amyzworldds
amyzworldds
hannie
76 posts
「Capri | ISTJ | 22 」 ⋆˚࿔ Writing ‘cuz I’m a lil lonely bean 𝜗𝜚˚⋆
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amyzworldds · 16 days ago
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Hello, sorry it’s late! I’m taking a short break because of school schedules and seminars, so I’m a bit busy. I’ll be back, maybe on Friday, and will post something. For now, can you guys help or suggest ideas for how DK and Y/N will meet again in Part 2 of Across Continents, Still You?
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amyzworldds · 20 days ago
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new members — may 2025 !
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.∿⊹﹟next steps . . .
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amyzworldds · 21 days ago
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Title: Across Continents, Still You
Masterlist
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Five years after leaving Seoul to protect Seokmin from a scandal, Y/N unexpectedly reunites with him at a wine festival in Rome, stirring old wounds and unspoken love. Pairing: DK x Y/N Genre: Slice of life, Angst, Drama WC: 5.4k
Y/N had carved out a life for herself in Rome, a far cry from the bustling streets of Seoul where she was born. Five years ago, she landed in the Eternal City for a job opportunity, trading the familiar hum of Korea for the sun-drenched cobblestones of Italy. The first year was a whirlwind of challenges—language barriers, a new timezone, unfamiliar weather, and the aching loneliness of not knowing a soul. But time, as it does, softened the edges. She learned to savor the bitter tang of espresso, mastered enough Italian to banter with locals, and even grew fond of the humid Roman summers. Most importantly, she found a small circle of friends who became her anchor.
Today was her day off, and her phone had buzzed early with a call from her friend Giulia. “Y/N, you’re coming to the wine festival in Greve, right? It’s tradition!” Giulia’s voice was bright, almost demanding, through the speaker.
Y/N laughed, pulling a light jacket from her closet. “Do I have a choice? You lot would drag me there if I said no.”
“Exactly!” chimed in Matteo, another friend, who’d grabbed Giulia’s phone. “We’re meeting at the usual spot. Don’t be late, or we’re starting without you.”
The Greve wine festival was an annual ritual for their group—two women, Giulia and Sofia, and two men, Matteo and Luca. They were locals who’d taken Y/N under their wing, helping her navigate the chaos of her new life. Over time, they’d become her family away from home. Y/N wasn’t a wine enthusiast when she arrived in Rome, but five years of festivals and late-night tastings had changed that. She could now appreciate a good Chianti, even if she’d never admit it to Matteo, who’d tease her endlessly about her “refined” palate.
Y/N drove to their meeting spot, a quaint plaza just outside Greve. The air was warm, carrying the scent of blooming lavender and fresh bread from nearby bakeries. As she parked, she spotted her friends lounging near a fountain, their laughter echoing.
“There she is!” Sofia called, waving dramatically. “Thought you’d bailed on us, Korea.”
Y/N rolled her eyes at the nickname. “And miss Matteo trying to pronounce ‘Sangiovese’ wrong again? Never.”
Matteo clutched his chest in mock offense. “My pronunciation is flawless, thank you very much.”
“Flawlessly terrible,” Luca added, earning a playful shove from Matteo.
The group fell into their usual rhythm, strolling through Greve’s charming streets. They stopped for pizza at a hole-in-the-wall trattoria, the kind only locals knew about, and then grabbed gelato—pistachio for Y/N, always. Luca, ever the photographer, insisted on snapping pictures, teasing Y/N about her “model poses” while she stuck out her tongue for the camera.
Y/N and Luca had a close bond, the kind that sparked whispers among their friends. People often teased them about being “more than friends,” and Y/N knew Luca harbored feelings for her. But her heart, stubborn as ever, wasn’t in it. She cared for him deeply, but romance? That was a door she’d locked long ago. So, they stayed friends, and Luca never pushed.
As the festival’s opening hour approached, the group joined the lively crowd at the entrance. They were near the front of the line, buzzing with excitement. Each grabbed a wine glass, the clinking of crystal signaling the start of their adventure. The festival was a maze of booths, each offering a different vintage, and soon the group scattered, chasing their favorite flavors.
Y/N wandered alone for a bit, her glass catching the golden afternoon light. She sipped a bold red, savoring the way it warmed her chest. As she moved through the crowd, she noticed a cluster of large cameras and a small crew. The sight piqued her curiosity, but what caught her off guard was the language she overheard—Korean. Her heart gave a small, unexpected lurch. It had been years since she’d heard her native tongue in person, and the sound felt like a tether to a life she’d left behind. She smiled to herself, feeling a quiet joy at seeing fellow Koreans so far from home. Maybe they were filming a travel show, she thought, her mind drifting to memories of Seoul.
Lost in thought, she didn’t notice the tall figure in a white shirt until they collided. Her wine glass slipped from her hand, shattering on the cobblestone with a sharp crash. “Oh no, I’m so sorry!” she gasped, crouching to gather the shards before anyone could step on them.
The stranger knelt beside her, his voice soft but flustered in broken English. “No, no, my fault. Sorry, so sorry. Let me help.”
That voice. It hit her like a wave, familiar in a way that made her breath catch. She froze, her fingers hovering over a piece of glass. Slowly, she looked up, and the world tilted. Their eyes locked, and time seemed to unravel.
It was him. Lee Seokmin. DK. Her best friend from high school. Her first love. The man she’d dated when he debuted with Seventeen, only to break his heart two years later without ever telling him why. The reason she’d fled to Rome, carrying a secret she’d buried deep.
His eyes widened, mirroring her shock. “Y/N?” he whispered, his voice barely audible over the festival’s hum.
“Seokmin…” Her voice trembled, barely a breath.
The world around them blurred. The chatter of the crowd, the clink of glasses, the distant calls of his Seventeenmembers shouting “DK, where are you?”—it all faded. For a moment, it was just them, crouched on the ground, surrounded by broken glass and unspoken history.
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Flashback
Back in high school, Lee Seokmin was already a star in the making, a trainee under Pledis Entertainment with dreams as big as his heart. Y/N, on the other hand, was just a regular student, her biggest worry being the pile of assignments due every Friday. The two were an unlikely pair, yet inseparable, their lives intertwined by chance and proximity.
It was a Friday afternoon, the school day done, and they walked side by side down the familiar Seoul streets toward their apartment building. Y/N’s backpack swung lightly as she rambled on, her voice bright with excitement. “Seokmin, I can’t wait for you to debut! You’re gonna be so famous, and you know what that means, right? Free food for me forever!”
Seokmin threw his head back, his laugh warm and infectious. “Yah, is that all I’m good for? Feeding you tteokbokki and ice cream?”
“Exactly!” she teased, nudging his shoulder. “You better keep your promise, Lee Seokmin. When you’re a big star, I expect you to buy me whatever I want.”
He grinned, his eyes crinkling in that way that made her heart skip. “Deal. I’ll buy you the whole world if I make it big. Just wait.”
Their closeness wasn’t just chance. They lived in the same apartment building—Seokmin in Seventeen’s dorm with his fellow trainees, Y/N with her family a few floors up. Their friendship sparked years ago when Seokmin, on his way home from practice, spotted Y/N outside their building, kneeling on the pavement, feeding a scruffy street dog with scraps from her lunch. He’d stopped, charmed by her kindness, and offered her a spare water bottle to wash her hands. From that moment, they were glued to each other’s sides. Same building, same class, same wavelength.
Seokmin was a golden retriever in human form—bright, warm, and impossibly kind. To Y/N, he was the gentlest soul she’d ever met, always ready with a smile or a silly joke to lift her spirits. He’d listen patiently to her complaints about school, sneak her snacks during late-night study sessions, and cheer the loudest at her small victories. To him, Y/N was his safe harbor, the one person who saw him as Seokmin, not just a trainee chasing a dream.
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As they grew, so did their feelings. It wasn’t a sudden spark but a slow, steady deepening, like roots burrowing into the earth. They both knew it, felt it in the quiet moments—stolen glances during class, the way their hands brushed when they walked. When Seventeendebuted, and Seokmin became DK, their puppy love bloomed into something real. Y/N was there for it all, from his trainee days as Lee Seokmin to his first stage as Dokyeom. She cheered at his debut showcase, her voice hoarse from screaming, and he’d looked for her in the crowd, his smile brighter than the stage lights.
To Seokmin, Y/N wasn’t just his girlfriend; she was his future. Even as teenagers, he was certain. He’d lie awake in the dorm, exhausted from practice, dreaming of a life with her—lazy mornings, shared laughter, maybe a dog like the one she’d fed all those years ago. “I’m gonna marry you one day, Y/N,” he’d whispered once, half-asleep on her couch during a movie night. She’d laughed, thinking he was joking, but the look in his eyes said otherwise.
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Years passed, and Seventeensoared. Their schedules grew hectic, their fame global, but Seokmin stayed true to his word. He spoiled Y/N relentlessly—not because she asked, but because he wanted to. A new scarf when she mentioned liking one in a shop window. Concert tickets to her favorite band. Late-night deliveries of her favorite desserts when she was stressed over college exams. “You don’t have to do this, you know,” she’d say, holding up a box of pastries he’d sent.
“I know,” he’d reply, grinning over a video call from some far-off city. “But I want to. You’re my person, Y/N.”
They were each other’s anchor. When Seventeen faced pressure, Y/N was his voice of reason, reminding him to breathe. When college overwhelmed her, Seokmin was her cheerleader, sending voice messages full of encouragement. “You’ve got this, Y/N. You’re unstoppable,” he’d say, and somehow, she’d believe him.
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But then came that night. Seventeen was in the middle of a world tour, cities blurring into one another. Seokmin was in a hotel room halfway across the globe when his phone lit up with Y/N’s name. His face brightened instantly. “Hey, you! Missed me already?” he answered, expecting her usual stories about college or a funny anecdote from her day.
But her voice was different—flat, distant. “Seokmin, let’s break up.”
The words hit like a punch. “What? Y/N, what are you talking about? Are you okay?”
“I just… I can’t do this anymore. I’m sorry.” And then, silence. The call ended. He tried calling back, but it went straight to voicemail. Her number was blocked. Her social media accounts, gone. It was like she’d erased herself from his life in an instant.
Seokmin spiraled. He called her family, desperate for answers, but her parents were vague. “She’s busy with college,” her mother said softly. “Or work. She’s just… busy.” He went to their apartment when the tour ended, heart in his throat, but Y/N was never there. One night, he waited outside for hours, hoping to catch her, only for her father to step out, his expression kind but firm. “Seokmin, we love you. But Y/N has her reasons. She won’t tell us, and you need to stop waiting.”
Reasons. That word haunted him. What reasons? Why wouldn’t she tell him? Why had she vanished without a trace, leaving him with nothing but questions and a shattered heart?
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Present
The world stood still as Y/N and Seokmin stared at each other, the shattered wine glass forgotten at their feet. The festival’s noise—laughter, clinking glasses, the hum of conversation—faded into a dull roar. It was as if the universe had carved out this moment just for them, a fragile bubble in the chaos of Greve. Their eyes held a thousand unspoken words, a history that neither time nor distance could erase.
“DK! We gotta go, man!” Na PD’s voice cut through, sharp and urgent, pulling Seokmin back to reality. At the same time, Luca’s voice reached Y/N, softer but insistent. “Y/N, you okay? What happened?”
A festival staff member approached, kneeling to clean the broken glass. “I’ve got this, don’t worry,” they said in accented English, waving them off.
Y/N and Seokmin stood slowly, their gazes still locked, reluctant to break the spell. Joshua, standing nearby, caught sight of Y/N and froze, recognition flickering in his eyes. He knew her instantly—the girl who’d been Seokmin’s world, the one whose absence had left him hollow for months. But the cameras, the crowd, the risk of a scene—it was too much. Joshua stepped forward, his voice steady in fluent English. “Sorry about the glass. Hope you’re okay. Goodbye.” He grabbed Seokmin’s arm, pulling him gently but firmly away.
Y/N watched as Seokmin was led through the crowd, his broad shoulders and familiar silhouette shrinking with every step. Her chest tightened, an old ache resurfacing, sharper now. Luca stepped in front of her, concern creasing his brow. “Y/N, seriously, are you alright? You look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
She blinked, the world snapping back into focus. Seokmin was gone, swallowed by the festival’s chaos. She forced a smile, her voice unsteady. “I’m fine, Luca. Just… bumped into someone. No big deal.”
Luca frowned but didn’t push. “Okay, but we’re heading out. It’s getting dark, and Giulia’s starving. You know how she gets.”
Y/N nodded, letting him guide her toward their friends. But her mind was elsewhere, replaying the moment their eyes met. Seokmin had changed—his face sharper, his frame stronger, matured by time and fame. Yet those eyes, so lively and warm, were the same ones that used to crinkle when he laughed at her terrible jokes. He was different, yet achingly familiar, a living echo of the life she’d left behind.
For five years, Y/N had avoided Seventeen. No music, no news, no social media. She’d built walls around her heart, convinced herself she’d moved on. She’d endured the weight of her secrets, the pain of her choices, alone in a foreign city. But seeing him, so close yet so unreachable, shattered the illusion. The heartbreak she’d buried clawed its way back, raw and unrelenting.
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Meanwhile, Seokmin was silent as Joshua pulled him through the festival, the other Seventeen members trailing behind with Na PD. The producer, ever observant, noticed the shift in Seokmin’s demeanor. “DK, what’s up? You okay?” Na PD asked, his tone light but curious.
Seokmin didn’t respond, his gaze fixed on the ground. Joshua, quick to deflect, laughed. “He’s fine, just embarrassed. Bumped into a girl and forgot how to talk. Classic DK.”
The members chuckled, and Na PD grinned, letting it slide. “Who gets drunk off wine tastings?” he teased, clapping Seokmin’s shoulder. But Seokmin didn’t laugh. His silence was heavy, a stark contrast to his usual brightness. The members exchanged glances—something was off.
Joshua knew the truth. He’d seen Y/N, seen the way Seokmin’s face had lit up and then crumbled. He knew the devastation Y/N’s sudden departure had caused years ago. Seokmin had never fully recovered, carrying a quiet hope that their paths would cross again. The members had watched him struggle, piecing himself back together while clinging to unanswered questions. Joshua stayed close, shielding him from further probing.
That night, at the restaurant, Seokmin was a ghost of himself, pushing food around his plate. Na PD raised an eyebrow. “DK, you’re scaring me. Where’s the guy who was singing karaoke an hour ago?”
Joshua jumped in again, laughing. “Told you, he’s drunk on wine. Lightweight.”
“Drunk on wine?” Na PD scoffed, grinning. “What is this, a rom-com?”
The table laughed, but Seokmin’s smile was forced, his eyes distant. The members sensed the shift, their curiosity growing, but Joshua’s subtle glances kept them quiet. He knew this wasn’t the time or place.
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On the bus back to their transient house, Joshua slid into the seat next to Seokmin, tapping his knee gently. “Hey. You okay?” he asked, his voice low, meant for Seokmin alone.
Seokmin nodded, staring out the window. “Yeah. I’m fine.”
Joshua didn’t buy it. He knew those eyes, the way they hid a storm. But he didn’t push, just rested a hand on Seokmin’s shoulder, a silent promise of support.
Later, in the quiet of the transient house, with the cameras off and Na PD gone, the members gathered in the living room. The air was heavy, the unspoken tension finally breaking. Joshua spoke first, his voice steady. “It was Y/N. We saw her at the festival.”
The room stilled. Every member knew her name, knew the weight it carried. They’d seen Seokmin unravel when she left, watched him search for answers that never came. Now, here she was, in Italy of all places.
Hoshi broke the silence, his tone light but cautious. “Y/N’s in Italy? What, was she hiding from you in Rome this whole time?” He laughed, trying to ease the mood, but Jeonghan nudged him, whispering, “Don’t be insensitive.”
Hoshi shrugged, sheepish. “Just trying to lighten things up.”
Jeonghan sat beside Seokmin, his voice gentle. “So, what’s the plan, DK? You’ve been waiting for this, right? A chance to talk to her?”
Seokmin shook his head, his eyes fixed on the floor. “I don’t know, hyung. I don’t know what to do. Or what to feel.” His voice cracked, raw with confusion. “We’ve got an early schedule tomorrow. Let’s just… rest.”
The members hesitated but respected his words, filing off to their rooms. Seokmin lay in his bed, staring at the ceiling, the darkness pressing in. His mind replayed her face, her voice, the way she’d looked at him—like she was seeing a ghost, too. Five years of questions swirled in his chest, but one burned brighter than the rest: Why did you leave me?
He exhaled, turning to the wall. “I’m okay,” he murmured to no one, or maybe to himself. “Let’s just sleep.”
But sleep didn’t come. All he could think about was her, and the truth he’d been chasing for years, now closer than ever yet still out of reach.
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The moment in Greve lingered like a ghost for both Y/N and Seokmin, a fleeting collision that lasted mere seconds but unraveled years of carefully buried emotions. It was their last interaction, a brief spark in the chaos of the wine festival, and neither knew if their paths would ever cross again. For five years, they’d built walls around their hearts, but that single glance had cracked them open, exposing the raw, unresolved ache they’d both tried to outrun.
For Seokmin, the encounter was a cruel tease of hope. Back in the transient house, he lay awake night after night, replaying her face, her voice, the way her eyes had widened with recognition. Was she living in Rome? Just visiting? He had no way of knowing, and the uncertainty gnawed at him. The odds of seeing her again in a city of millions felt impossibly slim, yet he couldn’t let go of the fragile thread of hope. “Maybe it’s a sign,” he whispered to himself one night, staring at the ceiling. “Maybe we’re not done.” But even as he said it, doubt crept in. What if that was it? A final, fleeting glimpse of the girl who’d once been his everything?
Y/N, meanwhile, fought a different battle. She’d spent five years avoiding Seventeen, steering clear of their music, their faces, their world. But seeing Seokmin up close shattered her resolve. Back in her Rome apartment, she found herself typing his name into her phone, hesitating before hitting search. When she finally gave in, the flood of results overwhelmed her—Seventeen’s global success, sold-out stadiums, awards piling up. Her heart swelled with pride, but it came with a sharp pang. “They’ll never know how proud I am,” she murmured, scrolling through photos of their NANA Tour, their laughter lighting up Rome’s streets. She remembered the grueling days of their trainee years—Seokmin stumbling home from practice, exhausted but smiling, trading normal teenage adventures for endless hours in a practice room. She’d been there through it all, from their debut struggles to the sleepless nights of their early tours. Knowing they were in Rome for NANA Tour, enjoying the city she now called home, brought a bittersweet comfort. But it also hurt, a reminder of the life she’d walked away from.
Life in Rome marched on. Y/N threw herself back into work, her days filled with meetings and deadlines. But the encounter with Seokmin lingered, a quiet undercurrent to her routine. Then, a rare gift arrived: her boss granted her a month-long vacation. She called her parents that night, their voices crackling with excitement over the phone. “Y/N, come home,” her mother urged. “It’s been five years. We miss you. Spend your vacation in Korea.”
Y/N hesitated, her mind flashing to Seokmin’s face in Greve. Could she handle being back in Seoul, where memories of him waited around every corner? But the longing for home was stronger. “Okay, Mom,” she said softly. “I’ll come.”
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Now, here she was, standing outside Incheon Airport, breathing in the crisp Korean air for the first time in half a decade. The familiar chaos of the city buzzed around her—taxis honking, travelers rushing past, the faint scent of street food in the distance. She adjusted her scarf, waiting for her parents’ car, when her eyes caught a massive billboard across the street. It was an advertisement, bold and colorful, and there, plastered across it, was Seokmin’s smiling face. His grin was as bright as ever, those lively eyes staring out at the world. Y/N’s breath hitched, a bitter smile tugging at her lips. “Of course,” she whispered to herself, her voice tinged with both fondness and pain. “You’re everywhere.”
She stood frozen, staring at the poster, memories flooding back—late-night walks, his promises to buy her the world, the way he’d looked at her like she was his future. Five years ago, she’d walked away, carrying a secret she couldn’t share. Now, standing on her home soil, with his face beaming down at her, she wondered if fate was playing a cruel trick—or offering her a chance to finally face the truth.
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A week had passed since Y/N landed in Seoul, her hometown now feeling like a distant memory she was rediscovering. She spent her days with her parents, playing tourist in the city she once knew by heart. They ate steaming bowls of tteokbokki at bustling street stalls, wandered through Gyeongbokgung Palace like wide-eyed visitors, and laughed over old family stories at cozy restaurants. But Seoul, vibrant and alive, was overwhelming. The biting winter air, the spicy tang of kimchi, the rhythm of the city—it was all so familiar, yet it stirred a deep ache in Y/N’s chest. Everywhere she turned, Seventeen was there. Their songs spilled from coffee shop speakers, their faces beamed from mall billboards, their names lit up restaurant TVs. Each encounter was a jolt of nostalgia, tangled with a guilt that gnawed at her. For five years, she’d carried a secret, one that had driven her to hurt the one person who’d deserved nothing but her love. “I’m such an idiot,” she muttered to herself one night, staring at her reflection in her childhood bedroom mirror. “Why did I think I could just erase him?”
Tonight, unable to sleep, Y/N slipped out of her parents’ house and found herself walking toward the Han River. It was a place etched into her soul, where she and Seokmin used to stroll, sometimes with his members in tow, laughing and chasing each other like kids with no cares in the world. She smiled at the memory of Hoshi tripping over a rock, Seungkwan’s dramatic reenactments of their latest practice mishaps, Seokmin’s arm slung casually around her shoulders. Her laughter faded as she reached the riverbank, the water glinting under the moonlight. Then she froze. A familiar figure stood a short distance away, gazing out at the river, his silhouette unmistakable even in the dim light. It was him. Lee Seokmin. DK.
Her heart stuttered. She could turn back, pretend she hadn’t seen him, and let the moment slip away like she had in Greve. Or she could stay, face him, and finally confront the truth she’d buried. “Is this you, universe?” she whispered, her breath visible in the cold air. “Giving me a chance, or just messing with me?”
She hesitated, then glanced at him again—and her breath caught. He was looking at her now, his eyes wide with the same shock she’d felt in Italy. For a moment, they just stared, the river’s quiet ripple the only sound between them. Then Y/N smiled, a small, tentative thing, and walked toward him. She stopped a few feet away, her hands gripping the railing as she gazed at the water, gathering her courage. Taking a deep breath, she turned to him, her smile steadier now.
“It’s been a while, huh?” she said, her voice soft but clear. “How are you? You guys are huge now, aren’t you? I’ve been here a week, and your faces and songs are literally everywhere.” She laughed, light but nervous, her eyes flickering to the river to avoid his gaze.
Seokmin’s expression softened, a faint smile tugging at his lips. “Yeah, we’re doing great. Working on a new song, actually. It’s… been a ride.” His voice was warm, but there was a cautious edge to it. “What about you? How’s life been?”
Y/N’s smile widened, a playful glint in her eyes. “Oh, I’m a full-on Italiano now. Just a tourist in Korea.” She laughed, then softened, her tone turning wistful. “I’ve been living in Rome for a while. Five years, actually. This is my first time back, and it’s… so nostalgic. Everything feels the same, but different, you know?”
Seokmin nodded, his gaze lingering on her face, searching for something she wasn’t sure she could give. They fell silent, standing side by side, the Han River stretching out before them, its surface reflecting the city’s lights. The quiet was heavy, filled with years of unspoken questions. Then, out of the stillness, Seokmin’s voice came, low and raw. “Why?”
Y/N’s heart clenched. She knew exactly what he meant. She turned to him, meeting his eyes for a brief, aching moment before smiling faintly. “I didn’t break up with you because I fell out of love.”
The words hung in the air, a fragile confession that left them both suspended, the truth teetering on the edge of revelation.
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Flashback
Five years ago, Y/N’s world had crumbled in a single moment. She’d just gotten home from college, exhausted from a long day of classes and drowning in stress over a pile of paperwork for a presentation due tomorrow. She slipped into comfy sweats, tied her hair up, and sank into her chair, reaching for her phone to call Seokmin. His voice always had a way of grounding her, no matter how chaotic her day had been. But just as her thumb hovered over the call button, her phone buzzed with a message from an unknown number.
Her heart stopped as she opened it. Videos and photos of her and Seokmin—intimate, private moments, stolen snapshots of their love—filled the screen. Below them, a chilling message: Break up with DK, or I release these and ruin his image. Her blood ran cold, her hands trembling. Seventeen was still rising, their name just beginning to shine. She’d seen the grueling years Seokmin poured into his dream—the endless practices, the sleepless nights, the sacrifices. How could she let a scandal destroy that? How could she be the reason his world fell apart?
She was only a teenager, scared and unprepared. Acting out of fear, she made a choice. “Seokmin, let’s break up,” she’d said over the phone that night, her voice flat to hide the way her heart was shattering. When he pressed her, frantic—“Y/N, what’s wrong? Talk to me!”—she hung up, blocked his number, and cut him out completely. She knew he’d fight for her, knew he’d show up at her parents’ house, so she avoided him, hiding behind excuses of school and work. After graduation, when a job offer in Rome came, she seized it, fleeing to a new life where she could bury her guilt and try to mend her broken heart.
Present
Y/N stood by the Han River, the moonlight casting a silver glow over the water. Seokmin’s question—“Why?”—still hung between them, raw and heavy. She took a shaky breath, her eyes meeting his, and began to unravel the truth she’d carried for five years.
“That night I broke up with you,” she started, her voice trembling, “I’d just gotten home from school. I was stressed, exhausted, and all I wanted was to hear your voice. But before I could call you, I got a text. From someone I didn’t know.” She paused, her fingers tightening on the railing. “It was pictures of us. Videos. Private moments I thought were just ours. And a message saying if I didn’t break up with you, they’d leak everything and ruin your image.”
Seokmin’s eyes widened, his breath catching. “What? Y/N, why didn’t you tell me?”
“I was scared, Seokmin,” she said, her voice breaking. “I was just a kid. Seventeen was just starting to make it, and I saw how hard you worked—how hard all of you worked. The sleepless nights, the practices, the sacrifices… I couldn’t let some stupid scandal destroy that. I couldn’t be the reason you lost everything.”
He shook his head, stepping closer, his voice thick with emotion. “Y/N, I would’ve fought it. We could’ve figured it out together. You didn’t have to carry that alone.”
“I know,” she whispered, tears spilling down her cheeks. “But I wasn’t brave enough. I thought… if I told you, you’d try to fix it, and it’d make things worse. So I left. I blocked you, avoided you, and when I got a job offer in Rome, I took it. I thought I could move on, fix myself. But I never stopped feeling guilty for hurting you.”
Seokmin’s eyes glistened, his jaw tight as he processed her words. “All this time… I thought you just stopped loving me. I kept asking myself what I did wrong, why I wasn’t enough.”
“No, Seokmin,” she said fiercely, turning to face him fully. “It was never about you not being enough. You were everything to me. I loved you so much it hurt. I just… I couldn’t be selfish. I couldn’t risk your dream for my love.”
He let out a shaky breath, running a hand through his hair. “Y/N, my dream meant nothing if you weren’t there. You were my anchor. Losing you… it broke me.”
Her tears fell faster now, her smile bittersweet through the pain. “I guess I just wasn’t brave enough back then. But I loved you, Seokmin. I still do. And I’m so proud of what you’ve achieved. Seeing you everywhere here, hearing your songs… it’s like you’re part of the city’s heartbeat. But I don’t know if love is enough right now.”
Seokmin stepped closer, his hand brushing hers on the railing, tentative but warm. “Y/N, I never stopped loving you either. Not for a second. Every city, every stage, I looked for you in the crowd. Even in Rome, when I saw you… I thought maybe the universe was giving me a second chance.”
She laughed softly, wiping her tears. “The universe is funny like that, isn’t it? Throwing us together in Rome, now here. But I hurt you, Seokmin. I don’t know if I deserve that chance.”
“You were protecting me,” he said, his voice steady despite the tears in his eyes. “You made a choice out of love, even if it hurt us both. That’s not something to punish yourself for. It’s something we can learn from.”
Y/N looked at him, her heart aching with the weight of his words. “If we ever meet again… and we’re still looking at each other the same way…” She paused, smiling through her tears. “Then I’ll know. That even after everything, it was always you.”
Seokmin’s hand closed gently over hers, his touch grounding her like it always had. “Then I’ll keep looking your way, until the universe brings you back.”
They stood there, hands entwined, the Han River flowing quietly before them. The city hummed around them, but for that moment, it was just them—two hearts that had weathered years of pain, finding solace in the truth. Whether the universe would weave their paths together again, they didn’t know. But under the Seoul sky, with the river as their witness, they held onto the fragile hope that love, in time, might be enough.
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an: DK looks like total boyfriend material to me! He seems like such a green flag, like a perfect prince. Where can I find someone like him???
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amyzworldds · 21 days ago
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Title: Unseen Version
Masterlist
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For a decade, Seventeen’s Y/N has been the bubbly maknae, but her 10th anniversary solo track “Unseen” reveals a deeper, raw side, yearning to break free from her playful persona. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th member Genre: Angst, fluff WC: 3.2k
Ten years had flown by for Seventeen, a whirlwind of stages, tours, and memories etched into their 10th anniversary album preparations. The group buzzed with excitement, each member pouring their heart into a full album featuring solo tracks—a milestone to celebrate their journey. Y/N, now 25, had grown into a more mature version of herself—or so she insisted, despite still pranking her members and dragging Dino into her chaos. Her trinket obsession remained, her bag jangling like a wind chime, and her bunny slippers still squeaked through the studio. Yet, beneath her playful exterior, a quiet shift was brewing.
The dorm days were long gone—replaced by sleek apartments, each member carving out their own space. Y/N’s place was a shrine to her past: pink decor, trinket-covered bags, and a fridge stocked with gummies. But the media and fans still saw her as the “past Y/N”—the mischievous maknae, forever childish, forever energetic. She loved her role as Carats’ mood-lifter, but with the 10th anniversary looming, she craved something new—a chance to show a side of herself the world hadn’t seen.
Today, Y/N sat in a meeting with Woozi and the producers, discussing her solo track for the album. The room hummed with ideas—playful melodies, upbeat tempos, lyrics dripping with her signature quirky charm. “We’re thinking a fun, colorful vibe,” one producer said, flipping through notes. “Something that screams Y/N—energetic, maybe a dance track with cute hooks.”
Y/N nodded, her smile polite but strained, fingers twisting a glittery keychain under the table. Woozi, across from her, caught the flicker in her eyes—a hesitation she didn’t voice. He tilted his head, studying her, but didn’t push. “Sounds good,” she said softly, though her heart wasn’t in it. For ten years, she’d delivered bubbly anthems, and while she adored them, they felt like a costume she’d outgrown.
After the meeting, Woozi caught her in the hallway, slinging his bag over his shoulder. “Hey, Y/N-ie, you hungry? Wanna hit that new café outside? My treat.”
Her face lit up, trinkets jangling as she bounced on her toes. “Ooh, yes! I heard they have glittery lattes—let’s go!”
They strolled to the café, a cozy spot with pastel walls and fairy lights. Y/N ordered a sparkly matcha latte, Woozi a plain black coffee, and they settled at a corner table. She was quieter than usual, scrolling her phone, her usual chatter replaced by a pensive frown. Woozi sipped his coffee, watching her over the rim. “You okay, kid? You’re weirdly silent—not planning to sticker my studio, are you?”
Y/N puffed her cheeks, setting her phone down with a dramatic sigh. “I’m fine, oppa… mostly.” She poked at her latte foam, then blurted, “It’s the solo track. I love their ideas—really, I do! But… it’s the same. Playful, energetic, ‘cute Y/N.’ I’ve been doing that for ten years, and I’m tired of it. People still see me as the kid I was at 15, and I’m 25 now—an adult! I want something new.”
Woozi chuckled, leaning back. “An adult? You? The girl with a glittery bunny backpack?”
“Rude!” she huffed, rolling her eyes, but a smile tugged at her lips. “I’m serious, oppa. Don’t get me wrong—I love cheering up Carats, making them smile. But I’m not just that. I want to rebrand, show a different side. Something… real.”
He sobered, nodding slowly. “I hear you. You want to grow up in their eyes—show you’re more than the chaos gremlin. I’ll talk to the producers, see what we can do for your solo. Maybe something deeper, raw.”
Her eyes sparkled, relief washing over her. “Really? You’d do that? Oppa, you’re the best!” She rummaged in her trinket-laden bag, pulling out a glittery pink notebook that screamed “Y/N.” “Hold on—I’ve got ideas!”
Woozi raised an eyebrow, smirking. “What’s that? Your secret diary? Is this your ‘mature’ side?”
“Shut up!” she pouted, flipping it open with a flourish. “It’s my lyric book—been writing for years. You guys never asked, so I kept it secret.”
His jaw dropped as she revealed pages of handwritten lyrics—some scrawled in glitter pen, others in smudged ink. “You write lyrics? Since when? Why didn’t you say anything?”
“Because you all wanted me to do cheerful stuff!” she said, half-laughing, half-sad. “Look at this one—it’s different.” She slid the notebook over, pointing to a page titled “Shadows of Me.” The lyrics were raw, heavy—verses about feeling trapped by her past self, the weight of being seen as “just” the bubbly maknae, the quiet struggles no one noticed. Lines spoke of rough paths, self-doubt, and yearning to be understood as a whole person, not a caricature.
Woozi read in stunned silence, his coffee forgotten. The words were beautiful, poignant, cutting deeper than he’d expected. “Y/N… this is good. Really good.” His voice softened, eyes tracing her handwriting. “You’ve been feeling this way all along? For ten years, and we didn’t know?”
She shrugged, a bittersweet smile playing on her lips. “I’m good at hiding it. I love being the happy one, but… sometimes I’m not. I just want people to see me—the real me.”
He leaned forward, shock giving way to awe. Her lyrics peeled back a layer he’d never glimpsed, revealing a Y/N who’d grown quietly, carrying burdens behind her glittery facade. For ten years, they’d missed this—her depth, her heart, her unspoken truths.
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The café conversation lingered in Woozi’s mind, Y/N’s glittery notebook a quiet revelation. As they parted ways that day, she’d pressed it into his hands, her eyes earnest but nervous. “Oppa, read it all,” she said, trinkets jangling as she adjusted her bag. “Maybe you’ll find something for my solo track. I trust you.”
Woozi nodded, tucking the notebook under his arm. “I’ll look through it, Y/N-ie. No promises, but… I’m curious.” Her shy smile stuck with him, a glimpse of a Y/N he hadn’t fully seen before—not the chaos gremlin, but a woman wrestling with her own identity.
In his studio that night, Woozi flipped through the notebook under the glow of his desk lamp, its pages a mosaic of glitter ink and raw emotion. Lyrics spilled across them—some hopeful, some aching, all deeply personal. Songs about feeling caged by her “bubbly” image, about nights spent doubting herself, about wanting to be seen as more than a smile. One line hit hard: “I’m more than the laughter, more than the spark—I’m a shadow that’s learning to shine in the dark.” “Damn, Y/N,” he muttered, awestruck. “How’d you hide this?”
He called Bumzu the next day, notebook in hand. “You gotta see this—Y/N’s been writing lyrics. They’re… something else.” In the studio, Bumzu skimmed the pages, his jaw dropping. “She wrote this? Our Y/N? The trinket tornado?” He laughed, shaking his head. “This is a secret talent—she’s got a poet’s soul. We’ve been sleeping on her all this time!”
“Right?” Woozi said, tapping a page. “Her solo needs to be one of these—something real, not another candy-coated bop. She’s ready to show a new side.”
They zeroed in on a track Y/N had titled “Unseen”—a soft, haunting melody she’d scribbled chords for, its lyrics weaving her feelings of being trapped by expectations and yearning to reveal her true self. “This one,” Woozi said, circling it. “It’s her heart on paper. Let’s make it hers.”
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Y/N joined them in the studio the next week, her usual bounce subdued as she clutched a glittery pen, nervous but eager. “You really liked it?” she asked, eyeing the notebook on Woozi’s desk. “It’s not… too different?”
“It’s perfect,” Bumzu said, grinning. “You’ve got a gift, Y/N-ie. This song’s gonna hit hard—trust us.”
“Yeah, kid,” Woozi added, tweaking the soundboard. “It’s you—raw, real. Let’s record it.”
The process was intense but intimate. Y/N poured her soul into the booth, her voice soft yet steady, carrying the weight of “Unseen.” The melody was gentle, a piano-driven ballad with strings that swelled like a heartbeat, a far cry from her usual upbeat anthems. Lines like “I’m not just the light you see, there’s a storm inside of me” flowed with quiet power, each note a step toward shedding her old skin. Woozi and Bumzu exchanged glances, floored by her depth, her trinkets glinting under the studio lights like a reminder of the Y/N they knew—and the one they were meeting now.
After the final take, Y/N stepped out, breathless, “Was that okay? I didn’t mess it up, did I?”
“Mess it up?” Woozi laughed, pulling off his headphones. “You killed it. This is your best work yet—Carats won’t know what hit ‘em.”
Bumzu nodded, clapping. “It’s beautiful, Y/N. You should be proud.”
She smiled, small but genuine, clutching her notebook like a lifeline. “Thanks, oppa. It feels… right. Like I’m finally saying what I’ve wanted to.”
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After Bumzu left, Woozi lingered, motioning Y/N to sit on the studio couch. She plopped down, her bag jangling, and he leaned forward, his usual teasing edge replaced by sincerity. “Listen, Y/N-ie. I read every word in that notebook, and… I’m sorry we didn’t see this side of you sooner. You don’t have to pretend to be the ‘happy maknae’ if it’s not you—not with us, not with Carats.”
Her eyes widened, fingers twisting her keychain. “But… what if they don’t like the real me? What if they want the old Y/N—the one who’s always smiling?”
“Then they’re not real fans,” he said firmly, meeting her gaze. “The ones who matter will love you for you—storms and all. And if anyone hates it? Screw ‘em. You’ve got thirteen brothers who’ll stand by you, no judgment. We’ve got your back, always.”
Her lip trembled, and she looked away, blinking fast. “You mean it? Even if I’m not… fun all the time?”
“Especially then,” he said, softening. “You’re not just our chaos queen—you’re Y/N. The one who writes lyrics that hit like a truck, who drags Dino into pranks, who makes us laugh and keeps us grounded. You don’t have to hide any of it.”
She sniffled, a shaky laugh escaping. “You’re gonna make me cry, oppa. Stop being so nice—it’s weird!”
“Deal with it,” he teased, tossing her a tissue. “Now go rest—you’ve got a masterpiece to share with the others soon. They’re gonna lose it when they hear ‘Unseen.’”
She grinned, hugging her notebook, the weight of ten years lifting slightly. “Thanks, Woozi oppa. I’m… ready for this. I think.”
“You are,” he said, smiling. “And we’re with you—glittery notebook and all.”
The other members hadn’t heard “Unseen” yet, but Y/N’s solo was shaping into something transformative—a mirror of her heart, a bold step for their 10th anniversary. Woozi, carrying her notebook’s secrets, felt a new respect for her, knowing her lyrics had unveiled a truth they’d overlooked. Y/N was ready to redefine herself, and the world would soon meet the real her—shadows, storms, and all.
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With Seventeen’s 10th anniversary album nearing release, the studio was a hive of anticipation, but Y/N carried a quiet weight no one else saw. She felt the pressure of a decade in the spotlight, her role as the youngest—and only girl—pushing her to match the group’s relentless energy. Lately, though, she felt like a stranger in her own skin, as if her bubbly persona was a mask she’d worn too long. Was it exhaustion from the industry’s demands? Fear of showing her darker side? Or was she simply outgrowing the Y/N everyone expected? She hid her unease behind smiles, but the doubt gnawed at her—especially as her solo track, “Unseen,” loomed.
Tonight, the group crammed into Woozi’s studio for a listening session, their laughter bouncing off the walls as they prepared to hear each member’s solo track. The footage would go up on their YouTube channel post-release. Couches were packed, snacks littered the table, and Dino sprawled on the floor, tossing gummy worms at Hoshi. Y/N sat tucked between Seungcheol and Minghao, her trinket-laden bag at her feet, forcing a grin as the chaos unfolded.
One by one, they played the solos, heads bobbing to the beats. Seungcheol’s “Jungle” roared with fierce determination, earning cheers and Mingyu’s dramatic, “Hyung, you’re a beast!” Wonwoo’s “99.9” was introspective, its smooth flow prompting Vernon to nod, “That’s my vibe—deep, man.” Mingyu’s “Shake It Off” had everyone dancing in their seats, Hoshi yelling, “Puppy, you’re stealing my spotlight!” Vernon’s “Shining Star” brought soft smiles, Joshua teasing, “So you’re a romantic now, huh?”
Dino’s “Trigger” followed, a high-energy banger that had Seungkwan hyping, “Maknae energy! You snapped, Dino-yah!” As it ended, Woozi leaned forward, a mischievous glint in his eye, pausing before the next track—Y/N’s. The group hadn’t heard it; she and Woozi had kept it a secret, wanting to surprise them. “Alright, guess time,” Woozi said, smirking. “What’s Y/N’s solo gonna be? Genre, vibe—go.”
Hoshi grinned, leaning back. “Easy—bubblegum pop! Something hyper, with glittery beats!”
“Yeah, like a cheerleader anthem!” Mingyu added, mimicking a dance. “Y/N’s always got that happy energy!”
Seungkwan nodded. “Gotta be fun—maybe a cute rap part, like her old tracks!”
Y/N rolled her eyes, slumping into the couch, her heart sinking. “Wow, so predictable, huh?” she muttered, half-joking, but the words stung. They saw her as the same old Y/N—cheerful, chaotic, unchanging.
Woozi laughed, shaking his head. “You’re all so wrong. Ready for a shock?” He glanced at Y/N, who gave a small nod, her fingers twisting a trinket nervously. “This is ‘Unseen’—let’s go.”
Hoshi leaned forward, joking, “What, is it sexy? Bold? Mature? Spill, Jihoon-ah!”
“Just listen,” Woozi said, hitting play.
The room fell silent as a soft piano melody unfurled, delicate yet heavy, strings weaving in like a quiet ache. Y/N’s voice followed—raw, vulnerable, unlike her usual bright tone. “I’m not just the light you see, there’s a storm inside of me…” The lyrics poured out, painting her struggle—feeling trapped by her “happy” image, yearning to be seen as human, flawed, real. “I’m more than the laughter, more than the spark—I’m a shadow that’s learning to shine in the dark.”
The members’ smiles faded, brows furrowing as they leaned in, eyes flicking to Y/N. She stared at her lap, heart pounding, afraid to meet their gazes. The song swelled, her voice breaking on “Ten years of smiles, but who sees my tears?” and the studio felt like it held its breath. When the final note faded, a heavy silence hung, the kind that pressed on your chest.
Seungcheol broke it, voice soft, “Oh, Y/N-ie… that’s different, huh?” He leaned forward, eyes searching hers, a mix of awe and sadness.
“Who wrote this?” Vernon asked, his usual teasing gone, replaced by quiet intensity.
Woozi pointed at Y/N, a proud smile tugging his lips. “She did. Every word, every note—her heart.”
The room erupted—not in chaos, but in a rush of stunned admiration. “You wrote that?!” Mingyu gaped, scooting closer. “Y/N, that’s… insane. It’s beautiful.”
“I’m shook,” Vernon said, shaking his head. “It’s so raw—like, you’re letting us in. I love it.”
Hoshi, usually loud, was quiet, eyes glistening. “I didn’t know you felt like that, Y/N-ie. It’s… it hurts, but it’s amazing.”
Y/N’s lip trembled, her hands gripping her trinkets to steady herself. “I was scared you wouldn’t like it,” she whispered, voice cracking. “It’s not fun or happy—it’s… me. The parts I hide. I thought… maybe you’d want the old Y/N.” Tears spilled over, and she swiped at them, embarrassed.
Seungcheol slid closer, pulling her into a side hug. “Kid, we love it. And we love you—every part, happy or not. You don’t have to hide this from us.”
“Yeah,” Joshua added, voice gentle. “You’re our sister—bubbly, sad, whatever. We’re here for all of it. This song? It’s you, and it’s perfect.”
Dino, eyes wide, leaned over. “I’ve seen you cry, but this… it’s different. You’ve been carrying this alone? Why didn’t you tell us?”
“I didn’t want to be a burden,” she admitted, tears flowing freely now. “As the only girl, I got so much hate—people saying I didn’t fit, that I was too loud, too girly. So I played up the bubbly side, to vibe with you guys, to prove I belonged. But… I’m tired. I’m 25, and I’m not that kid anymore. I’m scared to show the real me.”
Seungkwan reached for her hand, squeezing it. “You belong—always have, always will. You don’t need to prove anything. If you’re hurting, tell us. We’re not just a group—we’re family.”
“And screw the haters,” Seungkwan said fiercely, wiping his own eyes. “Your song’s gonna shut them up. This is Y/N—real, strong, ours.”
One by one, the twelve showered her with words—Wonwoo’s quiet “It’s poetic, Y/N-ie—you’ve got soul,” Mingyu’s earnest “I’m so proud of you,” Vernon’s simple “You killed it.” Even Woozi, usually reserved, said, “You showed your heart, kid. That’s braver than any of us.”
Y/N sobbed, overwhelmed, her usual spark drowned in vulnerability. “I thought… I had to be happy for you guys, for Carats. I didn’t want to let anyone down.”
Seungcheol hugged her tighter, his voice thick. “You could never let us down. If you’re struggling, we want to know—we’ll carry it with you. You’re not alone in the dark, Y/N-ie.”
The others piled in, a messy group hug that toppled snacks and sent trinkets jingling. Hoshi sniffled loudly, “Stop making me cry, you gremlin!” earning a watery laugh from Y/N. For the first time, she felt seen—not as the maknae, the girl, the clown, but as herself, shadows and all.
The session revealed a Y/N they’d missed—her tears weren’t new, but her quiet pain was. As the only girl, she’d fought to fit their rhythm, absorbing hate to shield her place, crafting a persona to belong. Her bubbly side had been armor, and “Unseen” cracked it open, leaving the thirteen raw. They felt the sting of neglect—not intentional, but real—knowing their laughter had sometimes drowned out her silent struggles.
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amyzworldds · 22 days ago
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Part 2: A Decade of Us
Masterlist | Part 1
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After ten years of love, Y/N walks away from Wonwoo, a dedicated doctor, to chase a life unshaped by others’ dreams, shattering their once-unbreakable bond. Two years later, she’s an artist with a gallery of her own, while he masks his heartache in endless hospital shifts. A chance encounter at her gallery opening rekindles memories through a single painting—would this path bring them back together, or leave their story unfinished? Pairing: Non-Idol Wonwoo X reader Genre: Angst WC: 4.2k
The first few months after the breakup were a descent into darkness for Y/N. She’d fled to that small coastal town with dreams of freedom, but instead, she found herself trapped in a prison of her own making. The suitcase sat unpacked in the corner of the weathered house, a silent witness to her unraveling. She shut down her social media accounts, deleted the apps from her phone, and severed every tie to the life she’d left behind. The world didn’t need to see her like this—broken, hollow, a shell of the woman who’d once laughed so easily in Wonwoo’s arms.
Nights were the worst. She’d lie in bed, the sound of the waves crashing outside a cruel reminder of how alone she was, and cry until her throat ached. She’d sob into her pillow, muffling the sound so the universe wouldn’t hear her regret. Had she done the right thing? She’d wanted to find herself, to break free from the chains of expectation, but all she’d found was a void. Wonwoo’s absence was a wound that wouldn’t heal, a constant ache that pulsed with every breath. She’d loved him like he was her entire world, and now that world was gone.
Her parents had called, of course. They’d tracked her down through a mutual friend, their voices sharp with disappointment when she finally picked up. “You’re throwing everything away,” her mother had said, her tone laced with the same judgment Y/N had spent her life trying to escape. “We gave you everything, and this is how you repay us?” Her father had been quieter, but his silence was heavier, a disapproval that cut deeper than words. The fight that followed was explosive—years of pent-up resentment spilling out until she’d slammed the phone down and walked out of the life they’d built for her, slamming the door on their expectations for good.
She tried to paint, to reclaim the passion she’d once had, but her hands wouldn’t cooperate. The brushes felt foreign, the colors dull. Every stroke was a reminder of what she’d lost, not just Wonwoo but the version of herself she’d buried under everyone else’s dreams. So she turned to alcohol instead. Cheap wine, bitter whiskey—anything to numb the pain, to blur the edges of her guilt. She’d sit on the porch, glass in hand, staring at the horizon as the days bled into weeks, then months. It didn’t help her forget, not really, but it dulled the sharpness enough to keep her breathing.
After six months of drowning, something snapped. She woke up one morning, head pounding, the taste of regret sour on her tongue, and decided she couldn’t keep living like this. She poured the last of the liquor down the sink, packed her suitcase, and bought a plane ticket to nowhere in particular. She’d travel, she told herself. She’d see the world, chase the horizon until she found something worth holding onto. Maybe then she’d stop crying.
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A year later, she was a different woman—or at least, she was starting to feel like one. The travels had taken her across continents: the bustling streets of Tokyo, the quiet canals of Amsterdam, the sun-drenched cliffs of Santorini. She’d walked until her feet ached, eaten food she couldn’t pronounce, and let the world wash over her like a cleansing tide. Somewhere along the way, the tears had stopped. Somewhere along the way, she’d picked up a paintbrush again.
It started small—a sketch of a fisherman in Portugal, the lines of his weathered face telling a story she couldn’t put into words. Then a watercolor of a Parisian café, the soft blur of rain on cobblestones. The more she painted, the more she felt herself coming back to life. She rented a studio in a quiet Italian village for a few months, filling canvases with colors she hadn’t touched in years. The passion she’d lost crept back, tentative at first, then bold and unapologetic.
By the two-year mark, she’d opened her own gallery in a small city she’d fallen in love with during her travels. It was a modest space, all white walls and natural light, where she hung her paintings—pieces of her soul laid bare for strangers to see. She met new people: artists, travelers, locals who saw her not as the dutiful daughter or the heartbroken ex, but as Y/N, the woman who’d built something out of nothing. She smiled more, a genuine smile that reached her eyes, and for the first time in years, she felt content. Happy, even.
But Wonwoo never left her mind. She still loved him, a quiet, persistent ache that lived in the spaces between her ribs. She’d reactivated her social media under a new name, posting her paintings and snippets of her life—sunsets, coffee cups, her hands stained with paint. She didn’t know if he saw them, but she hoped he did. Late at night, she’d scroll through his old Instagram, the same handful of photos he’d posted years ago, frozen in time. He hadn’t updated it since the breakup, and the silence nibbled at her. Was he okay? Was he happy? Did he hate her for what she’d done? Selfishly, she wished he still loved her, that he was waiting for her to come back, even though she knew she had no right to ask that of him.
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Wonwoo, meanwhile, had been living a half-life. The hospital kept him busy—long shifts stitching wounds, setting bones, saving lives—but it couldn’t fill the emptiness she’d left behind. He’d stayed in their old apartment for a while, surrounded by ghosts of her laughter, her scent, her presence, until it became unbearable. He moved to a smaller place near the hospital, a sterile box with no memories, and threw himself into work.
He didn’t talk about her, not even to his colleagues. But he followed her, quietly, through the new account she’d made. He’d found it by chance one sleepless night, a painting of a stormy sea popping up in his explore feed, her name attached to it. He didn’t follow her—he couldn’t bring himself to—but he checked it religiously, scrolling through her posts like a man starving for scraps. She looked happy, her smile genuine in a way he hadn’t seen in years, and it both warmed and broke him. He wanted her to be happy, more than anything, but God, he missed her. He missed her so much it felt like a physical weight, pressing down on his chest every time he breathed.
He didn’t date. Friends tried to set him up, but he brushed them off with a polite smile and a vague excuse. How could he explain that his heart still belonged to her, that no one else could ever compare? He didn’t know if she’d come back, didn’t know if he’d even want her to after everything, but he couldn’t let go. He wished for destiny to intervene, to bring them back together when the time was right, if it ever would be.
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Two years after the breakup, on a crisp afternoon, Wonwoo found himself in a car with Soo-jin, a new friend he’d met at the hospital. Soo-jin was a pediatrician, a bright-eyed woman with a sharp wit and a love for painting that rivaled her dedication to medicine. They’d bonded over late-night coffee in the break room, her chatter about art exhibitions cutting through the monotony of his days. Her birthday was approaching, and she’d been pestering him for weeks to visit a new gallery opening near the hospital. “It’s small, but the artist is incredible,” she’d said, her voice brimming with excitement. “Please, Wonwoo. Come with me. It’s all I want for my birthday.”
He’d agreed, more out of obligation than interest. Art hadn’t held much appeal for him since Y/N left—too many emotions he didn’t want to face—but Soo-jin’s enthusiasm was hard to resist. As they drove, she filled the silence with stories about the painter, someone she’d heard about through a friend, though Wonwoo only half-listened, gazing out the window at the city blurring by.
The gallery was tucked into a quiet street, a sleek little building with a sign that read “Horizon” in elegant script. Inside, it was warm and bright, the walls lined with paintings that pulsed with life—landscapes, portraits, abstract swirls of color. Soo-jin darted off to admire the pieces, her phone out to snap photos, her voice bubbling with delight as she chatted with strangers. Wonwoo wandered aimlessly, hands in his pockets, letting the crowd’s hum wash over him.
He stopped in front of a painting near the back, his breath catching. It was a scene of a library, soft and muted, with a boy sitting at a table, headphones over his ears, lost in a book. A girl stood a few feet away, her camera raised to snap a photo of him, a shy smile on her face. The details were uncanny—the slant of the boy’s shoulders, the way the girl’s hair fell over one eye. It was them, or at least a version of them, captured in the moment they’d met all those years ago. He remembered it vividly: her fumbling with the camera, him pretending not to notice until she’d laughed and introduced herself.
His heart thudded in his chest. It could be a coincidence, he told himself. Libraries were common, headphones and cameras too. But something about it—the tenderness in the brushstrokes, the quiet intimacy—felt too personal, too specific. He stepped closer, reading the title on the plaque: “First Light.” No artist name, just that.
He turned to a staff member nearby, a young woman with a clipboard. “Excuse me,” he said, his voice rougher than he intended. “I’d like to buy this one.”
She smiled. “Great choice. It’s one of the artist’s favorites. I’ll get the paperwork started—oh, here she comes now. She can tell you more about it.”
Wonwoo froze as a figure talked from behind him, her voice cutting through the air like a blade he’d never stopped feeling. “This one’s special,” she was saying, her tone warm and familiar. “It’s about beginnings, about finding something you didn’t know you were looking for.”
He didn’t turn around, couldn’t, his body locked in place as the realization crashed over him. It was her. Y/N. Her voice was unmistakable, softer now, lighter, but still the one that had haunted his dreams for two years. She hadn’t seen him yet, his back to her as she spoke to the staff member, gesturing at the painting.
“It was inspired by a memory,” she continued, oblivious to the storm brewing in the man behind her. “A moment that changed everything.”
Wonwoo’s hands clenched at his sides, his throat tight. He wanted to run, to disappear before she turned and saw him, but his feet wouldn’t move. The staff member nodded and stepped away, leaving Y/N alone with the painting—and with him.
He turned then, casually, as if the world wasn’t about to tilt on its axis. Their eyes met, and time stopped.
Her face went pale, her lips parting in a silent gasp. “Wonwoo?”
He couldn’t speak, couldn’t breathe. She looked different—her hair shorter, her eyes brighter—but she was still her, the woman he’d loved for a decade, the woman he’d let go. And here she was, standing in front of him, holding a piece of their past in her hands.
“Y/N,” he managed finally, his voice barely a whisper.
For a moment, they just stared, the gallery fading away, the noise of Soo-jin’s laughter and the chatter of strangers swallowed by the weight of their silence. Two years of longing, of wondering, of healing and breaking all over again, condensed into this single, fragile moment.
And then she smiled—a small, trembling thing—and said, “I didn’t know you’d be here.”
He’d opened his mouth to respond, perhaps to say something that could bridge the gap, when the bubble burst.
“Wonwoo! Oh my God, you have to see this one!” Soo-jin’s voice cut through the silence, bright and oblivious, shattering the moment like glass. She bounded over from the other side of the gallery, her dark ponytail bouncing with each step, her face alight with the kind of joy only art could spark in her. Before Wonwoo could react, she looped her arm through his, her fingers curling around his elbow with a familiarity that came from months of easy friendship. She didn’t notice the way he stiffened, didn’t see the woman standing just feet away, didn’t sense the storm brewing in the space she’d unwittingly invaded.
“Come on,” Soo-jin urged, tugging him toward a painting on the far wall, her smile wide and unguarded. “This one’s incredible—look at the colors! It’s like she bottled a sunrise and spilled it onto the canvas.”
Wonwoo stumbled forward, pulled by her momentum, his mind a chaotic swirl of panic and indecision. He glanced back at Y/N, his eyes pleading for her to wait, to understand, but Soo-jin’s chatter drowned out any chance of explanation. “I swear, this artist is a genius,” she was saying, her voice a steady stream of excitement as she dragged him along. “You’re so quiet today—don’t tell me you’re bored already!”
He couldn’t find his voice, couldn’t form the words to stop her, to turn back to Y/N and say what needed to be said. His feet moved mechanically, following Soo-jin’s lead, but his heart stayed rooted in that spot where Y/N stood, watching him go.
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Y/N felt the ground shift beneath her, a slow, sickening tilt that threatened to swallow her whole. She’d been about to speak, to ask him how he was, to tell him she’d missed him—something, anything to keep him there with her. But then the girl appeared, all brightness and energy, clinging to Wonwoo like she belonged there. Y/N’s breath caught in her throat, her hands trembling at her sides as she watched them.
The girl—Soo-jin, she’d heard her name in the chatter—was beautiful in a effortless way, her smile radiant, her enthusiasm infectious. She pulled Wonwoo away with a laugh, her arm hooked through his as if it were the most natural thing in the world, and he went with her. He didn’t pull away, didn’t stop her, didn’t turn back to Y/N with more than a fleeting glance. And in that moment, the fragile hope Y/N had clung to shattered.
She stood there, alone in the middle of her own gallery, surrounded by the paintings she’d poured her soul into, and felt the weight of two years crash down on her. He’d moved on. Of course, he had. She’d left him, walked away from their life together, and now he’d found someone else—someone who could make him smile, someone who didn’t carry the baggage of her regrets. The girl’s laughter echoed faintly, a sharp contrast to the silence ringing in Y/N’s ears, and she couldn’t look away.
Soo-jin was pointing at a painting now, her voice animated as she gestured wildly, her body leaning into Wonwoo’s space. He stood beside her, nodding absently, but Y/N couldn’t see his face, couldn’t read his expression. All she saw was the ease between them, the way Soo-jin’s hand rested on his arm, the way he didn’t pull away. It was enough to twist the knife deeper.
She’d spent two years rebuilding herself, painting her way out of the darkness, convincing herself she could be happy without him. But seeing him now, with someone else, made her realize how much she’d still been holding onto him—how much she’d hoped, in her selfish, secret heart, that he’d waited for her. That he still loved her the way she still loved him. But this—this was proof she’d been wrong.
Her chest ached, a hollow pain that spread like ink through water, staining everything it touched. She turned away, blinking back the tears that threatened to spill, and busied herself with a stack of flyers on a nearby table, her hands shaking as she shuffled them pointlessly. She wouldn’t cry here, not in her own gallery, not where he could see. She’d walked away from him once; she could survive this too.
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Wonwoo’s mind was a battlefield. Soo-jin’s voice washed over him, a stream of words about brushstrokes and light that he couldn’t process. His body was here, standing in front of a vibrant painting of a sunrise, but his thoughts were back there, with Y/N. He’d seen the shock in her eyes, the flicker of something—hope, maybe—before Soo-jin had pulled him away. And now he was stuck, trapped between the friend who didn’t know what she’d interrupted and the woman he’d never stopped loving.
“Wonwoo, are you even listening?” Soo-jin teased, nudging him with her elbow. “You’re like a statue today. What’s up with you?”
He forced a smile, his throat tight. “Sorry. Just… distracted.”
She tilted her head, studying him with a mix of curiosity and concern, but before she could press further, her eyes lit up again. “Oh, wait, there’s another one over here—come on!” She grabbed his hand this time, pulling him toward a cluster of smaller canvases, her excitement undeterred by his silence.
He let her lead him, his limbs heavy, his heart pounding. He wanted to turn back, to run to Y/N and explain—explain that Soo-jin was just a friend, that he hadn’t moved on, that seeing her again had ripped open every wound he’d tried to heal. But how could he? Soo-jin was oblivious, her arm still linked with his, and Y/N was… God, he didn’t even know what she was thinking. Had she seen this and assumed the worst? Did she think he’d replaced her?
The thought made him sick. He glanced over his shoulder, searching for her in the crowd, but she’d moved. She was by a table now, her back to him, her head bowed as she fiddled with something—papers, maybe. The distance between them felt insurmountable, a gulf widened by misunderstanding and two years of silence.
“Seriously, Wonwoo, you’re killing me here,” Soo-jin said, laughing as she let go of his hand to step closer to a painting of a stormy sea. “If I didn’t know better, I’d think you were in love with this artist or something.”
He flinched, the words hitting too close to home. “It’s not that,” he muttered, shoving his hands into his pockets. “Just… tired.”
She raised an eyebrow, unconvinced, but shrugged it off. “Well, perk up. We’re here to have fun, remember? My birthday gift?”
He nodded, forcing another smile, but his mind was elsewhere. He needed to talk to Y/N, to clear this up before it spiraled into something he couldn’t fix. But how? Soo-jin was relentless, her energy pulling him along like a current he couldn’t fight, and Y/N was retreating, slipping further away with every second he didn’t act.
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Y/N watched them from the corner of her eye, her hands still clutching the flyers she didn’t need to organize. Soo-jin was talking animatedly, her hands waving as she pointed at another painting, and Wonwoo stood beside her, his posture stiff but attentive. They looked good together, she thought bitterly—Soo-jin’s brightness balancing his quiet steadiness in a way Y/N never had. She’d always been the storm, the chaos, the one who needed saving. Maybe he was better off with someone who didn’t carry so much weight.
She swallowed the lump in her throat, turning fully away now, her back to them as she pretended to adjust a frame on the wall. The painting in front of her blurred, her vision swimming with tears she refused to let fall. She’d made her choice two years ago, walked away to find herself, and she’d done it—she’d built this gallery, found her passion, carved out a life that was hers. So why did it feel like she’d lost everything all over again?
A staff member approached, her voice hesitant. “Y/N? Someone’s asking about First Light. They want to buy it.”
She nodded, forcing her voice steady. “I’ll handle it. Give me a minute.”
She took a deep breath, smoothing her expression into something neutral, something professional. She could do this. She could face him again, sell him the painting, and let him walk away with Soo-jin without breaking down. She’d survived worse.
But as she turned back toward the spot where she’d left him, she saw Soo-jin laughing, her head tipping back as she grabbed Wonwoo’s arm again, pulling him toward the exit. He glanced back once more, his eyes finding hers across the room, and for a heartbeat, she thought he might come back. That he might break free and close the distance between them.
He didn’t. Soo-jin’s tug was insistent, and he followed her out the door, disappearing into the evening light.
Y/N stood there, the gallery suddenly too quiet, the weight of her own assumptions pressing down on her. He was gone, and he’d taken her last shred of hope with him.
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Wonwoo stepped outside, the cool air hitting his face like a slap. Soo-jin was still talking, her voice a distant hum as she pointed at something down the street, but he couldn’t focus. His mind was back in the gallery, with Y/N’s pale face, her trembling smile, the way she’d looked at him like he’d just broken her heart all over again.
“Wonwoo, you’re hopeless,” Soo-jin said, laughing as she nudged him. “I dragged you here to cheer you up, and you look like you’ve seen a ghost.”
He stopped walking, his hands clenching in his pockets. “Soo-jin,” he said, his voice low. “I need to go back.”
She blinked, surprised. “What? Why? We just got here—”
“There’s something I need to do,” he cut in, his tone firm despite the tremor in it. “I’ll meet you later, okay? I’m sorry.”
She frowned, clearly confused, but nodded. “Okay, fine. But you owe me a coffee for ditching me on my birthday outing.”
“Deal,” he said, already turning back toward the gallery, his pulse racing. He didn’t know what he’d say, didn’t know how to fix this, but he couldn’t leave it like this—not with her thinking he’d moved on, not when every fiber of him still belonged to her.
He pushed through the door, his eyes scanning the room, and froze. Y/N was standing by First Light—the painting he’d planned to buy, the one that captured their beginning—talking to a man in a sharp suit. The man was gesturing at the canvas, his voice loud enough to carry. “I’ll pay double whatever’s on the tag,” he was saying. “It’s perfect for my office.”
Wonwoo’s stomach dropped. He strode forward, his resolve hardening. “It’s already reserved,” he said, stepping into the conversation, his voice steady despite the chaos in his chest. “I spoke to the staff earlier. It’s mine.”
The man turned, his brow furrowing. “I don’t see a sold sign. I want it, and I’m willing to negotiate.”
“It’s not for sale to you,” Wonwoo shot back, his tone sharper than he intended. “I’ve claimed it.”
Y/N’s head snapped up, her eyes widening as she saw him again. Shock flickered across her face, followed by a tangle of emotions she couldn’t hide—confusion, hope, fear. She opened her mouth, but the man cut in, undeterred.
“Come on, name your price,” he pressed, crossing his arms. “I’m not leaving without it.”
Wonwoo’s jaw tightened, his hands curling into fists. He wasn’t just fighting for a painting; he was fighting for a piece of them, a memory he refused to let slip away. “It’s not about money. It’s mine.”
“Enough,” Y/N said suddenly, stepping between them, her voice firm but trembling. “This painting isn’t for sale. I made it for myself. It’s not going anywhere.”
The man huffed, clearly annoyed, but he read the resolve in her eyes and relented. “Fine. Your loss.” He stalked off, muttering under his breath, leaving them alone once more.
The gallery seemed to shrink around them, the hum of the crowd fading into a distant murmur. Y/N and Wonwoo stood there, inches apart, staring at each other like they’d forgotten how to breathe. Her chest rose and fell unevenly, her fingers clutching the edge of her sleeve, and he saw the question in her eyes—why had he come back?
Neither spoke, the silence stretching taut between them, heavy with everything they hadn’t said in two years. His heart pounded, a thousand words fighting to break free, but he waited, letting her set the pace.
“Y/N!” a staff member called from across the room, breaking the spell. “We need you over here—someone’s asking about the seascape.”
She glanced away, then back at him, her gaze softening. “I’ll be back,” she said quietly, hesitating. “Will you…?”
“I’ll wait,” Wonwoo replied, his voice low but laced with meaning. “However long it takes.”
She nodded, a faint flicker of understanding passing between them, and turned to follow the staff member. He watched her go, her silhouette moving through the crowd, and settled against the wall, his eyes fixed on First Light. He’d waited two years for her—through the silence, the longing, the nights he’d replayed their last moments together. He’d wait now, as long as she needed.
That day, their tenth anniversary, he’d had a ring in his pocket, a question on his lips. He’d planned to propose, to bind their lives together forever, but she’d walked away before he could ask. Things had happened, life had shifted, but he wouldn’t let it happen again. Not this time.
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an: This has been sitting in my drafts for months. I don’t have any plans to post it, but instead of deleting it, I might just share it hihi.
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amyzworldds · 22 days ago
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Heyy hope you're doing well!! can you write about 14th member of seventeen being late to practice and the members lash out on her esp the leader line (scoups,woozi,hoshi) but what they didn't know was that y/n lost a family member the other day so shes really struggling with grief at the moment. THANK YOUUU 🩷🩷
Title: A Family Found in Grief
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Y/N is shattered by her grandmother’s sudden death. Rushing to the hospital, she faces grief alone until her bandmates, initially upset by her absence, learn the truth and join her at the funeral. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th member Genre: Angst Warnings: This story contains themes of death of a loved one, hospital settings, and grief. WC: 4.5k
The night was heavy, a quiet blanket draped over Seoul, the city’s usual hum muted under the weight of exhaustion. Y/N, collapsed onto her bed in her modest apartment, her limbs aching from a relentless day. Photoshoots with blinding flashes, recording sessions that stretched her vocal cords thin, dance practice that left her muscles screaming, and a guest appearance on a talk show where she plastered on her brightest smile—it was all too much. Her phone lay silent on the nightstand, its screen dark, mirroring the exhaustion in her bones. She was moments from slipping into sleep when the sharp ring of her phone cut through the stillness.
“Who’s calling this late?” she muttered, rubbing her eyes as she reached for the device. The screen lit up with Mom. A faint smile tugged at her lips—probably another late-night gossip session or one of her dad’s corny jokes her mom loved to relay. She swiped to answer, her voice soft and groggy. “Hey, Mom, what’s up? Another dad joke?”
But the voice on the other end wasn’t warm or teasing. It was jagged, broken by sobs. “Y/N, sweetheart, it’s—it’s Grandma,” her mother choked out, her words trembling. “She’s in the hospital. It’s bad, honey. We’re on vacation, but we’re booking a flight back to Korea right now. Can you—can you go to her? Please, Y/N, she needs you.”
Y/N’s heart plummeted, the air sucked out of her lungs. “What? Grandma? What happened? Is she okay?” Her voice cracked, sleep evaporating as panic clawed at her chest.
“She collapsed,” her mother sobbed. “They don’t know yet, but it’s serious. Please, Y/N, go now. We’ll be there as soon as we can.”
The call ended, leaving Y/N frozen, her phone trembling in her hand. Her grandmother—her rock, her fiercest supporter. The woman who, when Y/N’s parents scoffed at her dreams of becoming a singer, sat her down and said, “You chase that star, my girl. Don’t let anyone dim your light.” The woman who watched every Seventeen performance on TV, no matter how small, and sent Y/N texts like, “My superstar, you made me cry with pride today.” The thought of her lying in a hospital bed, frail and fighting, shattered Y/N’s heart.
She stumbled out of bed, throwing on a hoodie and grabbing her keys. The drive to the hospital was a blur, her hands shaking on the steering wheel, her mind a storm of “What if I’m too late?” and “Please, Grandma, hold on.” The city lights streaked past, but all she could see was her grandmother’s warm smile, her weathered hands clapping along to Y/N’s first stage performance.
At the hospital, the sterile smell of antiseptic hit her like a wall. She ran to the reception desk, her voice frantic. “I’m here for my grandmother, Park Hye-sook. Where is she? Please, I need to see her!”
The nurse’s face was kind but strained. “She’s in the ICU, miss. The doctors are with her now. Please, take a seat, and they’ll update you soon.”
Y/N’s knees buckled, but she forced herself to sit in the cold, plastic chair in the waiting area. Her phone buzzed—texts from her sister, Min-ji, who was on her way. Y/N clutched the device, her lifeline to the outside world, but she couldn’t bring herself to call the boys or their manager. Not yet. This pain was too raw, too personal.
Minutes bled into hours. Y/N’s eyes burned from staring at the ICU doors, willing them to open with good news. Finally, a doctor emerged, his face etched with a seriousness that made Y/N’s stomach lurch. She stood, her legs wobbly, Min-ji arriving just in time to grab her hand.
“Are you Park Hye-sook’s family?” the doctor asked, his voice low.
Y/N nodded, her throat tight. “Yes, I’m her granddaughter, Y/N. This is my sister, Min-ji. Please, how is she?”
The doctor’s eyes softened, but his words were a knife. “I’m so sorry. We did everything we could, but your grandmother’s condition was too severe. Her heart gave out. She passed away a few minutes ago.”
The world tilted. Y/N’s knees gave way, and Min-ji caught her, both of them sinking to the floor. “No,” Y/N whispered, her voice breaking. “No, no, no, she can’t be gone. She was supposed to see my next comeback. She was supposed to—” Her words dissolved into sobs, raw and guttural, tearing from her chest. Min-ji clung to her, crying just as hard, their grief a shared wound.
“She was so proud of you, Y/N,” Min-ji managed through her tears. “She always said you were her greatest joy.”
Y/N’s mind flashed to her grandmother’s last text after SEVENTEEN’s latest performance: “My Y/N, you shine brighter than all the stars. Keep singing for me.” The memory was a dagger, twisting deeper. She couldn’t call her parents—they were probably on a plane, unreachable. It was just her and Min-ji, two girls drowning in loss in the sterile hospital corridor.
The rest of the night was a haze of heartbreak and duty. Y/N didn’t sleep, didn’t eat, didn’t think about Seventeen or the schedule waiting for her tomorrow. She forgot to text the boys, forgot to tell their manager she wouldn’t make it to morning practice. Her world had narrowed to this hospital, to the unbearable task of arranging her grandmother’s funeral. She sent messages to family members, her fingers trembling as she typed, “Grandma passed away tonight. Please come to Seoul General Hospital.”
One by one, aunts, uncles, and cousins arrived, their faces mirroring Y/N’s devastation. They took over some tasks—speaking with the funeral director, arranging transport—but Y/N couldn’t let go of the responsibility. “She’d want me to do this right,” she whispered to Min-ji as they sorted through paperwork, her voice hollow. “She always said I was strong enough for anything.”
But she didn’t feel strong. She felt like a child, lost and aching for the woman who believed in her when no one else did. The hospital lights buzzed overhead, cold and unforgiving, as Y/N sat by her grandmother’s side one last time, holding her hand, now still and cool. “I’m so sorry, Grandma,” she sobbed. “I should’ve been here sooner. I should’ve told you I love you one more time.”
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The night had stretched into an eternity, each minute heavy with the weight of her grandmother’s absence. Her aunties began to arrive, their soft footsteps and murmured condolences filling the space, but Y/N barely registered their presence. Her heart was a hollow drum, beating only with grief.
Min-ji, her sister, slid into the seat beside her, gently taking Y/N’s cold hands in her own. “You okay, Y/N? I mean, I know you’re not, but…” Her voice wavered, her own eyes red from crying. She squeezed Y/N’s hands tighter, trying to anchor her. “Grandma texted me last night, you know. She was so excited, asking me to help her organize her Seventeen merch collection again.”
Y/N’s lips twitched, a ghost of a smile breaking through her daze. “She was obsessed with that collection,” she whispered, her voice hoarse. “Her house… it’s like a museum of us. Of me.”
Min-ji let out a soft laugh, though it was tinged with sorrow. “Yeah, every wall’s got your face on it. Posters, albums, that one giant cutout of you from the last comeback—she’d point at it and say, ‘That’s my girl, the brightest star in Seventeen.’” She paused, her voice cracking. “She even had a shelf just for the signed stuff. Remember how she’d call you every time new merch dropped, demanding autographs from every member?”
Y/N’s smile grew, bittersweet. “She’d call me at, like, 2 am, saying, ‘Y/N, I need Woozi’s signature on this photocard, and don’t you dare forget Hoshi!’” She shook her head, the memory warming her for a fleeting moment before the ache returned. “She loved you guys so much. She was our biggest fan.”
Their auntie, Soo-jin, approached quietly, her face etched with concern as she sat on Y/N’s other side. “Y/N, sweetheart, have you told your company yet? The boys? They should know what’s going on.”
The words hit like a jolt. Y/N’s eyes widened, her breath catching. “Oh no… I forgot,” she admitted, her voice barely audible. The thought of texting the members or their manager felt like climbing a mountain. Her phone sat heavy in her pocket, untouched since she’d messaged her family. “I… I can’t right now. I’m too tired. I’ll tell them tomorrow.”
Soo-jin’s brow furrowed, her hand resting gently on Y/N’s shoulder. “You need to rest, Y/N. You look like you’re about to collapse. Let us handle things here for a bit.”
Min-ji nodded, her grip on Y/N’s hand tightening. “She’s right, Y/N. You haven’t slept, and you’re pale as a ghost. Grandma wouldn’t want you running yourself into the ground like this.”
Y/N’s shoulders slumped, exhaustion winning over her stubbornness. “Okay,” she murmured, her voice small. “I’ll go home, rest for a bit. I’ll head to the company tomorrow to tell them, then come back to the funeral.”
Her uncle, Jae-ho, who had been quietly coordinating with the funeral director, stepped forward. “I’ll drive you home, Y/N. No arguments.” His tone was firm but kind, and Y/N didn’t have the energy to protest.
The drive back to her apartment was silent, the city’s lights blurring past like tears streaking down a window. Y/N leaned her head against the cool glass, her grandmother’s voice echoing in her mind: “You shine brighter than all the stars.” The words felt like a promise she wasn’t sure she could keep anymore.
When they reached her apartment, Y/N stumbled through the door, her uncle’s gentle “Get some sleep, kiddo” following her inside. She collapsed onto her bed, still in her hoodie, her heart a leaden weight in her chest. As her eyes fluttered shut, the image of her grandmother’s proud smile lingered, and sleep claimed her, heavy with grief and unspoken goodbyes.
The next morning light filtered weakly through Y/N’s curtains, but it did little to lift the heaviness that clung to her. She woke late, her body protesting from the chaos of the previous night. Her phone lay untouched on the nightstand, likely buzzing with missed calls and texts from the boys, who were probably at the HYBE building for their early practice. Seventeen’s schedule was relentless, and Y/N knew they’d be wondering where she was, but the thought of facing her phone—of facing anyone—felt like too much. Her heart was still raw, her grandmother’s absence a wound that hadn’t stopped bleeding.
After dragging herself out of bed, Y/N took a quick shower, the hot water doing little to soothe her. She pulled on a loose hoodie and a cap, tugging it low to hide her puffy, tear-streaked face. As she drove to the HYBE building, her vision blurred with fresh tears. Memories of her grandmother flooded her mind—her infectious laugh that could light up a room, the way she’d cook mountains of food for the members whenever they visited. “You boys and my Y/N work too hard,” she’d say, piling plates high with kimchi jjigae and bulgogi. “Eat up, or I’ll tell the fans you’re not taking care of my girl!” The thought of never hearing that laugh again made Y/N’s chest tighten, and she had to grip the steering wheel to steady herself.
She parked outside the HYBE building, wiping her tears with the sleeve of her hoodie before stepping out. Keeping her cap low, she slipped into the elevator, only to find their manager, Min-soo, already inside. She forced a small bow, her voice barely above a whisper. “Good morning, Min-soo oppa.”
He frowned, noting her disheveled appearance. “Y/N, you okay? You look… rough.”
Her throat tightened, but she pushed the words out. “My grandmother… she passed away last night. I was at the hospital.”
Min-soo’s face softened, his eyes filled with sympathy. “I’m so sorry, Y/N. My deepest condolences. Why didn’t you text me? I could’ve informed everyone, and you could’ve stayed at the funeral. You need rest.”
Y/N shook her head, her voice trembling. “I wanted to tell the boys myself. They deserve to hear it from me.”
Min-soo nodded, though his concern lingered. “The boys have been asking about you. They’re in the practice room, but… you haven’t told them yet, have you?”
“No,” Y/N admitted, her gaze dropping to the floor. “I haven’t had the chance.”
“Alright,” Min-soo said gently. “But, Y/N, you don’t have to push yourself. The company can give you a hiatus. We’ll post a notice later to inform the fans about your grandmother. You focus on your family for now.”
Y/N nodded, too drained to argue. “Thank you, oppa.”
The elevator dinged, and they stepped out. Min-soo gave her a reassuring pat on the shoulder before she headed to the practice room. Her heart pounded as she opened the door, the familiar thump of music and the sound of sneakers squeaking on the floor greeting her. The boys were scattered across the room, sweat-soaked and visibly exhausted from hours of practicing new choreography. The air was thick with tension, and Y/N’s stomach churned.
Before she could speak, Seungcheol’s sharp voice cut through the room. “Y/N, where have you been? You’re hours late. We’ve been waiting for you!” His face was a mix of frustration and annoyance, his arms crossed tightly.
Hoshi, the performance unit leader, didn’t hold back either. “You know better than this, Y/N. We’re learning a new choreo, and it’s already a mess with one member missing. This isn’t just about you—it affects all of us.” His tone was stern, his usual playful demeanor buried under the weight of his responsibility.
Woozi, usually calm, added fuel to the fire, his voice clipped. “We can’t keep adjusting because someone didn’t show up. What’s going on, Y/N?”
The three of them stared at her, their annoyance palpable. Y/N stood frozen, her head bowed, the brim of her cap hiding the tears welling in her eyes. She knew she should’ve texted, should’ve warned them, but the weight of her grief had swallowed everything else. Hoshi shook his head and stormed out, muttering under his breath. Woozi followed, his expression unreadable, while Seungcheol gave her a lingering look, a faint smile that didn’t reach his eyes before he left too.
Y/N stood there, alone in the silence, guilt piling onto her already shattered heart. “It’s my fault,” she whispered to herself. “I should’ve told them. They don’t know…”
Before she could gather her thoughts, Min-soo reentered the room, his phone in hand. “Y/N, the company’s sending flowers to the funeral as a condolence. Can you give me the address?” He paused, glancing at the remaining members, who had frozen mid-stretch, their eyes snapping to Y/N. “I’ve informed the company, and we’re drafting a notice for the fans now.”
The room went deathly quiet. Joshua, his voice soft but laced with concern, stepped forward. “Wait… what happened, Y/N? Funeral? Is everything okay?”
Y/N’s throat closed up. She wanted to explain, to tell them about her grandmother, about the woman who loved them all like her own, but the words wouldn’t come. “Thank you, oppa,” she said to Min-soo, her voice barely audible, before turning and bolting out of the room.
In the hallway, she passed Hoshi, who called out, “Y/N, wait!” But she couldn’t stop, couldn’t face him or the others. Her exhaustion, her heartbreak, her guilt—it was all too much. She understood why they were upset; she’d left them in the dark, but the sting of their anger without asking why cut deeper than she expected.
She drove back to the funeral, her hands shaking on the wheel. At the venue, she changed into a black and white hanbok, the traditional mourning clothes feeling like a physical manifestation of her grief. As she stepped into the room filled with her grandmother’s memory, the weight of the day pressed down on her, and she braced herself to face the next steps alone, her heart still heavy with unspoken words.
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Back at the HYBE practice room, the air was thick with tension and exhaustion. The remaining members stood in a loose circle, catching their breath after hours of grueling choreography. Seungcheol, still reeling from the earlier confrontation, turned to their manager, Min-soo, who lingered by the door. His brow furrowed with unease. “Min-soo hyung, what was that about a funeral? What’s going on with Y/N?”
Min-soo’s eyes widened slightly, surprise flickering across his face. “Wait, she didn’t tell you guys?” He paused, rubbing the back of his neck as the members exchanged confused glances. “Y/N’s grandmother passed away last night. She was at the hospital dealing with everything. That’s why she was late. She’s taking a hiatus for now, so we’ll need to adjust the choreography until she’s ready to return.”
The room fell into a stunned silence, the weight of the revelation settling over them like a heavy fog. Seungcheol’s face paled, his earlier annoyance replaced by a sinking guilt. “Nobody knew?” he asked, his voice low as he scanned the group. The members shook their heads, their expressions a mix of shock and regret.
Hoshi, who had just reentered the room, caught the tail end of the conversation. His usual energy was subdued, sensing the shift in the atmosphere. “What’s going on? What happened?” he asked, looking from Seungcheol to Min-soo.
Joshua, his voice soft but heavy, filled him in. “Y/N’s grandmother passed away last night. That’s why she was late. She’s at the funeral now, and she’s taking a break from the group for a bit.”
Hoshi’s eyes widened, his hand flying to his mouth. “Oh no… I didn’t know. I—I yelled at her.” His voice cracked, guilt washing over him. “I thought she was just… I didn’t mean to come at her like that.”
Woozi, who had been quiet, clenched his fists, his jaw tight. “None of us knew,” he muttered, his usual composure fraying. “I feel like such an idiot. We should’ve asked her what was wrong instead of jumping down her throat.”
Seungcheol nodded, his own guilt mirrored in his eyes. “We messed up. Big time. She’s going through hell, and we made it worse.”
The group fell silent again, the weight of their actions settling heavily on their shoulders. Min-soo cleared his throat, breaking the quiet. “I’m heading out to arrange the flowers we’re sending to the funeral. You guys… figure out how to make this right.” He gave them a pointed look before leaving the room.
Hoshi sank onto the floor, running a hand through his hair. “I feel awful. She’s always been there for us, and the one time she needed us to understand, we just… didn’t.”
Jeonghan, who had been quietly processing, spoke up, his voice gentle but firm. “We need to apologize. Properly. And we need to be there for her now. She shouldn’t have to go through this alone.”
The others nodded, a shared resolve forming. Seungcheol pulled out his phone, his fingers hovering over the group chat. “Let’s start with this,” he said, beginning to type.
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At the funeral, the air was heavy with the scent of chrysanthemums and the soft hum of murmured condolences. Y/N stood quietly in her black and white hanbok, her parents now by her side, their faces etched with grief. Her mother held her hand tightly, whispering, “Your grandmother was so proud of you, Y/N. She’s still watching, you know.”
Y/N nodded, her throat too tight to respond. Her phone had been buzzing all morning with messages from close friends and comments from fans on her social media, where the company had posted a notice about her grandmother’s passing. The outpouring of love was overwhelming, but it couldn’t fill the void left by her grandmother’s absence.
Her phone vibrated again, and she glanced at it, expecting another condolence. Instead, it was the group chat. Seungcheol’s name popped up with a long message:
“Y/N, I’m so, so sorry about earlier. We had no idea what you were going through. We were frustrated, but that’s no excuse for not asking why you were late. We feel terrible for adding to your pain. Your grandmother was such an incredible woman, and we’re all heartbroken for you. Please accept our deepest condolences. We’re finishing up our schedules today, and we’ll come to the funeral to support you. We’re here for you, always. – Cheol”
One by one, messages from the other members flooded in:
“I’m so sorry, Y/N. I didn’t know. We love you, and we’re here for you. – Hoshi”
“I feel like such a jerk. Please let us make this right. We’re so sorry for your loss. – Woozi”
“Y/N, we’re coming to be with you. Your grandma was the best. We’re so sorry. – Joshua”
Tears welled in Y/N’s eyes as she read the messages, a mix of relief and lingering hurt washing over her. She understood their frustration in the moment—they hadn’t known—but the sting of their words still lingered. Still, their apologies and promise to come to the funeral warmed a small corner of her heart.
She slipped her phone back into her pocket, turning to face her family and the mourners. The funeral parlor was filled with memories of her grandmother, but now, Y/N felt a flicker of hope that she wouldn’t have to carry this grief alone. The boys were coming, and despite the pain of the morning, she knew they’d stand by her, just as her grandmother always had.
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The funeral parlor was bathed in the soft glow of candles, their flickering light casting shadows over the framed photo of Y/N’s grandmother, her bright smile a stark contrast to the heavy silence of the room. Y/N sat motionless, her eyes fixed on the picture, the weight of her loss anchoring her to the spot. Her phone, buzzing earlier with the boys’ apologies, lay untouched in her pocket. She couldn’t bring herself to respond—not because she didn’t forgive them, but because the grief was too consuming, a tide pulling her under.
As night fell, the sound of familiar voices broke through the quiet hum of the funeral hall. The Seventeen members arrived, their presence a gentle ripple in the stillness. Y/N didn’t look up, her gaze locked on her grandmother’s smiling face, but she felt them before she saw them—the warmth of their concern, the quiet shuffle of their steps. Her mother, her eyes red but grateful, greeted them at the entrance. “Thank you for coming, boys,” she said, her voice trembling. “Please, talk to Y/N. She’s… she’s not listening to us. She hasn’t eaten or rested all day.”
One by one, the members approached, their faces etched with sorrow and guilt. Seungcheol knelt in front of her, his voice soft. “Y/N, we’re so sorry about your grandma. She was one of a kind. We’re here for you, okay?”
Joshua followed, placing a gentle hand on her shoulder. “She was your biggest fan, Y/N. Our biggest fan. We’re so sorry for your loss.”
Hoshi, his usual spark dimmed by regret, added quietly, “I’m so sorry for earlier, Y/N. I didn’t know. Your grandma… she was like family to us too.”
Y/N remained silent, her hands clasped tightly in her lap, but their words wrapped around her like a warm blanket. Jeonghan, ever the gentle soul, sat beside her and pulled her into a hug, his arms steady and comforting. “Hey, you don’t have to say anything,” he whispered, his voice soothing. “But your grandma? She’s up there, probably bragging to all the angels about her superstar granddaughter and her thirteen chaotic grandsons.”
A small, broken laugh escaped Y/N’s lips, the first crack in her stoic facade. Jeonghan’s words painted a vivid picture—her grandmother, with her infectious laugh, proudly showing off Seventeen’s albums to a heavenly audience. “She’d totally do that,” Y/N murmured, her voice barely audible. “She’d say, ‘My Y/N’s the best, and don’t you dare forget her boys!’”
The others chuckled softly, gathering closer. DK, his eyes already glistening, chimed in, “Remember when she came to our concert and brought those homemade banners? I swear, she cheered louder than the entire stadium.”
Seungkwan nodded, his voice thick with emotion. “She made us that huge batch of tteokbokki backstage, and I’m pretty sure she told Mingyu his cooking could never top hers.”
Mingyu laughed, wiping his eyes. “She was right, too. I tried to get her recipe, but she just winked and said, ‘You’ll never know my secrets, pretty boy.’”
The memories flowed, each one a thread weaving a tapestry of love and laughter. Y/N’s resolve crumbled, and the tears she’d held back all day spilled over. She buried her face in Jeonghan’s shoulder, her sobs raw and unrestrained. “I miss her so much,” she choked out. “She was my everything.”
Jeonghan held her tighter, his own eyes misty. “We know, Y/N. We miss her too. But she’s still with you, cheering you on. She’ll be at every performance, front row in heaven.”
DK and Seungkwan, unable to hold back, joined her in crying, their tears a quiet testament to the love they all shared for Y/N’s grandmother. The other members gathered closer, forming a protective circle around her. Vernon rested a hand on her back, “We’re your family, Y/N. You’re not alone in this.”
Woozi, his earlier anger replaced by tenderness, added, “She’d want you to keep shining, you know. She always said you were her star.”
The boys stayed by her side, refusing to let her grieve alone. Mingyu and Dino disappeared briefly, returning with trays of food they’d prepared themselves—simple kimbap and fruit, but made with care. “You need to eat, Y/N,” Mingyu said gently, pushing a plate toward her. “Grandma would have my head if I let you starve.”
Y/N managed a small bite, the act feeling monumental under the weight of her grief. Her mother, watching from across the room, gave the boys a grateful nod. The members also helped with small tasks—arranging flowers, greeting mourners, and ensuring the funeral ran smoothly. A beautiful wreath from the company, adorned with white lilies and a ribbon reading “In Loving Memory,” stood proudly beside her grandmother’s photo, a gesture that brought fresh tears to Y/N’s eyes.
As the night wore on, Seungcheol noticed the dark circles under Y/N’s eyes. “Y/N, you need to rest. You’re exhausted.”
She shook her head, her voice soft but stubborn. “You guys are tired too. You had practice all day. You should go home.”
Hoshi grinned, though his eyes were still red. “Not a chance. We’re not leaving you. Besides, Grandma would haunt us if we didn’t take care of you.”
Y/N’s heart swelled, the warmth of their presence easing the ache just enough to breathe. “Thank you,” she whispered, her voice breaking. “I don’t know what I’d do without you guys.”
Jeonghan squeezed her hand, his smile soft but unwavering. “You’ll never have to find out. We’re here, Y/N. Always.”
As the candles burned low, the boys stayed by her side, their laughter and tears mingling with hers. In the midst of her grief, Y/N found a flicker of solace in the family she’d built with Seventeen, a bond her grandmother had always cherished. And though the pain of loss lingered, their love reminded her that she wasn’t alone—and that her grandmother’s light would shine on through them all.
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an: Hello, I’ve been receiving requests for a 14th member with a love interest in another member. Please bear with me; I’ve been thinking about what type of love story they’ll have and how it will start. If you have ideas, kindly send them my way—my mind has been blank lately, and I need some inspiration, send help! Also, could you request something different, like a non-idol or something other than a 14th member? I have over 40 requests just for the 14th member, and I don’t even know what to write first. Also, I’m planning to write for other artists or groups, so you can send those requests too, hehe.
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amyzworldds · 25 days ago
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SEVENTEEN
S.coups ⤷Shadow of Sacrifice (COMPLETED) ↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Last Part Jeonghan ⤷Echoes of Exhaustion (COMPLETED) ↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 Joshua ⤷Sweet Cookie Competition (One Shot) Jun Hoshi Wonwoo ⤷A Decade of Us (Not yet complete) ↪Part 1 ⤷From Classmates to Soulmates ↪Part 1 | Part 2 ⤷Love Stays ↪Part 1 Woozi ⤷Fitness Quest DK Mingyu ⤷Love Simmered in Chaos (One shot) The8 Seungkwan
  ⤷When Life Gives You Tangerine ↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 |
Part 5
Vernon ⤷A Tale of Unsaid Love ↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 Dino ⤷Long Hair, Don't Care (One shot)
⤷Unspoken Feelings
↪Part 14th Member ⤷Silent Screamer ↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4.1
| Part 4.2 | Part 4.3
⤷ The Little Secret ft. Bang Chan
↪Part 1 | Part 2 ⤷Adventure with Yn
↪Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4 |
Part 5 | Part 6.1 | Part 6.2
⤷Weight of Words ↪Part 1 | Part 2 ⤷Thirteen Cheers for Fourteen ↪Part 1 | Part 2 ⤷Enlistment Blues ↪Part 1 ⤷Forgotten Birthday ↪Part 1 ⤷Blossoming in Silence ↪Part 1 ⤷Unspoken Feelings ↪Part 1
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amyzworldds · 25 days ago
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hi how are you? I really love everything you write 🩷
I would like to ask if you could write about svt x 14th member like one of the members (dino please 🥺) is in love with her and doesn't know what to do with his feelings so he starts being extremely nicer to her until he get jealous because someone flirts with y/n and that's when he decides to confess and idk what more else hahaha but with happy ending please
Thank you and have a good day 🫶🏻
Part 1: Unspoken Feelings
Masterlist
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Y/N, Seventeen’s spirited fourteenth member and resident maknae, shares an unbreakable bond with Dino, forged through trainee-day pranks and late-night ramyeon runs. As the group rockets to fame from their scrappy debut, their friendship—full of playful banter and unwavering loyalty—faces a subtle shift, with unspoken feelings threatening to blur the line between best friends and something more. Pairing: Seventeen (Dino) x 14th member Genre: Fluff, lil bit of angst
The practice room buzzed with the familiar chaos of Seventeen—thirteen voices overlapping, laughter bouncing off the mirrors, and the faint hum of their latest track looping in the background. Y/N sprawled dramatically on the floor, her face scrunched in frustration. Her hair stuck to her forehead, and her practice clothes were slightly rumpled from hours of dancing. Across the room, Dino leaned against the wall, catching his breath, his sharp eyes catching her familiar pout from a mile away.
Y/N and Dino had been inseparable since their trainee days, a dynamic duo forged in late-night practice sessions and sneaky trips to the convenience store for ramyeon when their trainers weren’t looking. Back then, Y/N’s wild energy had been a whirlwind—dragging Dino into her schemes, whether it was “borrowing” a senior trainee’s dance shoes for a prank or sneaking out to chase a stray cat she swore needed their help. Dino, ever the loyal sidekick, followed her lead, even when it meant getting scolded later. Her big, pleading puppy eyes and silver tongue always won him over.
“Dino, remember when we got caught trying to ‘rescue’ that cat outside the dorms?” Y/N had laughed once, years ago, her voice bright as they sat on a park bench sharing a stolen ice cream. “You were so scared we’d get kicked out, but you still carried that mangy thing for me!”
“I only did it because you wouldn’t stop whining about it, Y/N,” he’d shot back, but his grin betrayed him. That was the thing about Y/N—she could talk him into anything, and he’d complain the whole way while secretly loving every second.
Now, years later, that same bond held strong, but something had shifted for Dino. He couldn’t pinpoint when it started. Maybe it was the night he found her crying on a bench outside the company building, her dreams of debuting in a girl group shattered when the lineup changed last minute. She’d looked so small, her usual spark dimmed, and he’d sat beside her, offering quiet comfort until she leaned into him, her tears soaking his sleeve. Or maybe it was the way her smile lit up a room, brighter than any stage light, or how her casual touches—grabbing his arm, ruffling his hair—sent his heart into a tailspin. All he knew was that being called her “best friend” or “favorite member” felt like a punch to the gut. He wanted more. So much more.
But Y/N? Oblivious as ever. To her, Dino was her partner-in-crime, her go-to for everything from dance tips to late-night snack runs. The other members didn’t notice anything off either—they just saw their maknae duo, Y/N leading the charge and Dino trailing behind like her loyal shadow. Even now, as the group took a break from their grueling dance practice, Y/N’s frustration was palpable, and Dino braced himself for what was coming.
Sure enough, Y/N pushed herself up from the floor, her ponytail swinging as she marched over to him, her lips pursed in that telltale pout. “Dino!” she whined, dropping dramatically to her knees beside him. “This choreography is impossible! I keep messing up that one stupid turn in the chorus, and Hoshi oppa’s gonna kill me if I don’t get it right before he comes back from his water break!”
Dino chuckled, wiping sweat from his brow. Her theatrics were nothing new, but they still made his chest feel tight. “It’s not impossible, Y/N. You’re just overthinking it. Again.”
She huffed, crossing her arms. “Easy for you to say, Mr. I-Get-Every-Move-Perfect-On-The-First-Try. Some of us aren’t dance machines, okay?”
He raised an eyebrow, a teasing smirk tugging at his lips. “Oh, please. Who was the one who nailed that freestyle battle during training and made all the sunbaes jealous?”
Y/N’s cheeks flushed, and she swatted his arm. “That was one time, and you swore you’d never bring it up! I looked like a flailing octopus!”
“A very talented flailing octopus,” he corrected, dodging another playful swat. His heart did that annoying flip again as her hand lingered on his arm, her touch casual but electrifying to him. He cleared his throat, trying to focus. “Come on, show me the part you’re messing up. I’ll walk you through it.”
Her eyes lit up, that familiar spark returning. “Really? You’re the best, Dino-yah!” She grabbed his hand, pulling him to his feet with that effortless enthusiasm that made his head spin. He let her drag him to the center of the practice room, ignoring the amused glances from Seungkwan and Vernon nearby.
As they ran through the steps, Dino couldn’t help but drift back to a memory from their trainee days. They’d been in a similar practice room, just the two of them, after everyone else had gone to bed. Y/N had been struggling with a dance sequence then too, her frustration bubbling over until she’d flopped onto the floor, groaning.
“I’m never gonna get this, Lee Chan,” she’d mumbled, using his real name—a habit she only fell into when she was feeling vulnerable. “What if I’m not good enough to debut?”
He’d sat beside her, nudging her shoulder. “You’re Y/N. You’re always good enough. And if you’re not, I’ll just drag you through it until you are.”
She’d laughed, her mood lifting, and leaned her head on his shoulder. “You’re stuck with me, you know that, right?”
“Yeah, yeah, my personal chaos gremlin,” he’d teased, but his heart had been racing even then, a hint of something deeper he hadn’t yet recognized.
Now, as Y/N mirrored his movements in the present, her tongue poking out in concentration, Dino felt that same warmth flood his chest. But it was sharper now, tinged with longing. Every time she got too close—her shoulder brushing his, her laughter filling the air—he wanted to pull her into his arms and tell her everything. That she wasn’t just his best friend. That he saw her in every future he imagined. That the thought of her smiling at another guy—some idol or dancer who didn’t know her like he did—made him want to scream.
But he didn’t. He couldn’t. Seventeen was his family, and Y/N was too precious to risk losing. What if she didn’t feel the same? What if confessing made her pull away, leaving him with nothing but awkward silences where their easy laughter used to be? Worse, what if it threw off the group’s dynamic, the one they’d all worked so hard to build?
“Dino, you’re zoning out!” Y/N’s voice snapped him back to reality. She was standing with her hands on her hips, glaring at him playfully. “You’re supposed to be teaching me, not daydreaming! What’s got you so distracted, huh?”
You, he wanted to say. Always you. But instead, he forced a grin. “Just thinking about how you owe me ramyeon for this. Again.”
She gasped, mock-offended. “Excuse me, Lee Chan, I paid you back last time! With that fancy iced coffee you like!”
“That was, like, three favors ago,” he shot back, falling into their familiar banter. But as she laughed, nudging his shoulder, his heart ached with the weight of everything he couldn’t say.
For now, he’d keep being her minion, her dance coach, her best friend. He’d teach her the steps, sneak out with her for late-night adventures, and glare daggers at any guy who got too close. But deep down, Dino knew he was hopeless. He was down bad for Y/N, and no amount of pretending could change that.
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Year 2016
The air in the cramped waiting room at Show Champion buzzed with nervous energy, the kind that only comes with a group on the edge of something big. It was 2016, and Seventeen—fourteen members strong—had only recently debuted under Pledis Entertainment, a company so small they couldn’t even afford proper in-ear monitors. The group made do with cheap earphones, their stage outfits a mix of thrifted finds and DIY flair. But what they lacked in resources, they made up for in passion, their synergy electric as they laughed and jostled in the tiny space.
“If we win today, I’m treating everyone to burgers!” Mingyu declared, sprawled across a couch that barely fit half the group. His grin was wide, but his wallet was famously thin.
“Add fries and ice cream for me!” Y/N piped up, perched on the armrest next to Dino, her eyes sparkling with her usual mischief. She nudged him with her elbow, expecting his usual playful retort.
“Y/N, we can barely afford the burgers,” Seungkwan teased, fanning himself with a script. “But when we’re big shots, we’ll get you a whole ice cream truck.”
The room erupted in laughter, Y/N’s giggle cutting through the noise like a melody. Dino, sitting beside her, tried to focus on the banter, but her laugh sent a familiar warmth through his chest. At seventeen, he chalked it up to the closeness they’d always shared—trainee days spent sneaking snacks, her dragging him to chase stray cats, or the time she’d cried in his arms when her girl group debut fell through. She was his best friend, his chaotic counterpart. Surely this flutter in his heart was just a phase, a side effect of her being the only girl he’d ever been this close to. Right?
A sharp knock on the door broke the moment. “Seventeen, you’re up next!” a staff member called. The group sprang into action, forming a quick huddle. S.Coups’ voice was steady as he led their cheer: “One, two, three—Seventeen, fighting!” With a collective shout, they filed out, Y/N bouncing on her toes beside Dino, her energy contagious.
On stage, their performance of Pretty U was electric. Every step, every note was fueled by months of sleepless nights and relentless practice. Y/N’s voice soared in her parts, her movements sharp yet playful, and Dino couldn’t help but steal glances at her, his heart pounding for reasons he couldn’t quite name. The crowd roared, and as the final note rang out, the fourteen of them stood breathless, grinning under the stage lights.
Backstage, the wait for the winner’s announcement felt eternal. Seventeen stood shoulder-to-shoulder with other idols on the crowded stage, Y/N wedged between Dino and Wonwoo. She fidgeted, whispering to Dino, “Do you think we have a shot? We prayed so hard, but…” Her voice trailed off, her usual confidence tinged with doubt.
He nudged her gently, forcing a smile. “We killed it, Y/N. If we don’t win, the universe is broken.”
She grinned, her nerves easing, and grabbed his hand for reassurance. His breath hitched, but before he could process it, the host’s voice boomed: “And the winner of this week’s Show Champion is… Seventeen!”
The world slowed. Cheers erupted, confetti rained down, and Seventeen exploded into a mess of hugs and tears. Seungcheol grabbed the mic, his voice thick with emotion as he thanked their fans, Carats, who’d believed in them from the start. Y/N, overwhelmed, turned and launched herself into Dino’s arms, her face buried in his chest.
“We did it, Dino-yah! We really did it!” she squealed, her voice muffled but brimming with joy. He hugged her back, his arms tightening instinctively, and for a moment, he let himself feel it—the warmth of her, the weight of their shared dream coming true. But as she pulled away, laughing and wiping tears, that flutter in his chest twisted into something deeper, something that scared him. He was just a kid, wasn’t he? This was just a crush. It had to be.
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Two years later, that “crush” had grown into a tidal wave, and Dino was drowning. Every smile Y/N flashed, every casual touch, every late-night talk about their dreams—it all made his feelings sharper, undeniable. He hated it. She was his bandmate, his best friend, part of the family they’d built through sweat and tears. Confessing could ruin everything—their friendship, Seventeen’s dynamic, the trust they’d all fought for. So he did the only thing he could think of: he pushed her away.
It started subtly. One morning in their dorm, Y/N shuffled into the kitchen, expecting the usual—Dino at the stove, flipping pancakes, her coffee already brewing. It was their ritual, born from trainee days when they’d sneak breakfast together before grueling schedules. But that morning, Dino sat at the table, eating alone, his plate nearly empty.
“Dino-yah, where’s my pancakes?” Y/N asked, her tone teasing as she leaned over his shoulder. He froze, his jaw tight, and without a word, he stood, dropped his plate in the sink, and walked out. Y/N blinked, confused, as Seungkwan and Vernon exchanged a look.
“What was that?” Seungkwan muttered, his eyebrows shooting up.
“No clue,” Vernon replied, glancing at Y/N, who stood frozen, her smile fading.
It didn’t stop there. For a month, Dino avoided her like she was a ghost. If she entered a room, he found an excuse to leave. If she spoke to him, he answered in clipped words or not at all. During practice, he stayed on the opposite side of the formation, his eyes fixed anywhere but on her. The members noticed, whispering among themselves. Jeonghan even pulled Y/N aside one day, his voice gentle but probing.
“Y/N, did something happen with you and Dino? He’s acting… weird,” he said, his brows furrowed with concern.
Y/N’s face fell, her frustration bubbling over. “I don’t know, oppa! I didn’t do anything! Why does everyone think I messed this up? Am I that awful?” Her voice cracked, and Jeonghan quickly backtracked, assuring her it wasn’t her fault. But the doubt lingered, and Y/N’s usual spark dimmed, her pouty frown a constant fixture.
The members tried talking to Dino too. Joshua cornered him after practice, his tone calm but firm. “Chan, what’s going on with you and Y/N? You’re freaking her out.”
Dino shrugged, his expression blank. “Nothing’s going on. Just busy.” But inside, he was screaming. Avoiding Y/N wasn’t helping—it was making everything worse. Seeing her sad, her eyes searching for him only to meet his cold shoulder, felt like a knife in his chest. He missed her—her chaos, her laugh, the way she’d drag him into her ridiculous plans. He was hurting her, and it was killing him.
Finally, he couldn’t take it anymore. One evening, after a long practice, he found Y/N in the dorm’s common room, curled up on the couch with a manga she wasn’t really reading. Her face was set in a stubborn scowl, and when he sat beside her, she pointedly turned away.
“Y/N,” he started, his voice soft. “I’m sorry.”
She didn’t look at him. “For what? Ignoring me for a month? Making me feel like I did something wrong?” Her voice was sharp, but it wavered, betraying her hurt.
He winced, guilt twisting his gut. “I… I didn’t mean to hurt you. I just… needed space.”
“Space?” She whipped around, her eyes blazing. “We’ve been glued together since we were trainees, Dino! You don’t just ‘need space’ out of nowhere! Why won’t you tell me what I did?”
He opened his mouth, but the truth—I’m in love with you, and I’m terrified—stuck in his throat. Instead, he pulled a small paper bag from behind his back, offering it to her. Inside was her favorite ramyeon and a pint of her beloved ice cream.
“I don’t know how to explain it,” he admitted, his voice barely above a whisper. “But I’m really sorry, Y/N. Can we… go back to how things were?”
She stared at the bag, then at him, her scowl softening but not gone. “You’re lucky I can’t stay mad at you,” she muttered, snatching the bag. “But you owe me pancakes tomorrow. And you better not pull this crap again.”
He nodded, relief washing over him as she cracked a small smile. But deep down, he knew this wasn’t over. His feelings weren’t going away, and no amount of ramyeon or apologies could change that. For now, he’d settle for her forgiveness, but the ache in his heart was only growing stronger.
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Seventeen had come a long way since their scrappy debut days. Years have passed, they become a household name, their music topping charts, their faces plastered on billboards, and their bond stronger than ever. The members had spread their wings, some choosing to live independently while others paired up—Jeonghan and Seungkwan sharing a cozy apartment, Mingyu and Wonwoo bickering over who’d cook dinner in theirs. Y/N, ever the free spirit, had opted for her own place, a small but vibrant apartment filled with plants and mismatched furniture that screamed her personality. Yet, despite the physical distance, her connection with Dino remained unshakable, a tether that no amount of fame or time could break.
Their closeness was a constant—late-night video calls when Y/N got a wild urge to explore the city, or her whining texts for Dino to bring her snacks when she was under the weather. No matter how exhausting his day, Dino always answered. He’d drive across Seoul at 3 am if she asked, cook her favorite ramyeon when she was sick, or pick up whatever bizarre craving she had, all while grumbling playfully. It was their rhythm, carved out from trainee days and polished by years of shared dreams and chaos.
Tonight was no exception. It was 2 am, and Y/N was tipsy, her laughter echoing through a quiet alley as she stumbled out of a bar with her friends. Her phone was already in her hand, Dino’s number on speed dial. The call connected after a single ring, and she giggled into the receiver.
“Do you just sit by your phone waiting for me?” she teased, her voice slurring slightly, playful and warm.
On the other end, Dino rolled his eyes, leaning back on his couch, his game paused on the screen. “Please, Y/N, I was in the middle of crushing it in Overwatch. You’re ruining my streak.” A lie, of course. He’d been scrolling aimlessly, half-expecting her text from earlier—Going out with friends, might need a ride later—to turn into this exact call. He’d never admit he’d been waiting, though.
“Whatever, loser,” she shot back, her grin audible. “I’m sending you my location. My feet are dying in these heels.”
“You and your terrible shoe choices,” he muttered, already grabbing his keys and jacket. “Stay put. I’m coming.”
True to his word, Dino pulled up in record time, his car a familiar sight as it rolled to a stop outside the bar. Y/N stood under a streetlight, swaying slightly, her sparkly dress catching the light. Her friends waved at him, their knowing smiles not lost on him—those sly glances that said they saw right through his “just friends” act. He ignored them, stepping out to drape his spare jacket over Y/N’s shoulders.
“Ugh, these heels are the worst,” she whined, pouting as she leaned against him for balance. “My feet hate me.”
“You say that every time,” he replied, his tone fond but exasperated. He opened the passenger door, and as Y/N said her goodbyes to her friends, he grabbed the pink slippers he kept in the backseat just for her. She had a habit of wearing impractical heels, only to beg for her comfy backup pair by the end of the night.
Y/N’s face lit up as she slipped them on, sighing in relief. “You’re a lifesaver, Dino-yah.” She climbed into the car, immediately launching into a tipsy recount of her night—her friends’ bad karaoke, the spicy tteokbokki they’d shared, the guy who’d tried to flirt with her until she “accidentally” spilled her drink on him. Dino listened, his eyes on the road, a soft smile tugging at his lips. He loved this—her unfiltered chatter, the way she’d ramble to him about everything and nothing, even after a day packed with group schedules or her solo gigs. It was their thing, a ritual that felt like home.
But then, out of nowhere, she went quiet. He glanced over, catching her staring at him, her head tilted, eyes glassy but curious. “Chan,” she said, her voice softer, almost serious despite her tipsy haze. “Why are you so nice to me? Like, all the time?”
His hands tightened on the steering wheel, his heart stuttering. The question hung heavy, her gaze pinning him in place. He wanted to say it—Because I’m in love with you, and I’ve been in love with you since we were kids chasing dreams in a sweaty practice room. But the words lodged in his throat, too big, too risky. What if she laughed it off? What if she pulled away, like he’d feared back when he tried avoiding her in 2018?
That month of distance still haunted him. He’d thought ignoring her would kill his feelings, but it only made him ache more. Her hurt, her confusion, the way she’d snapped at Jeonghan for suggesting she’d done something wrong—it had torn him apart. He couldn’t bear the thought of losing her again, not when she was woven so deeply into his life.
Before he could muster an answer, Y/N’s eyes lit up, spotting something through his window. “Oh! Convenience store! Dino, I want ice cream!” Her voice was bright again, the serious moment gone as fast as it came. She flashed him that smile—the one that made his resolve crumble every time, the one that said she knew he’d give in.
He sighed, pulling into the store’s parking lot. “You’re gonna owe me big time, Y/N.”
“Add it to my tab,” she quipped, already unbuckling her seatbelt.
As they walked into the brightly lit store, Y/N looping her arm through his like it was nothing, Dino felt that familiar ache settle deeper. He’d buy her the ice cream, drive her home, listen to her ramble until she fell asleep in his passenger seat. He’d keep being her person, her late-night savior, her best friend. But every step beside her, every laugh she shared, made it harder to pretend that was enough.
Back in the car, Y/N happily licked her ice cream, oblivious to the storm in his heart. “You’re the best, Lee Chan,” she mumbled between bites, leaning her head against the window, her slippers kicked off and her legs tucked under his jacket.
He glanced at her, his chest tight. “Yeah, yeah. Just don’t get any ice cream on my seats.”
But as she giggled, her voice fading into sleepy murmurs, he knew he was hopeless. No matter how many late-night drives or ice cream runs, he couldn’t outrun his feelings. He was in too deep, and Y/N—oblivious, chaotic, perfect Y/N—was the only one who didn’t see it.
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an: Dino is such boyfriend material, I can’t even handle it! He’s got this vibe just screaming green flag energy, like, ugh, I’m so in love with him!
196 notes · View notes
amyzworldds · 28 days ago
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HEYYYY i love your writing and how you always write so fast hihi btw i was wondering if you could do yn as the quiet 14th member of seventeen and how she always gets picked on by host whenever seventeen appears on tv show because of how quiet she is but before any of the member can defend her she replied to the host in the most sassy way possible??? and from that day she turns into a mini minghao hihi thank youuuu and take care 🩷
Title: Blossoming in Silence
Masterlist
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Seventeen’s shy maknae, evolves from a quiet, blushing observer to a sassy force under Minghao’s guidance. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th member Genre: Fluff
The members sprawled across couches and chairs, waiting for their producer, Bumzu, to arrive. The room hummed with the usual banter—Jeonghan teasing Mingyu about his latest cooking disaster, Woozi scribbling notes on a pad, and Dino trying to convince Hoshi to join him in a TikTok dance challenge. Amid the lively chatter, Y/N, the group’s beloved maknae, was in a rare mood. She was usually the quiet one, her shy nature painting her as the soft-spoken shadow who preferred observing over speaking. But today, she was a burst of energy, clinging to Seungcheol’s arm as she animatedly shared a story about her favorite stray cat.
Y/N had always been reserved. When she joined Seventeen, fresh from the trainee life, her wide-eyed silence made her seem like a fragile porcelain doll. She’d answer questions with a nod or a whispered word, her cheeks flaming red if anyone teased her too much. The members quickly learned she wasn’t distant—just painfully shy. They adored her for it. To them, Y/N was their baby sister, a treasure they protected fiercely. They’d melt whenever she spoke, hanging onto her rare words like they were precious gems. Publicly, they kept their teasing gentle, never wanting to push her past her comfort zone. But in private? That’s when the playful chaos unfolded—poking at her blushing cheeks, ruffling her hair, and laughing when she’d squeak in protest.
Her clinginess was even rarer. Y/N usually kept to herself, maybe curling up next to Joshua with a book or hovering near Wonwoo during practice. But on days like today, when something sparked her excitement, she’d latch onto someone—today’s victim being Seungcheol—and the members would watch with heart-eyes, soaking in her fleeting openness.
“Cheollie oppa, you should’ve seen her!” Y/N’s voice bubbled as she tugged Seungcheol’s sleeve, her eyes sparkling. “Mimi—that’s what I named the cat—she was so brave! She had four kittens, and they’re so tiny, like little fluff balls!”
Seungcheol grinned, his dimples deepening as he leaned closer, nodding like her story was the most important thing in the world. “Four kittens, huh? Mimi’s a superstar. Did you name them yet?”
Y/N’s cheeks pinked, but she didn’t shy away. “Not yet, but I was thinking maybe… Cloud, Pancake, cheesecake, and… um, maybe Cookie? I don’t know!” She giggled, hiding her face briefly in Seungcheol’s shoulder.
Across the room, Vernon raised an eyebrow, smirking. “Cookie? Y/N, you’re gonna turn our dorm into a bakery with these names.”
The group chuckled, and Y/N’s blush deepened, but she didn’t retreat. Instead, she stuck out her tongue at Vernon, a rare playful jab. “Better than your idea to name a dog ‘Dog’ last week!”
The room erupted in laughter, Vernon clutching his chest dramatically. “Yo, that was a concept! You’re savage today, maknae!”
Jeonghan, lounging on a beanbag, propped his chin on his hand, eyes glinting mischievously. “I like this Y/N. Clingy and sassy. Cheol, what’d you feed her this morning?”
Seungcheol chuckled, wrapping an arm around Y/N protectively. “Nothing! She’s just excited about her cat family. Right, Y/N?”
“Mhm!” Y/N nodded vigorously, her ponytail bouncing. “They’re living outside our dorm, but I bring them food and treats every day. Mimi trusts me now—she lets me pet her! But the kittens need a real home. I was thinking… maybe I could buy them a little cat house? Or find someone to adopt them?”
Woozi looked up from his notebook, his serious producer face softening. “A cat house? That’s ambitious. You gonna build it yourself, kid?”
Y/N’s eyes widened, and she waved her hands frantically. “No, no! I meant, like, buy one! I’m not that handy!”
Mingyu snorted, leaning forward with a teasing grin. “Oh, come on, Y/N. I bet you and Wonwoo could make a cat mansion. Right, Wonwoo?”
Wonwoo, who’d been quietly sipping coffee, glanced up with a small smile. “Leave me out of this. But Y/N, you’re doing good with those cats. They’re lucky to have you.”
Y/N beamed at the praise, her shY/Ness creeping back just enough to make her duck her head. “Thanks, Wonu oppa…”
Hoshi, bouncing in his seat, clapped his hands. “Okay, but imagine! We adopt all the kittens, and they become Seventeen’s official mascots! Picture it: tiny cats in little carat-colored sweaters!”
“Hoshi, no!” Joshua laughed, shaking his head. “We can barely keep up with you in the dorm. Don’t add cats to the chaos.”
“But they’d be so cute!” Hoshi whined, turning to Y/N. “Back me up, Y/N! You want the kittens in sweaters, right?”
Y/N giggled, her fingers twisting in Seungcheol’s sleeve. “Maybe… just one sweater? For Cookie?”
The room cooed in unison, the members melting at her soft admission. DK leaned over, ruffling her hair gently. “You’re too cute, Y/N. We’re gonna have to fight over who gets to adopt Cookie now.”
“No fighting!” Y/N squeaked, her voice half-laugh, half-protest. “They need nice homes, not a wrestling match!”
Seungkwan, who’d been scrolling on his phone, looked up with a grin. “Y/N, you’re practically their mom already. You sure you’re ready to give them up?”
Y/N paused, her excitement dimming for a moment as she thought it over. “I… I want them to be safe. Even if it means I can’t keep them. But I’ll miss them a lot…”
The room softened, the teasing energy giving way to warmth. Seungcheol squeezed her shoulder gently. “You’re doing the right thing, Y/N. We’ll help you find them good homes, okay? No one’s better at taking care of others than you.”
Y/N smiled shyly, leaning into him. “Thanks, oppa… You guys are the best.”
Dino, who’d been unusually quiet, piped up with a playful smirk. “Yeah, we’re the best—until you start yapping about cats again and we all turn into your personal audience!”
“Yah!” Y/N huffed, tossing a crumpled tissue at him, her blush returning full force as the room burst into laughter again.
As the teasing resumed, Y/N settled back against Seungcheol, her rare chatter fading into a content smile. The members kept stealing glances at her, their baby sister who could light up the room with just a few words. They wouldn’t trade these moments—or her—for anything.
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Over the next month, Y/N’s quiet presence found a new anchor in Seventeen’s Xu Minghao. While Y/N’s shyness wrapped her in a soft, blushing cocoon, Minghao’s silence was a different beast—sharp, deliberate, and laced with a sassy edge that could cut through any nonsense with a single deadpan quip. Her rare bursts of chatter treasured like gold. But lately, the members noticed her gravitating toward Minghao, the one whose quiet wasn’t timid but commanding, like a cat that didn’t need to roar to make you feel small.
It started subtly. During practice breaks, Y/N would plop down beside Minghao, her knees tucked up as she sipped from a water bottle, listening intently as he critiqued a dance move or tossed a dry remark at Hoshi’s over-the-top antics. Minghao, for his part, seemed to welcome her company. He’d always been fond of Y/N, charmed by her gentle nature, but he never pushed her to talk. Instead, he’d offer a calm space where she could just be. Soon, she was trailing him like a shy shadow, and the members couldn’t help but notice.
One afternoon, Minghao invited Y/N to a tea ceremony he’d set up in a quiet corner of their dorm. It was a ritual he cherished—porcelain cups, steaming water, and the slow art of brewing loose leaves. Y/N, curious and a little nervous, sat cross-legged across from him, her hands fidgeting.
“Oppa, am I doing this right?” she asked, her voice barely above a whisper as she held a teacup with both hands, mimicking his careful grip.
Minghao’s lips quirked, his eyes glinting with that signature sharpness. “You’re holding it like it’s a grenade, Y/N. Relax. The tea’s not gonna bite.”
She giggled, her cheeks pinking, but she loosened her grip, watching as he poured another round with practiced grace. “It’s so… fancy. I thought tea was just, like, a bag in hot water.”
He raised an eyebrow, his tone dry as desert sand. “A bag? Y/N, that’s not tea. That’s an insult to civilization.”
Y/N laughed, a soft, bubbling sound that made Minghao’s stern facade crack into a small smile. “Okay, okay! I get it. This is better. It smells nice too.”
“Told you,” he said, leaning back with his own cup. “Stick with me, kid. I’ll teach you how to live with taste.”
The tea ceremonies became their thing. Every few days, Minghao would set up his little setup, and Y/N would join, her shY/Ness melting as she learned to appreciate the bitter-sweet notes of oolong and the calm of the ritual. Sometimes, he’d coax her into meditation afterward, guiding her to sit still and breathe deeply. She’d squirm at first, peeking at him through half-closed eyes, but his steady presence kept her grounded.
“Hao oppa, how do you sit so still?” she mumbled once, her legs already twitching five minutes into a session. “I feel like ants are crawling on me.”
He didn’t even open his eyes, his voice flat but teasing. “That’s just your brain throwing a tantrum. Tell it to shut up and breathe.”
“Rude!” she huffed, but she tried again, biting back a smile. His bluntness was oddly comforting—no sugarcoating, just truth with a side of sass.
The other members, however, weren’t entirely thrilled. They’d catch glimpses of Y/N and Minghao sipping tea or meditating in the dorm’s common room, and jealous glances would fly. During one practice, Seungcheol nudged Jeonghan, nodding toward the pair sitting cross-legged on the floor, Y/N giggling at something Minghao said.
“Look at that,” Seungcheol muttered, arms crossed. “Hao’s stealing our maknae.”
Jeonghan smirked, but his eyes narrowed. “He’s got her drinking tea now. Tea! She used to beg me for strawberry milk.”
Across the room, Hoshi pouted, his voice louder than necessary. “Y/N! You’re not gonna start wearing all black and quoting poetry like Hao, are you?”
Y/N’s head snapped up, her face flaming. “Oppa, no! I just… I like the tea, okay?”
Minghao didn’t even look at Hoshi, sipping his water with a smug air. “She’s got better taste than you, Hoshi. Let her live.”
“Yah!” Hoshi clutched his chest, feigning betrayal, while the others laughed. “Y/N, blink twice if he’s brainwashing you!”
“I’m fine!” Y/N squeaked, burying her face in her hands, though her muffled giggles gave her away.
DK leaned toward Joshua, whispering, “You think Hao’s teaching her to be all zen? I miss her clinging to Cheol and yapping about cats.”
Joshua chuckled, shaking his head. “Nah, she’s still our Y/N. She’s just… borrowing Hao’s vibe for a bit.”
The jealousy was playful, mostly. The members knew Minghao wasn’t stealing her—they’d seen how Y/N still lit up during group dinners, blushing when Vernon teased her or clinging to Seungcheol when she was tired. But Minghao’s quiet pull had unlocked something new in her. She wasn’t just the shy maknae anymore; she was starting to carry a hint of his confidence, even if it was just in the way she’d sip tea and roll her eyes when Dino tried to prank her.
One evening, during a rare group movie night, Y/N curled up on the couch next to Minghao, a mug of chamomile in her hands—a gift from him. The members kept sneaking glances, their protective instincts tinged with amusement. Woozi finally broke the silence, his tone teasing but warm.
“Y/N, you’re a tea snob now, huh?” he called out, smirking. “What happened to our juice-box maknae?”
Y/N stuck out her tongue, a spark of Minghao’s sass in her eyes. “Juice is for babies, oppa. Tea’s classy.”
The room exploded in mock gasps, Mingyu clutching his heart. “She’s gone full Hao! We’ve lost her!”
Minghao just smirked, nudging Y/N’s shoulder. “Told you, kid. Stick with me, and you’ll run this place someday.”
“Hao oppa, stop!” Y/N laughed, swatting him, her blush returning but her smile brighter than ever.
As the movie played on, the members settled down, their jealousy fading into fondness. Y/N was still their baby sister, shy and sweet, but watching her bloom a little under Minghao’s wing? That was something they could all cheer for—even if they’d never admit it out loud.
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The studio lights blazed down on Seventeen as they sat in a colorful, semicircular setup for a variety show, their latest comeback promotion in full swing. The set buzzed with energy—bright backdrops, a live audience cheering, and a host known for his bold, sometimes chaotic style. The thirteen members, plus their cherished maknae Y/N, were decked out in coordinated outfits, their new album’s aesthetic shining through. Y/N sat at the back corner, her hands folded neatly in her lap, a shy smile playing on her lips. She was quieter than usual, her wide eyes taking in the whirlwind of questions and laughter around her.
The host, a middle-aged man with a flashy suit and a penchant for stirring the pot, had been lobbing questions at the group for the past twenty minutes. Most were standard—details about the album’s concept, funny behind-the-scenes stories, or who was the messiest in the dorm (Vernon and Hoshi took that hit with a sheepish grin). The members were in their element, with Seungcheol leading the answers, Jeonghan tossing witty remarks, and Hoshi stealing the spotlight with exaggerated reenactments of their choreography fails. Y/N, though, stayed silent, giggling softly at her members’ antics but keeping her words to herself. It wasn’t unusual—her shy nature often made her the quiet observer in public settings, and the members were used to shielding her from too much attention.
But the host noticed her silence, his eyes zeroing in on Y/N like a hawk spotting prey. He leaned forward, his grin a little too sharp, and the mood in the room shifted subtly.
“So, Y/N,” he began, his voice carrying a teasing lilt, “you’ve been awfully quiet back there. Are you always this shy, or are you just saving your voice for something big?”
The audience chuckled, and Y/N’s cheeks flushed pink. She gave a small nod, her voice soft but steady. “I’m just… listening, sunbaenim. The members are doing a great job answering.”
Seungcheol shot her a reassuring smile from the front row, and Joshua nodded encouragingly. The members were ready to pivot the conversation, but the host wasn’t done. He leaned back, tapping his chin as if deep in thought, his eyes glinting mischievously.
“Listening, huh? That’s cute. But come on, you’re the maknae of Seventeen! Surely you’ve got some wild stories. Maybe… a secret crush among the members?” He winked at the audience, who erupted in gasps and giggles.
The air tensed instantly. Y/N’s eyes widened, her blush deepening, and the members’ smiles faltered. Jeonghan’s jaw tightened, and Vernon’s hand twitched like he was ready to grab a mic and shut it down. They’d dealt with pushy hosts before, but this was crossing a line—especially with Y/N, who they protected like a little sister. Seungcheol opened his mouth to steer things back, but the host barreled on, oblivious or uncaring.
“Or maybe,” he continued, his tone growing bolder, “you’re so quiet because you’re overwhelmed by all these handsome guys, huh? Who’s your type, Y/N? Give us a hint!”
The audience laughed again, but it was strained now. Woozi’s eyes narrowed, and Hoshi’s usual grin was gone, replaced by a hard stare. Mingyu leaned forward, his knuckles white against his knee, while DK whispered something to Dino, who looked ready to leap out of his seat. They’d stayed silent to keep things professional, but this was too far—Y/N didn’t deserve to be cornered like this.
Before any of them could snap, Y/N sat up straighter, her shy demeanor shifting. Her eyes, usually soft and hesitant, glinted with something new—something sharp, borrowed straight from the Minghao school of sass. She tilted her head, her lips curving into a smile that was polite but laced with venom. The room seemed to hold its breath.
“My type, sunbaenim?” she said, her voice clear and deceptively sweet. “Well, I like people who ask interesting questions. You know, ones that don’t make everyone in the room cringe.”
The audience gasped, then burst into laughter, louder than before. The host blinked, caught off guard, his grin faltering. The members froze, their eyes darting to Y/N in a mix of shock and delight. Minghao, seated a few spots away, leaned back with a smug smirk, his arms crossed like a proud mentor watching his protégé shine.
The host tried to recover, chuckling awkwardly. “Oh, feisty! Okay, okay, I’ll bite. What’s an interesting question then, Y/N? Educate me.”
Y/N didn’t miss a beat, her tone dripping with the same deadpan sarcasm Minghao wielded like a blade. “Maybe ask about our album? Since, you know, that’s why we’re here. Or do you only care about gossip that doesn’t exist?”
The audience roared, clapping wildly, and the members couldn’t hold it in anymore. Vernon muffled a laugh behind his hand, his shoulders shaking. Seungkwan bit his lip to keep from cackling, while Jeonghan leaned toward Joshua, whispering, “She’s wrecking him.”
The host’s face reddened, but he pressed on, clearly underestimating the maknae. “Alright, fair enough! But come on, Y/N, you’re so mysterious. Gotta give us something. What’s it like being the only girl in Seventeen? Ever feel like you’re in over your head?”
It was another jab, thinly veiled as curiosity, and the members’ patience snapped. Seungcheol’s hand clenched into a fist, and Woozi was half a second from cutting in with something sharp. But Y/N was already leaning forward, her smile now a full-on weapon, her voice steady and laced with sarcasm so precise it could’ve been scripted by Minghao himself.
“In over my head?” she repeated, raising an eyebrow. “Sunbaenim, I’m surrounded by thirteen guys who can’t find their socks without me. If anyone’s in over their head, it’s them. But sure, tell me more about how I’m the one struggling.”
The studio erupted—audience screaming, staff stifling laughs, and the members losing it. Hoshi slapped Mingyu’s arm, wheezing, “She’s killing him!” DK was doubled over, clutching Joshua for support, while Dino pumped his fist like he was at a concert. “That’s our maknae!” he shouted, barely audible over the chaos.
Minghao’s smirk widened, his eyes glinting with pride. He leaned toward Wonwoo, muttering, “Told you she’s got it. That’s my work right there.”
Wonwoo snorted, shaking his head. “You created a monster, Hao.”
The host, now visibly flustered, raised his hands in surrender, his cocky demeanor crumbling. “Okay, okay, Y/N! You win! I’ll stick to the album questions from now on, promise!”
Y/N leaned back, her sass fading into her usual shy smile, though her eyes still sparkled with mischief. “Good idea, sunbaenim. We’ve got a lot to say about the music.”
Seungcheol finally stepped in, his tone firm but warm, redirecting the conversation like the leader he was. “Speaking of the album, we poured a lot into this comeback. Y/N actually had some great ideas for the choreography—maybe we can talk about that?”
The host latched onto the lifeline, pivoting to safer ground, and the interview continued smoothly. But the members couldn’t stop stealing glances at Y/N, their quiet maknae who’d just turned the tables with a few razor-sharp words. Vernon leaned over during a break, grinning. “Y/N, where was that hiding? You’re scary when you want to be.”
She ducked her head, her blush returning. “I just… didn’t like his questions. They were mean.”
Jeonghan ruffled her hair, chuckling. “Mean or not, you handled it like a pro. We were ready to jump him, but you didn’t need us.”
“Yeah, but don’t make a habit of it,” Seungkwan teased, pointing at her. “We’re supposed to be the ones defending you, not the other way around!”
Y/N giggled, her shyness creeping back, but Minghao caught her eye from across the set. He gave her a subtle nod, his smirk saying it all: That’s my girl. She smiled back, a little prouder, a little bolder, knowing her members had her back—and that she could hold her own when it mattered.
As the show wrapped, the members crowded around her backstage, their protective energy mixed with awe. Hoshi slung an arm around her shoulders, grinning. “Y/N, you’re our secret weapon now. Next comeback, you’re answering all the questions!”
“No way!” she protested, hiding her face in her hands, but her laughter gave her away.
Minghao watched from the side, his smugness softening into something warmer. He’d taught her to stand tall in her own quiet way, and today, she’d shown the world—and the host—what Seventeen’s maknae was made of. The members might tease her later, might bicker over who got to claim credit for her newfound fire, but one thing was clear: Y/N was their baby sister, shy but unstoppable, and they wouldn’t have her any other way.
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A year had passed since the infamous variety show interview, and the internet hadn’t forgotten. Clips of Y/N’s razor-sharp takedown of the host had resurfaced, trending across platforms with fans dubbing her “The8’s girl version” and “Little The8.” The comments sections buzzed with praise—“She roasted him so politely, I’m in awe!” and “Protect Y/N at all costs, but also, she doesn’t need it!” The outrage over the host’s inappropriate questions, especially toward an underage girl, had cemented SEVENTEEN’s decision: they’d never work with that show again. More importantly, Y/N, had grown into her own—a quiet firecracker who carried Minghao’s sass like a second skin, much to her members’ delight.
The dorm, life was louder and livelier with Y/N’s evolution. She was still their shy maknae, blushing at compliments and hiding behind Seungcheol during chaotic moments, but her newfound confidence shone through. Where she once stayed silent during interviews, she now answered with a blend of politeness and biting wit, her words so effortlessly sharp they left hosts scrambling to keep up. The members loved it, often leaning back with grins as she handled nosy questions with the grace of a diplomat and the sting of a wasp.
During a recent radio interview to promote their latest mini-album, the host had asked about their group dY/Namics, then turned to Y/N with a playful but pointed question. “Y/N, you’re surrounded by thirteen talented guys. Ever get tired of being the baby? Or do they spoil you too much?”
Y/N tilted her head, her smile sweet but her eyes glinting with mischief. “Spoil me? Sunbaenim, they can barely keep up with me. I’m the one reminding Mingyu oppa where he parked his car last week.”
The studio erupted in laughter, Mingyu clutching his chest in mock offense. “Yah, Y/N! That was one time!”
“One time too many,” she shot back, her voice light but her smirk pure Minghao. The host chuckled, clearly impressed, and the members exchanged proud glances. Seungcheol leaned toward Jeonghan, muttering, “She’s unstoppable now.”
Back at the dorm, Y/N’s sass wasn’t reserved for interviews. The members, who’d always teased her for her quick blushes, now faced a maknae who fought back—cutely, of course, but with enough bite to keep them on their toes. One evening, as they lounged in the living room debating takeout options, Hoshi decided to poke the bear.
“Y/N, you’re so quiet tonight,” he teased, grinning. “What’s wrong? Missing your stray cats again?”
Y/N, curled up on the couch with a mug of tea (a Minghao habit she’d fully embraced), rolled her eyes. “Hoshi oppa, I’m quiet because I’m trying to save my energy for when you inevitably try to dance on the table later.”
The room howled, Hoshi gasping dramatically. “Excuse me? I’m a professional, maknae!”
“Professionally chaotic,” she muttered, sipping her tea with a pointed look. Minghao, sitting nearby, snorted, giving her a subtle fist bump. “That’s my girl.”
Dino piled on, smirking. “She’s got you there, hyung. Y/N’s out here reading us like a book now.”
Y/N stuck out her tongue, but her cheeks pinked, a hint of the old shy girl peeking through. “You guys started it! Always teasing me. I learned from the best, though.” She pointed accusingly at Minghao, who raised his hands innocently.
“Don’t blame me,” he said, his tone dry but his eyes warm. “You were a diamond in the rough. I just polished you up.”
The teasing continued, but it was different now—less one-sided, more like a game they all played. Y/N’s comebacks were never mean, always delivered with a pout or a giggle that softened the blow, and the members couldn’t get enough. Still, sometimes she’d catch them looking at her with mock nostalgia, sighing about the “old Y/N” who’d just blush and hide.
One night, after a particularly lively practice session, the group sprawled across the studio floor, catching their breath. Vernon, ever the instigator, tossed a water bottle her way and grinned. “Y/N, remember when you’d turn red if we even looked at you? What happened to that kid?”
Y/N caught the bottle, narrowing her eyes playfully. “She grew up, oppa. Thanks to you all bullying me into it.”
“Bullying?!” Seungkwan gasped, clutching his heart. “We cherished you!”
“Cherished me into a corner,” she shot back, crossing her arms. “Now I fight back, and you complain? Make up your minds!”
The group laughed, but Y/N’s pout deepened, her voice dropping to a softer tone. “What, don’t you like the new me? I thought you wanted me to be tough…”
The shift was instant. Seungcheol sat up, his leader instincts kicking in, and pulled her into a side hug. “Are you kidding? We love the new you. Old you, new you, sassy you—we love all of you.”
Joshua nodded, ruffling her hair. “Yeah, you’re still our Y/N. Just with a little extra spice now.”
DK piled on, wrapping her in a bear hug from the other side. “You’re like… a cute chili pepper! Tiny but with a kick!”
“A chili pepper?!” Y/N squeaked, laughing despite herself, her pout melting away. “That’s so bad, oppa!”
Minghao watched from the sidelines, his usual smirk softened by fondness. “They’re right, you know. You’re still you. Just… you with better comebacks.”
She stuck her tongue out at him, but her eyes sparkled. “This is your fault, Hao oppa. You turned me into a mini you!”
“Guilty,” he said, shrugging unapologetically. “But you wear it well.”
The group piled into a chaotic group hug, Y/N squished in the middle, her laughter muffled as she protested, “I can’t breathe, you weirdos!”
As they pulled back, Woozi caught her eye, his tone serious but warm. “For real, Y/N. We love the sass. It’s good you can hold your own now. But you know we’re always here, right? Sassy or not, you’re our maknae.”
Y/N nodded, her smile shy but genuine. “I know, oppa. Thanks… for everything.”
Later, as they headed back to the dorm, Y/N walked between Minghao and Jeonghan, her tea mug tucked into her bag and her heart full. The resurfaced clips online, the “Little Minghao” nickname, the pride in her members’ eyes—it all reminded her how far she’d come. She was still their shy baby sister, but now she had a voice, a spark, a way to stand tall when the world got too loud. And whether she was roasting a host or pouting for hugs, her thirteen protectors would always be there, cheering for every version of her.
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an: And I'm officially back, guys!!! Woohoo! I’ll start editing all the requests I’ve written before and will post them soon. Sorry for ghosting you guys, HAHAHAHAHAHA, but yeah, I’m back!
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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Part Five: When Life Gives You Tangerine
Masterlist | Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
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A shy girl from Jeju who secretly admires her lively classmate, Boo Seungkwan, through small, thoughtful gestures. As their lives take unexpected turns, her quiet support evolves over the years, blending childhood memories with dreams that grow far beyond their little island school. Pairing: Boo Seungkwan x Reader Genre: Fluff
The promotion shoot wrapped up, and the energy in the room plummeted. The boys, once a whirlwind of noise, were now a mix of exhaustion—some slouched in chairs, eyes half-closed, while others shuffled off to change out of their stage outfits. Y/N stood at her station, quietly packing her makeup brushes and palettes, her hands moving on autopilot. Her assistant, Minji, hovered beside her, whispering like a conspiratorial gremlin.
“So, Seungkwan totally knows,” Minji hissed, nudging her elbow. “Did you see his face? He was all smiley! You’re doomed!”
“Shh!” Y/N whispered back, cheeks flaring. “He doesn’t know anything! Stop making it weird!”
“Oh, it’s already weird,” Minji teased, stacking compacts. “He called you tangerine fairy! Everyone heard it!”
“Minji, I will throw this sponge at you,” Y/N muttered, shoving brushes into her bag. Just finish packing and get out. No drama. No—
A shadow loomed beside her. She turned, and there was Seungkwan, popping up like a jack-in-the-box, his grin wide and bright despite the long day. Y/N froze, feeling the weight of a dozen pairs of eyes—Jeonghan’s smirk, Hoshi’s barely-contained giggle, Wonwoo’s quiet stare. It was like a rom-com scene, and she was the unwilling lead.
“Hi,” Seungkwan said, leaning casually against the table. “So… you’re my tangerine fairy who suddenly disappeared, huh?”
Her heart did a backflip. “W-What?!” she squeaked, clutching a makeup wipe like a lifeline. “I—I mean—hi! Uh, no, I’m just… me!”
He laughed, soft and warm, tilting his head. “Come on, Y/N. The tangerines? The doodles? ‘It’s from Jeju’? You’re not fooling anyone.”
Minji snorted behind her, and Y/N shot her a death glare before turning back. “I… um… okay, maybe I used to do that! But it was forever ago! I didn’t think you’d remember!”
“Remember?” Seungkwan’s eyes sparkled. “How could I not? Those tangerines were the best part of my day! I’d sit down, see a smiley face, and boom—happy Seungkwan!”
Her cheeks were on fire. “R-Really?” she mumbled, twisting the wipe in her hands. “I just… thought you liked them. I didn’t mean to… disappear or anything!”
“Yeah, you left me hanging!” he teased, crossing his arms. “One day, no more tangerines, no more shy girl in the back. I was worried, you know!”
“Worried?!” she yelped, eyes wide. “About me? I was just… quiet! You were the star!”
“And you were my secret cheerleader,” he said, grinning. “I even went to your grandparents’ house with a tangerine to check on you!”
Her jaw dropped. “You what?!”
From across the room, Jeonghan piped up, “Oh, he did! Came back with your sketchbook and everything!”
“Hyung!” Seungkwan whirled, pointing at him. “Stop helping!”
Y/N’s brain short-circuited. “Sketchbook?! You—you have my drawings?!”
“Yup!” Seungkwan turned back, sheepish now. “The one with me on stage, stars, tangerine crowd? It’s still on my wall. Kept me going through trainee days.”
She wanted to melt into the floor. “Oh my gosh,” she whispered, hiding her face. “That’s so embarrassing!”
“No, it’s awesome!” he said, laughing. “You believed in me before I even debuted! And now you’re here, still giving me tangerines!”
Minji leaned in, whispering, “Told you—doomed!”
“Minji, hush!” Y/N hissed, then forced a shaky smile at Seungkwan. “I… I’m glad you liked them. I didn’t think they mattered that much!”
“They did,” he said softly, picking up a “You’re my star!” tangerine from her basket. “Still do. So… no more disappearing, okay?”
Her heart skipped. “O-Okay,” she stammered, nodding. “No disappearing.”
“Good,” he said, pocketing the tangerine. “Maybe next time, we can talk over some Jeju oranges? You know, catch up properly?”
The room erupted—Hoshi whooping, DK clapping, Jeonghan cackling. Y/N’s face was a furnace, but she managed a tiny, “S-Sure!”
“Yes!” Seungkwan cheered, fist-pumping. “Tangerine fairy’s back, everyone!”
“Seungkwan, stop!” she laughed, finally relaxing a little. The boys kept teasing, but for once, she didn’t mind. Maybe being found wasn’t so bad after all.
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Weeks had slipped by since that heart-pounding moment at the shoot, and Y/N hadn’t crossed paths with Seungkwan again. Seventeen’s packed schedules—performances, interviews, fan events—kept him on a whirlwind, while Y/N drowned in her own sea of foundation brushes and glittery eyeshadows, dolling up idols left and right. The memory of Seungkwan’s grin and that “no more disappearing” promise lingered, but life had a way of keeping them apart.
At her apartment, Y/N doodled absentmindedly on a tangerine—“Keep going!”—while Jiwoo lounged on the couch, scrolling her phone. “So,” Jiwoo said, smirking, “what’s the update on your tangerine prince? Any juicy texts yet?”
Y/N’s cheeks flared. “No! Nothing! He’s busy, I’m busy—there’s no update!”
“Lame,” Jiwoo teased, tossing a cushion at her. “He asked you to catch up over oranges! That’s, like, a date invite! Why hasn’t he called?”
“Because he’s an idol?” Y/N said, catching the cushion. “And I’m just… me? Maybe he forgot. It’s been weeks!”
“Forgot?!” Jiwoo sat up, dramatic. “Girl, he’s got your sketch on his wall! You’re unforgettable!”
“Stop it!” Y/N groaned, hiding her face. “It’s not like that! He was just being nice!”
“Nice, my foot,” Jiwoo snorted. “He’s into you. Bet he’s just too chicken to text.”
Meanwhile, across town in Seventeen’s practice room, Seungkwan was mid-stretch when the interrogation began. Hoshi flopped beside him, grinning. “So, Seungkwan-ah, what’s the plan with your tangerine fairy?”
“Plan?!” Seungkwan yelped, nearly toppling over. “There’s no plan! Stop it!”
“Come on,” DK chimed in, wiping sweat off his brow. “She’s gorgeous! You’ve got her number—why haven’t you made a move?”
Seungkwan’s ears turned pink. “I—I don’t even know if I like her like that! And I can’t just text her out of nowhere! It’d be weird!”
Jeonghan sauntered over, smirking as always. “You got her number from her assistant that day, right? What’s the hold-up? Scared she’ll think you’re a creep?”
“Yes!” Seungkwan wailed, flopping onto the floor. “What if she’s like, ‘Who’s this random guy?’ I’d die!”
“She won’t,” Wonwoo said calmly, sipping water. “She’s shy, but she didn’t run screaming when you called her tangerine fairy. She’s cool with it.”
“Exactly!” Mingyu nodded. “She’s pretty, sweet, and she’s been cheering you on since forever. Someone’s gonna snatch her up if you don’t move!”
“Snatch her up?!” Seungkwan sat up, horrified. “She’s not a prize! And I don’t even know what I feel!”
Hoshi tilted his head. “You don’t? Dude, you light up every time we mention tangerines. That’s not normal.”
“It’s a curse!” Seungkwan groaned, burying his face in his hands. “Those oranges from back then—they’ve haunted me! I can’t forget her!”
“Haunted you into stardom,” Jeonghan teased. “That sketch of hers? You’d stare at it during trainee days like it was magic. Admit it—you’re interested.”
Seungkwan peeked through his fingers. “Okay, fine! I’m… interested! But liking her? I don’t know! She’s just… special. Those doodles, the tangerines—they’d pull me out of the dumps when I was exhausted. I’d look at them and think, ‘Someone believes in me.’ It’s why I’m here!”
“Aww,” DK cooed, clutching his heart. “That’s so cute! Just text her already!”
“No way!” Seungkwan flailed. “What would I even say? ‘Hi, I’m the guy you gave fruit to a decade ago, wanna hang out?’ It’s too random!”
“How about,” Jeonghan suggested, grinning, “‘Hey, Y/N, still got any tangerines left? Let’s peel some together.’ Smooth, right?”
“Smooth?!” Seungkwan yelped. “That’s cheesy! She’ll block me!”
“She won’t,” Wonwoo said, shrugging. “She’s into tangerines too. It’s your thing.”
Seungkwan groaned, collapsing again. “You’re all useless! I’ll figure it out… eventually!”
Back at her place, Y/N finished her tangerine doodle, setting it aside. “He’s not gonna text,” she mumbled. “It’s fine. I’m fine.”
“You’re not fine,” Jiwoo said, smirking. “You’re doodling sad tangerines now. Just message him!”
“No!” Y/N squeaked. “What if he doesn’t remember me anymore? I’d die!”
Jiwoo laughed. “Oh, he remembers. Trust me.”
Unbeknownst to them, Seungkwan sat in the practice room, staring at his phone—Y/N’s number glowing on the screen. Hey, Y/N, he typed, then deleted it. Tangerine fairy, it’s me! Nope, deleted again. “Ugh, why is this so hard?!” he muttered, tossing the phone aside. For now, the tangerine curse held strong—keeping them apart, but never out of each other’s minds.
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The park was peaceful, the two of them munching tangerines side by side, watching kids scamper across the playground. The sky dimmed, painting the horizon orange, and a cool breeze rustled the trees. Seungkwan glanced at Y/N, his curiosity bubbling up—the question he’d held onto since that shoot finally spilling out.
“Hey, Y/N,” he said, peeling another tangerine segment. “I’ve always wondered… why’d you give me those tangerines back then? And why didn’t you ever talk to me?”
Y/N froze mid-bite, her tangerine dangling in her hand. What do I say? Her mind raced. That I had a crush on him? That I still kinda like him? No way—that’s too weird! Her cheeks flared red just thinking about it—spilling her heart to Boo Seungkwan, idol extraordinaire, felt like a one-way ticket to mortification. He’ll think I’m some creepy fan!
She opened her mouth, but no words came out—just a tiny, panicked squeak. Before she could cobble together an excuse, a familiar voice cut through the silence.
“Y/N! There you are!” Her grandma appeared, huffing slightly from the walk, peering over the bench. Then her eyes landed on Seungkwan, and they lit up. “Oh! The idol boy! The one you used to draw all the time! Seungkwan, right?”
Y/N’s soul left her body. “Grandma!” she yelped, jumping up. “W-What are you doing here?!”
“Looking for you, silly!” Grandma said, beaming. “It’s getting dark! And Seungkwan—have you eaten? Come join us! I’ve got a whole spread at home—jjigae, pancakes, tangerines, you name it!”
“Grandma, no!” Y/N flailed, stepping between them. “He doesn’t have to—he’s probably busy!” She shot Seungkwan a desperate look—Say no, please say no! What if they tell him everything?!
But Seungkwan just grinned, standing up. “That sounds amazing! I’d love to, Grandma. Thanks!”
“What?!” Y/N squeaked, her face a furnace. “Seungkwan, you don’t have to! You’ve got… plans or something, right?”
He laughed, brushing off her panic. “Plans? Nah, just chilling in Jeju. And no more disappearing, remember? Destiny’s clearly got this covered—I’m not fighting it!”
“Destiny?!” she hissed as they started walking, Grandma leading the way. She tugged his sleeve, whispering, “Seriously, you don’t have to! They’re gonna say stuff—embarrassing stuff!”
“Like what?” he whispered back, grinning at her red face. “How cute you are when you blush? Too late—I already know that.”
“Seungkwan!” she groaned, shoving him lightly. “I’m serious!”
“So am I,” he teased, unfazed. “Relax, tangerine fairy. I’m here for it.”
At the house, they settled around the dining table, a feast spread out—steaming jjigae, golden kimchi pancakes, and, of course, a bowl of tangerines. Y/N kept her eyes glued to her plate, avoiding Seungkwan’s gaze, while her grandparents launched into chaos.
“Oh, you should’ve seen her back then!” Grandpa said, chuckling. “She’d sit there doodling you on stage—stars everywhere! Always said, ‘He’s gonna be a big singer someday!’”
“Grandpa, stop!” Y/N whined, sinking lower. “That’s not—nobody needs to hear this!”
“Oh, yes they do!” Grandma cut in, passing Seungkwan a pancake. “She’d show us those drawings so proud—like you were her little project! And look at you now—on real stages, just like she said!”
Seungkwan’s eyes sparkled, and he leaned forward. “Really? What else did she say about me?”
“No, no, no!” Y/N yelped, waving her hands. “Don’t answer that! Please!”
“Too late!” Grandpa laughed. “She’d watch you sing at school events—hid in the back, clapping all quiet. Said your voice made her day better!”
“Grandpa!” Y/N’s voice hit a new pitch, her face tomato-red. “Can we talk about literally anything else?!”
Seungkwan grinned, resting his chin in his hand. “No, no, I wanna hear more! Did she ever say I was cool?”
“Oh, all the time!” Grandma said, nodding. “She’d come home like, ‘Seungkwan’s so cool, he’s gonna be famous!’”
“Grandma, I’m begging you!” Y/N moaned, hiding behind her napkin. “He doesn’t need to know this!”
“Why not?” Seungkwan teased, peeling a tangerine. “It’s cute! You were my first fan, huh?”
“I—I wasn’t—!” she stammered, but her grandparents kept going, oblivious.
“And those tangerines!” Grandpa added. “She’d sneak out early to leave ‘em for you—drew little hearts and everything!”
“Hearts?!” Seungkwan’s eyebrows shot up, delighted. “Y/N, you didn’t tell me about hearts!”
“Because it’s embarrassing!” she wailed, slumping in her chair. “Can we eat in silence? Please?”
“Nope!” Seungkwan laughed, popping a tangerine segment into his mouth. “This is gold! Your grandparents are my new best friends.”
“Oh, we like him!” Grandma said, patting his hand. “You should visit more—bring your singing voice next time!”
“Deal,” he said, winking at Y/N. “As long as Y/N doesn’t run away again.”
“I’m running right now,” she muttered, but a tiny smile crept onto her face. The table erupted in laughter, stories flowing, and though she was redder than ever, Y/N couldn’t deny it—Seungkwan fit right in, tangerines and all. Destiny’s a menace, she thought, but maybe not the worst one.
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Seungkwan lingered at Y/N’s grandparents’ house after dinner, the table still buzzing with laughter and empty plates. As he prepared to leave, Grandma bustled into the kitchen, returning with a bulging bag of food—kimchi pancakes, jjigae containers, and a heap of tangerines.
“Take these, Seungkwan-ah!” she said, thrusting the bag at him. “Share with your members—they need some Jeju love too!”
“Oh, wow, thank you!” Seungkwan bowed deeply, grinning. “The guys are gonna lose it over this!”
Grandpa chuckled, tossing in extra tangerines. “And don’t forget to come back! We’ve got more stories about our tangerine cheeks here!”
“Grandpa!” Y/N whined, hiding her face, but Seungkwan just laughed.
“I’ll be back for sure,” he said, winking at her. “Stories and all.”
Y/N walked him outside to wait for his van, the night air cool and quiet. She shuffled her feet, clutching a tangerine nervously. “Um, sorry about them,” she mumbled. “They’re so talkative. Just… forget all that stuff they said, okay?”
Seungkwan turned, his smile soft. “Forget it? No way. I’m happy I heard it.” He stepped closer, eyes warm. “I never forgot your tangerines, Y/N. They always cheered me up—still do.”
Her cheeks burned, and she looked away. “R-Really? They were just… silly.”
“Silly? They were everything,” he said, laughing lightly. “You have no idea.”
The van’s headlights appeared down the road, and Y/N’s heart sank—time was up. But before he climbed in, Seungkwan paused, turning to her with that bright, earnest smile. “You know, Y/N, you’re the reason I became an idol. That drawing of yours—the stage, the stars, the tangerines—it made me believe someone really thought I could do it. So… thank you.”
Her breath caught. “I—I didn’t… I mean, you did all the work!”
“Maybe,” he said, shrugging. “But you gave me a push. Let’s meet up in Seoul, yeah? No more vanishing.”
She nodded, a shy smile breaking through. “Okay. Deal.”
He waved as the van pulled away, and Y/N stood there, heart racing, until the taillights disappeared. Back inside, she found her grandparents pressed against the window like spies, grinning ear to ear.
“Look at that chemistry!” Grandma cooed. “Tangerine cheeks and her idol boy!”
“Stop it!” Y/N groaned, storming to her room. But alone, she flopped onto her bed, a grin spreading as she replayed Seungkwan’s laugh—bright, infectious, like pure joy. He’s so happy, she thought, her heart fluttering. Then her phone buzzed. A text from Seungkwan: “Thanks for today, tangerine fairy! Let’s do it again soon.” Her smile widened, and she typed back lightning-fast, cheeks red but heart soaring.
Months flew by, and things between them bloomed. Seungkwan and Y/N texted constantly—his messages bold and chatty, hers shy but growing bolder. “You won’t believe what Hoshi did today,” he’d yap over a call, voice bubbling. “Spilled juice all over the dorm!”
“Oh my gosh, again?” she’d laugh, her usual quiet melting away. With him, she was different—braver, brighter. His calls left her red-faced but giddy, and when their schedules aligned, he’d pop up at her shoots, especially if she was doing makeup for other artists on the same setlist.
“Hey, tangerine fairy!” he’d say, leaning against her station, ignoring her flustered squeaks. “Got any spares today?”
“Seungkwan, you’re not even in this shoot!” she’d protest, handing him a doodled tangerine anyway. The other artists would smirk, and she’d hide behind her brushes, mortified but secretly thrilled.
But lately, Seungkwan had been swamped, their chats shorter, meetings rare. Y/N tried not to dwell on it—He’s an idol, it’s normal—but she missed him. Then, one night, her phone buzzed: “Look outside your window.”
She peeked out, and there he was—Seungkwan, standing under a streetlight with that goofy grin, a picnic basket swinging in his hand. She bolted downstairs, throwing on a hoodie, and stepped outside, eyes wide.
“Seungkwan?!” she gasped, laughing. “What are you doing here? It’s midnight!”
He held up the basket, beaming. “Missed you. Midnight picnic’s the answer, right?”
“You’re crazy,” she said, but her smile betrayed her. They walked to a nearby park, the night quiet except for crickets. They spread a blanket, unpacking snacks—sandwiches, juice, and, naturally, tangerines. For a while, they ate in silence, the city lights twinkling above.
Then, without warning, Seungkwan reached over and took her hand. Her breath hitched, her eyes snapping to his, but he didn’t say anything—just kept walking, fingers warm around hers. Why is he doing this? Her heart pounded. Over months of texts, calls, and stolen moments, she’d fallen hard—his sweetness, his gentleness, the way he made everyone smile. But to him, was she just the tangerine girl from way back? Why hold her hand like it was nothing?
“Seungkwan?” she ventured, voice small. “Why… are you holding my hand?”
He glanced at her, his grin softening. “Because I wanted to. Is that okay?”
She blushed, nodding shyly. “Y-Yeah. It’s… okay.”
“Good,” he said, squeezing her hand. “Let’s just enjoy this, tangerine fairy. No disappearing tonight.”
She laughed, her heart a mess but happy. “No disappearing,” she promised, wondering just how deep this tangerine curse had pulled them both.
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The midnight picnic lingered in Y/N’s mind like a sweet dream—Seungkwan’s warm hand, his bright laugh, the tangerine peels glowing under the moonlight. But reality swooped in fast. Seungkwan was swept away by Seventeen’s relentless schedule—rehearsals, variety shows, and overseas promotions—while Y/N drowned in her own whirlwind of makeup gigs, blending eyeshadow for idols and dodging Jiwoo’s teasing.
“Hand-holding at a midnight picnic, huh?” Jiwoo smirked, sprawled on Y/N’s couch with a tangerine in hand. “What’s next, a tangerine-themed proposal?”
“Jiwoo!” Y/N yelped, tossing a cushion at her. “It was just… a moment! He’s busy, I’m busy—we’re not dating!”
“Sure,” Jiwoo drawled, peeling the tangerine. “That’s why you’re doodling hearts on your tangerines now. Totally not in love.”
“I’m not!” Y/N protested, cheeks red. “They’re just… decorative!”
“Decorative, my foot,” Jiwoo laughed. “You’re head over heels, tangerine fairy. Just admit it!”
Y/N groaned, hiding her face. Truth was, she was falling—hard. Seungkwan’s texts, his surprise visits, that gentle way he made her feel seen—it was all too much. But doubt gnawed at her. Does he even see me like that? Or am I just his old tangerine pal?
Meanwhile, in Seventeen’s dorm, Seungkwan wasn’t faring much better. He sat on the couch, staring at his phone—Y/N’s last text, a shy “Hope practice went well!” glowing on the screen. He wanted to reply, but his fingers froze. What if I sound too eager?
Hoshi burst in, tossing a tangerine at him. “Yah, lover boy! Still daydreaming about your fairy?”
Seungkwan caught it, glaring. “I’m not daydreaming! And stop throwing fruit!”
“He’s totally daydreaming,” DK said, plopping beside him. “You’ve got her number, you’ve held her hand—why’re you stalling?”
“I’m not stalling!” Seungkwan huffed. “I just… don’t know what to say! What if she thinks I’m weird for liking her?”
Jeonghan, lounging nearby, smirked. “Liking her? You’ve been in love with her tangerines since you were ten. Just ask her out!”
“In love?!” Seungkwan’s voice hit a new octave. “I’m not—I mean, I like her, okay? She’s sweet, and her doodles are… inspiring! But what if I mess it up?”
“Mess it up?” Wonwoo said, glancing up from his book. “She’s shy, not fragile. Just be you—she already likes you.”
“Yeah!” Mingyu added, munching on a snack. “You’re Boo Seungkwan! Charm her with your Jeju vibes!”
“You’re all useless,” Seungkwan groaned, flopping back. But deep down, he knew they were right. Y/N wasn’t just a memory—she was here, now, and he didn’t want to let her slip away again.
A few days later, Y/N was at a music show, doing makeup for a rookie group. She was mid-blush application when her phone buzzed—a text from Seungkwan: “At the same venue today! Can I swing by?” Her heart did a flip.
“He’s coming here?!” she whispered, nearly dropping her brush.
“Who?” Minji, her assistant, peeked over. “Oh, let me guess—tangerine prince?”
“Shush!” Y/N hissed, typing a quick “Sure!” before her nerves could stop her. It’s just a visit. No big deal.
But when Seungkwan strolled into the makeup room, all casual in a hoodie and that dazzling smile, her resolve crumbled. “Hey, tangerine fairy!” he called, waving a tangerine he’d clearly nabbed from her stash. “Miss me?”
“S-Seungkwan!” she stammered, cheeks red. “You’re… here!”
“Yup!” he said, leaning against her station. “Saw your name on the crew list and had to say hi. Got any new doodles for me?”
“Uh, maybe!” she said, fumbling for a tangerine with a “Keep shining!” doodle. “Here—don’t eat it yet!”
“Too late,” he teased, pretending to peel it. “Kidding! This one’s a keeper.”
The rookie group members giggled, and Minji whispered, “You’re so obvious!” Y/N shot her a look but couldn’t stop smiling. Seungkwan lingered, chatting about his day, making her laugh with stories of Hoshi’s latest chaos. Every glance, every joke, felt like a spark.
Before he left, he leaned closer, voice soft. “Hey, Y/N… you free this weekend? Maybe we could grab coffee? No tangerines required.”
Her breath caught. Is this… a date? “C-Coffee?” she squeaked. “Like… just us?”
“Yeah, just us,” he said, grinning. “Unless you want to bring your tangerine army.”
She laughed, nodding. “Okay. Coffee sounds good.”
“Sweet!” he said, fist-pumping. “I’ll text you!”
As he waved and jogged off, Minji pounced. “Did he just ask you out?! Spill!”
“It’s just coffee!” Y/N protested, but her heart was soaring. Coffee with Seungkwan. The tangerine curse was pulling them closer, and for once, she wasn’t scared to see where it led.
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Seungkwan lounged on his room, propped up on pillows for a cozy Weverse live. The screen glowed with fan comments zooming by—questions about Seventeen’s latest comeback, favorite snacks, and random memes. He grinned, waving at the camera. “Hey, Carats! Just chilling tonight—let’s chat!”
The comments flooded with hearts and emojis, and Seungkwan laughed, reading one aloud. “‘Why did you pick tangerines for your Miniteen character? Is it because you’re from Jeju and your dad has a farm?’”
He burst out laughing, clapping his hands. “Oh, good guess! Jeju’s definitely tangerine central, but that’s not the whole story.” He leaned closer, eyes sparkling. “Okay, Carats, want a throwback? Back in elementary school, I had this classmate who’d sneak tangerines onto my desk every morning. They’d have these cute little faces drawn on them—smiley faces, hearts, sometimes a ‘Fighting!’ note. I’d sit down, see one, and just… boom, best day ever!”
The comments exploded—“Awww!” “Who was it?!” “Tangerine fairy!” Seungkwan grinned, reaching off-screen to grab something. “Wait, it gets better. This classmate? She drew me once—check this out.” He held up Y/N’s old sketch, the one with him on stage, stars twinkling, a tangerine crowd cheering. “Look at this! She drew me like I was already a star. Still got it on my wall!”
Fans spammed hearts, begging for more. “Did you know who it was?” one comment asked.
Seungkwan paused, his smile softening. He knew Y/N valued her privacy—no way he’d spill her name. “Nah, I didn’t know back then,” he fibbed gently. “It was a mystery! But then… poof, the tangerines stopped. She disappeared, moved away or something. Broke my heart a little, not gonna lie.”
The comments turned into a sea of crying emojis. “Find her!” one fan wrote. “She’s your muse!”
“Muse, huh?” Seungkwan chuckled, leaning back. “Yeah, maybe she was. Those tangerines, that drawing—they kept me going through trainee days. If I could talk to her now, I’d just say… thank you. She’s the reason I believed I could do this.”
The live went on, but his words hung in the air, sweet and sincere, warming every Carat’s heart—and one viewer in particular.
Across town, Y/N sat on her couch, phone propped up as she watched the live with Jiwoo. Her jaw dropped when Seungkwan told the story, her cheeks turning tangerine-red. Jiwoo cackled, elbowing her.
“Oh my gosh, he’s talking about you!” Jiwoo squealed, clutching a pillow. “Tangerine fairy on Weverse! You’re famous!”
“Jiwoo, stop!” Y/N whined, hiding her face. “He’s crazy! Why’s he telling everyone?!”
“Because he’s in loooove,” Jiwoo teased, drawing out the word. “Look at him showing off your drawing! He’s whipped!”
“He’s not!” Y/N protested, peeking through her fingers. But when Seungkwan held up her sketch, her heart melted. “Oh no… he kept it. That’s so embarrassing!”
“Embarrassing? It’s adorable!” Jiwoo said, grinning. “He’s basically confessing to the world that you’re his inspiration!”
“He’s just being nice!” Y/N mumbled, but her smile betrayed her. Hearing him talk about her tangerines, her drawing, with such warmth—it made her chest flutter. He really remembered all that.
When the live ended, Jiwoo poked her. “You gonna text him? Tell him he’s nuts for airing your tangerine saga?”
“I… maybe,” Y/N said, grabbing her phone. She hesitated, then typed a quick message to Seungkwan: “You’re CRAZY! Telling all of Weverse about my tangerines?! I’m hiding forever now!”
His reply came in seconds, with a string of laughing emojis. “Haha, tangerine fairy, you can’t hide from me! Had to give you a shoutout—those tangerines changed my life! Thank YOU.”
Y/N’s cheeks burned, but she typed back, “You’re too much. But… I’m glad you liked them.”
“Liked them? Loved them,” he replied. “Still do. Coffee soon? I owe my muse a tangerine or two.”
She laughed, her heart racing. “He’s impossible,” she muttered, but Jiwoo caught her grin.
“Yeah, impossibly in love with you,” Jiwoo teased, dodging Y/N’s swat. “Go plan your coffee date!”
“It’s not a date!” Y/N insisted, but as she texted Seungkwan back—“Coffee sounds good. Bring tangerines!”—she couldn’t stop smiling. The tangerine curse had woven their past into something new, and every sweet word from him felt like a step closer to something brighter.
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The coffee shop was tucked in a quiet Seoul alley, its warm lights spilling onto the cobblestones. Y/N arrived early, clutching a tangerine she’d doodled with a nervous “Good luck!”—a habit she couldn’t shake. Seungkwan had texted her to meet here, his usual playful tone laced with something new: “Just you, me, and some tangerines. Got something to tell you.” Her stomach had been in knots ever since.
Inside, she found a corner table, the scent of espresso mingling with her jitters. What’s he gonna say? she wondered, peeling her tangerine absentmindedly. It’s just coffee… right?
The door chimed, and Seungkwan walked in, his hoodie and cap making him look like any other guy—except for that bright, unmistakable grin. “Tangerine fairy!” he called, sliding into the seat across from her. “You beat me here? And with a tangerine already? You’re too good.”
“H-Hi!” she stammered, pushing the tangerine toward him. “I just… got nervous. Here, take this!”
He laughed, picking it up and reading the “Good luck!” doodle. “Nervous? Why? It’s just me!” His eyes softened, and he set the tangerine down gently. “But… I’m kinda nervous too.”
“You? Nervous?” she said, raising an eyebrow. “You’re Boo Seungkwan! You’re never nervous!”
“Oh, I’m human, Y/N,” he teased, then took a deep breath. “Okay, no more stalling. I’ve been thinking about this for a while, and… I really like you. Like, really like you. Not just as my tangerine fairy from back then, but as you, now. And I want us to be official—like, together. A couple.”
Y/N’s heart stopped. Her tangerine segment fell to the table with a soft plop. “W-What?!” she squeaked, her cheeks flaming. “You—like me? Like… that?”
“Yeah, like that,” he said, grinning, though his hands fidgeted with his coffee cup. “I’ve liked you since Jeju, maybe even before—those tangerines, your drawings, they’ve always been part of me. But now? It’s you, Y/N. Your laugh, your shy smiles, the way you make everyone’s day better. I want you in my life, for real.”
She stared at him, her mind a whirlwind. Seungkwan likes me. Me. But doubt crept in, cold and heavy. “But… you’re an idol,” she mumbled, looking down. “You’re Boo Seungkwan. Fans, your company, your whole world—it’s huge. And I’m just… me. A makeup artist. Nobody. Won’t it be… too hard?”
He reached across the table, gently taking her hand. “Hey, don’t say that. You’re not ‘nobody.’ You’re Y/N—the girl who made me believe I could be a star. The girl who still makes me smile just by existing.”
Her cheeks burned, but she didn’t pull away. “Still… your fans. They’re so protective. And your company—what if they don’t like this? What if it messes up your career?”
Seungkwan squeezed her hand, his gaze steady. “I’m not gonna lie, it won’t be easy. Fans can be intense, and the company’s got rules. But I’ve thought about this, Y/N. I’ve talked to my members—they’re rooting for us, by the way.” He grinned, then sobered. “I don’t care about the noise. I care about you. We’ll figure it out together—slow, steady, private if we need to. I’m not scared of hard, not when it’s for you.”
Her eyes stung, his words sinking deep. “You… really mean that?” she whispered.
“Every word,” he said, leaning closer. “You’ve been my tangerine fairy all this time—cheering me on, believing in me. Let me cheer for you now. Let me be yours.”
Y/N’s heart felt too big for her chest. She wanted to say yes—every fiber of her screamed it—but fear held her back. “I’m… scared,” she admitted, voice small. “What if I’m not enough for all this?”
Seungkwan smiled, soft and sure. “You’re more than enough. You’re my inspiration, remember? And I’m not going anywhere. We’ll take it one tangerine at a time, okay?”
She laughed despite herself, the knot in her chest loosening. “One tangerine at a time?”
“Yup,” he said, picking up her doodled tangerine and holding it like a promise. “Starting with this one. So… what do you say? Be my girlfriend?”
Y/N took a shaky breath, looking into his warm, earnest eyes. The doubts were still there, but his hand in hers felt like an anchor. He’s Seungkwan. My Seungkwan. “Okay,” she said finally, a shy smile breaking through. “Let’s… try this. Together.”
“Yes!” Seungkwan cheered, loud enough to turn heads in the shop. He caught himself, laughing. “Oops, sorry! I’m just—wow, I’m so happy!”
“You’re ridiculous,” she giggled, her blush deepening but her heart soaring.
“Ridiculously yours,” he said, winking. “Now, let’s order some cake to celebrate. And maybe more tangerines?”
“Always tangerines,” she agreed, squeezing his hand back. As they laughed and planned, the world outside—the fans, the company, the chaos—faded. For now, it was just them, two tangerine hearts beating as one, ready to face whatever came next.
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an: hellooo, sorry this is so so so late. I fell asleep early last night, which is why I forgot to post it. Sorry!
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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Are you home yet?? 🥺👉👈 I'm waiting for your posts 😔😔
Hi! I just got home. I'll edit the tangerine story first and post it tonight. After that, I'll work on editing some of the requests I've already written hehe🫶🏻
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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HELP MEE I LOVE UR STORY WITH SEUNGKWAN “when life gives u tangerines” I LITERALLY TEARED UPP HUHU
Okay, okay, guys, I hear you! That tangerine one is actually finished, but I'm just doing some polishing. Plus, I'm currently not at home, so I don't have my laptop with me, and the last story I posted was just from my drafts, so yeah. Maybe when I get home on Friday, I'll post it. Hehe, sorry for the wait!!
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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Part Two: Hiding in Plain Sight
Masterlist | Part 1
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Seventeen’s chaotic camaraderie, Y/N, the group’s 14th member, navigates a hidden romance with Joshua amidst their hectic schedules. Balancing playful group dynamics, subtle affection, and the pressure of secrecy, their close bond faces challenges from teasing members and unspoken tensions. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th member Genre: Fluff, Angst, Humor
The van ride back to the dorm was loud, filled with the members’ drunken laughter and slurred stories, but a heavy silence hung between Y/N and Joshua. He sat by the window, earbuds in, staring into the dark Seoul streets like they held answers. Y/N, wedged between a giggling DK and a half-asleep Woozi, kept her eyes on her lap, her stomach churning. Jeonghan’s little game had hit harder than she’d expected.
When they stumbled into the dorm, the members were a mess—Mingyu tripped over a shoe, giggling, while Seungkwan tried to serenade Hoshi with a butchered ballad. Joshua, though, was a different kind of quiet. He kicked off his shoes, muttered a vague “Night” to no one in particular, and headed straight for his room without so much as glancing at Y/N.
She caught Jeonghan’s eye as he slung his jacket over a chair, her glare sharp enough to cut. Look what you’ve done. He just grinned, stepping close to drape an arm around her shoulders, his voice a teasing whisper. “Good luck with sulky, jealous Joshua,” he said, laughing softly before slipping away to his own room, leaving her standing in the dim living room.
The dorm slowly quieted, the chaos giving way to snores and the occasional creak of a bed. Y/N changed into her pajamas—an oversized hoodie and soft shorts—then sank onto the couch, scrolling aimlessly on her phone to kill time. She needed to make sure the members were out cold before sneaking to Joshua’s room. Her chest felt tight, replaying his coldness, the way he’d shut her out. Joshua was never mad—not like this. Even when she was stubborn or pushed his patience, he’d always meet her with a smile or a gentle nudge. This felt different, and she hated it.
After an hour, when the dorm was silent, she padded down the hall, her socks muffling her steps. Joshua’s door was cracked open, a sliver of moonlight spilling out. She slipped inside, closing it softly behind her. He was lying on his bed, arms behind his head, eyes closed, but Y/N knew him too well—his breathing was too even, too deliberate.
“I know you’re not sleeping,” she said quietly, her voice barely above a whisper as she crossed the room. She climbed onto the bed, settling beside him, her arms wrapping around his waist without hesitation. “Shua, come on.”
He didn’t move, his body tense under her touch. A sigh escaped him, long and heavy, and when he spoke, his voice was low, edged with something raw. “Why don’t you go sleep? Gotta rest up for your big date tomorrow, right?”
Y/N pulled back just enough to see his face, her heart sinking at the tightness in his jaw. She pouted, nudging his chest gently. “You know I didn’t mean any of that,” she said, her voice soft but firm. “I only played along with Jeonghan because if I didn’t, the guys would’ve started asking questions. Like, ‘Why’s Y/N so weird about this?’ It could’ve made them suspicious, Shua. I was just… protecting us.”
Joshua’s eyes stayed closed, but his hand twitched, like he wanted to reach for her but wouldn’t let himself. “Protecting us,” he echoed, the words flat. “Funny how that ends up with you agreeing to meet some guy. And the members eating it up, thinking you’re single.”
She frowned, sitting up slightly, her fingers tightening on his shirt. “Joshua, stop. You know you’re the only one I love. Like, only you. That whole thing was a stupid act. I’d never actually go on a date with anyone else.”
He finally opened his eyes, meeting hers in the dim light. They were softer now, but still guarded, searching her face. “Then why can’t we just tell them, Y/N?” he asked, his voice quieter but no less intense. “The members—they’d get it. They’d probably throw us a damn party. They’re our family. But it’s been years, and we’re still sneaking around, and now they’re out there trying to set you up because they think you’re free to date whoever.”
Y/N’s throat tightened, the familiar argument settling heavy between them. She dropped her gaze, her fingers tracing small circles on his chest to ground herself. “I know,” she admitted, her voice small. “I want to tell them, I swear. Just… not now. It’s the comeback, and everyone’s stressed, and what if it changes things? What if they start treating us differently, or think we’re not focused?”
Joshua sighed again, his hand finally moving to cover hers, his thumb brushing her knuckles. “You always say that,” he said, not accusing, just tired. “‘Not now.’ But it’s been three years, Y/N. I’m tired of watching you pretend I’m just another member. I’m tired of feeling like I have to hide how much I—” He stopped, swallowing hard, his eyes flicking away.
Her heart twisted. She hated this—hated seeing him hurt, hated that she was the reason. Leaning forward, she pressed her forehead to his, her voice barely a whisper. “I’m sorry, Shua. I’m so sorry. I don’t want you to feel like that. I just… I got scared. But I promise, we’ll tell them soon. When the timing’s better. Okay?”
He didn’t answer right away, his hand tightening on hers. She could feel the conflict in him—the patient, steady Joshua who’d always given her space, warring with the part that just wanted to be seen with her. Finally, he exhaled, pulling her closer until she was tucked against his chest, his arms wrapping around her fully.
“Okay,” he murmured, but there was a weight to it, like he wasn’t sure how many more “okays” he had left. “But I’m holding you to that promise.”
She nodded against him, her pout deepening as she buried her face in his neck, breathing in the familiar warmth of him. “I hate when you’re mad at me,” she mumbled, her voice muffled. “You’re never mad. It’s weird. I don’t like it.”
A soft laugh escaped him, the first crack in his armor. “I’m not mad,” he said, his hand sliding up to cradle the back of her head. “Just… frustrated. I don’t want to share you, even if it’s fake.”
“You’re not sharing me,” she said fiercely, lifting her head to meet his eyes. “I’m yours. Always. Jeonghan’s stupid friend can kick rocks.”
That pulled a real smile from him, small but genuine, and he leaned down to press a kiss to her forehead. “Good. Because I’d hate to have to scare him off.”
She giggled, the tension easing as she snuggled back into him, her arms tightening around his waist. “You? Scary? Please. You’d probably just charm him into leaving politely.”
“Don’t test me,” he teased, his voice lighter now, his fingers tracing lazy patterns on her back.
They lay like that for a while, the dorm silent around them, the earlier fight dissolving into the quiet. Y/N felt her eyes growing heavy, the warmth of his embrace pulling her toward sleep. She hated fighting with him—hated how it made her chest ache, how it reminded her that even Joshua’s patience had limits. But here, curled up with him, she could pretend for a little longer that it was just them, no secrets, no games.
As her breathing slowed, Joshua’s hand stilled in her hair, his voice a soft murmur against her temple. “I love you,” he said, so quiet it was almost lost to the dark.
“I love you too,” she whispered back, already half-asleep, her arms still wrapped around him like she could keep the world out forever.
But in the back of her mind, Jeonghan’s smirk lingered, a reminder that their secret wasn’t as safe as it used to be. And Joshua’s words—“not now”—echoed, a promise she wasn’t sure how much longer she could delay.
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The dorm had been a pressure cooker for days, the air thick with unspoken tension. Jeonghan’s restaurant stunt had left a mark, and though Y/N had smoothed things over with Joshua that night, the cracks were still there. She’d promised to tell the members—soon—but “soon” felt like a moving target, and Joshua’s patience was wearing thin. Jeonghan, ever the menace, wasn’t done stirring the pot.
His next scheme came during a rare break in their schedule. The group was lounging in the practice room, sprawled across the floor, debating dinner plans. Y/N was curled up on a bench, scrolling through her phone, while Joshua sat nearby, strumming his guitar absentmindedly. To the members, it was business as usual—until Jeonghan struck.
“Hey, Y/N,” he called, his voice deceptively casual as he leaned against the mirror. “My friend texted me again. You know, the one who’s dying to meet you? He’s free tomorrow night. I told him you’re game for coffee.”
Y/N’s head snapped up, her eyes narrowing. Not again. “Jeonghan, I didn’t—”
“Wait, hold up!” Seungkwan cut in, sitting up from his spot on the floor, eyes wide with glee. “This guy’s still in the picture? Y/N, you didn’t tell us you were actually into it!”
“I’m not,” she said quickly, her voice sharp, but the members were already piling on.
“Come on, give him a chance!” Hoshi chimed in, grinning. “Jeonghan wouldn’t set you up with a dud. Right, Hannie?”
Jeonghan smirked, his gaze flicking to Joshua, who’d stopped strumming, his fingers frozen on the strings. “Oh, he’s a catch,” Jeonghan said smoothly. “I showed him your latest stage pics, Y/N. Man’s smitten. Said you’re exactly his type.”
Y/N’s stomach dropped. She shot Jeonghan a glare—you’re dead—but the damage was done. Joshua’s jaw clenched, his eyes fixed on the guitar like it was the only thing keeping him grounded. “Cool,” he muttered, barely audible, but the word carried a chill that Y/N felt across the room.
“Shua, it’s not—” she started, but Mingyu steamrolled over her, oblivious.
“Yo, we need details! What’s this guy do? Is he, like, a CEO? A model?” Mingyu asked, leaning forward. “Y/N’s gotta aim high, you know.”
“He’s just a friend,” Y/N snapped, her voice louder than intended, trying to shut it down. “And I’m not meeting him, so drop it.”
The members groaned, teasing her for “playing hard to get,” but Joshua didn’t say a word. He set the guitar down, stood, and walked out without looking back, the door clicking shut behind him. The room fell quiet for a split second, the others exchanging confused glances.
“What’s up with him?” Vernon asked, scratching his head.
Jeonghan shrugged, his smirk barely hidden. “Guess he’s not feeling it today.”
Y/N’s glare could’ve burned a hole through him. “I need some air,” she muttered, grabbing her jacket and heading for the door, her heart pounding with guilt and frustration.
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For the next two days, Joshua was a ghost. He didn’t ignore Y/N outright—that would’ve been too obvious—but he was distant, his warmth replaced by a polite, untouchable wall. In the dorm, he’d answer her questions with clipped “Yeah” or “Fine” his eyes never meeting hers. At practice, he stayed on the opposite side of the room, focusing on choreo with an intensity that shut her out. Y/N felt every dodged glance like a jab, her chest tightening with the weight of it.
She tried to catch him alone, lingering after meals or hovering near his room, but he’d slip away, mumbling about calls or errands. The worst part was how he masked it—still joking with the members, still his usual self to everyone else. Only Y/N saw the cold edge, the hurt he buried under his smile.
Jeonghan noticed, of course. He didn’t say anything, but his eyes followed them, sharp and calculating, waiting for the next crack.
That night, the group decided to hit a nearby diner for a late dinner, craving a break from dorm food. The vibe was off, though—Joshua had been holed up in his room all day, his door shut tight. Seungcheol knocked once, calling, “Shua, you coming?” but got a muffled “Not tonight” in response. The members exchanged looks but didn’t push, sensing his mood.
Y/N was on the couch, knees pulled to her chest, scrolling through her phone but not really seeing it. Hoshi flopped beside her, nudging her arm. “Y/N, come eat with us! You can’t just mope here all night.”
“I’m not moping,” she lied, forcing a smile. “Just… not feeling great. You guys go ahead.”
“You sure?” Seungcheol asked, frowning. “We can bring you something back.”
“Yeah, I’m good,” she said, waving them off. “Have fun.”
Jeonghan lingered by the door, his gaze flicking between Y/N and Joshua’s closed room. He didn’t smirk this time—just gave her a small, almost apologetic nod before herding the others out. “Let’s move, people. I’m starving,” he said, his voice light but deliberate, giving Y/N and Joshua the space he knew they needed.
The dorm fell silent, the kind of quiet that pressed against Y/N’s ears. She stayed on the couch, her phone forgotten in her lap, replaying Jeonghan’s stunt and Joshua’s reaction. She hated this—hated how her fear had pushed him away, hated how Jeonghan’s games had made it worse. But bursting into Joshua’s room felt wrong; he needed time to cool off. So she waited, the clock ticking past an hour, then two.
Finally, the door to Joshua’s room creaked open. He stepped out, hoodie pulled up, heading for the kitchen without a word. Y/N’s heart jumped, but he didn’t look her way, his steps deliberate as he grabbed a glass from the cabinet.
She couldn’t take it anymore. “Shua,” she said, her voice soft but cutting through the silence. “Can we talk?”
He paused, his back to her, filling the glass with water. “What’s there to talk about?” His tone was flat, colder than she’d ever heard, and it stung like a slap.
“You’re mad at me,” she said, standing but staying by the couch, giving him space. “And I get it. Jeonghan was out of line, and I messed up by playing along again. But I didn’t mean it. You know that.”
He turned then, leaning against the counter, his eyes dark with something raw—hurt, anger, exhaustion. “Do I?” he asked, setting the glass down harder than necessary. “Because it’s the same thing every time, Y/N. You say you’ll tell them, but you don’t. You let them think you’re free to date whoever, and I’m just… what? Supposed to smile and go along with it?”
“I’m trying to protect us!” she said, her voice rising, desperate. “If I’d shut Jeonghan down too hard, they’d start asking why. They’d dig, Shua. You know how they are. I didn’t want them figuring it out like that.”
“Protect us?” He laughed, but it was bitter, empty. “You’re protecting you. I’ve been ready to tell them for years. I’d shout it from the damn rooftop if you’d let me. But you keep saying ‘not now,’ and I’m done hearing it. I’m done watching you pretend I’m nothing to you.”
Her breath caught, tears pricking her eyes. “You’re everything to me,” she said, stepping closer, her voice breaking. “You know that. I’m just scared, okay? Scared it’ll change things with the group, with the fans, with everything we’ve worked for.”
He shook his head, running a hand through his hair. “I love you, Y/N. More than anything. But I can’t keep doing this—hiding like we’re some dirty secret. I can’t keep watching them try to set you up because you won’t let me be yours out loud.”
“I’m sorry,” she whispered, tears spilling now, her hands trembling. “I’m so sorry, Shua. I’ll tell them. I swear, when they get back tonight, I’ll do it. No more waiting.”
He looked at her, his anger softening but not gone, like a fire burned down to embers. “You’ve said that before,” he said quietly, and the weight of it crushed her. He turned, heading back toward his room. “I need space.”
“Joshua, please,” she called, following him, her voice desperate. “Don’t walk away. I mean it this time. I’ll tell them. I’ll—”
He stopped in the doorway, his back still to her, and for a moment, she thought he’d keep going. But then he sighed, his shoulders slumping, and turned to face her. “You really mean it?” he asked, his voice softer now, searching her face.
“Yes,” she said, stepping closer, her hands reaching for his. “I’m done hiding. I want them to know. I want everyone to know you’re mine.”
His eyes held hers, conflicted but softening, his love for her winning out over the hurt. He let her take his hand, his thumb brushing her knuckles like a reflex. “Okay,” he said finally, barely above a whisper. “But if you don’t, Y/N… I don’t know how much longer I can do this.”
She nodded, tears still falling, and before she could overthink it, she leaned up, kissing him softly, an apology and a promise rolled into one. “I love you,” she murmured against his lips. “I’m sorry I made you wait.”
Joshua hesitated, then deepened the kiss, his hands sliding to her waist, pulling her closer. It was slow, intense, all the anger and longing pouring out until they were breathless. When they pulled apart, he rested his forehead against hers, his voice low. “I love you too. Always.”
They stayed like that, wrapped up in each other, the dorm’s silence a cocoon around them. Y/N’s heart raced, but for the first time in days, it felt lighter. They’d tell the members tonight. No more games, no more secrets.
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An hour later, the members were wrapping up at the diner, their table a mess of empty plates and soju bottles. Seungcheol leaned back, stretching. “We should grab takeout for Shua and Y/N,” he said, flagging down a waiter. “They’re probably starving.”
“Yeah, Joshua’s been off all day,” Wonwoo noted, frowning. “He was locked in his room like he’s plotting a heist or something.”
“Maybe he’s just tired,” DK said, but his tone was uncertain. “Or… I dunno, mad? He’s never this quiet.”
Seungkwan nudged Jeonghan, who’d been unusually subdued, sipping his drink in silence. “You’re quiet too, Hannie. What’s up? You know something?”
Jeonghan’s lips twitched, but he shook his head, his expression carefully neutral. “Me? Nah. Just enjoying the food.” Inside, he felt a twinge of guilt—his scheme had pushed Joshua harder than he’d meant, and Y/N’s glare still burned in his memory. But he kept his mouth shut, letting the moment play out.
They paid, grabbed takeout, and headed back, the walk filled with Hoshi’s loud retelling of a fan meet story. When they reached the dorm, Seungkwan fumbled with the key, juggling the takeout bags. “If Joshua’s still grumpy, I’m eating his share,” he joked, pushing the door open.
The sight inside stopped them dead.
Joshua and Y/N were on the couch, tangled in a kiss that was anything but subtle. Her hands were in his hair, his arms around her waist, and they were so lost in each other they didn’t hear the door. Seungkwan’s takeout bag hit the floor with a thud, sauce packets spilling. Hoshi, mid-giggle, choked on air, his jaw dropping. The others froze, a collective gasp sucking the air out of the room.
Joshua saw them first, his eyes snapping open over Y/N’s shoulder. He pulled back, pushing her gently, his face flaming. “Y/N—”
She kissed him again, oblivious, chasing his lips with a whine. “Shua, why’d you—” He pushed her back a little harder, and she turned, pouting, ready to complain—until her eyes landed on the twelve members staring like they’d seen a ghost.
Her face went beet red, her mouth falling open. “Oh my God,” she squeaked, scrambling to stand, but her foot caught on a cushion, and she nearly faceplanted. Joshua grabbed her arm, steadying her, his own cheeks crimson but his lips twitching like he might laugh.
Hoshi broke the silence, jumping like he’d won the lottery. “OH MY GOSH, YOU TWO ARE KISSING! THIS IS WHY! THIS IS WHY!” He pointed wildly, spinning to the others. “I KNEW SOMETHING WAS UP!”
“You knew nothing!” Seungkwan shouted, clutching his chest like he’d been betrayed. “WHY DIDN’T I SEE THIS? WHY?”
“Hold up, hold up!” Mingyu yelled, waving his arms like a referee. “How long has this been going on? Y/N, you were gonna date Jeonghan’s friend yesterday!”
“I was not!” Y/N snapped, mortified, hiding half behind Joshua, who was biting back a grin despite himself. “That was a joke! I’m—ugh, this is so embarrassing!”
Dino’s eyes were saucers. “You were making out in our living room! I’m traumatized! I need therapy!”
“Oh, grow up,” Vernon said, but he was grinning, shaking his head. “Honestly, I’m just mad I didn’t figure it out sooner.”
Seungcheol crossed his arms, smirking. “So, what, you two have been sneaking around this whole time? Under our noses?”
Joshua cleared his throat, finally finding his voice, his arm sliding around Y/N’s waist protectively. “Yeah, uh… for a while. Three years, actually.”
“THREE YEARS?” DK screeched, clutching Hoshi for support. “THREE? YEARS? I’VE BEEN LIVING A LIE!”
The room erupted, questions flying like confetti. “How’d you keep it secret?” “When did this start?” “Does this mean you’re, like, together together?”
Y/N groaned, burying her face in Joshua’s shoulder, her voice muffled. “You’re all so loud! I’m dying here!”
Then Woozi’s eyes narrowed, landing on Jeonghan, who was leaning against the wall, smiling like the cat that got the cream. “Wait a minute. Jeonghan, you’re not freaking out. Why aren’t you freaking out?”
The group turned on him like hawks, realization dawning. “OH, YOU KNEW?” Mingyu bellowed, pointing accusingly. “YOU KNEW AND DIDN’T TELL US?”
Jeonghan raised his hands, laughing. “What can I say? I’m Yoon Jeonghan for a reason.” His smug shrug only fueled their outrage, the members shouting over each other.
Y/N snapped out of her embarrassment, pointing at Jeonghan like she was ready to fight. “YOU! THIS IS YOUR FAULT, YOU MENACE!” she yelled, stepping forward. “You and your stupid fake-date schemes! You pushed us into this!”
Jeonghan just grinned, strolling over to ruffle her hair, unfazed. “You’re welcome,” he said, winking. “At least now you don’t have to hide.” He turned to Joshua, tapping his shoulder. “Congrats, man. Good luck with this interrogation.”
Joshua laughed, the tension from earlier melting away, his arm tightening around Y/N. “Thanks, I think.”
The members descended into chaos, dragging chairs into a circle like they were starting a tribunal. Seungkwan plopped down, crossing his arms. “Okay, spill! From the beginning! When did you two start sneaking around?”
“And why didn’t you trust us?” Wonwoo added, mock-hurt. “We’re your family!”
Y/N groaned, sinking onto the couch, still red-faced. “It wasn’t about trust! I just… ugh, you guys would’ve teased us to death!”
“And we’re not doing that now?” Hoshi cackled, dodging as she swatted at him.
Joshua, grinning, pulled her closer, his voice warm. “Alright, alright. It started predebut, honestly. We just… clicked. Didn’t want to mess with the group vibe, so we kept it quiet.”
“Quiet?!” DK shouted. “You were sucking face in our dorm! That’s not quiet!”
Y/N squealed, hiding her face in her hands. “I wasn’t sucking face! Oh my God, kill me now!”
“You kinda were,” Joshua teased, laughing when she shoved him. “What? It’s true!”
The members roared, some cheering, others fake-gagging. “Get a room!” Dino yelled, only for Mingyu to smirk and add, “Oh, wait, they already did!”
Y/N grabbed a cushion, hurling it at him. “You’re all the worst!” she shouted, but her smile betrayed her, the relief of being out in the open washing away her embarrassment.
Jeonghan watched it all, his guilt from earlier fading. He’d pushed too far, maybe, but it’d worked out. He caught Joshua’s eye, giving a small nod. Joshua nodded back, a silent we’re good.
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Later, when the members finally calmed down, Y/N dragged Joshua to her room, slamming the door to drown out the renewed teasing. “They saw me kissing you like a desperate idiot,” she groaned, glaring at him as he leaned against her desk, laughing. “And you’re just laughing?”
“I mean, yeah,” he said, grinning, stepping closer to pull her into a hug. “You don’t have to hide how clingy you are anymore. It’s kinda cute.”
She pouted, shoving his chest lightly. “I’m not clingy. And I’m still mad at you for laughing. I looked like a tomato out there!”
“My favorite tomato,” he teased, kissing her nose. “And for what it’s worth, I’m glad they know. No more sneaking.”
She sighed, melting into him, her arms looping around his neck. “Yeah, okay. But if they keep teasing me, I’m blaming you and Jeonghan.”
“Deal,” he said, tilting her chin up for another kiss, softer this time, the chaos outside forgotten.
Behind the door, Hoshi’s voice rang out, muffled but gleeful. “Yo, they’re probably kissing again!”
“Let’s barge in!” Seungkwan suggested, only for Seungcheol to yell, “Leave them alone, you animals!”
Y/N pulled back, groaning. “We’re never living this down, are we?”
Joshua just laughed, holding her tighter. “Nope. But I wouldn’t trade it.”
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The dorm was a battlefield of snacks and banter, Seventeen sprawled across the living room for a rare movie night. Popcorn bowls were precariously balanced, and Seungkwan was already arguing with DK over who got to pick the film. Y/N, though, had zero interest in the debate. She was tucked into Joshua’s side on the couch, her legs draped over his lap, one arm looped around his neck as she played with the collar of his hoodie.
“You look so cute like this,” she murmured, her voice low but shameless, her lips brushing his ear just enough to make him shiver. “Comfy Shua is my favorite Shua.”
Joshua grinned, his hand resting on her knee, thumb tracing lazy circles. “Oh, yeah?” he teased, tilting his head to meet her eyes, his own sparkling with mischief. “You’re just saying that ‘cause you’ve got me trapped here.”
“Trapped and loving it,” she shot back, leaning in to peck his cheek, quick and bold, not caring who saw. Her heart fluttered at how easy it was now—no overthinking, no glancing over her shoulder. Just them, out in the open, and she was eating it up.
The members, however, were less enchanted. Mingyu groaned from the floor, tossing a popcorn kernel at them. “Can you two not be so gross for, like, five minutes? I’m trying to enjoy my snack here!”
“Jealousy’s not a good look, Gyu,” Y/N called, sticking out her tongue before snuggling closer to Joshua, who laughed, wrapping an arm around her waist to pull her even nearer.
“I’m not jealous,” Mingyu huffed, crossing his arms. “I’m just saying, Joshua used to be our friend before you turned him into your personal teddy bear!”
“He’s still your friend,” Y/N said, grinning wickedly. “Just… my teddy bear first.”
Joshua choked on a laugh, his cheeks pink but clearly loving every second of her boldness. “I’m not complaining,” he said, winking at her, and she giggled, poking his dimple.
Their bubble was interrupted by Hoshi, who bounded into the room with his usual chaotic energy, eyeing the couch like a predator. “Yo, Shua, my man!” he declared, making a beeline for the empty spot next to Joshua. “Scoot over, I’m claiming my bro time!”
Y/N’s head whipped around, her eyes narrowing into a glare that could’ve melted steel. “Oh, no you don’t,” she snapped, planting a hand on Joshua’s shoulder to block Hoshi’s path. “This is my spot, Kwon Soonyoung. Back off.”
Hoshi froze, blinking dramatically. “Your spot? Since when is Joshua’s side your spot?”
“Since I said so,” Y/N retorted, leaning forward, her voice dripping with mock menace. “Find another seat, tiger boy, or we’re throwing hands.”
The room erupted, the members hooting and laughing as Hoshi clutched his chest like he’d been shot. “Tiger boy?! That’s cold, Y/N! I just wanna sit with my buddy!”
“Your buddy’s taken,” she said, smirking, then patted Joshua’s chest for emphasis. “Right, Shua?”
Joshua, barely holding it together, nodded, his grin wide. “She’s kinda got a point, Hosh. This spot’s reserved.”
“Betrayal!” Hoshi wailed, flopping onto the floor next to Vernon, who was snickering. “Fine, keep your clingy girlfriend. I’ll just bond with Vernon’s vibes instead.”
“Good luck with that,” Vernon deadpanned, shoving Hoshi’s head off his shoulder. “Your vibes are chaotic.”
Y/N stuck her tongue out at Hoshi, then turned back to Joshua, her smile softening as she leaned up to kiss his jaw, slow and deliberate. “You’re too handsome tonight,” she whispered, loud enough for him to hear but flirty enough to make his ears redden. “How am I supposed to focus on this dumb movie?”
“You’re gonna kill me,” he murmured back, his voice low and warm, his hand sliding to her lower back, fingers grazing just under her hoodie. “But I’m not mad about it.”
Seungkwan gagged dramatically from across the room. “Okay, enough! You’re making my popcorn taste like regret! Can we watch the movie or what?”
“You’re just mad ‘cause Shua’s getting more action than you,” Y/N teased, dodging a cushion Seungkwan lobbed her way.“Rude!” Seungkwan shouted, but he was laughing, the others piling on with their own jabs.
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The next week, during a magazine photoshoot, Y/N’s clinginess hit new heights. The set was buzzing—lights, cameras, staff darting around as Seventeen posed in sleek, coordinated outfits. Joshua stood under a spotlight, adjusting his jacket, his hair styled just messy enough to look effortlessly perfect. Y/N, waiting for her turn, couldn’t take her eyes off him.
“Shua,” she called, sidling up as the photographer adjusted settings. “You’re out here looking way too good. Like, rude levels of handsome. How’s a girl supposed to cope?”
He turned, his smile slow and flirty, leaning closer so only she could hear. “You’re one to talk,” he said, eyeing her outfit—fitted blazer, skirt hugging her just right. “I’m barely surviving over here.”
She giggled, bold as ever now, and stretched up on her toes to kiss him, quick but soft, right there on set. “That’s for being too cute,” she said, winking as she pulled back.
A stylist nearby froze, clearly unsure whether to pretend she hadn’t seen, but Joshua just laughed, his hand brushing hers before she stepped away. “You’re trouble,” he called after her, but his eyes said he loved every second of it.
Hoshi, who’d been posing nearby, caught the whole thing and groaned. “Y/N, can you not steal Joshua for two seconds? I need him for my concept!”
“Your concept’s fine without him,” she shot back, sticking out her tongue. “Go flirt with a camera or something.”
“I’m wounded!” Hoshi gasped, clutching his heart, but he was grinning, already plotting revenge. “Just wait, I’m stealing his seat at lunch.”
“Try it and you’re sitting on the floor,” Y/N warned, her glare playful but fierce, making the others nearby crack up.
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By the weekend, the members were staging a full-on revolt. At the dorm, Joshua was trying to teach Dino a new guitar chord in the living room, but Y/N had other plans. She plopped onto his lap, wrapping her arms around his neck, effectively halting the lesson. “Hi,” she said, all sugar and spice, kissing his cheek. “You’re too cute when you’re focused. Had to interrupt.”
Dino threw his hands up, exasperated. “Y/N, I’m trying to learn here! Can you not hog him for, like, one hour?”
“Nope,” she said, grinning, snuggling deeper into Joshua’s lap, who was laughing too hard to help. “He’s mine now. Get your own Shua.”
“There’s only one, unfortunately,” Joshua teased, his arms sliding around her waist, clearly thrilled by her boldness. “And I’m pretty happy where I am.”
“Gross,” Dino muttered, tossing a pillow at them, which Y/N caught and hugged like a trophy.
The door swung open, and Seungcheol walked in, freezing at the sight. “Oh, come on,” he groaned, rubbing his temples. “Y/N, let the man breathe! We need Joshua for game night, and you’re, like, glued to him!”
“He’s breathing just fine,” Y/N said, smirking, then leaned up to kiss Joshua’s nose, slow and dramatic, just to mess with them. “Right, babe?”
“Better than ever,” Joshua agreed, his grin wide, planting a quick kiss on her temple for good measure.
Seungcheol fake-gagged, turning to the others piling in behind him. “Someone get her off him! I’m calling an intervention!”
Hoshi saw his chance, diving for the couch with a war cry. “Operation Save Joshua begins now!” He grabbed Y/N’s arm, tugging like he was pulling her from quicksand. “Come on, let’s free our bro!”
Y/N yelped, clinging to Joshua like a koala. “Get your paws off, Soonyoung! This is my spot!”
“Your spot’s gonna be the hallway if you don’t share!” Hoshi shot back, laughing as he tugged harder, turning it into a full-on wrestling match.
Joshua was no help, doubled over laughing as Y/N and Hoshi bickered, her arms locked around his neck. “You two are ridiculous,” he managed, but his eyes were soft, drinking in Y/N’s playful grin. He’d waited years for this—her unfiltered affection, no walls, no secrets—and every second felt like a gift.
Woozi, watching from the sidelines, shook his head. “I give up. They’re unstoppable. Someone get me noise-canceling headphones.”
“Or a barf bag,” Seungkwan added, dodging as Y/N flung a cushion at him.
Jeonghan strolled in last, smirking at the chaos he’d indirectly unleashed. “Look at you lovebirds, making everyone sick,” he teased, winking at Y/N. “Worth it, though, right?”
Y/N paused her tug-of-war with Hoshi, her smile softening as she looked at Joshua, who squeezed her hand, his eyes saying everything. “Yeah,” she said, voice quieter but bright. “Totally worth it.”
Then she turned, glaring at Hoshi, who was still trying to wedge between them. “But you’re still not stealing my spot, hamster!”
“Challenge accepted!” Hoshi roared, diving back in, and the room dissolved into laughter, Joshua pulling Y/N closer through it all, happier than he’d ever been.
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an: Joshua is sososo handsome, and I hate it! I can’t even look at his pictures for too long, because I feel like I’m going to melt.
311 notes · View notes
amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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hello !! may i request a svt 14th member!reader x joshua where they're in a secret relationship because they got together recently and some cute scenes where they're trying to always be together without making it obvious they're dating >< and the ending being them being caught kissing when they were left alone while the other members went outside to either hang out or buy groceries hehe thank you !!
Title: Hiding in Plain Sight
Masterlist | Part 2
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Seventeen’s chaotic camaraderie, Y/N, the group’s 14th member, navigates a hidden romance with Joshua amidst their hectic schedules. Balancing playful group dynamics, subtle affection, and the pressure of secrecy, their close bond faces challenges from teasing members and unspoken tensions. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th member Genre: Fluff, Angst, Humor
The dorm was buzzing with its usual chaos. It was a rare day off, and the members were scattered around the living room, some sprawled on the couch, others raiding the kitchen for snacks. Y/N sat cross-legged on the floor, scrolling through her phone, earbuds in, looking every bit the relaxed maknae-esque member she often played up. Joshua was on the couch nearby, casually strumming a guitar, his soft humming blending into the background noise of Mingyu and DK arguing over what to order for dinner.
To anyone watching, it was just another day. Joshua and Y/N’s closeness was no secret— predebut stories of them sharing snacks and late-night talks were practically group lore. But what the members didn’t know, and what Y/N worked hard to keep under wraps, was that those moments had grown into something deeper. For three years now, they’d been dating, stealing quiet moments away from the group’s watchful eyes.
Y/N was the cautious one. Early on, she’d insisted on keeping it private. “They’ll never let us hear the end of it,” she’d whispered to Joshua one night, tucked away in a practice room after hours. “Seungkwan’s teasing is bad enough when we’re just friends in their heads. And what if… what if they think we’re distracting each other?” Joshua had chuckled, brushing a strand of hair from her face, but he’d agreed. Her need for privacy trumped his occasional urge to let the world—or at least their members—know.
In the dorm now, Y/N felt Joshua’s gaze flicker toward her, subtle but warm. She didn’t look up, keeping her focus on her phone, but her lips twitched slightly. He was always like this—finding small ways to stay close. Like how he’d chosen the spot on the couch nearest to her, his knee just shy of brushing her shoulder. To the others, it was nothing. Joshua was just being Joshua, friendly and comfortable with everyone.
“Yo, Y/N, you voting for pizza or fried chicken?” Hoshi’s voice cut through her thoughts, his head popping up from the other side of the coffee table.
She pulled out an earbud, tilting her head. “Pizza. Always.” Her tone was playful, deflecting any chance of seeming distracted.
“Bet Joshua’s gonna say the same,” Vernon chimed in from the kitchen, smirking. “You two always pick the same stuff.”
Y/N’s heart skipped, but she rolled her eyes, keeping it cool. “Because we have taste, unlike you and your weird food combos.”
Laughter erupted, and the moment passed. Joshua’s fingers paused on the guitar strings for a half-second, but he didn’t look at her, just grinned at Vernon’s fake offense. Y/N exhaled quietly. Close calls like that were why she kept her guard up.
Later, when the group split off—some heading to the kitchen, others to the TV—Joshua leaned down as he passed her, murmuring, “Practice room later?”
It was soft, barely audible, disguised as a casual comment. Y/N gave the tiniest nod, her face neutral, before slipping her earbuds back in like nothing happened.
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The practice room was their sanctuary. Late at night, when the dorm quieted and the members were too tired to notice, they’d sneak down to the company building. Officially, it was for “vocal practice” or “choreo tweaks.” In reality, it was where they could just be.
Joshua was already there when Y/N slipped inside, locking the door behind her. He was sitting on the floor, back against the mirror, scrolling through his phone. The second he saw her, his face lit up, softer than the teasing smirks he’d worn all day.
“Took you long enough,” he said, but there was no bite in it. He patted the spot next to him.
Y/N didn’t hesitate, dropping down and immediately curling into his side, her head resting on his shoulder. Here, with no one watching, she let herself melt. “Had to wait for Woozi to stop interrogating me about my lyric ideas,” she mumbled. “He’s relentless.”
Joshua chuckled, wrapping an arm around her. “You’re too good at dodging. Even I almost believe you’re just ‘focused on work’ sometimes.”
She poked his side, grinning. “Gotta keep up the act. You’re the problem, you know. Sitting next to me all the time, looking at me like… that.”
“Like what?” His voice was teasing, but his eyes were warm, tracing her face like he was memorizing it.
“Like you’re whipped,” she shot back, but her cheeks flushed.
“Good. Because I am.” He leaned down, pressing a soft kiss to her forehead, and Y/N’s heart did its usual flip. These moments—quiet, unguarded—were worth every second of caution.
They stayed like that for a while, talking about nothing and everything: a new song idea, a dumb meme, plans for a future they hoped could include more than stolen moments. But when Y/N’s phone buzzed with a text from Seungcheol—Where you at?—reality snapped back.
She sighed, pulling away reluctantly. “I should go before they start a search party.”
Joshua’s hand lingered on hers, but he nodded. “Tomorrow?”
“Tomorrow,” she promised, standing. Before she left, she glanced back, catching his smile—one that was just for her. She carried it with her, even as she stepped back into the role of “just Y/N,” the 14th member who definitely wasn’t sneaking around with Joshua.
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Back at the dorm, she slid into the living room, where a few members were still up, watching a movie. Joshua was already there, sprawled on the couch, looking perfectly innocent. When she sat on the opposite end, he didn’t react, but his foot nudged hers under the blanket—just enough to make her bite back a smile.
“Pizza’s here soon,” Mingyu announced, oblivious as ever.
“Cool,” Y/N said, leaning back, her voice steady. Across the couch, Joshua’s eyes flickered to her for a split second, and that was enough. They were good at this—hiding, balancing, keeping their secret safe. For now, it was enough.
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The Seventeen’s schedule was relentless as always—rehearsals, interviews, and a looming comeback. The practice room was a second home, mirrors fogged with sweat and music blasting through speakers. Y/N stood near the back, catching her breath between choreography runs, her eyes scanning the room out of habit. Joshua was across the space, laughing with Jeonghan about something, his hair slightly damp from exertion. To anyone else, he was just another member, blending into the group’s chaos. To Y/N, he was a quiet anchor in the storm.
Keeping their relationship under wraps was second nature now, three years into their secret. Y/N had perfected the art of distance in public—never too far from Joshua to raise suspicion, but never close enough to spark rumors among the members. She’d dodge lingering glances, keep her touches platonic, and redirect conversations that veered too close to teasing. Joshua, though, was bolder in his quiet way. He’d find excuses to be near her—a water bottle passed during a break, a fleeting comment about the choreo—small enough to go unnoticed but deliberate enough to make her heart race.
Today was no different. As the group ran through their title track for the tenth time, Joshua ended the formation just a step away from her. His arm brushed hers as they transitioned, so brief it could’ve been an accident. Y/N kept her face neutral, focusing on her reflection in the mirror, but her pulse ticked up. He knew exactly what he was doing.
“Alright, five-minute break!” Seungcheol called, clapping his hands. The members scattered, some collapsing on the floor, others grabbing their phones. Y/N headed for her bag, pulling out a towel to wipe her face, using the moment to steady herself.
Joshua, predictably, wandered over, casual as ever. “You good?” he asked, voice low, leaning against the wall nearby. To anyone watching, it was just a check-in between friends.
“Yeah, just surviving,” she replied, flashing a quick smile before looking away. She caught Hoshi’s eye from across the room—he was sprawled dramatically, whining about his legs—and she laughed, deflecting any chance of seeming too focused on Joshua.
“Good. Keep up,” Joshua teased, but there was a softness in his tone that made her glance at him. His eyes held hers for a half-second too long, and she turned away, busying herself with her water bottle. Too risky, she thought, even as warmth spread through her chest.
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Later that evening, the group piled into a van for a late-night radio interview. Y/N slid into a middle seat, wedged between Dino and Woozi, with Joshua up front next to the driver. The members were buzzing, tossing around dumb hypotheticals to pass the time.
“Y/N, who’d you pick to be stranded on an island with?” Seungkwan asked, leaning over the seat with a mischievous grin.
She didn’t miss a beat. “Mingyu. He’d probably try to cook the coconuts and burn the island down, but at least I’d be entertained.”
The van erupted in laughter, Mingyu protesting loudly. Joshua stayed quiet, but Y/N caught his reflection in the window—he was smiling, just a little, like he knew she’d picked a safe answer. She always did. Naming him, even as a joke, would’ve felt like tempting fate.
At the radio station, the interview was standard fare—comeback teasers, group banter, and the usual “who’s the closest?” questions. Y/N sat between Vernon and Jun, keeping her answers light and vague. When the host asked about her bond with Joshua, citing their predebut friendship, her stomach tightened.
“We’ve always been chill,” she said, shrugging. “He’s like the group’s unofficial therapist. Listens to everyone.”
Joshua nodded from his spot across the table, adding, “Y/N’s easy to talk to. She’s got good advice.” It was true enough to sound natural, vague enough to mean nothing. The members didn’t blink, used to their dynamic being framed as pure friendship.
But as the interview wrapped and they shuffled out, Joshua’s hand grazed her lower back for a split second, guiding her through the crowd of staff. It was gone before she could react, but her skin tingled where he’d touched. She shot him a look—careful—and he just smirked, pulling out his phone like nothing happened.
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Their next stolen moment came days later, after a grueling rehearsal. Most of the members had crashed in the dorm, too tired to notice Y/N slipping out with a vague excuse about “grabbing something from the studio.” Joshua was already waiting in the company’s rooftop garden—a tucked-away spot they’d found months ago, hidden from prying eyes.
The city lights stretched out below, and the cool night air felt like freedom. Y/N didn’t hesitate this time, stepping into Joshua’s open arms. He pulled her close, chin resting on her head, and for a moment, they just stood there, the weight of secrecy lifting.
“Missed you,” he murmured, voice muffled against her hair.
“We were together all day,” she pointed out, but her arms tightened around him, betraying her own longing.
“Not like this.” He pulled back just enough to look at her, his thumb brushing her cheek. “You’re too good at pretending I’m just another member.”
She sighed, half-smiling. “I have to be. You saw how Seungkwan was fishing in the van. One wrong answer, and he’s planning our fake wedding for laughs.”
Joshua chuckled, but his eyes softened. “You ever think about… not hiding?”
Her stomach twisted. She’d thought about it—dreamed of a day when they could sit next to each other without overthinking every glance. But the risks loomed larger. “I want to,” she admitted quietly. “But the group… the fans… I don’t know if they’d get it. And the guys would lose it. You know how they are.”
He nodded, not pushing. Joshua never did. Instead, he leaned down, kissing her softly, slow enough to make her forget the world for a second. “We’ll figure it out. When you’re ready.”
They stayed up there as long as they dared, talking about the comeback, their parts in the new song, anything to stretch the moment. But when Y/N’s phone buzzed—Wonwoo asking if she’d seen his hoodie—she knew it was time to go.
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Back in the dorm, she slipped in quietly, hoodie in hand as an alibi. The living room was dim, only a few members still awake. Joshua was on the couch, scrolling through his phone, looking every bit like he’d been there for hours. Y/N tossed Wonwoo’s hoodie to him, earning a grateful nod, and sank into a chair across from Joshua.
“Long day,” she said, loud enough for anyone listening, her tone casual.
“Tell me about it,” Joshua replied, not looking up. But under the coffee table, his foot nudged hers—just once, just enough to say I’m here.
She hid her smile, pulling out her phone to scroll through nothing. They were still a secret, still careful. But in the quiet of the dorm, with the members oblivious around them, that was enough.
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The dorm was quieter than usual that morning, the usual pre-promotion chaos muted by the early hour. Seventeen’s first comeback stage was today, a big deal after months of preparation, and the air buzzed with anticipation. Y/N stood in front of the bathroom mirror, splashing cold water on her face to shake off the feverish haze clouding her head. Her reflection looked pale, eyes heavy, but she gritted her teeth. No way I’m missing this.
The members had noticed she wasn’t herself. At breakfast, Minghao had squinted at her, asking, “You good, Y/N? You look like you’re about to pass out.”
“I’m fine,” she’d shot back, forcing a grin. “Just didn’t sleep enough. Ready to crush it today.”
Seungcheol had frowned, clearly unconvinced, but Y/N waved it off, piling food onto her plate to prove a point. Joshua, sitting across the table, hadn’t said anything, but his eyes lingered on her—sharp, assessing, the kind of look that saw through her stubborn front. She avoided his gaze, focusing on her coffee instead.
Now, as they piled into the van to head to the music show, Y/N’s head throbbed, her body aching with every step. She slid into the back row, pressing her temple against the cool window, hoping no one would press her again. Joshua, of course, had other plans. He climbed in last, scanning the seats before settling right beside her, his knee brushing hers as he sat. To the others, it was just Joshua being his usual, considerate self—nothing new.
“You okay?” he asked softly, voice low enough to stay between them. His hand rested on the seat, fingers grazing hers for a fleeting moment, warm and deliberate.
She nodded, eyes half-closed. “Just sleepy,” she mumbled, keeping her tone light. “Long night.”
He didn’t buy it—she could tell from the way his jaw tightened—but he didn’t push. Instead, he shifted closer, his shoulder angled toward her. “Here,” he said, patting it gently. “Rest a bit. You look like you need it.”
Y/N hesitated, but the pounding in her head won out. She let her head drop onto his shoulder, her cheek pressed against the soft fabric of his jacket. The contact was grounding, easing the ache just enough to keep her going. Joshua’s hand settled lightly on her arm, a subtle touch that felt protective but stayed just shy of obvious. To the members, it was classic Joshua—always offering a shoulder to anyone who needed it. Seungkwan, sprawled in the seat ahead, didn’t even glance back, too busy arguing with DK about setlist predictions.
“Don’t hog Joshua’s shoulder the whole ride,” Vernon teased from the middle row, grinning over his phone. “Some of us might need a nap too.”
“First come, first served,” Y/N shot back weakly, managing a smirk. Joshua’s thumb brushed her arm, so soft it could’ve been an accident, and she bit her lip to hide a smile.
The van hummed along, the members’ chatter fading into background noise. Joshua tilted his head slightly, resting his cheek against her hair for a moment—a tiny, intimate gesture hidden by the angle of their seats. “Tell me if you feel worse,” he whispered, barely audible. “I’m serious.”
“I’ll be fine, Shua,” she murmured back, but her voice softened at his concern. “Promise.”
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At the music show, the backstage area was a blur of staff, cameras, and last-minute checks. Y/N pushed through her fever, plastering on a smile for rehearsals and fan greetings. The members kept an eye on her—Jun nudging her water bottle closer during a break, Jeonghan tossing her a jacket when she shivered—but she brushed them off with quick “I’m good” and forced energy. Joshua, though, was a constant shadow, his presence steady but subtle.
During a rehearsal pause, he found her leaning against a wall, eyes closed, catching her breath. He stepped up beside her, close enough that their arms brushed, his fingers grazing her wrist under the guise of handing her a mic pack. “You’re burning up,” he said quietly, brow furrowed. “Sure you don’t wanna sit this one out?”
“It’s our first stage,” she replied, voice firm despite the rasp. “I’m not bailing. Don’t worry so much.”
He sighed, but his hand lingered on her wrist, thumb tracing a small circle against her pulse. “Can’t help it,” he admitted, his tone softer now, almost a confession. “Just… lean on me if you need to, okay?”
She met his eyes, her stubbornness faltering under his warmth. “I always do,” she said, barely above a whisper, and for a second, the chaos around them faded. His fingers squeezed hers lightly before letting go, both of them stepping back into their roles as the stage manager called them over.
--------------------------------------------------------------
On air, Y/N poured everything into the performance, hitting every beat despite the fever dragging at her limbs. Joshua stayed close in the formation, his glances subtle but frequent, checking her without breaking character. During a talk segment, when the MC asked about their comeback prep, Y/N sat at the end of the lineup, gripping her mic tightly to steady herself. Joshua, two seats away, answered a question, his voice calm, but his foot nudged hers under the table—just a tap, grounding her. She exhaled, focusing on his voice to keep herself anchored.
At the next break, they were shuffled to a green room to wait for their second stage. Y/N sank onto a couch, head tipped back, trying to ignore the dizziness. Joshua appeared beside her with a water bottle, sitting just close enough for their thighs to touch. “Drink,” he said, pressing it into her hand, his fingers brushing hers deliberately, lingering a beat too long.
“You’re babysitting me now?” she teased, but her voice was weak, grateful.
“Someone’s gotta,” he shot back, smirking, but his hand rested lightly on her knee, hidden by the couch’s armrest. “Rest for five minutes. Please.”
She nodded, sipping the water, letting his touch steady her. Across the room, Hoshi and Dino were messing around, reenacting their stage choreo with exaggerated flair, oblivious to the quiet moment. To the members, Joshua’s concern was just him being him—always checking on everyone. They didn’t see how his thumb traced a soft line against her knee, or how Y/N’s fingers briefly laced with his before she pulled away, keeping up the act.
“Thanks, Shua,” she said, loud enough for anyone nearby to hear, her tone deliberately casual. “You’re a lifesaver.”
“Anytime,” he replied, matching her tone, but his eyes said more, warm and unwavering. He shifted slightly, giving her space as Mingyu flopped onto the couch beside them, whining about hunger.
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By the end of the show, Y/N was running on fumes, but she’d made it through. Back in the van, she claimed the window seat again, and Joshua slid in beside her without a word. The members were too hyped, reliving the stage, to notice anything. When her head found his shoulder again, it felt like the most natural thing in the world—nothing new, nothing to question.
“You did good,” he murmured, his hand finding hers in the dark, hidden between their seats, fingers interlocking tightly. “Proud of you.”
“Couldn’t have done it without you,” she whispered back, squeezing his hand. His thumb stroked over her knuckles, a silent promise, and she closed her eyes, letting his warmth pull her through.
To the group, they were just Joshua and Y/N—close friends, same as always. But in the quiet of the van, with his hand in hers, they were everything else, too.
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The practice room was a haven of controlled chaos, Seventeen’s usual blend of focus and foolery. Y/N sat on the couch tucked against the mirrored wall, her legs curled under her, leaning casually into Joshua’s shoulder. One hand toyed with his bangs, twisting the soft strands absentmindedly, while the other scrolled through her phone. She snorted at a meme, shoving the screen toward him. “Shua, look at this—Carats are wild for this edit.”
Joshua grinned, tilting his head to see. “Why am I always the victim in these?” he teased, voice warm as he nudged her hand away from his hair. Her laughter was soft, bubbling up as she swiped to another video, their bubble undisturbed by the members stretching or joking nearby.
To the group, this was just Y/N and Joshua—same as always. She was sweet with everyone, sprawling across Mingyu’s lap during movie nights or stealing bites of Dino’s snacks. Joshua’s quiet affection was par for the course, too—his hand ruffling Vernon’s hair or resting on Seungcheol’s shoulder mid-conversation. So when Y/N’s fingers lingered in Joshua’s hair, no one blinked. Except Jeonghan.
He was sprawled on the floor, catching his breath after a choreography run, but his eyes flicked to the couch. Y/N’s casual ease with Joshua had a different edge—a softness in her smile, a deliberate way she leaned just a bit closer than necessary. Jeonghan’s lips twitched. Interesting.
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That night, the group planned a rare outing to a karaoke bar, a break from their packed schedules. Y/N and Joshua, as usual, bowed out, citing exhaustion. “I’m dead from practice,” Y/N groaned, flopping dramatically onto the dorm couch. “You guys have fun screaming your lungs out.”
“Same,” Joshua added, already in sweats, scrolling through his phone. “I’ll pass out if I try to keep up with Hoshi tonight.”
The members didn’t question it—those two often skipped group outings, happy to chill at the dorm. But Jeonghan, halfway out the door, realized he’d left his phone on the kitchen counter. “Be right back,” he called, waving off Seungkwan’s impatient “Hurry up!”
He didn’t mean to be stealthy, slipping back into the dorm with light steps, but old habits died hard. He just didn’t want to wake them if they were already dozing. The living room was dim, lit only by a lamp, and as he neared, Y/N’s voice floated through the quiet, sweet and petulant.
“I’m telling you, Shua, that choreo’s gonna kill me,” she whined, her tone softer than her usual group banter. “My legs are screaming.”
“You killed it today,” Joshua murmured, his voice low, soothing. “Just take it easy tomorrow.”
Jeonghan froze, curiosity pulling him closer. He peeked around the corner, careful not to creak the floor. Y/N was curled into Joshua’s side on the couch, practically hugging him, her arms looped around his waist as she pouted up at him. Joshua’s hand moved through her hair, brushing it gently, his expression so soft it was almost unrecognizable from his usual calm smile.
Jeonghan’s heart kicked up, not from shock but from the thrill of catching something hidden. Well, well. He smirked, pieces clicking into place—Y/N’s careful distance in group settings, Joshua’s subtle orbit around her. They weren’t just close. They were together. And they’d been hiding it, right under everyone’s noses.
He could’ve grabbed his phone and left, but where was the fun in that? Instead, he backed away, easing the door open and shut with deliberate silence. As he rejoined the group outside, Seungkwan waved. “Got your phone?”
Jeonghan’s smirk widened, eyes glinting. “Nah, it’s dead. Left it behind.”
Hoshi tilted his head, squinting. “Why do you look like you just won something?”
“Just happy to be out,” Jeonghan said smoothly, but his mind was already spinning. He wouldn’t spill—not yet. It wasn’t his story to tell. But oh, he was going to have fun with this.
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The next day, Y/N and Jeonghan were holed up in the recording studio, the only two left to lay down their parts for the group’s album. The others were off on solo schedules, leaving the space quiet, just the hum of equipment and their voices. Y/N lounged on the couch, scrolling through her phone, giggling at a Carat-made compilation of SEVENTEEN’s chaotic moments.
“Jeonghan, you have to see this,” she said, leaning over to show him a clip of Seungkwan’s dramatic aegyo fail. “I’m sending this to him later.”
Jeonghan laughed, but his eyes flicked to her, catching the carefree way she sprawled next to him. His mind flashed to last night—the way she’d clung to Joshua, all soft edges and trust. His smirk returned, sharp and knowing.
He leaned back, stretching his arms casually. “You know, Y/N,” he started, voice light but pointed, “if you’re ever hiding something, you can tell me. I’m good at keeping secrets.”
Y/N froze, her thumb pausing mid-scroll. “What?” She laughed, but it was nervous, her eyes darting to his face. “Hiding what? You’re so random.”
Jeonghan’s smirk grew, his gaze locking onto hers. “Come on, I’m not that clueless. Unlike the others, I notice things.” He paused, letting the words sink in, then dropped the bomb. “Like last night. Forgot my phone, came back to the dorm. Didn’t mean to overhear… or see you and Joshua getting cozy.”
Y/N’s face drained of color, her phone slipping to her lap. “Jeonghan, wait, it’s not—” She stumbled, panic flashing in her eyes as she sat up straight. “I mean, we weren’t—okay, look, I can explain.”
Her words tumbled out, a rushed defense. “It’s not like we’re hiding anything bad, I swear. I just… I didn’t want the group to make it a thing, you know? They’d tease us forever, or what if they think it’s a problem? We’re just trying to keep it lowkey, and—”
Jeonghan cut her off with a laugh, leaning forward to ruffle her hair like she was a kid. “Relax, Y/N. I’m not mad. I’m fine with it.”
She blinked, caught off guard. “You… are?”
“Yeah,” he said, grinning. “You two are cute. Sneaky, but cute.”
Relief flooded her, but it was short-lived. Jeonghan leaned in, his voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper, eyes glinting with mischief. “But don’t think I’m letting you off easy. I’m not telling the members—or Joshua, for that matter. This stays between us.”
Y/N’s eyes narrowed, sensing the trap. “What’s that supposed to mean?”
He just smirked, leaning back with a shrug. “Oh, nothing. Just… let’s see how long you two can keep this up when I’m around.”
She groaned, slumping back. “You’re the worst.”
“And you love me for it,” he shot back, laughing as she shoved his shoulder.
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The next evening, Seventeen crowded into a BBQ restaurant, fresh off a long day of schedules. The air was thick with the smell of grilling meat and soju, the table a mess of plates and bottles. Y/N, still rattled from Jeonghan’s bombshell, made a point to avoid Joshua’s orbit. Instead of her usual spot near him, she wedged herself between Seungcheol and Hoshi, forcing a laugh as Hoshi tried to “teach” her how to wrap a lettuce wrap properly.
“You’re hopeless, Y/N,” Hoshi said, shaking his head as she fumbled the wrap, rice spilling onto the table.
“Says the guy who dropped his entire skewer earlier,” she fired back, earning a chorus of laughs.
Jeonghan sat across from her, sipping his soju, his eyes flicking between her and Joshua with barely concealed glee. Joshua, at the end of the table, was quieter than usual, picking at his food. Y/N felt his gaze on her but didn’t dare meet it, hyper-aware of Jeonghan’s watchfulness.
Then, out of nowhere, Jeonghan struck. “Oh, Y/N, I forgot to mention,” he said, voice casual but loud enough to draw attention. “My friend was asking about you. You know, the one I told you about? He really wants to meet you.”
Y/N’s chopsticks froze mid-air, her eyes snapping to Jeonghan’s smirking face. Oh, you absolute menace. “Uh… what?” she managed, playing dumb.
Jeonghan leaned forward, undeterred. “Yeah, he’s a great guy. Funny, kind, totally your type. Since you’re single, I figured I’d set you up. What do you think?”
The table erupted. Seungkwan slammed his glass down, grinning. “Wait, Y/N’s getting a date? Spill the details!”
“Is he hot?” DK chimed in, leaning over Hoshi to poke her arm. “Come on, you gotta give us something!”
Y/N forced a laugh, glaring daggers at Jeonghan. Game on, then. She wasn’t about to let him win this. “Sounds… fun, actually,” she said, her smile tight but convincing. “What’s his name? Maybe I’ll give it a shot.”
Joshua’s hand stilled on his chopsticks, his jaw tightening. He didn’t look up, but the shift was obvious to anyone paying attention. Jeonghan, of course, was. “Oh, Joshua, what do you think?” he asked, voice dripping with fake innocence. “Good idea, right? Y/N deserves to have some fun.”
Joshua’s eyes flicked to Jeonghan, sharp and unamused. “If she wants to, sure,” he said, his tone flat, almost too controlled. “Her call.”
Y/N’s stomach twisted, but she kept up the act, nodding enthusiastically. “Yeah, why not? Tell your friend I’m game, Jeonghan.”
The members piled on, oblivious to the undercurrent. Mingyu clapped her shoulder. “Go for it, Y/N! When’s the date? We need a full report.”
“What’s his job? Is he, like, a model or something?” Dino asked, eyes wide.
“Better not be cooler than us,” Seungcheol added, smirking as he poured more soju.
Jeonghan laughed louder than necessary, clearly delighted. “Oh, don’t worry, I’ll set it all up. You’ll love him, Y/N.”
Y/N kicked him under the table, subtle but hard. He didn’t even flinch, just raised his glass to her with a wink. Joshua, meanwhile, pushed his plate away, leaning back with a look that could’ve burned a hole through the wall. The others kept rambling, planning her fake date, while Y/N played along, her competitive streak refusing to let Jeonghan see her crack.
But as the night wore on, she stole a glance at Joshua. His fingers were tight around his glass, his smile gone. She hated this—hated Jeonghan’s game, hated how it made Joshua look at her like he wasn’t sure where they stood. She’d fix it later, away from prying eyes. For now, she just smiled wider, leaning into Hoshi’s side as he slung an arm around her, keeping the charade alive.
Jeonghan caught her eye, his smirk saying it all: Your move.
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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GOSH IDK A PART OF ME WANTS MORE 14TH MEMBER ANGST BUT ANOTHER PART OF ME WANTS WHOLESOME 😭😭😭
Me too, me too! Also, nearly every request I've gotten is pure angst—huhu, why are we all dying to sob??
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amyzworldds · 2 months ago
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hii !! it's my birthday right now (april 12) and i'm carving some angst rn heheheh i was thinking about YN birthday, instead of them hanging out together, celebrating her birthday. they forgot her birthday but YN thought they were pranking her and planning to make a surprise birthday party for her, they ACTUALLY forgot her birthday. she waited for a week for them to say a happy birthday to her (she was willing to accept belated happy birthday from them) but none of them did, and became colder to her. YN got sulky and angry so she drank and drank until she became drunk, and got home on 10 pm, which is past their curfew. she got caught and got scolded by seungcheol, who was waiting at the front door looking angry. well, she was drunk and was not on her right mind, unconsciously said some things she's been keeping to her self.
Title: Forgotten Birthday
Masterlist
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When Y/N, wakes up excited for her 25th birthday, she anticipates the usual chaos and love from her bandmates. But as the days unfold with packed schedules and unexpected silence, she grapples with emotions that test their decade-long bond, leading to a heartfelt journey of connection and understanding. Pairing: Seventeen x 14th reader Genre: Fluff, Angst
Y/N woke up bright and early, the crisp April air filling her with a familiar buzz of excitement. Today was special—April 12, her birthday. She stretched happily as she stepped out of her room in the dorm, a wide grin plastered on her face. Birthdays were always a big deal for her, and being part of Seventeen made them even more unforgettable. She glanced around, expecting the usual chaos of the boys bombarding her with "Happy Birthday!" the moment she appeared, like they always did at the start of April to tease her. But today? Nothing. Just a few sleepy glances from the members sprawled across the living room.
Hoshi was slouched on the couch, rubbing his eyes. Mingyu was half-asleep over a bowl of cereal, and Seungcheol gave her a lazy nod before scrolling through his phone. Y/N smirked knowingly. Oh, they’re playing it cool again, huh? she thought. The boys were notorious for their birthday pranks, and she was certain they were up to something.
“Morning, guys!” she chirped, bouncing into the kitchen.
“Mmm,” Jeonghan mumbled, sipping his coffee. “Morning, Y/N.”
That was it? No cheeky grin, no nudge-nudge-wink-wink? Y/N’s smirk widened. Nice try, boys. She grabbed a glass of juice, humming to herself as she leaned against the counter, watching them drag themselves around like zombies. They’d had a brutal schedule last night—a fan event that ran way past midnight—and it showed. Dark circles, messy hair, and barely any words exchanged. Still, Y/N wasn’t buying the act. They were definitely planning something.
In the van to their next schedule, Y/N couldn’t contain her excitement. “So,” she started, leaning forward, “April’s a pretty big month, right? Lots of… plans?” She wiggled her eyebrows, glancing at Dino, who was squished next to her.
He yawned. “Uh, yeah, I guess. Concerts, comebacks… the usual.”
“Anything else?” she pressed, her tone playful.
Woozi, eyes closed and head against the window, muttered, “Y/N, can we talk about this later? I’m dying here.”
“Yeah, some of us need sleep,” Vernon added, pulling his hoodie over his face.
Y/N leaned back, crossing her arms with a smug grin. Oh, they’re good. She could picture it already—the moment they’d “surprise” her, probably bursting into the practice room with a cake or ambushing her at the dorm later. Last year, they’d ignored her all day only to barge into her room at midnight with a massive cake, balloons, and a pile of gifts, laughing as she pretended to be shocked. The year before that, they’d pulled an even wilder stunt, acting mad at her for “being late” to a meeting (which was fake), only for her to end up teary-eyed before they revealed the prank with confetti and hugs. This year, she was ready for whatever they had up their sleeves.
The day was a whirlwind—back-to-back rehearsals, a radio show, and a photoshoot that left everyone wiped out. Every time Y/N dropped a hint about April or birthdays, the boys brushed it off. “We know, Y/N,” Seungkwan said at one point, sounding exasperated. “But can we just… rest for five minutes?”
“Okay, okay,” she replied, her smirk never fading. They’re so obvious. By evening, as they piled back into the van, Y/N was practically vibrating with anticipation. Any minute now, they’d pull the big reveal. She could feel it
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The first week of April flew by in a blur of schedules, and now, with only four days left until her 25th birthday on April 12, Y/N was practically glowing. She’d stopped dropping hints or teasing the boys about it—she didn’t want to ruin their carefully crafted “surprise.” But that didn’t stop her from grinning ear to ear, shooting knowing glances at her bandmates whenever they caught her eye. They’re probably finalizing the big plan right now, she thought, barely containing her excitement. Seventeen’s pranks were legendary, and her 25th birthday felt like it was going to be their grandest scheme yet.
Their days were packed to the brim—dance practices, interviews, and late-night recordings that left everyone drained. Y/N was just as exhausted as the boys, her muscles aching and eyes heavy, but the thought of her upcoming birthday kept her buzzing. She’d catch herself humming in the van or bouncing her leg during breaks, unable to shake the anticipation.
In the dorm one morning, Y/N plopped onto the couch next to Mingyu, who was scrolling through his phone, looking half-dead. “Morning, Gyu oppa! Big day ahead, huh?” she said, her grin wide and teasing.
He barely glanced up. “If by ‘big’ you mean exhausting, then yeah. I’m already tired.”
“Oh, come on, you’ve got that spark in you somewhere!” Y/N nudged him, her eyes glinting. He’s totally playing it cool.
Across the room, Seungcheol was shoving toast in his mouth while checking their schedule. “Y/N, save the energy. We’ve got back-to-back shoots today.”
“I’m ready, leader-nim!” she chirped, leaning back with a smirk. “April’s got me in a great mood.”
Jeonghan, lounging on a beanbag with a face mask on, cracked one eye open. “You’re way too cheerful for 7 am What’s with you?”
“Nothing, nothing,” she sang, winking at him. “Just… feeling good about this month.” Oh, you’re not fooling me, Yoon Jeonghan.
In the van to their first schedule, Y/N sat squished between Dino and Woozi, her grin still plastered on. “So, guys, four days until… you know, a really cool date in April. Any thoughts?” she asked, barely hiding her glee.
Dino yawned, his head lolling onto her shoulder. “Four days until I hopefully get some sleep. That’s my thought.”
Woozi didn’t even open his eyes, earbuds in. “Y/N, please. I’m begging you. Let me nap.”
“Okay, okay, I’ll be quiet,” she said, holding up her hands but still smiling. Nap all you want, Jihoon. I know you’re scheming.
At the dance studio later, the group was drenched in sweat, running through their choreography for the nth time. Y/N spun past Hoshi, who was barking instructions like a drill sergeant. “Y/N, sharper on that turn!” he called.
“Got it, boss!” she replied, flashing him a grin. “Gotta look good for… you know, special occasions.”
He raised an eyebrow, wiping his forehead. “Special occasions? Like not collapsing after this set?”
“Sure, something like that!” she laughed, twirling away. Keep pretending, Soonyoung.
During a quick water break, Seungkwan plopped down next to her, fanning himself. “Why are you so smiley today? It’s freaking me out.”
“Can’t a girl just be happy?” Y/N shot back, nudging him. “April’s my favorite month, you know.”
“Yeah, yeah, we get it,” he muttered, gulping water. “But you’re, like, extra happy. It’s suspicious.”
“Suspicious? Me?” She gasped dramatically, pressing a hand to her chest. “I’m just living my best life, Kwannie.”
Vernon, overhearing, snorted from a few feet away. “Living your best life while we’re all dying? Respect.”
“Thank you, Hansol,” she said, bowing with a flourish. “I take my job as the group’s sunshine very seriously.”
By the time they wrapped their last schedule—a late-night radio show—Y/N’s energy was finally starting to wane. She slumped into the van, her head resting against the window. Still, her lips curved into a small smile as she thought about her birthday. Four more days, and they’ll pull out all the stops. Cakes, balloons, maybe even a goofy handmade card from DK.
Joshua, sitting beside her, noticed her expression. “You’re still smiling? After today’s chaos?”
“Always,” she murmured, eyes half-closed. “Got a lot to look forward to, Shua oppa.”
“You’re unstoppable,” he said with a soft laugh, shaking his head. “Just don’t burn out before we do.”
“No promises,” she teased, her voice fading as she drifted into a light doze, her mind still buzzing with visions of the birthday surprise she was sure was coming.
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The morning of April 12 arrived, and Y/N woke with a flutter in her chest. Her 25th birthday. A milestone. The dorm was eerily silent, not a single sound stirring the air—no clatter of pans, no muffled laughter, no whispered plotting behind closed doors. She sat up in bed, her lips curving into a hopeful smile. Okay, maybe later, she thought, brushing off the quiet. They’re probably saving it for after today’s schedule. Seventeen loved their dramatic reveals, and Y/N was certain they’d outdo themselves this time. She could already picture the chaos—cake smeared on her face, balloons everywhere, Mingyu tripping over a gift box in his excitement.
She bounded out of her room, her energy dialed to eleven despite the packed day ahead. In the living room, a few of the boys were slumped on the couch, scrolling through their phones or sipping coffee, their faces drawn with exhaustion. Y/N didn’t let it faze her. She was practically vibrating, her grin wide as she leaned over the back of the couch where Hoshi and Seungkwan sat.
“Morning, guys! Feeling good today?” she teased, wiggling her eyebrows. “Like, really good?”
Hoshi barely looked up, his voice flat. “It’s just another day, Y/N. Chill.”
Her smile faltered for a split second, but she rallied, laughing it off. “Oh, come on, it’s a great day! Perfect for, you know, big moments!”
Seungkwan sighed, rubbing his temples. “Can you not be so loud? We’re all beat from yesterday.”
Y/N’s heart gave a tiny lurch, but she kept her grin plastered on, leaning closer. Classic prank mode. “Okay, okay, I’ll keep it low-key. But you guys are hyped for today, right?”
Across the room, Woozi shot her a glance, his expression blank. “Hyped? Y/N, we’ve got a million things to do. Can you just… focus?”
The words stung, sharper than she expected, but she swallowed the hurt, her smile unwavering. They’re just tired. It’s fine. They’re setting me up. She bounced into the kitchen, grabbing a glass of water, humming to herself to drown out the unease creeping in. It’s my 25th birthday. They wouldn’t forget.
The day’s schedule was relentless—rehearsals, a live stream, and a fan sign event that stretched into the evening. Y/N stayed her bubbly self, teasing the boys between takes, dropping playful hints about “special days” and “reasons to celebrate.” But each time, she was met with shrugs, eye rolls, or curt replies.
During a break at the studio, she sidled up to Dino, who was stretching nearby. “Hey, Chan, bet you’re planning something fun for later, huh?” she said, nudging him with a grin.
He frowned, wiping sweat off his brow. “Planning? Y/N, I’m just trying to survive this choreography. Give it a rest.”
Her laugh came out a little too loud, a little too forced. “Right, right, survive first, party later. Got it!”
But as the day wore on, the silence around her birthday grew heavier, like a weight pressing on her chest. No sneaky glances between the boys, no hushed giggles, no poorly hidden gift bags. Just exhaustion and indifference. By the time they dragged themselves back to the dorm late that night, Y/N’s hope was fraying, but she clung to it like a lifeline. Maybe now. Maybe they’re waiting to surprise me.
In the living room, she flopped onto the couch, still buzzing with forced energy. “Wow, what a day, huh? Perfect way to cap off… you know, something special?” she said, looking around at the boys, her voice bright but brittle.
Mingyu, kicking off his shoes, didn’t even glance her way. “Y/N, can you stop with the vague hints? It’s annoying.”
Her breath caught, the words slicing deeper than they should’ve. She opened her mouth to laugh it off, but Jeonghan cut in, his tone sharp as he headed for his room. “Seriously, we’re all tired. Not everything’s about you.”
The room fell silent, the air thick with tension. Y/N’s smile froze, her heart plummeting. She looked to Seungcheol, hoping for a softening glance, a hint that this was all part of the act, but he just shook his head, muttering, “Let’s just get some sleep,” before walking away.
One by one, the boys disappeared to their rooms, the sound of closing doors echoing in her ears. She sat there, alone in the dimly lit living room, her hands trembling in her lap. The silence was deafening now, no balloons, no cake, no laughter to break it. Just her, and the sinking realization that maybe, just maybe, they’d forgotten.
Her chest ached, hot tears pricking at her eyes, but she forced them back, her lips twitching into a shaky smile. No, it’s fine. It’s part of the plan. They’re messing with me. She thought of last year’s midnight surprise, of the year before when they’d turned her tears into laughter with a single confetti pop. They wouldn’t forget. Not my 25th.
She stood, her legs heavy, and shuffled to her room. Closing the door, she leaned against it, her smile faltering as the hurt clawed its way up her throat. Maybe tomorrow, she told herself, her voice barely a whisper. Maybe they’re planning something big, and this is just… the buildup. She climbed into bed, curling up under the covers, her heart bruised but stubborn. Y/N believed—no, she had to believe—it was all part of their plan.
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April 13 dawned with a gray sky, the air heavy with the promise of another chaotic day. Y/N woke with a flicker of hope still burning in her chest, though it was weaker now, fragile like a candle in a storm. Maybe today, she thought, brushing her hair back and forcing a smile in the mirror. Maybe they’re waiting for the perfect moment. Yesterday’s silence had stung, but she’d convinced herself it was still part of Seventeen’s elaborate prank. They were masters at dragging out the suspense—she’d seen it before. Surely, her 25th birthday, a decade with these boys, wasn’t something they’d just… forget.
The dorm was a whirlwind of activity as the members rushed to get ready for another packed schedule—filming, interviews, and a late-night rehearsal. Y/N moved through the chaos, her smile bright but brittle, watching for any sign, any flicker of mischief in their eyes. She didn’t mention her birthday, didn’t dare disrupt whatever plan they might be hiding. She teased them lightly, keeping her tone playful, waiting for the moment they’d crack and the surprise would spill out.
“Big day today, huh, Cheollie oppa?” she said, leaning against the kitchen counter as Seungcheol stuffed a protein bar in his mouth.
“Big? That’s one way to put it,” he muttered, barely looking up from his phone. “We’re gonna be dead by tonight.”
Her smile wavered, but she pressed on, turning to Joshua, who was tying his shoes nearby. “Bet you’re excited for something today, right, Shua oppa?”
He shrugged, distracted. “Excited to maybe grab a coffee later, if we get a break. You good?”
“Never better!” she chirped, her voice a touch too high. They’re just tired. It’s fine. She clung to that thought as they piled into the van, her eyes scanning each member for a telltale smirk or a poorly hidden grin. But there was nothing—just exhaustion etched into their faces, their heads leaning against windows or buried in their phones.
The day was a blur of motion, one schedule bleeding into the next. Y/N threw herself into every task, laughing with fans during the signing event, nailing her choreography in rehearsal, all while keeping one ear open for a whispered “happy birthday” or a sudden burst of confetti. But the hours ticked by, and the silence grew louder, heavier, until it felt like a weight pressing on her ribs. No balloons. No cake. No knowing glances. Just another day to the boys, while to her, it was everything.
By the time they stumbled back to the dorm well past midnight, Y/N’s hope was fraying at the edges. Three days had passed since her birthday—three days of waiting, of smiling through the ache, of telling herself they wouldn’t forget. She lingered in the living room as the boys shuffled in, her heart still clinging to the idea of a late surprise. Maybe they’d been too busy yesterday, too swamped to pull it off. Maybe now, in the quiet of the dorm, they’d finally reveal the prank.
“Long day, huh?” she said softly, perched on the arm of the couch, looking at Vernon as he tossed his jacket onto a chair.
“Brutal,” he groaned, rubbing his neck. “I’m crashing. Night, Y/N.”
Her throat tightened. “Night,” she managed, her smile slipping as he disappeared down the hall. One by one, the others followed—muttered goodnights, tired waves, and the sound of doors clicking shut. No one paused, no one lingered, no one gave her that spark of recognition she’d been waiting for.
Alone in the living room, the silence was suffocating. Y/N’s mind raced, her thoughts spiraling. Do they actually forget? The idea felt impossible, unthinkable. They’d been together for a decade—thirteen boys who knew her better than anyone, who’d celebrated every milestone with her, who’d turned her birthdays into memories she’d cherish forever. She could understand one or two of them slipping up, maybe distracted by the chaos of their lives. But all thirteen? Acting like her 25th birthday was just another day? The hurt bloomed sharp and raw, slicing through the hope she’d held onto so tightly.
She wandered to her room, her steps slow, her chest heavy. Closing the door, she sank onto her bed, the silence wrapping around her like a cold embrace. Her smile finally crumbled, and hot tears spilled down her cheeks, quiet at first, then shuddering sobs she muffled into her pillow. How could they forget? she thought, her heart twisting. We’re a family. They’re my brothers. They wouldn’t just… forget. The memories of past birthdays—cakes smashed in her face, DK’s off-key serenades, Seungkwan’s dramatic gift reveals—felt like cruel ghosts now, taunting her with what this year lacked.
She curled up, wiping her eyes, her breath hitching. Maybe they’re still planning something. Maybe it’s bigger than I think. Even now, three days late, she couldn’t let go of the belief that they’d come through. They had to. They were Seventeen, her thirteen pillars, her home. She clung to that thought, fragile as it was, and whispered to herself in the dark, “They will not forget.” But the tears kept falling, and the doubt crept deeper, leaving her to wonder if this time, they really had.
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Five days had passed since Y/N’s 25th birthday, and the silence from the boys was deafening. Not a single “happy birthday,” not a glance of guilt, not even a question about why she’d gone quiet. Y/N’s heart sank deeper with each day, the hurt festering into something raw and unbearable. She was sure now—they’d forgotten. Completely. The thirteen boys she called family, who she’d poured her soul into for a decade, had let her milestone birthday slip by like it was nothing.
It felt so unfair. Every year, Y/N was the first to greet each member on their birthday, no matter how grueling their schedule. She’d stay up late crafting heartfelt letters, scraping together her allowance for thoughtful gifts, planning surprises that made them laugh or tear up. For Seungkwan’s last birthday, she’d barely slept, decorating the dorm at 4 a.m. For Dino’s, she’d written a letter so long it took her hours, her hand cramping. But her birthday? Nothing. Not one of them had noticed her forced smiles, her quiet stares, her heart breaking in the spaces between their indifference.
The day ended like all the others—chaotic, exhausting, and empty of any acknowledgment. Back at the dorm, the boys trudged to their rooms without a word, doors slamming shut like nails in a coffin. Y/N stood in the living room, alone, her chest tight with resentment. Fine, she thought, her jaw clenching. If they don’t care, I’ll celebrate myself. It was five days late, but she wasn’t going to let her 25th birthday pass without something, even if it meant doing it alone.
She stormed to her room, ripping open her closet. Her fingers landed on a tight, shimmering party dress—bold, defiant, perfect. I’m going out, she decided, slipping it on, her reflection in the mirror fierce despite the ache in her eyes. They had no schedules tomorrow, so why not? She’d drown the hurt in music and alcohol, let the club’s chaos swallow her pain. No one would stop her—not that they’d even notice she was gone.
At the club, the bass pounded through her bones, and Y/N threw herself into it. The bartender, who’d seen her and the boys there before, recognized her instantly and kept the drinks coming—cocktails, shots, anything she wanted. She drank heavily, the burn of liquor dulling the sharpness in her chest. She danced, swaying under the flashing lights, losing herself in the crowd. For a while, it worked. She felt alive, untouchable, the hurt buried under layers of alcohol and rhythm.
But the drinks piled up, and soon her head was pounding, her vision blurring. She stumbled on the dance floor, giggling at nothing, her movements sloppy. The bartender watched with growing concern—she was far gone, her words slurring, her eyes unfocused. They tried talking to her, but she just laughed, waving them off. She’s too drunk, they thought, glancing at her phone on the counter. They didn’t know the dorm’s address, so they scrolled through her contacts, landing on Seungcheol’s name. He’s the leader, right?
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Seungcheol was deep in sleep, the kind that felt like sinking into a void after weeks of exhaustion. His phone buzzed relentlessly, dragging him awake. He squinted at the screen—3 a.m., Y/N’s name flashing. Annoyance flared immediately. What the hell does she want now? He answered, ready to snap, but the voice wasn’t hers. It was a bartender, shouting over blaring music and chatter.
“Hey, this is the club on 5th. Y/N’s here, and she’s wasted—like, can’t even talk straight wasted. Keeps dancing, but we’re worried. Someone might recognize her, and she’s alone. Can you come get her?”
Seungcheol’s groan was guttural, his temper spiking. “Yeah, fine. I’m coming.” He ended the call, fury bubbling up. Why the hell would Y/N pull this now? Doesn’t she know we’re all barely functioning? He yanked on a hoodie, his mind racing with irritation. She was out causing a scene, risking their reputation, when they were all drowning in fatigue.
He stormed into Joshua’s room, flicking on the light. “Get up. Y/N’s drunk at some club, and we gotta go get her.”
Joshua blinked, confused but already moving. “What? Why’s she out there alone?”
“No idea, but I’m pissed,” Seungcheol snapped, then barged into Jeonghan’s room. “Jeonghan, up. Y/N’s causing trouble. Club. Now.”
Jeonghan groaned, rolling out of bed with a scowl. “Are you kidding me? What’s her deal?”
The three of them piled into a car, the drive tense and silent, each stewing in their own annoyance. At the club, the music hit them like a wall, the crowd a blur of bodies. They spotted Y/N instantly—swaying wildly on the dance floor, her tight dress catching every light, her face flushed and eyes glassy. She was a mess, and the sight only fueled their frustration.
Seungcheol pushed through the crowd, dropping his jacket over her shoulders. “Y/N, let’s go. Now.”
She laughed, shoving him away, her voice slurred. “Nooo, I’m having fun! Leave me alone!”
Joshua tried next, his tone gentle but firm. “Come on, Y/N, it’s late. You’re drunk. Let’s get you home.”
She swatted at him, stumbling. “I don’t need you! I’m fine!”
Jeonghan’s patience, usually endless, was fraying. He stepped closer, his jaw tight. “Y/N, stop it. You’re making a scene. Let’s go.”
She pushed him too, her movements clumsy but defiant. “You don’t get to tell me what to do!”
Seungcheol’s temper snapped. He scooped her up in one motion, ignoring her protests, her fists weakly hitting his back. “Enough. We’re leaving.” Jeonghan and Joshua flanked him, draping their jackets over her to shield her from prying eyes, their faces set in grim irritation. She was wearing that damn dress, and they weren’t about to let anyone snap a photo that could haunt them later.
Back at the dorm, they dropped her onto the couch, her body slumping as she mumbled incoherently. The noise had woken the others, and soon the living room was crowded with sleepy, annoyed faces—Jun rubbing his eyes, Mingyu frowning, Wonwoo looking like he’d rather be anywhere else. Seungcheol stood over her, hands on his hips, his voice sharp.
“What the hell were you thinking, Y/N? Going out alone, getting trashed like that? What if someone recognized you? You know how much trouble that could’ve caused?”
Jeonghan crossed his arms, his usual calm replaced by a scowl. “We’re exhausted, Y/N. We don’t have time to babysit you when you pull stunts like this.”
Joshua, softer but still firm, chimed in. “You could’ve gotten hurt. Why didn’t you just stay here?”
The others piled on, their voices overlapping, each one laced with frustration. “Do you know how hard we’re working right now?” Mingyu snapped. “And you go make things worse?”
“What even got into you?” Seungkwan added, shaking his head. “We’d all have to clean up your mess if this got out.”
Y/N stirred, her head lolling as she let out a bitter, drunken chuckle. She pushed herself up, swaying, her eyes blazing through the haze of alcohol. She pointed a shaky finger at them, tears streaming down her face as her voice cracked with raw hurt.
“You… you… all of you!” she slurred, her gaze sweeping the room. “You forgot my 25th birthday! Five days ago! Not one of you said a word! Not one of you asked why I’m quiet, why I’m like this!” She stumbled, catching herself on the couch, her sobs breaking free. “I’m always there for you! Every birthday, every single one, I’m up at midnight, writing letters, getting gifts, making you feel special! Even when I’m dead tired! But you… you thirteen… you just forgot me!”
Her voice rose, trembling with pain. “A decade together, and you didn’t even notice! You just cared about sleep, about schedules, about everything but me!” She collapsed back onto the couch, her body giving out, tears pouring as she mumbled, “My 25th… and you didn’t care…” Her words faded into soft, broken sobs, her head dropping as she passed out, tears still glistening on her cheeks.
The room froze, the air thick with a silence that crushed them all. Seungcheol’s anger drained away, replaced by a sickening realization. Joshua’s eyes widened, his hand covering his mouth. Jeonghan stared at the floor, his jaw tight. One by one, they pieced it together—April 12, six days ago. Y/N’s birthday. The day they’d been too tired to notice, too buried in their own exhaustion to remember.
Minghao whispered, “Oh no… we forgot.”
Mingyu ran a hand through his hair, his voice small. “How did we… all of us?”
Woozi’s face was pale, his usual stoicism gone. “She loves birthdays. She always makes ours huge. And we…”
Seungcheol exhaled sharply, guilt settling like lead in his chest. They’d fucked up—badly. They knew how much Y/N poured into their birthdays, how she lit up at celebrations, how she made every moment count. And they’d let hers pass without a single thought.
Jeonghan moved first, kneeling beside her, gently brushing her hair back. “We need to get her to bed,” he said quietly, his voice heavy. Seungcheol nodded, lifting her carefully, her body limp in his arms. They carried her to her room, tucking her in as her tears dried on her face, her breathing uneven even in sleep.
Back in the living room, the silence lingered, each member lost in their own guilt. “How do we fix this?” Joshua asked, his voice barely above a whisper.
“We can’t undo it,” Woozi said, his tone flat but pained. “But we have to do something. She deserves that much.”
They sat there, thirteen brothers who’d failed their sister, knowing they’d broken something precious—and unsure if they could ever make it right.
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The next morning, Y/N woke to a pounding headache and a heart that felt like it had been trampled. Her room was dim, the curtains still drawn, and the events of last night crashed over her like a wave. She remembered everything—her drunken outburst, the tears, the way she’d pointed at each of them, spilling her hurt. And their faces. Not concern, not guilt, but irritation, exhaustion, annoyance. The memory burned, twisting the knife deeper. She lay there, her makeup smudged and streaked, still in the tight party dress that now felt like a costume for a night she wished she could erase.
She dragged herself to the mirror, wincing at her reflection—mascara tracks down her cheeks, lipstick smeared, hair a tangled mess. Pathetic, she thought, her throat tightening. A shower was the only thing that made sense. She stood under the hot water, letting it wash away the makeup, the sweat, the lingering scent of alcohol, but it couldn’t touch the ache in her chest. She felt hollow, betrayed by the thirteen people she’d trusted most. They hadn’t cared about her last night—not really. All they’d worried about was the group’s reputation, the headlines that could’ve followed if someone had recognized her. “What if someone saw you?” Seungcheol’s voice echoed in her mind. “We’re tired, Y/N.” Not once had they asked if she was okay.
Back in her room, she pulled on an oversized hoodie and sweatpants, her stomach growling but her pride too bruised to face the kitchen. She was hungry, but the thought of seeing them, of pretending everything was fine, made her sick. She curled up on her bed, staring at the wall, the hurt festering into anger. A decade together, she thought, tears stinging her eyes. I’ve given them everything—every birthday, every late night, every moment I had. And they couldn’t even remember mine. The unfairness of it choked her, and she buried her face in her pillow, willing herself not to cry again. But the tears came anyway, silent and bitter.
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Meanwhile, the dorm was stirring with a different kind of energy. Jun, Minghao, and Wonwoo were the first awake, gathered in the kitchen, their voices low as they replayed last night. Y/N’s words hung heavy in the air, each one a dagger they couldn’t dodge. “You forgot my 25th birthday… not one of you asked why I’m quiet…” The guilt was suffocating, and the sight of her closed door down the hall felt like a silent accusation.
“How did we let this happen?” Jun asked, his voice quiet, his hands fidgeting with a coffee mug. “All thirteen of us. Not one of us remembered.”
Minghao sighed, leaning against the counter, his usual calm frayed. “She’s always the one who makes our birthdays special. The letters, the gifts… and we couldn’t even give her a damn ‘happy birthday.’”
Wonwoo stared at the floor, his jaw tight. “She was crying last night. Drunk, sure, but those weren’t just drunk tears. We hurt her. Badly.”
The others trickled in, each face etched with the same shame. Seungcheol rubbed his eyes, looking like he hadn’t slept. Jeonghan sat at the table, unusually silent. Even Hoshi, always the spark of energy, was subdued, his shoulders slumped. They all glanced at Y/N’s door, the weight of their failure settling deeper.
“We can’t undo it,” Seungcheol said finally, his voice rough. “Her birthday’s gone. But we have to do something. We owe her that.”
Minghao nodded, grabbing his jacket. “Jun and I will get a cake. Something she’d love—chocolate, with those little sprinkles she always picks off and eats last.”
“I’ll handle food,” Mingyu said, already pulling out his phone to order her favorites—fried chicken, tteokbokki, that spicy ramen she could never resist. “We’ll cook, too. Make it a spread.”
“Gifts,” Joshua added, glancing around. “We’ll each get her something. Doesn’t have to be big, just… personal. Something that shows we know her.”
They split up, a quiet determination driving them. They knew it wouldn’t erase the hurt, wouldn’t change the fact that they’d fucked up in a way that cut deep. But they had to try. Y/N wasn’t just a member—she was their sister, their heart, and they’d let her down.
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Hours later, the dorm was transformed. The living room was filled with the smell of food, a chocolate cake with sprinkles sitting proudly on the table, balloons tied to the chairs despite the late celebration. Gifts were piled in a corner—small boxes, handwritten notes, things they’d scrambled to find that screamed Y/N. A playlist of her favorite songs played softly, curated by Woozi, who’d spent an hour agonizing over the order.
But Y/N’s door stayed closed. The boys exchanged glances, the silence heavy. Finally, Seungcheol approached, knocking gently. “Y/N? Can you come out? We… we need to talk.”
No response. He knocked again, his voice softer. “Please, Y/N. Just… give us a chance.”
Inside, Y/N sat up, her heart pounding. She wanted to stay hidden, to nurse her anger, but something in his tone—raw, almost broken—pulled at her. She wiped her eyes, steeling herself, and opened the door. The sight hit her like a punch: the boys standing in a loose circle, the cake, the food, the gifts. Her breath caught, but she crossed her arms, her face guarded.
“What’s this?” she asked, her voice flat, though it wavered at the edges.
Seungcheol stepped forward, his eyes searching hers. “We fucked up, Y/N. We forgot your birthday—your 25th. There’s no excuse for that.”
Jeonghan joined him, his usual smirk gone, replaced by raw sincerity. “You’ve always been there for us, every single time. Your letters, your gifts, the way you make us feel like we’re the only ones who matter. And we… we let you down.”
Her lips trembled, but she held her ground, the hurt still raw. “Five days,” she whispered, her voice cracking. “Six now. Not one of you noticed. Not one of you asked why I was quiet, why I was… breaking.”
Mingyu’s voice broke as he spoke, his eyes glassy. “We were so caught up in ourselves, in being tired, that we didn’t see you. And last night… we weren’t worried about you, not like we should’ve been. We were assholes, Y/N. I’m so sorry.”
The tears she’d fought all day spilled over, hot and unstoppable. “I tried so hard to believe you didn’t forget,” she choked out, her voice shaking. “I kept smiling, waiting for the surprise, telling myself you were planning something. But you didn’t. You just… forgot. After ten years, how could you all forget?”
Hoshi stepped closer, his own eyes red. “We don’t deserve your forgiveness, not after this. But you’re our family, Y/N. We love you. We were stupid, blind, but we love you.”
She sobbed, her knees buckling, and Joshua caught her, pulling her into a hug. “We’ll spend every day making this up to you,” he murmured, his voice thick. “We promise.”
One by one, they joined, surrounding her in a group embrace, their apologies overlapping—Seungkwan’s shaky “I should’ve known”, Dino’s quiet “You deserve better”, Woozi’s hoarse “I’ll never let this happen again”. Y/N cried into their arms, the hurt pouring out, but their warmth, their voices, started to stitch something back together. It wasn’t fixed—not yet—but it was a start.
They pulled back, guiding her to the table. Minghao lit the candles on the cake, his smile soft. “It’s late, but… happy birthday, Y/N.”
She stared at the flickering flames, her heart a mess of pain and tentative hope. She blew them out, her wish simple: Let us heal. The boys cheered, but it was gentle, their eyes still heavy with guilt. They ate, laughed, handed her gifts—a bracelet from Vernon, a journal from Wonwoo, a goofy plushie from DK that made her smile through tears. Each note, each gesture, was a step toward reconciliation, a promise to never let her feel invisible again.
As the night wound down, Y/N looked at them, her family, and felt the first flicker of forgiveness. It would take time, but they were hers, and she was theirs. And that, at least, was worth fighting for.
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an: Hi Anon, sorry this is late, but belated happy birthday to you! I hope you'll have a great year!🎂🎉🫶🏻
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amyzworldds · 3 months ago
Text
Part Two: From Classmates to Soulmates
Masterlist | Part 1
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Y/N, a vibrant solo artist, and Wonwoo, the reserved Seventeen member, share a bond that blossoms from high school friendship into something deeper. Her chaotic energy clashes with his quiet nature, but their connection—full of teasing, cat photos, and unspoken sparks—grows through years of laughter and challenges, proving opposites can be inseparable. Pairing: Wonwoo x reader Genre: Fluff
The internet was buzzing. Fans who’d once flooded Y/N and Wonwoo’s old posts with “bestie goals” emojis now noticed the silence. No more candid stories of Y/N crashing Seventeen’s practice, no more Wonwoo lurking in the background of her vlogs. Instead, her feed was full of Jaehyun—laughing on Star Buddies, sharing smoothies, posing with peace signs. Hashtags like #Yaehyun trended, while #WonYN faded into memory.
Y/N saw the speculation but brushed it off. They’re just bored. It’s fine. But it wasn’t fine. Wonwoo’s absence left a hole—his dry texts, his rare replies. He’d gone cold, and she felt it like a winter she couldn’t shake. She’d catch glimpses of him on Seventeen’s lives, his quiet smile unchanged, but his eyes seemed... distant. Angry, even. At her? At himself? She didn’t know, and it killed her.
Wonwoo wasn’t oblivious either. Every Jaehyun story she posted twisted the knife deeper. He’d scroll past, jaw tight, hating how he’d let her slip away. Why didn’t I say something? He was mad—at her for pulling back, at himself for not stopping her, at Jaehyun for being there when he wasn’t. His members noticed too. Mingyu’s teasing about “Yaehyun” stopped after Wonwoo snapped at him one night. “Drop it, Gyu.” The room went quiet, and no one brought her up again.
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Y/N and Jaehyun grew closer, bonded by Star Buddies and late-night chats. He was sweet, attentive, everything a friend should be. But every time he laughed at her jokes, she’d think, Wonwoo would’ve rolled his eyes. When he let her ramble, she’d miss Wonwoo’s sarcastic “Are you done?” Jaehyun was great, but he wasn’t him. And that realization hit her hard—she didn’t just miss Wonwoo as a friend. She loved him. Not the safe, platonic kind. The kind that made her chest ache.
Jaehyun, though, was falling. He’d light up when she texted, save her favorite snacks, linger a little too long when they hugged. Y/N didn’t see it—or maybe she didn’t want to. She was too busy gaslighting herself into thinking her heart didn’t belong to a certain bespectacled introvert.
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One chilly autumn evening, Jaehyun texted Y/N to meet at a park near Han River. She showed up in a oversized hoodie, her hair messy from a long day, expecting a casual hangout. They sat on a bench, eating kimbap from a convenience store, laughing about their latest episode where Y/N accidentally tripped into a foam pit.
“You’re a walking disaster,” Jaehyun teased, handing her a soda. “How do you survive?”
“Pure luck,” she grinned, nudging him. “And good friends who save me from myself.”
He smiled, but it faltered. The air shifted, and Y/N’s stomach twisted. She knew that look—too serious, too soft.
“Y/N,” Jaehyun said, voice low. “I need to tell you something.”
She froze, chopsticks mid-air. No. Please don’t.
“I like you,” he said, eyes earnest. “Like, really like you. I thought maybe you felt the same, but... I just had to say it.”
Her heart sank. Jaehyun’s confession hung between them, heavy and fragile. She liked him—his kindness, his laugh—but not like that. Never like that.
“Jaehyun...” She set the kimbap down, voice trembling. “You’re amazing. Really. But I... I like someone else.”
He blinked, processing. Then, with a sad smile, he asked, “It’s Wonwoo, isn’t it?”
Y/N’s breath hitched. She hadn’t said his name, but Jaehyun knew. She always mentioned Wonwoo—how he’d hate this spicy snack, how he’d love that stray cat they saw. It slipped out, and she never noticed until now.
She looked away, cheeks burning. “I... I don’t know.”
But she did. Admitting it to herself felt like jumping off a cliff—she loved Wonwoo. Not just as her best friend, but as the one who made her world brighter, louder, better.
Jaehyun chuckled softly, masking the hurt in his eyes. “It’s okay, Y/N. I see it. You light up when you talk about him.” He paused, then added, “I’ll be here, you know. As a friend, or... if you ever change your mind.”
Her throat tightened. She hated hurting him—Jaehyun, who’d been nothing but good. “I’m so sorry,” she whispered. “I didn’t mean to—”
“Hey, don’t apologize for how you feel.” He stood, brushing off his jeans. “It’s getting late. Let me drop you home.”
“No, I... I wanna stay here a bit,” she said, voice small. “I’ll be fine.”
He hesitated, then nodded. “Text me when you’re home, okay? And don’t overthink this. I’ll be alright.”
She forced a smile as he left, but the moment his figure faded, the dam broke. She buried her face in her hands, tears spilling. She’d hurt Jaehyun, and worse, she’d hurt herself by pushing Wonwoo away. This park—it was blocks from his and Mingyu’s place. The realization hit like a wave, and before she could stop herself, she pulled out her phone.
Her thumb shook as she dialed Wonwoo. It rang once, twice, then—
“Y/N?” His voice was low, cautious. Weeks of silence, and now this.
She opened her mouth, but all that came out was a sob. She couldn’t stop—tears, guilt, everything pouring out.
“Y/N, what’s wrong?” Panic crept into his tone. “Where are you?”
“The p-park,” she hiccuped. “Near your place.”“Stay there. I’m coming.” The call ended abruptly.
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Wonwoo didn’t think—he just ran. Heart pounding, shoes slapping pavement, he cut through streets until he reached the park. The night was cold, but he barely felt it. All he could hear was her crying, echoing in his head. She’s hurt. She needs me.
He spotted her on the bench, shoulders shaking, face buried in her knees. His chest ached—anger at himself, at her, at everything fading into worry. He slowed, catching his breath, and approached.
“Y/N.”
She looked up, eyes red and puffy, mascara smudged. “Wonwoo...”
Her voice broke, and before he could say anything, she stood and threw herself into his arms, hugging him like he might vanish. “I’m sorry,” she sobbed into his jacket. “I’m so sorry I stopped talking to you. I didn’t mean to—I just—”
He froze, then slowly wrapped his arms around her, one hand resting on her head. “Hey, slow down. Why are you crying?”
She pulled back, teary eyes meeting his. “I hurt Jaehyun. He... he likes me, and I told him I don’t feel the same. It hurt him, and it hurts me because I hate hurting people, but I can’t pretend I like him when—” She stopped, biting her lip.
Wonwoo’s heart thudded. When what? But he didn’t push. Instead, he brushed a tear from her cheek, his touch gentle despite the storm in his chest. “You didn’t mean to hurt him. You were honest. That’s enough.”
She shook her head, clinging to his sleeve. “It’s not just that. I messed up with you too. I pulled away because I was scared, and now you’re mad at me, and I don’t blame you, but I—” Her voice cracked. “Do you still want to be my friend, Wonwoo? Please?”
He stared at her, something breaking inside. Mad? He wasn’t mad—not really. He was terrified of losing her, furious at himself for letting it get this far. Her question, so small and raw, undid him.
“Y/N,” he said, voice soft but firm. He cupped her face, wiping another tear with his thumb. “I’m not going anywhere.”
She blinked, lips trembling. “Really?”
He chuckled, a low sound that warmed the cold night. “You think I’d let you ditch me that easily? You’re stuck with me, chaos and all.”
She laughed through her tears, a shaky, relieved sound, and hugged him again, burying her face in his chest. “I missed you so much.”
“Missed you too,” he murmured, resting his chin on her head. His heart screamed to say more—to tell her how her distance gutted him, how Jaehyun’s name in her stories felt like a punch, how he loved her in a way that wasn’t just friends. But not now. Not when she was hurting.
They stood there, her sobs quieting, his arms steady around her. The park was silent, save for the rustle of leaves, but to Y/N, it felt like the world was right again—Wonwoo was here, and that was enough.
For now.
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Y/N and Wonwoo were back to their old rhythm—or close enough. The park reunion had patched the cracks in their friendship, and Y/N, true to form, dove back in with double the chaos. She was a whirlwind again, flooding Wonwoo’s phone with texts, voice notes, and photos of every stray cat she’d spotted during their months apart.
One afternoon, she barged into Seventeen’s practice room, arms full of convenience store snacks. “Wonwoo! Guys! I got jjajangmyeon-flavored chips and those weird gummy worms you like!” she announced, dumping the haul on the floor.
Wonwoo, stretching nearby, raised an eyebrow. “You bought the whole store again, didn’t you?”
“Only the good stuff!” She grinned, plopping beside him and launching into a story about her Star Buddies taping. “So, I tripped on a rope during this obstacle course, and Jaehyun caught me, but I still faceplanted into a pile of balloons. Balloons, Wonwoo! I looked like a human piñata!”
He chuckled, patting her head absently. “Sounds about right. You’re a walking disaster.”
She stuck out her tongue but leaned into his touch, unbothered. The members exchanged glances—Hoshi’s smirk, Jeonghan’s knowing nod. Wonwoo was smiling again, his quiet warmth back. Y/N’s energy filled the room, and he soaked it up like he’d been starving for it.
Later, as they sat eating, she scrolled through her phone, shoving it in his face. “Look at this cat I saw yesterday! Orange, fluffy, total Wonwoo vibes. I named him Glasses Jr.!”
“Stop naming things after me,” he muttered, but his lips twitched, and he zoomed in on the photo. “It’s cute, though.”
“Right? I have, like, fifty more. Hang on—” She swiped through her gallery, narrating each cat’s imaginary backstory while Wonwoo listened, nodding like it was the most normal thing in the world.
Mingyu leaned over to Vernon, whispering, “They’re back to normal. Thank God. Grumpy Wonwoo was getting old.”
“Normal?” Vernon snorted. “They’re one step from holding hands and calling it ‘friendship.’”
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But normal wasn’t quite normal. The spark was back—stronger, brighter. It was in the way Y/N’s laugh made Wonwoo’s chest tighten, or how her arm brushing his sent a jolt through her. Their hugs lingered a beat too long, their smiles carried a weight they didn’t name. When she’d fall asleep on his shoulder during movie nights, he’d freeze, afraid to wake her but memorizing the moment. When he’d adjust her scarf on a chilly day, she’d blush but pretend it was the cold.
The members saw it—Seungkwan’s eye-rolls, Dino’s not-so-subtle “Just date already!” when they bickered. Even fans noticed, old #WonYN clips resurfacing with comments like “they’re soulmates, fight me.” But neither dared speak it. Not yet.
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Then, in early 2020, a storm hit. A blurry photo surfaced online—Wonwoo at a café, a girl leaning close, laughing. The caption? “Seventeen’s Wonwoo spotted on a date!” Fans exploded, some defensive, others shipping the “mystery girl.” It spread like wildfire, and Y/N saw it before Wonwoo could explain.
She was at her dorm, scrolling Twitter, when the photo popped up. Her stomach dropped. The girl was pretty—smiling, casual, someone who looked like she fit his quiet world. Y/N’s mind spiraled. Is he seeing someone? Did I miss my chance? The thought of him with someone else—someone not her—stung more than she’d expected.
She didn’t text him. Didn’t call. Instead, she pulled back again, slower this time. No practice room visits, no cat photos, no late-night rants. Her texts became polite, short. “Busy today, talk later!” She hated it, but the fear was louder than her heart.
Wonwoo felt the shift immediately. Her silence was deafening—worse than before. He’d scroll through their old chats, her absence a weight he couldn’t shake. The rumor? He barely cared about it until he realized she did. And he hated himself for not seeing it sooner.
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One evening, fed up, he grabbed his jacket and headed to her place. No plan, just a need to fix this. When he knocked, Y/N opened the door, her hair in a messy bun, eyes tired. She didn’t smile—just stepped aside and shuffled to her couch, curling into a blanket.
“Hey,” he said, closing the door. “You’ve been... quiet.”
“Just busy,” she mumbled, staring at her TV. It was off.
He frowned, sitting across from her. “Y/N, what’s going on? You’re doing it again—pulling away.”
She shrugged, picking at her blanket. “I’m fine, Wonwoo. You don’t have to check on me.”
“Bullshit,” he said, sharper than he meant. She flinched, and he softened, leaning forward. “Talk to me. Please.”
Her eyes flicked to him, guarded. “I saw the photo. You and that girl. Everyone’s saying you’re dating.”
He blinked, then groaned, running a hand through his hair. “That’s what this is about? Y/N, it’s not true. She’s a friend of a friend—Seungcheol’s, actually. We were at a group hangout, she went to the bathroom, and some fan snapped a pic. That’s it.”
She bit her lip, unconvinced. “It looked... real. You were smiling.”
“Because she told a dumb joke!” He laughed, exasperated. “I wasn’t on a date. I wouldn’t—” He stopped, heart pounding. The words were there, heavy, begging to spill.
Y/N stood, crossing her arms. “Wouldn’t what, Wonwoo? It’s fine if you’re seeing someone. You don’t owe me anything.”
He shot up, frustration boiling over. “I wouldn’t date someone if it wasn’t you.”
She froze, eyes wide, breath catching. “What?”
He stepped closer, voice low but steady. “You heard me. I don’t want anyone else, Y/N. I never have. It’s always been you.”
Her heart raced, the room spinning. She’d spent months—years—burying this, convincing herself it was just friendship. But here he was, saying it, and it unraveled everything. “Wonwoo, you... you can’t just say that.”
“Why not?” He closed the distance, eyes searching hers. “I hate this—watching you slip away, pretending I’m okay with it. I let you go once, and it was the worst mistake I’ve ever made. I’m not doing it again.”
Tears pricked her eyes, but she laughed, shaky. “You’re an idiot. I pulled away because I was scared—scared I’d ruin us. I love you, Wonwoo, and not just as my best friend. I’ve loved you for so long, and it terrified me.”
He stared, processing, then broke into a soft, disbelieving smile. “You love me?”
“Duh,” she sniffled, poking his chest. “Why do you think I was such a mess about that stupid rumor?”
He caught her hand, pulling her into a hug. “We’re both idiots,” he murmured into her hair. “I love you too. More than you know.”
She melted into him, clinging like she used to, but this time it was different—raw, real. “So... what now?”
He pulled back, brushing a tear from her cheek. “Now? We stop being dumb. Be with me, Y/N. No more running.”
She laughed, loud and bright, the sound he’d missed most. “Deal. But I’m still sending you cat pics.”“I’d be pissed if you didn’t,” he said, and when he leaned down, pressing a soft kiss to her forehead, the spark they’d danced around for years finally caught fire
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The past years was a soft kind of chaos for Y/N and Wonwoo. From their high school days—her loud chatter breaking through his quiet world—to their confession that finally set their spark ablaze, they’d built something unbreakable. Now, as lovers, they were a study in contrasts that somehow fit perfectly. Wonwoo, once allergic to skinship, melted under Y/N’s touch. Y/N, always a clingy whirlwind, was now extra—draping herself over him like a human blanket, stealing his hoodies, and demanding his attention with a pout that could topple empires.
Tonight, they were at Wonwoo and Mingyu’s shared apartment, a cozy space cluttered with gaming gear, Seventeen merch, and Y/N’s stray hair ties. Mingyu was off filming some solo schedule, leaving the place to them. Wonwoo was glued to his gaming setup, headset on, fingers flying across the keyboard as he battled in some online match. Y/N, sprawled on his bed in one of his oversized shirts, was... less than thrilled.
“Wonwoo,” she whined, kicking her feet against the mattress. “Did you hear what I said? So, at the studio today, they tried to make me do this weird choreography, and I was like, ‘I’m a singer, not a contortionist!’ I swear, I almost fell on my face.”
“Mm,” he mumbled, eyes locked on the screen. “Cool.”
She huffed, sitting up. “Cool? That’s it? I could’ve broken my neck, and you’d still be like, ‘Nice, babe.’”
“Yup,” he said, clicking furiously. A victory screen flashed, and he leaned back, smirking. “Got ‘em.”
Y/N glared at the back of his head, then at his gaming PC. If that thing were a person, she’d have words. Harsh ones. “You and that computer are in a serious relationship. I’m just the side chick.”
He snorted but didn’t turn around. “You’re dramatic.”
“And you’re ignoring me!” She flopped back, staring at the ceiling. “I’m literally right here, looking cute, telling iconic stories, and you’re out here marrying your keyboard.”
“Five more minutes,” he said, already queuing another match.
That was it. Y/N had enough. With a theatrical groan, she rolled off the bed, snatching his blanket and—most importantly—Foxdungee, the Miniteen character plushie she’d gifted him last Christmas. “Fine! If you’re gonna be like that, I’m taking your kid and leaving!”
She stormed out, blanket trailing like a cape, Foxdungee tucked under her arm. Wonwoo’s room fell quiet, but he was too deep in his game to notice—yet.
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In the living room, Y/N flopped onto the couch, cocooning herself in the blanket until she was a burrito of pettiness. She hugged Foxdungee tight, its little glasses and fox ears squishing against her cheek. “Your dad’s the worst,” she muttered, glaring at the plushie. “All he does is play that stupid game. What about me, huh? I’m fun! I’m adorable! But nooo, he’s too busy being a nerd.”
She grabbed the remote, scrolling through streaming options. “If he wants to ignore me, you’re my date now, Foxdungee. We’re watching Barbie: Princess Charm School because it’s a classic, and you deserve culture.”
The TV lit up with Barbie’s sparkly world, and Y/N settled in, narrating to the plushie like it was a person. “See, Blair’s got dreams, just like me. And she doesn’t need a dumb gaming boyfriend to shine.” She giggled at a scene where Blair tripped, then sighed. “Okay, maybe I trip like her too. Don’t tell your dad.”
Halfway through Barbie’s makeover montage, the room felt... too quiet. No keyboard clicks, no Wonwoo muttering about “lag.” Y/N’s pout deepened. She missed him, even if he was a distracted nerd. She hugged Foxdungee tighter, whispering, “He’s probably still playing. Jerk.”
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Wonwoo, meanwhile, had noticed the silence. His game ended, and the absence of Y/N’s voice hit like a dropped beat. No chatter, no giggles, no dramatic sighs. He pulled off his headset, glancing at the empty bed. When did she leave? Guilt crept in—he’d been deep in his zone, but he hadn’t meant to ignore her.
He wandered into the living room, pausing at the sight. Y/N was a blanket burrito on the couch, Foxdungee clutched like a lifeline, laughing at Barbie outwitting a villain. Her hair was a mess, his shirt dwarfed her, and she looked so adorably grumpy that his heart did a flip.
“Hey,” he said, leaning against the doorway.
Y/N glanced up, spotted him, and—petty queen—rolled her eyes before turning back to the TV. “Oh, look, Foxdungee, it’s your dad. Too bad we’re busy having fun without him.”
She hugged the plushie tighter, muttering loud enough for him to hear, “At least you don’t ignore me for pixels.”
Wonwoo bit back a laugh, her sulky vibe too cute to handle. He crossed the room, crouching in front of her so she couldn’t avoid him. “You’re really mad at me over a game?”
She refused to meet his eyes, chin tilted up. “I’m not mad. I’m thriving. Me and Foxdungee are having the best date ever. Right, buddy?” She wiggled the plushie’s arms, making it “nod.”
He chuckled, low and warm, and her resolve wobbled. That laugh—her kryptonite. “Y/N,” he said, voice soft, “I’m sorry. I got carried away. Didn’t mean to ditch you.”
She finally looked at him, pout still in full force. “You said ‘five minutes’ an hour ago. I was telling you about my day, and you were like, ‘Mm, yup.’ I’m not a podcast you can half-listen to, Jeon Wonwoo.”
He winced, rubbing his neck. “Fair. I was a jerk. But you know I love your stories.”
“Do you?” She hugged Foxdungee closer, eyes narrowing. “Because your computer seems to get all your love.”
He grinned, leaning closer. “Jealous of my PC? That’s a new one.”
“I will fight it,” she huffed. “I’ll smash it with a hammer and dance on the pieces.”
“Please don’t. It’s expensive.” He reached out, tugging Foxdungee gently from her grip. “And stop stealing my kid to make me jealous.”
She gasped, grabbing for the plushie. “Foxdungee chose me! You don’t deserve him!”
They tussled lightly, laughing until Wonwoo let her win, Foxdungee back in her arms. He sat beside her, pulling the blanket over both of them. “Truce?”
She side-eyed him but scooted closer, resting her head on his shoulder. “Maybe. But you’re on thin ice, mister.”
“Noted.” He wrapped an arm around her, fingers tracing circles on her arm. “What’s Barbie up to? Catch me up.”
Her face lit up, and she launched into a recap, voice bright and chaotic. “Okay, so Blair’s at this fancy school, right? And there’s this mean girl, Delancy, who’s totally jealous—”
He listened, nodding like it was a TED Talk, and she melted into him, her earlier grumpiness fading. This was them—her loud, him quiet, but always tethered. Wonwoo, who’d once flinched at hugs, now craved her closeness. He glanced down at her, eyes soft. How did I get this lucky?
The movie played on, but Y/N’s narration slowed, her head heavy on his chest. “You’re comfy,” she mumbled, nuzzling closer. “Better than Foxdungee.”
“High praise,” he teased, kissing her temple. Her hair smelled like his shampoo, and it made his heart do stupid flips. “Sorry I got sucked into gaming. I’ll make it up to you.”
“You better,” she yawned. “I want breakfast tomorrow. Pancakes. With chocolate chips.”
“Deal.” He pulled the blanket higher, tucking her in. “But you’re not allowed to hog the syrup again.”
“No promises,” she giggled, voice fading as she drifted off.
Wonwoo watched her sleep, her lips parted, Foxdungee squished against her cheek. Barbie’s credits rolled, but he didn’t move, just held her closer. The world could wait—this moment, her warmth, her chaos, was all he needed.
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an: Hello! I've been receiving requests, hehe. Please bear with me—I'm a bit busy right now, but I'll get to them all. Just drop your requests, and I'll write them one by one hehe. I hope you like this! I feel like something's missing here, but yeah, HAHAHAH
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