#united states#indigenous#first nations#comanche#north america#land back#rewilding#indigenous activism#conservation#prison abolition#bison#forest#good news#hope
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