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New myth wrecked me
With this myth, the story of the sea god is complete🥹 I think they will tell another tale on another myth on his 4th
#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#love and deepspace rafayel#lads rafayel#lnds rafayel#rafayel#l&ds#l&ds rafayel#rafayel x mc#love & deepspace rafayel#love and deep space rafayel#rafayel myth#rafayel merman
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Let me just rant
Omg the amount of people who does not like Rafayel suddenly switching up just because he is portrayed what we all knew what he was capable of is... idk disappointing?
It shows that those people did not care about his lore and they have this weird sense of idea of masculinity that led them to dismiss Raf's 'manliness'. Just because he has softer features doesn't mean he isn't manly. Rafayel has always portrayed his dark side in some cards already and when you dive deeper to his lore you discover that his looks literally will deceive you.
Some players will automatically associate him with the word "feminine" "twink" or even being just the "gay bestie". It really feels so bittersweet that such a well written character is mischaracterized that much just because of stereotypes.
It's even more frustrating because some of the reason why they tend to associate Raf with those words is because of how he acts and dress himself. Masculinity should not be limited with JUST buff builds, strong personalities and darker color schemes.
Xavier tends to get this treatment too just because of his soft looks that's why they tend to overlook the fact that he is a very skilled and strong swordsman. The greatest hunter. Lumiere himself.
Compared to the MC, ALL of the guys are big. They have defined muscles that portrays their strength so why is it that most players (especially those who don't read lore) AUTOMATICALLY say Rafayel or Xavier is a twink?
They do have boyish looks but they are not slim or average built. They just look small compared to Caleb, Sylus, and Zayne since those three are giants but they are not small, am I making sense?
Now with the reveal of Sea God suddenly Rafayel is this manly character😭 he has always been. Am I being to defensive of a fictional character? You might think that but actually I'm more angry at the fact that it's already the year of 2025 and there are still people who unconciously encourage toxic masculinity.
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runway
pairing: rafayel x reader
summary: when your top model meets with an accident that keeps him off his feet for a while, you have no choice but to take on the arrogant Qi Rafayel in his absence. dealing with a creative rut and a temperamental model who has endless amounts of audacity when you have fashion week to worry about is no easy task, and he certainly doesn't make it any better.....does he?
themes: strangers to lovers, co-workers to lovers, mild enemies/annoyances to lovers, celebrity! au, model! rafayel, fashion designer! mc, fluff, angst, slowburn, sexual tension, profanity, alcohol consumption, abadonment issues, petnames, lots of banter, explicit sexual content (fingering, nipple sucking, praise, cowgirl, protected sex), plot with porn, mc is a girlboss with a temper, rafayel is a brat and an asshole, they're both flawed and emotionally constipated lmao
word count: 35.7k
playlist: vogue by madonna, fashion killa by a$ap rocky, xs by rina sawayama, glamorous by fergie & ludacris, fashion! by lady gaga, disturbia by rihanna, louboutins by nesra, city of blinding lights by u2, empire state of mind (part ii) by alicia keys.
lyns notes: i rewatched 'the devil wears prada' (one of my fav movies fr) and this was born 🫡 I am a self proclaimed fashion girlie so this was a total blast to write and celebrity aus are my fav!! unfortunately I have not made it as an intern during fashion week yet, so please excuse the inevitable inaccuracies. model raf you will always be famous to me. enjoy <3
Your coffee was cold.
Simone stared at you nervously, her years of working as your assistant telling her all she needed to know in that moment. She watched as your fingers drummed against the dark wood of your desk, picking up on all the signs of your distress. Your lips pulled into a grimace, the slight tick in your jaw, and how you looked at the cup of coffee before you. All your employees knew that you were strictly a hot coffee drinker.
“How is he?”
She scrambled to answer. “Xavier is….recovering.”
You pinched the bridge of your nose, exhaling slowly. “Elaborate.”
“His leg is broken in two places. Some scratches, but thats the extent of his injuries. He was lucky.”
Your frustration with the situation at hand knew no bounds, and your mood soured even further with the new information. Clicking your tongue, you pressed your index finger and thumb against your temple, already feeling one of your headaches coming on. “Send a bouquet with a card to his hospital room.”
“Of course.” Simone pulled out her phone and began making the arrangements. “Anything else?”
“Coffee that isn’t frigid.”
Nodding quickly, she walked over and plucked up the cup from your table, giving you a final nod and stepping out of your office. Out of the dozens of assistants you had had, Simone had turned out to be the most competent and tolerable of all, and unlike her predecessors, had withstood your sky-high expectations and sharp tongue.
One word people would use to describe you is difficult. Others included delightful descriptions such as ‘unreasonable’ and ‘overbearing’, or perhaps the synonyms so many journalists had used in their pieces about you, including but not limited to: uptight, stubborn and ill-tempered. It was to the point where you had to applaud them for their creativity and commitment to the bit, never failing to find a new word to describe you in a bad light, even if you were the fashion world's current darling.
But this world you were so blessed to be a part of was cutthroat and unforgiving. Smiles and pretty manners would have never gotten you out of the tiny apartments you lived in after graduating from fashion school. Even sheer talent wasn’t enough, so you steeled yourself over those arduous years, using your ambition like the sharp tool it was to overcome the hurdles that had blocked your way to the top.
You had built your brand from the bottom up, and it had been worth it. Every tear, every candle you burned late at night, and every nick on your now-perfectly manicured fingers had gotten you to where you were. Some would say you had your success handed to you, but you knew better. You remembered all the times you nearly gave up, all the years you spent running around and interning for brands that treated you like trash. One couldn’t just forget their roots, even if everyone around them insisted on pretending they didn’t exist.
And so here you were, at twenty-seven years old: Y/n L/n, one of the youngest successful fashion designers in the world, and the founder and CEO of luxury fashion label, Lumiere.
For a brand that was merely five years old, it had quickly turned into a status symbol. Owning a single piece of clothing from any one of Lumiere’s high-end collections set one apart instantly. Your designs were exquisite, and your ability to take any fabric and turn it into a work of art was truly extraordinary. Every collection you breathed life into stunned critics and fellow designers alike, cementing your position as one of the most respected creatives in the industry today.
Respected or not, being a woman in power was a tough act to keep up. Sitting on the throne meant you had to rule with an iron fist. You weren’t allowed to slip up or make mistakes.
Especially not with Paris Fashion Week coming up.
The spring and summer collections would be revealed to the world at the most important fashion week. Everything had been going smoothly under your careful watch.
Until, of course, right now.
Yesterday, your top model met with an accident. Xavier Shen had been with you since the very start of Lumiere and was practically synonymous with its branding. Together, the two of you had taken the world's hottest runways by storm with his award-winning walk and your impeccable designs. In terms of real friendships, he might have been the only one you had.
And now, when you needed him, he was out of commission. There was no way he’d be walking for anyone any time soon.
Your black Louboutins pressed into the carpet beneath your feet as you fought off the wave of annoyance that cut through your concern for Xavier. It wasn’t really aimed at him, no, it was because you couldn’t have possibly predicted such a thing happening.
Money– you had lots of it. More than you could count, and enough to never worry about making a dent in your bank balance ever again. What was most important to you now was control.
Simone rushed back in, placing a steaming cup of coffee on your desk with a polite smile. “Anything else?”
Picking up the cup and taking a sip, you savoured the hot, bitter flavour that coated your taste buds. “A closer for the show would be nice. And someone to model the new line.”
Xavier had always been the one to fill in those shoes, sometimes quite literally. Now, you were left to figure out how to replace him temporarily while retaining the integrity of your brand. You couldn’t just take on anybody.
She didn’t flinch at your cold tone. “Sylus Qin?”
You shook your head, resting your elbows against the mahogany of your desk and cupping the mug of coffee, letting its warmth seep into your skin. “He’s walking for the Dior show, which is only an hour before ours. And he doesn’t particularly fit our image.” Sylus was, no doubt, an excellent model and a current favourite, but wasn’t what you wanted representing your brand. “And don’t even think of recommending Zayne Li. He’s been Miu Miu’s poster boy for the last year, and I have no intention of riding on their coattails.”
Simone began listing models, but none seemed fitting. Yes, this was a problem that you had to solve as quickly as possible, but you refused to settle for anything but the best. As she rattled off names, you turned your attention to the floor-to-ceiling window panes that adorned the back of your office, which revealed a stunning view of the city below. The sun was setting, spilling its orange-red rays all over the buildings and buzzing streets of New York.
It didn’t matter how many times you had been met with this view, it would never grow tiresome. New York would forever be your second love after fashion. It was unforgiving as it was generous, a contradictory quality you liked to think you shared with it.
“What about Qi Rafayel?”
You turned back to her at the unfamiliar name, raising a singular eyebrow. “Who?”
“Rafayel,” she repeated his name, tapping the screen of her tablet and approaching you, holding it out for you to see. On it was the cover of the most recent Vogue issue, and on it was a man covered in colour, the white shirt he wore a victim of this photoshoot's concept. Hues of blue and fuchsia painted his cheekbones and neck, and his dark eyes seemed to stare right into your soul, his features somehow striking a balance between sharp and gentle all at once.
“Tell me more.”
“He’s probably the most talked about in modelling right now. GQ named him Model of the Year.” She droned on about everything she knew, and you were once again reminded of her competency. “He’s under the Lemuria Modelling Agency and has achieved supermodel status with how sensational his walk is.”
You hummed, intrigued now. “How come I’ve never heard of him?”
“From what I’ve heard, he’s very selective about who he walks for, which makes everyone want him even more, of course. Word is that he isn’t walking for any fashion week shows yet. He’s refused all offers.”
Oh? Most models jumped at any chance they got to walk for fashion week. It was the pinnacle of the modelling world as much as it was for the fashion world, with every model competing for the coveted few spots on the runway.
Leaning forward, you studied the magazine cover for a few more seconds. He did seem to give off the same regal air that Xavier did, at least from the shoot you were looking at, which meant it was at least worth considering taking him on. Potential was something you’d have to bet on.
“This might do,” you muttered, waving your hand in her direction. “Arrange a meeting with him and his manager and add it to my schedule.”
Rafayel adored a good party.
Sprawled out on the length of his couch with one arm hanging off of it, he lifted his glass with a satisfied half-smile, cocking his head as he observed the chaos that unfolded around him. The mess currently being made would undoubtedly be a problem, but it was one that a future version of himself would have to deal with. Right now, he was content with being the facilitator.
The bass reverberated through his body, the music so obnoxiously loud that it somehow managed to drown out the raucous laughter and chatter that travelled around the large room. He tipped back the glass, savouring the burn of the alcohol that kissed his throat so soothingly. It provided a pleasant buzz, one that he had been carefully maintaining all evening and the night so far.
People were dancing on his coffee table. Corners of the large room were occupied by pairs that were a little too close, but the darkness provided them with privacy. Beautiful women sauntered around, a couple hovering around him like moths to a flame. One even sat on the velvet armrest of the couch, right behind where his head lay and reached out to touch his hair, which would have annoyed him if he wasn’t halfway to drunk already. The attention didn’t faze him in the slightest, he was used to being at the centre of it.
He was the life of every party, the drug that kept it going, and everyone wanted a piece of that sweet high. His parties were all the rage, and anyone with so much as a speck of fame wanted to be in attendance at them, singers, actors and fellow models alike.
Sighing blissfully, he downed the rest of his drink. The delightful thing about alcohol was that once you had had enough of it, you hardly noticed the taste. He looked up at the woman who so boldly played with his hair, watching how she batted her eyelashes and flashed a coy smile at him. A smirk teased at his lips as he entertained the idea of taking his fun a little further.
Nothing could possibly ruin such a perfect night.
“RAFAYEL!”
Oh dear.
He didn’t have to look to know who had yelled his name. There was only one person in the world who could say his name with such astronomical levels of exasperation. His manager spotted him and stormed over, setting one foot furiously in front of the other until he was right beside the couch. Rafayel lazily opened an eye, peering up at the intruder.
“Lovely to see you, Thomas. Here to join in the fun?”
Thomas scowled. “I suggest throwing that expensive phone of yours out if it doesn’t work.”
“It works just fine.”
“Then why haven’t you bothered to answer any of my calls?”
The model sighed and sat up, giving the women at his side an apologetic look. “Excuse me, ladies,” he said, charm oozing out of every syllable that spilled from him. “I need to talk to my friend here, and I’ll be right back.”
With practised grace, he got to his feet and beckoned for Thomas to follow him into the kitchen, which was miraculously deserted. Leaning against the marble counter, he picked up a bottle of gin and poured it into a clean glass before offering it to the frazzled man. When all he received in return was a glare, he shrugged and tipped it back.
“I’ve been trying to get hold of you all day,” Thomas said through gritted teeth, tapping his foot against the floor and folding his arms over his chest. Rafayel barely flinched at his agitation, used to it by this point.
“I’ve been busy.”
His manager scoffed, throwing his hands up in the air. “Busy? You call this being busy?” He gestured to the doorway that led back to the party, making Rafayel wish he was still there, instead of here, facing the wrath of his uptight manager when he wasn’t as drunk as he wished he was for it. Rolling his eyes, he prepared to give his usual excuses and get it over with so that he could go back to his fun.
“Look–”
“No, you look,” Thomas took a step forward. “Your shoot for Vogue was three weeks ago. Since then, you’ve had numerous offers to walk in fashion week. More than any model I’ve previously managed.” The way he phrased it was incredulous, as if he couldn’t fathom how he had managed such a thing. “So I’m gonna need you to tell me why you’ve turned all of them down.”
Ugh. If Rafayel had been just a little faster, he could have been in his bedroom with that woman and avoided this interaction altogether. He placed the glass back down, running a finger along the rim of it as he hummed.
“None of the brands spoke to me.”
Thomas looked like he was about to implode. He shut his eyes, letting out a long-suffering sigh. “You just have to walk. Pose a little. There's no speaking involved. You should know what your job entails by now.”
Rafayel placed a hand over his heart, feeling rather attacked at the moment. “Don’t patronise me.”
To that, he was met with a mirthless laugh. “Patronise you? You’re too smart for me to even try, and yet you still insist on acting like a child.” It was always entertaining when his manager lost his patience like this, and he always turned it into a game of sorts, testing to see just how far he could push back.
“You wound me, my friend.”
“Your aunt expects you to walk for fashion week.”
Of course, she did. Immediately, his easy-going persona vanished, and he clicked his tongue in an attempt to push down his irritation. “Talia wants me to do so much, doesn’t she?”
He couldn’t keep the bitterness out of his voice, but it didn’t matter. His opinion rarely ever did when it was up against his aunts, but he supposed it was his fault. He was the one who had decided working under her would be a good idea, thinking that the familial connection would help further his career. It turned out, however, that while it had certainly given him a headstart, he had become her favourite project.
Back in her prime, Talia had been an extremely successful supermodel herself. After getting married, she didn’t return to the runway, but instead started her own modelling agency: Lemuria Modelling Agency. Since she knew the ins and outs of the business so intimately, she had experienced what felt like overnight success with it.
When Rafayel came along, it was as if she wanted to live vicariously through him, pushing him into shoots and brand deals for fashion houses that she had once worked for herself. It was only recently that he put his foot down and insisted on choosing his projects for himself, refusing to be a puppet for any longer. Surprisingly, she had agreed, and it had somehow worked out even better than before, with his career taking off like never before.
He had no intention of turning out to be another version of her, even if he had technically followed in her footsteps. He was well aware of his worth and he’d be damned if he allowed himself to settle for anything less than perfect.
“You have another offer for fashion week and a contract for a couple of months.”
“I’m not interested.” His answer was immediate. He disliked speaking of work during his downtime, but since he had been ignoring all of his calls, he didn’t have the right to complain about that right now.
“You haven’t even heard who it's for yet.” Thomas groaned. “Lumiere is a highly respected brand. It’s short notice, but you’re lucky you’re being offered the position at all.”
“I don’t care how great they are,” he muttered dryly, reaching for the bottle once again. He despised being told what to do, regarding himself as a free spirit despite his perfectionist tendencies.
For a moment, he thought he had won this argument, taking the other man's silence as acceptance. His presumptuous joy was short-lived.
“Get your head in the fucking game, Rafayel. This whole stuck-up artist thing you have going on might have worked out in your favour so far, but it won’t cut it in the long run.” Thomas snapped, sufficiently vexed. “You will take on Lumiere, and you will walk for them. I don’t care if I have to drag you to Paris kicking and screaming, you're coming.”
Rafayel bit back his surprise at the outburst, feeling his pride take a hit at Thomas’s words. Stuck-up artist? If life had gone the way he had intended it to, then perhaps he would have been exactly that. Not that he was complaining about the life he had now, he enjoyed every second of it thoroughly, for he was nothing if not a patron of indulgence. Still, the accusation stung just a tad.
He was caught so off-guard that he couldn’t respond with his normal unbothered quips. The man in front of him didn’t let up on his glare, but finally moved out of Rafayel’s personal space, clicking his tongue in triumph like a disappointed father would at his child.
“We have a meeting scheduled with them for next week. Don’t be late. And for god’s sake, check your phone. I’ll send over the details.”
With that final statement, Thomas walked out, as eager to leave the party as Rafayel had been to rejoin it just a few minutes ago. With nothing left to do but nurse his bruised ego, he poured himself another drink to keep him company while he sulked over how that conversation had gone so terribly.
You stepped out of the car, immediately holding a hand over your face at a distance that let you see what was in front of you while simultaneously shielding yourself from the onslaught of camera flashes and paparazzi yelling at you to spare them a glance. Forcing a neutral expression, you let your feet carry you to the entrance of the restaurant as quickly as possible, wanting nothing more than to escape the unwanted attention.
Frankly, you should have been used to the paparazzi by now after having dealt with it for five years and counting, but there was something so jarring about having cameras shoved in your face or following you while you tried to go about your daily life. When you started out, all you had wanted to do was create your clothing, but fame had come along with your accomplishments, launching you into a spotlight that was meant for your designs. You had media training and publicists working to keep your image squeaky-clean.
The ambience on the inside provided you with respite from the press, and the tension in your shoulders instantly dissipated. Warm, dim lighting and the pleasant clinking of glasses and cutlery travelled all around you, combining with the smooth jazz that played, creating a melody of its own. This was one of your favourite places to dine, which was precisely why you had chosen it for today.
Walking further into the restaurant, you spotted the person you were here to meet and made your way over. The woman sitting at the reserved table scanned the menu.
“Gabriette,” You smiled pleasantly, making your presence known. She looked up at you, eyes lighting up.
“Y/n!”
Gabriette got to her feet and embraced you politely, giving you a customary kiss on each cheek in greeting. You returned the gesture before removing your coat, draping it on the empty seat across from hers and sitting down.
“I hope I didn’t make you wait too long.” You picked up your menu as a server filled your glass with some water, flipping through the pages.
“Not at all! I’m so glad we could make time to meet.”
Gabriette Dubois was a celebrity fashion designer, much like yourself, whom you had met years ago while in Paris for your first ever fashion week. She was a little older than you but somehow managed to not look a day over twenty-five, petite in every sense of the word. Her own fashion house, Dubois Designs, was all the rage just as yours was. This meant that while you were friendly with her, she was less of a friend and more of an acquaintance.
Competitor would have been the right word.
“How have you been?” She was in New York for a few weeks and insisted on having lunch with you. She was far from your favourite person, but you knew the importance of nurturing and maintaining connections. If not for that pesky reason, you would have cut all contact with her a long time ago. Your temper made it so that you lacked patience when it came to people like her, but thankfully, she lived in Paris, which meant you only had to bite your tongue and force a smile on occasion.
“I’ve been fantastic,” she beamed, her French accent curling the ends of her words. “I’ve been busy the whole time I have been in this city, but you know how it is. The busier you are, the better business is, yes?” The subtle brag was not lost on you.
You suspected she was the one who had called the press. They loved tailing you around anyway, but catching two high-profile fashion designers together? That was the same thing as finding gold to them.
“I know what you mean.” You ordered a glass of red wine after agreeing with her. She opted for some rosé. “Finding time to rest is rare.”
“I bet you miss the days when Lumiere was still a small little thing,” she said with the same smile on her face, but you weren’t naive enough to miss the slight condescending lilt of her voice. While she treated you perfectly well, you knew that she didn’t quite see you as an equal, purposely choosing to turn a blind eye to your achievements. She thought of you as beneath her, even though your success outshone even hers at times.
You didn’t need her approval. All this was a formality anyways.
“Sometimes,” you admitted good-naturedly, choosing not to take the bait. The drinks arrived, and you took a nice, long sip of yours, reminding yourself of why you even agreed to meet her in the first place. “Sorry, I just remembered, I have something I’d like to ask you.”
Gabriette might have had a superiority complex, but this also meant she loved to shove all her accomplishments in other people's faces. Bragging was something she viewed as her birthright, and you had mastered the art of using it to your advantage.
The server returned, and the two of you placed your orders before resuming conversation. “Ask away.”
“It’s about a model,” you started carefully. “My top model is out of commission right now, and I need a replacement for a little while.”
She leaned back in her seat and sipped her rosé. “Oh yes, I heard about Xavier. Go on.”
No doubt she assumed you were about to ask her to help you find someone to take his place. You had no intention of doing such a thing since you were going to meet your potential temporary replacement in three days, thanks to Simone. What you wanted was a little information from someone who had directly had contact with him.
“You’ve worked with Rafayel before, haven’t you?”
You phrased it as if you didn’t know this already, when in reality, you had done your research. It wasn’t your job to do so– you could have easily gotten any of your employees to do it– but this was a big deal. You refused to have just anyone take Xavier’s place, even if it was only for a short while. Simone had already run a background check on him, and you had to admit that from all the surface-level knowledge that you had that he did fit with your brand's image quite well.
Gabriette peered at you from over her glass, raising an eyebrow as she nodded slowly. “Yeah, a couple of years ago. Why?”
“I hadn’t really heard of him until recently.” You placed your glass down, and at that moment, the server returned with your food. She didn’t bother to hide her scoff as she picked up her fork, digging into her salad immediately.
“That’s on you. Rafayel has been around for a while.” She took a bite of lettuce and croutons, taking her time with the morsel before she pounced once more, taking a concealed jab at you. “But I guess it’s expected when you live under a rock. If you weren’t so caught up with insisting on only working with Xavier for even a minute, you would have seen him around.”
You refused to let her get under your skin. So what if you were picky about who you took on? Consistency was something you valued, and you had your reasons, ones that you didn’t have to divulge to her and waste your breath.
A tired exhale left your lips. “I’m thinking of taking him on.”
“Good luck with that.”
Huh. You sat up straighter. “What do you mean?”
“Rafayel is a talented model, no one can say anything about that, but I doubt you’d be able to handle him.”
Handle him? Oddly enough, this statement of hers sounded less like a concealed insult and more genuine. Feigning indifference, you nibbled at your own food. “Why so?”
She laughed curtly, toying with her fork. “He’s a great way to make headlines, that's for sure. The world loves him right now, even with his scandalous behaviour, but when it comes down to it…” You made a mental note to look into what she meant by scandalous behaviour later when she trailed off, silently prompting her to continue.
Gabriette pressed her lips together, a flash of irritation taking over her eyes for a brief moment, but it wasn’t aimed at you.
“He’s a total nightmare to work with.”
Rafayel waltzed into the meeting room ten minutes late, his head held up high like he owned the place.
This did not amuse you, the actual owner.
A man who you could only assume was his manager entered behind him, looking so defeated that you almost felt sorry for him. Almost, because you had no sympathy for people who wasted your time like they had. Simone had gotten you a second cup of coffee to pass the time, and you had just about finished it, ignoring the last few dregs in the cup in favour of narrowing your eyes at the two men.
“I’m so sorry about the delay,” he said quickly, taking a seat at the table after Rafeyel did. “There was– er– unavoidable traffic. I’m Thomas, Rafayel’s manager. Your assistant spoke with me last week.” The excuse was pathetic, and you didn’t miss the brief scathing look he sent the model when he stumbled over the words. The latter looked utterly unbothered, his elbow on the armrest of the chair, his chin resting on his palm.
If you weren’t in such a terrible situation, you would have probably asked them to leave, but not only were you running on a tight schedule, but you were also fresh out of options.
“Don’t worry about it. It’s a pleasure to meet you both.”
You looked at Rafayel to finally asses him in person, mild surprise running through you when you realised he was already staring right at you. Most people avoided eye contact with you because of how intense you could be, but he seemed to be having no such trouble; his eyes locked onto yours, a bored look lingering in them.
Now that you were looking at him in person, you had to admit that he was quite breathtaking. You had watched a couple of his most famous runway moments, but the way he looked through a screen did not compare to the real thing. He was positively gorgeous, which wasn’t something you thought all that often, considering you were surrounded by beautiful people all the time. Rafayel, however, was in a league of his own, with soft, dark hair that fell over his forehead and into his mesmerising eyes. Smooth skin that surely had skincare companies begging him to be in their advertisements, lips that were the perfect pinkish hue, and elegant, high cheekbones; he was a work of art.
A work of art whose impudence was currently pissing you off.
“Rafayel,” You finally directly addressed him. “I take it that you’ve agreed to model for Lumiere for the next four months.”
His lips twitched. “It seems that I have.”
“We’re thrilled to have you on board.” You gestured to Simone. “My assistant here has drawn up the contract, which you can take to look over before signing it.” Dutifully, she placed a file before them, which he picked up, flipping through and scanning over the details and terms.
This is where the meeting would usually end. He’d smile, nod and leave, and you’d go back to your office and hopefully review some of the recent sketches you had done. They needed some reworking as soon as possible, especially if you wanted to stay on schedule.
Except it didn’t.
He tossed the contract back on the table. “Thats all well and good, but I have a condition of my own.”
His manager glanced at him apprehensively. Your look on your face must have betrayed how bewildered you felt, because the edge of his mouth quirked upwards in amusement ever so slightly at your reaction.
“A….condition?” You echoed his words incredulously, fingers curling around the Montblanc pen you were just about to hand to him. His smile widened, and he nodded, leaning forward with his elbows resting on the edge of the table like he was about to divulge to you a secret you should have been dying to know.
“Whatever you make me wear, I have to approve of it. I have to like it, or I don’t wear it.”
You weren’t quite sure you had heard him right at first, blinking twice as you registered what he had just said. Honestly, even the idea was so ridiculous that you were sure you had misinterpreted, because this wasn’t a condition. It was a demand, one that he expected you to meet, as if it wasn’t completely audacious of him to do so.
“I’m sorry?”
“You heard me. This is a dealbreaker.”
Thomas looked so alarmed that it would have been funny in any other context. Clearly, he had no hand in this and was just as caught off guard as you were, but nowhere near as outraged.
Simone realised the meeting was going awry, and swiftly swooped in, clearing her throat before you exploded right then and there in the conference room. She was surprised that the pen you were holding hadn't snapped in two yet with how tight your grip on it was.
“I’m sure we can work something out,” she said smoothly, taking over for you as you glowered. “We’re delighted to have you working with us, Mr. Qi.”
No part of you was delighted. Sure, he ticked off all the boxes: attractive, seasoned and acclaimed, but there was something about how he carried himself that didn’t sit quite right with you. This had nothing to do with any of the scandals that he had found himself in, though you had looked into them to make sure it wouldn’t impact your brand. Dating scandals and rumours of him being a womaniser– stuff like that never held any weight for too long, especially not for a man. You didn’t care about his personal life, no, your annoyance stemmed from his haughty attitude.
Rafayel grinned, not bothering to even look at her, winking at you instead for good measure. “Pleasure doing business with you.”
The fucking audacity.
Once they had left, you stormed into your office, your stilettos carrying the heavy weight of the pure, unadulterated rage you felt at that instant. Simone followed, bracing herself for the inevitable downpour of your wrath and clutching her tablet in the hopes it would help her calm you down. Of course, she knew there was no shot in hell of that happening; when you were like this, it would take nothing short of a miracle to placate you.
To say you were a proud person would be an understatement. There were not very many instances where you willingly let someone else have control in a situation, and you were well aware of what your work was worth. There was a reason you were at the top of the game.
It made his condition all the more absurd.
“He has to approve of it?” You seethed, spinning around to glare at the only person around to take the brunt of your fury. “Who the hell does he think he is?”
Simone winced, “It’s certainly….an odd request.”
“A request? A request would be if he asked us for tea, Simone. This is an insult.” He had to have known that, too, unless he was a total idiot. You were starting to believe that because models didn’t choose what they wore. The implication was that you didn’t know how to dress your models, as if all the skills you had honed were worth nothing. “Who the hell does he think he is?”
Despite having just met him, the smug look he had given you was already burned into your memory. You couldn’t remember the last time you had outright disliked someone this quickly.
“Rafayel is eccentric, yes,” Simone said tentatively. He had sounded so confident, like it was a given that you would agree. “But maybe he didn’t mean to offend you?”
“Xavier would never do this,” You groaned, mourning the absence of your darling top model. “Tell me, is there a chance we can get someone else on board instead?”
Unfortunately, you knew the answer without her giving it to you. Keeping your brand's image intact was of utmost importance to you, and you were nothing if not meticulous. Xavier’s sudden unavailability had thrown a real wrench in all your careful planning, and though it wasn’t his fault, it still left you extremely frustrated. Replacing him was nearly impossible, and you were lucky to have chanced upon Rafayel.
Undoubtedly, he would fit in with your curation seamlessly. He’d look fantastic modelling your clothing, and he’d be perfect for the PFW show. The hype that currently existed around him would also help tremendously. Your publicist was about to have an absolute field day with this collaboration.
“He’s our only viable option at the moment. The chances of him disapproving of your clothes are slim to none, anyway.” Your assistant said comfortingly. “It’ll be fine.”
God, you hoped so.
QI RAFAYEL SIGNED WITH LUMIERE?
Word is that the most elusive model of the decade has put down roots with the hottest brand, and boy, does the partnership seem fitting! It’s a wonder, especially with Rafayel's sudden disappearance from the modelling scene right at the height of his career. Known for his fearlessness when it comes to experimental designs and his ability to embody any look, the model is truly at the top of his game, so it makes perfect sense for him to work with a brand that shares that very status.
We can’t wait to witness his comeback with Lumiere very soon!
The fitting room was in chaos when you arrived.
You grimaced at the disarray you were met with; stylists rushing around and shouting various instructions at each other. There were different types of fabric all around, clothing items you could recognise at a single glance, falling off their hangers and display mannequins. Amidst it all stood Rafayel, who looked utterly uninterested, his arms over his chest, wrinkling the deep purple Ralph Lauren shirt he was wearing. The colour suited him.
But why was he still in his personal clothes? In two hours, he was to be at a shoot for the brand's website and social media pages, but here he was, just standing around. At least his makeup was done, you supposed.
“Miss Y/n!” One of the stylists paused her movements and greeted you. “We are right on track!”
Were they? You glanced around at the confusion, stepping over the shoes that were right in front of the doorway and walked up closer to one of the mannequins. Wordlessly, you held your hand out, and immediately they all knew what to do, scrambling to hand you a pin. Placing it between your teeth, you folded over a part of the waist of the pants to readjust the pleating and secured it in place.
“It doesn’t seem like it.” Your eyes sliced back to the model, who was now looking right at you. “He’s not ready.”
Typically, you would never visit a fitting like this, trusting your employees to get the job done. You were too busy to make the time to show up for things like these, simply giving the orders and checking in once the job was done. Even Xavier didn’t get any surprise pop-ins from you, and he was someone you actually cared for.
But no part of you inherently trusted Rafayel to cooperate. The stylist who handed you the pin dropped her voice and signalled towards him. “He’s a little difficult.”
Of course.
Leaving the mannequin, you walked up to Rafayel and levelled him with a stare. “Would you care to enlighten me as to why you’re giving my stylists a hard time?”
He looked around and pointed to the clothing that another stylist held up with a helpless expression. It was a lovely white silk shirt with an asymmetrical cut, the buttons starting at the right shoulder and ending at the left side of the waist. This was paired with trousers to complete the look, but it wasn’t supposed to take away from the shirt, which was the main event.
“I’m not wearing this.”
Irritation was a feeling you were well-versed in. The way it flared up inside of you so quickly when he spoke was still shocking.
“And why not?” You briefly wondered why everyone around you seemed to take pleasure in wasting your time as of late. This was only one of the outfits he had to be photographed in, the others lined up neatly on a clothing rack.
“It’s boring,” Rafayel said casually, as if he were remarking on the weather. “Where's the colour? The life? I look at it and feel nothing.”
Oh, he felt nothing, did he? Briefly, you wondered if he’d feel the slap you were so tempted to give him. All he had done since stepping into your building was insult you and parade around like he was better than everyone, and you didn’t take either of those things lightly. “It’s the highest quality silk and stitching.”
“Everything you’re having me wear is in black and white.”
“I’m so glad you can tell colour.”
Your stylists flinched a little at your apathetic tone, despite being all too used to your snippy remarks. You were hard on everyone who worked for you, but that was only because you held your employees to the same high standards that you did yourself when it came to the work they were supposed to do. Their paychecks certainly made up for it, as did your generosity when it came to granting them leave.
“Black and white is plain.” He sighed dramatically, like the lack of colour was personally offending him. “Chanel already has that rodeo down to the ‘t’.
His audacity left you astounded once more, and you were even more pissed off when you unwittingly realised that he had a point. Still, even if Chanel did have a thing for black and white styling, you liked to think that you had put your unique spin on the clothes that distinguished them from competing brands. You didn’t just think it; you knew your designs were amazing. The man in front of you didn’t allow you to tell him this, since he had already started speaking again.
“If I wanted to wear Chanel, I would have accepted their offer.”
“Why didn’t you?”
You knew damn well that it was a good thing he had agreed to work for you, but that didn’t mean he had to. Rafayel’s lips tipped upwards, as if your annoyance entertained him. “I already told you. I find black and white boring, and even though it’s all I see right now,” he gestured around the room and at the clothing rack, “I don’t think it’s all you’re capable of.”
Was that a compliment? If it was, he was shit at giving them out. Not that you were any better, but that hardly mattered in the grand scheme of things. It wasn’t your job to be nice, it was your job to make sure things got done the way you wanted them.
So, against all your severely miffed instincts, you sucked in a deep breath to calm yourself down. “This collection is already public. We just need the pictures for social media.”
He looked disappointed. “Fine. I’ll make an exception just this once.”
How positively saintly of him. You wondered if he expected you to drop and kiss his feet for making such a compromise.
Unfortunately for him, he wasn’t going to get any of that. You pressed your lips together, deciding you had wasted enough of your time already and that it was time to get back to those sketches of yours you had been putting off. Nodding curtly, you moved to leave, but he opened his mouth again.
“A word of advice?”
Well, wasn’t he chatty today? You sighed, pressing two fingers against your temple and rubbing in the hopes it would soothe you. “You’re going to give it to me even if I say no, aren’t you?”
He proved you right. “If your Paris Fashion Week collection is going to be as uninspired as this, then I suggest you start rethinking it.”
The stylist closest to the two of you gasped.
Uninspired? This was a collection you had revealed recently at a show a couple of weeks ago, and critics had been all over it, practically kissing your feet with the amount of praise they had dished out. Uninspired definitely wasn’t one of the words they had used to describe it.
You didn’t miss the smirk on his lips as he watched you react to his harsh words. He had gotten under your skin, and he knew it. It had been so long since someone had managed to do so that you forgot how it felt, and you despised the feeling. Your eyebrows raised in fury that was plain as day, leaning away from him like his presence stung just as much as his words did.
Rafayel didn’t want to admit it, but he was having way too much fun with this. The day he first showed up at the Lumiere building, he was pretty much dragged there against his will by Thomas. He had heard of it in passing and was expecting yet another high-fashion brand that had lost all its integrity in favour of stagnating and staying relevant through its namesake. When he had looked into its previous seasons, however, he began to begrudgingly appreciate the creativity of their clothing, as well as its authenticity.
Finding out that Lumiere was only five years old came as a surprise, as did the news of the meeting with the founder and head of the company herself. To say that was unconventional would be an understatement. Typically, these types of meetings consisted of him only meeting an assistant or two, but never the designers themselves. Sure, eventually he’d speak to them at a show or afterparty he was obligated to be at, but never had he met them upfront like this.
Moreover, he certainly hadn’t expected the designer to be a beautiful young woman. Rafayel had always had an eye for pretty things, so one look at you was enough for him to see that you were just that. Beautiful didn’t even cut it, actually, so much so that you could probably walk in your own fashion shows.
So you were pretty. Rafayel was aware enough of it, and although he tended to gravitate towards that, you weren’t exactly his type. He typically went for women who were generous with the smiles they gave him and found pleasure in his reputation, the type who giggled at everything he said and touched his arm to make sure their intentions were clear. As far as he was concerned, a type meant there was a pattern involved, and that would be the best way to describe the women he had gotten involved with in the past.
You were too intense for his taste, with your calculating gaze and perfectly pinned-up hair without a single strand out of place. Breathtaking in the most intimidating way. He was all for dancing through life while having a good time and breaking a few rules if he had to. You, on the other hand, looked like you had written the rules and expected everyone else to abide by them.
It was probably a good thing that he didn’t want to get with someone who was technically his boss.
But you were oh-so easy to rile up.
“Uninspired?” You hissed, and if looks could kill, the one you were giving him right now would have probably landed him six feet under. “Excuse me?”
Feisty. My, my, he was going to have a blast with this. Shrugging, he started unbuttoning the front of his shirt, and the stylists, who had been standing frozen while the two of you had a stare-off, jumped back into action. They seemed relieved that he was finally cooperating, one of them assisting him with his shirt and the other holding the one you designed open and ready to slip onto his body.
Your eyes dropped to his now exposed torso as the shirt was peeled off of him for just a second before you sliced them back up to his. That infuriating smirk remained on his face throughout.
“Need some clarification?”
So this is what Gabriette meant when she said he was a nightmare to work with.
“There is nothing uninspired about my clothing,” you snapped, unable to keep your temper from flaring up anymore. “From now on, keep any advice you have to yourself.”
Everything that had come out of his mouth so far had been unwanted, and you were starting to think he was doing it on purpose, especially with how he was watching your every reaction like a hawk. Refusing to dignify him with one, you turned and walked out of the room, emerging into the hallways of the Lumiere building. The familiarity of the decor and soothing warm lighting should have helped with your agitation, but nothing of the sort happened.
Now, you understood why Gabriette said all that stuff about not being able to handle him.
Four months of this madness before everything would go back to normal. In comparison to other things you’ve dealt with in the past, this was trivial. You were a professional, considered a damn genius for your work and the sheer levels of success you were graced with at such a young age. There was nothing you couldn’t do, even if it was dealing with a self-important model that seemingly took pleasure in irking you.
In any case, you could refrain from pushing him out of a window.
“Oh, these are great. I’m gonna have to hide them from Jeremiah.”
Xavier placed the box of chocolates you had gotten him on the coffee table in front of where he sat on the couch. You joined him there, eyes lingering on the cast on his leg that spanned from his ankle up to just below his knee. He caught you staring at it in contempt and grinned.
“Wanna sign it?”
You scoffed and leaned against the throw pillows. “You know I don’t.”
Despite your hectic schedule, you had made sure to set aside some time to visit the injured man now that he had returned from the hospital. His roommate had let you in when you arrived, since Xavier was strictly instructed to stay off his feet as much as possible. The irony of that wasn’t lost to either of you.
“Worth a shot.”
He was pretty much homebound and stuck in that cast for twelve weeks, and after that would have to go through physical therapy for a bit before he was back on his feet. It was certainly a blow to his career’s momentum, especially since it quite literally depended on his ability to walk. Eventually, he’d get back onto the runway, you knew, but you couldn’t help but feel bad.
Considering all this, he seemed to be in a good mood, smiling gently at you. Xavier, unlike you, had endless amounts of patience and had a temperament that was as angelic as he looked. He was plenty successful, and Lumiere was by no means the only fashion house he modelled for, even if it was the one he worked with the most. He had seen the ambitious girl who powered through all the doubts thrown in her face when you had taken the leap and started your brand, and had stuck by you ever since.
This was why he was your only true friend. He had seen something in you when you hadn’t quite figured yourself out just yet. For the past five years, he had stayed by your side without wavering even once, and as a result of this, he could read you like you were an open book.
“You’re upset with me.” He noted. You sighed, shaking your head.
“No, I’m upset with the circumstance.” You gestured towards his leg. “The timing is terrible.”
Xavier quirked an eyebrow in amusement. “Apologies. The next time I plan on breaking my bones, I’ll let you know in advance.”
“Please let there never be another time,” You let out a tired sigh. “Replacing you is a hassle. Get better. I need you back at work.”
“And here I thought you missed me for me.” He lightly teased.
“You know I do.” You looked at him meaningfully. “You know what I mean.”
He did. You had never been the best at being vulnerable or expressing yourself, but he had long since learnt how to read between the lines.
“I’ve heard that you managed to find someone to fill in.” He circled back to your point about replacing him and looked at you expectantly, waiting for you to fill him in on all the happenings he had missed. Things were progressing slower than you would have liked, but smoothly, nonetheless.
Except for one little thing. One person, more accurately.
If you were being honest, you didn’t particularly want to talk about the cause of all your recent headaches. Instead, you eyed his cast again, trying your best to keep the bitterness out of your voice. “Does it hurt?”
“It’s just a dull ache now,” he reached down and scratched over the plaster. “And it’s uncomfortable, but it doesn’t hurt.” Then, he gave you a pointed look. “Do you think I can’t tell when you’re changing the subject?”
Damn. You pulled your hair free from its tight ponytail, letting it cascade over your shoulders and letting your scalp breathe. It wasn’t often you let your guard down like this, but you knew you were safe with Xavier. You also knew that you needed to be as relaxed as possible if you were going to talk about your latest problem.
“I did find someone to fill in.” Your lips twisted in displeasure. “But I’m counting down the days till you return.”
“That bad?”
“Rafayel is impossible.”
Xavier cocked his head to the side. “Thats new. You generally comment on someone's incompetence.”
“Oh, he’s plenty competent.” It was the truth. You almost wished he were terrible at his job, but that wasn’t the case. The pictures for your social media had turned out amazing, and you had spent quite a lot of time looking over them, trying to find a reason to be unsatisfied, but to no avail.
A great model. An exasperating person.
Over the past two weeks, you had seen too much of him. He was constantly complaining about something, showing up late, or making snide comments and going out of his way to make everyone’s jobs harder. You had heard of models that thought they were untouchable, but Rafayel was a whole other level, a bona-fide diva.
If you weren’t so desperate, you would have already fired him. Desperation was not a feeling you enjoyed, but you didn’t want to go through the hassle of having to select someone else to fill in the void Xavier had left in his absence.
“So, what do you mean by impossible?” He propped an arm on the couch's backrest, rubbing the back of his neck.
You indulged Xavier with the details, telling him all about Rafayel’s complaints about your clothing and all the ways he had managed to drive you up the wall. You were frustrated with his behaviour, but also with yourself for being so caught up about it when you had more important things to worry about.
A charity gala you were supposed to attend next week. Prepping for Paris Fashion Week.
“Oh, Y/n. He does sound like a handful.” Xavier muttered sympathetically after you had aired out all your grievances. His admission made you feel a lot better about the situation.
“He’s more than a handful.”
“But I’ve never seen you back down from any challenge.” He remarked. “And thats basically what he’s doing. Challenging you.”
He was right, you weren’t someone who backed down easily. Your conversation drifted to other things: his time at the hospital, the terrible food they made him eat, and other such tragedies. You realised how much you truly missed having Xavier around, being able to talk to someone like this wasn’t something you were able to do often.
You made a mental note to visit him as much as possible.
“It’s a challenge,” Xavier reminded before you left, popping one of the chocolates you had gotten him in his mouth as he gave you one last piece of advice about your Rafayel problem. “Don’t let him win.”
Behind a camera, Qi Rafayel was more than tolerable.
So much about the man pissed you off. From his slow manner of speaking that tested your patience, to the lazy half-grin he seemed to perpetually have plastered on his face, you could probably list out all the things about him you disliked. He made it so easy with his incessant attempts at driving you up the wall.
Still, it was evident that even with all his antics, he was a professional.
Now, he was in archival Lumiere, one of the collections from the start of your career. There were only a few pieces of the structured jacket he wore in circulation since they were handmade. In fact, he was wearing the very piece that had appeared on the runway all those years ago. It hung from his shoulders as he posed, staring into the camera as it shuttered.
You had personally chosen this piece for this shoot, asking your stylists to work with it because you knew he wouldn’t be able to complain. It was a stunning jacket, and apparently, he agreed.
Every few seconds, he’d change the pose, each more dramatic than the last. A hand raised in a flourish near his face, back facing the camera, with him looking back at it, legs spread with his arms behind his head as he stared straight ahead through a half-lidded gaze. Watching him go through the motions like it was second nature was mesmerising.
You were starting to understand his appeal. There was a certain playfulness to his sensuality, and he knew exactly how to use it to his advantage. Something about him felt dangerous, unpredictable in an exciting way, and that quality of his was his greatest selling point.
The makeup on him was bolder this time, accentuating his siren-esque features. His hair was artfully slicked back, different from his normal look and showing off his forehead.
He was going to be on the cover of Elle, styled with Lumiere, of course. In this particular issue, they were going to include a one-on-one interview with you as well, which was why you were present at the shoot. After they were done with him, they’d be taking a couple of shots of you to include with your interview.
And it seemed they had just wrapped up.
The intense expression on his face immediately dropped, giving way to a relaxed one, his eyes travelling around the room until they met yours. The photographer thanked him for his time, but he was already moving towards you. As he approached, a staff member popped up at your side.
“Would you like some coffee, miss?”
You turned to the woman who asked you the question. “Hot, without any sugar.”
She nodded and looked at Rafayel, who had stopped by your side. “And for you, sir?”
“Cold coffee. As much whipped cream and sugar as you can manage.” He dropped a wink in with his order for good measure, and the staff faltered ever so slightly, trying to hide how charmed she was as she left to get the drinks. Once she was gone, he looked at you, his perfect pink lips twitching.
It was obvious that he wanted to say something, and it would no doubt be something that ticked you off. Still, you relented and finally asked.
“What is it?”
He studied you for a moment. “Nothing. It’s just so predictable that you take your coffee plain.”
You bristled. “There’s nothing wrong with it.”
“I never said there was,” He drawled, and then dropped the subject. “Seems like it's your turn to get behind the camera, Miss Designer. Ready?”
“It’s not my first time,” You said as the staff returned with your coffees. Grabbing yours, you took a slow sip and continued. “We had to model quite a bit in fashion school for various projects and assignments.”
It wasn’t as if you were claiming to be better than him, but you did have some experience. He hummed an idle tune, bringing the straw of his drink to his mouth and sipping it in delight.
You had to bite back a frown at the monstrosity he received, the swirls of whipped cream over milky coffee. There were even sprinkles on the damn thing. You understood his comment about your order being predictable because that being his somehow made a lot of sense. Globs of the whipped cream spilt over the side of the glass and slipped down its length, the entire thing was over the top and messy.
A lot like him, you supposed.
“Want some?” He asked cheekily, tilting the glass in your direction. He knew you were going to refuse, but the way you scrunched your nose and did such a terrible job at hiding your aversion was too entertaining to pass up on.
“I’m good.”
“Suit yourself.”
You shot Rafayel a displeased look, scanning him from top to bottom. The jacket you had so carefully handstitched was unbuttoned and open so that his abs could peak through in the pictures. You didn’t let your eyes linger there, snapping them back up to his.
“Don’t stain the jacket.” You muttered sternly, adjusting the collar of your top and centring your jewellery with one hand, the other gripping the handle of your cup. He was holding his coffee too close to himself for your liking, especially with the way the top of the whipped cream was leaning to the side, as if it was about to tip over any second now.
“Yes, we wouldn’t want that.”
The patronising lilt of his voice told you that he was trying to get a rise out of you, but you knew he liked the jacket. When he had been made to put it on, he had looked at it appreciatively and hadn’t complained even once, which felt like nothing short of a miracle. You purposely looked anywhere but him, instead opting to watch the photographer set up for your turn.
But Rafayel wasn’t someone you could just ignore. His presence was magnetic and all-consuming, and even when he was silent, he was distracting. The effect he had was strange and inexplicable, cutting through your general dislike towards him.
Thankfully, the photographer turned to you and nodded. “Whenever you’re ready, miss.”
Without sparing Rafayel another glance, you handed your coffee to the staff member closest to you and strutted over, taking your place behind the camera. You took a seat on the stool they had put out for you as a makeup artist came over to give you a touch-up and fix your hair. Focusing on the camera lens, you reminded yourself what you were here for in the first place.
But when your traitorous gaze flickered back to Rafayel, he was already looking at you.
Pages filled with sketches lay strewn out over the desk of your home office, with you hunched over them in concentration. You ran your fingers through your hair and tugged at the ends, your other hand gripping your mechanical pencil.
You may have looked like the picture of productivity, but right now, you were feeling the complete opposite. It was nearly one in the morning, and you had skipped out on dinner in favour of trying to get the conceptual designs for the spring collection done. You had been procrastinating working on them for a while now, but with only three months left before the show, the pressure was starting to set in. You usually never left things to the last minute like this – last year you had the clothes ready by this time – but for reason reason, you were having trouble with it.
All you had added to the sketches were a couple of idle lines that changed absolutely nothing. The ideas were good, very reminiscent of the typical silhouettes you tended to go for, but it felt like something was missing.
It felt uninspired.
Not that you’d ever admit that out loud. It was bad enough that you were struggling with what you were supposed to be a genius at, but to use the very words Rafayel did to explain your predicament? That was just humiliating.
Groaning, you ran a hand over your face and leaned back in your chair, your back sore from the horrible posture you had been maintaining for the past two-ish hours. You were distracted, but you couldn’t figure out why, because the only sounds around were the ticking of your clock and the drumming of your foot against the floor.
Finally, you gave up, emerging from your office and into the living room of your penthouse. All the lights were off, but the large ceiling-to-floor windows you had lit up the place just enough, casting shadows around in the moonlight. You had bought the place when Lumiere had just taken off, and you had more money than you ever had in your life. As a result, you ended up with an apartment on the top floor that the elevator opened directly into, that only you had access to and too much space for your good.
The muffled sounds of New York City in the distance kept you company as you padded to your kitchen. Your appetite was non-existent – a result of your hyper-focused state – but you knew you had to eat something.
You had been feeling unsatisfied with your sketches for a while now, and Rafayel’s comments about ensuring nothing was uninspired had hit too close to home. The last thing you wanted to do was release something you were unhappy with or considered subpar.
God knows you hated to admit that insolent man had a point, but he did.
And you had to figure out a way around it fast.
The thing you loved more about New York was how alive it felt.
You walked down the streets, sunglasses perched on your nose. It was a Saturday, and you had decided to take a day off for yourself in the hopes that the reset would grant you some motivation for the spring collection.
So far, you had had no run-ins with the paparazzi. Maybe this was one of those days when they had decided to be more subtle with their approach to getting content, but whatever it was, you were grateful for the sense of privacy it gave you. Realistically, even if it wasn’t the paparazzi, you knew someone would get a picture of you walking in and out of stores and post it online. That was fine, simply part and parcel of the life you had made for yourself.
You were enjoying the peace, the cacophony of the city melting into a song so uniquely New York. You were someone who knew how to enjoy your own company, but perhaps that stemmed from the fact that you had no one else to share it with. Sure, Xavier was there, but you knew the moment the two of you hung out for extensive periods anywhere but his or your place, or the Lumiere building itself, there would be dating rumours springing about everywhere.
Neither of you had the time nor the energy to deal with that nonsense. At least like this, you had control of the narrative, and that peace you loved so much.
Ah, yes, peace. The very thing that shattered immediately as a man ran into you.
Okay, so you hadn’t exactly been paying attention, lost in your thoughts as you walked, but words laced with annoyance immediately tumbled out of your mouth. “Hey! Watch where you’re going!”
“Jeez, lady, I’m sorry, okay– wait, Y/n?”
Oh no. You knew that voice.
You peered up at the offender, taking in the butter yellow cap that sat over his smushed hair, long lashes framing those beguiling eyes that were currently wide in shock. His hands flew to your arms, gripping them as he steadied both of you at the same time. You had about two seconds to acknowledge the way he was up in your personal space, pushing your sunglasses up to see if you were seeing things correctly.
“Rafayel?”
He swore under his breath, releasing your forearms as he jerked away, glaring. “Could you not yell it out for the entire street to hear?”
Why the hell was he annoyed? He was the one who had walked into you. If anyone had the right to glare like that, it was you. You blinked up at him in exasperation, wondering for the umpteenth time where he got the gall.
“Oh, I’m sorry,” You bit sarcastically, “My bad for being the unsuspecting soul you run into. Next time, I hope it's a pole.”
He cast you a droll look that you were sure was meant to last longer, but he seemed skittish today. This was the most casually dressed you had ever seen him, a simple sweatshirt over jeans and….were those sneakers? All you had seen him in up until this moment were shirts and clothing you designed.
Then, without warning, he grabbed your hand and pulled you along with him.
Right into a dark, dingy alley.
“What the fuck?” You blurted, more puzzled than anything else, as you yanked your hand out of his touch, holding it close to your body. “Are you high? Why on earth have you–”
“Sorry,” he breathed, holding his palm out in a manner that told you he needed a second. Not that you cared in the slightest, narrowing your eyes at him and propping a hand on your hip.
“You have two minutes to explain why you’ve dragged me with you here.”
A vibrant blush spread across the apples of his cheeks and ears. Well, at least he had the decency to look embarrassed. He interlaced his fingers behind his neck and glanced up a the sky, before looking back at you.
“I was trying to outrun the paps.”
“By running into me?”
“I didn’t plan that!” He snapped, and you had to admit that it was nice to see him be the irritated one for a change. His eyebrows knitted together, an indignant pout taking over his usual, nonchalant countenance. All things considered, it was kind of cute.
“I’m not hearing any explanations.” You reminded him impatiently, raising an eyebrow. He sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose for two whole seconds like he was contemplating whether you were worth explaining it to. You were tempted to tell him that his two minutes were swiftly passing by.
“I ran into an ex of mine.” He confessed finally. “Cassandra Corin. Cassie.”
The name was vaguely familiar– an actress, if you remembered correctly. Blonde, blue-eyed, gorgeous. You were sure you had seen some of her work in passing, and so you nodded, prompting him to continue. “I’ve heard of her.”
“Yeah. Well, we were together for like a month, but she’s a very, uh…..dramatic person, if you will. I happened to walk out of a store, and she was right outside with the press, who she had obviously called.” There wasn’t an ounce of fondness in his voice as he spoke about the woman.
“Did she plan for you to be there?” You asked, bewildered.
“I don’t think so, but she’s the type of celebrity that subscribes to the ‘all publicity is good publicity’ agenda. A pic of us together would certainly help with that.” He explained with a surprising amount of patience. “I’ve kind of been lying low as of late, so they’re hungrier than usual to get a couple of shots. I had to run out of there, and I don’t like running.”
Ah, there it was. You should have known he couldn’t go more than five minutes without complaining. Still, you could sympathise with his predicament, having had your fair share of experiences with trying to avoid the paparazzi.
“Right,” you raised an eyebrow. “I still don’t get why you’ve forced me into hiding with you.”
Rafayel mirrored the unimpressed look you were currently giving him. “It would be ten times worse if they saw us together. I was trying to be inconspicuous and you–” He paused, gesturing towards you from top to bottom, “–look anything but.”
Glancing down at your outfit, you let out an offended sound. “Excuse me? I can be inconspicuous.”
You were a vision, dressed in what only someone with too much money would consider casual: a light pink Chanel cardigan over a t-shirt and Prada loafers on your feet. You carried a Hermes Mini Kelly bag on your arm, Miu Miu shades pushed up on your head like a headband as you stared at him, poorly hiding your displeasure.
“No.” Rafayel had to fight back a smile, shaking his head. “You really can’t.”
It wasn’t a bad thing, per se. He knew a thing or two about having a commanding presence, having used his own to his advantage his entire life. Unfortunately, that meant that the two of you in one place at the same time was a recipe for disaster, especially when he was trying his damnedest to avoid it.
Your scowl deepened. “You’re insufferable, I hope you know that.”
“I’ve been told it brings out my eyes.”
Unbelievable. His ego had to be sky-high, taller than the Empire State Building. Never before had you wanted to knock someone down a couple of pegs so badly. His tone was light and airy, as if he now found the ordeal funny, and while that infuriated you, there was something melodic about his voice that you couldn’t ignore.
“You love wasting my time, don’t you?” You grumbled under your breath, wondering how on earth you managed to get yourself into such a position and, more importantly, why you were still in it. You could have easily walked out of this stupid alley already. His eyes sparkled, but before he could say anything aggravating, another sound cut through.
MROW!
You startled at the high-pitched yowl, dropping your gaze to find an orange cat sitting by your shoes. It looked fat and happy, like too many restaurants had taken pity on it and fed the little thing leftovers. Its black eyes stared up at you, as if waiting for you to give it something to eat as well, before letting out another pitiful meow.
And how did the man standing in front of you react to this?
Rafayel yelped.
Loudly. Embarrassingly, even. He practically jumped away from you and the cat, hands in front of him in a protective stance. You blinked rapidly, unsure of how to react to that.
“Are you…okay?”
“Do I look okay?” He hissed, the action seeming very catlike. “Where the hell did that thing come from?”
That thing? You looked down at the cat that had busied itself with rubbing against your ankles, weaving in between your legs before settling back down into a seated position.
“Rafayel,” you did your best to keep your voice level, speaking slowly, as if you were talking to a skittish animal. “Are you afraid of cats?”
“Nonsense. Why would I be afraid of them?” He eyed the cat with such disdain that one would think it had personally murdered one of his family members, or something along those lines. Regardless of what he had said, he looked terrified, his body language stiff and unnatural. You had never seen him like this, so used to his cavalier attitude and manner of carrying himself. He sniffed, still maintaining a safe distance. “They’re vile creatures. I just don’t want them anywhere near me.”
His mouth was twisted downward in horror, and his eyebrows were raised so high they looked like they disappeared underneath the cap he had on. It resulted in an expression so comical that you had to bite the inside of your cheek in a genuine attempt to keep a straight face, but failed miserably.
You burst into laughter.
It was so sudden that it stunned Rafayel, his lips parting in shock as the sound washed over him. It felt like someone had dumped cold water on him because your laughter was intoxicating, so much brighter than he had anticipated, not that he had. It made you look younger, so much more carefree than you did with the tight-lipped facade you typically donned. Your lips stretched upwards, the edges of your eyes crinkling as you giggled at his expense.
A rare crack in your carefully crafted exterior. Intrigued, the urge to know more about you rose out of nowhere, but he clamped it down immediately.
“You’re laughing at me.” He accused, trying to keep the indignation in his voice.
“I’m sorry!” You managed in between puffs of laughter, and now he knew something had to be very wrong with him, because he nearly told you not to apologise for it. “It’s just–it’s so adorable!” You bent down and scooped up the cat into your arms, forgetting yourself for a moment as you watched the animal snuggle against you. “How can you be scared of this?”
He thought this was ridiculous. A woman like you, dressed head to toe in designer clothing, letting a stray cat all over her. It was completely unexpected and strangely alluring.
“Put that thing down.” He narrowed his eyes at the cat as you scratched under his chin. Just as quickly as it had slipped off, he could see you compose yourself once again. You straightened out your posture, your smile fading and turning less genuine and more polite, practised. He couldn’t help but immediately miss the unfiltered version of you he had just gotten the briefest of glimpses of.
“It’s not a thing, Rafayel, it’s a cat.” You sounded amused. “Look at how harmless it is.”
You held out the cat, and he recoiled away from you, glaring at the feline. He took his cap off, shaking his head and huffing. “It’s a viscous beast. If it scratches or bites you, don’t expect me to help you.”
The quick reply he expected from your end never came, because when he met your gaze again, you were staring at him – at his head, specifically. For all he knew, you were taking note of how terrible he looked now that he had lost the cap. Those things always made his scalp sweat, but they were his best bet at hiding his face without coming off looking too suspicious.
“Your hair is curly.”
Your cadence was back to being clipped, short, but there was something different there as well. Softer.
“Wow. Ladies and gentlemen, we have with us the real-life Sherlock Holmes.” He snorted, running his fingers through his tangled locks, before offering up the explanation you were clearly expecting. “Stylists usually end up straightening it. Something about it fitting my image better.”
“I see.” You studied him for a moment longer before looking back down at the cat. You quite liked his natural hair, but then again, he could probably pull off a trash bag and somehow make it look stylish. Not that he’d ever agree to that, but the thought almost made you laugh again.
Speaking of trash bags, you looked distastefully at your surroundings. “Can we get out of here now? I’m sure the press would have moved on by now.”
“Only if you lose the cat.”
You sat behind your desk, going over some paperwork. It was the less exciting part of your job, and you always ended up letting it pile up until you had an unreasonable amount to get through all at once. Most of your employees had gone home already, and you had sent Simone on her way as well.
The bright light of your office made your eyes hurt after the long day you had had, and you pressed your palms against them, sighing deeply.
“Wow. Do you just live here?”
The hell? You glanced up to see Rafayel standing by the door, leaning against the doorway with his arms folded, looking right at you. The sight of him made something in the pit of your stomach turn.
Ever since the incident with the cat from a week ago, being around him no longer boiled your blood as much as it once did. He had been going out of his way to interact with you a lot more, and you hadn’t done anything to discourage it. Make no mistake, he still got on your nerves, but you tolerated him for some reason, even when he got too casual with you.
Perhaps you had been a little too lenient.
“What are you doing here?” You demanded, pushing the paperwork to the side and narrowing your eyes at him. He pushed off the wall and walked over to your desk, plopping down in the seat across from you without any invitation to do so.
“I could ask you the same question. I had a meeting with Andrew about rehearsals for fashion week, but I left my jacket behind, so I came back for it. Your office is the only one with the light still on, and my curiosity won. Your turn to tell me why you’re still here since it's–” he glanced down at the Rolex on his wrist. “ –Nine p.m.”
You waved your hand over the papers in front of you. “Work.”
“But you’re the only one here. Do you do this often?” He frowned, and if you paid close attention, his voice had a note of disapproval. That made sense, he seemed like the type of person to abhor working even a second overtime. Unfortunately, you were well-versed in it.
“Most days, yes.”
He blinked. “Okay, no. Get your things. We’re leaving.”
Definitely too lenient. “We are?”
“Yep, come on. You can do….whatever you’re doing now tomorrow.” He got to his feet and stared at you expectantly, evidently waiting for you to follow suit. “I don’t think you know what a break is, but you’re going to take one right now.”
Wow. Truly, the man had unprecedented levels of entitlement to try and boss you around when technically, you were his boss. Scoffing under your breath, your defiant gaze met his stubborn one.
“I’m busy.”
“You’ll be just as busy tomorrow.”
This was ridiculous. No one dared to speak to you so brazenly, and yet there he was, doing just that if there wouldn’t be a single consequence. What you should have done was tell him to piss off and leave you alone so you finish your work like you had set out to do.
So why on earth did you grab your coat and follow him out of your office instead?
“Is this another instance of you wasting my time, Rafayel?” You asked as you approached his car in the parking lot. You still weren’t sure what possessed you to actually follow him, but it was too late to back out of it now. A smirk teased his lips.
“Maybe.” His response resulted in you grumbling under your breath, and he laughed, fishing his keys out of his pocket and pressing a button to unlock his sleek, black Mercedes. He slid into the drivers seat and cocked his head in your direction. “Get in.”
God help you, because for some reason, you complied. “Are you going to tell me where you’re taking me?” You settled in the passenger seat, taking in the interior, because, of course, the seats were covered in bright red leather. It was as unashamedly flashy as he was in every sense of the word.
“It’s a surprise.”
“I don’t like surprises.”
Rafayel started the car, smoothly pulling out of the parking lot and onto the road. With one hand on the gear stick and the other on the steering wheel, the scene of him driving was ridiculously attractive for something so normal. You told yourself it was just because he was a conventionally attractive person. “Of course, you don’t. Relax, Miss Designer, don’t you ever loosen up?”
“Not if I can help it.”
“I figured. You look like the type to not know the meaning of fun” And clearly, he was a stranger to the concept of holding his tongue. One glance at the offended look on your face only made him want to tease you even more. Not too long ago, he was convinced the only expressions you were capable of were scowls and glares, but he had recently learned that you had an entire arsenal of them. Your nose would scrunch when you were disgusted, your lips would part when you were caught off guard, and if something happened to amuse you, you wouldn’t smile immediately. Instead, the smile would start in your eyes, and oftentimes stay there.
It felt like he was slowly but surely unlocking new sides to you, and he wanted nothing more than to unravel all of them. Most of all, he wanted to figure out how to get that pretty laugh out of you once more.
For no reason in particular. He was just a naturally curious person.
“Look,” he reasoned with you. “You’re gonna have to trust me on this one, alright? It’s not far off and it's worth it.”
“...Fine.” You finally relented, relaxing just a little as you leaned back in the passenger seat and busied yourself by looking out of the window as he drove. Minutes later, he pulled up by a modern-looking structure that consisted of only a ground floor. Once he parked, he cleared his throat.
“Ready?”
“I don’t know what I’m supposed to be ready for,” you said dryly, undoing your seatbelt and getting out of the car. He grinned like he had won the lottery.
“That’s what makes it even better.” Faulty logic and all, he led you to the entrance of the building and opened the door, sauntering inside like he owned the place. You lingered outside, noting how all the lights were off, and it clearly looked like it was closed.
You couldn’t not be suspicious. “Are we trespassing?”
“Nah. Trespassing would mean we’re here without permission.” Rafayel gestured for you to follow him into the darkness, the moonlight filtering in through the door and letting you see just enough of him to not lose your bearings. He reached out and felt around the wall before humming triumphantly and flipping a switch. “There we go. Stop thinking so much and trust me, yeah?”
Squinting to readjust your eyesight to the now-bright lighting, you were left even more dumbfounded than before. “We’re in an….art gallery?”
White walls with frames hanging on them surrounded you, each with little plaques under the art pieces with the artist's information. Some of the walls were constructed in the centre of the room for people to walk around as they inspected the art. There didn’t seem to be any sort of theme with the current display, from what you could tell.
“Again, with those deduction skills,” he teased, and strangely enough, you didn’t want to slap him for it. “I’ll have you know that art can be very therapeutic. Great for taking a break from working”
It wasn’t every day you found yourself spontaneously being dragged to an art gallery, and having company was something even rarer. You had long since made peace with your lifestyle and its lonesome nature, but you were admittedly enjoying his presence, even if it was a little too chaotic for your liking.
“I’m pretty sure thats to do with creating it.” You almost smiled when he glared at you for your rebuttal. Huffing, he turned and walked further into the gallery, leaving you with no choice but to follow along. You were well aware that you were encouraging his crazy behaviour, but it wasn’t like you could stop now.
So you picked up your pace, pulling your coat around yourself tighter as you took in the different art pieces. Portraits, landscapes and some abstract pieces, the different art styles captivated you. You had always had an affinity for art, since fashion was so intrinsically intertwined with it.
Lost in your thoughts, you almost walked right into his back. Fortunately, he turned around at the perfect moment and reached out, hand on your shoulder. The contact snapped you out of it, and you looked up at him only to find an apprehensive look in his eyes. That didn’t make much sense though, considering how cocky and self-assured he was.
Raising your eyebrows in silent question, he sighed and moved out of your line of sight, revealing a wall.
Your eyes widened, all the air in your lungs leaving you at once.
The wall was covered in artwork of the sea. Every single piece was extremely detailed, some moody with their depictions of storms and deadly waves and others painting a picture of the sea at its calmest.
It was stunning, and even that word felt like an understatement. It simply did not do what you were currently looking at justice. The artist had captured the terrifying beauty of the sea so perfectly that looking at it stirred something akin to inspiration inside of you.
To you, the seafom resembled lace. The wheels in your head began to turn as more comparisons burst forth – the sand could be chiffon, and the waves themselves draped like silk. It had been so long since you had felt creativity like this that all you could do was stare, letting your skills take over and work through all the ideas that rushed forth, feeling overwhelmed and delighted all at once.
A singular plaque on the wall sat low and hidden away, tucked under all the art. You crouched down slightly, eager to know the person who had inspired you once more.
Anonymous.
You blinked, rising to your full height as you looked back at the art, dazed. “It’s beautiful.”
“Thank you.”
You spun around, unable to stop yourself from gaping at him. His stance was relaxed, hands in his pockets, and his eyes trained on the artwork. At first, you had thought you had misheard him, but the tone of his voice and the way he was looking at the paintings with what could only be described as pride told you otherwise.
“You made these?”
Your disbelief was unmistakable, and it stung a little. He chuckled at the incredulity in your voice as you asked the question, nodding slowly. “Surprised?”
“Very, yes.” You glanced between the art and him. “Why have you shown me this, Rafayel?”
“You don’t think very much of me,” It was a statement, rather than a question. He said it with a small simper, but it was unlike the one he usually wore. It was genuine, if not a little sad, no traces of that signature smirk of his as he met your eyes now.
“You’ve never given me a reason to.”
“Well, there you go. Here’s your reason.” His voice was oddly quiet. “To think of me better, that is.”
You truly didn’t know what to make of that. Only one question remained in your mind as you eyed the artist's plaque that held no information about the man beside you. “Why have you chosen to be anonymous? Your work is wonderful.”
Pride flickered to life in his eyes once more, like your compliment meant something. “Because this way, people will appreciate my art for what it is, without my affiliation. I’m not an idiot, Y/n, I know the entire world knows who I am. The moment they find out I’m the one who painted these, it won’t just be about the art anymore. It’ll be about me. Sure, it would get a lot more attention than it does here, sitting in the back of a barely known art gallery, but at least whatever attention it does get is real.”
Oh.
Rafayel was shallow, with a silver tongue he didn’t know how to control. He infuriated you to no end and thought much too highly of himself for his own good. He was vain, arrogant, and about a dozen other things that you thought of as faults.
But he was so much more. As of late, you were beginning to see who he was past all of that. You saw the man who was irrationally afraid of cats and, for some reason, went out of his way to talk to you. You saw the artist behind the model, curls and all. The softer smiles and perceptiveness that you would have never attributed to him before.
“I won’t say this often, so don’t get used to it.” You said slowly, glancing back at him. “But you were right, I did need a break. Thank you for this.”
He and you weren’t so different. Both of you were artists in your own right, seeking control over the art you created. The only difference was that he held that control by distancing himself from his work, whereas you were the very essence of yourself. Both of you had pride that clashed and egos that didn’t take kindly to bruising.
You no longer knew what to make of Qi Rafayel. That should have scared you.
But when he flashed you a boyish grin at your admittance to him being right, you realised that it didn’t.
It was past ten when Rafayel dropped you back home.
You made a beeline for your home office, forgetting to take off your shoes in your frenzied state. Within minutes, you were hunched over new, fresh pieces of paper, your old sketches discarded in a trash can and forgotten about. Your pencil flew over the pages as you frantically began to draw out new designs, eager to capture the ideas that had been swirling around in your head the moment you saw those paintings.
Inspiration was powerful, but fleeting. For the next two hours, you poured everything out onto those pages, and it felt like you were submerged underwater, unable to come up for air until you were finished. Your newest collection came to fruition that night, born from an unexpected muse.
When you were done and the sound of waves in your mind receded, you were left with the sounds of the city and a sense of tired satisfaction.
Jimmy Choo's were meant to be savoured. They were the type of shoes that people glided in, they made the simple act of walking an experience to remember.
They were not meant for the furious strides of one very livid fashion designer.
“Andrew!” Your model's manager flinched at the sharpness in your voice as you addressed him. “Why on earth are they not walking yet?”
“There’s just been a small delay–”
“I am in no mood for excuses.” You snapped, sweeping your gaze over the lineup of models standing ready but doing absolutely nothing. “Honestly, I’m starting to think I’m surrounded by imbeciles. First, I find out that the hems of an entire rack of shirts have been messed up and have to spend my entire morning explaining how to fix that problem to people who apparently don’t know how to do their jobs. Then I come here to check on how rehearsal is going, only to see that it hasn’t even begun.”
Andrew scrambled to appease you. “We’re starting right away!”
With that strangled declaration, he jumped into action, snapping his fingers in the direction of the models. “All of you! Behind the curtain, stat! In order, I want all of you walking out like you will for the show, understood? Chop Chop!”
Rafayel watched you from the end of the line, moving along with it until he was positioned correctly. This was the first rehearsal for the Paris Fashion Week show that was rapidly approaching, with only about two months left before the final day. Today, all that was taking place were run-throughs of the walks and setting the order of the models walking. His position was confirmed since the start, he would be the last one to walk, the much-anticipated closer of the show.
He noticed your tense shoulders, the way your lips were pressed together in a thin, displeased line. The first model walked out, and you studied her like a hawk, no doubt mentally filing away all your criticisms. Imposing as ever, your bad mood was evident.
For some crazy reason, he wanted to help alleviate it. He had seen past this untouchable facade you put up and had peeked through the cracks in your walls a couple of times now, when your pink lips curled upward just slightly, and your eyes glimmered a little brighter than usual. When you were just yourself, instead of the persona you played to stay at the top.
It seemed to him that you didn’t let anyone see that side of you. Instead, you did everything in your power to avoid letting it show.
What a lonely existence that must have been.
He walked out onto the practice runway when it was his turn, one foot in front of the other as he glided smoothly, focusing on a spot on the wall directly in front of him. It was the same old routine he had practised and perfected for years now.
When he reached the end, he shifted his weight from one foot to the other before turning around. His view shifted to you, and he let it linger, savouring the way you stared at him. For a split second, he was sure your expression softened, but just as quickly, that softness vanished. He continued his walk until he disappeared behind the curtain once more.
Another run-through with Andrew yelling out the changes he wanted each model to make, and then they were all afforded a generous ten-minute break. Rafeyel did not know why he found himself gravitating towards where you stood.
“Shouldn’t you be with the rest of the models?” You raised an eyebrow as he approached you, trying your best to sound as indifferent as possible. That wasn’t something you typically had trouble with, but now it felt a little harder to do when faced with the intensity of his attention.
“When have I ever done anything I was supposed to?”
You exhaled, shaking your head bemusedly. “Don’t sound so proud of it.”
“You look stressed.” Rafayel's voice was low and thoughtful, almost as if he actually cared. You snuffed out that thought. He had been on your mind a dangerous amount as of late, but there was a perfectly rational explanation for that: he had inspired you.
“I’m always stressed. I’ve been on my feet all day.” You rubbed the spot between your eyebrows with your index and middle finger, smoothening out the frown that had formed.
“Have you learnt nothing from being around me? What happened to taking breaks?” He groaned, but it was more theatrical than genuinely perturbed. “Or do you need me around to make sure you take them?”
Absolutely not. Having Rafayel around was proving to be detrimental to your sanity for reasons entirely different to those expected. You tilted your head towards the other models and waved your hand in their general direction. “What I need you to do is your job, not loiter around here.”
He laughed like you had told the world's funniest joke, pinning you in place with a knowing look. “Oh, just admit it already. I’m the most entertainment you’ve had in a while. You love being around me, even if you don’t want to admit it.
You pursed your lips. “The jury’s still out on that one.”
“Is it, though?” His habit of incessantly questioning you was getting old, but that addictive drawl of his voice pulled you right back in. “You’re smiling.”
To your mild dismay, you realised he was right. Now that he pointed it out, you could feel how the apples of your cheeks were raised with the upward curve of the sides of your mouth. Scoffing, you tried your best to erase any evidence of the sort as you turned away, but to no avail.
“Your break is over, you can stop pestering me now.” But your tone was lighter than it had been all day. He rolled his eyes good-naturedly and walked off, joining the group of models who were gearing up to practice their walks once more. As the distance between the two of you increased, you realised with a start that you unfortunately did quite like being around him.
But there wasn’t a rule that said you had to admit to such a thing. Rafayel was like a breath of fresh air after almost drowning, or a lagoon in the middle of a desert. Unpredictable and against everything you knew to be true about life, and yet…
There was something undeniably charged between the two of you, from the way he sought you out and how you let him linger. Neither of you dared to acknowledge this, however, keeping your distance literally and figuratively.
As he paraded down the runway once again with the elegance of a swan but the flamboyance of a peacock, you couldn’t help but wonder if it was that predictability and control you so desperately clung to that held you back. The second you let yourself go for just a little while, you found the inspiration you had been so desperately waiting for.
The past week had you being more productive than you had in months, your designs for fashion week already in production. With how everything was going, the collection for the runway would be ready by next week, which would finally put everything back on track. You had to constantly check in to ensure things were going exactly how you wanted them to, but for the first time in a long time, it felt like you could let go of your tight hold and just breathe.
And if a certain pretty boy was plaguing your thoughts, well, that was no one else's business.
Maybe he was rubbing off on you.
“This way.” You turned the corner into yet another hallway, causing Rafayel to wonder just how big the Lumiere building was. You had summoned him there out of the blue, giving him no explanation as to why you wanted him there and only reminding him to be on time. The request was definitely unlike your usual self, more aligned with his impulsive nature, but he couldn’t bring himself to refuse.
And so there he was, following you through the endless corridors. When he had asked why he was there, all he received was an uncharacteristically mischievous look in your eyes and nothing more. When he probed for answers, you only said one thing: “I thought you liked surprises.”
Never in a million years had he expected you, of all people, to throw his words back in his face. You had successfully piqued his curiosity, and he trailed behind you now, eager to see what you had in store.
Finally, you stopped in front of a door and brought out a pair of keys. “Currently, only select individuals have access to this room,” you informed him as you unlocked it, before pausing and looking at him. “You’ll be the first and only person who isn’t from Lumiere itself to witness what I’m about to show you. It goes without saying that it’s a secret for now.”
“I feel like the Sherlock joke has gone a little too far,” he muttered dryly. “You have a thing for suspense now.”
Your lips twitched, and you pushed the door open, letting him enter first. When he did, he froze in place, jaw falling open as he made sense of what he was looking at.
Mannequins filled the room, the same number as the number of models there were for the fashion week show. Each form had complete outfits on, and each one was exquisite in ways he couldn’t properly describe the way it deserved. Navy blue satin gowns with hand-stitched embroidery and ivory-coloured lace hems, intricate golden beading on cream corset tops, deep turquoise shirts made of the finest silk, and skirts that looked like waterfalls, layered with intent, short in the front and long in the back. Netted tops and coats with the most gorgeous pearl detailing he had ever seen, flowy chiffon shirts that were artfully tucked into white pants – every piece was thoughtfully designed and lovingly put together.
Rafayel was rendered completely speechless.
“Introducing Lumiere’s 20[XX] Spring Collection.” You announced, stepping beside him and regarding your work with pride. Your hands were tucked behind your back, your stance bashful, but he could tell you were anything but. You knew what your work was worth, and you weren’t shy about it.
He wasn’t the type of person who was used to having nothing to say – quite the opposite – but there he was, rooted to the spot in awe as you walked over to one of the mannequins and slightly adjusted the skirt on it. The simple action told him just how much each piece meant to you, how well you knew them. He intimately understood the familiarity an artist had with their work, but seeing that mirrored in you was something else entirely.
“Y/n,” he breathed out, “This is…”
“I’m hoping you’re going to say ‘impressive.’ It might be a little too late to walk for Chanel now.” There you were again, throwing his own words back in his face, and he couldn’t, for the life of him, figure out why he liked it so much. It was so completely unlike you.
“It’s more than impressive, you’ve outdone yourself.” He said, finally managing to break out of the reverie he had found himself in.
“Is that so?” You looked over your shoulder back at him, the slightest of smiles teasing your lips. “You haven’t even seen what you’re going to wear yet.”
Without so much as another glance in his direction, you gracefully weaved through the mannequins to the back of the room. It was all he could do to follow along, doing his utmost best not to knock anything over as he gaped. As he passed each outfit up close, details he hadn't seen before revealed themselves, and he had to resist reaching out to touch.
And in the back, on the final mannequin, was the garment that took his breath away.
A shirt made from blood red organza silk that had an iridescent quality to it, shifting colours when the light hit it from different angles. From red to blue to violet, Rafayel found himself entranced by its ever-changing nature, eyeing the pale blue pearl details on the collar with deep appreciation. It was completely sheer, with subtle winding patterns stitched into the delicate fabric that resembled coral.
“I hand-stitched this one myself, and in three weeks, you’ll be the one wearing it to close my show.” You said softly, trailing your fingers over the sleeve with care. You toyed with the end of it, watching how his eyes went wide and lips parted in something close to reverence.
“It’s phenomenal. All of it is.” He couldn’t tear his eyes away from it, taking a step closer to you and the mannequin. “It’s so different from anything I’ve seen, especially from you.”
“Yeah, well, I realised that I didn’t just want to put out a collection that meant nothing.” It was true, the very thing that had driven you as you had put the collection around you together. “Fashion is more than just clothing. It’s an art form. It’s supposed to evoke a feeling, to be able to tell a story and have its own identity.”
The devotion you possessed towards your work was admirable, it was so plainly obvious that this was exactly what you were meant to do. Utterly enamoured, he spoke, “It’s gonna be one hell of a show.”
The sincerity in his voice caught you off guard. You had been around him long enough to know he wasn’t someone who took anything too seriously, but the earnest look he was giving you that he definitely took this – and by extension, you – very seriously.
“Good, but I don’t want to just want to put on any show. I want it to be a performance.” You aimed to leave an impact, for people to leave the show and think about the experience for weeks, maybe even months, after. Rafayel realised that you were trusting him with enabling that by divulging your vision to him.
“Then it’s an honour to be one of your performers.”
That earned him a proper smile, not just the hint of one. It was small but mighty, starting in your eyes like your smiles always did, but this one was the rare type that reached your mouth and lit up your features. He found himself feeling winded for the second time in the past ten minutes, but this time it was because of you and not the clothing. At least he could explain the latter option.
“In that case, what do you think about a more permanent position at Lumiere?”
It wasn’t like this was the first time he had been offered this, but shock infiltrated his system anyway. “Like Xavier Shen?”
You nodded. “Like Xavier. A brand ambassador.” Waving a hand around, you continued, “You fit with Lumiere’s image and the vision I have for my brand, so I believe you won’t disappoint. I don’t say that lightly, or to every model. Of course, I’m not forcing anything on you, and you can take your time to think about it.”
Such plainly stated praise from the impossible-to-please Y/n L/n was practically unheard of, but there you were, staring at him with finality in your eyes. Arms folded over your chest, hair pinned up in that perfect bun as always and stiletto-clad feet, you were the same as always and yet he couldn’t seem to perceive you as he had in the past.
Thomas would be overjoyed at him finally taking something seriously. His aunt would certainly approve of the collaboration, and he’d be walking for a fashion house he actually cared about. It seemed perfect.
“I don’t need time.” Rafayel looked at the shirt that he would soon be wearing. “You’ve got yourself a new brand ambassador.”
The airhostess led you to your seat in first class, dragging your carry-on suitcase behind her. Once your bag was in the overhead cabin and you were settled in your seat, she returned a couple of minutes later with the drinks menu and a cart, patiently waiting for your order. You leaned back in the plush seat and scanned over the available options.
“A glass of Dom Pérignon, please.”
God knows, you’d need the drink. Alcohol now acquired, you took a leisurely sip and tried your best to relax, but that was easier said than done. Boarding was still going on, and in about half an hour, you’d be airborne. The thought caused your stomach to churn.
To say you weren’t a fan of flying would be an understatement. Sure, you had to do it a lot for work and should’ve probably been used to it by now, but that wasn’t the case at all. Oftentimes, you found yourself clutching at the armrests for dear life during take-off, which, in your opinion, was the worst bit, and remained on edge throughout the flight. Even the comfort of first class didn’t help very much.
When you landed in Paris, there would be exactly ten days before the start of Fashion Week. You would be at your busiest since NYFW, and the added stress of anticipating that only added to your jittery state. Sighing deeply, you closed your eyes for a moment to ground yourself, index and middle finger rubbing against your temple.
“Well, hello there, neighbour. Fancy seeing you here.”
Your eyes flew open, settling on the culprit of the voice.
Rafayel stood in the booth right next to yours, looking the opposite of how you felt, completely at ease in this setting.
“Why are you here?”
He raised an eyebrow. “The same as you, I presume, to get to Paris. Did you expect me to take a boat or something?” And then, as if he owned the place (which was his usual way of carrying himself), he rested his arms over the walls of your small enclosure, chin propped in his palm. “I guess Thomas booked the same flight as yours.”
“It certainly seems that way. Are you going to bother me the entire flight?” You felt mildly embarrassed at how you had blurted out the question so disgracefully.
“As much as I possibly can, yes.” He beamed like he had delivered the best news of your life. “Isn't it lucky our seats are so close?”
“Such a blessing,” You deadpanned, needing another drink despite your current one not being anywhere close to finished. The rest of the first class was completely empty, which meant you were stuck with his relentless pestering, whether you liked it or not, confined to the same space as him for the next seven and a half hours.
Brilliant.
Rafayel snorted. “I’m going to pretend that you meant that.” The airhostess appeared once again with her cart, and he opted for whiskey, neat and on the rocks. Once he had obtained his drink, he turned to you and held his glass out. “Cheers.”
You were too busy giving him an unimpressed look to remember your flying anxiety, until one of the airhostesses stepped into the first class section and announced that the takeoff would be soon. Immediately, you put your drink in its holder and frantically gripped the armrest as she went through the motions of the safety debrief. Rafayel sat down in his own seat, but looked over at you in amusement.
“You seriously pay attention to these things?”
“What does it look like?”
“I mean, haven’t you been on enough flights to know the basics by now?” He fastened his seatbelt as the safety instructions were done, and the lights dimmed, the plane getting ready for take-off.
“It doesn’t hurt to be reminded.” You muttered under your breath, but the cadence of your voice had taken a shaky turn, which was a far cry from its usual firm, clipped nature. Rafayel shot you an inquisitive look before noticing the death grip you had on the armrest and the tense set of your shoulders.
Whatever teasing comment that lay on the tip of his tongue dissolved as he dropped his voice. “Hey. Are you okay?”
“I’m fine.”
“That was the most unconvincing ‘I’m fine’ I’ve ever heard.” He tilted his head and studied you for a moment. “You’re pale.”
The plane began to pick up speed, causing you to dig your manicured nails into the leather of the armrest and stare straight ahead at the blank screen in front of you. Usually, you always started a movie by now to distract yourself from your fear, but this time, you had paid so much attention to Rafayel that you had forgotten your routine when it came to flying.
But your silence told Rafayel everything he needed to know. “Hey. Look at me.”
“Rafayel, I am in no mood for your–”
“Tell me about the Spring Collection.”
You whipped your head to him, considerably confused by the sudden change of topic. “What? Why? You’ve seen the entire thing upfront.”
He sighed theatrically and gave you a pointed look. “Just do it, will you?”
This bizarre man. You didn’t think you’d ever be able to understand how his brain worked. Still, if there was one thing you allowed yourself to brag about, it was your work. Crossing your legs, you tried your best to relax in your seat.
“It’s inspired by the sea, which actually, you have yourself to thank for,” you said, getting straight to the point without beating around the bush.
Rafayel’s lips parted. “I do?”
“Your art.” You clarified, giving him a meaningful look. “It really struck a chord in me. One look at it and I knew exactly what I wanted to do for the collection, which was surprising considering I had been going through a bit of a creative rut.” You recalled how your creativity had come rushing back to you all at once, the moment you set your eyes on his paintings.
He told himself he’d dissect the warm feeling in his gut later, a smug look taking over his features. “I am nothing if not inspiring.”
You scoffed under your breath, shaking your head in disbelief at his conceitedness and wondering why-oh-why you found it somewhat endearing now. “Don’t let it get to your head.”
“Too late.” A slow, languid smirk stretched out on his lips as he took a sip of his whiskey, the amber liquid swirling around in his glass. Your eyes betrayed you, dropping to his mouth and watching as his tongue darted out to lick his lips. “I’m gonna brag about this forever. Where is the show going to be held?”
“In a cathedral.” You averted your gaze, feeling heat creep up your neck and onto the apples of your cheeks. Clearing your throat, you sipped your champagne in an attempt to soothe your ruffled feathers, hoping it would cool you down and keep your face from flushing.
What the fuck was wrong with you?
“A cathedral, huh? You’re really going all out.” He rubbed his chin in thought. “It’s gonna have a very operatic feel to it.”
“That’s exactly what I’m going for,” you admitted, pleasantly surprised that he had grasped exactly what you wanted to put across without you going in depth at all. It was as if he had reached into your mind and taken the words out of your mouth. Even Xavier wasn’t this perceptive.
Now, why on earth were you comparing him to Xavier? This was madness. Something was obviously very wrong with you since your train of thought had never been this outlandish before. You couldn’t make sense of it at all, simply because you had never been subjected to feeling this way before. Why was there a fluttery sensation in the pits of your stomach? What was this warmth that seemed to simmer underneath the expanse of your skin every time he looked at you?
Oh my god. Were you flustered by Qi Rafayel?
As that absolutely insane possibility made itself known, the lights in the cabin flickered back on, pulling you out of your thoughts and back to reality. Rafayel was already watching you, amused, taking another leisurely sip of his drink and blissfully unaware of your inner turmoil. Blinking rapidly, you realised that you were already airborne and had made it through take-off without a hitch.
And that was when it hit you: all this talk about the collection and the show had been for your benefit. The model had been distracting you on purpose, somehow picking up on your fear. His presence, one that you had previously considered as bothersome, had been the very thing to calm you down.
You didn’t know what to say.
“Now then,” he picked up the bowlful of salted nuts one of the airhostesses had gotten upon his request, eyes twinkling as he popped a handful into his mouth. “Tell me more.”
Day one of Paris Fashion Week was a whirlwind.
You had been invited to watch two shows that day, the first of which was a Marc Jacobs runway show. The second show was for Dubois Designs, after which Gabriette had made sure to personally meet you and insist that you attend the afterparty as well. The new addition to your schedule gave you less than an hour to get ready for the aforementioned party, since right before it, you had a talk and presentation with Anna Wintour.
Between the glitz and glamour and one too many coffees, it was only the first day, and you had been thrust right back into the chaos you so loved and thrived in.
Dubois Designs was huge in Paris, being the home city of the brand and the founder. Even with your conditional friendship with Gabriette, you could admit that her show had been incredible. The exaggerated silhouettes had been eye-catching, and the craftsmanship was truly remarkable.
You descended the stairs and found yourself in a large, crowded basement. The party itself was in full swing, moody red lighting bathing the entire room while simultaneously keeping it dark. It fit the edgier aesthetic that Dubois Designs tended to lean towards, despite being a luxury fashion house. A DJ was tucked into a corner, mixing the electronic music as the backdrop for people to drink and dance to their heart's content.
Familiar faces stopped and greeted you as you made your way to the bar, knowing you’d definitely need a drink to enjoy all this. The darkness made it a little harder to recognise people, but most of them were well-known faces in the industry, from models to actors and even some well-known influencers. Having to be social at almost midnight was not something you particularly enjoyed, but it was the start of fashion week, and your adrenaline was at an all-time high, making all of this much more tolerable than usual.
Getting yourself a gin and tonic, you began consuming it at a pace that would ensure you had a pleasant buzz in about twenty minutes. The energy around you was palpable, the ebb and flow of it was surprisingly infectious, forcing you to subconsciously loosen up.
“Y/n! You made it!”
The French accent gave her away before she even stepped into your line of sight. Gabriette appeared seemingly out of nowhere, throwing her arms around you and giving you air kisses on both cheeks. You returned the gesture, tentatively returning her hug before pulling away.
“Of course I did. How could I ever refuse a personal invite from you?” You smiled the commercial smile you practised for events such as these. “After a show like that, I knew the afterparty would be just as spectacular.”
It was obvious that she was still riding off the high that the success of her show had brought, but you couldn’t blame her. She laughed, the sound a tad bit too shrill, “You are too kind. I have people to meet, but please, enjoy yourself.”
And with another exaggerated air kiss, she left you to your own devices, continuing on her mission of making rounds through the party. Events like these always tended to be impersonal, interactions were short and fleeting, and the more connections you managed to make in one night, the better. The industry was filled with young people looking to connect, and this was the best way to do so.
You finished your drink while chatting with the creative director of Louis Vuitton, who expressed their excitement for your upcoming show. As you engaged in conversation, you observed the scenes going on all around you, a sense of wistfulness taking over you. There was a point in your life when you thought you’d never belong in this world, back then when it felt too out of reach for a young aspirant such as yourself.
As your eyes swept across the room, they snagged on a familiar pair staring right back at you.
Rafayel cocked his head to the side when he caught your eye, immediately excusing himself from the conversation he had been having and making his way over. Unsure of what compelled you to do the same, you slipped through the crowd until you met him halfway.
“I did not think you would be here,” you admitted once within earshot. You hadn’t seen him for the past two days, with him being busy with photoshoots and other such events, his manager had added to his itinerary at the last minute (to his dismay).
Now that he was before you, his gaze dropped, slowly dragging over your figure from bottom to top like he was committing it to memory. The act sent inexplicable shivers up your spine, and you gripped your glass to show yourself from physically reacting, but that was harder said than done.
He wore a dark red shirt that had shimmery lilies embroidered across it, mostly unbuttoned to expose the smooth skin of his chest and torso. With his hair slightly dishevelled in a way that made him seem effortlessly attractive and the dark lighting casting sharp shadows over his face that brought out the intensity in his typically soft visage, he was truly something to behold.
Devilishly handsome, temptation incarnate.
“Gabriette invited me.” He waved his hand dismissively as he explained, like he didn’t really care. “Something about nurturing goodwill.”
“She’s all about that, isn’t she?” You muttered dryly. The loud music almost made your quip inaudible, but he caught on anyway, delighted at the hint of the sassy nature you possessed under all that seriousness.
“I didn’t think this was your scene.”
You wore a blue drop waist Lumiere mini dress and Isabel Marant fringe boots on your feet. Signature Vivienne Westwood earrings dangled from your ears, glinting through your styled hair whenever the light caught them. The entire outfit was in stark contrast to what he was used to seeing you in, devoid of any formality and primness.
“It’s not, but you know.” A playful smirk adorned your lips as you swayed to the music, looking so much more relaxed than normal. “Goodwill and all.”
God, he could get addicted to that. “Shame, you secretly being a party girl would have made you even more interesting.”
“Am I not interesting enough for you?” Your voice teetered on the edge of mockery with the question, shifting your weight from one foot to the other and staring up at him defiantly.
“Trust me, Y/n, you have no idea just how interesting I think you are.” He said smoothly, plucking your drink out of your hand and placing it off to the side, but before you could reprimand him for doing so, his hand cupped your elbow gently and pulled you along with him.
“Dance with me.”
It wasn’t a request, but rather a statement he was annoyingly sure you would comply with. You supposed you didn’t have much of a say in the matter with how he was basically dragging you with him, but it had been a while since you found yourself able to be properly irritated with him.
Even in the dim lighting, you were acutely aware of how people watched the two of you, eyes following your every movement, but you knew who they were actually looking at. You might have been Y/n L/n, the fashion industry's darling, but he was Qi Rafayel. You didn’t live under a rock; you knew of his reputation as the life of the party, but now you could see that play out in real time. A party wasn’t a good one without him. In all honesty, that was probably the reason Gabriette invited him in the first place.
Rafayel was made for the spotlight. Wickedly charming with levels of confidence that some would spend their entire life chasing, he basked in the attention being thrown his way like it was a form of currency. Perhaps it was, in a sense, what they exchanged to be able to admire such an alluring soul in his element.
The entire room watched him, but Rafayel? His eyes were locked on you.
You felt your mouth go dry, and a hammering began within the confines of your ribcage, slow at first but building up to a crescendo. His hands slipped from your elbows down to your waist, holding you gingerly. Everyone begged for even a speck of his attention, but all of his was on you, and the effect was downright dizzying.
“You look beautiful.”
“Thank you.”
How proper of you. Mirth danced about in his expression as he pulled you just a tad closer, knowing fully well he was pushing your limits. “Aren’t you going to pay the compliment back?”
“You’re a world-famous model, Rafayel. I harshly think you need me telling you how good you look.” You looked over his shoulder, unable to hold any eye contact with him.
“No,” he mused, dipping his head until his mouth was just by your ear. “But you could tell me how hot I am.”
Every syllable dripped with that delicious, insufferable cockiness you desperately wished you still loathed. You could feel the warmth of his breath tickle the skin of your neck, and you turned your head until you were face to face with each other, so painfully close it felt illegal.
One thing was becoming quickly apparent to you, and that was that whatever you felt towards Rafayel wasn’t the plain old, run-of-the-mill attraction. That was just one aspect of it, especially in this moment, running through the charged air between the two of you like an electric current. The tension was almost tangible, like a live wire you were tempted to wrap your fingers around and tug.
But there was so much more. His willingness to share his art with you, even though he kept it a secret from the rest of the world. Distracting you on the plane. Challenging you to be better, even when you hated how he went about it. You, turning him into your muse, letting him inspire both you and your work.
You had disliked him because he was out of your realm of control. He wasn’t someone you could put a leash on and expect to follow every order; no, he did things his way and forced you to see the good in it. Now, however, you realised that you didn’t want to try and control him. You liked the unpredictability.
“I’d never do that.” You whispered, hating how breathless you must have sounded. Still, you made no effort to reclaim your personal space, addicted to the close proximity from the second you had been exposed to it. You finally understood why everyone wanted this. Wanted him.
A knowing smile stretched across his face, and in spite of your best efforts, you found yourself utterly enraptured by it.
“Oh, I know.”
Rafayel was tipsy, just about aware of the bass-boosted music, with a lazy smile on his face as he ordered two drinks at the bar. You were somewhere out there waiting for him to return with them, no doubt ready with a scathing remark about how long he was taking.
He didn’t know what he was doing. He couldn’t recall the last time he felt so bewitched by someone, solely because he never let anyone get close enough. Keeping people at arm's length was something he was well-versed in, but for some reason, he had only pulled you closer. His attempts at breaking down your walls had resulted in him letting you through his.
You, and your scrutinising gaze and sharp tongue. Beautiful. Unforgiving.
“Mr. Qi?”
He turned to the source of the voice, finding a man standing there with a determined look on his face. Rafayel raised an eyebrow. “Yes?”
“Lovely to make your acquaintance, sir, I’m Gabriette Dubois’ assistant.” He adjusted his glasses and continued. “Miss Dubois is overjoyed that you made it, and she would be here herself if something hadn’t come up. She wanted me to pass on a message.”
The drinks arrived. Rafayel tugged them closer to where he leaned against the bar, nodding. “Go on.”
“Miss Dubois is interested in working with you once again.” The assistant held out a business card, evidently not picking up on the man's surprise. As far as he remembered, the collaboration between Dubois Designs and him had been a couple of years ago and a roaring success, but there had never been any talk of extending it. He had expected that, since he had been his usual difficult self, Gabriette hadn’t appreciated it very much. Moreover, this was before he had catapulted into being considered one of the world's hottest models, so she had had no reason to keep him on for any longer.
“I see.”
“She awaits good news from your end. Take the time to think about it.”
And with that, the man left Rafayel alone once more. He toyed with the business card for a couple of moments before slipping it into his pocket. Then, he picked up the drinks and made his way back to you.
“How many times have you been to Paris?”
You stitched your eyebrows together in thought. “Four times, maybe?”
Rafayel looked scandalised, eyes widening and mouth falling open like you had personally offended him. “And this is your first time exploring?”
“I come here very briefly and only for work, Rafayel,” You spooned a heap of thick cream into your hot chocolate. “I should be working right now, but someone insisted I accompany him to the middle of nowhere.”
“I insisted you take a break, since you clearly don’t know how to take one yourself.”
That much was true. After a gruelling rehearsal (one that ended in you talking sternly to your employees about not ensuring the practice runway was to scale), he had caught up to you and demanded you drop everything and follow him. Maybe all the stress had been getting to you because you let him convince you, but not without complaint. You made your annoyance with the situation quite obvious, even if it wasn’t genuine at all.
He had suggested taking a walk, which is what this insane outing had started as, but when you admitted to never having actually explored the city, he acted like you had personally offended him. He decided to take matters into his own hands, which was how you ended up in a small boulangerie that was hidden away in one of the Parisian streets.
The hot chocolate was rich, and the croissant you had ordered was perfectly buttery and flaky. By no means did the bakery look like a place a celebrity would frequent, with its old-timey decor and peeling paint job, but it had a certain charm to it, run by a lovely old lady who immediately began fussing over Rafayel the moment the two of you arrived. Later, he told you that it was a secret gem and one of his favourite places to frequent whenever he was in Paris.
It turned out that was quite often, so much so that he even had an apartment here. He absolutely loved the city of love, which was why he was so flabbergasted at you not knowing much about it despite having been there several times.
“Fashion week is a very important time for me. I can rest after it's over.”
“Workaholic.” He jibed at you, stealing a piece of your croissant. “I’m going to take you around.”
You tried to protest, “That’s unnecessary-”
“Trust me, it’s necessary. Besides, I already asked Thomas to bring my car.”
“Your car?”
He gave you a too-innocent smile. “Did I not mention I have a car here? Don’t worry, it's very nice. A convertible, too.”
“You’re ridiculous.” You looked off to the side to conceal the grin that was threatening to break out on your face. There were about a million other things you could think of that you should have been doing, and yet here you were, going along with his shenanigans.
Once you were done eating and emerged from the bakery, his sports car was indeed waiting out for both of you with the roof pulled back. He ushered you into the passenger seat, going so far as to open the door for you before taking his place behind the steering wheel and pulling out of park.
Rafayel had no destination in mind, simply wanting to spend more time with you and keep you away from your precious work. Due to the late hour, they were mostly empty, which made the drive pleasantly smooth. He switched the radio on, the latest and greatest pop music filling the comfortable silence that had settled between the two of you.
The lamps cast a dim yellow light over the Parisian streets, and you took it all in, watching intently from the car as they passed you by. By no means was this the greatest tour in the world – far from it. He didn’t tell you what you were looking at, too busy humming along to a Taylor Swift song, but it stirred up a feeling deep within you that you couldn’t quite put your finger on.
The sounds of late-night Paris mixed with his voice, turning into a melody you would have never thought was worth listening to before. It wrapped around your senses, and little by little, you let yourself go. Your posture relaxed, your jaw softened from its perpetually clenched state, and you let out a breath you didn’t even know you had been holding in.
And for the first time in a long time, you realised that the loneliness you were so used to carrying around was nowhere to be found.
The only other person who managed to lessen the sense of isolation you harboured was Xavier, and even he couldn’t do it all the time, and yet, the headstrong man driving you around had somehow managed to break down all your walls and let you out of the prison you had built for yourself. While others expected you to break from the pressure that came with your position, he made sure you didn’t, even when you refused his help.
You sat forward in your seat, shutting your eyes as the cool night air blew against your face. Perhaps it defeated the point of the ride if you weren’t looking around anymore, but you couldn’t help it. It had been so long since you had been able to completely let go around someone else that you wanted to savour every second of the moment.
Rafayel glanced over and found it almost impossible to look away from you. Eyes fluttering open with shadows cast from your eyelashes and dancing on your face. Wind in your hair, hair that was finally let out of its perfect updo and allowed to freely fall over your shoulders. The way your head was tilted up just slightly as you stared at the starless sky, focused on the crescent moon overhead.
God, you were a painting he could never do justice to, but desperately wished he was able to.
Forcing himself to look away, he drummed his fingers on the steering wheel and focused his attention back on the roads he cruised down. “I should take you back to your hotel."
“Yeah,” you mumbled, leaning back against the seat. “I have a lot to do tomorrow.”
“When do you not?”
“Just drive!” You forced exasperation into your voice as you put in the address of the hotel into his GPS. This moment was one you never wanted to end, but your feet were firmly rooted in reality even when your head was in the clouds. You clamped down on that wish and settled back in the seat, watching the streets pass you by.
But it festered anyway, latching onto you like wishes so great tended to. You had everything you could have ever wanted: money, fame, and you had achieved all your dreams, but now here you were, with a new dream blooming from the remnants of old ones, a dream you never thought would see the light of day.
If not for him, would you have let another trip to Paris pass you by with your head stuck in your schedule until it was time to board that flight back to New York? The notion of that had made him go out of his way to remedy it, even when you put up a fuss and tried to talk him out of it.
Unfortunately for you, you were rather easy to convince when it came to him.
When he pulled up to the hotel, he ignored all your protests and accompanied you to your room door. With every step you took towards the elevator, you did your utmost to keep a safe distance between your body and his, reminding yourself that this wasn’t something you could get used to. You hated the giddy feeling in your chest and the way it seemed to consume you when he was around. The back of his hand brushed against yours as you stood side by side, and even though the contact was minuscule, you could feel it everywhere.
The doors of the elevator opened, and you walked out with purpose, desperate to put as much space as you could between the two of you. He sauntered behind you, hands casually shoved in his pockets, completely and blissfully unaware of the storm waging in your head. You stopped outside your room and turned to face him.
“Don’t expect me to invite you in.” You warned, crossing your arms over your chest as you regarded him warily, expecting him to push back once more. “You’ve already taken enough of my time today.”
Your tone was reprimanding, but he could tell it was all just for show. There was a glint in your eyes that told him you more than enjoyed yourself today, even if you’d never admit it. He knew you well enough by now to know that you said one thing but meant something else entirely, and that solidified you as one, if not the most confusing person he had ever met.
And yet there he was, trying to decode you. “I wouldn’t dare ask for even a second more.”
Taking a step forward, he looked down at the floor for a second before lifting his gaze back to your face, staring at you intently. The silence stretched on for a beat too long, and in that fleeting moment, those mesmerising amethyst eyes of his dropped down to your lips. Briefly, he wondered what it would be like if he just leaned forward and–
He would have dismissed that deranged thought entirely if he hadn’t caught your breath hitching. “Actually, I might need a couple.”
Rafayel’s eyes flickered back to yours, realising you hadn’t moved away. You swallowed, too proud to be the one who looked away first, and instantly, you knew what this was: weeks of flirtation disguised as tolerance and arguments coming to a head. A silent question hung in the little space between him and you, weighted and with far too many strings attached for you to even consider. He was waiting for permission, you realised, or any sort of answer.
It was a bad, terrible, no good idea. A desire that was nothing more than a moment of weakness, one you would surely regret somewhere down the line.
But around him, succumbing to moments of weakness was so easy.
“Then you better make it worth it.”
His hands found your waist, tugging you closer and pressing his lips to yours without another word. He stole your breath with his, leaving you to gasp against his mouth as it moved against yours oh-so gently, like you were made of glass he refused to let shatter. You could taste the subtle sweetness the hot chocolate had left, and smell the scent of his expensive cologne, struggling to process all of it as he kissed you.
And fuck, how he kissed you. The world around you went silent as Rafayel’s lips fit perfectly against yours, like two pieces of a puzzle finally coming together. They were soft and a little chapped from the night air, but intoxicating nonetheless.
When the two of you broke apart, he made no motion to move, keeping his hands on your hips. Your eyes fluttered open, your noses brushing against each other, and the warmth of his breath fanning over your lips. You hadn’t quite returned to reality just yet, still existing in the few seconds prior.
Rafayel let go after a minute or so and took a step away from you. You could see it now – the way he looked at you like you were the sun and moon and stars, a type of fondness you were wholly unused to. It had been there for the past couple of weeks, but you had mistaken it for mirth.
“Times up,” he muttered with an impossibly soft smile adorning his face, stuffing his hands into his pockets. “Goodnight, Y/n.”
You watched him walk away from you, down the hallway and back to the elevator. As the doors shut, he gave you a cheeky little wave, causing you to stand there flabbergasted and more confused than you had ever been in your life before. You lifted your fingers to your lips that tingled from the ghost of his kiss.
You’d be lying if you said you didn’t like it.
You quickly became addicted to the drug that was Rafayel.
Secret touches. Lingering glances. It had been two days since he first kissed you, and you had made no efforts to get him to stop. In between interviews and rehearsals, he somehow managed to grab hold of you and steal you away from the world, even if it was just for a couple of minutes.
His apartment in Paris was on the fourth floor, in a building with older elevators. You walked out of it and to the numbered apartment that he told you was his, knocking and waiting for him to answer. He had texted you just after you finished filming a video with Vogue, insisting that you absolutely had to come over as soon as possible.
When he opened the door, looking completely at ease, you suspected your mild concern had been for no reason.
“There you are,” he hummed, holding a glass of wine precariously in between his fingers, sloshing it around before taking a sip. “I was wondering when you’d show up. Come inside.”
You stepped over the threshold and into his apartment, following him to his living room. For someone as over-the-top as himself, it was quite the quaint place, with wooden furniture and the original paint job still intact. If you asked him about it, you figured he’d just say something pretentious about preserving the Parisian integrity of the apartment.
Pulling off your gloves, you tossed them on his coffee table and shrugged off your coat. He leaned against the island that separated the kitchen from his living room, watching your every move like it was a dance sequence he was trying to memorise. Once you were done, you turned to face him with an expectant look.
“From the urgency of your messages, I assumed there was an emergency.”
He smiled coyly, pressing the edge of his glass to his lips. “Is wanting to see you not emergency enough?”
You wanted to scream, to push him out of a window and kiss him senseless at the same damn time. That conflict inside of you bubbled over, leaving a confused bout of need in its wake because no one had ever driven you this crazy before. Narrowing your eyes at him, you walked over until you were standing right in front of him.
“You know very well that I’m busy.”
“And yet, here you are.” He reached out to you, taking your hand in his and pulling you closer. His hair fell into his eyes, the deep purple ends of it kissing the high of his cheekbones like wisteria hanging down from tree branches. Unable to resist, you cupped his face, brushing your thumb over the mole on his cheek with tenderness that surprised even yourself.
“I think you’re distracting me on purpose.”
“There she is,’ he murmured fondly, turning his face into your palm and pressing his lips against it in a soft kiss. “The queen of cynicism.”
He gripped your wrist and slowly began peppering kisses from the centre of your palm down to your wrist, his eyes sweeping to yours. Something about the action felt strikingly intimate, sparking a fire inside of you that you hadn’t known could ever exist. Your fingers curled around the back of his neck, drawing him into you for once and meeting his lips with your own.
You were hooked. Every brush of his mouth against yours was electrifying, precise and addictive in ways that left you wanting more every time. Wine entirely forgotten, his hands lifted to your face and held it, turning you around and pressing you against the edge of the island as he took the lead.
When Rafayel kissed you again, you blossomed under his touch like a flower exposed to the sun for the first time in days. His fingers entangled in your hair and cradled the back of your head delicately, his nails scratching against your scalp and sending delighted shivers down your spine. He tilted your head back so that you could meet him better, the nature of the kiss dissolving into something much more intense as his tongue swiped over your lower lip, eliciting a soft sound from the back of your throat.
“Jesus,” he mumbled against you, pained and breathless, pulling away for a singular moment that somehow felt too long despite probably being not more than a second. When he leaned back in, his lips found the side of your mouth, trailing down to your jaw and finding the spot below your ear that made you sigh and tip your head back. He made good use of the access you had so willingly given him, leisurely leaving hot open open-mouthed kisses over the expanse of your neck, knowing exactly what to do to have you fall apart while simultaneously doing barely anything at all.
Your hands gripped the collar of his shirt at first, then slid down the silky fabric until they met the cool metal of his belt buckle. Emboldened by the situation, you hooked your fingers in his belt loops and tugged him even closer, until his hips were flush against yours. Your eagerness induced a dry chuckle from him, soft and barely there, puffs of his breath tickling against your pulse point. His thigh slotted between your legs before he paused, letting the gravity of what was happening hit either one of you.
It never did.
“Don’t you dare stop.” You almost snapped, but it lacked that authority your voice usually possessed when delegating tasks at work, instead laced with avid desperation for something only he could give you – a thrill only he could provide. Your permission was all he required, gripping your hips and lifting you onto the kitchen island and stepping in between your legs.
“So bossy,” you could feel him grinning against your neck. “You can’t resist ordering people around, can you?”
Before you could even think about refuting, his mouth was back on yours with a renewed sense of want, demanding and dizzying all at once. The beginnings of a retort died on your tongue when his meets yours and his hands slip under the hem of your skirt, sliding up your thighs maddeningly slow. All you could do was whine impatiently, leaning into him and giving in to that magnetic pull of his. He lifted his head, peering down at you with darkened eyes, so close that you could still taste him.
“Tell me what you want,” he asked, squeezing your thighs in a manner that told you knew knew exactly what you wanted. “You can do that for me, can’t you?”
You glared, though it was weak. “Don’t play dumb.”
“Fine. When was the last time someone made you come, Y/n?”
You exhaled sharply at his question, one he phrased so innocently, although it was nothing of the sort. “Rafayel.”
“I thought you liked it when people were straightforward with you.” He smirked down at you, running his thumb over your lower lip and applying a little pressure, enough to have your mouth part. His other hand slipped further up your inner thigh, fingers languidly tracing the edge of your panties. He could feel you stiffen, anticipation running rampant through your veins as a wave of arousal crashed over you, rendering you pliant and wanting.
Dipping his head to your ear, he whispered, “You’re always so wound up, baby. Let me help you relax.”
With that, the spark he had lit inside of you roared to life, the flames burning your blood, making you feel hot all over your body. You were wet, embarrassingly so, soaked through your underwear as a haze of lust enveloped your mind. His knuckles brushed against your clothed core, and the minimal contact made you whimper needily, flattening your palms against the flat of his chest.
“Please, Rafayel.” Never, in a million years, did he ever think he’d have you begging for anything, but there you were, with your legs spread. “Touch me.”
Rafayel didn’t think he’d ever been this turned on in his life.
Manoeuvring your panties to the side, his fingers dipped in between your folds, a hungry gleam blazing to life in his eyes as he watched you jerk into his touch, drinking in the way your cheeks flushed and eyebrows furrowed. Your slick coated his fingers, and he groaned, the sound low and deep as he brought them up to your clit and circled it, tantalisingly slow.
“You’re so wet for me.” Shame filtered through you at his words, but it came secondary to the want that coursed through you. It wasn’t like you could deny the claim anyway; you could feel it firsthand. “Gonna make you feel so good.”
“You better,” you breathed out, clutching at the ends of his shirt in a futile attempt to keep your sanity somewhat intact, but he was doing an excellent job of chipping away at it, with how expertly he rubbed your clit, increasing the pressure of the circles he rubbed against the bundle of nerves.
“Oh, I will.” He flashed you a cocky grin, hooking his finger in the center of your panties and tugging them down your legs. “Don’t you worry your pretty head about it.”
His other hand travelled underneath your top and pushed the material up your body, and you raised your arms, helping him pull it off and leaving you in a simple black bra. Still, he looked at you like you had a matching lingerie set on, humming in appreciation as he pulled your panties down your legs. They caught against one of your heels, which fell to his floor with a soft thud, but neither of you cared enough to even comprehend that. Immediately, he was back on you, middle finger pressing against your entrance as he nipped at your throat, soothing the sting his teeth left behind with licks of his tongue and wet kisses.
Finally, finally, he pushed one lithe finger into you and provided you with some relief, revelling in the moan you gasped out. His lips made their way down your neck and to your collarbone, kissing the swell of your breasts unhurriedly, as if he had all the time in the world to do with you as he pleased. He set a lazy pace with his finger, introducing a second one to your cunt with ease on account of how wet you were, gushing all over his hand.
Impatient, you reached behind and unhooked your bra, letting it fall off your shoulders and took in the appreciative look on his face when you tossed it to the side.
“Fuck,” he looked like you had positively wrecked, like you were a witch that had put him under a spell. “You’re killing me here.”
Rafayel attacked your chest again, this time with a little less precision. His pretty pink lips dragged across your breasts, tongue flicking out and swirling around one of your your pebbled nipples, taking it into his mouth and sucking. You arched into him with a whimper, your hands finding purchase in his soft hair, holding his head close to your body. His fingers moved in and out of your cunt fast, the palm of his hand rutting against your clit rhythmically, having your toes curl out of pleasure.
“Raf- oh, fuck.”
He looked up at you through his eyelashes, biting down on your nipple just hard enough for sparks of pain to shoot through you, mingling with the pleasure until you were left with a heady mix of both swirling inside you. You cried out, your hips bucking up against his fingers on their own accord.
For someone usually so well put together, it was hypnotic to watch you fall apart for him – and because of him. His mouth slipped from your nipple for a moment in favour of staring at you in wonder. “God, you’re so…”
You never found out what he meant to say, eyes rolling to the back of your head when his fingers curled inside of you, the tips of them stroking against the spot that made it hard for you to hold back your moans and whimpers. The sounds tumbled out of you like a waterfall, combined with the wet ones from your pussy, and filled the silence of his apartment, spurring him on even further as he fingered you so diligently. He went right back to lapping at your breast, his free hand kneading your other one, rolling that nipple under his thumb and pinching it.
“Oh my god,” you whined as you helplessly ground against his palm, the heel of it digging into your clit and applying delicious pressure on it that had you losing your damn mind. You could tell you were close from the coiling sensation in your gut, and from the way your legs were trembling, he had picked up on it as well.
“That’s it,” he cooed. “Come for me.”
Seconds later, your orgasm hit you hard, a choked moan of his name leaving you as you clung onto him, overwhelmed at how good it felt. He held you against him, his ministrations never letting up for even a moment as he helped you ride out your high to the fullest. Once he was satisfied, he pulled his fingers away, staring at the mess you left on them in awe.
And then he looked at you, and he realised that the mess of you was far prettier. Lips swollen and kiss-bitten, hair all messed up just like how he’d imagined far too many times for him to willingly admit to, and eyes blown wide with desire. The sight of you like this – so perfectly wrecked – almost made him moan aloud, but he stopped himself by kissing you once more, messily now, all teeth and tongue and heat.
“Y/n,” Rafayel rasped out your name against your lips, “Fuck, I need you.”
You wrapped your arms around his neck and pulled him closer until you were flush against his chest, locking your legs around his hips. “Then take me.”
Bossy as ever, it only made him want you more. Gripping the underside of your thighs, he picked you up and carried you to his bedroom, lips locked with yours. He didn’t know how he made it to his room, but once there, he set you on the mattress and climbed over you, taking a moment to admire you in all your glory.
He was a total goner.
“You’re wearing too many clothes,” you huffed in between kisses, tugging impatiently at his collar and fumbling with his buttons. Rafayel laughed, finding your indignation so fucking adorable that he almost forgot what the two of you were doing, so consumed with the fact that he had you like this. When you managed to undo most of his buttons, he leaned back and pulled the shirt off, discarding it to some corner of the room and unzipped his pants.
His cock sprung to life as he kicked off his pants, and you were awestruck at the sight of him. The tempting lines of his abs you had forced yourself to look away from several times, now on display for only your eyes, and the flushed tip of his hard cock claiming all your attention because not only was it pretty, it was big. You bit your lower lip in anticipation, propping yourself up on your elbows to get a better look.
“Like what you see?” He drawled out the question with a lazy grin as he slipped on a condom, his smugness riling you up even more. Licking your lips, you pushed him away until he landed on his backside, expression morphing into one of confusion.
Aha, so it was possible to wipe that look off his face after all.
“Sit up against the headboard,” you instructed, getting to your knees and slipping the skirt that you still had on off your body, both of you completely naked now.
Although surprised, he complied fairly quickly, the smirk returning with full force. “Yes, ma’am.”
To Rafayel, this made sense. You always had to have a modicum of control over any situation, and this was how you established that here. You threw a leg over him, straddling his lap. His breath hitched when his cock came into contact with your bare cunt, unable to hold back a groan when you began to grind. The sound fired off every synapse in your brain, your body working on its own as you rolled your hips harder against him.
“God, fuck,” his honeyed voice was strained with the effort it took to not just hold you still and fuck up into you. “I’m going to lose my mind if I’m not inside you soon, pretty girl.”
The nickname did something to you, going straight to your head like a strong shot of tequila. You lifted your hips, reaching between your bodies and aligning his cock with your entrance, wetness coating the tip. Circling your hips, you savoured the way he sucked in a breath between his teeth.
But you were a woman who had virtually no patience. Teasing him, while fun, only succeeded in making you more desperate than you already were.
So you steadied yourself by placing your hands on his shoulders, slowly sinking onto his length. You hissed in pleasure at the burn of the stretch, nails sinking into the skin of his shoulders and most definitely leaving marks. The near drunken sound that left him when you took all of him was the most gratifying one you had ever heard. He gripped your hips, tipping his head back against the headboard and breathing heavily.
“You– fuck– you feel so perfect,” Rafayel stuttered in wonder, but you were still adjusting to his size to comprehend the praise properly. He was buried to the hilt, and you felt delirious, clawing at him as you tried and failed to keep yourself together. You needed him so bad it scared you, somehow growing even wetter with him inside of you because of how fucking good it felt.
Lifting your hips once again, you came down on him, mouth falling open at how he filled you up so easily. He groaned, dropping his head to the crook of your neck and ravishing it once more, both of you far too gone to even think about the consequences of leaving marks.
“Raf,” you whined, rocking your hips into him as you chased your high, in turn pulling his along. “Shit, it feels so good.”
“I know, cutie, I know,” His mouth was on your nipple again, wrapping his lips around it and sucking harshly, sending shocks of pleasure right down to your core. Instinctively, you clenched around him, and his grip on you tightened imperceptibly, a silent warning. Naturally, as you did with most things, you took it as a challenge, this time clenching on purpose.
“You little-” In retaliation, his thumb found your engorged clit and flicked it, causing you to screw your eyes shut and squeal with the extra stimulation.
“I can’t– god, it's too much,” you whimpered, feeling that familiar tug in your core build rapidly. Still sensitive from your first climax, it was no wonder that you were close already. Wanting to come again, you bounced faster, earning you a pleased groan from him.
“You’re incredible,” he crooned against your skin, hands running up your sides reverently as he stared at you through a half-lidded gaze. The sight of you on top of him, bare, looking so gorgeous, was enough to have him come undone, and he wanted it imprinted in his brain forever. He wanted to paint you like this, to turn you into art for his eyes alone.
You came hard, crying out his name in between the many of sounds that fell from your lips in ecstasy, gasps and moans alike. All you could think of was Rafayel, Rafayel, Rafayel as your high crashed over you like a wave crashing onto the shore.
Immediately, he took over, flipping your positions so that you were pressed into the mattress, his hips snapping to yours with a renewed sense of urgency. You mewled at the instant overstimulation, pawing at his torso in a weak attempt to get him to slow down, knowing damn well you didn’t want him to. He grabbed at your wrists and pinned them above your head, thrilled at the gasp-moan it elicited.
“You sound so fucking pretty,” Rafayel mumbled, sheathing himself inside of you with one final thrust, unravelling with a low moan. The two of you stayed like that for a couple of seconds, still connected, recovering from your mutual high.
Carefully, he pulled out, discarding the used condom and climbing right back into bed with you. His arms wrapped around your body, gathering you against his chest with all the tenderness in the world, limbs so entwined with yours that you didn’t know where you started and he ended anymore.
“Hey.”
You glanced up, finding him staring down at you with a soft, satiated smile, tracing soothing circles on your back. Like this, Rafayel was at his most irresistible to you, with his hair all mussed because of you, cheeks flushed, and every ounce of his attention on you. Try as you did, you couldn’t fight hints of your own smile from showing, so you nuzzled into his neck to hide your face. “Hi.”
“There isn’t a single reason for you to be shy,” he whispered playfully, propping his fingers under your chin and lifting your head so you were looking at him once more. “That was– you were amazing.”
“I don’t get shy.” Nonetheless, your cheeks flushed at his praise.
He chuckled quietly. “Of course you don’t.” And he kissed you again, like all the times he had just done so weren’t and would never be enough for him. Cupping your jaw sweetly, it was the most innocent press of his lips to yours, not needing any more from you. You certainly didn’t.
“Rafayel?” You breathed his name, pulling back and looking into those captivated eyes, hues of dark fuchsia and sapphire twinkling back at you. Entranced, you realised that your heart was no longer yours to control, free from the clutches of your mind, belonging to the man who held you. It was terrifying and freeing all at once, falling without knowing when and if you’d land at all.
“Hmm?”
“I think you might be my favourite muse.”
The words were honest, tinged with a vulnerability that hit home for Rafayel. He knew you didn’t open up like this to anyone, but you were staring at him now with that same look you gave him after asking him to stay on at Lumiere as a brand ambassador. Something in the confines of his ribs constricted as he brushed your hair out of your face.
“What an honour that is.”
It was early morning when Rafayel padded to his living room. The sun hadn’t risen yet. You were still in his bed, curled up under the sheets, looking so peaceful amidst your slumber. When he slipped away, he made sure not to disturb you.
For as long as he remembered, he had thrived on attention. It was something he had been handed even before his breakout into the mainstream as a top model. People constantly told him how he was meant for the limelight, standing proud at the centre of attention.
He settled on his couch, elbows on his knees and palms pressed into his eyes as he tried to think. His mind was racing, running at a mile a minute, and he was struggling to catch up.
You said he was your muse.
He had been a muse his entire life. For his aunt, for other designers and brands, he was used to it. The prospect of being a muse had never scared him before, but now he was yours, and he wasn’t sure how to navigate that role anymore. You, who said his art had inspired you to create your clothing, clothing he would soon wear and show off to the world. It should have thrilled him because he rarely resonated with a brand like he did yours, and even less with people.
Up until you, of course. You were a force of nature, obstinate and stubborn and spectacular too, like a storm that crashed into his town and swept him away. He meant it when he said it was an honour to be your muse.
But he knew that after a while, people got bored of their muses. Periodically, they moved on and found a new one to devote all their time and effort to. He was used to being wanted, and he often used that to his advantage, but being the one who wanted your attention was not a role he knew how to fill. The script had been flipped on him, and he felt like an actor with zero experience, wading in waters that were much too deep for him.
Walking away had always been easy. He wasn’t the type to be tied down to anything, all about living in the moment and having a good time. Now, he found himself wanting to stay, and that endlessly frightened him. What happened when he finished serving his purpose as your muse and you pushed him to the side?
He didn’t want to stick around and find out. He couldn’t bear to.
A business card lay on his coffee table. Lifting his head from his hands, he reached out and picked it up, turning the thin cardboard over in his fingers and reading the number on the back. The Dubois Designs logo glared up at him, as if taunting him with what would come to pass if he went through with this.
He picked up his phone.
You didn’t see Rafayel after that.
There were many things you could attribute this to. Your swamped schedule, the dinners, afterparties, showcases and fittings that you’d never hear the end of, his own endeavours – it made sense.
What didn’t make sense was the radio silence. He had gotten very comfortable with messaging you, even though you never entertained his overzealous texting style and only graced him with the driest of responses. Now, your phone was filled with communication from everyone except the man you were admittedly waiting to hear from.
Nothing.
Smack dab in the middle of one of the busiest weeks of your year, you didn’t have the time to dwell on it. The Lumiere show drew closer, and you were heavily involved in every aspect of the preparations to make sure everything was exactly how you wanted it to be.
You called him once, but he hadn’t picked up. It made you frown, but it wasn’t like you had the right to his time. Hadn’t you told him how precious yours was time and time again? Satisfied with that reasoning, you continued, pushing all thoughts of the charming man away for as long as you could.
“He isn’t here.”
The observation slipped out of you flatly, a little too loud and emphatic even for your own ears. It was the night before the show, and the final rehearsal was underway, held right in the cathedral that would serve as the set. Typically, these run-throughs were held a couple of hours before the actual show, but that would have disturbed the normal proceedings of the church, and you had no intentions of undermining the sanctity of it.
You turned to your assistant and models' manager. “Where is Rafayel?”
Simone jumped in quickly, knowing well how you hated being left hanging. “Andrew didn’t see him come in, and I contacted Thomas, but he hasn’t been able to get hold of him either.”
“What on earth…?” You muttered mostly to yourself as something in the pit of your stomach twisted, tight and unpleasant. His absence lately stung, but up until this moment, you had graciously let it go, figuring that there was a reason for it. Now, however, it was impossible to let it slide because he wasn’t just ignoring you, he was skipping out on rehearsal, and that was a professional commitment.
“I heard he was difficult to work with,” Andrew commented, rubbing his chin. “But I didn’t think he’d be irresponsible.”
You wouldn’t stand for it. Nodding stiffly, you spoke. “I’m leaving the rest of the rehearsal in both of your hands. I have something to check on.”
Neither of them questioned you, absorbing your instructions and carrying them out efficiently. You grabbed your coat and left the cathedral, your shoes clicking against the cobbled footpaths as you hailed a cab. Your best bet on where he was would be his apartment, and that was exactly where you’d go to get your answers.
When you reached, the scene you were met with wasn’t what you expected at all. The door to his apartment swung wide open, loud music reaching your ears from where you stood as the elevator doors opened. Swallowing down your bafflement, you slowly approached the entrance, an uncomfortable feeling settling in the middle of your chest the closer you got.
Once you were inside, it only got worse. The music made it hard for you to think, your eyes sweeping across the room and taking in the sight: people laughing, mingling and dancing, some of them you even recognised.
And in the eye of the storm was Rafayel, lounging about at the centre of the chaos around him.
What the fuck?
He looked so at ease, lounging on his couch with his head tipped back on the back of it, eyes closed like he was unaware of what was going on. His serene expression only stirred up your frustration, and it mixed with your confusion and the crumbs of dread that swirled around your gut. Brushing aside your discomfort, you stormed over, knocking your leg into his to alert him of your presence.
Rafayel’s eyes fluttered open, dazed and unfocused. At the sight of you, something flickered in them, but it disappeared just as quickly. “Y/n,” he slurred your name, barely audible over the volume of the music. “What are you doing here?”
God, he was drunk. Clenching your jaw at that fact, you narrowed your eyes and set him with a glare, taking in his inebriated state.
“What the fuck do you think you’re doing?”
Déjà vu was what Rafayel felt at that moment, but instead of it being Thomas coming to scold him, it was you who stood before him, looking so furious and beautiful at the same time. There was nothing gentle about the way you phrased the question, your tone harsh and accusatory, like you had already decided he was in the wrong without giving him the chance to explain.
Clever woman.
He rubbed a hand over his face, trying to pull his scattered thoughts together through the haze of his tipsiness. His lack of answer seemed to piss you off even more, and while that might have once amused him, all it did now was make his heart sink. Grabbing his wrist, you pulled him through his apartment and back out into the hallway, not caring if you were making a scene or about who was staring.
“I’m going to ask this once, and only once. What the hell is all this?” You let go of his wrist, spinning on your heel to face him once it was just the two of you. The music was softer out here, making the clipped tone of your voice all the more apparent.
“It’s a party, sweetheart. I’m sure you know what that is.”
“Don’t call me that,” you snapped, furious at how cavalier he was being. It felt like you were back at the beginning, when you first met him, with his audacity and you struggling to keep your temper in check, except so much worse. Now, you were personally involved with him, which caused all of your emotions to lash out all at once. “Don’t you know what day it is?”
“You’re asking such odd questions, but if you must know, it's Thursday.” He looked completely uninterested in the conversation you were trying so hard to have. You grit your teeth, taking a step forward.
“First, you ignore me,” you seethed, your perfect facade crumbling bit by bit in his presence. “Then you don’t show up for the show rehearsal, that is going on right now, mind you, and throw a party instead? What the fuck is wrong with you?” Your disbelief was palpable, and it grew exponentially when he scoffed, like your questioning right then was a major inconvenience.
“Oh, please, you and I both know I’ll be fantastic on the runway whether I’m at the rehearsal or not.” He leaned against the wall to hide how unsteady he felt on his feet right then, the paradox almost making him laugh. Almost.
“Thats not the point!” You took a step toward him. “You know it's not.”
“Isn’t it?”
You exhaled shakily. “No. It’s about–” Us, but was there an ‘us’ for you to even refer to? From the way he was looking at you right now, so cold and aloof, you doubted it. “You’ve been avoiding me.” You let the statement hang between him and you, not bother to tack on the question that sat on the tip of your tongue, letting the rhetorical nature of it take over and do the work for you.
Rafayel was aware of how it looked because he was the one who had made it so. He had kissed you, held you, slept with you and then disappeared. He hated the look on your face right now, the way you were staring at him so pleadingly, waiting for him to explain why, too proud to outright ask for it. He averted his gaze, staring at his shoes.
“Are you really that surprised?”
Something in you cracked wide open. “What?”
“Come on, Y/n, you’re smart. I’m sure you’re aware of my reputation.” He knew he was being an asshole, but what was one of instance of that to him? That was what the world perceived him as anyway– a playboy with a penchant for partying and a pretty face – so why not live up to it? If it were going to protect him from getting hurt, then by all means, it would be worth it.
With how your face swiftly collapsed at his insinuation, it certainly didn’t feel worth it. He wanted to take it back immediately, to take you by the shoulders and tell you the truth and hold you like he had just days ago.
He couldn’t. Everything about wanting you terrified him because of the intensity of that desire. He had never felt like this before, and the thought of you someday not wanting him back was unbearable. He knew how he was: selfish, self-serving to a fault, difficult and exhausting at times, so very skilled at pushing people away. Eventually, you’d get tired of him and leave.
The idea of you walking away scared him so much that he opted to run away first to save himself from that pain.
“Did–Did everything that happened between us mean nothing to you?” You despised the way you stuttered, the stilted rhythm of your speech that betrayed the emotion behind it, because it made you feel weak. Out of control.
Perhaps if he were a better man, a stronger one, he’d tell you the truth. He’d tell you that it had meant the most to him, and how nothing had ever mattered as much as you did.
But he wasn’t.
“Was it supposed to?”
You couldn’t conceal the sharp gasp that left you at his cruel words, staggering away from him like you had been shot. The man in front of you was one you didn’t recognise, a mere phantom of the one you thought you knew. He had Rafayel’s eyes and hair and stature, but it wasn’t the same Rafayel that had torn through your walls and coaxed the real you out into the light, the part of you that you kept hidden away from the rest of the world. Instead, it was a man who held those secrets and threw them back in your face like they had meant nothing.
You had let your guard down and let him in, forgetting how easy that made it for you to get hurt. Those walls that once towered so high around had come crashing down, and you didn’t know how to rebuild. Hot tears burned your eyes, heartbreak mingling in with your rage toward him, but you refused to cry. You wouldn’t give him any more of yourself than you already had.
All you had left was your dignity, and you’d be damned if you let that go.
He was right; he had a reputation for a reason, and you should never have expected anything more. You pulled yourself together, momentarily wondering how you ever let yourself be so stupid.
“You will walk in the show tomorrow.” You forced yourself to sound steady, fingers curled into fists at how enraged you felt. “And then you will never walk for Lumiere again. Do you understand?”
The cold fury in your cadence wasn’t lost on him, and neither was the way you were shutting him out and shutting down. You had gotten used to expressing yourself freely when around him, and even now, it was like all your feelings were plastered across your face for him to see. It was awful to watch you blink away your tears so rapidly, knowing that they were because of him, how your lips twisted downward at the sorrow you felt but refused to give in to.
Rafayel hated that he was the one who had caused you this pain, but he couldn’t backtrack now. He had come this far, he might as well finish the job. Maybe it would be easier if you hated him.
“That won’t be a problem. I’ll be signed with Dubois Designs.”
You felt the betrayal before you processed it.
It started as a dull ache in the centre of your chest, gradually worsening until it felt like someone was standing on top of it, making it hard for you to breathe. When it– what he had done– finally hit you, you could no longer think straight, unstable on your feet despite being the sober one. You had spent your entire life keeping your cards close to your chest, only for the one person you had let peek at them to burn the whole deck.
There was a lump in your throat and a knife in your back.
When you spoke again, your voice was dangerously quiet. “After tomorrow, I never want to see you again.”
With your head held high and heart sinking low, you turned on your heel and left, stepping into the old elevator without sparing him another glance. Part of you wanted nothing more than you shake him and make him feel the way you did right then, but that would require casting your pride aside, and frankly, you didn’t have it in you. You wouldn’t let him take that away from you.
Rafayel watched you leave, frozen in place. The irony wasn’t lost on him; he had run away from the future possibility of you walking away from him, only to have you do exactly that right now. The party continued in the background, but all he could think of were the tears in your eyes and how fucking hurt you looked because of what he had just done to you. To himself.
You emerged back into the Parisian streets, the cold air nipping at the exposed skin of your neck. Pulling your coat tighter around yourself, you looked up at the sky and then at your surroundings, those tears you had so valiantly fought against finally trickling down your face.
The city of love had never looked so dull.
The models were lined up and in place. Every seat was filled, celebrities and critics alike taking the front row. Photographers had their equipment in place, ready to capture the results of your hard work. You stood backstage, and despite having done this so many times, you felt a little nervous.
Everyone looked fabulous in your clothing, the stylists carefully draping them in the delicate fabrics and complicated pieces. Both the women and men models had little Swarovski crystals embedded in their hair that would shimmer when the light hit them, with the women’s hair being done in beach waves. Last-minute touch-ups to the makeup, some models having to be quite literally stitched into their outfits– it was that unique brand of madness that only existed behind the veiled curtains of a fashion show.
This was it. The end of a season for Lumiere. Months of fretting over details and extensive planning, hours upon hours of work and stress and obstacles would culminate in the twelve minutes that your models took the stage for.
“On in ten,” Simone announced, taking her spot beside you. “Ready?”
“As I’ll ever be,” you mumbled, both your hands over your stomach in an attempt to calm its churning. The lights came on all of a sudden, signalling that the show was about to begin. The music began playing, and the first model rolled her shoulders, straightened her posture, and lifted her head just slightly, a look of concentration dawning on her face.
And down the runway she went.
She glided down the runway with grace, and a hush fell over the audience at the magnificent sight, fabrics shimmering as the dramatic lighting hit them. Once she reached the end, she twirled gracefully and turned to return as the next model emerged into the spotlight. They passed each other on their respective paths, hums of appreciation arising from the onlookers. Haunting organ music accompanied the models as they walked one by one, dramatic and exquisite.
Operatic.
It was funny how only one person had ever been able to capture the essence of what you had envisioned so perfectly and put it into words. It was fitting, you supposed, the muse would understand what he inspired. He now stood at the back of the line, waiting his turn to take the runway and blow everyone away with the final piece of the collection.
Rafayel’s eyes met yours across the backstage area one final time, so brief that you would have missed it if you weren’t already looking at him. For his look, you had instructed the stylists to leave his hair in its natural curly state, and with the crystals in it, he truly looked like a character from a fairytale. When you looked at him now, though, his beauty wasn’t what you were transfixed on.
It was the look in his eyes. Forlorn, longing and….defeated? The combination resulted in something inexplicable, but it chipped away at a suspicion you had been harbouring ever since the night before, one that you had buried deep to save yourself from the pain that would come with trying to understand it. For how well he could read you, it seemed that you could do the same for him, and now, that split second of eye contact told you everything you needed to know.
Everything that had happened between the two of you had meant something to him, and for some reason, he lied to you and said it didn’t.
You didn’t want to know why.
Rafayel stepped out and onto the runway, his expression morphing into one you had seen in magazines and on your website. The dark red organza silk of his shirt shimmered in the light like light upon ocean waves, hints of blue and purple making a show as he walked. Captivating as ever, he brought your clothing to life with every step he took.
The perfect closer for a sensational show.
When it was time for you to walk out, you plastered on a smile and waved, placing one foot in front of the other like your life depended on it. Cameras flashed, and thunderous applause was heard throughout the cathedral, especially when you took your place in the middle of your models as they lined up for a final bow. You joined then, a weight rolling off your shoulders as the show came to a spectacular close, undoubtedly a resounding success.
You had done it. This show was unlike any other you had put on, and no doubt everyone would be talking about it. You had stepped out of your comfort zone when it came to designing and achieved your goal of putting on a spectacle that made the audience feel.
So why did you feel so hollow?
After surviving a swarm of paparazzi shouting questions at you, desperate for even a sliver of your attention and a glance at their lenses and shaking the hands of impressed critics, you found yourself at the Lumiere afterparty. People you called loosely called friends for appearances' sake, celebrities, influencers, and fellow designers were all in attendance, showering you in congratulations and complimenting your work. They said the show would go down in fashion history as iconic and asked how you managed to do it once again. You smiled and drank and tried your best to bask in your well-deserved glory at a party you didn’t want to be at, in a city that was tainted.
And at this party, Qi Rafayel was nowhere to be found.
New York was as unforgiving as ever.
Your life resumed its regular course when you returned; fittings, photoshoots, interviews, and so much paperwork. You threw yourself into your work, filling every spare moment of your day with something to do, fix, or delegate, an arguably pathetic attempt at keeping yourself from thinking of him.
The cacophony of the city accompanied your every solitary step, and you took comfort in it. The incessant honking while stuck in traffic and the chatter of pedestrians filled your senses, whether you were sitting in the back of a cab or running errands. It served as background music to your loneliness, and while you might have once been satisfied with it, you found it hard to go back to that blissfully ignorant state.
Because now you had a taste of what it felt like to not be quite so lonely. Rafayel had waltzed into your life like the tempest of allure and insolence he was and drenched your world in colour. He had taken you out of your box and painted you a new perspective, one you had so foolishly assumed he’d view by your side.
Early mornings and late nights – your days began to blur together until you weren’t sure when they started and ended. Your voice lacked the bite it usually had when reprimanding your employees for any stupid mistakes. If your coffee was cold, you drank it anyway, perplexing Simone. You walked through the hallways of the Lumeire building during those long work days and returned to your penthouse in the dead of night, moving under the heavy silence that completely claimed the large space.
You loathed him for making the life you had so carefully built for yourself feel so miserable. More than anything, you hated how you wished he were still in it.
Rafayel threw a party.
He didn’t even want to be there anymore. Everything about it felt wrong. His drink wasn’t strong enough, the music was too loud, and there were too many fucking people around. He didn’t even like any of them; it was the usual crowd that showed up whenever he hosted one of these things, and while he could usually get along with them, right now all their presence did was remind him that the one person he truly wanted beside him wanted nothing to do with him.
A pitiful try at filling a void he had created himself. He didn’t want anything to do with himself either.
God, he missed you. He missed that rare smile you seldom let show, the ridiculous updo you always had your hair done in, and the passion in your eyes when you spoke about your work. He missed your voice, your crimson painted lips and scrutinising glare that made everyone it was directed at shrink. The way you’d scowl when he teased you, and the softness with which you told him he was your favourite muse.
As he glanced at the doorway of his apartment, he almost willed you to walk through it like you had in Paris, on that fateful night when he ruined everything. He imagined you appearing there, huffing in displeasure at the pandemonium of this stupid party and wanting to see him. Idiotically, he braced himself for exactly that, waiting and watching like it was something that would actually happen.
But he knew it wouldn’t. Instead of waiting around for it to happen, he realised that for the first time in his life, he’d have to work for what he wanted.
He would have to go to you.
Walking into the Lumiere building after two months away was a strange experience.
It seemed like nothing had changed, not that he expected it to. He had almost become an ambassador for the brand, and now there he was, walking down its hallways as nothing more than an exiled stranger.
His feet carried him to your office, knowing that was where you’d be, always holed up in there with a thousand things to get done. Passing the conference room where he first met you four months ago, he wondered how things had gotten to this point. Back then, he had been reluctant to get involved with Lumiere.
Funny.
When he reached your office, you seemed to be in conversation with someone. One glance at the silvery blond hair on the man, and he recognised him as Xavier Shen, the model he had replaced. Now, the man seemed perfectly healthy, standing on his feet as the two of you conversed. The sight reminded Rafayel that he truly might not be needed by you anymore, in every sense of the word.
Still, he steeled himself and pushed the glass door open, not bothering to knock. He never did in the past, so why start now?
“Huh. You really do live here.”
Both Xavier and you turned to him, and the first thing he noticed was how tired you looked. Your shoulders looked like the weight of the world rested upon them, slumped just a little bit, and prominent dark circles under your eyes. It seemed he was right in assuming you were running yourself ragged; he knew your habits well enough. Still, even with all that, to him, you looked positively radiant.
At the sight of him standing there with his hands in his pockets, your heart stuttered before it twisted in pain. He was the same as ever, his presence commanding the entirety of your office like no one else but you could, still a sight for sore eyes. That ever-present playful tone to his voice, however, was weaker than you remembered, just barely hiding the thick layer of vulnerability just below the surface.
“I thought I said I never wanted to see you again.”
Xavier glanced between you and Rafayel before clearing his throat. “I’m gonna take my leave. See you tomorrow.” He gave you a sharp nod and slipped out. Rafayel barely comprehended the other man leaving, so focused on being in the same room as you again.
“I know.” Those words were fresh in his mind even after all these weeks, eating away at him. They were the reason it took him so long to come here, so afraid you’d turn him away the second he showed his face, but he knew he’d regret it for the rest of his life if he didn’t try. “I know, I just…” He trailed off, not quite sure what to say now that he was face to face with you.
“What do you want, Rafayel?” You took a seat behind your desk and defensively folded your arms over your chest, keeping your guard up. “To waste more of my time? To remind me how little I meant to you? Take your pick, and do it quickly because I don’t have all day.”
He looked pained. “I want to talk. Please.”
A bitter laugh escaped you. “And why should I listen to anything you have to say?”
“You shouldn’t,” he admitted, walking to your desk. “But I’m asking you to, anyway.”
You scoffed, shaking your head in disbelief as you looked off to the side. He somehow had the gall to walk into your building and ask to talk to you when he had no right to do so. It was just so like him, selfish with total disregard for your feelings, and as much as you wanted to tell him to get out, a small, hopeless part of you wanted to hear what he had to say.
You supposed that was what you got for falling for someone like him. “Fine. Talk.”
Relief flooded his system. He sat down on one of the cushioned chairs in front of your desk and tried to gather his thoughts. There was so much he wanted to say, but he hadn’t the faintest idea of where to start. “I’m sorry.”
That had seemed like a pretty good place to begin, but with the way your eyes narrowed, he wondered if he had already made a mistake. Lord knows it wouldn’t be his first or last one. “That could have been an email.”
“Would you have read it?”
You clenched your jaw at his rash question, opting to stay silent. Rafayel wanted to slap himself, knowing he was being an asshole even now, the one time he was actively trying to avoid doing so. He didn’t deserve even a second of your time; he should have walked out of your life and stayed away to avoid causing you any more pain.
He swallowed the lump in his throat and forged on. “I fucked up, I know that. I’ve never– I lied and said that none of it mattered, but– fuck, this is coming out all wrong.” He rubbed a hand over his face, frustrated at his inability to say what he wanted in a manner that made even a sliver of sense. “I was scared.”
All that self-assuredness you were so used to was nowhere to be seen now as he stumbled over his words. It was jarring to see Rafayel admit to being scared when you had only ever associated him with unshakable confidence.
“Scared of what? Me?”
There was something fractured in the way you asked that, fragile even. He immediately refuted the claim, feeling awful that you would even consider it a possibility. “No, god no, not you. Never you.” His eyes snapped to yours, full of earnestness that made you instantly believe him. “You called me your muse.”
You let out a slow breath. “I remember.”
Rafayel gripped the armrests on either side of him, looking off to the side, his throat bobbing with uncertainty as he contemplated whether this was a good idea anymore. “But muses are temporary. They can’t inspire forever, and god knows I’m not someone who thinks about forever.” A huff of forced laughter. “But with you, I did. I wanted to be the one that inspired you forever and that scared the shit out of me.”
Here they were, answers to questions you had been too proud to ask. He ran his fingers through his straightened hair, pushing it back and out of his face. Regardless of how restless he felt, he continued, knowing that the truth was the least of what you deserved. “For the first, fuck, maybe the only time in my life, I wanted to stay. I was so afraid that you’d wake up one day and realise I’m not worth being your muse and you’d walk away. Pick someone else.”
“Do you really think so little of me?” You asked quietly, unable to look anywhere but him.
“I didn’t know what to think,” He said honestly. “I’ve never cared so much, and the thought of you leaving because you didn’t find me inspiring enough for your creations–” He cut himself off and dropped his head, as if suddenly realising how fucking awful his assumption sounded out loud. “I thought the only way to avoid that would be to leave first, and I know that that makes no sense, but I….I’m so sorry.”
You had been called a lot of things in your life: difficult, stubborn, unreasonable, and yet somehow, this stung the worst. He had made the decision for you, leaving you to deal with the repercussions of an outcome you didn’t have a hand in choosing.
“You thought I saw you as a means to an end.” Your voice was devoid of emotion, hollow, anguished eyes never once finding his. “When I only ever thought of you as a beginning.”
For something that was a concept, it was funny how his regret manifested itself as a physical ache, ripping through his chest and causing his throat to close up on itself. Your words cut through him, reminding him of how he was the one to rush to an end that you hadn’t even considered.
Maybe this wasn’t salvageable. Maybe all he was destined for was to live with the knowledge that he had finally loved someone other than himself, and ruined it.
“I know what it feels like to be loved.” It took everything in him to keep looking at you when it seemed like you couldn’t bear to even glance at him. His tongue felt like it was made of lead, heavy and uncooperative as he tried to say what he had known for so long. “Adoration, infatuation, whatever. I know when someone is in love with me, but I’ve never felt the same way. I don’t know how to, but I think whatever I feel for you has to be pretty damn close, and–”
“Don’t you dare.”
“–I’m in love with you, Y/n.”
A shattered breath left you, your composure faltering completely at the confession. Nothing about this was fair. Your heart was bruised and battered, but it fluttered to life completely against your will when he said it, and you detested it. You wanted to hate him so badly, even when it was so clear that you loved him. Why else would all this hurt so bad?
They said pride came before fall, but in your case, you fell first, and now it was your pride that stopped you from letting him back in. You knew he didn’t deserve a shred of forgiveness, and you also knew that if you looked at him right now, you’d let go of the anger you were so desperately holding onto. It was the only thing keeping you from being totally vulnerable, so you kept your gaze on your mahogany desk, trying your hardest to stay strong.
“I think you should leave.”
Quiet enough to conceal how choked up you truly felt, you knew you didn’t mean it. You needed the time and space to think about everything that had happened. You couldn’t just forgive him even if you wanted to, so skilled at holding a grudge as you were, the bitter realisation that you were perhaps as scared as he was right then making itself known.
Rafayel had never been good at doing what he was told, but there was no place for his sense of entitlement here. He had done enough damage, and if you wanted him to leave, then that was exactly what he’d do. Getting to his feet, he stared at you one last time, waiting, wishing and hoping you’d look up.
But you didn’t.
So he left your office, complying with your wishes without argument. It should have pleased you, considering how you hated rebuttals when it came to people following your orders.
But as you watched him walk through those doors, you had never wanted someone to defy you more than in that moment.
When a storm comes to an end, it does so in parts.
First, the wind stops howling. As it does, the heavy showers relent and turn back into the light drizzle it started as, gentle and harmless. The darkened clouds clear up, giving way to clear blue skies and the warm, golden rays of the sun.
Resentment worked differently when it came to someone you loved. It turned out that both those feelings– resentment and love– could exist simultaneously, even when it seemed nearly impossible, but when the latter was real, it made it exhausting to hold on to all that anger. Love itself was confusing, contradictory, and so difficult to navigate, especially when it was good.
And when had anything good been easy?
The art gallery was pretty much empty, seeing that it was almost eight p.m., which was when it closed. You swept through the different hallways, procrastinating, approaching the showcase you were truly there for.
And why the hell were you there?
Because, despite everything, Rafayel was still everything you wanted, and you were so tired of pretending he wasn’t. You had spent night after night going over everything that had happened over the past six months and trying to convince yourself of the opposite, but when it came down to it, one thing was abundantly clear: he made you happy like no one else could. He could accomplish the opposite as well, but one extreme would not exist if the other didn’t.
He was flawed, but so were you. Your pride made it impossible for you to see that at first, making you punish yourself and stay miserable, even though the one thing you wanted was within reach. You turned it away, thinking that refusal would help you forget him and the way he made you feel, but it didn’t. Maybe it didn’t make any sense, but maybe it wasn’t supposed to. You had spent so much of your life making sure everything went exactly how you wanted, caging yourself within your own expectations.
Stepping into the back, you were in front of the very wall he had shown you all those months ago when he had dragged you out of your office. Even when you weren’t sure of him, he was the only person in your life who had ever forced you to live.
Your breath hitched.
The paintings had been rearranged with a new one in the centre. The colours stood out against the others, this one bathed in warm oranges and yellows, a faceless woman leaning out of the roof of a car with the wind in her hair. There was something distinctively wistful about it, like she was being viewed from the lens of another.
It was you.
You took a hesitant step forward, instinctively looking at the artist plaque despite knowing that it would read ‘anonymous’. Not that it mattered, of course, because you knew exactly who had made it.
“Y/n?”
You turned, and there Rafayel was. It had been a while since you had seen him, and during that time, he had stayed out of the limelight completely—no articles in tabloids, no rumours, nothing. Your pulse picked up at the sight of him, and you felt like a child being caught doing something they weren’t supposed to.
“What are you doing here?” The ridiculous question left you before you could stop it. His lips twitched slightly, a hint of amusement bleeding into those all-consuming eyes.
“Forgot already? I’m a little insulted.” He spoke gently, cocking his head towards his artwork. He studied you for a moment. “Why are you here?”
When it came to him, you always found yourself wanting to do opposite things at the same time. You wanted to run away, but more than anything, you wanted to run right back into his arms. If that made you an idiot, well, wasn’t everyone allowed to be one every once in a while?
“I don’t know.”
A soft smile, so much like the one he gave you that night when he first kissed you. “No, you do. You of all people don’t do things without a reason.”
There he went again, reading you like a book without your permission. You looked back at the painting of you, skillfully evading his question with one of your own. “When did you make that?”
“Recently.” Hesitantly, he made his way to your side, like he wasn’t sure if he had a spot there anymore, but in typical Rafayel fashion, he took it anyway. “I’ve had time on my hands.”
“How?”
“I haven’t been modelling that much lately. Thomas is just about fed up with me.” His attempt at levity wasn’t lost on you. You were quite aware of his absence from the spotlight as of late, but something nagged at the back of your mind, telling you that you had a piece of the puzzle missing.
Then it hit you as your eyes swept to him, once again succumbing to the gravitational pull he possessed. “But what about Dubois Designs?"
He slipped his hands into his pockets, not meeting your eyes. “They sent over a contract.” He admitted, clearing his throat. “But I may have thrown it out.”
“Why?” It felt like all you were doing was asking questions you already knew the answers to. Rafayel clicked his tongue in a mixture of mild annoyance and something else, something you couldn’t quite pinpoint, giving you a knowing look.
“You know why.”
Fuck. Both of you, stubborn, impossibly prideful people, holding each other back because of each other. It was almost laughable. Swallowing thickly, you shifted closer to him, your gaze darting back to his depiction of you. “It’s a beautiful painting.”
“Yeah, well, you can thank my muse for that.”
You were breathless. “I’m your muse?” Another question lay under this one: Do you still love me?
“If that’s okay with you,” His eyes never strayed from you, watching you like you were the very essence of the sun itself, or the most perfect pearl in the ocean. “I wouldn’t blame you if you don’t want to be. I may have given it a bad rep.”
You bit the inside of your cheek, facing him properly now that you had finally worked up the nerve. “You’ve made me a fool, Qi Rafayel.”
Fondness sweeter than the ripest of peaches spread over his face. “No one could ever make you a fool, Y/n. Especially not me.” He took a tentative step forward into your personal space, and you never wanted him to leave again. “So I’ll ask you again, why are you here?”
There were a few things in this shallow, pretentious world you were certain of. Your faith in your abilities as a designer was the first, knowing that no matter what, your skills and talent would always speak for themselves more than your words ever could. The second was your preference for coffee that was piping hot, without sugar, so that the bitterness would shock your system into functioning.
And the third, in a sick, unfortunately fortunate twist of fate, was Qi Rafayel, the model who had traipsed into your life without so much as a warning and had turned it upside down.
“Because you’re still my muse.” You whispered. “And as it so happens, I love you too.”
When your lips met, you knew right then and there that you’d never let him go again. Your palm cupped his face as you pulled him closer, reaquainting yourself with the feel of him against you, how the two of you fit together so perfectly as if you were made for each other. One of his hands slipped around your waist, the other coming to rest over your own over his face, keeping it trapped there as he leaned into your touch, whispering I love you’s back.
“I’m going to fuck up,” Rafayel mumbled against your mouth, resting his forehead against yours like he couldn’t bear to be any further from you. “I’m going to piss you off and I’m never going to be easy.”
You squeezed his forearm. “I know. Those are your most endearing qualities.”
“Will you love me even then?” He held you close, but you could feel the slight tremble in his touch. You saw him for what he was under all that indifference and chutzpah: a man who desperately loved you through his fear. Lucky for him, you were a woman who loved him through his mistakes and all the madness he brought into your life.
“Rafayel.” With a tender whisper of his name, you pressed your lips to his reassuringly. “I love you because of it.”
Love was messy and imperfect, but so were the two of you. Neither he nor you were easy people, but when had you ever taken the easy way out of something? You wouldn’t mind never getting out of this, content to stay with him for as long as he’d have you. The colours rushed back into your life, starting with the pinks and blues of his eyes as they crinkled with a smile. He’d break every one of your rules with a smile, and you’d let him.
“God, you’re going to regret that.”
But he was laughing, and so were you, giddy with the thought of a future with him. The sound of his laughter was so enchanting that you wanted to memorise it, and perhaps now you could, with him by your side for what you hoped would be a beginning without an end.
You were wholly and irrevocably in love with Qi Rafayel, infuriating quirks and all. Everyone in the industry that the two of you ruled might have thought of him as a total nightmare.
But to you? To you, Rafayel was a dream.
fin.
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🐦⬛ OUT OF BOUNDS — you get isekai-d into the n109 zone [chapter four]
synopsis — the monotony of your university days is interrupted by a stroke of misfortune, one which lands you in the world of love and deepspace, the game you had been casually playing for the previous months. with no way to return home, sylus offers you the job of being his personal secretary. — a continuation of the one-shot “out of bounds”
pairing — sylus x non-mc! reader
tags — reader is not mc, isekai/transmigration, fluff, angst, mutual pining, slice of life, boss/employee relationship, slow burn, grief, mourning, loss
a/n — we have finally reached the long awaited reader crashout and are nearing the end… i hope you all enjoy! this chapter was fucking with me for so long and i wanted to take my time rather than under deliver. this story means a lot to me and i’m trying my best to make sure it pays off well<33 but still, 18k words was not easy to edit so please don't mind any slight errors 😓 also, caleb came home in 30 pulls so do expect a birthday fic coming soon ~ (whether it'll be on time for his birthday is the question...)
ao3 | masterlist | series masterlist | part three | part five [coming soon]



chapter four: inevitable — it’s hard to shine when you’re standing between the sun and the moon. wc: 18.6k
The hunter’s arrival is no more than a whisper within the N109 Zone.
Sylus has kept the truth of her existence under lock and key, hiding his weakness under steel and chainmail. As far as the world knows, his interest lies in the protocore attached to her heart — and he plans to keep it that way. Biding his time, preparing for the day he carefully steps into her life.
But, like the force of nature she was, the hunter manages to find her own way in.
He’s the image of cool confidence as he’s informed of her capture in enemy hands, draping a blazer atop his shoulders and instructing the twins to start the car. “Will you be able to hold the fort on your own?” He asks.
But you can see the barest tremor in his hands, the tension in his shoulders, the rising fear of losing her before he even gets to see her with his own two eyes.
“You can count on me.”
This is the only peace you can offer him in the midst of this chaos.
His eyes continue to linger, as if time wasn’t of the essence. Little words have been exchanged between the two of you since the hunter came into the picture. And for a moment, you think he might say something (please, say something). But all he does is grip your shoulder as if to ground himself, nodding in a silent ‘thank you’ before he leaves.
The door shuts behind him.
You know how this story goes. It was only a matter of time before he reunited with his lover in this life, before the story would continue along its tracks and catch you in the crossfire.
Your search for a way home had become painfully futile. You’d think a world altered by the discovery of the Deepspace Tunnel would have more answers to the truth of your presence here, but your search had dug up nothing. Wormholes, dimensional travel, transmigration; from the philosophical to the scientific, all paths led to dead ends.
You sit listless in your chair, fiddling with the necklace Sylus gave you as you wait for your life to be thrown into chaos.
Staring into the metropolitan abyss of the N109 Zone, you sometimes like to imagine what sylus sees. An ant-like web of crimes and deceit, of power-hungry folks looking to get ahead and eat each other alive in the process. But all you ever see is a world beyond your understanding. And here, you wonder where you fit in this ecosystem; what your presence has done to change the story.
You burst into terrible, broken laughter.
You shouldn’t get ahead of yourself.
You were but a drop of water in the ocean. There was nothing that you, with no worth or significance to your name, could do to make more than a solitary ripple.
And so, you keep your longings locked and your love as just thoughts, as you wait in bated breath for the story and their fated reunion to begin.
—————————————————————
“Where are you taking me?” Her voice is biting as the twins bring her to the room you’ve prepared. Ornate, spacious, and windowless, just as Sylus asked. A gilded cage with an open door. You don’t see her but her rage rings through the corridors, something that feels almost like a hallucination after having stepped in her shoes, reading the story you once adored.
Her arrival is a marker of the story catching up to you, of time catching up to you. A reminder that you do not belong in this world.
In the next few days, you become a quiet observer of this tale, watching their fractured reunion play out.
“What makes you think I'd ever be willing to help you?” She snapped at Sylus after their third failure at resonance, a sad attempt at a threat when she lay exhausted, slumped in the fancy chair in his study.
“You don’t exactly have a choice, sweetie. As you can see —” He gestures to the opulent surroundings, “— you’re in my territory.”
You roll your eyes. Trust Sylus to make a shit first impression, even to the supposed love of his life.
You keep to the sidelines, going about your typical routine. But your curiosity gets the better of you on the second day, when you offer to bring the hunter her food.
You can’t help but imagine being in her shoes right now; kidnapped by the man she believes to have destroyed her home and killed her family. To an extent, you think it might not be so different to how you felt, first arriving here.
So, you decide to reach out. Maybe gain her trust and coax her into eating and regaining her strength. Food is the way to the heart, after all. At dinner time, you bring a tray to her room, knocking on the door and calling her name.
“Who's there?” She asks from the other side of the door, wariness lacing her voice.
You introduce yourself, “It’s me, Sylus's secretary. Aren’t you hungry?” You soften your voice, treating her with the gentleness you would a cornered animal, but you’re met with silence. Concern gnaws at you, “You haven’t eaten in twenty four hours.”
She scoffs, the sound muffled by the barrier between you two. “What, isn’t that your plan? Starve me til’ I’m too weak to escape and resist Sylus's demands?”
You stop in your tracks, puzzled. “Escape? You know you can leave, right? No one’s going to stop you.” Even the door was unlocked. But you believed knocking was a basic form of respect, unwilling visitor or not.
She stays tight-lipped for the next few moments, so you continue, “Not that you’d get any further than a couple blocks, what with vultures hanging around the compound at all hours of the day—” Your spiel is cut off as she suddenly swings the door open, doing a double take at the sight of you.
It’s clear she sees the resemblance just as you had, her face contorting from defensiveness to stunned confusion. But for you, seeing her in the flesh only refuted any idea of similarity between the two of you.
Haggard and bruised, the hunter still manages to shine in the gritty underbelly of the N109 Zone.
When you first saw her face projected in the hologram, the likeness was unmistakable. The shape of your eyes, the slope of your nose, and the barely-there difference in the color of your hair and complexion. Anyone could have mistaken the two of you as cousins, maybe even siblings. But standing in front of her now, the difference has become clear as day.
You can’t help but understand how so many have fallen head over heels, enthralled by her and her character. In the shadow of her energy and vivacious presence, you could only look dim in comparison. Standing beside Sylus was no small feat — one that you’d failed to live up to, looking nondescript and ordinary at the side of the most powerful man in the N109 Zone.
But of course, she fits like the missing piece to his puzzle. The dragon and the sorceress, now the criminal and the hunter. You try not to feel inferior, tamping down the jealousy and pettiness festering within you, but it’s hard to shine when you’re standing between the sun and the moon.
The initial surprise dissipates, and she eyes you with the mistrust expected of a kidnapee twice-over. You extend the tray towards her as a sign of good will, “Eat it while it’s still hot.”
“...How do I know it’s not poisoned?”
You huff, taking a quick bite. “Happy now?”
She snatches the tray and slams the door behind her in one quick motion. You click your tongue; so much for gaining her trust.
—————————————————————
Time had dulled your memory of how awful their first meeting truly was.
Really, what was Sylus thinking? You wonder as he treats his treasured soulmate so… menacingly.
You’ve become a bystander to the motions of the story you’re familiar with; the failed resonance, her disdain for him, and his absolute lack of tact in interacting with her. With his every word coated in menace and veiled threats, you’re wondering if Sylus was even thinking at all. Was he like this when you two first met? You try to recall as you get the ick from his unexpected hostility.
You want to know what’s running through his mind, what possessed him to think this was the appropriate way to go about this. But since the hunter’s arrival, your time with him had become even more scarce, any moment together cut off by his work or your urgency to leave.
Guilt washes over you each time you see his face drop, when you make another hasty escape from facing him. But you cling on to the belief that this was necessary, to give you both space to adjust to the hunter’s presence, and for you to learn to live with the fact that he was not yours.
The two return from the workshop, and you stride into the office to give your daily secretarial report — only to find him hunched at his desk with a glass of wine, staring vacantly into the skyline of the N109 Zone.
In the dimly lit office, his eyes, shrouded by the shadows, give away nothing. But you catch the way his shoulders tense, his fingers clenching the stem of the glass.
“Sylus?” You call out gently, announcing your presence with audible footsteps as you approach him, breaking your internal promise to keep your distance. But you could only hold out this one-sided silence for so long, weak in the face of his vulnerability.
He calls your name with a weary tone, “Do me a favor and tell the informant I won't be meeting him today.”
“Are you okay? What happened?” You take slow steps in approaching him.
He fiddles with the stem of his wine glass as he releases a low, bitter laugh, “Well… it seems that our dearest hunter fears me. It was not any bodily dysfunction or injury that was preventing us from resonating, but rather her disgust.”
She captured his heart, bound his soul to hers, and now has no recollection of any of it. Detests him to the point her evol rejects his.
You feign ignorance to the story beats you remember, “Well, it’s only been so long since you’ve met her again… If she’s still the same person, her memories of you are still there, deep down.”
“As if the world hasn’t made me wait long enough.”
You don’t know what to say to that — heart torn between feeling bruised and feeling sadness for him.
“I'd like to be alone.” He takes a deep breath, a subtle command as returns his gaze to the skyline, guarding his vulnerability, unwilling to bare more of his weaknesses than he already has.
The world sees Sylus as an unstoppable force, as the supreme authority in the criminal underworld. But though the dragon may be fierce and capable, the human underneath was just that — a human. One that got frustrated, whose skin bruised, who had weaknesses that he guarded with veiled ferocity. But somehow, somewhere along the way, he’d chosen to strip the curtains of that vulnerability to you.
Maybe in another world, you would have taken him into your arms, refused to leave him as he quietly fell apart. But in this reality, it was no longer your place to do so. As it was, he had promised his heart to another, leaving yours too tender to comfort his.
The only peace you could offer him now was the privacy to crumble in solitude.
Still, you couldn’t bear to leave him so quietly. “You’re not a hard person to love. You know that, right?” You whisper, a quiet admission of your feelings. For all his gruff and intimidating nature, it was not his power, money, or looks that earned him your affection. But rather, all the softness he guards from the harsh world he lives in.
You shut the door before he can acknowledge you, trying to wipe the mental image of his conflicted expression. You mute his email for the next hour, redirecting it to your inbox, offering him a brief moment of peace to ruminate in his thoughts.
You laugh silently, bitterly to yourself, for giving so much of yourself for a man who was devoted to another. Despite having been set aside, you still can’t help but show your love for him in the only way you know how. (In the only way you can).
And you wonder to yourself: could you ever touch the part of him that hurts? One of the most powerful men in this world, having his world shaken by the hunter’s disdain. If it were your spite, your hurt that he faced, would it even feel close to the gravity he feels now?
You shouldn’t ask questions you don’t want the answer to.
You had found yourself in the deep end, and it was high time to swim back to shore, to back out of this one-sided race. Because you may have received his affection, but you will never receive the depth of his devotion.
—————————————————————
Hostility melts into mischievous affection as the hunter’s dynamic with Sylus takes a sudden pivot into unfamiliar territory. The visit to the shopkeeper marked a turning point in their relationship as Sylus came to his senses, and their relationship evolved for the better. The truth to their tied souls, you think, as you bear witness to the connection quickly blossoming between them.
You’re fine. Really, you are.
(At least, that’s what you tell yourself each time you see the soft smile on his face, melting in adoration for the hunter.)
You stop avoiding him, after catching a glimpse of the vulnerability he attempts to hide. His face lights up whenever you approach him, breaking the silence you kept for so long. And not for the first time, you feel guilt wash over you for how you added to his existing turmoil.
But still, you’re left wondering about your place in his life now that the hunter has arrived.
The pages turn one after another as the two of you fall back into old routines, nurturing the friendship and camaraderie you built over the past year. But not everything stays the same.
You maintain your boundaries, keeping your nightmares and worries to yourself — settling for long, lonely nights, when the alternative is setting yourself up for a painful road.
One night, you find a rare moment of peace in the recent chaos. The two of you battle over this world’s version of Monopoly in a high-stakes, cutthroat bet to determine who will have the first taste of Luke and Kieran’s slightly… dubious creation in the kitchen.
They had taken up a class in baking after catching you one too many times in the dead of the night, making midnight snacks. A fact which warmed your heart, at first, until you realized that neither twin has ever touched a stove in their lives. The clanging of pots and shouts coming from the kitchen only serve to fill you with dread.
You try your best, but eventually resign yourself to your fate. You know a lost cause when you see it. You didn’t exactly expect death by food poisoning, but when you think about it, it wasn’t a bad way to go.
“Can’t you let this poor salaryman pass through? Just this once?” You pout on the second hour of playing this stupid board game, putting on your best puppy eyes as you implore him to pity your little player.
“That wouldn’t be fair to you, sweetie.” He smiles as you begrudgingly hand over the play money for landing on his property.
His attention is focused solely on you, a rarity since the hunter’s arrival. But even with the scarce time you’ve spent together, you can’t pretend not to have noticed the growing bags under his eyes, the constant furrow in his brow. He’s handled the chaos in the N109 Zone with the stride of a man who knows his word is law; but at the expense of his own health and rest.
In perfect timing, the game ends just as the twins exit the kitchen, dressed in matching aprons and holding a plate of mini strawberry shortcakes. You end up losing, as expected, but Sylus is a good sport — taking a bite right alongside you.
It’s… not bad at all, especially for a beginner. A little wonky and undercooked in the middle, the edges slightly burnt. But it’s edible. “Not bad,” You say — and immediately correct yourself, “Not that I thought it would be! But it’s good. Better than my first go at it, at least.” You leave out the age you were when you first touched an oven — all worth it to see their eyes shining from your praise.
”Awe, thanks, Miss Secretary! It was all in a day’s work,” Luke grins as he fixes his crooked apron.
Of course, Sylus is Sylus. Eliciting his praise is like pulling out teeth. “It’s… acceptable, I’ll admit,” He says with a satisfied hum.
Still, it’s enough for the twins to celebrate with a high five, “Hell yeah!”
The four of you clear half the tray, before bidding the twins good night, the two suddenly tired from the sugar crash. “Amateurs,” You tease. They probably kept taste-testing the ingredients.
“I hadn't expected baking to become such an… outlet of energy for them.” Sylus comments, stealing a strawberry from your piece. You retaliate by getting a scoop of his whipped cream.
“Well, most people I know started baking as some sort of distraction or stress relief,” You eat a forkful of cake and nod in approval. Every storm in your life has been followed by the creation of more pastries than you could possibly eat. “If it distracts them from the pranks, then I wholeheartedly approve!” You cheerily stake your fork into the air.
“Knowing the twins, they’ll just find a way to incorporate it,” He eyes the kitchen doors skeptically, not wanting their mischief to bleed into the food they eat.
With all the sugar you just consumed, it was clear you wouldn’t be sleeping anytime soon. “Wanna clear this batch with me? Before they go and stock the fridge with the rest of their projects.”
“I'm afraid I'll have to take a rain check on that,” He says as he puts on his blazer again, standing up from the dining table.
“Hm? But there wasn’t anything on the calendar, last I checked. Did I miss —”
You’ve already brought out your phone to view the shared calendar when he explains, “I’ll be meeting with the hunter regarding a little… deal, that she’s brokered.” He leans down to match your height and ruffles your hair. “Don’t worry, Miss Secretary. Your schedule’s still intact.”
You roll your eyes, trying to muster a smile as you remind him, “Be nice.”
He raises an eyebrow, “When am I not?” Tch. When is he ever?
Soon, you settle in the silence of an empty kitchen — and the thought of more cake doesn’t sound so appealing anymore. It’s never easy hearing of the two spending time together, much less seeing them in the penthouse everyday. But you’d rather have a friendship with Sylus than nothing at all. And you can only hope that with time, one day, it won’t hurt at all anymore.
For a brief period of time, you have hope of that possibility. You think if you hold these boundaries in place and protect your friendship, things might just return to normal. Even if it means the end to anything more.
That is, until the arrival of the auction.
The Solon Hotel celebrates its 15th annual auction, a Myriad of Nights. The crinkled invitation has been pinned to your corkboard for months, a dreaded reminder of all the preparations you needed to make.
The event has kept you on your toes; dutifully studying the list of guests, keeping an eye on keen bidders and Onychinus rivals. This auction is one of the N109 Zone’s most important events of the year, with the grossly rich and the violently powerful alike having a stake in this auction.
One week before the auction, Sylus strolls into the office, a sly smile plastered on his face, “I come bearing good news.”
You roll out your chair to face him. Without missing a beat, you ask, “A raise? World peace? Luke and Kieran outgrowing their terrible twos?”
“I'm not a miracle worker,” He smirks at that last one. “No, I've come to tell you that you’ve been granted a night off on the 17th.”
“The 17th?” You question — and he amusedly spins your chair before striding over to his desk, ready to start the work day. But you’re left dazed, stopping the wheel as you pull up the shared digital calendar, confirming your suspicions. “But that’s the night of the auction.”
“Miss Hunter will be covering for you.”
“Oh?” Your face falls in an obvious dismay you can’t hide.
The auction. Like many things from the story that have become hazy over time, the auction had slipped your mind. With how far back preparations had started, you completely overlooked its connection with the hunter’s arrival.
“She has her own agenda for the night,” He continues, “One that promises bloodshed. So, I want you to rest easy for the night. Take a well deserved break.”
By all accounts, you should be glad. You can’t blame him for making this decision, as you vocally detest going to these events. It’s easily the least enjoyable part of your job. But even with the foreknowledge you had, the thought of her taking your place weighs like a heavy brick in your stomach.
He realizes you’re not exactly pleased. “You can still come if you’d like to, of course,” He’s quick to assure you. “I thought you might enjoy the night off since you despise dealing with these affairs. I didn’t take you for being such a workaholic,” He chuckles affectionately, motioning to ruffle your hair — but you pull away, a little too abruptly.
You see his face fall, and you quickly brush it off and pretend to be unaffected, “Ah, ah, ah — no can do, slave driver!” You dramatically make a letter X with your arms. “You can’t take away a day off once you’ve given it.”
He rolls his eyes, but the concern doesn’t leave his face as he tries to coax you into opening up, eyes filled with a quiet honesty, “There’s no need to pretend like you’re not bothered by this. I know you’ve worked hard for this event.”
“Sylus, you don’t need to worry about me. You have bigger fish to fry. Besides, why would I be bothered by a day off?” You try to play it off.
He sighs, accepting that you’re not going to talk about this any further. “Well, you know that there’s no one who can do your job better, right?” He places a hand on your shoulder, “I just don’t want you getting caught in the trouble that’s bound to ensue.”
You muster a smile, “Of course. After all, what would you do without your dearest secretary?”
He smirks, mind flashing to a night that now feels further than the sun. “Descend into chaos, no doubt.”
As though you were a scorned lover, you watch them from the mezzanine of the penthouse, dressed in your frilly pajamas and sipping a hot mug of tea as they leave dressed to the nines. The criminal and the hunter, two souls cut from the same cloth.
As much as it hurts you to stay behind, there was no way you would be able to stomach the picture perfect image of them together.
“Ready?” He offers his arm with the mannerisms of a perfect escort.
“It's showtime.”
“You lovebirds leaving without me?” You can’t help but be a little dramatic and interrupt their moment — though, Sylus definitely sensed your presence long before they entered. “Could’ve saved me a dance, at least.”
The hunter’s face scrunches in disdain at the mention of lovebirds, but she quickly recovers. “Oh, I think there’ll be more than just dancing, Miss Secretary,” She cheekily lifts the slit of her dress, showing a peek of the pistol strapped to her thigh.
Despite already knowing they’ll have a safe return, your brows knit in worry, “Stay safe out there, you two.”
“You know we can’t promise that — but we’ll make a good effort,” Sylus smirks at you, a hint of concern in his eyes at the idea of leaving you behind.
You nod, a silent way of saying you’ll be okay. You wave goodbye and the hunter returns it eagerly, having warmed up to you in the past week. But the concerned, knowing look never leaves Sylus's face until they depart.
The elevator doors slide shut, and it feels like a coffin closing over your heart.
You laugh at how dramatic you’re being as you hold back a slight tear. It’s just an auction, you keep telling yourself. But it’s not the auction, isn’t it? It was seeing her take your place, and knowing this won’t be the last time.
You pick yourself back up, resolving to make the most of your night off. You make yourself comfortable in the living room, blanket and couch all to yourself, a movie running as background noise as you try to distract yourself with all sorts of hobbies. But you find yourself listless, unable to keep your mind focused on one thing.
The movie ends, and it becomes quiet.
With Sylus gone and the twins on a mission, the silence becomes all consuming. You leave a light on for when they return, trekking through opulent hallways until you reach your room, where once again, you stare into the city skyline stretching out into the distance.
There’s rarely ever an opportunity to be alone in the Onychinus base. But when you are, it never ends well. You used to be able to appreciate solitude in your old world, but maybe you’ve become a little spoiled here, in receiving the constant companionship you had once lived without as a student living away from home.
Here, solitude is when the lines between your dreams and reality begin to blur. Hours dazed in the possibilities of the past, the possibilities of a world where you had stayed. Graduated, diploma in hand as your family stands proudly at your side. Starting your career, devoting your passion to the field you love.
In comparison, this place feels like a lovely yet imprisoning dream. You’re fascinated by the wonders of the world you live in now, but each day that passes is a reminder of your place — or rather, lack thereof — in this world. A reminder of losses beyond comprehension. The loss of chance. The loss of possibility. No opportunity for you to grow, no winding path to change and evolve. And you ask yourself: are you even living?
This world feels like dreaming in a far-too-long nap. And not for the first time, you want to wake up from it.
It's currently March, the last of the winter chill before the snow melts, marking more than a year since your arrival. You feel like a broken record, looping back to the same hurts in an endless loop of grief; your doomed love, severed home, rootless soul. You can no longer fool yourself into thinking you can continue like this. You can no longer pretend to have a reason to stay.
You need to spare yourself from this grief, before it consumes you.
—————————————————————
The auction reaches a chaotic conclusion, one that is whispered about through the N109 Zone for weeks after. You feel the ripples of their actions even from the safety of your office. Luke and Kieran are sent to clean house at The Nest. Meanwhile, you’re swamped with associates from Onychinus’s complex web of loyalties, scrambling to reclaim their spot in Sylus's good graces in light of the recent power struggle.
Eventually, the dust settles. The pages of the calendar turn as the snow melts and warmth pours into the Onychinus base. And alongside the sunshine is Miss Hunter, whose presence becomes a permanent fixture in the penthouse.
It has only been a year since your arrival in this world, but your life has been completely upended, you think. From being a broke, burned out college student, to a tired secretary and mother of three.
Who were those three children, one may ask?
“Miss Secretary!” You poke your head out to see what the fuss was all about, hearing the twins snickering not too far away. The hunter stomps her way to your room, face cringed and seething in disgust. “Luke and Kieran gave me a cookie filled with toothpaste!”
“Ah — see, your first mistake there was trusting anything they gave you.”
Luke and Kieran warmed up extremely quickly to the hunter, as they did in the story. They enjoyed her presence around the base, but you couldn’t tell if it was more for her personality or the fact they had a new target for their trickery. A part of you was relieved; it meant you were no longer on their roster of victims (not that they particularly like pranking you, as you stare them down in disappointment each time). But their determination to mess with the hunter was going to send you into an early grave.
“I didn't even know they could feed themselves, let alone bake,” She pouted, crossing her arms. “In fact, they told me you made them!”
Ah. “Well… there may be some truth to that…” Your voice descends in volume to hide your guilt, but the hunter manages to hear quite clearly.
“You knew about it, and you didn’t tell me?” She gasps, face contorting into mock betrayal. “I can't believe you had it in you to be this… deceitful!”
In your defense, they had only asked you for baking lessons on how to make a cookie sandwich. You had no part in the actual crime. (Though, you may have turned a blind eye at them squeezing toothpaste in the frosting bag. Your patience can only go so far.)
As penance and apology, you promise to bake her actual, edible cookies in return for the monstrosity she just ingested, when you suddenly have a stroke of genius. “I wonder if they have any left.” Your face contorts into a shit-eating grin, “Don’t you think Sylus would appreciate a sweet treat right about now?”
The two of you cackle and rope the twins into it, sending Miss Hunter as the messenger. (He sees right through your ploy, but still takes a bite because she’s the one offering.)
So maybe you’re not as mature as you preach to be. However, your headaches aren’t exclusive to the humans in the penthouse.
Mephisto's permanent return to the base was a spark of joy in the bleak few months you’ve had, as he’s released from the duty of monitoring the hunter 24/7. It surprised you how much you missed the crow, realizing you’d taken his presence as one of your constant companions for granted.
The first week after his return, he sticks to your side like glue. Displeased at the hunter’s continued presence, continuing to report about her to you. Each time he catches her with Sylus he goes to show you the footage — almost like a son tattling on his father’s misdeeds. It’s a sweet gesture; clearly he’s smarter than given credit for, enough to decipher why you’ve been so downtrodden in the recent weeks. But as much as you appreciate his concern, you’re also not a masochist.
“What is it, Mephie?” You groan, abruptly woken after three grueling hours of trying to fall asleep. You would have thrown hands had you not discovered Mephisto, flapping his wings urgently.
He pecks at your cheek, showing you a hologram of Sylus and the hunter in his room, shoulders pressed together in a close proximity you were not prepared to see. “What, you want me to do something about it?” He flaps his wings in earnest, and you promptly turn around to bury your head in the pillow.
“It's none of my business!” You stubbornly burrow yourself under the blanket as he continues to squawk, “I don't want to know about the time they spend together, okay? It’s just rubbing salt into the wound.” You groggily explain, voice muffled by the pillow.
You didn’t need Mephisto to report on them — you already knew Sylus spent all his free time with her. As recalling her memories was a long shot, he turned his efforts to slowly build up their relationship again. What were once free slots in his calendar are suddenly blocked with the simple notes of ‘Miss Hunter.’ Your work dynamic has never been more out of sync, with his adjustments to the hunter’s daytime schedule after you had originally adjusted to his nights. Gone are the nights you could find him downstairs, spending the night chatting away your fears. Now, all you find are the lights turned off and a motorcycle gone from the garage.
Your voice must have taken a sad turn as the crow whimpers, nuzzling his beak into your neck to comfort you, almost like an apology. “It's okay, I know you just wanted to help.”
You let him roost on your bedside drawers, watching as he mechanically shuts down to rest. Mephisto's presence usually helps you fall asleep but tonight, you sigh as you resign yourself to a night of overthinking.
For a while, you thought that Mephie’s grudge against the hunter was one-sided. A rebellious phase, like a son’s poor reaction to his father’s new partner. So imagine your surprise when you realized she returned the sentiment.
You’re knitting on the couch, nodding along and reacting accordingly to Mephie’s squawks and accusatory pointing of his wings to the disgruntled hunter across the room.
“She said that? Oh, I’m so sorry you had to hear that…” You dramatically cater to the crow’s concerns, “I'll talk to her for you, don’t you worry.”
“Sylus should’ve fed him to the wolves,” The hunter pokes her tongue out at the crow, who squawks in horror. “Of all the adorable, fluffy, non-feathered pets he could’ve had —”
“Ah, ah, he’s not a pet,” You correct her to appease the bird who looks as if steam is about to leave his butt. “He’s the best reconnaissance agent we have at Onychinus. Aren’t you, Mephie?” You coo at him and he flaps his wings in agreement.
But of all the changes the hunter’s arrival brought to your life, the most unexpected development was your friendship with her.
In hindsight, it was no surprise. She may be a hunter — cutthroat and fearless, storming into the N109 Zone, wreaking havoc in the city’s most powerful crime syndicate — but you find there’s a certain bond between all freshly graduated college students. A little burned out, a little lost in life. Your similarities run deeper than your appearances, finding common ground in interests and life experiences despite having come from two different worlds.
She turns to you as a refuge within Onychinus, and in the process, she becomes yours.
Although you loved your newfound family, a year spent with only them had perhaps led you to become a little stir crazy. You almost forgot how it was to interact with normal people your age, as your current situation and job didn’t leave you with a lot of room to feel carefree. But the hunter steps in as a breath of fresh air, taking you along on her various escapades.
“What, leaving without me?” Sylus asks with a touch of playful offense, when the hunter arrives at the Onychinus headquarters — not for him, but for you, to his comical surprise. You can see the silent question in his eyes as they flit between the two of you, and you shrug.
“Yes, now go shoo,” The hunter flicks her wrist, motioning for him to leave as she grins and slings an arm over your shoulder. “It's just me and Miss Secretary today.”
This had all began when the hunter had been rambling about Kitty Cards, and you had stupidly made the off-hand comment, “Oh yeah, I’ve never played that before.”
It wasn’t a lie; the real life edition of the game would be a vastly different experience to the virtual one. But the appalled look on her face sent waves of regret coursing through you, as she immediately booked a session at her favorite cat cafe.
Of course, Sylus still manages to pull one on you as you’re promptly greeted by two bodyguards from the pool of new initiates.
Your jaw drops as you turn to him, “Excuse me, do you not trust me to go out on my own?”
“It's not you that I don't trust,” His gaze drifts over to the hunter, who glares at him in offense. “Our dear hunter, on the other hand, has a talent for finding trouble.”
The hunter in question scoffs, “Well, why else do you think I keep you around?” She tilts her head cheekily at him, as he rolls his eyes, breathing an affectionate sigh.
Like always, it’s a casual punch to the gut.
His gaze travels to you (almost knowing, you think) but you brush it aside and keep the neutral expression on your face. “Let’s wrap it up, you two.” You walk forward, lightly shoving your shoulder against Sylus’s, interrupting their moment. A rare moment of pettiness from you, but you think you’re entitled to it every now and then. “Shall we go? I’d like to see the Linkon sun before nightfall.”
You spend the day in Linkon where she crushes your ass repeatedly, and you’re not even offended. You were only here to see the cats, after all. It’s the perfect duo; she’s way too competitive and you don’t care about winning at all — the best of both worlds as you share the winnings, anyway, at the badge counter.
In your small world consisting of your newfound family at Onychinus, you appreciate the new friend you’ve made. An appreciation that surpasses any of the petty jealousy you may have. Time spent with the hunter means the opportunity to be a little less mature, to be silly in a way you haven’t been in a long time. You appreciate the brief reprieve, as this world has forced you to remain at 100% — keeping you at constant guard in the wake of your transmigration.
Alongside kitty cards, she introduces you to the pop culture in this world, something you were never given a glimpse of in the game. One afternoon, you two decide to steal a set of speakers from Sylus’s study, putting on a playlist she made after learning how little you knew of mainstream music.
You’re sitting on the floor of your room, surrounded by papers as she switches the song to a soft acoustic track. “I like this one,” you comment, making a mental note to add the artist to your own playlist.
“You don’t know them? Huh, I guess I shouldn't be surprised since you didn’t know any of the fifteen others before this…” You laugh awkwardly as she sends you the link, murmuring a soft thanks. “Did you grow up under a rock?”
“Something like that. I grew up really far from Linkon, it’s like an entirely different world there.” It wasn’t a lie.
She never questions you further than that, to your relief. “You know, three months ago I wouldn't have dared to step into sylus’s study unless my life was at stake,” The hunter reminisces, sprawled out on your bed. “But here we are, committing casual theft.”
“You’ll learn over time he’s not as scary as he thinks he is. Especially when it comes to you. You could — I don’t know, spill your coffee on his desk, or stage a revolt against him in Onychinus, and he wouldn’t even bat an eye.”
She rolls her eyes, but you can see the faint blush coating her cheeks. “You’re exaggerating. Honestly, I was scared shitless when I first met him. Don’t tell him that,” She stares you down, and you motion to zip your mouth closed. “But I guess he’s not that bad, the more I get to know him…”
You smile, partly out of affection and partly out of bitterness. The hunter is so obviously smitten, and you know it’s only a matter of time before she opens her heart to him.
By all means, you should be happy for them. You should be happy that your dearest friend in this world is finally getting the love and happiness he desires, that he deserves. You promised to back out of this unspoken race and let the story continue as intended — but here and now, fiddling with the beautiful necklace given to you many moons ago, you realize you have a habit of clutching onto things for far too long.
Long after the hunter leaves, you shuffle papers and calendars around to an unnecessary degree of perfection, lingering on these thoughts. Your friends, your family, your dreams, had made up the beautiful, imperfect mess that was your life. But here, beyond the walls of this place, the sad reality was there was little reason for you to stay. Little reason for you to live.
And you wonder, when she finally takes the place you hold in Sylus’s life, in Onychinus — what will be left for you in this world?
—————————————————————
Early April showers take over the dark skies of the N109 Zone, a soft drizzle pattering against the windows of Sylus’s main office. It's a slow day, spring taking its course as Onychinus returns to a new normal with the hunter.
Stoic and focused he may seem, but Sylus’s mind is anywhere but work, drifting to the hunter and their blossoming relationship. He’s taken any and all opportunities to spend time with her. His schedule — once filled with free nights and weekends spent cozily in the penthouse — are booked back to back in any free moment he and the hunter can spare. His text messages, typically relegated to his work, become full of silly little moments as she continues to take a larger place in his life.
It’s what he wanted, isn’t it?
So why does he feel his heart fall every time he sees the distance that’s grown between you two?
It's the 17th of April, and despite the little time you’ve spent together, he knows you already have something planned for his birthday. You haven’t breathed a word about it, but he knows that you would refuse to let it go uncelebrated, if the twins’ hushed scheming around him isn’t enough to go by.
He rests his chin on his hand, scrutinizing you, as if he could read your mind if he tried hard enough. You type away on your computer like a machine, so focused that it takes an awfully time before your eyes drift over to him, a bit alarmed at the intensity of his staring. “Why are you looking at me like that?”
“No reason at all,” He barely holds back the smirk threatening to curl at his lips.
He can practically see the thoughts running through your head. Is he mad? Is he planning something? Can he read my mind? Until you finally look away with a resigned sigh.
He chuckles under his breath, thinking he’s ready for whatever you have planned, when the door swings open, revealing the hunter — who was supposedly busy with work today — on a surprise visit.
“Knock knock!” She raps her knuckles against the open door, “Good evening, Miss Secretary! Or — good morning, I guess, for the both of you?”
“Did I say you could come in?” Sylus asks with his typical drawled snark.
She scoffs, throwing a smile at you before occupying his visitor’s chair, crossing her legs and making herself comfortable. “Is that any way to greet your favorite hunter, who’s so kindly come to you since you’ve been busy all week?”
He narrows his eyes, “You want something from me.” A statement, not a question.
She sticks her tongue out at him, having clocked her immediately before she even got a word in. “A little birdie may have told me that you own an RX–116 —”
“You’re not riding it.” The answer comes automatically, eyes mechanically returning to the paperwork he’d been previously neglecting.
“You haven’t even let me explain why…!”
“Alright, tell me. Why should I let you take Treasure — my most cherished motorcycle — out on a reckless joyride into the N109 Zone?” He crosses his arms, patiently waiting for her answer.
“Because you’re a fun–loving soul at heart, who values the happiness of his friends?” Her tone is light, fingers crossed, only to receive his deadpan stare. She huffs, “Oh, come on. I promise I'll be careful. What if you drive? If Miss Secretary can survive it, I definitely could!”
His eyes drift over to you, and you barely glance up from your screen, deigning him with a shrug. “Sorry, she asked.” He continues to stare intently at you, a silent plea he hopes you’d understand if only you’d just look up. “Why are you looking at me like that?”
“…No meetings? Deadlines? Overdue paperwork? Tell me what’s on my schedule today.”
You grant him an almost knowing smile, rolling your eyes. “Since when have you cared about paperwork?” Still, you flick through the digital calendar, lazily pretending to indulge his request. “No, there’s nothing keeping you. You’re free from the clutches of work. For today,” You emphasize that last part as a subtle threat.
Still, he continues to look at you skeptically — it’s almost like he wants you to hand him more work. “I mean it, go have fun. Take a break. Since when did you care so much about skipping work?” He can almost hear you muttering, “The privileges of being a rich bastard…” as you breathe a tired sigh.
It's true that Sylus's position affords him the privilege of passing up on the workday for his whims. Whether it be upgrading Mephisto, waiting on online auctions for vintage records, or in this case, a day out with the hunter.
It unnerves him, this side of you. Despite the stark gap in power between you, you’ve never failed to scold and banter with him, thumping him on the head more than a few times after he’d neglected the calendar. But lately, you’ve been almost… complacent with him, as if you’ve accepted something inevitable.
It's a jarring realization when he thinks about how little time he’s spent with you since the hunter’s return. Especially considering how close you had grown, how you’d spent almost every free moment with him before. A part of him knows that for one reason or another, you’ve kept your distance, and he hates it — but at the same time, the hunter was slowly opening her heart to him.
But were you really going to let him go this easily, on the eve of his birthday, when you clearly had something planned already? It was moments like these that made him wish for things to return to normal. (That made him wish to see the side of you that cared.)
“Fine,” He gives into the pleading eyes of the hunter, who cheers as he tosses her the keys. “Meet me in the garage. Careful not to go too wild, kitten.”
He shakes his head as she skips out of the room, catching one last look at you before muttering, “You two will be the death of me…” He leaves the office without looking back.
The evening is spent racing through the outskirts of the N109 Zone, wind and rain rushing past them as Sylus takes the opportunity to show off the motor’s maximum speed. She screams, and it echoes through the empty roads. Joyously carefree, still carrying the same fire and spirit she once held in their previous lives.
But, not everything was the same. The hunter’s life was by no means easy, but she grew up in a much kinder world than the sorceress, untouched by the horrors that he and her previous iteration were irrevocably changed by. Does he even want her to remember? Would it still be love if he forced her to relive those horrors?
His devotion to the sorceress has always been overwhelming, all-consuming. But in this life, he does not feel the same intense love, but more so a quiet affection, a desire to protect. And so, he’d rather the hunter live in peace. Never knowing the horrors of their past, even if it means that he’ll be forgotten, as well.
She urges him, “Go faster!” and he obliges with a smirk, revving up the engine to go at maximum speed. She cackles, letting go of his waist and letting her arms caress the midnight breeze. He can’t help but breathe an affectionate sigh — her dauntless, the opposite to your wariness on this very motorcycle.
Miss Secretary. His thoughts have once again spiralled back to you, a habit that’s slipped out of his control. He's always been unwavering in his desires, but your arrival had upended his world and the foundations of what he knew about himself. And now, he no longer knows where his heart lies.
He knows it’s not fair to either of you. He feels guilty for the hunter’s oblivious nature — clueless to what almost was (what could still be) between you and him. And for you, you have done your utmost best to keep the boundaries he wasn’t strong enough to.
He's a shameless man who’s never been afraid to take and take. But every time he sees the pain that his indecision — his choice — has caused you, he can’t help but tread carefully, wary of hurting you any more than he already has.
The clock strikes twelve, marking the beginning of April 18th. They return to a base shrouded in darkness, where they stumble around for the lights, only to be greeted by a garishly decorated living room and the twins dressed in red and black.
“Happy birthday, boss!” The twins blow party poppers as he walks into the living room, “Didn’t expect this, did ‘ya?”
He’d been so conflicted at leaving before his birthday, when little did he know, it was all an elaborate ruse to distract him while you and the twins decorated.
“…It seems I've been deceived.” This is the first time you have ever left him truly dumbfounded.
“Surprise!” The hunter slaps him on the back, a satisfied smirk on her face. “Did you really think I was bugging you for a ride out for nothing?”
“Well, not nothing, considering you commandeered the vehicle halfway through.” She swats at him playfully in response.
His eyes search for you, and just in time, you carefully step out of the kitchen, holding a two-tiered cake with a candle lit atop. What ensues is an off-tune rendition of happy birthday, as you step closer, careful not to extinguish the flames, “Make a wish, Sylus.” You smile.
Since the tragic end to his life as a dragon, he’s only ever had one wish. But this year, he hesitates.
For the first time, he wishes for something else. Something new and precious.
The flames dance in the wind before being snuffed with a single breath, smoke trailing with the promises of what’s to come.
Once again, you‘ve planned an elaborate celebration, just as you did the previous year. Something simple here at the base, but still catering to his preferences. From the tasteful red, black, and gold decorations, his favorite meals laid out on the dining table, and a pile of presents wrapped in a mishmash of patterns and ribbons.
When he takes the first bite of the cake, he lets out a hum of satisfaction, immediately noticing the gleam in the twins’ eyes.
“What, did you like it?” You smile at him cheekily, chewing through your own bite. “Luke and Kieran baked it, red velvet cheesecake with a bourbon coating.”
The hunter scowls, still not over their previous attack on her taste buds. “Oh, so Sylus gets a fancy, artisanal cake and I get toothpaste cookies?”
Kieran grins, lightly punching her shoulder, “Don’t worry, Miss Hunter. Just wait til’ it’s your birthday.”
”Yeah! We’re more than ready to top the last one," Luke chimes in, a sinister promise no one wants to hear.
Sylus's gaze follows the hunter throughout the night. It’s the closest he’ll ever get to closure, he thinks, seeing her slot into his close circle (family) like a perfect puzzle piece, celebrating a day that never mattered to him until they made it matter. In their previous life, they had never been afforded the time or peace to celebrate these mundane milestones.
But despite the jovial atmosphere, his eyes can’t stray from your strange mood. You do a good job of pretending that everything is alright, going about the motions and matching the merry of the occasion. But though you may be able to fool others, you can’t fool him. After the party has come to an end, he doesn’t leave your side — determined to know what’s been bothering you.
“Hey, no cleaning for the birthday celebrant!” You lightly shoo him away with the broom as he tries to take over cleaning the living room.
“Oh? I say the birthday celebrant gets to decide that for himself,” He easily swipes the broom from your hands, and you huff, relegated to picking up the wrapping paper strewn about the floor.
“Stubborn bastard,” You mutter under your breath.
“A little louder, dear. I couldn't hear you.” You scowl at him and he laughs, “I can't let you do all the work, no? What kind of boss would I be, then? Tsk, if only you had just left it to the cleaners like I told you to.”
Still, you resolve to finish cleaning. It’s a bit comical seeing him with a broom and dustpan, and on his birthday, of all days. Still, you assert that it would be too rude to leave all this work for the cleaners’ shift come morning. With the two of you working at it, by the time the hour’s up you wouldn’t have been able to tell a celebration occurred.
“Let's go to the rooftop,” Sylus suggests, after taking out the trash. “I feel like taking a breath of fresh air.”
The two of you walk up the familiar staircase to the rooftop, the highest point in the N109 Zone, where you’ve spent many nights deprived of sleep and spilling your deepest fears and nightmares.
“Watch your head.”
“What are you— ow!” You bump your head on a new exit sign that hadn’t been there the last time you came.
He laughs breathily, rubbing your forehead with his thumb after he perfectly ducks under the sign. “I did warn you.”
“It feels like forever since we’ve been up here.”
“It's also been quite a while since I’ve seen you.”
You laugh shakily, “What are you talking about? We’re in the office every day…”
“Don’t act like you don’t understand, it’s unbecoming of your intelligence,” He brushes a stray hair from your face.
“Well, what can I say? We’ve all been so busy lately… But you seem happy, though.” He remains silent, so you continue, “You’ve waited so long to reunite with her. I've never believed in soulmates or anything like that, but for you two, I just might. I’m happy for you,” A timid smile paints your face, and he can’t tell if it’s out of bitterness or soft appreciation.
He doesn’t know how to feel, receiving your approval — feigned as it may be. “If that's so, do you believe it for yourself?” You look at him strangely. “Do you think you could have a soulmate?”
The question seems to weigh heavily on your mind as you look away, dangling your feet aimlessly, “Maybe so… But I like to think that love is a choice. Something that’s earned, built up over time. That's the kind of love that I want, at least.”
His heart has been conflicted for so long — but all of a sudden, you feel unreachable, slipping from his grasp into a territory uncharted. (All of a sudden, he wants to give you everything you wish for.)
“It's been a while since we’ve talked like this. It’s nice being able to spend time with you again.” You stand up, brushing non-existent dirt off your thighs. “But I better head to bed.”
It’s a lie, you both know you’ll spend the night tossing and turning into the hours of the night; so he tries to push at the walls you’ve put up. “Come on, dear. It's my birthday. Just grace me with your presence for a few more minutes…”
He tries not to sound desperate, but all he wants to do is reverse time, to return to a period where you weren’t wary of spending time with him. He'd been spoiled by the affection and friendship you once offered so freely, and now he couldn’t bear this distance you stubbornly held in place.
He reaches to grab your hand, but you pull yours away.
You hesitate before turning around, “I'm sorry, Sylus. But maybe another night.” Your voice is soft as you say good night, his eyes stuck on the image of you walking further away until you disappear from sight.
He wants so badly to pull you back, yearns to grab your hand once again, to feel the warmth of your palm against his. But he knows he has no right to. The presence of the hunter a few doors over says it all, says his choice. He can’t bear to hurt you any more than he already has. But at the same time, he can’t bear to lose you.
So instead, he watches you walk away, knowing that he’s chosen the hunter, his soulmate. But a part of his heart continues to yell at him, telling him he’s making a grave mistake.
—————————————————————
You don’t think you’ll ever get used to the overstimulating atmosphere of the underground ring. The flashing lights, the all-consuming noise in the hours before a match starts. It's been months since you’ve been here, but it’s clear that anticipation runs high in the crowds, with this being Sylus's first game since last year’s loss.
You sniffle, holding back a sneeze as you approach the ring with a bouquet of flowers, waiting patiently for Sylus to break from his pre-game focus as the coach gives him a last minute pep talk.
His eyes eventually drift over to you as he takes a sip of water, “Oh? Look who showed up." He smirks at you, arms leaning against the barrier, “And here I thought you’d be a no-show after last year’s disappointment.”
“What can I say? It’s a crime to pass up on an easy bet.”
“I'm touched by your faith in me,” Unlike his words, his tone is deadpan.
You mockingly scoff, “Who said I placed my bets on you?” You say this, but both of you know who you’re rooting for. “I just thought I might as well wish you good luck, considering I used my PTO on this.”
“Trust me, dear.” His smirk is one of confidence, as he leans past the barrier, face inching towards yours. “By the end of the night, there’ll be a new champion reigning this ring.”
A sudden screech comes from behind — some sort of ongoing venue prep — and your face scrunches up, another headache coursing through you.
“Are you okay?” His brows furrow as he calls your name, concerned at the deep circles under your eyes, the pale sheen to your face. “Maybe you should sit down. You don’t look well.”
“I'll be fine,” You wave him off, “It’s just a headache. I can champ through it.”
“But is it wise for you to stand in these crowds?” He removes his glove, pressing a hand against your forehead. “Go sit down in the locker room, they’ll be airing the match inside. I don't need you in the stands to know you’re supporting me.”
The increasing dizziness you feel is the only reason why you nod, picking up your things and doing as told without so much as a fight. His eyes follow your sluggish form until you make it past his sight, settling inside the rundown locker room to watch alongside other competitors and coaches.
Even though you’ve been continuously sneezing and feel like knocking out, you’re on your toes the entire match, even from the low quality screen delegated to the locker room. The crowd is just as enthusiastic, roaring for his revenge match. You know nothing about boxing, but even you can tell from the first few minutes alone that he’s doing well, performing better than he ever was as the cheers of the crowd pound through to the walls of this secluded room. The camera shifts as he overtakes his opponent — and that’s when you see it, a glimpse of the hunter cheering at the front row.
You already expected her presence, was anticipating to sit by her side as the both of you cheered Sylus on. But a part of you feels sick, lightheaded, progressively dizzier as the match continues. Not just because of the hunter’s arrival, or the anxiety of seeing Sylus getting socked in the face — you realize as you feel the bile rising up your throat.
The match ends as you walk out of the bathroom, contents of your stomach flushed down the toilet. You missed the final blow, the crowning moment, the television having switched to an interview. His voice fills the room, the audio muffled and crackly, “Someone came all the way here to watch me. Said she didn’t want to see me lose.”
You recognize that look of adoration, reserved only for the hunter. And once again, you feel your stomach lurch.
It's a weak moment for you — you want to stay, to cheer him on as his friend and supporter (the only things you were and would ever be to him). But it was too much for you, seeing her take the place that maybe, in another life, could have been yours.
You guiltily leave the bouquet in the locker rooms, slipping away easily into the swarm of crowds leaving the venue. You pass by the ring as you make your way to the exit, seeing him at the edge of the barricade, swarmed by reporters.
In the ring, he shines like a star far out of your reach.
Was this penance for your pride? For believing you could take the spot of someone who was long destined to be by his side? The last image you see is of his arm wrapped around her waist, lips pressed to her forehead — his attention, his gravity, tethered to her.
You leave the underground stadium guilt-free, feeling a little silly for having doubts about your departure affecting him. You realize that no matter what you do, he’ll be fine.
He has the hunter now.
—————————————————————
The moment he steps out of the ring, lights flashing and reporters crowding to get his interview — the first thing he sees is the hunter, standing front row in the bleachers, cheering him on with her fist in the air. His arm stays around her waist as they celebrate his win, answering nosy interviewers and being crowned with the champion’s ring.
He should be filled with nothing but happiness, satisfaction. But right now, all he could think of was finding you.
He fiddles with the champion’s ring, a nervous tic he’d never dare show to the naked eye as he makes his way to the locker room, where he finds an intricate bouquet of flowers and a congratulatory note, written in your familiar penmanship.
It seems his greed had become far too overwhelming.
Faced with all his wishes coming true, he still yearns for more. Everything he ever wanted was coming together, but none of it felt right — not with your absence creating a gaping void in a picture perfect image.
Disheartened by your absence, the dim mood follows him as he returns to a quiet home. He carefully steps inside, your snores filling the space as he finds you sprawled on the living room couch, still dressed in your outside clothes, skin dull and face tightened in discomfort.
He lifts you up, beginning the trek to your bedroom to let you sleep away the rest of the night, only for you to stir awake in his arms. “Sylus?” You peek at him through bleary eyes, “You’re home…”
He places the back of his hand against your forehead, “You’re burning up. Did you take any medicine before falling asleep?”
“I'm sorry I couldn’t stay for the match…” In your drowsy state, you don’t hear his question, instead nuzzling your head into his chest. He savors the feeling of your warmth. “Did you get my flowers?”
“I did. They were a beautiful choice.”
“That's good. You deserve only the best, after all.” Your voice is a little breathy, soft and tender in ways you never reveal to him anymore — and he couldn’t help but be a little lovestruck.
“You know just how to flatter me, don’t you?” He lays you down gently, tucking the covers over your form, as he musters the courage to follow through with his thoughts. “But since you brought me flowers, I should give something in thanks.”
He slides the champion’s ring off his finger, delicately placing it in your palm, closing your fingers over it. “I believe this should be yours.”
“Sylus, what is this?” Your face is still unnaturally pale, but you seem more lucid now, staring at the ring with an unreadable expression on your face.
“There's only one reason I left as a champion today, and she’s standing right in front of me.” His eyes are glued intently to yours, water still streaking from his hair after the quick shower he took before leaving. “Last year’s match was a blow to my pride, I'll admit. But how could I ever stay down with you by my side?”
It’s rare for him to display his fondness on a silver platter — not painted in wit or banter, but with the clarity of an open window into his heart. But something about you wills him to take steps he never has before.
You stay silent for an unnerving amount of time, turning away from him, overwhelmed by the depth of his gaze. Your face contorts into a fractured smile, “I think we both know who you should really give this to.
He stares at the ring, refusing to take it from your outstretched hand. a strained laugh leaves his lips. He gently grabs your chin, forcing you to look at him once again, “You won’t even accept gifts from me, now? How much will you pull away from me before you’re satisfied?”
“I can't accept this, and you know why.”
He knows. Just like he knows why you stray from his touch, why you avoid his gaze. He knows, but he refuses to accept it.
“I went into this match for you. I won it for you, not the hunter.” A frantic sort of grief fills his features, imploring you to open your heart to him. “So why is it that you keep telling me to run to her? What makes you believe you’re undeserving?”
“Because it shouldn’t be me. I just—” The words fail to form on your tongue, twisting and turning until the intention is lost. “Please, sylus. I can't do this right now.”
“I didn't think your cowardice was stronger than our friendship.”
You come to an abrupt still, your eyes glazing over in stifled shock. “Well, I'm sorry to have disappointed you.”
Regret immediately courses through him as he realizes the harshness of his words, and the guardedness of your tone. He hates causing you hurt or pain, but he can no longer bear to ignore the distance that's grown between you. (But does he even have the right to confront you about it? When he knows his actions are the root cause.)
“We can't hide from this forever, so why won’t you just talk to me?” He's just about ready to beg for you to look at him again, to talk to him again, without the inhibitions that separate you now.
You take a deep breath, a hundred thoughts running through your mind before you settle on simple words, “Because things can’t go back to normal, and I don't know if they ever will.” You turn around, effectively ending the conversation and drawing that dreaded line. “I'd like to be alone now, please.”
It’s not irreparable; at least, you don’t think so. But regardless of the place the hunter now holds in your life, you had crossed a turning point in your relationship, one that made it impossible to turn back. This was the price of his choice; he couldn’t have his cake and eat it, too.
Despite how much he wants to confront you, more than anything he wants to respect the boundaries you’ve set in place. And so, Sylus is left to stew in his thoughts in the living room, fiddling with the ring and wondering why he wouldn’t just give the ring to the hunter. Why he caused all of this mess. (He knows exactly why.)
The bond he had with the hunter transcended lifetimes, giving his soul a first taste of human connection and love. He grasped at the seams of that bond, holding on for dear life and desperately seeking the peace they were never afforded. But your arrival broke the monotony of his days, and in the process, treated him to that connection, that genuine acceptance and care so freely. You easily slotted into his life, and now that you were trying to walk away — he couldn’t just bear to let you go.
He may have fallen in love with the sorceress in their previous life, but now, it was time to face his current reality.
In this world, his heart had chosen you.
—————————————————————
You feel like you're being replaced, being pushed out of the picture you were never meant to be captured in.
For the longest time, you’ve felt the petty urge to hate the hunter. To pick out her flaws and shortcomings to make yourself feel better. But that wouldn’t be fair to her, who’s done nothing but unknowingly capture Sylus's heart. And it would only fan the flames of bitterness and hurt that were already burning inside you.
You stomp at the petty jealousy taking root in your heart — because what right do you have to feel that way? What right do you have to mourn a love that was never yours to begin with?
You feel rather foolish. You thought you knew what his affection felt like, but it was nothing compared to seeing his devotion. You never believed in soulmates — but how could you deny the cosmic connection before your very eyes? Like a planet and its moon, they orbit each other — his harsh edges softening in her presence.
Sylus gave you hope for a future in this world. But to him, you must be just one of many, a buffer while he waits for his lover to finally come along in this life. He was someone who had never known peace, never known the warmth of love before he met her. In the grand scheme of things, what was your rust to her gold?
These fantasies have become fatal, cutting open old wounds and deeply hidden thoughts. Never have you felt so untethered. No place where you belonged, no place to call home, no connection that was meant to be truly yours. Your world had been shrouded in static in the wake of losing your loved ones, life becoming grainy and distant in your grief. The loneliness had been dampened by new connections, by a blossoming love, but was now coming back in full force as you watch the image of how it should be, without you.
You were never meant to be here.
(Thus, it was only right to return things to how they should be.)
—————————————————————
Thunder rolls in, casting gloomy skies over the N109 Zone. it’s one of those days where you can’t muster up the energy to do anything but curl up on the couch with a blanket, paperwork left forgotten on the coffee table, watching raindrops dart against the tall windows overlooking the city.
The twins are similarly sprawled across the living room floor. With Sylus and Mephisto out on a mission, it’s just the three of you in the penthouse, spending the last of the spring showers working by the warmth of the fireplace, before humid summer storms take over.
The dreary atmosphere did nothing to quell the persistent grief that weighed heavily in your chest. Not even the comforting presence of Luke and Kieran could muster a smile on your face, these days.
Your eyelids start to flutter, the movie and the twins’ chatter becoming hazy as you drift into slumber, where once again, you dream of home.
You find yourself thinking about home much more, nowadays. You miss the sun, you miss the food, the warmth of company (the lack of doubt of your belongingness). But as always, you wake up to the cars and gunshots typical of the N109 Zone, the rain having slowed to a soft drizzle, pattering against the window.
You spend a little while with your eyes closed, savoring the taste of home only a dream can capture, a feeling that slips through your fingers before you can truly grasp it. And once again, you wish for a clue, a hint, an answer to a way back home.
Little did you know how soon this wish would be granted.
You stretch your arms out, coming to a slow rise from the couch, remembering the pile of paperwork that awaited you on the coffee table. You sigh as you see the other half; it seems the twins hadn’t gotten much done either, their papers getting mixed up with yours during your short nap. you take quick, mindless glances at the papers — your events and supply documentation, the twins’ mission reports — as you sort through them.
One in particular slides out from the pile, and you pick it up, intending to place it on their side of the table — only to stop in your tracks, catching a single phrase. Dimensional travel.
You shouldn’t be snooping. As Sylus's secretary, you’re already privy to most of the ongoings in Onychinus. You know that if something’s been kept from you, it’s for a reason. But as your mind flits over all the dead ends you’ve run into in your search to go home, you think — what’s the harm in taking a look?
Your blood stills.
What greets you is the twins’ hasty scrawl, recounting their findings as they led a reconnaissance mission at an EVER lab on the outskirts of the N109 Zone. Test subjects who were found in public, on the brink of death. Who spoke of “other worlds.” Unfortunate individuals who were found somewhere more public, deemed a nutcase, and left vulnerable to the hands of EVER. In Kieran’s more formal penmanship are the words, “These findings are supported by the classified dimensional travel studies at Prestara University…”
And when you see the date of the mission — it’s from the previous year.
Why did no one tell you about this?
All of you were smart enough to connect the dots. Near-death experiences, tales of other worlds. Here you were, searching on what seemed to be a fool’s errand, when the people you slept under the same roof with held the very answers you’d been so desperately seeking.
An eerie feeling settles over you (you don’t want to name it as betrayal) as you look over the papers, reading them over and over, thinking there’s no way this had been just out of reach, all these months.
On the dot, the twins return to the living room with bags of snacks in their arms, Luke with his typical cheer as Kieran stills, seeing the papers in your hand. “Miss Secretary, you’re finally awake. Do you want a snack —”
“What is this?” You cut him off, uncharacteristically stoic as you raise up the stapled reports, still reeling from shock at the words you’ve just read. “Your mission reports… These are from a year ago. Why didn’t I know about this?
The two worriedly look at each other in silent communication, before you ask again, fed up with the lies and secrecy. “What aren’t you telling me?”
“Luke, she read the reports. She knows.”
“But the boss said — Fine. But don’t blame me when this ends badly.” He sighs before giving in, turning to look you in the eye. “I think it’s better if we show you. But… Please don’t be mad at the boss.”
“No more than you already are,” Kieran adds, and you look at him skeptically. “We know you two are fighting. It’s been torture seeing you guys mope! The boss has been burying everyone in work and you… You’ve been a shell of yourself.”
You open your mouth, ready to spout excuses, but he interrupts you. “Don’t deny it, we can see it for ourselves. Especially with the way the boss has been grovelling.”
“Sylus has not been grovelling. He has better things to do with his time.” You roll your eyes, but they continue to stare at you in doubt, until you sigh and let up.
“Alright. so we may have had a… slight disagreement. But really, I've just been in a funk. A little homesick, and a little actually sick. That's all. But you know what will help me?” You raise up the reports once again, flipping to the research page. “Show me these case studies. Show me everything there is to know about this.”
“Well, we tried.” Kieran lets out a tired exhale, “If knowing this will help you, then we’ll do it.”
The twins lead you into their wing of the penthouse, a territory you never dared to venture unless it was dire circumstances— which it very well feels like it is now.
“Welcome to our little abode!” Luke cheers as he swings the doors open.
“Oh, how… charming.”
You tiptoe around the communal living area, unable to distinguish what is a weapon for Onychinus and a personal invention they’ve made for an elaborate prank. Frankly, it’s a mess. Apparently teenage boys are the same type of disgusting in any universe, you cringe as you find a smelly article of clothing on his desk that's definitely overdue for a wash. Only the promise of answers holds back your urge to hand these kids a broom and force them to clean.
“Over here’s my desk. Go wild, I guess. I'll be in the other room if you need anything.”
Your heart races as you’re left to your own devices, inputting the related mission code — and there it is. A wealth of information answering the questions you’ve had.
You skim over the articles, all from the same research team, studying the phenomenon of dimensional travelers, as they’ve so aptly put it, and their possible connection to the Deepspace Tunnel.
But the most damning implication of them all, was that there was a way for you to return home. The researchers are positive they’re close to a breakthrough, they write, as they cite the commonalities between these travelers. If a close encounter with death is what brought them all here, then it only makes sense it can bring them back.
But this is where the trail ends. The last article ends with the researchers discussing potential experimentation — the risks of being lost in the unknown boundary between worlds, ripped to shreds by the force of gravity, or better yet — just dying. With it, your hope dims.
But it’s something. Nothing concrete, but enough to prove you weren’t crazy. Enough to have hope. Enough to try.
But the question remains… how could this have possibly slipped past you? You’ve researched every corner of info available to you in the Onychinus database.
As Sylus's secretary, you’re granted the privileges to access almost everything in Onychinus, including the information databases which contain a wealth of information from various sources (legally and illegally obtained, many inaccessible to the public yet). And when you check the status of the articles — you see that your access has been blacklisted.
As it was, there was only one person in Onychinus with the power to do this.
“Sylus put you up to this, didn’t he?” When your eyes turn to Luke in question, he only nods grimly in confirmation.
“The boss asked us to keep it from you,” He almost looks like a sad puppy wagging his tail, trying to appease your increasingly irate mood. “He was only worried about what you might do if you found out about this.”
“He should’ve worried about what I’d do if you kept this from me.” You spat bitterly, and immediately, guilt coils through you for misplacing this anger on Luke. The twins might have been in on it, but despite all their mischief, they would never have had the heart to lie to you. No, this was all Sylus's doing.
You walk away, as overwhelming waves of betrayal course through you. You don’t want to make assumptions, but there is no other possible truth. It’s almost uncharacteristic of him, you think. He's always supported whatever you wanted to do. So why would he do this now?
Why hide the answers that would lead you back home?
And if he hid this from you, what else could he be hiding?
These thoughts continue to plague you into the late hours of the night. Hours of tossing and turning in the sheets, before giving up on slumber entirely. Before, you would tiptoe in the marbled halls in search of laughter and company. But things were no longer the same. Now, you lock yourself in silence, refusing to bare any more of your heart.
But there still comes some nights such as now, when you can’t stifle the dark creeping in. Like a sheep heading into the wolves’ den, you tiptoe out of your bedroom, making your way to the kitchen where you cope as you always have: by baking.
As you pull out the ingredients, Sylus eventually comes strolling in, as if he had a sixth sense to your presence.
“Can’t sleep again?” He asks groggily. Hair mussed and robe crumpled, it was clear he had already been in bed. His tone is careful, still tiptoeing around you after the mess of a conversation you last had after the match.
You nod tiredly, “Too much to think about.” You’re being uncharacteristically cold to him, not even turning around or looking at him in acknowledgement. But if he notices, he doesn’t show it.
All you want is a moment alone. But already, he’s coming far too close to you — invading your space like he’s entitled to it, when all you want is to be as far away from him as possible.
“Let me help you.” He says, grabbing the bowl from behind you and rolling a whisk in his other hand. “It'll just be like old times, don’t you think? Miss Baker, with her apprentice running the ovens.”
You can’t help the anger simmering beneath you as you slam the cupboards closed, alarming him. Can you not get one moment of peace in this fucking household? “You know what? I think I'll just go to bed, actually.”
He lets out a breath of frustration. "Alright, it’s clear that there’s a problem here.” He grabs your hand to stop you from leaving, only for you to rip it from his grasp. He steps back, “I admit that I said some hurtful things before, and I'd like to apologize properly. But can we sit down and talk about this like civilized people?”
You know it’s wrong to lash out like this, but this betrayal had you reeling and acting out impulsively. A crash-out long in the works, tipped over by your recent revelation. “Always one to ask forgiveness rather than permission, aren’t you?”
“What?” He pinches the bridge of his nose, utterly confused. “I don't know why you continually insist on shutting me out — but I assure you, nothing productive will come out of this.”
A bitter laugh escapes you, “Well, I don’t know why you insist on lying to me. But I'm not the one asking questions here.”
“What are you talking about?” His blood runs cold, gaze steely as he begins to tread carefully through this volley of words.
“Did you think I'd never find out about the information you hid from me? That you ordered Luke and Kieran to lie to me about? How much have you hidden from me?” You seethe, the words spilling out of you like an overflowing kettle.
His silence says it all.
“Gosh, I guess it figures.” You don’t know whether to laugh in irony or cry in defeat. “The one person I trusted the most turned out to be a lying bastard… I don't know why I expected any better from you.”
Sometimes you forget the person Sylus truly is, beyond the softness he’s shown to you in confidence. He may be flowing with unspoken affection for those he cares for, but in the end, he was still a criminal. The leader of the world’s most notorious crime syndicate, gifted in the art of deceit.
But despite this, Sylus was still the person who took you in when you had nowhere else to go. The one person you trusted more than anyone in this world. Although his blossoming relationship with the hunter sprouted thorns over your friendship, you thought that you’d at least have total honesty.
But your expectations crumble into disappointment.
Sylus treats this exchange flippantly, at first, trying to stave off a fight he doesn’t want to have. But you’re so frustrated, you can’t even look him in the eye. Though his face gives away nothing, a storm was brewing inside as the consequences of his actions dawned on him.
And so, he decides to tell you the truth.
He whispers your name carefully, like an apology in itself. “I'm sorry I lied to you. It was never my intention to deceive you, or to hold you back from finding answers — but I know I've hurt you nonetheless. But please, let’s not fight about this. Let me explain myself, first.”
You turn to him, waiting for an answer that will resolve the hurt in your heart.
He doesn't know where to begin, so he starts with an explanation.
When you first arrived, Sylus had done the research. Tried to find a way to send you — this anomaly who’d landed in his backyard — back to where she belonged. But all he could find were dead ends. As far as he knew, there was no way to send you back. You, this stranger, who he wanted out of his life. (Oh, how the thought hurts him now.)
Almost a year later, when the dimensional travel research came in — he immediately marked it as classified. A spur of the moment decision, where he blocked off your access to these files in fear of you discovering them. He excuses it as the danger, the potential recklessness that might possess you in the face of this revelation.
But the truth was: you were no longer just a stranger, you were Miss Secretary. A core part of his life, regardless of the short time you’d been here. Maybe if he was less in-deep, if the reality of you slipping from his grasp wasn’t so tangible, he wouldn’t have resorted to deceit. But as it was, there was no way he was letting you go now.
After all, the fear of lying to you was nothing compared to the fear of losing you forever. (But now, he may just lose you because of it.)
His explanations ring through your head, but all you hear are excuses. You fire back, words slow and tense like a string stretched thin. “You think you’re always right, but you’re not. That's not an excuse to withhold this from me. Living in the N109 Zone is a danger in itself, so what’s so different about this?”
He scoffs, “The difference is that here, you are by my side. Do you think I can't protect you?”
“It's not your responsibility to protect me. In fact, I've long overstayed my welcome here.”
“Says who?” His eyes stare intently into yours, as he opens his arms, “Look around, dear. The only person who wants you to leave is you.”
He shakes his head, frustrated, “Do you even understand what could happen to you if you pursue this path? This not only blurs the boundary between our worlds, but the boundary between life and death. You could die before ever seeing a glimpse of your old world,” A frantic panic shadows his eyes as he moves forward, shaking you by the shoulders, almost begging you not to do this.
“At least I'd finally have some peace!” You spat out like a bullet that’s been lodged in your chest, a truth so hard to bear. Every day in this world has been an uphill battle, and no connection — whether familial or romantic — could make up for everything you had lost, or the closure you had seeked.
“You don’t mean that.” He murmurs in disbelief, the broken look on his face enough to have your shoulders slumped in guilt.
He tries — you know he does — to close the distance that you have placed. But a sadistic part of you likes to see him hurt, likes to see him struggle to repair what he unintentionally broke. But the other part of you just wants to spare yourself from any more hurt.
You’ve never been the type to cling to your pride, but not even you can acquiesce to this when you feel so wronged.
“Do you even understand what this information means to me?” Your voice trembles in desperation, “You don’t know what it’s like to lose everything. I cared about my life. I had dreams, I had plans! My family and friends, they all probably think I’m missing or dead — when I'm just here, trying to get back to them. Yet you have the audacity to pretend like you did this for my sake?”
To him, your arrival was a miracle. Another surprise fate had thrown his way, something he was determined not to let slip from his grasp this time around.
But to you, your arrival in this world was your greatest tragedy.
In spite of it all, he puts his foot down, refusing to put your life on the line. “No, this is where I draw the line. You will not be pursuing this — this death wish, and that’s final.” He doesn’t realize how tightly he’s gripped your shoulders until he steps back from the sheer betrayal in your eyes.
For the first time, you look at him as if he were no more than a stranger. Like you didn’t know him, hadn’t held him in your arms in his lowest moments. He could handle the hunter’s anger and distrust, your distance and aloofness. But your fear? It breaks him.
Still, he swallows this heartbreak in favor of your safety. “Ignore me, hate me — I'm willing to put up with all of it so long as you don’t hurt yourself.”
“Well, what fucking choice do I have when you control everything in this goddamned place?” You close your eyes and laugh bitterly, whispering, “I guess I never knew you as well as I thought I did.”
You walk away, and he knows better than to chase you.
All this time, you had felt guilty for hurting him with your distance, for being an obstacle in the space that was meant for the hunter. Meanwhile, he had been the one barricading you from going back. But why? You cannot comprehend as to why he would be selfish enough to try and keep you here, not when he has everything he’s ever wanted.
Your thoughts continue to spiral as you return to your room– and for the first time, you feel more peace in the silence than in his company.
—————————————————————
He sits in the kitchen until early noon, stewing in disappointment and anger towards himself.
Sylus is hailed for his ability to read people. His target’s desires, his enemy’s weaknesses, his loved ones’ needs. Yet when it comes to you, he finds himself lost at sea, in conflict with himself in a way he hasn’t been since he was unused to the world and its dangers.
For the past millennia, he’d had a clear focus, a clear goal — until you strolled in and completely upended his world and everything he thought he knew.
And what’s worse? He would let you do it as many times as you wanted.
He knows this won’t be resolved so easily. Both of you are the type whose true feelings cannot be encapsulated by mere words. And when the storm inevitably rolls in, he’s afraid of what might be lost in the collateral. Because now, he was far too gone.
Losing the sorceress had nearly broken him once, sent him on a search that had clouded his realization of the place you’d taken in his heart. The realization that he couldn’t bear to live without those mundane moments with you.
He knows, here and now, that he needs to fix this. Right his wrongs, clear things with the hunter, and maybe beg at your feet for you to look at him kindly again, after all he’s done to push you away. Before it's too late and he lets love slip from his grasp once again.
—————————————————————
The ballroom is lit under the warm glow of the numerous chandeliers, casting light over your stone cold face. The opulent celebration — a business partner’s 40th wedding anniversary — was a complete juxtaposition to the storm raging inside you, uncaring to be approachable as you swirl your wine.
In a twist of cruel irony, another event had delegated Sylus to bring a partner for the evening.
“We'll be leaving at 8 o’clock. Use my card for the dress — and treat yourself, while you’re at it.” He informed you, placing one of his cards on your desk along with the invitation. You raised an eyebrow in skepticism, he never spared time for frivolous events such as anniversaries, especially for people he barely knew.
“What, the hunter wasn’t free this time around?” You can’t help but ask, the snark evident in your tone.
He sighs and walks away, not even deigning that with a response. “Don’t be late.”
You shove the invite into a drawer, fully intent on ditching him. But alas — he added it to the calendar himself.
You were expecting him to hand you another half-hearted apology, to add to the growing pile that was already accumulating. Apology flowers left at your desk, paperwork submitted on time, deliveries of chocolates and your favorite food at the office, as his eyes suspiciously don’t meet yours.
“If you think you can bribe me with material things, then you don’t know me very well,” You bitterly threw these words at him then, before clocking out for the day. But Sylus was never one to give up easily.
Throughout the night, you feel the constant prickle of eyes on your back. At first, you assume it’s because of past events, people’s curiosity towards the secretary Sylus was so quick to defend. Your insecurity has you turning around each time — only to meet your employer’s gaze across the room, his eyes lingering on you even with the conversation in front of him. You scoff and look away.
Eventually, he approaches you with your coat in hand, “I believe it’s time to take our leave.”
“So early?” You reply, your words short and cutting when it's necessary to speak.
“This night has already proven to be a disappointment. No reason to waste any more of our time.”
“I'll call for the driver then,” You’re about to dial when he plucks your phone out of your hand.
“No need, I've already given him the night off. I'll be the one driving us home.” You squawk in indignance. Once again, this man has managed to corner you into a situation where you can’t escape him. “But, dinner first, shall we?” He extends a hand, which you resolutely walk past.
This seething ignorance follows him the whole way to the restaurant, into the dimly lit private room where the two of you are seated. Had it been any other occasion, you would’ve taken the time to appreciate the florals adorning the tables, the band playing jazz in the corner, and the delicious food. But your anger clouds your enjoyment, as you channel your frustrations into blindly ordering the most expensive items on the menu.
It isn’t until you’re about halfway through the meal and down one bottle of wine when he finally gets you to speak up, “You can’t stay mad at me forever, darling.”
You take a heavy breath through your nose, “Maybe not, but I can certainly try.” You take another sip of your wine, burying your hurt and sorrow into another bottle.
“You should realize that I'll do whatever it takes to earn your forgiveness.”
“You broke my trust. You lied by omission, letting me continue on a wild goose chase when you were withholding the answers. Pretty words and extravagant gifts aren’t enough to earn my trust again.”
He gently reaches for your hand, threading his fingers through yours. “I know that, and I'm willing to do it all to earn your forgiveness. Not only for my deception, but all your hurts that have gone unnoticed.”
It’s too much, your chest feels too heavy with all that’s bearing down on you. Your voice takes a shaky note, “Sylus, all I want is to go home. That’s it.”
You put up the boundaries he never had the heart to, kept your heart at bay for both of your sakes. But now, he wants to pry open your walls, to reveal the fears that plague you at night.
“I know, dear. I know. And if that’s what you truly want, then I promise to do everything in my power to help you —- so long as it doesn’t result in you getting hurt.” He looks into your eyes, grasping your hand tightly, “All I want is for you to feel safe in confiding in me again — to share your worries, your fears, as you once did. Allow me to carry the weight of your grief with you.”
He knows how much your arrival in this world hurt you, and he carries the guilt of being selfish enough to keep you here despite that.
“I can't anymore. It hurts too much to confide in you, to have a taste of what I know I'll never have. What we’ll never be.” You don’t know what possesses you to admit this yearning. Maybe the intoxication from the wine. Maybe his pleading eyes, or his sweet talk, saying all the right words you’ve wanted to hear for the longest time. But you don’t have any fight left in you to keep your distance.
“What you can’t have? Darling, I would lay the world at your feet, if that was your wish,” He strokes your cheek with an intimacy surpassing friendship — but you haven’t been just friends in a while, have you?
Maybe you both drank a little too much, scooted a little too close in the booth, got too caught up in each other's presence (something you've both been starved of for a while). You don’t know who moved first — but one of you ends up breaking.
You share a starved kiss, hidden under the privacy of dim lights. All at once, the chatter of the restaurant and the rushing of cars dissipate, and all that's left in this universe is you and him and cosmic dust, orbiting around each other.
He explores your mouth, brows furrowed, hands gripping your waist and pulling you to his lap — as if he could meld the two of you by the flesh. It’s like a taste of heaven on your lips, tasting what you had yearned for, denied yourself for so long.
And for a moment you think: what was stopping you from being together? What was so wrong with this connection — so powerful that it wracked your body with shivers and tethered your soul to his presence?
And then you remember: the hunter.
The reality of what's happening dawns on you, your eyes widening mid-kiss as you abruptly push him away, leaving him stunned; his tie crooked, lipstick staining the corner of his lips.
Your hands tremble, still hazy from that searing kiss as you try to hold back the tears welling at your eyes, “Sylus —” You choke on your tears, unable to form the words.
He grasps your face, breathing your name, trying to make sense of what just happened.
“Sylus, oh god, what did we just do? I — fuck, what about the hunter?”
You run outside the private room, the voices of the restaurant and servers fading in the distance as you hastily escape from the implications of what you’ve just done. You try to hail a taxi when he catches up to you, calling your name.
He may be in front of you but all you see is the hunter, her face riddled with betrayal and hurt. Unlabeled as their relationship may be, she’s just spent the past few weeks opening her heart to someone only for it to be betrayed. By a new friend, at that.
You don’t know what possessed you to kiss him back, to deepen it and lose yourself in his lips. Love struck your head, ridding you of logic. Made you give in to the sin of yearning for something that isn’t yours. And now, you were facing the guilty consequences.
“Sylus, we’ve done enough. Please, let’s just forget that any of this ever happened —-”
You’re cut off by his hollow laugh, his chin tilting down for his eyes to stare directly into yours. “You don’t know what you’re asking of me.”
“This is gonna ruin everything you’ve wished for, don’t you see?” You’re desperate for him to see the wrongdoing in your actions.
“No, it’s you who doesn’t see what’s in front of you.” He grasps your wrist, pressing it to his chest, gentle in a way that doesn’t match the fire in his eyes. “Do you feel this heart? It races in your presence, melts at your touch — and if you disappeared? Well, it would simply stop beating.”
His other hand rests on your clavicle, fiddling with the necklace that has remained on your neck since the night of your birthday. He's a man who never says please, but for you he’ll get on his knees and plead.
His words, such heartfelt words that want to make you give in to all of his wishes are one thing. But his actions are another. You’ve witnessed firsthand the way he looks at her, melts in her presence. And you’re not ignorant to how she feels for him now, once heated frustration turning into the adoration she feels now.
“How could I ever believe what you’re saying?” You feel almost hysterical, with the weight of your emotions crashing down on you. “You’re telling me that you’ve waited hundreds of years for the love of your life, the person bonded to your soul, and you’re going to push it all away for some fleeting connection?”
“Don’t reduce it to something as frivolous as that,” His face darkens, and he grips your hand tighter. “You know that what we have runs deeper than both of us can describe.”
”But what is it to a soulmate?” Your voice is despondent, resigned, “What is this compared to a bond transcending time and space? I know that regardless of what happens here, you’ll choose her. I know that very well, Sylus.” Your voice breaks as you reach your tipping point.
His heart stills, because he himself doesn’t know what he can say to prove himself.
“Please don’t cry,” His voice softens at the sight of tears welling in your eyes, becoming all but putty in your hands. As of this moment, he knows there’s no convincing you, no making you believe that his words ring sincere and true. But he still can’t help but motion to wipe your tears, until you harshly block his hand.
The sorceress and the traveler, Miss Hunter and Miss Secretary. The dragon resting inside of him couldn’t bear to let go of his mate — after all, what was a centuries-old love compared to a new, fleeting connection? But the threads of fate had woven together to bring you to him, and the man he was now couldn’t bear to cut those ties.
You swallow the hurt, trying to put into words the burden that’s been weighing on you for so long, “I don't want to live in her shadow. I don't want to see this through when I know that one day, you’ll regret what you’ve lost.”
His face falls, and you feel a bit of satisfaction in seeing him carry even a smidgen of the hurt you’ve felt. But for the most part, it just hurts you to see him in pain.
”You think so lowly of me, as if I don't have the autonomy to make my own decisions. But you need to face the facts, dear —- the only one holding back is you.” He’s laid his heart on a silver platter. The only obstacle here was your own doubts, your own insecurities.
You reel back as he steps closer, “So tell me, why do you prevent us from having what we both want?” He brushes his hand gently against your cheek.
You take a deep breath to say the words you know will end this for good. “Because I deserve better than to settle for second place in your heart.” You give him no time to refute before you turn around, heart bruised and battered. “Please, just leave. Don’t follow me. I don't wanna speak to you anymore, not tonight.”
“I’m not leaving you alone in this city —”
“I'll call someone.”
And that’s how it ends.
You walk away, deciding to call Kieran to pick you up. You can’t bring yourself to be in close proximity with Sylus right now. You know he hasn’t actually left, hearing the conspicuous whirring of his motorcycle in the distance, engine alerting you to his presence from a mile away. In the corner of your eye, you can see Mephisto's red, beady eyes from the pedestrian light across the road, watching you.
Still, you continue to walk aimlessly in this false notion of solitude, carrying your heels as you wait for Kieran to arrive. Now that the haze of alcohol has cleared, and you’ve let out all that was building up since the hunter’s arrival, you can’t help but feel hollow. Completely drained of all the anger and sorrow that you’d been carrying in the past few weeks.
The streetlights cast these roads in an artificial light, the moonless sky and desolate streets feeling emptier under its warm glow. Midsummer was fast approaching, a period once marked by sunshine and cicadas. The N109 Zone was the antithesis to everything you’d ever known and cherished — and for a while, you thought that maybe it could be enough.
But now, you yearn for the sun to rise after the long night you’ve endured.
A familiar car eventually pulls up, the window rolled down for you to see the concern on Kieran’s face. But he says nothing as you enter, haggard and spent, with no energy to hide your woes or muster up small conversation. The lights of the city dissipate as you head into the outskirts of the N109 Zone, and you can only hope the darkness is enough to shroud the silent tears streaming down your face.
Kieran says nothing as you silently cry in the backseat, offering you the grace of asking no questions.
—————————————————————
Sylus watches painfully as you walk away, ashamed by this seemingly forbidden act — when all he wants to do is pull you in for more.
For the longest time, he'd been in this foolish delusion that things could be the same between him and the hunter. If he got her to remember, if he got her to open up. But the truth was, it’ll never be the same. Both of them were two entirely different people in this life, and now… now there was you.
He had been desperately latching on to the love that was robbed from him centuries ago, and blinded himself to the way you’d fully taken root in his heart.
Now, he needed to cut off these loose ends and find a way to make up for his mistakes, his indecision — and only then, could he even try to give you the love that you deserve.
But the next few days prove to be a trial as the world seems keen on keeping the two of you apart. You have a talent for avoiding him, finding increasingly elaborate ways not to cross paths with him. And when an important mission arises, requiring him to go into the field himself, it felt like fate conspiring against him.
He finishes the mission in record time, completing it in detached efficiency as he ponders how to go about speaking with you — something he plans to do as soon as he returns home. But as he nears the entrance to the Onychinus headquarters, he can immediately sense that something is wrong.
A flash of light strikes through the heart of the N109 Zone — devoid of the accompanying rumble of thunder to be lightning — when dread fills his bones. He realizes he's seen this before.
On the day that you arrived.
He rushes into the building, immediately approached by his lackeys reporting of traitors lurking in Onychinus, who thought it wise to attack the base in his absence. But all he can think about is finding you.
He rushes to his office, finding the twins equally distressed, after they’d cleared the floor for traitors. “Boss, she’s gone.”
“Explain it to me clearly. Who's gone?” His heart is racing — struck by horror at the blood pooling at your desk. He knows the answer, but he doesn’t want to confront the devastation about to tip over.
“Miss Secretary. We apprehended the traitor, but there was a stray bullet and then — she just vanished.”
Rage blinds him. Suddenly he wants vengeance, retribution, ordering his men to apprehend the shooter. All he can do is imprison and torture the man who dared shoot at the woman he loves, making him suffer for what he’s taken from you.
But it's not nearly enough. Not when your absence is so palpable, not when you’ve left his life as easily as you entered it.
In the end, your departure is but a whisper in the N109 Zone, leaving behind nothing but a pool of blood and a mark on his heart.
—————————————————————
are we gonna talk about the way it took me a whole car crash, the national elections, and a loved one's terminal illness to finally finish this chapter? maybe another day. but for now i'm going to play death and rebirth (i didn't let myself until i finished this LOL) i'll see you all on the next chapter where we pick up where this chapter left off and (maybe) see things from sylus’s perspective!
some things i’d like to share since i took off for a month
i've started a new term with new professors — and one of them is literally named GOJO??? my class calls him “professor gojo uwu~” behind his back its hilarious
hot chocolate does not mix well with vodka (don’t ask me how i know)
filipino lads artists are goated and i spend more money on their merch than on the actual game
i fear i’ve become too delusional because why does my dad’s doctor look like ZAYNE —
p.s. if any of you are interested, i've linked the playlist i made for this fic in the series masterlist :>
taglist — @mangooes @mentaltrouble2201 @animegamerfox @crazy-ink-artist @phisen @jeondyy @t4naiis @wifunozomi @munimunni @blessdunrest @rafayelridesfisheatsfish @paintedperidot @mansonofmadness @pillarofsnow @sylususeyourevolonmepls @angelichiaro @mephisto-with-a-knife @crimsonmarabou @hikaru-sama @flamedancer13 @tati-the-fangirl @ameili @poptrim @caramelizedpopcirn @cupid-gene @vvonunie @lunia-likes-pomegranet @iamawkwardandshy @tinyweebsstuff @astolary @vyntheria @theloveofnagiseishiroslife @velourmobius @beaconsxd @hon3yydew @kira-loves0905 @codedove @that-lost-one @colonelcalebs-pipsqueak @kaiii07 @bohoooitsme @everythingistaken00 @rmjace @red-raf-sy @goddexxluv @seris-the-amious @stellisangelicus-world @alhaith4ms @young-adult-summer @junrui
feel free to dm/comment on the series masterlist if you'd like to be added or removed from the taglist 💕comment and reblog if you enjoyed!
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Imagine being the non-mc significant other of lead guitarist! Sylus. part2
Imagine the night was going well, last set of play and they were done for the day until that damn request card came. The way he stared at it under the stage light, jaw ticking, heart twisting in quiet dread. Lips of an Angel. He didn’t need to flip it over. He already knew who it was from.
Imagine the way he gripped the card tighter, wishing it would dissolve in his fist. A request like this wasn’t just a song. It was a test. A fucking ghost tapping on his shoulder. He looked over at the frontman, already nodding, already smiling that smug smile that said "Just do it. One more time won’t kill you."
Imagine he wanted to say no. He should have said no. He almost did. But the crowd was waiting, and when he glanced out across the sea of dim faces, he didn’t see you. If he had, he wouldn’t have done it. Maybe.
Imagine the way the first chord came like muscle memory to him. The way his fingers danced a familiar pattern of pain. He hadn’t played this song for years. Had not sung it in longer. There was no reason for that. He never sings, only does on occasional day but mostly because nowadays, he only sing for you and only you.
Imagine the way he knew this song isn't just music. It was a confession with a melody. And tonight, he was about to lie to the only person who really mattered.
"Honey, why you calling me so late?" The words sat like broken glass in his mouth. They didn’t belong to him anymore. But she was out there.
Imagine the way her eyes, not as sweet and shiny as yours, locked on him. Like he was still that boy who used to write songs about her and pretend it didn’t hurt. Thag made something unspoken twist inside his chest. Not love. Not anymore. It was just unfinished business. The kind that rots if you never open the box.
"I gotta whisper cause I can’t be too loud." He used to believe that. Used to think love had to hide in shadows and stolen glances. But you, you showed him difference. You were sunlight and stability. You laughed at his shitty guitar riffs, kissed the calluses on his fingers, and loved him on the quiet days. You were never a secret.
"Well, my girl’s in the next room" He cringed on the inside. His stomach turned with every lyric. Because you weren't in the next room. You were probably at home, curled up with one of his old hoodies, reading the same damn novel you've been teasing him with for weeks. Or maybe out with friends, texting him when you got home safe. You were his now. And he was yours, only yours. And yet, the song came out like a betrayal he didn't mean to sing.
Imagine he looked at her, MC, only once. Just for a second. She smiled like the world hadn't moved on. Like she still owned a part of him. Maybe she did. Maybe she always would. But what he had with her was then. What he had with you was real. It was now.
Imagine the way he finished the song on autopilot. The way no amount of applause could cut through the guilt already pounding on his chest. The band moved into the next song, but he barely played. His fingers hit strings without hearing them. His mind was somewhere else. Somewhere he couldn't follow.
Imagine he didn't know you were in the crowd. He didn't know you'd planned this as a surprise. He didn't even notice the shift in the crowd. Didn't see you leave. Didn't see your face. Didn't see the hurt. Not yet. Later, when he got backstage, there was a note waiting on him. No name. No message. Just a guitar pick.
Imagine the way his heart dropped. The way he picked up the guitar pick. Custom-made. His initials engraved in your handwriting. He stared at it like it had teeth. Every second he was touching it felt like it burns him. And then it hit him. You were here.
Imagine the way he ran out of the back door. Searched the alley. The parking lot. The street. But you were long gone. The night had swallowed you whole, and it didn't even leave a single echo behind.
Imagine he went home that night and stared at the ceiling in silence. He tried calling. No answer. Tried texting. Left on read. He couldn't sleep. He could not breathe right. Every minute that passed was a beat he felt like he doesn't deserve.
Imagine, the worst part wasn't that he sang to someone he didn't love anymore. It was that he did it thinking you will never know. But you did, and what was the cause?
Imagine he never told anyone what happened that night. Not even the band. He kept it all to himself. And the pick. He kept the pick. Carried it with him like a secret punishment. You were his home. And now, he was just another man who sang the wrong song to the right person who didn’t stay long enough to hear him say sorry.
[ⓒdark-night-hero] 2025°
: part 4 u : imma bake some brownies rq. Bye.
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Damn that hurts
i hope i never see you again.
a final confrontation, and an explanation long overdue.
word count | 4.9k link to work on ao3
sylus x reader mentions | heavy angst, no fluff, reader is not mc

You'd like to think that you've long since come to understand the man standing just an arms-length away from you, what with his silver hair that still somehow glistens even beneath the aged, orange-tinted porch light; the way that even without his arms through the sleeves, his blazer sits immaculately atop a button up, slacks cuffed perfectly at his ankles; the way his face – which was always so inscrutable in the threads of your memory – remains so, even now.
It's strange.
As you gaze up into his unfairly captivating eyes, you swear to yourself that this polaroid image you spent so long so carefully crafting of him – layers upon layers of a man that you toiled so painstakingly hard to even have within your reach – too, remains the same. You can almost wholly delude yourself into believing that to be true. You can feel it; taking one step closer, just past the threshold and onto the porch, just outside of the security of your home, both the physical and the one you built around your bleeding heart, and your fool's paradise would be a fantasy no more.
Your fingers twitch against where you hold the door open, your last line of defense.
The smell. The polaroid – your polaroid – has caught; the image comes into focus, and the edges are smoldering. It's burning.
The fringe of his hair, though seemingly perfectly coiffed at first glance, is just barely mussed; like someone's run their fingers through the silver strands. Just beneath the lapels of his blazer, you notice now that the thin chain that usually bridges the collar of his button up is missing; like someone had forgotten to put it back in its rightful place after having removed it in the first place.
His lips, your eyes inadvertently flit down to, are canted slightly downward, subtly displacing his habitually knowing expression with one you're realizing you can't quite read.
Like someone was here before you, with gentle hands and languid touches that left behind this whisper of disarray, and he was unable to smooth every last morsel over.
It's blistering.
"Don't.”
Your voice is rough, harsh, and his mouth stays parted for a second too long, closes around what you know was going to be your name, but you don't want to hear it. Not now, and not like this.
Your lower lip catches in your teeth, a silent question pressed against it. It seeps through the gaps, and the absence of it writhes into an unspoken accusation anyhow.
Why?
Sylus, ever the epitome of composure, doesn’t speak right away. You know that he knows better than to look anywhere other than at you, yet as you hold each other’s gaze, the air between the two of you becomes so tense, so palpable, you feel it in the back of your throat. It’s still. Thick. Thick with everything, all the confessions and admissions, he’s far too late to say.
His shoulders rise and fall with a low sigh of resignation.
“I never meant for things… for us to end like this. You, of all people, should know that.”
A humored laugh escapes you before you can stop it, and you shake your head in utter disbelief. Something vicious and nasty and unnamed starts festering in your chest, clawing against your ribs, threatening to tear you apart entirely.
“That’s low, Sylus, even- no, especially for you,” you say bitterly.
You watch as his mouth twists, contemplative. He tries again.
“Let me at least just explain myself, please, Y/N,” Sylus says, tone measured. But you can see it in his eyes–he’s wavering. You could despise yourself for recognizing it at all.
“What’s even there to explain?” you scoff, unable to mask the hurt that permeates your voice.
“Everything, Y/N.”
That unnamed something creeps further up your throat just as swift as the polaroid burns. “No. I think I know exactly what I really meant to you, Sylus.”
And how couldn’t you?
You, who was enamoured by his out of place, yet commanding existence in your unostentatious life. You, who tried your hardest to stay hidden, unobserved, in the furthest corner of an art gallery away from the curated noise and polished crowd, yet still kindled a curiosity in the man whose presence alone demanded an audience. You, who noticed his appearance at your side in the warped reflection of a gilded frame, only realizing you’d been studying the brushstrokes of the painting aimlessly when he inquired about your honest thoughts in a low, amused voice. You, who thought, “It’s all performance,” then heard his quiet chuckle, “Surely, you don’t mean just the piece,” and decisively turned to regard your mysterious company– only to find his impossibly carmine eyes already looking at you.
You, who felt like you were truly being seen for the first time in a long time, in a way that invited you in; a vow woven so intricately into one glance, it made something in you localized to your heart believe that this was the beginning. That you were the beginning.
Perhaps that’s what it is. Maybe this unnamed something that sits, waiting, behind your tongue is not grief at what you’ve lost, neither is it the misery adorned across your chest, nor is it the betrayal that’s haunted you in the depths of night, rather it is acceptance you’ve not only turned a blind eye to, but abandoned completely in favor of blissful ignorance. For acknowledging its actuality means accepting that you made your choice. You took the path less traveled and it brought you to this moment now.
But that couldn’t be so. You might have chosen this road, but when the echoes of every single waking second spent with Sylus live behind your eyelids to torment you when you so much as blink, all paths would have converged into this one anyways. And no matter how carnal the desire, you’re no Orpheus. You can’t look back. You can’t bring back the person you were before Sylus.
The you that existed with Sylus, though, was so in love. So alive. And that, in hindsight, is what’s been killing you slowly. Romantic love was something you’d let linger in the recesses of your mind, never to see the light, for it was something that somehow always seemed so foreign, never meant for you. But the way that had Sylus looked at you the night of the gallery truthfully was the beginning. Words and glances exchanged like secrets in his car, your getaway, as the moonlit water of Whitesand Bay glistened just beyond the open window, with the wind catching on your outstretched fingertips, had you feeling a little like falling in love with this stranger who felt like anything but.
So you did. As did he.
If love was a religion, then he was devout, and you were his divine. With notes of sharp spice and hints of bergamot, he wrapped you so carefully in his scent, you were always certain you could spend eternity in this embrace. The charmingly ardent way he always spoke to you felt like he was meant to exist in the confines of a fantasy, and the unabating way in which he treated you with such admiration and adoration felt like he would worship the ground you walked if he could.
And you loved him the only way someone who would have never expected love in return could ever love their first– wholeheartedly, without condition. It wasn’t a love full of glittering spectacles, or grandiose gestures, for such declarations were never you, yet it was intense all the same. Like Sylus was scripture, you faithfully mapped every inch, memorizing him like a prayer to be recited at eventide. Your love let him exist without the need to pretend. A familiar, quiet kind of love where he could return home every night, forgo his defenses, and hang his armour by the door. For months on end, a love most fervent.
So foolish of you. To not have seen your own love had doomed you from the start.
It started with a mistake. One made so silently, entwined in the spaces of your love that, in retrospect, if you weren’t so closely attuned to all that he did, you would never have heard it. But you did; a sharp flick, the scritch of a match, followed by the low hissing of a flame held to your beloved polaroid that even the naïve you of then couldn’t ignore. A name. He’d said it so casually in a conversation so fleeting that you paid it no regard. Until it wasn’t something you could overlook twice.
This name– her name, quickly became commonplace in your relationship. At the second occurrence, you implored Sylus about the matter. Someone he’d become acquainted with in his work dealing with the imports and exports of Linkon City, he’d informed you. A colleague. How wonderful, you’d reasoned, that his profession presented him with chance meetings like this. Thus, it was never mentioned by you again.
But then, for all you had claimed to be so intimately aware of him, you finally began to see.
It lingered a little too long, her name. In the space you weren’t aware was between you two. In the way it would hang in the air a little too long. In the lilt of his voice that was so undeniably soft, you weren’t sure if it was worse that it felt like something not meant for your ears at all or that he didn’t even seem to register he was starting to say it in the same way he said yours.
That steady, holy ground beneath your feet was shifting, he was slipping out of your grasp– and what were you, if not a bystander? His visits to your home in Bloomshire grew more frequent, yet simultaneously somehow, he was never actually there. He would still touch you, embrace you, and kiss you all the same, but the wail of your fragile heart told you something was different. That it had been different for a while, now. With the dampened light of the moon spilling through your blinds and the lull of sleep overhead, you would lie with him in the sanctuary of your bed, just as the two of you always had– your fingers feebly toying with the neckline of his sweater, and his own tenderly brushing over the skin of your eyelids. Only it felt less like you were a girl seeking wonted comfort in the familiar fabric of her lover’s wear, and more like you were secretly sewing into his heart your hope that he would stay. And it felt less like Sylus was a boy stroking the day’s worries out of his lover’s sight, and more like he was quietly willing you to close your eyes, so you wouldn’t have to see he wasn’t.
Then, it ended. Just as it had begun, it ended; quietly.
Rare was it for you to spend an extended amount of time in the center of Linkon, but work summoned Sylus away, and what with your traitorous feelings of guilty relief for the reprieve, you physically couldn’t stay home. A brief train ride later, you were less than surprised that Azure Square was teeming with life. Whether the bustling passerby and euphoric sounds of the city were the solace you needed mattered not, you were hearing and comprehending nothing more than the static of your own mind. The faces among the crowd were akin to figures moving in blurred strokes across an over-crowded canvas, immediately ferrying you back to the night of the art gallery.
Very little mind was being paid to your surroundings as you nursed a cold drink, sat beneath a canopy, and lost in the corridors of thought. The little bell strung on the door of the coffee shop jingled as more faceless strangers filtered in and out, and you could hear the rhythm of footsteps passing even as you were miles away. For the umpteenth time, you caught the faint aroma of coffee as the closing door wafted it in your direction, and with it, came a whisper of spice and citrus.
Sylus.
Like the scent itself took you by the face and coaxed you out of retrospection, your gaze focused on the backs of two strangers no more than a few metres away. Coffee in hand, hair tied in twin ponytails, and clad in white uniforms you know you’d seen somewhere but weren’t familiar with, the joyous atmosphere surrounding these two girls made you feel even more reprehensible, so you turned away, willing the ache and the devil on your shoulder to follow.
And maybe if you had been free of the tendrils of insecurity curled around your neck– maybe if you weren’t being suffocated beneath the weight of your own love of all things, you would’ve soberly finished your drink, rode the train back in solitude, and let yourself choke. But you were already on your feet.
You’d never wished for anything as achingly as you pleaded in that moment to be wrong. Perhaps all of your conflicting emotions had finally coagulated, and they were clouding what would otherwise be sound judgement. Maybe you were making unnecessary bounds and leaps towards a conclusion you weren’t even sure of. You could feel your lips part, the breath that gathered in your chest, and the sound of your hoarse voice as you said but one word. A name. Her name.
There was no mercy. No warning. And when the graceful sweep of her ponytail over her shoulder gave way to wide eyes and a startled expression, you knew she wasn’t just a stranger.
Even now– as you restudy the man that was everything but a stranger to you, the last remaining embers of your polaroid crumble away to little more than ashes at your feet, fluttering into the depths of the chasm stretching the expanse of your porch.
“Enlighten me then, Y/N, on what you’re so certain you meant to me,” Sylus rebuttals.
Your jaw tightens, “N-”
“Don’t you even think of responding with ‘nothing.’ You know that couldn’t be further from the truth, Y/N,” he interrupts, the abruptness betraying how unlike him this all is.
With the hand not pressed to the door, you throw your hand up in exasperation, coughing out a clipped laugh, “But it is what I meant, Sylus! What more could I have meant if you were willing to spend months lying to me–to my face about everything, at that?”
He shakes his head in an infuriatingly calm manner, and you hate how composed he can remain, even moreso now that all of your self-restraint is unraveling. But– with the dam cracked, why stop now?
“Jesus, Sylus, I–I mean you even lied about your job,” you stutter over a thick knot of emotions, “and I didn’t even get the courtesy of hearing the truth from you!”
That discovery was nothing less than a direct slap across the face. You can vividly remember the sickening feeling in the pit of your stomach– not at the fact that he had been keeping anything of this magnitude from you, but that you’d been so gullible to have believed it. Imports and exports for Linkon City. Not even knowing what his home looked like or where he lived, for that matter. And for you to have been so extraordinarily insensible to have let that be okay because you loved him.
Even revisiting that revelation now makes your insides writhe. Your eyes slip shut, and the sound of the deep inhale you take is soft, yet simultaneously stretched thin.
“It’s almost repulsive how pathetically naïve I was,” you murmur.
Sylus doesn’t flinch. He never does. He holds your stare when you finally look back up at him, and quietly says, “I can’t even begin how to tell you that I regret not having been the one to be honest with you. Especially from the start–”
“Then why didn’t you?!” The question bursts out of you before you can even consider stopping it. You press your lips together, well aware that any final morsels of collectedness are slipping from your grasp.
He exhales slowly, and you don’t entirely miss how the breath shudders slightly at the end, “As much as I lament deceiving you, Y/N, I ask that you understand the sheer amount of danger I would have put you in for even considering telling you my identity.”
You blink once, “I do understand. Really– I do, regardless of my current feelings. But what I’m hearing now is you thought it was safer to pretend to be someone you’re not, and never were, instead of just being honest with me? That was your idea of protecting me?”
“Y/N,” Sylus says in a more terse voice, “Don’t twist it like this. You’re too smart to insult both of us by acting like that’s what I was doing.”
Whether it’s a result of your frustration, heartache, or both, you can feel the telltale prick of tears behind your eyes, “If I’m so smart, why couldn’t you respect me enough to tell me the truth?”
Something in his unflappable front flickers, but your gaze has fallen to the silent abyss beneath you, threatening to swallow you whole.
“You denied me the choice of deciding if the truth was something I could live with. If it was someone I could love.”
The silence from before envelops you now. Adrenaline simmers beneath your skin. The unnamed something you came to recognize as acceptance settles heavily in your chest, leaving you with nothing except all of your raw, naked emotions– and questions that you’re not even sure you want to hear answered, but desperately need to so your heart can have permission to end its suffering.
There’s another beat of taut silence between you, and when you finally bring yourself to look back up at him, you can see where his expression is fraying at the edges.
“You’re right,” he says, the vague presence of something akin to quiet remorse in his voice, “I was wrong in assuming that in sparing you from the truth of who I am, I was sparing you from danger.”
There’s a pause that follows that feels deliberate, like he’s silently pleading with you to not merely listen to his words, but to feel the weight of a truth he’s well aware is much too late.
“What I thought was protection was nothing more than thinly veiled control. You didn’t, and will never, deserve that, and I’m sorry for that, Y/N,” he whispers.
Something in you longs to call him a bold-faced liar– wishes that you could scream at him for lying yet again, but there’s a painful throb when something else threads its fingers over and under the arteries of your bleeding heart. That lingering acceptance, once more. You yearn to say he’s being deceitful, but you know all too well that it hurts all the much more because you know he means it.
You don’t answer right away. You can’t. Saying anything that remotely mirrors the words ‘it’s okay’ would make you just like he was; a liar. So you elect to say nothing at all. But as you stand in your doorway with the biting winter air making itself intimately familiar with the skin of your cheeks – staring down the ghost of your wildest dreams and the reality of your ruin – you slowly realize that what you desire more than the truth is to be free.
The void beckons you twofold, so you let your stare fall away again. You shake your head, in not disbelief, but defeat. In the closet, another skeleton waits– born of his lies, and unwilling to wait any longer.
“... And her?”
Two words is all it takes to permeate the air with something far more volatile than before. Sylus, too, doesn’t speak right away, and a part of you grieves that he can’t immediately say you’ve got it all wrong. That it isn’t what it is. And even though you’re sure you look just as disheveled as you feel, you quietly let his eyes trace your features.
His expression shifts as he circles his response around on his tongue before he even opens his mouth to speak. You decide to spare him the effort.
“Was it always her?”
Sylus’ expression falls for a moment so brief you wonder if you imagined it, “She and I were not romantically involved while you and I were together.”
You feel your neck become increasingly warm from anger, and you instantly shake your head at him– bottom lip worried between your teeth.
“Don’t dodge the question, Sylus.”
“Y/N–”
“So– what, you kept the timelines clean? That’s real fucking rich.”
“The relationship that I have with her is complicated, and–”
You almost laugh. “How?! How is it so complicated that you needed to lie to both of us just to keep it tidy? Sylus, I don’t know how the truth will make me feel, but I know damn well another lie is far from fair to me.”
His Adam’s apple bobs as he swallows, his jaw clenches with the slightest jump of a muscle. Anticipation swells in you as you notice, for what is surely the first time, as his lips part to speak only to stop short; he’s hesitating. The ripple of torment that slithers its way down your spine is excruciating.
“There is no way for me to explain it without sounding disingenuous.”
It takes a herculean amount of effort to stifle the itch to immediately scoff, but you keep yourself quiet. There’s nothing you could say in this moment right now that would be worth easing the pressure on him, and frankly, you don’t want to.
Sylus’ chest rises in a low breath, “She was mine in a life that’s long since come to pass, and I’ve a bond with her that even I can’t explain. Her reappearance in my life now carried with it the presence of something that I still can’t unravel. Not when she herself wasn’t fully aware of the significance she bears to me.
“It would be remiss of me to pretend that my proximity to her was a mere coincidence, but it meant close to nothing because she was under the impression I was exactly who she’d been warned about. Then, everything changed.”
With each word that leaves his mouth, the world around you – the light of your porch, the chasm at your feet, you, Sylus – starts distorting at the edges. Like this isn’t a conversation you’re actively participating in, but more like you’re witnessing a scene that’s happening to someone else. It sounds unreal, and if it were anyone else telling you what he’s confessing now, you’d laugh. But this isn’t just anyone else. And for all the lies he’s woven so intricately around you, something in you deep down knows this isn’t one. You bite the inside of your cheek, trying to keep yourself grounded. Only now do you realize that the door stands abandoned behind you– your hands buried in the pockets of your sweater, keeping their anxious trembles out of sight.
Nothing, however, can hide the fear that’s laid itself bare in the look on your face.
“You deserve more than a bare bones explanation after all that you’ve gone through,” he admits solemnly, “and I would be the one to provide that to you if the circumstances surrounded you and I, but–”
Sylus’ voice tapers off before he can finish. Not that it matters when it’s all the same to you. You hear what needn’t be spoken aloud regardless.
But this is about her and I.
It isn’t until you taste salt in the corner of your parted lips that you register the weight of the tears welling in your eyes and rolling down the slope of your cheeks. Their existence is made even more miserable with the frigid air. Then, a numbing realization dawns on you: somewhere, in the margins of this back and forth, he’s taken the liberty of claiming your proverbial knife as his own, turned it inward, and positioned it against your chest. Without force, yet without hesitation.
Waiting.
For one final truth.
“I loved you, once, Y/N,” he breathes steadily, “but I love her now, and evermore.”
Ah.
You feel it. The crescendo. The point of the knife curves gracefully, guided by steady hands as it glides past your skin, through your bones, and plunges with a sigh of finality into your heart.
Unconsciously, you stagger back a step. You’re unable to hold his gaze. Your eyes drop down to his chest, your attention blurring out of focus.
All of it.
The aching.
The evenings spent mourning.
The endless nights wondering when you lost him.
The unrelenting mornings asking when you lost yourself.
It all converges into a singular, overwhelming moment. You press your nails into your palm, desperate to feel anything else.
How foolish of you, to think you had ever understood the man standing so far out of reach. It’s a incredible you never saw it sooner: You never truly had him to begin with.
You try valiantly to blink through the tears staining your vision, steeling yourself to face him as you come undone. Even when you’re falling apart at the seams, there will forever be this that remains constant. Because when you finally muster the courage to lift your chin and look him in the eye, it’s devastating– just how beautiful he still is to you.
Memories in snapshots flicker across your mind and briefly, you wonder if this is what people see in the moments before death wraps them in its embrace. You conjure images. Of the valleys your fingers left behind in his frosty hair with the haze of early morning hovering in your bathroom. Of a coffee table; where you had a habit of leaving the chain of his button up after you removed it when he’d arrive. And his expression, in the way the corners of his eyes seemed to soften just for you when he said he loved you.
Then, just as your beloved polaroid of him, this too, snuffs out. The memories stop. Abruptly. As if they themselves know you’re not welcoming them any longer.
A trove of them remains in the archives of your heart, though it feels less like that tenderness that’s been haunting you and more like you’re rotting from the inside out. Your body feels cold, but not because you miss the memories– or because you miss him. You feel cold because you can see.
While you were busy loving him, Sylus was already remembering someone else.
“You’re a cruel man, Sylus,” your voice cracks a little over the syllables of his name.
“... I know.”
In a last ditch effort to exhaust the last of your rage out on him, you rifle through snippets of the one and only interaction you had with her. Searching for even a granule of something that would allow you to absolve yourself of the loathing you’ve been drowning yourself in. That would prove she – just as he did – knew all along. But you can’t. The remorse that was sprawled across her face then– and the sympathetic way in which she whispered ‘I’m sorry’ was a testament for this.
The last sliver of anger in your body relinquishes into a hurt you know all too well. With it, the will to loathe her slips away and it leaves in its wake the quiet ache of knowing that against fate, you never stood a chance. How could you have been able to bring yourself to hate a girl who was just as kept in the dark? You’re too tired, and maybe too kind, for that.
You’re not quite sure what myriad of expressions you must be making, but you sure as hell can’t look at his for a second longer. Another step backwards leaves Sylus bathed in the orange porch light alone. There’s so much you’ve yet to say to him. So much that you still want to say. Nothing, however, feels adequate enough to convey in words the weight of what he’s done to you, so you concede.
“You’re a cruel, cruel man,” you echo resignedly, “and I hope I never have to see you again.”
With practiced ease, you slip further back into the shadowed refuge of your home that once upon a time, housed two. Keeping the door open has allowed for the winter outside to infiltrate its ambiance; the floor beneath your feet a frigid kind of cold. You’ll have to remedy this with wool socks when you’re alone tonight.
Sylus says nothing and the silence is resounding, even when the door creaks as you begin to shut it; slow, and certain. And you’ll implore yourself to acknowledge it as some sort of sadistic self-punishment later, but before you can close this chapter for good, your eyes find Sylus one last time, and when you catch a glimpse of something like guilt softening the edges of his face, you pause.
The sheer loneliness you’ve felt is something you wouldn’t ever wish onto someone else. Hence you’re not sure if you’ll ever find it in you to truly forgive him. Perhaps you never truly will. Maybe you, as well, are a cruel person for that. Time will pass, and you’ll spend it unlearning him, anyhow.
When the time does come to pass, and the dust settles with it, there is one truth that stands untouched.
“But I hope fate is kind to you this time around.”
You, too, loved him once.
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— Borrowed time, part 5
‼️Caleb x reader x Sylus. Reader not MC. University AU. Modern AU. Angst angst angst!
Everyone knows Caleb is in love with MC. Everyone. Including you. But that does not stop him from flirting with you, teasing you, keeping you close. And it definitely does not stop you from falling for him—even when you know you’re just a stand-in, a place holder.
“And when the rooftop door clicks shut behind him, you’re still tasting sin.”
song: party 4 u by charlie xcx [this song has been the main inspiration for this series, so whatever you feel listening go this song, i hope you’ll feel that while reading this series as well]
word count = 9.6k
i appreciate all likes, comments, reblogs, and asks. i may not reply to all of them, but i want you to know that i reread them over and over <3
i cant say im proud of this chapter, and tbh theres so much i hate about this part, but if i dont post this right now, i dont think i ever will, so please be kind, but i appreciate constructive criticisms! if this part felt unsatisfactory, just pretend this update didnt happen lol
ps. thank you so much for over 1k followers??? heres a thousand roses for all of you 😭🌹
part 1

The door creaks open.
The closet’s darkness slips away, replaced by blinding light and loud cheers.
But everything feels distant.
Your breaths are shallow. The warmth of his breath still clings to your skin, the ghost of his lips a lingering echo. His touch—still branded into your waist, your jaw, the hollow between your ribs. Your pulse hasn’t settled.
The air outside is cool, but your skin burns.
You stumble slightly as you step out, Sylus behind you—his shirt rumpled, one button undone. His silver hair is tousled, a little too messy. Your lips sting. You know you look wrecked.
And the crowd eats it up. Whoops and whistles explode around you.
You try to smile. You try to breathe.
But then your eyes land on him.
Caleb.
He’s across the room, half-lit by the cheap string lights, drink forgotten in his hand. His jaw is tight, his expression unreadable—except for his eyes.
They are cold.
Piercing.
It’s not anger. It’s like he’s looking right through you—like you’ve somehow ruined something sacred. Like you’re the disappointment.
Your chest tightens.
And then, just behind him, you catch a flash of movement.
MC.
Her head is down, hair shielding her face, her arms wrapped tightly around herself as she brushes past him, shouldering her way through the crowd.
Caleb snaps out of his trance in a heartbeat. His face shifts—concern overtaking scorn—as he calls after her and follows without hesitation.
And just like every time before, he doesn’t even spare you a second glance.
The cheers fade into static. Laughter turns tinny and distant, swallowed by the ringing in your ears.
It hits you all at once.
The heat. The mess. The press of Sylus’s body against yours. The way you leaned into it. The way you wanted to. The way you let yourself.
And then—MC’s face. Her voice. Her smile when she told you he’s kinda cute, isn’t he?
Guilt slams into you like a car.
It punches the breath from your lungs.
You feel it in your throat, acidic and raw, threatening to spill. A sickening twist coils in your stomach, bile licking at the edges of your tongue.
What have you done?
What did you just let happen?
Your skin crawls. The warmth you felt seconds ago now feels wrong—disgusting. It clings to you like smoke. Like shame.
You wrap your arms around yourself, trying to hold in the nausea curling up your chest.
Sylus says something beside you, low and teasing, but you don’t catch the words.
All you can hear is your own blood rushing in your ears.
And all you can feel is the weight of what you’ve just done. The taste of it. Bitter. Burning.
And the worst part?
You don’t even know who you’re more disgusted with—Caleb…
Or yourself.
You don’t wait for the whispers.
You don’t wait to see if MC turns back or if Caleb says anything at all.
You push through the crowd, pulse hammering in your throat, lungs clawing for air like there’s not enough oxygen in the room, not enough space in your ribs for this many feelings, this much shame.
The door slams shut behind you but it’s not enough.
Not enough to drown out the ghost of Sylus’s hands still on your waist. Not enough to erase the memory of his mouth against yours, hot and unbothered and too real.
Not enough to wipe away the scowl in Caleb’s eyes or the way MC couldn’t even look at you.
The night is too loud. The world is too close. Everything—everything—is pressing in on you.
So you push everything out of your way, scouring to find air.
You don’t think, don’t breathe, just bolt down the steps of the villa, sandals slapping against stone, the wind catching in your hair, stinging your eyes, stealing your balance. You don’t care.
The beach calls to you like a goddamn siren.
You trip onto the sand, knees buckling, breath shaking, heart feral in your chest like it’s trying to break out and leave you behind. You tear your heels off, toss them somewhere you’ll never find again, and march straight toward the water like it might wash you clean.
The ocean crashes louder than your thoughts.
Salt fills your nose. Wind tangles in your hair. The stars above are too bright, mocking. Too calm for the storm splitting your insides apart.
You drop to your knees at the shoreline, water licking at your calves, seeping into your clothes, and you let it. You need it. You need the cold. You need the sting. You need to feel something real.
Because everything in your chest is twisted. Twisted and wrong and out of place.
You lean forward, pressing your forehead against your knees, breathing like each inhale might keep you from unraveling completely. You wish it were just the alcohol. Just a mistake. Just a hazy memory you could laugh off tomorrow.
But you remember it too clearly.
His mouth. The weight of his gaze in the dark. The way his hand didn’t hesitate when it slid against your jaw, when he leaned in like he’d been waiting to taste you all night.
And you let him.
Worse—you wanted it.
The thought turns your stomach. You dig your fingers deeper into the wet sand, nails scraping at the earth, like maybe you can bury the part of you that’s smiling.
Because she’s there.
Somewhere inside you—beneath the nausea, beneath the shame—there’s a version of you curled up, smug and satisfied. A version who watched MC’s face twist, who watched Caleb’s scowl turn cold, and felt nothing but satisfaction.
That part of you is smiling.
You hate her.
Because that part of you—the one that enjoyed it—she’s been quiet for a long time. Always biting her tongue, always watching from the corners while MC took the spotlight, while Caleb gave his warmth to someone else. You taught her to wait. To be kind. To be better.
But god, you’re tired.
Tired of twinkling for people who never look up long enough to see you. Tired of being loved only in parts—when you’re easy, when you’re quiet, when you’re beautiful and harmless.
You’ve always been the supporting character in everyone else’s story. The best friend. The comic relief. The tragic footnote.
So tonight, you wanted to be the villain.
So tonight, she let herself out.
You let her kiss him.
You let her drag Sylus into that closet and tilt your chin up with a smile that begged “ruin me if you want to.”
And she did.
Now here you are, buried in the sand and sea, trying to figure out if the guilt eating at you is heavier than the satisfaction still curling at the edge of your lips.
You’re not supposed to feel this way.
You’re not supposed to want to be seen like that. Wanted like that.
Not at the cost of MC. Not at the cost of Caleb’s crumbling expression.
But you do.
You wanted them to see. You wanted to be wanted. And for a second—you finally were.
And for that, you are repenting your sins, kneeling by the shore and letting the cold eat you whole.
The tide rushes in again, crashing against your skin.
You raise your head, throat raw, eyes burning.
You sit there, watching the waves hit and retreat, over and over, counting the sparkling stars reflected on the ocean surface, until you could not feel your feet.
This is your way of atoning—because you fear the girl curled up inside you, biting on her nails every time a tear threatens to fall. Because the damage she has done once you let her out for a fraction of a moment is irreversible. Collateral.
And because you can’t promise this will be the last time you let her out.
You finally return to your room, dread curling tight in your chest like a vice. Each step down the hallway feels heavier than the last, your body moving on autopilot, mind spiraling with possibilities.
You hesitate at the door. Fingers resting on the knob. You aren’t sure what you’re bracing for.
An angry Michaela?
A tear-streaked Michaela?
A cold, distant Michaela who won’t even look you in the eye?
You don’t know which would be worse.
The knob turns with a quiet click, the door creaking open. You take a breath—slow, bracing—and step inside.
Empty.
The room is quiet. Still.
Her suitcase remains tucked in the corner. A half-drunk bottle of water sits on the bedside table. The lights are off, the curtains drawn. Not a trace of her. Not even the ghost of footsteps.
Somehow, it’s worse than yelling.
You stand there for a moment, motionless, caught in the heavy weight of nothingness.
Then your phone buzzes.
MC [02:46 AM]: Had to clear my head. Be back later.
Short. Punctuated. Not cold, but definitely not warm either.
And with that, you’re left alone.
Surrounded by silence.
Sinking into it.
You sit on the edge of the bed, heart thrumming against your ribs.
You should feel relieved.
You grip the edge of the mattress tighter.
You should be thankful the confrontation didn’t happen yet.
But all you feel is this crawling unease.
Like the silence is just the eye of the storm.
And when she comes back—
You’re not sure which version of Michaela you’ll meet.
And worse—you’re not sure which version of you she’ll find.
You get changed and crawl under the covers, body heavy, soul heavier. The silence is your only companion—thick, choking, unforgiving. You bury yourself into the blankets like they could shield you from the weight of what you’ve done.
Eventually, exhaustion drags you under.
•
Rustling wakes you.
Sharp. Precise. Intentional.
You blink your eyes open, and there she is.
Michaela.
Her back turned to you.
Her suitcase is open on the floor, half-filled. Clothes folded with a neatness that feels hostile.
You sit up slowly, throat dry.
She doesn’t look at you, nor say a word.
You rise. Move toward your side of the room. Get ready in silence. The kind of silence that screams.
Every breath feels wrong. Every second, guilt crawls further up your throat, pressing, choking, aching.
You swallow hard, then try to break the weight as you part your mouth to speak.
Your voice is quiet. Fragile.
“Michaela… last night, I—”
Michaela freezes for only a second before she turns around, face already wearing a smile that feels too sharp, too bright.
“Was such a blast! You gotta tell me all about what happened in that closet!” She winks.
“No—I—”
“Don’t think too deeply into it!” She waves her hand casually, like you’d just brought up a funny memory from a party instead of the reason her bag is half-packed. She lets out a breathy laugh, brushing her hair behind her ear. “It’s college, Yn. People kiss like, all the time. It’s nothing.” Her face drops slightly, but returns back to its beaming state. She reaches for your hands, and her voice lowers down. “It’s just a kiss, isn't it?”
A pause.
“Y-yeah,” you utter.
Her face beams once more as she squeezes your hands. “Besides, he is a pretty good kisser, isn’t he?”
You stare at her. The smile she’s wearing is dazzling—carefully crafted, practiced.
But it doesn’t reach her eyes.
And that hurts more than if she’d screamed at you.
The silence that follows is unbearable.
Eventually, the two of you gather the last of your things and leave the room. You walk side by side, the air between you tight with everything unsaid.
Outside, everyone is saying their goodbyes. Laughter, hugs, last-minute selfies. But none of it touches you. Not really.
You spot Caleb near the car, arms crossed, jaw tight.
He shifts his weight, arms crossed, leaning against the car with that infuriatingly calm expression—like he’s been waiting to deliver a blow.
“Well, well,” he drawls, eyes dragging over your form. “Eventful night, huh?”
You freeze mid-step.
His tone is light, teasing, even laced with that familiar cocky lilt—but it cuts deeper than any insult. Because you know Caleb. You know exactly when he means it. When the smile on his face is just another weapon.
“Hope he was worth the show,” he adds with a smirk. You can’t quite get a read on his face, can’t really understand whether the smirk is teasing, jabbing, or insulting.
You don’t answer. You can’t. So you walk past him without a word.
But he’s not done.
He leans in just slightly, voice dropping low enough for only you to hear:
“I bet you still thought of me.”
It hits you like a slap. You don’t flinch. You don’t give him that satisfaction. But it scorches down your spine, curling into something heavy and sour in your stomach.
All words run dry in your throat.
Because you know you did, and he knows you did.
So, swallowing down the lump in your throat, you quietly climb into the car.
The ride back is a void—quiet and cold despite the sun that floods through the windows.
Michaela sits in the front, headphones in, eyes fixed outside. Her expression is unreadable, a delicate mask of serenity.
Caleb drives in silence, but the tension in his body betrays him.
His knuckles tighten around the steering wheel. The muscle in his jaw ticks every time the car slows.
And yet—despite everything—you still see the way his hand occasionally reaches over to Michaela’s thigh. Subtle. Familiar. He squeezes gently, reassuringly, every time the silence grows too loud.
You sit in the backseat, hands clenched in your lap, stomach churning, heart clawing at your ribcage.
Because somehow, in this cramped little car filled with silence and ghosts, you still feel like the one who doesn’t belong.
•
You finally find yourself back in your familiar space.
The door clicks shut behind you.
Shoes off. Bag down. Keys tossed on the counter.
The silence wraps around you, soft and undemanding.
For the first time in days, you breathe without pretending.
You shower, letting the water scald the memory of Michaela’s laugh off your skin.
You eat something. Actual food. Not alcohol. Not regret.
And for a brief, flickering moment, you start to feel okay again.
Until your phone pings.
A message.
Unknown [6:43 PM]: So?
You freeze.
Every part of you stills—except for your heart, which begins to pound like it remembers the thing you’ve tried so hard to forget since last night.
Something forbidden.
Something thrilling.
Something wrong.
The memory comes back in flashes as guilt claws its way up your throat, hot and unrelenting. It tastes like shame.
You stare at the screen until the words blur.
And then, with trembling hands, you type.
You [6:50 PM]: It was a mistake.
You [6:50 PM]: Don’t text me again.
You hit send before you can think twice.
Your phone slips from your grip, landing face-down on the bed as you bury your face in your hands.
“It was a mistake,” you mumbled.
•
The following days were the most peaceful ones you’ve had in what felt like forever—quiet, slow, and mercifully uneventful. No parties. No whispered gossip. No sharp glances from Caleb or strained smiles from Michaela. Just the soft hum of routine and the space to finally breathe.
You sleep more. Eat better. Enjoying the lasts of your break. You’re rebuilding yourself piece by piece—one uneventful morning at a time.
But the moment you start feeling a little more like yourself, Monday catches up.
The quiet comfort of the break ends the second your feet hit campus tiles. The world spins forward like nothing ever happened.
Michaela acts like nothing ever happened.
She greets you with the same bright smile, the same light giggle, the same affectionate bump of the shoulder. As if that night was just another one of many forgettable college party blurs. As if your lips had never touched Sylus’s. As if her eyes hadn’t dulled the second they landed on you.
And you pretend too.
Because it’s easier that way. Safer.
Later that day, she loops her arm through yours as you walk out of class, swinging your hands between you. “Let’s go shopping after lectures? I need a new outfit or something for the first viewing next week,” she beams.
You nod before you can think too hard about it.
“Oh—” she adds, with that little flicker in her voice that always precedes something calculated, “I invited Caleb too.”
Your smile doesn’t falter, but your stomach twists.
The shopping trip is tolerable at best. Michaela slips into her spotlight with ease—twirling in front of mirrors, holding up dresses with playful pouts, laughing just a bit too loud at jokes that don’t quite land. Caleb sticks close, fingers brushing her waist, whisper her ear when she grins too hard.
But his eyes wander.
You catch him sometimes, gaze flicking to you when Michaela isn’t looking. Just for a second. Just enough to leave that same sour taste in your throat.
You don’t acknowledge it.
You can’t.
Instead, you smile when Michaela pulls you into the dressing room with her. You nod when Caleb asks if you’re tired. You pretend not to notice how her laugh dims a little when he lingers by your side for too long. You go through the motions—lift the hangers, compliment the colors, offer the safe, neutral opinions you’ve mastered so well.
It’s like muscle memory now. Playing your role.
Because if you don’t look too hard, you can almost believe this is normal. That nothing’s changed. That your mouth hadn’t betrayed you. That your silence wasn’t stitched from guilt.
By the time the sun dips below the skyline and the three of you step out of the store, bags in hand and feigned joy in your lungs, you feel wrung out—drained from smiling too much and meaning none of it.
Caleb says something—something teasing, probably—and Michaela laughs like a girl in love.
You stay a step behind them, clutching your bag a little too tightly.
You tell yourself it’s fine.
You tell yourself you deserve this.
Because in this triangle of careful lies and quiet betrayals—
You’re the one who kissed the wrong boy.
And you were the one who almost said yes again.
“Oh! I almost forgot,” Michaela says, as if it just came to her. “You have to come to the premiere next month.”
You blink. “The… premiere?”
She grins. “The film. The one we shot over break? We’re doing a small screening—kind of like a soft launch—for friends and crew.” She swings her shopping bags absentmindedly. “It’s just this tiny old theatre on 12th. Indie vibes, red velvet seats, ancient projector that might burst into flames halfway through—super charming.”
You force a smile. “Sounds cute.”
“You’ll come, right?” she says, looking at you over the rim of her cup. “I already told them to save you a seat.”
You hesitate—but not long enough for her to notice. “Sure.”
She beams. “Perfect.” Then, casually: “Sylus will be there too. I made sure he’d come.”
Your fingers tighten slightly around the straps of your bag.
“Made sure?” you echo, trying to keep your tone even.
Michaela shrugs, but there’s a sparkle in her eyes—the kind that always means she’s saying more than she lets on. “Yeah! I’ve been seeing him pretty frequently these days. Bumped into him a few times after the shoot… had coffee once or twice. He’s actually really funny when he’s not being all mysterious and broody.”
“Oh,” Caleb joins, light and amused. “Him. Great. Can’t wait to hear him brood about cinematography or whatever the hell it is he does.”
Michaela laughs, linking her arm with yours again. “Be nice. He’s actually been really helpful lately.”
“Helpful,” Caleb echoes, quirking a brow as he pops the lollipop from his mouth. “Didn’t realize mysterious bad boys were part of the crew now.”
“He’s not a ‘bad boy’,” she says, rolling her eyes.
She says it lightly, but there’s a deliberate lilt in her voice—a softness, almost flirtatious.
Your grip on your bag tightens, the fabric biting into your fingers.
You nod once, slow. “Didn’t know you two were close.”
She hums. “We’re getting there.”
Then, with a coy smile: “He asked a lot about you, though. Thought that was cute.”
Your chest constricts. The air feels thinner somehow.
“Anyway,” she says, skipping in front and spinning to fully face you, “it’s going to be such a fun night. You should wear that black slip dress—the one you wore to Jenna’s party? You looked so good in that.”
And all you could mutter in response was a short hum along with a smile.
•
The following days were as normal as they could’ve been. Well, aside from the fact that he has suddenly been everywhere.
At first, it was subtle.
A glimpse of him through the glass-paneled door of the editing lab, leaning over a student’s shoulder.
The sound of his voice drifting down the hallway—low, smooth, impossible to mistake.
Then you saw him again, this time in the courtyard. Talking to a group from the business department, one hand in his pocket, the other holding a coffee he barely drank from.
Word spread quickly.
“I thought he took most of his classes online?” someone whispered nearby.
“He does. No one ever sees him around.”
“Then why’s he here now?”
“Who knows? Maybe to complete his last courses before graduation?”
“He’s a business major, right?”
“Yeah, but like… old money business. Scary smart. The kind that makes you nervous to breathe too loud.”
You kept your head down, but your pulse never quite stayed still.
Because every time you caught sight of him, he never once looked your way—
And yet, you felt his presence like it was stitched into the fabric of your day.
He was too composed. Too polished. Too calculated.
And somehow, his silence was louder than if he’d cornered you outright.
“Just a mistake,” you mumble to yourself each time you see his figure waltz by.
But your quiet whispers to calm your nerves didn’t prove to be a very sustainable method.
Not when the universe seems hellbent on rubbing it in.
You see them together.
Once in the corridor outside the media building—her laugh echoing off the walls, his hand casually in his pocket, head tilted down to hear her better. They walk side by side, their pace easy, unhurried.
Michaela looks effortless next to him—bright-eyed, golden, her hand brushing his arm as she says something that makes him smile.
Not his usual smirk. Not the quiet, condescending curve of his mouth he wore like armor.
You stop in your tracks.
Just for a second.
Long enough for Michaela to spot you.
She waves. Cheerful. Unbothered. “Hey babe!”
He followed her gaze and landed on you. The smile on his lips curls up a little higher as you meet his eyes.
“Hello,” amusement coats his voice.
“Hi—”
“I’m probably not going to be free today for our usual hangouts,” Michaela cuts in, turning to you with an apologetic pout. “I asked Sylus to help with some of my work… You can hang out with Caleb by yourself, right?”
Before you can answer, she adds with a dramatic sigh, “Please tell him to chill and that I’m fine—just really busy. He’s been blowing up my phone non-stop these days.”
You force a smile, nodding once. “Yeah. Of course.”
She beams, already tugging Sylus further down the hall.
He casts one last glance your way.
A flicker of something in his eyes—teasing, sharp, unreadable.
As soon as you’re left standing there, caught in the space between their footsteps and your silence, your phone buzzes.
You glance down,
Caleb [4:28 PM]: where are you
Caleb [4:28 PM]: arent we having dinner today
Caleb [4:28 PM]: are you with her? she’s not answering my texts
Your stomach tightens.
You can still hear Michaela’s laughter fading around the corner, Sylus’s low voice murmuring something back.
Caleb [4:29 PM]: nvm
Caleb [4:29 PM]: i’ll find you myself
You don’t even remember agreeing to it.
One minute you’re reading Caleb’s texts with a pit in your stomach, the next he’s striding up to you outside the lecture hall—jaw tense, eyes scanning over your shoulder like he’s half-expecting Michaela to appear.
“She’s with him, isn’t she?” he asks, no greeting, voice clipped.
You blink. “Caleb—”
His expression shifts. He exhales, scrubs a hand through his hair, and forces a smile.
“Whatever,” he says, eyes softening as they settle on you. “Doesn’t matter. You’re here.”
And just like that, the edge in his voice fades.
“Come on,” he says, nudging your shoulder. “I’m starving. Let’s go grab something before I start chewing my own arm off.”
You hesitate for half a second, but he’s already walking ahead, glancing back to make sure you follow.
•
Dinner ends up being at this tiny place tucked behind the arts building—warm lighting, mismatched chairs, the kind of quiet hum that makes everything feel a little softer.
You sit across from him, arms tucked against your chest, still a little shell-shocked from everything.
He notices.
“You’ve been doing that thing again,” he says between bites. “Where your brain goes somewhere else and forgets to take your body with it.”
You snort. “And what thing are you doing right now?”
He leans back, exaggeratedly smug. “Being charming and irresistible, obviously.”
You roll your eyes, but the corner of your mouth lifts. Just a little.
When your food arrives, he pushes his plate toward you with a quiet, “Try this. It’s better than yours.”
You glance at him, suspicious. “You haven’t even tasted mine.”
He grins. “Exactly. That’s how confident I am.”
It’s silly. Stupid, even. But it helps. The knot in your chest loosens just enough to let a small laugh slip out.
And then—just as you’re mid-bite—his voice softens.
“Hey.”
You look up.
His eyes are steady now. No teasing. No act.
“I never really got the chance to say it properly,” he murmurs. “About what happened at the filming set. That night. Everything.”
The clinking of cutlery fades around you.
“I was inconsiderate,” he says. “I thought too little. Acted too harsh. ”
He looks down at his hands for a moment. “I overlooked your feelings. And I hurt you more than I meant to.”
You don’t know what to say.
So you just watch him as he finally lifts his gaze again, softer now. Warmer.
“I guess what I’m trying to say is… I’m sorry.”
The air between you stills.
“Can’t say I really enjoyed the stunt you pulled though,” he jokes.
The dinner continues quietly—less heavy now, more like the old rhythm you used to share with him. Caleb cracks a few jokes, pokes fun at your serious face, and makes exaggerated guesses about the lives of people at nearby tables. You end up laughing more than you expected to.
Then, as you gather your things to leave, he tilts his head toward you with a mischievous glint.
“One drink?” he asks. “There’s this quiet place nearby. They make the worst cocktails I’ve ever had in my life. Thought you’d like it.”
You roll your eyes. “Sounds irresistible.”
He grins. “Exactly.”
The bar turns out to be this cozy hole-in-the-wall tucked behind a bookstore, dimly lit with string lights that look like they’ve been up since 2003. There’s an old piano in the corner no one plays, and the bartender greets Caleb like he’s a regular—which is both comforting and mildly concerning.
The music’s soft. The booths are deep and worn-in. And somehow, the world feels smaller here.
Caleb orders for both of you, raising a brow at you across the table. “Just trust me.”
You don’t. But you drink it anyway.
“You’re smiling,” he points out, pleased with himself.
You arch a brow. “Must be the worst cocktail I’ve ever had in my life.”
He lifts his glass. “To consistent branding.”
You clink glasses, laughter warm between you.
The kind of warmth that sneaks up on you—gentle, nostalgic, easy.
And then, somewhere between the second and third drink, he leans back, eyes softer now, his playful edge melting at the corners.
“You know,” he starts, swirling what’s left of his drink. “I don’t really remember what my parents look like anymore.”
You glance over at him.
“You don’t talk about your family much,” you say gently.
He lets out a breath. It could’ve been a laugh.
“Don’t really have one,” he says. “Not really.”
He lifts the glass to his lips, but doesn’t drink. Just rests it there, like he needs something to hold on to.
“Thankfully, Michaela’s took me in,” he continues. “Thankfully…” he repeats, quieter this time.
Your mood sours from the mention of her name. Of course she would be mentioned.
“She has always been sick since she was a kid. ‘Cause of her bad heart.”
You stay quiet. Let him keep going.
Something in his voice says he needs to.
“It’s always been my responsibility to keep her safe,” he says, almost like he’s reminding himself. “Since we were kids.”
His fingers drum against the glass, slow and steady, like a heartbeat.
“And whenever I failed to do so… well…” he trails off, then smiles, a crooked, breathy thing that doesn’t touch his eyes. “It never really ended very well.”
You feel the weight of those words, the way he tries to tuck pain into them like they’re just another part of the joke.
“He used to remind me constantly… of my purpose…” Caleb mumbles, his voice slowing, slurring slightly. His words are slipping like his grip on the glass—loose, tired, too worn down to hold on.
You watch his eyes begin to dim, heavy with drink and something much older.
“You’re too drunk, Caleb,” you say softly, reaching out to steady the glass before it tips.
He blinks at you. Slow. Dazed. And then his lips part, just barely.
“That I’m just a stray…” he whispers, almost to himself. “If no one needs me…”
His gaze unfocuses for a moment. You don’t think he even realizes he’s still speaking.
Your breath catches.
He’s still smiling, faintly, lazily. But it’s the kind of smile that scourches your chest.
You slide your hand across the table, fingers brushing his. He doesn’t move.
“You should go home,” you murmur.
He doesn’t answer. Just leans further into his folded arms, the tension in his shoulders finally giving out.
You sigh, quietly.
The bar is warm, the night colder. And somehow, without much thought, you find yourself wrapping his arm around your shoulder, whispering half-hearted complaints as you half-drag, half-guide him out the door.
•
The days fly by like leaves lifted off the branches.
Nothing of the past has ever been mentioned ever again—the few days at the film set, the tense atmosphere between you and Michaela, nor the night Caleb slumped into your shoulder, murmuring half-truths through the haze of cheap liquor and old pain.
Classes resume. Group chats return to life. The cafeteria starts serving that awful tomato soup again. You slip back into the rhythm like nothing happened.
But the cracks are still there—just beneath the surface, waiting.
You’re sitting under the shade of a banyan tree behind the humanities building. It’s quiet, peaceful, a little breezy. Your lunch is balanced on your lap, half-eaten. Michaela plops down beside you with a soft “ugh” and a dramatic stretch.
“God,” Michaela says brightly, appearing at your side like she always does—seamlessly, like a breath of perfume. “He’s actually so funny once you get him to talk.”
You glance at her. “Who?”
She tilts her head, playful. “Sylus,” she says, drawing the name out. “He’s been helping me prep for the Q&A tomorrow. Said I needed to sound less ‘pageant’ and more ‘visionary.’ Whatever that means.”
Her laugh is breezy. Too light.
“Oh?” you respond, forcing a smile. “Sounds like you’re getting close.”
“Oh, it’s nothing serious,” she says quickly, tucking her hair behind her ear. “Coffee here, late-night notes there. He’s just so…” She trails off, eyes sparkling. “Interesting, don’t you think?”
You hum. Noncommital.
Michaela doesn’t seem to notice—or pretends not to.
She takes a sip of her drink, then suddenly perks up. “Oh! The premiere’s this Saturday. Are you ready?”
You blink. “Ready for…?”
“The spotlight, duh,” she grins, nudging your arm. “To see yourself on screen, see the scenes you played in come together with the background music. And to see your name in the closing credit!”
You roll your eyes, but it makes you smile. “It’s not that serious.”
“It is,” she insists. “You looked amazing, even in the trailer. You carried that café scene.”
You snort. “I said four words.”
“Yeah, but you felt those four words. I almost cried.”
You laugh together, and for a second—it feels real. Familiar. Like the last few weeks never happened.
“Have you picked an outfit yet?” she asks between bites of salad.
You shake your head. “Was just gonna wear something simple.”
Michaela gasps. “No. You’re not walking into an indie theater full of film nerds in ‘something simple.’ You have to look effortless. Like you’re not trying, but also like… if you were trying, you’d end worlds.”
You glance at her, raising a brow. “That specific, huh?”
“Always,” she says, eyes sparkling.
And for a moment, it’s just the two of you.
Two girls beneath a tree, laughing about dresses and dumb film boys and the weight of appearances.
It feels soft. Safe. Like how things used to be.
And it hits you with a quiet ache.
Because even now, part of you still wants to believe this friendship can survive what’s been done.
That maybe you haven’t already burned the bridge.
That maybe—just maybe—she hasn’t noticed the match in your hand.
The rest of the week passes in quiet, deliberate steps.
Classes blur. The campus grows louder, buzzing with exams and end-of-semester deadlines. Your name gets tagged once or twice in the group chat—reminders about call times, wardrobe, a blurry meme of someone joking about crying during the Q&A.
You try on outfits with Michaela after class, like you promised.
It’s surprisingly normal—her room filled with scattered hangers, half-empty iced coffees, the faint sound of a playlist humming from her speaker.
You laugh. You bicker. You twirl.
And then—Saturday arrives.
The day of the premiere.
It’s just past golden hour when you step out of your building, the sky painted in soft streaks of lavender and orange. The air is crisp. The kind that wakes you up and reminds you something’s about to happen.
The old theatre on 12th is just as Michaela described it—small, a little run-down, with velvet seats that creak and a marquee that flickers every other letter.
There’s already a crowd forming outside. Film kids in too-large blazers and thrifted dresses, professors dressed semi-formal but too cool to act like it, and the crew—all wide-eyed and excited, passing around programs and laughter.
The theater glows in the soft spill of marquee lights, buzzing faintly overhead as you approach, clutching your clutch tighter than necessary.
The car pulls up just as you step onto the red-carpeted pavement.
And then you see her.
Michaela steps out first, the silk of her silver dress catching the light like water. It slips over her frame effortlessly—cool-toned and reflective, like moonlight turned human. Her lips are painted a soft coral, her eyes dusted with shimmer, and her smile—bright, unbothered, breathtaking—lands like a punch to the chest.
Then comes Caleb.
He unfolds from the car in slow, unhurried movements, sleeves of his black dress shirt rolled neatly to his elbows beneath a tailored blazer, the collar unbuttoned just enough to suggest trouble. His hair is slicked back, not too perfect, and a hint of cologne catches the air as he leans slightly toward Michaela, saying something close to her ear.
You feel it instantly—the pull. The heat.
They look like they stepped off a magazine spread. Like they’re here to be looked at. Owned it. Earned it.
Your stomach twists.
But then her eyes find yours.
“Yn!” Michaela beams the second she sees you, waving you over like the oldest friend in the world. Her voice cuts through the crowd with effortless warmth. “You look stunning! Oh my God!”
You force a smile, walking toward her as she reaches out and takes your hand for a brief spin. “See? I told you that dress was the one. Absolutely gorgeous.”
“Thanks,” you murmur.
Caleb’s gaze drifts lazily toward you. His eyes widen slightly, just for a second—subtle, but there. And then that crooked, lazy smile of his crawls up his face like he’s trying not to let it show too much.
“Damn,” he mutters under his breath, voice low, just loud enough for you to hear over the soft chatter of the crowd. “You do look good today, shortcake.”
You don’t turn to look at him. You don’t smile. But your pulse stutters anyway.
Inside, the lights are low and flickering, casting everyone in gold.
You find your seats near the front.
You sit first.
Then Michaela slips in beside you, smoothing the back of her dress.
Then Caleb—his thigh brushing against hers, jacket folding as he slouches back with that usual too-cool ease.
And then—
An empty seat. Reserved with a single placard.
SYLUS QIN
You stare at it for a second too long.
The serif font. The clean white card. The space he hasn’t filled.
People slowly fill the theatre, and the chatter dies down as soon as the introducing speech starts. Cheers and laughter are exchanged as the producer welcomes everyone, and soon, lights begin to dim, the hush rippling through the room like a spell settling.
The first flicker of light sears across your vision—too bright, too sudden. You blink, disoriented.
The grainy opening shot bleeds onto the walls, painting everyone in uneven strobes of white and shadow. Your hands curl into the fabric of your dress.
Then you hear your voice.
Just a small line, off-screen. But it makes your throat tighten.
And then you’re there. You.
A glimpse of your face on camera—too quick, too exposed.
Your stomach flips. A cold rush spreads down your back. You shrink into your seat without meaning to.
The flickering continues—scenes switching with sharp cuts, too fast, too loud. Your eyes strain to follow. The glow of the screen presses against your skin like heat.
You feel it in your temples. In the base of your skull.
A thrum. A pressure.
You try to breathe slower.
But there you are again.
In the corner of the frame. Behind Michaela’s shoulder. Walking across the background, smiling as she delivers a perfect monologue.
You’re always there—but never really there.
Never centered. Never seen.
Just enough to anchor the shot.
Never enough to be remembered.
Your heart races faster.
You glance sideways—Michaela is watching intently, chin tilted just so, the soft rise and fall of her breathing unbothered. Her hand rests lightly on Caleb’s arm.
You try to focus on the screen, but the lights are too much now. The images change too quickly. Your skin feels hot. The sound dips and rises, warping in your ears. Laughter in the film echoes strangely, like it’s bouncing around inside your chest instead of the room.
You swallow down the tightness clawing its way up your throat.
Breathe.
You stare at your knees. At your folded hands.
The screen flashes white again—another cut. Another shot of Michaela framed in golden light, eyes brimming with perfectly timed tears.
And just behind her, out of focus—your figure. Barely lit. Barely there.
You curl your fingers into your dress and force yourself to stay still.
Because if you move—if you flinch, if you breathe too loud—it’ll feel too real.
Like this isn’t just a movie. Like your position in the film is just as it is in real life.
Your breath hitches.
Get through this. Just get through this.
But the room feels too full. Your lungs too tight. Your face too visible under the flickering screenlight.
So, with quivering hands, you quickly excuse yourself out quietly, muttering a soft “I need to use the toilet,” to Michaela.
Your fingers brush her arm as you squeeze past, knees knocking against the velvet seat in front of you.
You don’t look at Caleb.
You don’t dare.
The moment you reach the aisle, you bolt.
The darkness of the theater presses in from all sides, but the exit sign glows red—blessedly real, blessedly distant from the version of you being projected for everyone else to see.
You push through the heavy doors.
Out into the hallway.
Into the quiet.
It’s cooler out here. Dimmer. The hum of the projector muffled by layers of walls.
And still, your hands shake.
Your chest heaves.
You press your back against the corridor and squeeze your eyes shut, willing yourself to breathe again.
To stop hearing the lines you spoke, the laugh that wasn’t yours, the way you stood just out of frame.
You weren’t supposed to matter.
You weren’t supposed to be seen.
But seeing yourself just that—seeing yourself as nothing more than a narrative device—knocks all air out of your lungs.
And so you do what you do best in situations like these.
You walk.
Down the corridor. Past posters for old plays and peeling signs pointing to locked rehearsal rooms. The soft clink of your heels echoes against the concrete, sharp and rhythmic, the only sound in the hush that follows you.
Left. Then right.
You take the stairwell without thinking—something about the way the door hangs open, waiting.
Up.
One flight. Two.
You’re not counting. You’re not really anywhere.
Just moving.
The final door gives with a groan.
And then—open air.
The rooftop is quiet. Dimly lit by a few tired bulbs and the soft haze of city lights glowing from below. The wind brushes past your cheeks, tugging at the hem of your dress, the strands of your hair.
You inhale slowly—deeply.
The air fills your lungs and doesn’t choke. For the first time tonight, your chest doesn’t feel so tight.
You hug your arms around yourself, rubbing warmth into your skin as you move toward the edge of the rooftop. The wind tangles softly in your hair. The quiet is heavier than silence—it’s soothing. Honest.
The sounds of the premiere, the echoes of your lines, the weight of Michaela’s smile, Caleb’s lingering glances—all of it stays behind those concrete walls.
But the moment your shoulders finally drop—the tension unwinding from your spine like thread pulled too tight—
a voice slices through the quiet.
“The movie boring?”
You jolt.
And there he is.
Leaning lazily against the railing at the far edge of the rooftop, one hand resting in the pocket of his black slacks, the other loosely curled around a cigarette he hasn’t lit. The wind toys with the edges of his shirt, untucked and open at the collar, the soft fabric fluttering just enough to hint at the warmth beneath.
His silver hair—bright even under the dull rooftop lights—shifts with the breeze, strands falling across his forehead in that effortless way that should be illegal. The city glows behind him, casting shadows across the hard angles of his jaw, the sharp lines of his cheekbones. His eyes catch yours beneath long lashes, amused, unreadable.
He doesn’t move.
He doesn’t need to.
Just the sight of him—calm, crooked smile in place, posture loose like he’s got nowhere to be and nothing to prove—pulls something taut inside you all over again.
Sylus Qin.
Looking like trouble sculpted in moonlight.
And you walked straight into it.
Your voice stumbles out, more breath than word.
“What are you doing here?”
He doesn’t answer right away. Just tips his head slightly, eyes trailing over you in that infuriatingly slow, unreadable way of his.
“Didn’t realize rooftops were exclusively yours now.”
His voice is quiet but laced with amusement, like he’s already enjoying how thrown off you are. The wind picks up, tousling the silver strands of his hair. He doesn’t fix them. Just leans back against the railing again like this is his space now. Like you’ve wandered into his scene.
“I could ask you the same thing,” he adds, gaze settling on you. “Didn’t strike me as the type to abandon your own premiere.”
Your jaw tightens. “It’s not my premiere.”
“Could’ve fooled me,” he murmurs, eyes glinting. “You were in almost every shot. That little background smile of yours really carried the emotional arc.”
You shoot him a glare. He shrugs.
“Relax,” he says, voice dipping just enough to make your skin prickle. “I’m just making conversation.”
And then, without breaking eye contact, he pulls the cigarette back out from his pocket—like he knew exactly when to use it for effect.
You watch as he rolls it between his fingers, slow and practiced, before slipping it between his lips. His eyes flick downward, shadowed beneath dark lashes, as he flicks the lighter.
A soft click.
A brief spark.
Then flame.
He cups the light with one hand, shielding it from the wind, the gesture intimate in its precision. The flame catches the edge of the cigarette, a quick sizzle, and then a curl of smoke unfurls between his lips as he leans back—head tilted, silver hair brushing the collar of his jacket.
He exhales through parted lips.
Smoke spills from his mouth in a lazy stream, rising into the night air.
And for a moment, the whole rooftop smells like sin.
You swallow. Hard.
Because it shouldn’t look that good.
No one should look that good doing something so simple.
But he makes it look like poetry wrapped in gasoline.
Dangerous. Beautiful. Impossible to look away from.
He glances sideways, catching your gaze—then smirks around the cigarette.
“What?” he says, smoke curling past his teeth. “You want one?”
You ignore his question as you cross the distance between you with quiet steps, heels clicking softly against the rooftop floor, until you’re beside him.
Close, but not touching.
You lean forward onto the railing, elbows braced, eyes fixed on the world below. The city stretches beneath you—cars like fireflies, neon signs blinking against concrete, life spilling in all directions.
“Heard you’re pretty close to Michaela these days.”
Words slip out of your mouth before you could stop them—carried off too quickly by the breeze.
Sylus doesn’t respond right away. Just takes another drag, eyes still on the skyline, unreadable behind the soft glow of the city lights and the rising smoke.
“Is that what people are saying?” he asks, voice low, like he’s half-amused, half-bored.
You glance sideways at him, but his expression doesn’t shift.
“She’s been… talking,” you murmur.
He exhales slowly, smoke curling from the corner of his lips. “Yeah. She does that.”
There’s a beat of silence. The kind that leaves your thoughts too loud.
“She seems to like you,” you add, keeping your voice light. “Says you’re funny. Helpful.”
His gaze finally cuts to you, slow and sharp. An eyebrow arches. A slow, knowing smirk tugs at his lips.
“You sound jealous,” he says, voice dipped in something darker. Teasing. Dangerous.
Your breath falters.
“I’m not.”
He hums, low in his throat, clearly unconvinced. Then, he turns—just slightly—enough to face you, enough to make you feel it.
“Could’ve fooled me,” he murmurs, voice barely above the wind.
He leans in, just a bit. Not close enough to touch. Just close enough that the air between you shifts.
“I mean… if you wanted my attention,” his eyes drag slowly down your face, “you didn’t have to bring her up to get it.”
You blink. Hard.
The smirk deepens. He takes one last drag from the cigarette, flicks it to the side, and exhales—
Right past your shoulder, warm and slow, like it was deliberate.
Then he turns back toward the railing, arms resting casually as if he didn’t just turn your pulse inside out.
“Relax,” he says again, voice smooth and cruelly amused. “I’m just making conversation.”
“Fuck you and your conversations.”
“Language, princess.”
The corner of his mouth lifts, slow and smug, like he enjoys your bite more than he should.
He doesn’t look at you when he speaks next—just watches the lights below with that lazy, unreadable calm.
“The deal’s still on, by the way,” he says, almost offhand. “I don’t usually hold my deals this long.”
Your breath catches—but you don’t answer. Not immediately.
Instead, eyes still fixed on the city, you ask quietly,
“What’s it like?”
He glances sideways.
“To smoke,” you murmur, voice soft against the wind. “What does it feel like?”
That catches him off guard.
His smirk fades into something quieter—still sharp, but thoughtful.
He straightens a little, resting his elbows on the railing, eyes narrowed at the skyline like he’s remembering something he can’t touch anymore.
“It’s… warm,” he says eventually. “First few seconds burn. Then it’s just heat in your chest. Makes everything a little slower. A little duller.”
He glances at you again, eyes shadowed beneath silver strands.
“You’d hate it.”
And then, softer—
“You’d get addicted.”
You glance at him, the corner of your mouth twitching. “That confident, huh?”
His smile returns, crooked and slow.
“Always.”
Then—without looking away—he reaches into his pocket, pulls out the pack again, taps it once against his palm.
“Wanna try?”
You hesitate.
Just for a second.
The rooftop wind brushes your skin. The lights below blur like you’re not quite grounded anymore.
“…Okay,” you say finally, barely above a whisper. “Sure.”
His gaze lingers on you for a breath longer than it should—sharp, slow, searching.
Then, with practiced ease, he slips the cigarette between his lips, flicks the lighter, and inhales. The tip glows ember-red. Smoke curls around his face like it belongs there.
He steps closer.
Not fast. Not aggressive. Just… inevitable.
Until your backs are no longer parallel, but aligned.
Until his body is angled toward yours, his hand brushing the railing beside your arm.
Then he exhales—slow, steady—up into the air first, just to show you how.
And before your thoughts can catch up, before your pulse even finds a rhythm, his hand slides around your jaw. Gentle, but certain. Fingers curling under your chin, tipping your face up to his.
“Open,” he murmurs.
And you do.
He leans in—closer, closer still.
Not to kiss. Not yet.
His mouth hovers just a hair’s breadth from yours, and then—
He exhales.
Smoke floods from his lungs into yours, warm and heady and tasting like fire and him.
It hits you all at once—your lips parted against his, the heat of his breath rolling into your mouth, your chest, your nerves. Your hands grip the railing behind you, fingers curling tight.
And just as your knees begin to weaken, just as the smoke begins to burn—
His lips press to yours.
Not soft.
Not tentative.
It’s full, hungry contact—heat and pressure and something sharp beneath the surface. He kisses you like you’re something he earned. Like he knew this was coming the moment you stepped onto that rooftop.
And god, you let him.
His hand slips from your jaw to your throat, thumb resting lightly just beneath your pulse. You feel it hammering there, wild and fast. He deepens the kiss, mouth coaxing yours open further, tongue tracing the edge of your bottom lip like a tease, like a challenge.
You kiss him back.
Harder. Needier. Like you’ve been holding it in.
Like you’re finally letting go.
The smoke lingers between you. In your mouth. Your chest. The heat of it coils through your veins, makes the moment feel reckless, dangerous, electric.
When he finally pulls away, just barely, your lips are still parted—still chasing after him.
And Sylus—
He’s already smirking.
“Told you,” he breathes, thumb brushing your bottom lip.
“You’d get addicted.”
Your breath comes shallow. Foggy. Like you’re drunk—from the smoke. From him.
From the way his voice sits too low in your stomach, too warm in your throat.
You blink, dazed. “What the fuck was that?”
He laughs—low, rich, and dizzying.
“Still want to call it a mistake?”
You don’t answer. Can’t.
Not with the nicotine still curling in your lungs. Not with his breath still ghosting yours.
Maybe it’s the way the air thins between you again.
Maybe it’s the flush that rises to your cheeks when you look up at him and realize he hasn’t stepped back this time.
Or maybe it’s just that dangerous cocktail of heat and haze and the taste of sin still lingering on your tongue.
“I think,” you whisper, eyes flicking to his mouth, “you didn’t teach it properly.”
His gaze sharpens. That smirk falters, just for a second—enough to show the hunger underneath.
“Oh?” he breathes.
You nod. Barely.
He leans in. Slowly. Purposefully.
His hand grazes your waist, his breath brushing your lips—and just when you think he’s going to kiss you again—
He pulls back.
Barely an inch. Just enough to keep you chasing.
His smirk returns, lazier this time. Meaner.
“Didn’t think you’d beg so soon,” he murmurs.
You glare. “I didn’t beg.”
“Mm,” he hums, dragging a finger along your jaw, “Not yet.”
Then—finally—he kisses you.
But it’s slower now. Crueler.
His mouth moves with calculated ease, like he’s studying you. Like he wants to see how long you can last with the tension stretched this thin.
He barely gives you what you want—just enough heat to make your knees unsteady, just enough pressure to make you lean in.
When your hand fists in his shirt, tugging him closer, he lets out a quiet laugh against your lips.
“Impatient,” he mutters, and you feel it—low and hot—right in your throat.
And then he deepens the kiss.
Because he knows you’re done pretending you don’t want it.
And he’s done pretending he doesn’t love watching you unravel.
But in the middle of it all—his fingers sliding under your shirt, your hands fisted in the back of his hair, breaths shared like secrets—
It hits you.
A crack of clarity.
Sharp and sudden, cutting through the haze.
You pull back.
Not far, but enough. Enough to breathe. Enough to speak.
“Why are you doing this?”
His brows knit, just slightly. You feel the shift in him, the quiet tension settling beneath the heat.
You keep going. You have to.
“What will you get out of the deal?”
Your voice is low, but steady. The question tastes bitter in your mouth—maybe because you’ve been trying to pretend it didn’t matter.
But it does. It always did.
He watches you, smoke still clinging to his breath, his thumb pausing on your skin.
And for a moment, he doesn’t answer.
Like he’s deciding what version of the truth to give you.
Like he’s debating if you’ve earned it.
He fully pulls away, the warmth of his body gone in an instant.
You watch as he straightens his spine, smooths down his collar with one hand, runs the other through his wind-tousled silver hair—like he’s putting his armor back on. Like he needs the distance again.
“I’m not playing games,” he says.
His voice is low. Still sharp, but there’s something underneath now. Not heat. Not flirtation.
Something older. Quieter. Worn.
You cross your arms, still catching your breath. “Then what is this?”
He pauses.
You see the flicker in his eyes—a calculation, a hesitation. The part of him that always weighs what to say and what to bury.
Then his lips tug into that same maddening smirk.
“You’re just really pitiful,” he says, voice lazy with mock sympathy.
Your brows shoot up. “Excuse me?”
“Kind of like someone I knew,” he continues, like he didn’t just insult you to your face. His tone is still light, but something about the way he says it—too casual, too precise—makes you freeze.
He doesn’t elaborate right away. Just glances down at the city lights below, cigarette smoldering between his fingers again.
He takes one last drag from the cigarette before flicking it over the edge, watching the ember fall like a dying star.
Then he turns back to you—smirk faded now, voice lower, rougher. Real.
“Let’s just say—” he begins, eyes locking with yours,
“you get to use me to get whatever you want…”
A pause. A slow step closer.
“And I’ll use you to get whatever I want.”
He lets the silence stretch between you, lets the weight of the words hang there like smoke.
“Sounds fair?”
You don’t answer right away.
You just stand there—wind tousling your hair, the taste of smoke still clinging faintly to your lips—watching him.
Watching the way he doesn’t push.
Doesn’t ask again.
Just lets the offer hang in the air like a match waiting to be struck.
Your thoughts spiral—through the flickers of the film, the ache in your chest as you watched yourself play the shadow, Michaela’s bright voice, Caleb’s wandering gaze, Sylus’s mouth on yours, the weight of his hands, the things he said.
And the worst part?
The way all of it made you feel alive again.
Like something inside you had finally stirred.
Like you were tired of being careful. Tired of being quiet. Tired of waiting for someone else to hand you the pen to your own story.
You draw in a breath, meet his eyes.
“Fine,” you say, soft but steady.
“I’m in.”
His smile is slow. Pleased. Like he already knew.
But he says nothing. Just nods once and turns to leave, hands in his pockets, silver hair catching the rooftop light.
You don’t stop him.
You stay there for a moment longer, listening to the echo of your own heartbeat.
And when the rooftop door clicks shut behind him—
You’re still tasting sin.
Still thinking about the deal you just made.
And wondering who, in the end, will really get what they want.
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I also wanna explore a platonic mc with non-mc while the romantic route will only be the guys and how this will all play out
Entertainer/idol/actress isekai’d non-mc pt. 2 (poly route)
Since non-mc is hyperfeminine, imagine that the most spoiled in the game is actually mc. She gets every outfit, whether paid or not. She has the most pictures in snapshots and glint photobooth, and even her solo poses are complete.
The Li’s are treated equally by non-mc and she loves all of them but mc? Her outfits and accessories are priority, non-mc would get mc’s first before any of the Li’s and it translates to her actions when she got isekai’d. She pampers mc. Non-mc loves to buy her make up and matching accessories.
Non-mc’s first paycheck in the LADS universe? She bought a very famous skin care that is recommended when you are always in the battlefield (“mc you still need to look beautiful while slaying!! That’s mercy for the wanderers to see your pretty face before their demise.”) She plays dress up with her always and will make sure that she is available to listen to mc’s troubles.
Mc LOVES this and she gloats on it to the guys. She always has this smug face when she asks for non-mc’s presence and not even the combined forces of the five guys can stop non-mc to go to mc. Maybe that’s why the guys can’t also help but fall so much deeper for the two.
I mean, who could resist two empowered and very beautiful women? The guys would have a very hard time understanding that yes they do love mc but they also feel very deeply for non-mc, they can’t help but be drawn towards the two of them.
All while this chaos of emotions is happening, they solved the problem by directly asking mc, and what a very simple solution she had proposed.
“Then shouldn’t we just all date each other then? I really don’t mind if non-mc is part of it, I love her too.”
Her love is too big that it can include others too, bless her heart. Mc wouldn’t mind sharing the guys to non-mc. It even looks like they would have a harder time to get non-mc with mc around. Both girls are attached to the hip.
The problem though? Easing non-mc to the thought that all of them are ok with her being part of their dynamics. Non-mc is the type to truly wish for the best for mc and that includes her relationship with the guys. She will never cross mc’s boundaries and wish for a romantic relationship when it means that it can potentially hurt mc.
Will she feel jealous? Yes, but she will also always support women first before any men so she will prioritize mc.
Cue funny misunderstandings brought by failed plans and unsuccessful talks. Mc is just here to enjoy the show with her guys and non-mc, all while non-mc is confused but still goes along with what’s happening. The people who just really suffer at this point will be the guys.
Pt.1 (og idea)
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A face card that won’t ever decline
#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#lads rafayel#love and deepspace rafayel#lnds rafayel#rafayel#l&ds#l&ds rafayel#love and deepspace pictures#love & deepspace rafayel#rafayel love and deepspace#love and deep space rafayel#love & deepspace#love and deep space#loveanddeepspace#glint photobooth#lads photobooth#lads glint
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So y’all actually like this idea? Might really make a series out of it
Imagine an isekai’d non-mc who rivals the charm of mc. A non-mc who was in the entertainment industry, widely praised for her charisma, stage presence, and many talents. Literally born for the spotlight.
Non-mc who is hyper feminine, not a baddie but a literal cutie. Love soft pastels, lace, bows, and make-up. She always does her nails, is very aware of her vanity, has an upright posture, demure, and has a soft voice.
She sees strength in beauty and femininity, very self-assured, and ambitious. All smiles but is a very strong leader, a girl’s girl, kind of like Elle Woods in terms of personality, wit, and philosophy. She may look like a princess but she isn’t naive (how do you think she survived and thrived in the entertainment industry?)
She is optimistic, diligent, confident, and selfless. A social butterfly, someone who you can’t help but be drawn into. Now imagine her breezing through the main story, so quick to adapt to her new world, sunshine and halo following along in her every step.
She is not shadowed by mc, but she equals her, accommodates her even. Where mc as a hunter fights with well trained techniques, she fights while being creative, resourceful.
Now enter the Li’s who are very intrigued by her. And her, who knows them by heart because she played the game, boldly interacts with them, matching their energies and banters. That adds to their interest and they can even feel a pull towards her that is similar but also different from mc.
Mc who feels a certain connection to her. Mc who is cared by her. Mc who spent countless self-care routines with her. Mc who thinks of her as a sister. Her protector, adviser, and best friend. The one that always cheers her on and validates her existence by merely appreciating it. The one she came to admire the most.
Won’t that be an interesting dynamic between all of them?
Pt. 2 (poly route)
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Entertainer/idol/actress isekai’d non-mc pt. 2 (poly route)
Since non-mc is hyperfeminine, imagine that the most spoiled in the game is actually mc. She gets every outfit, whether paid or not. She has the most pictures in snapshots and glint photobooth, and even her solo poses are complete.
The Li’s are treated equally by non-mc and she loves all of them but mc? Her outfits and accessories are priority, non-mc would get mc’s first before any of the Li’s and it translates to her actions when she got isekai’d. She pampers mc. Non-mc loves to buy her make up and matching accessories.
Non-mc’s first paycheck in the LADS universe? She bought a very famous skin care that is recommended when you are always in the battlefield (“mc you still need to look beautiful while slaying!! That’s mercy for the wanderers to see your pretty face before their demise.”) She plays dress up with her always and will make sure that she is available to listen to mc’s troubles.
Mc LOVES this and she gloats on it to the guys. She always has this smug face when she asks for non-mc’s presence and not even the combined forces of the five guys can stop non-mc to go to mc. Maybe that’s why the guys can’t also help but fall so much deeper for the two.
I mean, who could resist two empowered and very beautiful women? The guys would have a very hard time understanding that yes they do love mc but they also feel very deeply for non-mc, they can’t help but be drawn towards the two of them.
All while this chaos of emotions is happening, they solved the problem by directly asking mc, and what a very simple solution she had proposed.
“Then shouldn’t we just all date each other then? I really don’t mind if non-mc is part of it, I love her too.”
Her love is too big that it can include others too, bless her heart. Mc wouldn’t mind sharing the guys to non-mc. It even looks like they would have a harder time to get non-mc with mc around. Both girls are attached to the hip.
The problem though? Easing non-mc to the thought that all of them are ok with her being part of their dynamics. Non-mc is the type to truly wish for the best for mc and that includes her relationship with the guys. She will never cross mc’s boundaries and wish for a romantic relationship when it means that it can potentially hurt mc.
Will she feel jealous? Yes, but she will also always support women first before any men so she will prioritize mc.
Cue funny misunderstandings brought by failed plans and unsuccessful talks. Mc is just here to enjoy the show with her guys and non-mc, all while non-mc is confused but still goes along with what’s happening. The people who just really suffer at this point will be the guys.
Pt.1 (og idea)
#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#l&ds#love and deepspace rafayel#rafayel#rafayel x mc#love and deepspace x non mc reader#lads x non mc#non mc reader#non!mc#caleb love and deepspace#rafayel x non mc#love and deepspace zayne#zayne love and deepspace#zayne x non mc#sylus x mc#zayne x mc#caleb x mc#sylus love and deepspace#sylus x non mc reader#love and deepspace xavier#xavier x mc#xavier x non mc#caleb x non!mc reader#poly!lads#love & deepspace#love and deep space#loveanddeepspace#lads headcanons
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Petals for the Forgotten
Summary : You weren't the MC. You weren't chosen. But you loved them. This is what's left of you.
CW : Angst, fem reader, non mc reader
A/N : First of all, I'd like to apologize in advance if there are any mistakes, because this is my first time writing and English is not my first language. It's been a while since I played lads but I've had this idea in my head so I'm sorry if there are any inconsistencies with the game. I hope you'll enjoy it all the same, happy reading.

Zayne — The garden no one saw bloom
You think it began when he smiled at you. A real smile, not the one he gave to patients, not the one he wore like a mask when things weren't going well. No, a smile just for you.
One day, you made a minor error on a pre-operative report. Nothing serious. But him, Zayne, the one everyone feared for his coldness, had taken the time to correct you with a gentleness you didn't know he possessed.
And then, he had said: "You learn quickly."
Three words. And yet, it was enough for a treacherous seed to find refuge between your ribs.
You never believed in love stories. Even less in the Hanahaki disease. For you, it was fiction, a tragic tale for souls too sensitive, too fragile for this world.
But the flowers... The flowers never asked for your opinion.
You woke up one morning with a burning throat and a metallic taste on your tongue. A violet bellflower detached from your lips like an unconfessed confession. Perfect. Immaculate. Deadly.
You continued to work. To smile. To cough in the bathroom when no one was looking. To smother the damp petals in tissues that you then concealed.
To love him.
Silently. Desperately. Mortally.
Zayne saw nothing. Or perhaps he refused to see. Perhaps it was simpler that way, to pretend that your eyes didn't linger on him when he entered a room, that your breath didn't catch when his hand brushed yours.
He passed by you with his impeccable files, his meticulous analyses, his subtle perfume — that scent of pine and antiseptic that haunted you even in your dreams. That coldness that no longer frightened you for a long time.
And then there was her.
His patient. His childhood friend.
You remember the day you saw them in the hallway between two procedures. Her hair was still wet from the rain. He handed her a towel without a word. She laughed. He smiled.
That smile... it was different. Deeper. More authentic. As if all the light in the world had chosen to take refuge on his face at that precise moment.
You had never seen his face so relaxed. So alive.
Every time she came to see him between missions, you felt him change. Metamorphose before your eyes. His gestures became softer. His voice lost that characteristic coldness.
And you became transparent. Invisible.
And it was even more painful than the flowers taking root in your lungs.
You thought you could hold on. That it would pass.
But one day, as you leaned over the sink in the break room, a coughing fit doubled you over. Dozens of violet petals splashed across the immaculate porcelain, tinted red, with your red.
And Zayne walked in.
He froze. The scattered flowers, the scarlet blood everywhere. The deafening silence that enveloped you both.
He closed the door behind him. Slowly. Methodically. As if performing a delicate operation. "Since when?" His voice was barely audible.
"It doesn't matter," you replied while wiping the corner of your lips, where a drop of blood still glistened.
He came closer. Too close. You wanted to scream. Or collapse against him and let your tears soak his immaculate coat. Or kiss him, just once, to know what his lips tasted like before dying.
But instead, you laughed. A small nervous, empty laugh.
"You think it isn't real, don't you? Hanahaki. The disease of lovesick fools. You must have studied it somewhere in your forgotten old textbooks."
He said nothing. His green eyes, usually so cold, so distant, wouldn't let you go. For the first time, you saw something in them that you couldn't name. Fear? Pity? Regret?
"I thought it was a legend, too. Until you." You continued, the words escaping your mouth like frightened birds.
"Why didn't you tell anyone?" he asked, his voice betraying an emotion you had never known in him.
"Because I knew you couldn't do anything." You plunged your gaze into his. "And I didn't want... to burden you with this."
He looked away. He seemed... hurt. But not for you.
"I can slow the progression," he offered, his tone becoming clinical, professional. As if you were just another patient, another body to repair.
"But you can't cure me."
He looked at you for a long time. As if searching for a way out, a solution, a lie to cling to. As if he could rewrite history, change feelings, tear out the roots that had wrapped around your heart.
"I'm sorry," he finally whispered, the words falling between you like stones into a bottomless well. And that's what hurt you, much more than the flowers tearing apart your organs. Not that he didn't love you. You already knew that.
But that he couldn't.
Because his heart, as frozen as it might appear to the world, was already beating for someone else. And no science, no medicine, no prayer could change that.
He offered you a temporary treatment. Medications to slow the growth of the flowers. A procedure to remove them. He almost begged you to accept, his eyes shining with an urgency you had never seen in him.
But you refused.
You didn't want a meaningless survival. A body without love. A heart too empty to continue beating. You preferred to die with this feeling intact, this exquisite pain that reminded you that you had lived, that you had loved, even if in silence.
You wrote him a letter. You left it on his desk, between two surgical reports. A letter where you didn't ask him to love you back, but simply to understand why you had chosen to leave.
You don't know if he read it. You didn't want an answer.
You left alone. You chose the room furthest from the north wing, where light barely enters and silence resembles the sea.
You didn't scream. You didn't cry.
You lay down. You closed your eyes, one last time.
And the flowers did the rest.
Zayne found you a few hours later. He knew exactly where to look.
You were nothing but a cold breath, surrounded by withered violet bellflowers, and crystallized blood. A macabre work of art, almost beautiful in its tragedy.
He didn't cry.
He sat beside you, took your still warm hand — that hand he had never really held while you were alive — and whispered something that no one else heard.
Then he placed a flower in a vial. Just one.
And he placed it in Operating Room 3. On the windowsill, next to an old gardening book that you had given him one day, claiming that he needed to learn how to care for living things.
You weren't the protagonist of his story.
But you were the tragic ending of his.
Because sometimes, it's the secondary characters who leave the deepest scars.

Sylus — The codes no one decodes
The first file you decoded for him was barely six months ago.
An intruder had managed to manipulate the internal sound waves at the Onychinus headquarters. The best experts had given up, defeated by the enigma. No one had understood how. You did.
Sylus didn't congratulate you. He simply said one word: "Effective."
And that's the kindest thing he ever said to you.
This simple word had become your treasure, a rough diamond that you polished in your mind each night before falling asleep. A rare compliment from an even rarer man.
Since then, you stayed.
Not because he kept you. He never kept anyone.
But because in his silences, in his pointed looks when you fed a stray cat or when you clumsily dropped something or when you cared for your precious flowers in the small improvised garden under your office window, you had found a space.
Not a place. Not a story.
Just a possibility. And that's worse than anything.
Because possibility feeds hope. And hope is the slowest, cruelest poison there is. You fell in love with him while trying to avoid him.
You didn't look for him. But it was always him your eyes found.
You didn't want to know what he read during his rare moments of rest. But you found him asleep with annotated music notebooks, unfinished compositions.
And you never dared to tell him.
You built a wall around your heart, stone by stone, code by code, as you did with security systems. But feelings are viruses more insidious than any malware. They infiltrate. They contaminate. They destroy.
You surprised him one night, in the conference room. The 'miss hunter' as he liked to call her, had fallen asleep on data from an ancient artifact. Strands of hair fell across her peaceful face.
He removed his jacket — that jacket he never took off, like armor against the world — to cover her. He looked at her for a long time, as if she were a precious memory, a rare constellation, an equation only he knew the solution to. You never saw that tender gaze directed at you.
The day you coughed up the first flower, you were still working on a particularly complex encryption system. A pain in your chest, as if someone had plunged a knife right into your heart. A burning sensation, as if acid were flowing through your veins.
Then a blue lily fell from your mouth, silent and damp. A messenger of death wrapped in beauty. You put it in a metal box.
You didn't believe it at first. You thought it was a chemical reaction. A hallucination caused by lack of sleep.
Until others followed. Blue lilies, ever more numerous, ever larger, as if your body was becoming a funerary garden.
And that same body began to weaken. Your fingers trembled on your keyboard. Your breath became short. Your nights, battles against suffocation.
You tried to hide it. But Sylus remains Sylus.
He observes everything. Even when he pretends not to care.
He confronted you one evening, as you were leaving the office, a bloodstain betraying you at the corner of your lips.
"You're bleeding a lot. Why aren't you saying anything?" His voice was calm, almost detached. But his eyes weren't.
"It's nothing. Just a cold." You attempted a smile that turned into a grimace.
"Do you think I'm stupid? You're vomiting flowers." He said these words as if announcing the day's weather. Simple. Factual. Undeniable.
You laughed. An empty laugh, as if mocking yourself, this absurd situation, this body that was betraying you.
"Are you going to fire me for this?" You tried to joke, but the words came out more bitter than intended.
He didn't laugh.
He just narrowed his eyes. Studied every detail of your face like a code to decipher, a puzzle to solve. "What is this disease? A mutation? Did someone contaminate you?"
"It's not a disease. It's a... curse."
You said nothing more. He didn't press.
But you saw it. That gleam in his eyes. That fierce determination that characterized him when faced with enigmas.
He searched. He combed through the oldest archives he could find.
He found a forgotten word: Hanahaki.
And a truth too ugly to be spoken aloud.
He came back to see you a few days later. Late at night.
You were in the generator room, sitting on the floor, a faded lily in your hands.
"It's me... isn't it?" His voice was just a whisper, almost lost under the hum of the machines. You raised your eyes. Slowly. Painfully.
"I never asked you to love me." You simply replied.
"You never asked me for anything else either."
He crouched down in front of you. He suddenly looked older. More human. Less invincible. He extended his hand toward you as one approaches a wounded animal. You backed away.
"If I had known you were capable of love... maybe I would have lied to my heart." You laughed bitterly, the sound transforming into a painful cough.
He exhaled, as if struck by an invisible force. The words had reached him where no weapon ever could. "Why didn't you say anything?"
You shrugged.
"Because I'm not miss hunter. I'm not the one who triggers cataclysms or prophecies. I'm not the one who makes your heart beat. I'm just a line of code in your algorithm. Replaceable. Erasable."
He closed his eyes. You saw his jaw clench. He would have liked to be cruel. To accuse you. To shake you. To tell you that you were stupid to have let things go so far. But he said nothing.
Because what you were saying was true.
And truth is the only thing Sylus has never known how to fight.
You stopped coming to work. No one saw you again.
A note was found in your private files, left in an old system journal format, coded with a melody he had composed one evening when you thought he hadn't seen you crying.
"I'm sorry I didn't know how to be a story."
Simple words yet so devastating. A virus that would infect his system forever. Sylus didn't cry.
But he burned all the flowers you had left behind. As if he could erase the proof of your love. As if he could rewrite the code of your meeting.
All except one.
A blue lily.
Which he had tattooed in the shadow of his nape. Where only he knows of its existence. Where the pain remains in silence.
A beacon hidden in his own body. A reminder that even the most secure systems have their flaws. And that some codes are never meant to be deciphered.

Xavier — The time no one took
You spent your nights calibrating temporal sensors, sorting anomalies, chasing echoes that might not even exist.
Xavier spent his hunting Wanderers.
You worked on the same floor. But you lived in two different worlds.
Yet you loved him. For a long time.
Not violent or possessive love. No. The kind of silent thing that settles between two heartbeats. The kind of feeling you never confess because you know it wouldn't change anything.
He always called you by your full name. Not once had he pronounced just your first name, that nickname your close ones used, that intimacy you would have so wanted to share with him.
You knew why. You weren't her.
Not the girl who accompanied him on each of his missions.
Not the light of his past. Or of his future.
He had laughed with her several times. Sometimes you heard them from your isolated post. A mundane discussion about a music style had turned into a passionate debate. She had stolen his earbuds, a gesture so familiar, so intimate. He had let her, with a smile on his lips that you had never seen.
You, you had only taken silence from him. Professional nods. Carefully drafted anomaly reports, which he skimmed through without really seeing them.
You were just a voice in his earpiece when a breach opened. Just another biometric signature among others.
But that was enough for you.
At least, that's what you repeated to yourself each evening when returning to your empty apartment, looking out the window and dreaming of a life for two. Just you and him.
Until the day you started vomiting flowers.
The first time was after a long mission at the border of N109 zone, a particularly unstable temporal rift. Xavier and she had been stuck for forty-eight hours in a loop. You had spent all that time awake, eyes fixed on the screens, desperately searching for a solution to bring them back.
When they finally returned, exhausted, she had collapsed in his arms. He had held her against him like a recovered treasure. You had simply turned off your equipment and headed to the bathroom, where a coughing fit had bent you in half.
You had thought it was only blood, that red substance that stained your lips. But no. A blue morning glory had fallen from your mouth, with a sweet and unbearable fragrance. A macabre miracle. A beauty that was killing you from within.
You cleaned up the blood. Threw away the flower. Silent throughout, as you had always been. You didn't tell anyone. Because you knew.
Hanahaki. An ancient disease. Almost forgotten. Mentioned in the most obscure texts. And incurable, unless loved in return.
You tried to ignore it. To pretend it was a passing anomaly.
You continued to transmit data, to smile behind your glasses, to cough secretly into tissues that you then burned to leave no trace.
But your body betrayed you.
One evening, as everyone was leaving the command center after a particularly taxing day, you collapsed near the main entrance. Your legs gave way beneath you like branches too fragile. A cascade of blue flowers surged from your mouth, forming around you a crown of suffering.
Xavier, who seemed to have returned because of something forgotten, probably his watch, rushed to you. He knelt down, his blue eyes wide with shock. He saw the flowers.
"Is it a contamination? Did someone hurt you?" He asked, an expression of genuine concern on his usually stoic face.
"No... no, it's not that." You murmured, struggling to breathe between the petals obstructing your throat.
You clenched your teeth, trying to keep your throat closed, but another flower came out: blue and perfect.
He picked it up.
"This flower... is it an ancient symbol? Some kind of... death ritual?" He asked, confused, seeking a rational explanation for this phenomenon that defied all logic.
"It's not a ritual. It's a curse."
You turned your head toward him, your gaze clouded by tears you refused to let fall. "I'm sick because I love. And it's not reciprocated."
He froze. Looked at you without understanding. Then slowly, gently, his fingers tightened around the flower, almost crushing it.
"Me?"
You laughed. A dry, painful laugh that triggered a new wave of coughing and flowers.
"Who else? I don't talk to anyone else." You tried to smile, but your lips only formed a grimace stained with blood.
Silence.
You placed your hand on his cheek. A gesture you would never have dared make normally. A last gift you allowed yourself before the end.
"Don't worry. I don't want reciprocity. I'm not asking you for anything. I just want... to be able to breathe a little longer."
But you couldn't.
You died three days later. In your sleep.
Your heart gave way under the flowers that had invaded every corner of your rib cage, transforming your body into a morbid garden.
Xavier didn't speak.
He canceled all missions for a week. An unprecedented act that sparked whispers throughout the base. He erased your digital traces from the system, as if you had never existed, except for one.
In a secret corner of the archives, a file bears your name. Not your full name. Just your first name, the one he had never pronounced while you were alive.
Inside: the image of a single blood-stained flower.
And a line, written in an ancient language: "She loved me in a language I didn't speak." A late confession. An eternal regret.
For even he can never go back in time to repair the heart he broke without knowing.

Rafayel — The canvas no one saw being born
You worked right next to his studio.
Every morning, you unlocked the rusty gate, took out the brushes, and let the sun graze the incomplete canvases that waited for someone to give them life again.
You weren't a painter. Not like him. You restored.
You took dead works, forgotten, cracked by time and indifference, and tried to give them back dignity. A final brilliance.
Rafayel painted the future. Emotions. Souls. His canvases were windows open to universes that no one else saw.
And he only looked at you when you laughed.
"You still have fingers covered in varnish," he would say with a smile. "You'll end up poisoning yourself."
You laughed. You didn't care. You would have gladly let the varnish eat away at your skin down to the bone if it meant he would continue to look at you.
It was your way of existing in his eyes. Of occupying, if only for a moment, a corner of his retina. You loved him slowly. Like loving a song you've never heard in full.
Each day, a new detail was added to the fresco that Rafayel had become in your mind. The way he squinted at a canvas that resisted. How his fingers danced above a palette, seeking the perfect color. The sound of his breathing when he sometimes fell asleep on his stool, exhausted after hours of frenzied creation.
But you knew. You weren't his muse.
He never spoke of her, but sometimes he painted her. The 'miss bodyguard'. That slender silhouette that returned in his canvas with obsidian reflections.
That silhouette that wasn't you. Would never be you.
She often talks to him when she comes to his studio, laughs with him, a hand placed carelessly on his shoulder as if she had all the rights in the world. Sometimes, he offers her a brush. She laughs, hugs him. It's their ritual: a brush for each victory, each successful mission.
You, you've never received anything but his friendship. A comfortable, lukewarm friendship, like a shawl placed on the shoulders of a sick person out of pity.
The day you coughed a red anemone onto your palette, you understood.
It wasn't an allergy.
It wasn't the varnish you handled daily.
It was love. The kind you never asked for, and which kills when it isn't returned.
Hanahaki.
You immediately knew what it was.
You had read the old legends in a notebook of Lemurian mythology that Rafayel had left lying around one day.
You had prayed for it to be false.
But flowers never lie.
You continued to live. To work. To restore works that would survive long after your body had become dust. To smile when Rafayel passed by, covered in paint.
"You should sleep more," he said one day, stopping in front of you longer than usual. "You look... a bit faded. Like a color that's fading."
You didn't reply. You didn't want him to see, to know, to understand. You simply nodded, offering him a smile that was meant to be reassuring but trembled at the corners.
But he eventually saw it.
One evening, as you had come to return a notebook he had forgotten at your place during his last visit, you collapsed in his studio, at the foot of an unfinished canvas representing a field of wildflowers under a stormy sky.
A shower of red anemones covered the floor, escaping from your mouth and mingling with spatters of paint, creating a work you would never have wanted to sign.
Rafayel froze at the sight of your condition. Then he rushed over. Took you in his arms.
His hands trembled. His eyes, usually so confident when fixed on a canvas, wandered over your face with palpable panic.
"No. No, no, no. Is it me? Is it... me who did this to you?" His voice broke on the last word, like a wave on a rock.
"It's not you. It's what I feel." You whispered, the metallic taste of blood mingling with the sweeter one of flowers.
You raised your eyes to him, gently, like a final light before eternal night.
"You never promised me anything. I knew from the beginning."
"You should have told me..." Rafayel's words were tinged with remorse.
"And then what? You would have loved me out of pity? You would have painted a lie?" You shook your head, "I'd rather have these flowers. At least they're real."
He said nothing. He was crying, silently.
You placed your red-stained hand on his cheek.
"I just wanted you to know that I found you as refreshing as a new air. As vibrant as a color one discovers for the first time. Even if you never saw me, I saw you entirely. And it was beautiful. I appreciated being your friend."
You died that night, in his studio.
Silently. Without calling for help. Your body surrounded by red flowers like an offering. Rafayel refused to paint for weeks.
He let the canvases molder in a corner, the brushes dry, harden, become unusable. As if his art had died with you.
Then, one day, he returned.
And on an immense canvas, he painted a woman sitting in the light, hands stained with varnish and love, restoring a work that no one else could have saved.
No one knew her name. People stopped in front of his exhibition, touched by an emotion they couldn't name, feeling there was something profoundly true in this image, something that transcended mere representation.
But at the foot of the painting, a phrase was engraved in the wood: "She loved like one restores a damaged canvas — in silence, and until the end."
And sometimes, when light strikes the painting in a certain way, some people swear they see red anemones growing along the frame, their petals opening toward the sky like silent prayers.

Caleb — The vessel no one knew how to repair
You knew every fiber of his vessel.
Every vibration, every tremor, every tiny defect in secondary circuits that escaped automated diagnostics. You could sense when a problem would arise days before it manifested, as if the metal and wires spoke to you in a language only you understood.
It was you who taught him to recognize a trajectory anomaly by ear, sitting cross-legged in the cockpit, hands full of grease, a half-chewed piece of gum between your lips.
"You're my mechanical guardian angel," Caleb would say.
You smiled.
Because it was almost that.
You kept him alive. From a distance. You watched over him through the metal and circuits of his vessel. But never in his arms.
You loved him.
You don't really remember how it started. It was blurry.
One moment, he had offered you an energy drink on a rainy evening.
The next day, he had defended you against an odious superior who criticized your abilities.
And the day after... You had no longer wanted to repair any vessel but his. As if your hands had developed an exclusive memory of his circuits, a particular affinity for the metal that protected him from interstellar voids.
But you knew it. You were not and would never be the famous 'Pipsqueak' he spoke of with that tenderness in his voice.
You were a blurry silhouette in his rearview mirror. A comfort marker. A practical tool. Not a story. Not a future. Just a fragment of his present that would disappear as soon as he accelerated.
The first flower appeared after a particularly dangerous recovery mission. He had returned with the vessel in tatters, impact marks all over the hull, the heat shield almost destroyed.
You had worked three days and three nights without sleep to restore it. When you had finally finished, you had collapsed against the command console, exhausted but satisfied.
That's when you had coughed so hard that you doubled over.
You had coughed so hard that you doubled over.
And in the hollow of your palm, a pink flower, delicate, perfectly formed. A Bleeding Heart tinged with a red that wasn't that of the petals but of the blood that now lined your throat.
You knew immediately.
Your late grandmother had already spoken to you about it on several occasions. Hanahaki.
A disease that strikes only those who love too much. And who are not loved in return.
A disease that modern science had relegated to the rank of myth, psychosomatic, collective delusion of a bygone era.
Yet, there it was, in your hand. Real. Deadly. Beautiful enough to die for, literally. Caleb noticed your pale complexion. Your persistent cough. The dark circles under your eyes. He forced you to rest. You refused.
"I've known people who broke everything except themselves. And you're the opposite, huh?" He told you one day, as you struggled with a faulty relay despite your fever.
"Maybe I'm already broken." You replied with a sad smile, wiping away with the back of your hand the sweat that beaded on your forehead.
He laughed, without understanding the weight of truth in your words.
And it killed you a little more. Each unshared laugh, each gaze that passed through you without really seeing you, each story he told about "Pipsqueak" and their adventures... so many roots that sank deeper into your lungs.
When you lost consciousness in the hangar, he thought it was a gravitational overload. He rushed over. He activated all emergency protocols.
He didn't understand why you were vomiting flowers. Why was your heart weakening for no apparent reason. Why the scanners detect no known pathogen.
"Is it a weapon? Did someone do this to you?" He asked you, kneeling beside your hospital bed, his calloused hands gripping yours with a strength that betrayed his fear.
"No, Caleb..."
You grabbed his sleeve, trembling.
"It's me. It's just... me."
He frowned, lost.
You rested your head against his chest, listening one last time to that heart that had never beaten for you. "I loved you... like one loves a star that will never return. Bright but untouchable. Vital but distant."
He remained frozen. Completely paralyzed by the confession you had just made. By the horror of understanding that it was he, indirectly, who was killing you.
He tried everything to understand what was happening to you and how to heal you.
He contacted the most discreet researchers. He went through old medical books. He even begged an Enforcer to let him search through the forbidden archives.
But nothing.
Love can't be forced. And you were already too far gone, carried away by a current against which no one could swim.
You died between two beats of the engine.
In the rest area he had specially refurbished for you, with that window looking out at the stars you so loved to observe during your breaks. Your body surrounded by pink flowers, shaped like broken hearts, like a cruel metaphor for what had killed you.
Caleb doesn't speak of you anymore.
He sealed the hangar where you worked. He doesn't let anyone touch his ship.
But sometimes, when he returns from a mission, he leaves a little pink flower on the dashboard.
And one day, someone heard him whisper in the empty cockpit when he thought he was alone: "You don't fix anything now, huh? Yet I'm the one who's broken."
Because some vessels, even the sturdiest, never fly the same way again when they've lost their guardian angel.

To those who weren't the story
You weren't the light of the world.
You weren't destined for great prophecies.
You had no power, nor a great reciprocated love waiting for you.
You had flowers in your throat.
And a heart too vast, too generous, too full of them.
Men who saw in you only a pale reflection of the one they truly desired.
They didn't choose you. They didn't save you. But they remember.
And perhaps that's the real curse of Hanahaki: not dying of unrequited love, but leaving behind an eternal remorse in the hearts of those who failed to see.
For some hearts never melt under the warmth of a gaze. Some loves die without ever having had the chance to live.
And some flowers bloom only once — in the silence of a final breath, colorful witnesses to a devotion that surpassed understanding.
We are all, in our own way, blind gardeners. Unknowingly cultivating feelings that bloom around us, sometimes neglecting the most beautiful roses to chase after mirages.
The true tragedy is not to love without return.
It's to leave without having been seen.
To be reduced to a dried flower in a closed book.
To be understood too late.
So the next time you see someone coughing slightly in your presence, look carefully. It might just be allergies.
Or it might be a garden desperately trying to reach you, to show you its beauty before withering forever.
For silent love is the loudest when it disappears.
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Imagine an isekai’d non-mc who rivals the charm of mc. A non-mc who was in the entertainment industry, widely praised for her charisma, stage presence, and many talents. Literally born for the spotlight.
Non-mc who is hyper feminine, not a baddie but a literal cutie. Love soft pastels, lace, bows, and make-up. She always does her nails, is very aware of her vanity, has an upright posture, demure, and has a soft voice.
She sees strength in beauty and femininity, very self-assured, and ambitious. All smiles but is a very strong leader, a girl’s girl, kind of like Elle Woods in terms of personality, wit, and philosophy. She may look like a princess but she isn’t naive (how do you think she survived and thrived in the entertainment industry?)
She is optimistic, diligent, confident, and selfless. A social butterfly, someone who you can’t help but be drawn into. Now imagine her breezing through the main story, so quick to adapt to her new world, sunshine and halo following along in her every step.
She is not shadowed by mc, but she equals her, accommodates her even. Where mc as a hunter fights with well trained techniques, she fights while being creative, resourceful.
Now enter the Li’s who are very intrigued by her. And her, who knows them by heart because she played the game, boldly interacts with them, matching their energies and banters. That adds to their interest and they can even feel a pull towards her that is similar but also different from mc.
Mc who feels a certain connection to her. Mc who is cared by her. Mc who spent countless self-care routines with her. Mc who thinks of her as a sister. Her protector, adviser, and best friend. The one that always cheers her on and validates her existence by merely appreciating it. The one she came to admire the most.
Won’t that be an interesting dynamic between all of them?
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Imagine an isekai’d non-mc who rivals the charm of mc. A non-mc who was in the entertainment industry, widely praised for her charisma, stage presence, and many talents. Literally born for the spotlight.
Non-mc who is hyper feminine, not a baddie but a literal cutie. Love soft pastels, lace, bows, and make-up. She always does her nails, is very aware of her vanity, has an upright posture, demure, and has a soft voice.
She sees strength in beauty and femininity, very self-assured, and ambitious. All smiles but is a very strong leader, a girl’s girl, kind of like Elle Woods in terms of personality, wit, and philosophy. She may look like a princess but she isn’t naive (how do you think she survived and thrived in the entertainment industry?)
She is optimistic, diligent, confident, and selfless. A social butterfly, someone who you can’t help but be drawn into. Now imagine her breezing through the main story, so quick to adapt to her new world, sunshine and halo following along in her every step.
She is not shadowed by mc, but she equals her, accommodates her even. Where mc as a hunter fights with well trained techniques, she fights while being creative, resourceful.
Now enter the Li’s who are very intrigued by her. And her, who knows them by heart because she played the game, boldly interacts with them, matching their energies and banters. That adds to their interest and they can even feel a pull towards her that is similar but also different from mc.
Mc who feels a certain connection to her. Mc who is cared by her. Mc who spent countless self-care routines with her. Mc who thinks of her as a sister. Her protector, adviser, and best friend. The one that always cheers her on and validates her existence by merely appreciating it. The one she came to admire the most.
Won’t that be an interesting dynamic between all of them?
Pt. 2 (poly route)
#love and deepspace xavier#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#lads rafayel#love and deepspace rafayel#lnds rafayel#rafayel#l&ds#love and deepspace x non mc reader#lads x non mc#non mc reader#sylus love and deepspace#love & deepspace caleb#l&ds zayne#l&ds caleb#l&ds rafayel#l&ds sylus#l&ds xavier#love & deepspace#love and deep space#loveanddeepspace#lads x non!mc reader#l&ds mc
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Imagine being the non-mc significant other of lead guitarist! Sylus.
"The usual?" You have the owner a smile and a nod. "You're late, it's already the four and last set." The pub owner spoke, preparing your drink. "That's because Sylus doesn't know I'm here. It's a surprise." You wink at her.
Imagine engaging on a conversation with the owner, the one you are actually close with given the fact that Sylus and the boys were the one that introduced you to her. She was a lovely lady with a bit of mystery around her. Keeping yourself occupied as you wait for the band to come into the stage.
Imagine preoccupied with your catching up with the owner, you did not notice that they were already on the stage. It wasn't until you heard a familiar strumming of electric guitar that you knew very well who belongs to that made you pause mid sentence and look at the direction of the stage.
Imagine being excited, its been a while since you have seen the boys, let alone your lover perform, having your own lives to begin with, you were quite busy nowadays, so now is the perfect time for a surprise. You even picked up a very unique guitar pick on the way here, designed just for him. He have been complaining about his old ones, ones you are pretty sure he could easily replace, nonetheless it was as if he was giving you some sort of hint.
Imagine the way you look back at the owner, only to see some sort of complicated look on her face. Soon enough you knew why. "Honey, why you calling me so late?" You knew that voice. "It's kinda hard to talk right now." You knew that fucking voice. "Honey, why you crying, is everything okay?" It felt like the world stop, but it didn't. In fact, it continues. Painfully. "I gotta whisper 'cause I can't be too loud"
Imagine, Sylus was never the best singer. There was a reason why he was the lead guitarist and not the vocalist. But the thing is, when he tries, when he tries hard enough. He really singings well. You have heared him, even laugh at him. But of boy did you love him singing. When he sings it was always full of emotion. Like unwritten stories yet to say and unfold. Like hidden feelings waiting to be heard. He only singing when it's important. He only sings for you. Or so you though.
"It's funny that you're calling me tonight." You watch silently, at the side the way he looks in the crowd. Then his eyes soften, "And, yes, I've dreamt of you too." You knew you shouldn't have followed his gaze, you don't want to get hurt nor confirm anything, but you still did. And boy, it fucking hurts. "And does he know you're talking to me? Will it start a fight?" There he was looking at her, MC. "No, I don't think she has a clue."
Imagine, you always wonder why they broke up. They were so perfect for each other. But then again, that was all in the past? Right? You knew Sylus loves you. You knew he does, but you also knew that she was there first. Before you there was her. How could you even compare yourself to her? She was well loved my everyone, heck, even you could tell how much of a lovable person she was. That's why you always wonder, why you? Still, Sylus always made you feel like you were enough. But you aren't really sure anymore.
"Well, my girl's in the next room, sometimes I wish she was you." She laughs, exchanging words with her friend as she sat there in front, eyes never looking away at Sylus. "I guess we never really moved on." Sylus was looking at her softly, he was looking at her with something in his eyes.
Imagine you found yourself back to all those years ago. Amongst the crowd as you watch the two stare at each other. You felt like a bystander as you did all those years ago. "It's really good to hear your voice saying my name, It sounds so sweet" When Sylus sings, it holds a meaning. It means this moment, this very moment is important for him. "Coming from the lips of an angel. Hearing those words, it makes me weak."
"I need to go." You do not know why you felt awfully calm, heart beating wildly at your chest makes you wonder why. "I'm s-" You just raise a hand and smile at her. Funny it felt numb when your heart literally have broken into tiny little pieces. "I'll come back to my tab later." "And I never wanna say goodbye."
Imagine the way you slowly make it out of the pub. Your heart weighting heavily on your chest. Taking every bit of you strength to prevent yourself from crying. Dragging your feet as you walk and took a deep breath to compose yourself. "But, girl, you make it hard to be faithful." You did not look back, you don't want to. And finally, you grab a hold of the door and push it. "With the lips of an angel." And so you were out the door.
[ⓒdark-night-hero] 2025°
: Sana all bakasyon na, sabaysabay tayong mag dusa.
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AGREE SO MUCH OMG
walk with me here.
do you guys see how BIG that tail is?!? I know Lemurians are beautiful but I definitely hope he has the unsettling type of beauty. I want them to show, to make the player FEEL, that Raf is not human.
give him blue, purplish lips, inhuman pupils, scales all over, sharp nails and teeth, fish gills on either side of his torso or neck, fin ears and make him BIG. PLEASE LET HIM BE A HUGE, MENACING YET BEAUTIFUL CREATURE. (I mean, do you guys remember how big the Lemurian in that old man's tank was???)
I pray that they show more of Rafayel's real personality too instead of just playing him as a sassy babyboy.
I need this card to be filled with tension. I need something that will impact their relationship to the core. I need to see Rafayel finally acting like the sea god he is. I need him to allow himself to show how much the past affected him and how complicated his feelings towards the player actually is.
GIVE ME UNSETTLING SIREN RAFAYEL PLEASE.
#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#rafayel love and deepspace#rafayel lads#lads rafayel#rafayel lnds#love and deepspace rafayel#rafayel x reader
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These cards are just so good. SO GOOD!!! I can’t believe they are 4 star cards.

#love and deepspace#lads#lnds#lads rafayel#love and deepspace rafayel#lnds rafayel#rafayel#l&ds#l&ds rafayel#rafayel love & deepspace#rafayel love and deepspace#banquet ablaze#love & deepspace rafayel#rafayel x mc
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