#scoop of justice
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The Scoop of Justice (2024)
Anyone remember/know Awesomenauts? It was the only MOBA I ever really got into. It's effectively gone now, but I wanted to show my appreciation with this fanart of my main: the Scoop of Justice.
Thanks for the games! :,)
support me on ko-fi
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Another dp x dc prompt/blurb thing for yall:
Everyone knows how much Batman cares about his kids. They may not all get along with him all the time, but it's obvious that there's nothing that the Dark Knight won't do to keep his bats and birds safe.
When Danny gets taken by the GIW, Jazz, Dan & Elle - acting as regents of the Infinite Realms while Danny is out of action - find themselves using this fact to try and force the Justice League's hand in helping them.
(The Justice League, it should be noted, have no idea about anything going on with the GIW and the Anti-Ecto Acts. Everyone in Amity has been led to believe that the JL has just been ignoring them.)
They don't want to do it, but their options are limited. The Realms are howling for blood and its either declare war and obliterate the human race or try to get a little sneaky and a lot underhanded. So they decide they're going to force Batman to help them by kidnapping as many of the BatKids as they can and holding them hostage until their demands are met.
#dc x dp#dp x dc#dpxdc#danny phantom#justice league#danny fenton#jazz fenton#dan phantom#dani phantom#danielle phantom#elle phantom#batfam#bruce wayne#bruce is losing his absolute SHIT#They took his BABIES#ALFRED GET THE SHOTGUN#Justice League is scrambling to destroy the GIW & get King Phantom back to his people before Bruce does something drastic#extra points if Jon & Kon also get scooped because they wouldn't let go of thier respective birds#so Clark is also losing his god damn mind#or maybe everyone *but* Tim (& Kon) got scooped#and we get some Super Brain Dead on our hands when Tim & Kon meet Danny while breaking into a GIW facility#everyone is so worried about the batkids but they're actually having the best vacation of their lives they are being PAMPERED#Jason stumbles upon Ghost Writer's library and just refuses to leave after its all over
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🎶 music for drawing AND dancing?
#discoholic#disco#object head#musicians on tumblr#music#funk#mirrorball#nu-disco#new jack swing#acid jazz#french house#french electro#spice girls#parappa#fatman scoop#breakbot#macross 82-99#future funk#vgm#justice#sedat the turkish avenger#jet grind radio#gba#jamiroquai
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Tip Jar 💰
Got a prompt right up my alley 💙💚
Inspo while writing: The Finish Line
tw for body dysmorphia
I could tell Agnes was in a bad space the second she tossed her keys onto the kitchen counter, pulled open the fridge door and reached for an iced cold beer. She didn't look at me; didn't acknowledge me as she popped the cap off with the bottle opener that stuck to the fridge and slammed back her drink.
Her eyes were downcast as she chugged; drinking until the bottom only had a thin layer of foam on the bottom. She put the bottle down on the counter next to the discarded bottle cap before I heard the fridge open again and another hiss of air escaping the sealed bottle of beer.
"Do you wanna talk about it, Baby?"
What more could I offer her than some support? Whatever was eating Agnes, I knew it was something deep. She was usually good at brushing things off and settling her loses but this...whatever this was, was eating her from the inside out.
"Nothing, Vidal. Drop it."
"I'm not going to do that. Not right now...not whatever this is...what is this?"
"Just some fucking asshole getting the best of me."
"And who's the asshole, Agnes?"
"Me."
-
Vidal watched me as I put the empty bottle next to the first one on the counter; turned slightly now so I was facing her with my arms crossed over my chest. I could feel the warmth of my shirt underneath my flannel shirt and the way my jeans pressed against my legs and thighs. The heavy construction socks that Vidal hated kept my feet warm; a giant hug. A giant plate of armor.
I was impenetrable then; only letting in what I wanted to and I could see on Vidal's face and in her eyes that she wanted in.
"You're not, Baby...you're not an asshole."
I scoffed at Vidal's words as I shook my head and dropped my gaze from her face. She was doing that fucking thing where she tried to see right through me; right into me. She saw me before even I saw myself. She was trying it now.
I peeled myself off of the fridge and felt the sweat on my back; in between my shoulders as I walked forwards and then past Vidal. I left her in the kitchen with the two empty beer bottles sitting on the countertop; their respected caps scattered carelessly there as well.
I heard her sigh behind me and then the soft footsteps as she followed me. I knew she would, always would. She needed to get to the bottom of this just like the good little detective that she was.
-
I watched in silence as Agnes trudged towards her spot on the couch; sitting down with a small humph through her mouth. She was tired; painfully so and I couldn't help but to stand there, stand over her as I watched those tight shoulders roll back and try to unwind from whatever burden she was carrying tonight.
"If you won't tell me...tell me what can I do?"
I whispered to her as I stared down at her face; the top of her head where her hair was parted in a messy line that was never perfectly straight. More loose strands of hair framed her face as her ponytail threatened to come undone.
Agnes was unraveling right before me and yet, I knew it wouldn't be so.
"Make me forget it."
I knew better than to poke and pry with what 'it' was but I knew from the pain in Agnes' voice that she really did need to be taken away from whatever it was. I took the empty spot on the couch beside her and pressed into her; closed the gap between us with my thigh pressed against hers. She sucked in her breath like she was nervous.
My hand reached over across my body and hers to fumble at the first button on her flannel. I must have reacted before my body did; gasping loudly as her hand reacted much faster than mine; grabbing my wrist to stop me. She had never grabbed me like that; never that hard with her blunt nails digging into my skin. The look in her eyes were wild; scared. An animal caught in a trap that knew its time was up.
Agnes was scared; uncomfortable. A splinter that throbbed and pained her in such a way that she didn't want to pull it out nor leave it in. Damned if you don't and damned if you do.
We sat like that in silence with her hand around my wrist as her eyes read over mine and in some way, begged me not to touch her without her clothes on. She wanted them on; all of them. Needed that shield, that band-aid to make this go smoother, sweeter.
I understood in a way that made my stomach drop and goosebumps appear on my arms.
-
I slowly let go of Vidal's wrist and knew it would be bruised over by the morning. Closing my eyes and swallowing back the acid I felt in my throat, I sunk back into the couch and waited for Vidal to take over. I had faith in her; always did with these kind of things.
She saw right through me. Te veo. I wasn't going to question her methods because I knew she would be able to deliver.
That hand I had held onto pulled back ever so slightly but not fully; just enough so that she could find the swell of my breast against my shirt and cup. I wish I could feel her skin against mine and the way her fingers warmed to the touch; the way her nails scratched over my hardened nipple and caused prickling over my skin. I wished for it and knew I couldn't have it; not tonight. I sucked in my breath and pulled my eyebrows in as I focused, focused hard on the layers between me and my clothes and Vidal's hand and fingers.
"Don't worry, Baby, I can still blow your mind..."
And I knew in that instant as Vidal continued to grope me through my shirt; that deep blue and black flannel that she loved. The first thing she ever saw me in, that she was telling the truth. I knew instantly, from that and, the sensation of her right hand moving over my thigh to cup the crotch of my jeans.
I sunk deeper and deeper and felt the muscles in my lower back loosen as I rolled my hips voluntarily towards her cupped hand. The friction that already existed between my boxers and my jeans; the tightness of my belt between my hips was going to throw me over the edge.
Vidal knew it and so did I.
-
I moved myself in a little closer; wanted Agnes to feel my shoulder press against hers even though it was in constant movement from my hand. She was helping herself as she rocked into my cupped palm; her toes curling against her socks as they tried to grip onto the carpet below. I watched from the corner of my eye as her right hand gripped the edge of the couch cushion while her left, grabbed my thigh. An anchor and armor were Agnes' go-tos. Who was I to challenge that?
I brought my face in closer as well and pressed soft kisses on the collar of her flannel shirt; felt the well-worn and well-loved fabric brush against them. Her armor needed love just as much as she did; recognition for all it did for her. She wouldn't be here and this open with me, this vulnerable with me without it.
I owed that blue flannel shirt a lot. I owed it her. Agnes.
I could tell Agnes was getting close with how short her breaths were becoming; how much longer she held them before pushing them through pursed lips. Her eyes still closed; forehead still scrunched and, her knuckles turning pale. She was rolling her hips faster as she tried to chase the friction and the warmth that she must have felt through her jeans from my hand; the weight against her as I pressed my palm.
-
It was always something amazing to me just how much we could feel from not even being touched. Friction alone was doing its job; Vidal at my side with her body and lips pressed tight against me. I could smell her perfume as she pressed her lips against the side of my neck now; lips having moved from the collar of my shirt. She was whispering something to me as her hand between my legs moved to help me. I clenched my thighs together and trapped her hand there; only her wrist visible from between my legs.
Dull throbs that shot into my lower abdomen soon became sharp and bold; little zaps that felt like electricity. Something so small between my legs allowed me to feel; allowed Vidal to experience a response in real-time. Nerve endings ruthlessly teased and touched; rubbed against and bothered. A sinking feeling in my got that shot down to my feet but also, at the same time, pooled inside of me. I knew my boxers were soaked; could feel them clinging to my skin.
I bit down on my lip and rolled faster into that trapped hand between my legs; a means to an end and I heard Vidal grasp against my neck. Hot and wet as her lips were dragged away from me moving. I wanted her to sink her teeth into me but I couldn't ask; my tongue like a rolled up sock in my mouth.
A rolled up sock that used to sit comfortably between my legs.
Vidal talked me through it; whispered little words of encouragement and suggestions. These words and phrased were well-thought, hand-picked just for me.
"Pretty boy."
"yournippleissohard...againstmypalmbaby..."
"Handsome."
"comeagainstmyhand...justletgo..."
"Baby."
"Just. Let. Go."
#Ask#Marvel#Agatha All Along#Butch!Agatha#Agnes O'Connor#Detective Agnes O'Connor#Agnes of Westview#Agent Vidal#Rio Vidal#Writing#Writing prompt#MMMHMMMM#HEARD HEARD HEARD#Oh I totally related to this#VERY MUCH SO#I HOPE YOU LIKE IT AND I HOPE THIS DID YOU SOME JUSTICE#I also hope everyone out here struggling or even just going through these notions are seen and heard and loved#Body dysmorphia#Body dysmorphia is a goddamn bitch and I hope everyone out there is taking care of themselves 💜#And fuck give others grace too!#Oh Agnes...I need to scoop her up with two hands and put her in my pocket#And Vidal! That woman is a godsend TRULY#They are so in love it makes me S I C k
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Prompt 143
You know what I think would be hilarious. The batfamily (or even all of Gotham but it’s dismissed as just another Gotham tale by Outsiders) being able to turn into cats. Not big cats either but like, housecats. And none of their teams know.
They think that the cats must be their local bat’s, because the collars have their symbols on them. And honestly how else would this giant fluffball get onto the Watchtower? Now of course they would have told the teams all eventually, but well, it’s become a competition now. How long can they keep this under wraps, and which of them will win in keeping it hidden.
#batman au#batman#dc#dcu#prompts#justice league#cats#shifters#No embarrassment has nothing to do with their decision to turn it into a competition#What was Bruce supposed to do when Clark suddenly scooped him up and started peppering his furry face with kisses?!#He couldn’t just change back to human form and he was supposed to be the only one in the Watchtower at the time#He’d be teased more if the others haven’t all had similar situations happen to them#Titans Tower was Tim getting crushed under big fluffball Jason as revenge#I have no idea about what breeds they'd be if they are any#but I just need you to know that Damian is at that kitten stage where their tails stick straight up#and i need everyone to know that bruce gives off maine coon vibes when it comes to how thick his fur is#in case it wasn't obvious their gear & clothing shift into collars#usually with their respective symbols instead of a tag or anything
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Little Chickadee meet little Sparkle au
Bruce: you shouldn't carrying him like he's a stuffed toy, bud.
Dick, walking past Bruce: and you should've finished med school and not disappointed Alfred, B.
Bruce, punch to the gut:
Wally, giggling: he he loser-man, loser-man!!
Dick, smiling at Wally: he learns so fast!
Bruce, ANOTHER punch in the gut:
In justice league headquarters
Bruce, sobbing: you're son called me LOSER-MAN!!
Barry, sassy: well, he never tells lies, so.
Hal: it's so weird seeing him cry like that...
Clark, who seen Bruce cry: not really.
Diana, who made Bruce cry once: I think it's adorable.
Oliver: he's a child, get over it. Roy said worse to me than whatever those kids said.
Bruce: fuck off, you take them then if you think you have tough skin then.
Oliver: fine.
At Oliver's place
Oliver: Dick, sweetheart, you gotta let Wally walk on his own.
Dick: do you have your wife's permission to be telling me what I should and shouldn't do.
Oliver, gut punched: I don't need Dinah's permission for anything!
Wally: simp! Hehe, simp!!
Oliver, gut punched again:
Back at justice league headquarters
Oliver, in Dinah's: take back those demons, I never want to see them again!
Bruce: tough skin, huh?
Oliver: shut up!
Dinah: shhh, it's okay dear, they can't hurt you now.
#dick grayson#wally west#bruce wayne#clark kent#diana prince#dinah lance#barry allen#hal jordan#birdflash#justice league#the justice league#oliver queen#oliverdinah#little chickadee au#little sparkle au#Dick a savage and teaching wally bad habits#barry ends up taking them and they didn't sass momma Iris#wally never walked in this time because Iris kept scooping him up lol
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Hi! I just stumbled across ur blog and saw u do OC req,, so I was wondering if u could do this one?
-Her(/any) name is Imagine_It or Imagine for short
-Horror Roblox OC
-AI but a lively personality (think exaggerated cartoon)
-Lovveesss art (cartoony styled) and colors
-That old trope about having a good and dark side
-Crystal-related
Sorry if this is too much or too little I’ve never really done this before 🥲
IMAGINE_IT STIMBOARD

1--2--3--4--5--6--7--8
#this is good dw!!!#hope i did her justice#stimblr#stimboard#stim blog#oc stimboard#oc#roblox#roblox oc#crystal stim#purple stim#cybernetic stim#digital stim#tech stim#screen stim#computer stim#amethyst stim#scooping stim#black stim#white stim#watercolor stim#watercolour stim#art stim#drawing stim#coloring stim#colouring stim#rainbow stim#sorry this took a while!! was trying to find fitting ones#ocs
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I don my gay apparel
and when I am in peril
I play a silly tune
so that the killers will swoon
#dbd#thoughts about media#scoops steve already excels at pacifying killers#give that goofball a lute? his charm is undeniable!#this doctor match was really funny though.#he was absolutely destroying us because the other survivors were...#well they weren't very bright. and I'm pretty sure david immediately started to kill himself on first hook.#I had SOOO many matches where people were doing that.#It was actually getting kind of annoying even though I REALLY dgaf when I play survivor.#but this doc saw I pulled out my lute and he lost his fucking mind.#the screencap doesn't do it justice. bro was SPINNING LMAO.#the other survivors were pissy like this match wasn't going to be an easy 4k for him otherwise.#or like they didn't literally hand him hooks.#sorry boys! should have been pretty and entertaining like steve!#charisma is the best stat and steve rolled a natural fucking 20 <3
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Ace attorney 4 liveblog:
I'm on the last case and Klavier--love that prick to death, you plug your music in the courtroom king--really is suggesting for the witness to change his testimony using bribery. How dare he. I have standards.
#ace attorney apollo justice#Liveblog#Spoilers#He's like hey Mr journalist ya can't write a scoop if your testimony is useless#Stfu Gavin I disproved his testimony
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friend left homemade pesto in the fridge and i just went to go use it and it had already gone mouldy. kms.
#i had NOTHING to put on my gnocchi i had to go to the corner store and get jarred shit 😭#which is like. fine. the jar shit tastes good but it wasn't made with love!!!!!#screaming crying throwing up while scooping the lovingly made mouldy pesto into the trash. no justice in this world#idk why i bothered trying to do groceries this week honestly i'm not gonna be able to use it all before i leave and i didn't even buy much!#there were too many take out places that i missed lmao#ky posts text
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Friendly Fire
Bucky x reader
Summary: Sam exposes Bucky’s obvious crush on you.
Word: 1,3k
The compound was quiet. Too quiet. Which meant you were about to commit a crime.
Not a real crime, just a tiny one. A harmless, innocent late-night snack raid. You tiptoed into the kitchen, trying not to make a sound, reaching for the cupboard handle.
"Really?"
You turned around, startled, finding Bucky leaning against the doorway, arms crossed, looking very unimpressed.
"You scared the hell out of me!" You hissed, pressing a hand to your chest.
He smirked. "You’re terrible at sneaking."
"I wasn’t sneaking."
"You absolutely were." He smiled, walking closer to you.
You rolled your eyes, turning back to the cupboard. "What are you doing up, anyway?"
"Same thing as you," He admitted, stepping closer. "Figured I’d grab something before Wilson wakes up and lectures me about eating properly."
You chuckled. "Well, now that you're here, you might as well make yourself useful."
He arched a brow. "Useful how?"
You gestured at the top shelf. "Grab that."
He sighed but reached up effortlessly, grabbing cookies you couldn’t get to.
You narrowed your eyes. "Showoff."
Bucky smirked, opening the cookie package, taking one out, and he exaggeratedly slowly took a bite.
"You are the worst," You muttered, grabbing a cookie from the package.
"You love it," He teased.
You snorted, but didn’t deny it. For a moment, comfortable silence settled.
Then Bucky glanced at you with a smirk. "We’re gonna get caught, you know."
You shrugged, taking a bite. "Worth it."
"Wow. Look at this."
Both of you froze.
Slowly, you turned, finding Sam standing in the doorway, arms crossed, shaking his head in mock disappointment.
"Two grown adults, sneaking snacks like criminals," He said, sighing. "Barnes, you should be ashamed."
Bucky groaned, rubbing his temple. "Sam-"
"No, no, don’t ‘Sam’ me." He pointed at both of you. "This is pathetic. You could’ve just eaten like normal people, but no midnight heist. What are you, spies?"
"Well...yeah," Bucky muttered.
Sam ignored that. "And you?" He turned to you, smirking. "Corrupted by Barnes already, huh?"
You sighed, pretending to be apologetic. "Guess I’ve been a bad influence on him."
Sam laughed, shaking his head. "No, no, you got it backwards, sweetheart."
Bucky rolled his eyes, grabbing cookies. "We’re leaving."
"Running from justice, huh?" Sam teased.
Bucky grabbed your wrist, pulling you toward the exit. "We don’t have to listen to him."
"Wait," Sam checked the shelf from which you got cookies. "Are those my cookies?" He called after you. "Thieves!"
You just laughed, following Bucky down the hallway.
---
"You’re terrible at this," Bucky muttered, watching you struggle with the dough. This time, the two of you decided to make cinnamon rolls.
You scoffed, tossing him a glare. "Excuse me?"
He leaned against the counter, arms crossed. "You’re kneading like you’re trying to fight it. It’s dough, not an enemy."
You huffed, turning back to the sticky mess in front of you. "You said I had to be firm!"
"Not aggressive," He corrected. "You look like you’re trying to kill it."
You sighed, rolling your eyes. "Maybe if you actually helped-"
Bucky smirked. "And ruin the entertainment?"
You narrowed your eyes. "You’re enjoying this way too much."
"I absolutely am." He chuckled, stepping closer to you.
Slowly, casually, you scooped up a bit of flour. "You know, for someone who’s supposedly a trained fighter, you’re way too close right now."
Bucky’s brow furrowed. "What?"
And before he could react, you flicked the flour straight at him. It was beautiful. A perfect explosion of white powder across his dark shirt and face. For one glorious moment, he just stood there, processing. Then his expression darkened.
"You," he muttered, wiping flour from his jaw. "Are in so much trouble."
You shrieked, immediately trying to back away, but he moved faster. In an instant, he grabbed a handful of flour and smeared it against your cheek, grinning at your stunned reaction.
"You did not just,"
"Oh, I did."
You lunged for another handful, and just like that, chaos erupted.
Flour flew everywhere onto counters, into hair, across shirts. You were laughing, dodging him, while Bucky, the incredibly skilled fighter, was apparently terrible at avoiding kitchen warfare.
By the time Sam walked in, he stared at the disaster in complete horror. "What the hell happened here?"
You and Bucky were breathless, covered in flour, smirking at each other like two kids who had just gotten caught.
Sam sighed. "I don’t even wanna know. But Barnes," He shook his head, walking out. "Just tell her, man."
"Ignore him." Bucky groaned, dragging a hand down his flour-covered face.
You just laughed, but you wanted to know what he meant.
---
The compound's kitchen was quiet until Sam decided to stir up trouble.
You were sitting across from Bucky at the table, quietly sipping coffee, when Sam decided today was the day to ruin Bucky Barnes' life.
"You know, man," Sam said, leaning against the counter, smirking at Bucky, "you’re not exactly subtle."
Bucky, sitting across from you, froze mid-sip.
You raised an eyebrow. "Subtle about what?"
Sam grinned like a man who lived for chaos. "You."
Bucky’s jaw clenched warningly. "Sam."
You blinked, confused. "Me?"
Sam turned back to Bucky, absolutely enjoying himself. "Look at you, all stiff and silent, pretending you don’t have a full-blown crush sitting right there."
Bucky exhaled sharply, gripping his coffee mug so tightly that you were sure it was seconds away from cracking.
"I do not-" He muttered.
"Oh, buddy," Sam interrupted, shaking his head. "You do. The way you watch her when she walks into the room? The way you get all weirdly protective? And let’s not forget the time you lost your mind when she got hit during training."
Bucky shot up from his chair. "I was concerned!"
"You were dramatic," Sam corrected.
You stared between the two men, heat rising to your cheeks. Bucky Barnes, former assassin, impossible grump, had a crush on you?
Bucky dragged a hand down his face. "Sam, I swear, I will-"
"What?" Sam taunted. "Kill me? Finally admit you like her?"
Bucky looked half ready to commit a crime. But before he could, Sam pushed off the counter, laughing. "Relax, man. I'm just saying that maybe you should stop glaring at me and do something about it."
Then, with an obnoxious wink at you, he walked out. You sat there, awkwardly clutching your coffee cup, very aware that Bucky was still standing.
"...So," you said, glancing at him. "You have a crush on me?"
Bucky groaned. "Ignore Sam. He likes ruining my life."
You smiled. "But…was he wrong?"
Silence.
Bucky rubbed his temple, sighed, and finally looked at you. "I hate him," he muttered. "But no. He wasn’t wrong."
Your heart stuttered.
Slowly, you set your coffee down. "So… what do we do about that?"
Bucky was silent for one long second. He hesitated, but only for a second. Then, he moved.
His hand reached up, fingers grazing your cheek like he was memorizing the feel of your skin. His touch was careful, uncertain, but when his thumb traced the edge of your jaw, you leaned into it. That was all he needed.
He slightly tilted his head, closed the distance, and kissed you. It started soft, hesitant, like he was afraid to break you, but the moment you melted into him, everything changed.
The tension, the months of stolen moments and unsaid words, came crashing down all at once. His lips pressed firmer against yours, his hand slipping to the back of your neck, pulling you closer like he’d been waiting, aching, for this.
And you kissed him back with everything you had, gripping his jacket, letting him swallow the breathless sound you made when he tilted his head, deepening the kiss. The world blurred.
It was just heat, hands, Bucky, the quiet realization that this was exactly where you wanted to be.
"FINALLY!"
You jerked away, breathless, turning toward the hallway where Sam stood, grinning like a damn idiot.
Bucky groaned, burying his face against your shoulder. "I am going to kill him."
You laughed, still catching your breath, still feeling the phantom imprint of Bucky’s lips.
"Took you long enough, Barnes." Sam just shook his head, victorious.
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Hey there i hope you’re having a great day!
I was thinking about a version of Bucky in which he is absolutely head over heels smitten with his girl that he melts over her simply sweet talking him to get something she wants, he can’t even help it he thinks she is the cutest thing ever.
I feel like no one can do smitten Bucky Barnes justice other than you
Or maybe I’m being biased lol.
Thank you!
Hope you're having a great day too. And thank you for the compliment, it made my day 🫠
Here's your fluffy bucky story. Hope its how you wanted <3
Pretty please
Pairings: Bucky Barnes × Reader (established relationship)
Summary: Bucky Barnes is hopelessly in love with you. He gives you everything you ask for—until you stop asking. That’s when he decides to give you the one thing you never say aloud.
Word count: 1.3k+
Warnings and tags: Smitten Bucky, a duck?, reader feels slight guilt only for a second, lover boy barnes.
Bucky Barnes had faced down entire armies. He’d survived missions no man should’ve made it out of, stood toe-to-toe with monsters, and walked through fire more times than he could count. But none of that compared to this—to you. To your soft smiles, your gentle laughter, and your very specific brand of mischief. You didn’t need weapons or war to bring a super soldier to his knees.
You just needed one look.
That head tilt. That spark in your eyes. The way your lips would part in that little smile as you leaned in and said in the sweetest voice imaginable—
“Pretty please? With puppy dog eyes?”
He never stood a chance.
You didn’t abuse it. That was the most dangerous part. You only asked for little things. Cute things. Things that could never be considered a burden. And Bucky, well… he’d give you the moon if you asked. Hell, he was halfway to building a rocket when you offhandedly said once, “I wonder what sunrise looks like from space.”
It was a joke. A passing thought.
But Bucky remembered. Bucky always remembered.
The duck was his personal favorite.
It had started on a rainy afternoon, one of those slow, sleepy days where time seemed to stretch. You were in his hoodie, feet tucked into his lap on the couch, scrolling through videos on your phone while the sound of the storm tapped softly against the windows.
You gasped. “Oh my God.”
Bucky looked over, amused. “What?”
You turned the screen to him, pointing wildly. “LOOK at this duck. He’s wearing a sweater vest. This is the cutest thing I’ve ever seen in my life. James. Look at his feet.”
Bucky squinted. “Huh. He’s fancy.”
“Fancy?!” you cried, clutching the phone. “He’s a whole gentleman. I would DIE for him.”
He chuckled, fingers drumming lightly along your shin. “Would you die for him… or want one of your own?”
You bit your lip. “Bucky, I am not asking you for a duck.”
He leaned back. “But you want one.”
You hesitated. Then…You folded your hands under your chin, your eyes impossibly wide and filled with longing. “Pretty please? With puppy dog eyes?”
He groaned, one hand dragging down his face as a grin crept in. “Not fair. That’s cheating.”
You beamed. “You love it.”
“I do,” he muttered, fully doomed.
Two days later, you opened the back door to the sight of a small, waddling creature in a tiny hand-crocheted sweater vest approaching the porch.
You blinked. “Is that—”
Bucky stood behind the duck, arms folded and entirely too pleased with himself. “His name is Sir Quacksalot. He likes strawberries. And cuddles.”
You gasped. “YOU GOT ME A DUCK?!”
He shrugged. “You said pretty please.”
Your squeal nearly shattered glass. You scooped the duck into your arms and spun around like you’d just won the lottery. “This is the best day of my LIFE.”
Bucky leaned against the railing, watching you coo over your new feathery friend. His chest felt warm—like some part of him had been waiting his whole life to see you this happy.
There was nothing he wouldn’t give you. No wish too silly. No ask too big.
At least, that’s what he thought—until you stopped asking.
It started subtly.
You still smiled at him, still kissed his cheek while he made coffee in the morning, still called him your “Bucky bear” when you wanted to make him blush (which always worked). But you weren’t asking anymore. Not for little things. Not even for something as simple as “can we make pancakes for dinner?” or “let’s take the long way home.”
At first, Bucky didn’t notice. Life got busy. He assumed it was just a lull, something fleeting. But after a week, then two, his chest began to tighten with something like worry.
You still looked happy. But it was quieter. Softer. More... reserved.
He started paying more attention. How your “thank yous” came with a hesitance. How you’d say, “You didn’t have to do all this,” a little too often. How your smile would falter sometimes when he gave you something, even as you hugged him and said you loved it.
And then one night, while you were asleep curled up in his arms, Bucky got up to grab a blanket—and his eyes landed on your notebook.
He wasn’t looking to snoop. He’d seen you scribble in it before—little doodles, grocery lists, the occasional poem or recipe. But this time, a page had slipped out slightly, catching his eye.
He picked it up.
And his heart stopped.
A sketch. A rough pencil drawing of a cabin. Trees. A porch swing. Notes scribbled in the margins.
String lights here?
Big fireplace with that armchair I love.
Waking up to snow. Coffee in mismatched mugs. Just us.
Then, the words that made his breath catch:
“Somewhere far enough to breathe. Somewhere I can wake up with him and feel like the world is still.”
You hadn’t shown this to him.
You hadn’t asked.
And he knew—instantly, gut-deep—that you’d wanted this more than anything. But you’d stopped asking because you didn’t want to seem like you were asking for too much. As if he hadn’t already given you his heart, his home, his soul.
Bucky closed the notebook gently.
And called in a few favors.
You were already suspicious when he drove you out of the city and wouldn’t tell you why. The trees grew thicker, the air cooler, and your eyes narrowed with every passing mile.
“Bucky,” you said slowly. “Where are we going?”
“You’ll see.”
“You’re being weird.”
“I’m always weird.”
You huffed, crossing your arms. “If this is a murder cabin, I swear—”
He snorted. “Trust me. You’re gonna like it.”
When he pulled off onto a narrow gravel path, your heart began to thud. And then you saw it.
The porch swing. The twinkling lights. The tall trees surrounding the cabin in quiet serenity, the kind of calm you only ever dreamed of.
Your hand flew to your mouth. “No way,” you whispered.
Bucky stepped out of the car and rounded to your door, pulling it open gently. “Come on, sweetheart.”
You stepped out, staring at the cabin like it might vanish if you blinked. “How did you—?”
“I found your notebook.” You froze.
“I wasn’t snooping. Just saw the page,” he said softly. “And I thought… if you won’t ask for it, I’m just gonna make it happen anyway.”
Your throat tightened. “I didn’t ask because it felt… like too much. You already do so much for me.”
He cupped your cheek, thumb brushing over your skin like he was touching something precious. “There’s no such thing as ‘too much’ when it comes to you. You want it? It’s already yours.”
Tears stung your eyes.
He pulled you into his chest and held you there for a long time, his chin resting against your head, his heart thundering against your ear.
“I love you,” you whispered.
“I know,” he murmured. “And I love you more than I’ve ever known how to say.”
That night, you sat on the porch with a blanket wrapped around your shoulders, Bucky behind you, his arms around your waist as you sipped hot cocoa in one of your mismatched mugs.The stars were clear. The world was still.
Sir Quacksalot waddled across the porch in another ridiculous sweater (Bucky had packed a whole duffel bag of duck outfits, because of course he had).
And you leaned back into the arms of a man who would burn down the world just to see you smile.
He kissed your shoulder, then whispered against your skin, “You never have to ask, doll. If it matters to you… it already matters to me.”
And in that moment, with his love wrapped around you like a second skin, you finally believed it.
#bucky barnes#bucky barnes x reader#bucky barnes imagine#bucky barnes fluff#bucky barnes x you#sebastian stan x reader#bucky x reader#bucky barnes fanfiction#james buchanan barnes#marvel fanfiction
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im. 💖
#having. a good night#i’m gonna. crash but. having. good converstions#feeling warm and fuzzy and comfortable#im.#i feel silly but im like. im falling in love i thinkkjjjjjjjjjj its great its wonderful#i have not felt this good and this pretty in a long time like im just. life is swell#im . tired and i know im doing the classic puppy love just. head over heels stuff thats known for in new and passionate relationships but it#feels so good and i like him so much and i just feel. real#i feel seen and understood and . loved its. huh its. yeah#but brain real fuzzy and warm. im just. i found someone so. just. so perfect for me its like. im :)#he treats me. really well and he’s so amazing and so fucking insanely talented at art and animation and im likeeee all dizzy and feeling#just . safe and comfortable like. i just feel. safe and its. not something i feel a lot#and like. its funny bc like theres a few irls who follow here who know both him and me and its like. haha you guys get the inside scoop on#just how infatuated we are with eachother like. surprise . but yknow.#its like. hhh. its just. im just. its nice#like. we all know im well aware that im pretty as it is but he just makes me feel. so pretty like just. gorgeous#and i mean he’s like . woah. like i know you guys dont know what he looks like besides my paintings but the paintings do not do him justice!#he’s got this like. great smile and he’s always laughing and giggling and this really pretty long hair i love and its like… 💖💖💖#like. he’s. very my type. i have a weakness for pretty guys and he’s just. so prettyyyyy and im :)#im sorry to my irls who see me just. gushing about him like. idk. im not sure if anyone saw it coming but i think it. makes sense. it makes#a lot of sense. and we’re. cute together. got that. opposing aesthetics stuff. but it’s. aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa#im just. oh i think im talking until the tags run out now i think so uh huh#yeah it’s . embarassing honestly to be. this into someone but it just. feels. good and natural and it makes sense like i said#i just. hm . im both so nervous around him and not nervous at all its. nice#and like. i just want to. be with him all of the time ever and it’s. probably whats gonna happen next semester#im just totally infatuated and he is. with me as well and it’s. really cool to be just. mutually losing it#like half of our calls involve us hiding our heads in our hands because its real nervous boy4nervous boy shit like. very much so#i often have to put my phone down and just. close my eyes and lie in the dark and go. oh my god oh my god oh my god#its just surreal to like someone so hard for so long and then a month after classes end and it’s real. its normal its happening
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keeping score ⚽ mingyu x reader.
hating mingyu is easy. seeing him in any other light takes work, and you’re tired of trying to figure that out.
⚽ uni soccer player!mingyu x reader. ⚽ word count: 20.4k ⚽ genre: alternate universe: non-idol, alternate universe: university. romance, light angst. offshoot of @xinganhao's soccer team!hhu verse. ⚽ includes: mentions of food, alcohol consumption. cussing/swearing. frenemies to ???, looots of bickering, slowburn, pining!! yearning!! tension, idiots in love, feelings realization/denial. reader is a fashion major, mingyu is a goalkeeper. hhu ensemble (mingyu’s soccer teammates). other idols make a cameo. ⚽ footnotes: this entire piece of work— all 20k words of it— is dedicated to @maplegyu. this couple is our magnum opus, and i owe so much of this vision to her; i can only hope i’ve done them justice. my favorite gyuldaengie! iyong iyo ‘to. ily. <3 🎵 the official keeping score s01 playlist.
▸ S01E01: THE ONE WITH THE MONTHLY FAMILY LUNCH.
The bane of your existence arrives like clockwork every month, complete with a three-course meal, polite conversation, and the insufferable presence of Kim fucking Mingyu.
You love the Kims. Really, you do.
His mother is an absolute angel, his father tells the best stories, and his sister is one of the few people in this world you can actually stand. But Mingyu?
Mingyu is a menace. A thorn in your side. A perpetual migraine dressed in a soccer jersey and an overinflated ego.
And yet, because your families are close, you’ve had the misfortune of growing up with him. There has never been a time in your life when he wasn’t there wreaking havoc, getting on your nerves, making these monthly lunches a test of patience and endurance.
You barely step through the Kims’ front door before he spots you, and the smirk that spreads across his face already has you bracing for impact.
“You spend all your money on clothes, don’t you?” Mingyu drawls, gaze sweeping over your carefully chosen outfit. This month’s best attempt at dressing to impress. “Do you ever buy anything useful, or is it just fabric and brand names at this point?”
You flash him a saccharine smile, one wide enough to make your cheeks hurt. “I would ask if you ever spend money on anything besides soccer cleats, but then I remembered—” You snap your fingers. “You don’t. Trust fund baby, right? Still trying to deserve that, Kim?”
He clutches his chest dramatically, as if wounded. “Low blow.”
You step past him, muttering, “Not low enough.”
The act drops at the dining table, of course. Because despite the mutual irritation that fuels your every interaction, you both have the social awareness to play nice in front of your parents.
Mingyu is seated next to you, and it takes every ounce of willpower not to roll your eyes when he oh-so-helpfully pulls a serving dish closer. To himself, obviously.
“Let me guess,” you say, resting your chin on your hand. “You’re carb-loading for a game?”
Mingyu, mid-scoop of mashed potatoes, doesn’t even blink. “Nah, just loading up so I don’t wither away listening to you talk about… what was it last time? The ‘psychological complexity of lipstick shades’?”
His mother lets out a dramatic sigh, though there’s no real dismay behind it. “Mingyu, be nice.”
“I am nice,” he says easily, flashing his mother an innocent smile before turning back to you, tone all too sweet. “And personally, I think you’re more of a soft pink girl than a red one.”
It’s a direct dig at your choice of makeup for the day. You know he’s just speaking out of his ass; he doesn’t know the first thing about shades, and red is definitely your color. You take a slow sip of your drink before matching his tone. “That’s funny. I was just about to say you’re more of a benchwarmer than a starter.”
His father chuckles, far too used to this by now. “Oh, come on,” he chuckles. “You two have known each other since you were in diapers. When will you stop with the little jabs?”
“Maybe they’ll finally get along,” your mother says amusedly, “now that they’re graduating.”
You and Mingyu exchange a look, one perfectly in sync despite how much you loathe the idea of ever being on the same wavelength.
Nose scrunch. Head shake.
Not in this lifetime.
There was a time— brief, fleeting, and foolish— when you thought you might actually be friends with Mingyu.
You must’ve been, what, eight? Nine? Young enough to still believe that people could change overnight, that rivalries were just a phase, that some friendships took time to bloom.
Back then, it was silly competitions: Who could swing higher at the playground, who could run faster in the backyard, who could stack the tallest tower of Lego before the other knocked it over. It was childish, harmless, even fun at times— until you saw his real colors.
And now, over a decade later, nothing has changed.
He still finds new and inventive ways to drive you up the wall.
Case in point: Your families’ traditional group photo.
You don’t know why you still expect him to behave. You should’ve known better.
Just as the camera shutter is about to go off, you feel something tickle the back of your neck. You tense immediately, but it’s too late. Mingyu, standing behind you, has flicked the ribbon of your dress like an annoying schoolboy pulling on a pigtail.
You whirl around, shooting him a sharp glare.
“Don’t,” you warn through gritted teeth.
He gives you a wide, infuriatingly innocent grin. “Don’t what?”
You turn back, forcing a pleasant smile for the next shot. And yet— there it is again. A slight tug, barely noticeable, but just enough to let you know he’s doing it on purpose.
The camera clicks.
This time, you whip around so fast he actually takes half a step back.
“I swear to God, Kim Mingyu—”
“Kids,” your mother calls, barely looking up from her phone. “Let it go.”
“We’re not kids,” you shoot back.
Mingyu nudges your side with his elbow, leaning down ever so slightly to murmur, “You’re right. We’re adults now. Which means you can use your words instead of glaring at me like you’re trying to set me on fire with your mind.”
You retaliate by elbowing him in the ribs. He squeaks and begins to whine to his mother.
There is no universe in which you and Mingyu will ever get along. No amount of family lunches, no shared childhood history, no forced photo ops can change that.
And you’re perfectly fine with that.
▸ S01E02: THE ONE WITH SOCCER PRACTICE.
Mingyu is having a good practice session— until Seungcheol ruins it.
“Yo, loverboy,” the team captain calls out, grinning as he jogs up beside him. “You’ve got an audience today.”
Mingyu frowns, breath still heavy from his last sprint across the field. “Huh?”
Seungcheol subtly tilts his head towards the stands.
And there you are— looking as out of place as a flamingo in a snowstorm.
You’re sitting as far from the field as possible, like being too close might infect you with ‘sports’. Your arms are crossed, your pink-clad form nearly swallowed by the ridiculous sun hat and oversized sunglasses shielding you from the very concept of nature. A frilly umbrella is propped up beside you, even though there isn’t a single drop of rain in sight.
The sheer disgruntlement on your face is almost impressive.
Mingyu groans. “Oh, come on.”
“Who’s that?” Vernon asks casually, appearing beside Mingyu and Seungcheol like a curious puppy. He’s the newest, youngest guy on the team, so he can’t be blamed for knowing the semi-constant fixture in Mingyu’s life.
Wonwoo, stretching nearby, lets out a knowing hum. “That,” he responds, “is Mingyu’s one true love.”
Vernon blinks. “Oh.”
Seungcheol laughs, slinging an arm around Mingyu’s shoulders in a way that always ticked the latter off. “The love of his life. His childhood sweetheart. The Juliet to his Romeo,” the older boy sing-songs.
Mingyu scowls. “Shut up.”
Vernon looks at you again. The way your expression barely changes as you sip from an offensively fuschia thermos makes him squint in confusion.
“She doesn’t seem too happy to be here,” the youngest notes, and Mingyu holds back the urge to snort.
You’re fidgeting now, glaring at a single blade of grass that’s found its way onto your lap, as if deeply offended by its existence. He’s half-tempted to dump an entire barrel of dried leaves on you, just to see you screech.
For now, though, Mingyu settles with shoving Seungcheol’s arm off him. “You guys are so annoying,” Mingyu grumbles.
Wonwoo pushes his glasses further up his face. “We’re just stating facts.”
“They’re not facts,” Mingyu snaps. “And she’s not here because of me. Trust me, if she had any choice, she’d be anywhere but here.”
Vernon looks between Mingyu and you again, then back at Mingyu. “…So?”
“So, what?”
The younger player shrugs. “Why is she here?”
Mingyu rolls his eyes. “She’s waiting for me.”
Seungcheol lets out a dramatic gasp. “Oh? Waiting for you? Just how deeply are you entangled with this woman, Kim Mingyu?”
It’s a story that Seungcheol and Wonwoo already know. Mingyu knows they’re just being difficult for the hell of it, trying to goad him into reacting. He focuses on indulging Vernon, knowing the longer he avoids it, the longer he’ll be picked on.
“I owe her family,” Mingyu says through his teeth. “It’s not some stupid love story— her parents basically helped raise me when mine were busy working. You think I want to drive her places? I don’t. But my mom guilt-trips me into it every time.”
Seungcheol and Wonwoo share an unimpressed look.
“Uh-huh,” Wonwoo says. “Poor you. Forced to chauffeur a beautiful girl around in your nice car. Sounds awful.”
Mingyu fights the urge to sulk. “It is. She’s unbearable.”
“She seems pretty quiet,” Vernon grunts as he adjusts his cleats.
“That’s because she’s sulking.” Mingyu isn’t sure why, but once the explanation starts, it just keeps going. “Normally, she never shuts up—always going on about useless crap, complaining about things normal people don’t even think about. Like, oh no, her new nail set doesn’t match the vibe of her outfit, or God forbid a restaurant uses the wrong kind of parmesan.”
He realizes he’s said too much when he notices Wonwoo fighting back a smirk, and Seungcheol biting the inside of his cheek. The latter pushes it further with a drawl of, “So, what I’m hearing is… you listen to her. A lot.”
Mingyu groans, rubbing his temples. He really had to learn how to keep his mouth shut. “No, I suffer through her,” he insists. “There’s a difference.”
Wonwoo folds his arms. “You know, it’s funny. You talk all this smack, but I don’t think I’ve ever heard her rant about you.”
“That’s just because she’s stuck-up. Always has been,” scoffs Mingyu.
His mind flashes back to childhood— when he was seven and you were six, and you turned your nose up at his scraped knees, saying, Only boys who don’t know how to run properly get hurt like that.
When he was ten and you were nine, and you refused to eat a slice of pizza at his birthday party because you only liked the fancy kind with real mozzarella, not whatever that was.
When he was fifteen and you were fourteen, and he caught you scoffing at his old sneakers, telling your mom some people just have no concept of ‘aesthetics.’
And yet, despite everything, your families had always forced you together.
Mingyu was never given the option to just avoid you. Your parents and his were practically inseparable, and since childhood, he’s had to deal with your high standards and exasperated sighs and perpetual disapproval over whatever nonsense you deemed worth being mad about that day.
“I promise you, she’s the worst,” Mingyu mutters, stretching his arms behind his head.
Vernon, still watching you, tilts his head. “So, what does she think of you?”
That one’s easy.
“She hates me,” Mingyu says simply. Like it’s a fact. The sun is warm, the sky is blue, and you hate Kim Mingyu.
Seungcheol grins, his smile a little too sharp and knowing for Mingyu’s liking. “Oh, well. At least that’s mutual, right?”
Mingyu doesn’t answer, but he does glance back at you just in time to see you struggling to shove your umbrella back into its case. You catch his eye and stick your tongue out at him, the act so childish that Mingyu can only roll his eyes and flip you off.
The feeling was most definitely mutual.
The practice goes as usual— drills, passing exercises, a scrimmage where Mingyu manages to nutmeg Wonwoo (which earns him a half-hearted shove after the play). By the time they’re finishing up with cool-down stretches, the sun is dipping low in the sky, casting the field in warm golds and oranges.
Mingyu runs a hand through his sweat-dampened hair and chugs the last of his water bottle before chucking it at Seungcheol’s back. “Captain,” he calls mockingly, “we done?”
Seungcheol catches the bottle before it can hit him. “Yeah, yeah. Go, be free.”
Mingyu doesn’t need to be told twice. He grabs his bag from the bench and jogs off the field, presumably heading toward you, who is still seated cross-armed, looking thoroughly unimpressed with the entire practice.
The three boys watch the interaction from a distance. Mingyu says something; you scowl. He nudges your knee with his foot; you swat at him.
Wonwoo rolls his shoulders. “You think today’s the day?”
Seungcheol lets out a low chuckle, shaking his head. “Not yet. Give it another few months.”
Vernon furrows his brows. “What?”
“The bet,” Wonwoo says simply.
Vernon blinks. “What bet?”
“We’ve had a running bet for years about how long it’ll take those two to get together,” supplies Seungcheol.
Vernon looks between them, then at you and Mingyu again. The two of you now seem to be engaged in some sort of bickering match. Mingyu pulls at the edge of your pink cardigan, and you swat his hand away with increasing irritation.
How long it’ll take the two of you to get together?
“You guys are insane,” Vernon says flatly.
Wonwoo snorts. “Tell me something I don’t know.”
“I mean, look at them.” Vernon gestures vaguely in your direction. At this point, you’re looking like you’re five seconds away from pouncing Mingyu. “They hate each other.”
Seungcheol and Wonwoo do it again. That shared look, that quiet understanding.
“Look again,” the team captain urges, and Vernon does.
He watches as Mingyu steps back, laughingly avoiding your physical assault. You— despite your obvious frustration— fight a smile before rolling your eyes.
There’s something there. Some spark of familiarity, of knowing each other too well, of a connection that might just be a little too deep for pure hatred.
Huh.
A beat. And then Vernon digs through his pocket and procures a couple of loose bills.
“Before the year ends,” he declares, making Seungcheol and Wonwoo chuckle.
▸ S01E03: THE ONE WITH THE JANKY ELEVATOR.
You don’t know why you always end up here.
Actually, no. You do know why. Because your parents insist you wait at Mingyu’s place whenever they’re running late to pick you up, since apparently his apartment is safer than a café or a mall. Nevermind that the biggest threat to your wellbeing is standing right beside you, scrolling through his phone with a self-satisfied smirk.
“Was a functioning lift too much to ask for when you were looking for apartments?” you say, eyeing the rickety metal doors of his apartment building’s elevators.
Mingyu doesn’t even look up. “Oh, sorry, princess. Next time, I’ll make sure to move into a high-rise penthouse with gold-plated buttons just for you.”
You make a noise of disgust, jabbing at the button with unnecessary force. “As if I’d ever step foot in your place again after today.”
“You say that every time.”
You open your mouth for a comeback, but the elevator doors groan open just then. The lights flicker ominously. There’s a suspicious stain on the corner of the floor. You step in with a sigh, Mingyu following behind you.
The doors shut. The elevator lurches upwards with a wheeze.
“You know,” Mingyu says, “if you hate coming here so much, you could always just Uber home.”
“Oh, believe me, if I didn’t have to be here, I wouldn’t. But my mom insists you’re—” You pause, making air quotes, “—‘trustworthy.’”
He smiles like he’s some God-given gift. “I am trustworthy.”
“You once stole my fries in front of my face and claimed I was hallucinating.”
“Okay, but—”
Before he can finish, the elevator gives a violent jolt.
And then everything goes black.
For a moment, there’s silence. Just the quiet hum of the emergency light kicking in, the faint creak of metal settling.
Then, Mingyu takes a sharp inhale.
“Uh.” His voice is suddenly tight. “No. Nope. No way.”
You blink, eyes adjusting to the dim lighting. “Oh, great,” you grumble. “Fantastic. This is what I get for stepping into this death trap of a building.”
“I think— I think I need to sit down,” Mingyu mutters, lowering himself to the floor.
You huff. “Be so for real right now, you lumbering idiot.”
But then you actually look at him.
The usual cocky tilt of his head is gone. His fingers are gripping the fabric of his joggers, his breathing coming in short, uneven bursts. His eyes are darting around the elevator, as if checking for an exit that isn’t there.
Oh.
Oh.
He’s genuinely scared.
A new, unfamiliar kind of concern settles in your chest. “Wait,” you say, kneeling beside him. “You’re not actually—”
“I just—” Mingyu gulps. “I hate elevators. And small spaces. And, you know, the whole getting stuck thing.”
And then it clicks.
You remember being kids, when the power went out at the Kim’s summer house during a thunderstorm. You remember little Mingyu, barely taller than you, sitting stiffly on the couch with his knees pulled to his chest, trying— and failing— not to let his fear show. You remember the way his face twisted when the room was swallowed by darkness, how his mother had to light candles and sit beside him until the power returned.
He never admitted he was scared, of course. Mingyu never admitted anything.
But you knew.
Looking at him now— his face pale, his jaw tight— you realize some things don’t change.
Without thinking, you place a hand on his arm. “Hey. Breathe, okay? It’s fine.”
Mingyu exhales shakily. “I am breathing.”
“Yeah, like a terrified chihuahua,” you mutter. “Deep breaths. In through your nose, out through your mouth.”
He gives you a look, squinting at you through the darkness, but he obeys. Inhale, exhale.
You squeeze his arm. “See? Not so bad.”
He closes his eyes, focusing on his breathing. You sit beside him, fingers still on his arm, grounding him. After a few beats, his breathing evens out. His shoulders relax.
“… Don’t tell anyone,” he finally says, voice barely above a whisper.
“Oh, I’m definitely telling the team.”
“I will murder you.”
An unbidden laugh escapes you. You nudge his knee with yours. “See? You’re fine.”
“Still hate this,” Mingyu exhales, rubbing his face.
“You are kind of pathetic.”
“Yeah, yeah.” He leans back against the wall. Then, like it pains him to say it, he adds, “Thanks, though.”
You roll your eyes, but you don’t remove your hand from his arm.
With a sudden jolt, the elevator whirs back to life. The overhead lights flicker before settling into a steady glow, and the quiet hum of movement returns beneath your feet.
Mingyu exhales the biggest sigh of relief you’ve ever heard. “Oh, thank God.”
He’s on his feet before the doors have even fully opened, practically leaping into the hallway like he’s just escaped certain death. You follow him with a disbelieving huff.
It isn’t until you’re several paces into the hallway that you realize you’re still holding onto him.
Your fingers are curled around his forearm, right where they’d been when you were calming him down. Mingyu, ever the opportunist, notices right before you can subtly let go.
He tilts his head. “Aww, you care about me,” he coos, but there’s a hint of something in his tone. You think it might be genuine appreciation; you’re not about to dwell on it, though.
“Shut up,” you snipe. You want to shove him back in the elevator and see just how cocky he can be when it crashes out again.
“Admit it,” he sing-songs, trailing after you toward his apartment. “You were worried about me.”
“I was trapped in an elevator. I was worried about myself.”
“Uh-huh. Sure.”
You choose not to dignify him with a response, striding ahead until you reach his door. Mingyu unlocks it with a beep, stepping aside to let you in.
As soon as you enter, you do what you always do— make yourself at home. You toe off your shoes, toss your bag onto his couch, and march straight to his kitchen. The years of forced proximity have made this something as good as a routine.
“You got anything to eat?” you ask. The question is rhetorical; you’re already prepared to rob him of whatever he has in his pantry.
Mingyu scoffs as he kicks off his sneakers. “This is not a restaurant.”
“Clearly,” you huff, swinging open his fridge. The contents are bleak. A few eggs, a half-empty carton of orange juice, a suspiciously old container of takeout, and at least three protein shakes.
You make a face. “Be serious.”
He sprawls onto the couch. “What?”
“You live like a caveman.” You shut the fridge with an exasperated sigh, turning to scan the apartment. Your gaze lands on a new decorative shelf against the wall, filled with an assortment of mismatched trinkets. They’re all atrocious and generic.
You’re inclined to tease him that it’s why he’s bitchless, this sheer lack of consideration for aesthetics. You reel that in, though, opting instead for a lighter, “Since when did you care about home decor?”
Mingyu props his feet on the coffee table. “It’s called having taste,” he shoots back.
“You don’t have taste.”
“Excuse you—”
“This,” you gesture at the shelf, “is ugly.”
Mingyu grabs the nearest throw pillow and chucks it at you.
You barely dodge it. It whizzes past your head, and once again, you think this is exactly one of those things you should’ve expected from Mingyu. He’s immature, and obnoxious, and unbelievably rude.
“Did you just—” you’re gaping, but then another pillow flies your way.
You snatch it out of the air, and then you catch the way he’s already scrambling for another ‘weapon’. “You are such a child!” you screech, except you’re not above retaliation.
What follows is a semi-violent pillow war that neither of you are willing to concede. It’s ridiculous, and loud, and it feels exactly like every argument you’ve ever had with him. Full of unnecessary dramatics and zero real malice.
Just like that, the moment in the elevator— the quiet, vulnerable, human side of him you’d glimpsed— disappears into the back of your mind. A moment of weakness, never to happen again.
Because Kim Mingyu is still the same as he’s always been.
▸ S01E04: THE ONE WITH THE NIGHT OUT.
Mingyu swears he’s going to kill you.
He’s probably made that threat dozens of times in the past years, but tonight, he’s fairly sure he’ll actually do it.
He should be in bed right now, getting some much-needed shut-eye for tomorrow’s game. It’s the type of do-or-die match where scouts will be in the audience, after all, and while Mingyu doesn’t really give two damns about going pro, he wouldn’t mind the validation.
Alas, instead of being in his bed, he’s stuck in traffic en route to wherever the hell you’ve gone drinking tonight.
If it had just been you that asked to be picked up, Mingyu would’ve ended the call without question. Probably would have told you to get off his case and book a cab yourself.
But it’s your mother who’s asking, who has entrusted your safety and well-being in Mingyu’s allegedly capable hands. He’s not about to turn down the woman who practically helped raise him.
Disgruntled, Mingyu pulls into the parking lot of where you said you’d be drinking. Some swanky club with thumping music and neon lights.
“So help me, God,” Mingyu grumbles underneath his breath as he stomps out of his car and toward the establishment. When the bouncer charges him an entrance fee— an entrance fee!— Mingyu’s urge to cause you bodily harm only triples. He coughs up the fee and marches into the club, fully prepared to give you grief for this little stunt.
The club is alive, full of sweaty bodies pressing against each other and questionable house remixes that everyone is pretending to like. It’s an assault on the senses, and Mingyu absolutely loathes it.
He wasn’t about to act holier-than-thou. He’s had his fair share of drinking escapades, had even been to this very club himself once or twice. Still, it’s different when you’re ready for a night out and when you’ve been forced out of your restful evening because of a person you can barely even consider a friend.
It takes him all of three minutes to find you.
Take away the history, the tension, and fine. Mingyu would willingly admit: You’re gorgeous. Sometimes. When you tried.
It’s more than the sinfully short dress, more than the ankle-length boots that no one else would pull off. It’s that laugh of yours, so bright and open and loud as you let one of your friends twirl you around on the dance floor. The sound reaches Mingyu over the din of debauchery, and he feels a muscle in his jaw tick.
He hates it. He hates you.
He wants to be home, back in his bed, instead of standing five paces away from a stunning you. A you that he will have to drag down because of responsibility, because of his blasted pride. Whether or not he cares to admit it, he hates that, too.
Mingyu weaves through the crowds of dancing people until he’s reached you. He’s just about to call your name when the DJ plays a song that you seem to like, because you let out a loud squeal and try to jump.
Key word: Try. You’re just a little off-balance from your choice of shoewear and the alcohol running through your veins, because your attempt has you stumbling.
Instinctively, Mingyu reaches out to catch you. His palms land on your waist as your back falls against his chest, and it nearly kills him— the sound of your drunken giggle. You tilt your head back to look up at him.
It starts off as a half-lidded, hazy expression, one that shows off just how intoxicated you already are. But there’s something different there, too. A heat. A hunger. One that shows you’re out for something, someone tonight. Mingyu hates that the most.
He hates how that look on your face disappears when you realize who caught you. Immediately, your unchaste expression gives way to something more akin to sulky discontent, like Mingyu is the bearer of bad news.
And he is, really, because his fingers squeeze at your waist as he glares down at you.
“It’s past midnight, Cinderella,” he says, pitching his voice just loud enough above the music. “Time to head home.”
Your reaction to him is always a good litmus test of how intoxicated you are. When you jut out your lower lip and whine out a petulant “Mingyu!”, that gives him the idea that you’re pretty damn gone.
“You’re no fun,” you whine, trying to wriggle free from his grip. “This is my favorite song—”
“And it’s one in the fucking morning. Let’s go.”
Somehow, you manage to peel away from him. One of your friends links arms with you, the two of you bursting into laughter of giggles. Mingyu is tempted to leave you then and there. There’s nothing funny about this situation, and he’s already planning to tell you off for how this might affect how he plays tomorrow.
“One more song!” You put up one finger, practically shoving it up to Mingyu’s face. “Pleaseee?”
He’s only halfway through saying something like no, let’s go before your friend is dragging you further into the throng of dancing people. Mingyu can already feel a headache blossoming beneath his temple.
Resigned to his fate, he steps to the fringes of the crowd. He isn’t in the mood to scream to All I Do Is Win with all of these strangers; the least he can do is keep an eye on you.
You, scream-singing the lyrics. You, whose dress rides up with every little sway. You— laughing, dancing, still several paces away from Mingyu.
He crosses his arms over his chest and briefly closes his eyes, exhaling through his nose. A voice snaps him out of his reverie.
“Hey, handsome. Want a drink?”
Mingyu’s eyes flutter open. He hadn’t noticed the girl sidling up to his side. She’s a bombshell, sure, with a lecherous gaze and a barely-there dress, but Mingyu trips up over the fact that the two of you kind of smile the same.
“No, thank you,” he says curtly. “I’m driving.”
The girl throws her head back and laughs. Mingyu’s headache feels like it’s worsening.
“You’re too good-looking to be the designated driver,” the stranger purrs. When she reaches out to run an innocent finger over Mingyu’s crossed arms, his lips tug into a slight frown. He’s no stranger to girls coming on to him. He’s entertained a couple, even, in settings exactly like this.
Tonight, he’s not in the mood. That’s it. That’s all there is to it, he thinks— as if he’s trying to convince himself.
That’s how he builds the courage to lie through his teeth.
“I’m here to drive my girlfriend home, actually.”
In the morning, he will justify it like this: He wanted the stranger to leave him alone. He wasn’t exactly lying. You were a girl, and you were… kind of his friend. And he was driving you home. That much was true.
In that very moment, though, his heart— the treacherous fool that it is— skips a single, infinitesimal beat at the prospect of calling you his ‘girlfriend’.
The stranger is undeterred. It’s a common throw-off, after all. The lie about having a significant other.
“Where’s this girlfriend of yours?” she asks, one eyebrow cocked upward in amusement.
Mingyu’s eyes flick over the throng of dancers. Right. He had been watching for you. He opens his mouth, about to mention some notable feature of yours, when the words stick in his throat. Because he’s looking right at you—
You, with your arms over the shoulders of some guy. You, tilting your face upward to kiss said stranger.
The strobe lights cut Mingyu’s vision into strips. He sees each moment like a flashbulb blinking on and off: Your eyes fluttering close. The stranger’s hand slipping to the small of your back, right over the curve of your ass. Your body, arching upward a little bit more.
Mingyu, still paces away.
By the time you’re pulling away from the man, Mingyu is already at your side. He’s still ever so gentle as he yanks you away from the stranger’s grasp.
“We’re going,” he announces.
The guy you had just been kissing lets out some strangled sound, something to the effect of “what the hell, man,” but Mingyu can’t be bothered to stick around and clarify. He focuses on hauling your ass away, even as you begin to kick up a fuss.
“But he said I was pretty—” you’re whining, the tone of your voice grating on every single one of Mingyu’s nerves.
“Because you are pretty!” he snaps as he guides you through the crowd. “Don’t go around making out with anyone who compliments you. Jesus!”
Somehow, the two of you manage to spill out of the club. Mingyu has a white-knuckled grip on your shoulders as he attempts to push you forward, towards his car.
You only add to his mounting annoyance when you dig the heels of your boots into the ground, keeping him from going any further.
“For fuck’s sake—” Mingyu grumbles. “I swear to God, I will leave you. I’m going to leave you to your own devices in this parking lot, you leech.”
“You wouldn’t,” you say shrilly. “You would never leave me!”
“I would,” he shoots back. He contemplates just throwing you over his shoulder and being done with it.
That train of thought is swiftly interrupted by you spinning around to face him. You plant your hands on your hips, speaking surprisingly evenly for someone who looks drunk out of their mind. “I was having fun,” you sniffle.
“And I was supposed to be asleep four hours ago,” he seethes. “Instead, I’m dealing with your bratty ass—”
“I didn’t ask you to—”
“Your mother asked me to—”
“Well, she can go and—”
“Please!”
Mingyu huffs out the word with his whole chest. Honestly, at this point? He’s not above begging. He runs his hands over his face before wringing them together.
“Can we just go home already?” he pleads. “I have to be up by six, and the student manager will have my neck if I’m late one more time. Please, please, please just get in my car already.”
You only stare him down with that steely expression of yours. Once again, Mingyu toys with the idea of manhandling you into his backseat, until you speak up.
“He said I was pretty,” you repeat, like that’s somehow the most important fact of the night.
“You are,” he responds exasperatedly.
“You’re lying,” you insist. It might be a trick of the light, a fleeting moment in the darkness of the otherwise empty parking lot, but Mingyu swears he sees a flicker of insecurity in your eyes.
You go on, “You’re just saying that. Unlike the guy back there, you don’t actually think—”
“Oh my God. Fine. Fine. I don’t think you’re pretty!” Mingyu throws his hands up in the air in a gesture of defeat.
You look like you’re about to deflate, but then he barrels on, going absolutely insane over this whole stupid affair. “I think you’re breathtaking. I think you’re the most gorgeous girl in the world,” he bites out. “But, holy shit, are you the most annoying one, too!”
If you’re surprised, there’s no indication of it in your expression. But your hands do drop from your sides, and you’re looking at Mingyu with a little less disdain than a couple of seconds ago.
A beat. And then—
“You think I’m breathtaking?” you ask, the ghost of a smirk on your lips.
To hell with it. Mingyu surges forward and wraps his arms around your waist, hauling you off the ground.
You’re squealing and raining punches down his back the entire way to his car.
▸ S01E05: THE ONE WITH THE MORNING AFTER.
You wake up to the distinct smell of something warm and buttery wafting through the air, the scent tugging you out of your heavy slumber.
Your head is pounding, and your throat feels like you swallowed a gallon of sandpaper, but worst of all, there’s a familiar sense of displacement— the kind that comes with waking up somewhere that isn’t your own bed.
Cracking one eye open, you’re met with the soft glow of morning light filtering through unfamiliar curtains. It takes you a second, but then you recognize the room instantly: Mingyu’s apartment.
The realization doesn’t startle you as much as it should. In fact, you sigh, rolling onto your back and rubbing at your temple. It isn’t the first time you’ve found yourself here after a night out, though it’s usually because of some family event that went on too long rather than Mingyu being forced to drag your inebriated ass home.
Still, the headache and vague memories of last night are enough to sour your mood. You groan, sitting up and taking in your surroundings. Your shoes are neatly placed by the door. A bottle of water and a pack of painkillers sit on the nightstand, which you’re quick to grab.
And then, there’s the smell. The one that pulled you out of sleep in the first place.
You shuffle out of bed and into the kitchen, where you find an actual, plated breakfast waiting for you on the counter. A plate of eggs, toast, and— because you assume Mingyu is still an insufferable health nut— a side of fruit. Stuck to the rim of the plate, a bright yellow Post-it with the worst handwriting known to mankind.
Stop drinking. -KMG
You find yourself staring at the plate longer than necessary. No matter how crude the note is, the fact remains: Mingyu cooked this. For you. Before his game.
There’s an uncomfortable flutter in your chest that you quickly stomp out.
Because sure, Mingyu cooked for you. Sure, he bought you medicine. But he also had the gall to leave you a rude Post-it note like the patronizing asshole that he is. You grab the note and crumple it in your fist before popping one of the painkillers in your mouth. You mutter “fuckin’ bitch” to no one in particular, but it lacks real venom.
Your thoughts are interrupted by your phone ringing. You frown before spotting Mingyu’s charger plugged into the wall, your phone attached to it. You don’t have time to unpack whatever that means, because your mother’s name flashes across the screen.
With a sigh, you answer. “Hello?”
“Where are you?” she asks, voice sharp with concern. “I tried calling last night, but your phone was off.”
“I was…” You hesitate, glancing at the breakfast on the counter. “With Mingyu.”
There’s no need for your mother to know where you really were dancing, who you’d spent the night flirting with. Hell, all of that is pretty much a blur at this point. The only thing left in your alcohol-addled mind is Mingyu calling you Cinderella, Mingyu’s hands on your shoulders, and… Did he carry you to his car? You’ll have to wheedle that information out of him later.
Your mother’s reaction to your white lie is immediate. Her sigh of relief is so loud you have to pull the phone away from your ear. “Oh. That’s good,” she breathes. “At least I know you were in good hands.” The food in front of you suddenly looks much less appealing. Of course. Of course that’s all it takes for her to drop her interrogation. You could have told her you spent the night at any of your friends’ places, and she still would have had a million questions. But mention Mingyu, and suddenly she’s appeased.
“Yeah,” you say flatly. “Great hands.”
You don’t like it. You don’t like feeling indebted to him. You don’t like that he has that effect— not just on your mother, but on you, too.
As much as you want to brush it off, you can’t help but glance at the plate again, at the neatly arranged breakfast that he didn’t have to make, at the medicine he didn’t have to buy.
And that flutter? That stupid, tiny, treacherous flutter in your chest?
You shove it deep down where it belongs.
Meanwhile, Mingyu fights his own battles. On the field, he’s a wall. A force of nature.
His muscles burn. His mind is sharp. Every time the ball nears his goal, he’s already two steps ahead. The opposing team is relentless, throwing every tactic they can at him, but it doesn’t matter. Not today.
Today, Mingyu is untouchable.
The scouts on the sidelines are nodding, murmuring to each other with increasing interest. His teammates are exhilarated, feeding off his energy. Seungcheol is the first to voice it, panting as he jogs past the goal. “You’re playing like a fucking monster.”
Mingyu doesn’t answer, just adjusts his gloves and keeps his gaze locked on the field. Wonwoo watches him a beat longer, brow furrowed. “You’re not usually this aggressive.”
Mingyu exhales sharply. “Gotta keep the scouts entertained, don’t I?”
It’s a good enough excuse. No one questions him after that.
But the truth is, he knows exactly why he’s playing like this.
Because across the field is him— the guy from last night. The guy who got to kiss you, to touch you while Mingyu watched.
And the jerk looks perfectly fine. Well-rested, even. Ready to play.
Mingyu’s jaw tightens.
When the next shot comes, he doesn’t just block it. He slaps it out of the air with enough force to send it soaring toward midfield. The sound of his palm meeting the ball echoes across the stadium. The forward who took the shot looks stunned; the murmurs from the scouts grow louder.
Seungcheol lets out a low whistle. “I don’t know what’s gotten into you, but I like it.”
Mingyu exhales, flexing his fingers inside his gloves. His heartbeat pounds in his ears, but he’s locked in, focused. He doesn’t care how many more shots they take. None of them are getting past him today.
You’re not even here, but you might as well be by the way Mingyu thinks of you the entire damn time.
And if, after the final whistle blows and his team secures the win, he happens to walk past him with just a little too much shoulder in his stride? Well.
That’s just the cherry on top.
He feels proud. Vindicated. He revels in it for a full minute before— much like you— shoving the feeling as far away from him as possible.
Now it’s even. Now, he doesn’t owe you a thing.
▸ S01E06: THE ONE WITH THE PERFUME.
Mingyu isn’t sure how he ended up in the fragrance section.
The trip to the mall had a purpose— find a birthday gift for their student manager, someone patient enough to handle their chaos. Seungcheol was atrociously down bad for the girl, and was still trying to prove himself worthy of her time.
Seungcheol, Wonwoo, and Vernon debate between a sleek planner and a wireless charger.
“The planner will help her deal with us,” Wonwoo pushes, “we’re always bombarding her with our schedules, anyway.”
Vernon butts in. “Getting her a gift that benefits us is a shitty thing to do.”
The man of the hour— Seungcheol, who is balancing the two gifts in his hands— gives the world’s shittiest suggestion. “Let’s just get both!”
As the three try to argue the merits of the gifts, Mingyu wanders off. For some reason, he finds himself drawn by the gleam of glass bottles and the faint hum of different scents in the air.
He has no business being here. Cologne isn’t something he puts much thought into; he has his one bottle, the same one he’s used for years, and it does the job.
Still, his fingers ghost over the display, picking up a tester bottle without much thought. The label is understated. Minimalist design, black serif lettering against a frosted background. Expensive-looking. He presses down on the nozzle, sending a fine mist into the air.
The scent unfurls slowly. First, there’s a burst of something citrusy— bright, crisp, and fleeting. Then it settles into softer notes, something warm and clean, like white musk and fresh linen.
But underneath, lingering just at the edge, is something else. Something vaguely floral, but not overpowering. A hint of jasmine, maybe, softened by vanilla.
His grip tightens around the tester. He’s suffered through this scent before.
It clings to his couch cushions, stubborn even after airing out his apartment. It lingers in his car, filling the spaces between his words when you're in the passenger seat. It’s in his hoodie the morning after you crash at his place, making his head turn before he remembers you’re already gone.
Mingyu frowns, inhaling again, as if the scent will offer up an explanation for why it pulls at something deep in his memory.
Could it be your own perfume? Could your shampoo have the same notes?
He debates it for a second. Buying the bottle, testing if it really does smell the same. If it would fade the same way, settle the same way. If it would remind him of you just as much.
And then— what the hell is he doing?
Mingyu sets down the tester bottle, clicking the cap back on. He tries to chalk it up to curiosity. That has to be it. He’s a man of logic, someone who likes to confirm hypotheses like whether this inconspicuous bottle of perfume is the same as his arch rival’s.
That’s all there is to it, he thinks, as he stalks back over to his teammates. A verdict has been reached: Seungcheol will get her the planner. The charger will be halved three-way by Mingyu, Vernon, and Wonwoo.
“Where’d you go?” Wonwoo inquires.
“Nowhere,” Mingyu answers, even though his mind is still on the stupid smell.
He wipes at his wrist like that might help him get rid of the thought of you.
(In the other side of the mall—)
▸ S01E07: THE ONE WITH THE SHOPPING TRIP.
You love shopping.
Not just for the thrill of it or the satisfaction of walking out of a store with a new find, but because it’s part of your studies. As a business major with a minor in fashion design, you don’t just see clothes. You see craftsmanship, marketability, trends, and the little details that separate the exceptional from the ordinary.
Which is why you don’t take it lightly when a saleslady looks down on you.
It starts with the way she barely glances at you when you step into the boutique, her gaze flickering from your casual outfit to the more expensively dressed customers lingering by the racks. She doesn’t offer a greeting, doesn’t ask if you need help, just wrongly assumes that you’re not worth her time.
You brush it off at first. It’s not the first time someone has made a snap judgment about you, and it won’t be the last. But then, as you pull a dress from the rack, inspecting the stitching along the seams, you hear her scoff.
“That one’s a little out of budget, don’t you think?” she says, her voice coated in artificial sweetness.
You arch a brow, turning the dress over in your hands. It’s a designer piece, sure, but it’s not about the price. It’s about the construction, and this one? Overpriced for what it offers. You could name at least three brands that do a better job at a fraction of the cost.
Instead of rising to the bait, you hum thoughtfully. “The stitching here is uneven,” you muse, holding the fabric up to the light. “And the lining? They cut costs with synthetic blends when they should have used silk. The structure won’t hold up after a few wears.”
The saleslady falters, clearly unprepared for an actual critique. You don’t stop there.
“For the price, I’d expect better craftsmanship. If you’re going to charge this much, at least make sure the dress can justify it.”
A beat of silence. Then, another voice chimes in— a stranger, another customer, who suddenly looks interested in what you have to say. “That’s actually a good point,” she murmurs, inspecting her own dress more closely.
The saleslady’s expression tightens, and she suddenly looks less inclined to speak. You hide a smirk, setting the dress back on the rack.
You love shopping. But more than that, you love knowing exactly what you’re talking about.
The next store is quieter, more minimalist, with racks of clothing spaced out deliberately to give each piece a sense of importance. You skim through them idly until something catches your eye.
A shirt. Simple, well-tailored, the kind of thing that would sit well on broad shoulders.
Mingyu’s shoulders.
You wrinkle your nose at the thought. The idea of picking something out for him makes your stomach turn, and yet… you keep looking at it. It’s a nice color, something that would complement his skin tone. The fit would be flattering. It’s practical, stylish, something he could wear effortlessly.
You chalk it up to habit. It’s the same as when you find a cute piece that would suit a mannequin perfectly. Just another exercise in styling. Nothing more.
Besides, if you bought it, it wouldn’t be for him. It would be for the sake of aesthetics. Like dressing up a doll. Or— better yet— like charity.
Yes. That’s all it is. You like knowing what you’re talking about, and this is just a manifestation of it.
You grab the shirt, holding it up for a final once-over before tossing it into your basket. If anything, you can pass it off as a Christmas gift. That’s reasonable. Normal, even. No big deal.
But then you see a sweater that would pair well with it. And a jacket that’s undeniably his style. And before you know it, your basket is full.
It’s only when you’re standing in line to pay that it truly hits you.
What the hell are you doing?
Your grip tightens around the handle of the basket, heart hammering in your chest. You stare at the pile of clothes— clothes for Mingyu— and feel a wave of unease creep up your spine. This is not normal. This is not something you do.
You were supposed to get one thing. One. Now you’re standing here like some deranged personal shopper, about to spend money on a man you claim to tolerate at best.
No. Absolutely not.
You step out of the line, return to the racks, and unceremoniously dump the basket’s contents back where they belong. One by one, you rid yourself of every last piece until there’s nothing left.
Your heart is still racing by the time you exit the store. You need a spa day. Desperately.
▸ S01E08: THE ONE WITH THE GAME.
“You’ve got to be fucking kidding me.”
Mingyu stares from across the field, frozen in place as his teammates jog past him. The pregame warmups blur into the background because there you are, sitting in the stands. Willingly.
It shouldn’t be a big deal, shouldn’t mean anything, but it does. Because in all the years he’s known you, you’ve never voluntarily attended one of his games. Not without some level of coercion. Not without at least thirty minutes of complaining.
And yet, here you are.
Unfortunately, you also stick out like a sore thumb.
He sees you draped in obnoxiously bright colors, layered in mismatched school merch like someone who got dressed in the dark— or someone trying too hard to look like they belong. The cap, the oversized hoodie, the scarf, all of it is excessive.
The worst part? It works.
Because even from across the field, even as his teammates stretch and the crowd chatters, Mingyu sees you. And now he can’t unsee you.
He ignores the cheerleaders calling his name. Ignores the people waving at him, the fans holding up banners with his number. Ignores the way his coach is probably going to yell at him later for getting distracted before the game.
Instead, he heads straight for you.
“What the hell are you doing here?” he demands, stopping just short of the stands.
You lower your phone, where you’d clearly been snapping photos, and peer down at him like he’s the one acting weird. “Your mom asked me to take photos of you,” you reply, voice maddeningly nonchalant. “Don’t lose.”
Mingyu scoffs. “Don’t tell me what to do.” Then, a beat later, he petulantly adds, “Also, I never lose.”
You roll your eyes, already angling your phone for another shot, but Mingyu doesn’t move just yet. The fact remains; you’re here, looking infuriatingly good, and he’s going to spend the next 90 minutes fighting for his life. He can’t decide if that’s a good or bad thing.
Either way, he knows one thing for sure: He really, really can’t afford to lose.
But he does.
It’s a hard-fought game, and Mingyu plays like a man possessed. He dives for impossible saves, yells orders at his defenders, and shuts down shot after shot. The crowd roars every time he denies the other team, and for most of the match, it looks like his team might just scrape by with a win.
Then, in the final minutes, everything falls apart.
A miscalculated pass. A stolen ball. A breakaway that happens too fast.
Mingyu sees it unfold in real-time, feels the moment slip through his fingers before it even happens. He charges forward, determined to cut off the angle, to make himself big, to stop the shot. But the ball soars past him, hitting the back of the net with a deafening thud.
The stadium erupts. The other team celebrates. And Mingyu, chest heaving, fists clenched, can only stare as the scoreboard confirms it.
A one-point lead. Game over.
He barely hears the whistle. Barely registers his teammates patting his back, muttering things like You did great and We’ll get them next time. None of it matters. Because he lost. Because he let that shot in.
Because somewhere in the stands, you saw him fail.
He drags his gloves off, jaw tight, shoulders tense. He doesn’t want to look up. Doesn’t want to see if you’re still watching.
Against his better judgment, his gaze lifts toward the stands anyway.
There you are, camera in hand, expression unreadable. Of all his losses that day, that was the one that inexplicably ticked him off the most. The fact that you weren’t smiling, weren’t frowning. You were just… watching. He’s never been able to read your mind, but he despises that inability the most today.
Mingyu exhales sharply, looks away, and storms off the field.
He doesn’t expect you to wait for him outside the locker room. You’re there anyway when he steps out, your arms crossed and your lips pursed. He doesn’t slow down, doesn’t acknowledge you beyond the look he shoots your way; you have to take large steps in your ridiculous heels just to keep up with his pace. He feels like a hurricane— one that’s about to sweep through your stoicism, about to leave significant collateral damage.
“Come on, then,” he mutters, shoving his duffel strap higher onto his shoulder. “Tell me just how shitty I am.”
“Excuse me?”
He lets out a humorless laugh, shaking his head. “You must be dying to rub it in my face. Go ahead. Get it over with.”
You frown. “What the hell is your problem?”
That sets him off.
“My problem?” he snaps, finally stopping in his tracks to glare at you properly. You follow suit, and it amuses him for a fraction of a second— just how easily he towers over you. “I just lost a game, in case you missed that part while taking your stupid pictures.”
You scoff, fully displeased now. “Are you serious? You think I came here just to laugh at you?”
“Wouldn’t be the first time.” His voice is sharp, low. “You’ve never had a problem making fun of me before.”
Your jaw clenches.
“No need to make me your punching bag, Kim.” In turn— your tone is piercing, almost hurt. “I came here to comfort you. I’m not the fucking devil you make me out to be.”
The words hit harder than they should.
The weight of the loss still clings to him, frustration simmering beneath his skin. His hands are still balled into fists, his shoulders locked up so tight they ache. But the way you say it, the unexpected offense in your voice, makes something in him falter.
He rubs a hand over his face. The hurricane in him quiets, runs out of rain. “Yeah.” His voice is quieter now. “Sorry.”
You roll your eyes. Really, you have every right to give him more shit; he knows he deserves it. “I should just leave you here to wallow.” You make a grand show of turning away— really, you have every right to give him more shit; he knows he deserves it.
But then you glance at him over your shoulder. “Since I’m feeling benevolent, I’ll treat you to a meal.”
Mingyu stares at you like you’ve lost your mind. “You?” He gestures vaguely between the two of you. “Treating me? Are you dying?”
“Maybe,” you deadpan. “From secondhand embarrassment.”
He lets out a sharp exhale, something between a huff and a chuckle. “Wow. Real comforting.”
You shrug. “I never said I was good at comfort,” you snipe, and he knows that much is true.
Somehow, that’s how he finds himself behind the wheel of his car, hands gripping the steering wheel. He’s still mildly dazed as he glances over at you in his passenger seat. He doesn’t remember actually agreeing to this. He doesn’t remember deciding to take you to his favorite restaurant. And yet here you are, scrolling through your phone like this is the most normal thing in the world.
For the first five minutes, the drive is quiet. Mingyu fiddles with the AC, rolls his shoulders, frowns at the road ahead. But the longer you sit there, humming under your breath, mindlessly playing with the hem of your sleeve, the more it starts to sink in.
This is the first time the two of you have willingly shared a meal together.
Not because of mutual friends. Not because of a group project or an event neither of you could get out of. Not because your parents forced you into it.
Just… because.
It’s the strangest possible way for Mingyu to have possibly ended the night.
He spares you another glance as he pulls into the parking lot. “You better not complain about the food,” he warns, “or I’m leaving you here.”
Of course, that gives you the leeway to complain, bitching about things like sanitation and standards for cuisine. He tunes it out like he often does, instead trying to figure out how the hell he ended up here.
Here, sitting across from you in a restaurant that he usually only visits with his teammates. It felt like a fever dream to approach the host stand and ask for a table for two; his voice had come out a little too uncertain, like he couldn’t quite believe the words himself.
The host had seated you without question, handing you both menus before disappearing, leaving Mingyu to sit there and take in the absurdity of the situation. You, sitting across from him, elbows on the table, flipping through the menu like this is any other meal with any other person.
His mind flickers, unbidden, to a thought: Are you like this on all dates?
Then, he scowls. No. This is not a date.
“Alright, what am I getting?” you ask, still scanning the menu. “You’re the one who dragged me here, might as well give me a solid recommendation.”
Mingyu raises a brow. “I dragged you here? You were the one who insisted on treating me.”
“Tomato, tomahto.” You shoot him a sharp glare, as if his insolence was something that caused offense. “Just tell me what’s good.”
He studies you for a second like he’s waiting for the punchline. When you just blink back expectantly, he sighs, resigning himself to whatever surreal alternate reality this is. “Get the beef stew,” he finally says. “And the garlic rice. You’ll thank me later.”
To his surprise, you actually listen. He half-expected you to ignore him just to be difficult.
The conversation that follows is easy in a way that confuses him. You bicker, naturally, but it’s mostly over trivial things— your tragic lack of appreciation for his taste in sports documentaries, the way he insists that pineapple on pizza is a crime against humanity. Nothing about the game, nothing about his loss, nothing about the way frustration still lingers in the tightness of his jaw.
Instead, you seem content commenting on the restaurant itself, mentioning how you like the warm lighting, how the playlist is surprisingly good. And then there’s the way you eat. Without rush, without any of the absentmindedness he sometimes sees when you’re multitasking with your phone. You actually appreciate the food, nodding approvingly after each bite like you’re mentally scoring it.
Somewhere between your satisfied hums and the way you swipe an extra spoonful of his rice when you think he’s not looking, Mingyu realizes something strange: You’re actually enjoying this.
And, maybe, so is he.
It’s disorienting, how quickly the irritation from earlier has faded.
He tries to remind himself of the reasons you’re infuriating. That you’re picky about things that don’t matter, that you have a bad habit of being late, that you roll your eyes too much, that—
But every thought is immediately met with another. That you actually care about things enough to be picky. That you only run late when you’ve lost track of time doing something you love. That you roll your eyes, sure, but you also laugh, also banter, also make things more interesting.
Mingyu stares at you for a moment, something warm settling into his chest.
By the end of the dinner, he’s forgotten why he was so upset in the first place.
▸ S01E09: THE ONE WITH THE HIGH SCHOOL REUNION.
The party is already in full swing by the time you and Mingyu arrive.
It’s the usual reunion scene— too many people packed into a house slightly too small for the occasion, music loud enough to drown out the conversations but not enough to stop them altogether, and a lingering smell of something fried mixed with overpriced cologne.
You’re still annoyed. Annoyed because Mingyu had, with all the grace of a wrecking ball, insulted your outfit on the drive here. Something about how your skirt was too short and your heels were impractical for a house party. As if he was some kind of fashion authority.
“Thanks for the unsolicited advice, asswipe,” you had snapped back, crossing your arms and staring out the window. He only scoffed in response, muttering something about not wanting to be responsible if you tripped and broke your ankle.
Now, hours later, you’re still disgruntled about it. You refuse to think about how, deep down, it had been less about disapproval and more about the way his gaze had lingered.
That would be a problem for another time. Maybe never.
You make your way to the kitchen, eyeing the assortment of drinks lined up on the counter. A bottle of something expensive-looking catches your attention. You grab it, twisting the cap with determination, but it refuses to budge. You try again, gripping it tighter, but all you manage is an embarrassing squeak of effort.
“Seriously?” you mutter under your breath, frustration bubbling up.
Before you can attempt another futile try, a large hand appears in your periphery. The bottle is plucked effortlessly from your grip. In one swift motion, Mingyu twists the cap open like it was nothing. No struggle, no hesitation, no unnecessary flexing. Just pure efficiency.
He doesn’t even smirk. Doesn’t gloat or tease you like you expect him to. He just hands the bottle back to you before turning away as if it had never happened.
You blink. Then blink again.
The room suddenly feels a little warmer. Must be the alcohol in the air. Or the heater. Or—
Oh, God.
With absolute horror, you realize Mingyu was kind of hot for that.
You take a generous swig from the bottle, hoping it burns away whatever ridiculous thought just took root in your brain. Unfortunately, the warmth spreading through you has absolutely nothing to do with the alcohol.
You take another sip, then another, letting the burn of the drink ground you. It’s fine. It’s whatever. You’ll drink and have fun and not think about the way Mingyu’s hand had so easily dwarfed yours when he took the bottle from you.
You wander back toward the living room, where clusters of people are chatting, laughing, reliving the glory days. Just as you settle into the buzz of the atmosphere, you catch Mingyu’s name being thrown around in a conversation nearby. You don’t mean to eavesdrop— okay, maybe you do a little— but something about the way his voice carries through the room makes you pause.
“Not drinking tonight?” You hear someone ask him.
“Nah,” Mingyu replies, nonchalant. “I’m her designated driver.”
Your stomach does a weird little flip.
Well, then.
If that’s the case, if Mingyu’s already consigned himself to the role of responsibility, then there’s absolutely no reason for you to hold back.
You tilt your head back, take another sip. Then another.
A warmth spreads through your limbs, but whether it’s from the alcohol or the fact that you now have free rein to drink without consequence, you’re not sure. You tell yourself it’s definitely the alcohol, though. Because the alternative— the thought that it has anything to do with Mingyu— just isn’t an option. Not tonight.
The alcohol has settled comfortably in your veins by the time the dancing starts. The living room has been cleared to make space, furniture pushed against the walls. Now the music pulses louder, the bass vibrating through the floor.
You’re laughing with old friends, moving with the rhythm, when you feel a sharp tug at the hem of your skirt.
You whirl around, already prepared to snap at whoever dared, only to come face-to-face with Mingyu. He’s standing there, a frown on his face. He leans in slightly, voice low but clear over the music. “I told you it was too short.”
You blink at him, thrown off by the way his fingers had just been on you, tugging fabric downward like it was some sort of personal mission. Something fizzes beneath your skin, something that has nothing to do with the alcohol and everything to do with the fact that Mingyu— annoying, overbearing Kim Mingyu— is looking at you like that.
It’d been such a boyfriend move. You force yourself not to dwell on it.
You don’t know what compels you, but maybe you’re just tipsy enough. Maybe you want to make him suffer.
You suddenly reach out, looping your arms around Mingyu’s neck. His whole body goes stiff, his eyes widening in immediate suspicion.
“Dance with me,” you say, tilting your head, voice syrupy with tipsiness and mischief.
Mingyu shakes his head, already taking a step back. “Absolutely not.”
You grin and pull him right back in. “You sure? ‘Cause I know things, Kim. Lots of things.”
“Are you blackmailing me?” he squeaks.
You sway closer, pretending to consider it. “It’s more of a… strategic incentive.”
A battle wars in his eyes. But then, with a low ‘tch’ and a mutter of “You’re insufferable,” Mingyu lets your grip pull him in.
The moment is bizarre.
His hands find their place— one cautiously at your waist, the other hovering near your shoulder like he’s afraid to touch too much. You move to the beat, feeling the heat of him through his shirt, the solid press of his frame against yours.
It’s ridiculous. It’s stupid.
It’s also the best decision you’ve made all night.
The song shifts into something heavier, the bass thrumming through your chest, the kind of music meant for bad decisions and blurred memories. Mingyu hasn’t bolted yet, which is a miracle in itself. He’s actually keeping up with you, moving in sync, matching your rhythm with ease. It’s unexpected, the way he doesn’t seem like he hates this, like he’s maybe— God forbid— having fun.
You scoff at the thought, but the amusement lingers. The insults come easy, natural, tossed between the two of you like a ball neither wants to drop.
“You dance like an old man,” you tease, voice warm with liquor.
“And you dance like you’re trying to summon a demon,” he shoots back.
You laugh, tilting your head up to meet his eyes. Maybe it’s the dim lighting or maybe it’s the alcohol, but Mingyu’s gaze doesn’t seem as sharp as it usually does. His grip on your waist is firm but not forceful, like he’s not entirely opposed to being here, to this, to you.
It’s too easy to forget that this is Mingyu, that this is the same guy who has made a sport out of getting under your skin. Because right now, he’s just a tall, ridiculously handsome man who happens to be an unfairly good dancer.
The thought sneaks up on you before you can fight it. If he wasn’t Mingyu...
The words slip out before you register them. “I wonder what I’d do if you weren’t you.”
Mingyu’s eyebrows raise. “What?” His voice is a little rough around the edges, and far too sober.
Shit.
You blink rapidly, force a laugh, and shake your head as if you can brush it off. “Nothing. Ignore me.”
But the thing is— you can’t ignore it.
Because somewhere, in the back of your mind, you’re already picturing it. A world where Mingyu isn’t Mingyu, where he’s just some stranger with sharp eyes and broad shoulders who smells good and dances well, who looks at you like he’s actually seeing you.
A world where you wouldn’t have to fight every instinct telling you to lean in.
Eventually, your feet start to protest. You’re wearing heels that were never meant for this much standing, much less dancing. You haven’t even said anything about it, but your expression must be reflecting your discomfort and your frustration. Mingyu sighs like you’ve personally ruined his night before crouching down and unlacing his sneakers.
“What are you doing?” you ask laughingly as he kicks them off, right there on the fringes of the dance floor.
“Giving you my shoes,” he says, like it’s obvious, shoving them toward you. “I’m not carrying you to the car.”
You snort. “You’d probably drop me anyway.”
“Exactly.” He watches as you swap out your heels for his much-too-big sneakers, which make you feel ridiculous but are, admittedly, a godsend.
You don’t realize until you’re halfway to the car that Mingyu is walking in only his socks, completely unbothered. You slide into the passenger seat, tipsy and warm and just self-aware enough to realize something terrible is happening.
You are warming up to Mingyu.
It hits you like a truck.
Mingyu, your mortal enemy. Mingyu, who has annoyed you since childhood. Mingyu, who insults your outfits and steals your food and opens your drinks without a second thought.
Your head lolls against the seat as you stare at him in horror, combing through the memories, trying to pinpoint exactly when this started going wrong.
By the time he pulls up in front of your house, you’ve made a decision.
You need to stop being too nice to him.
▸ S01E10: THE ONE WITH THE TEAM LUNCH.
Mingyu is halfway through his second helping of rice when he hears it— the unmistakable sound of his personal hell approaching.
He doesn’t even have to look up to know it’s you. The dramatic click of your heels, the way the conversation at the cafeteria table shifts just slightly, the exasperated sigh that escapes Wonwoo before you even arrive.
And then, as expected—
“Kim.”
Mingyu exhales sharply through his nose. He doesn’t know what you want, but if the past few weeks have been anything to go by, it’s nothing good. Ever since the high school reunion, you’ve been nothing short of a menace.
He still doesn’t know what changed that night, but suddenly, you’ve taken it upon yourself to be the most irksome person in his life. There was the time you texted him an obnoxious amount of links to ugly sneakers after he’d lent you his at the party. The time you “accidentally” swapped his shampoo for some floral-scented one that lingered in his hair for days. The time you sent him a video of him losing his last match, edited with clown music in the background.
He finally looks up from his food, expression already set in a scowl. You’re standing at the edge of their table, arms crossed, a shit-eating grin plastered on your face. Seungcheol, Vernon, and Wonwoo all look between the two of you like they’re watching a horror movie unfold in real-time.
“What do you want?” Mingyu asks, voice flat.
You feign offense, placing a hand over your chest. “Can’t I just stop by to say hello?”
“No.”
Vernon snorts, covering his mouth with his hand. Seungcheol nudges him under the table, but he’s grinning, too.
“You wound me, Kim.” You pull out the chair beside him and sit down like you belong there. “But fine, I do need something.”
Mingyu rolls his eyes, shoving another bite of food into his mouth before jerking his chin at you. “Then spit it out already.”
“I need a favor.”
Mingyu groans. “No. Absolutely not.”
“You don’t even know what it is yet!”
“I don’t need to know what it is.” He glares at you. “It’s a no.”
Wonwoo sighs, setting his chopsticks down. “Just let her talk, Mingyu. We’d like to finish our meal in peace.”
Mingyu gestures wildly. “I would like to finish my meal in peace!”
You pat his shoulder condescendingly. “This is more important than your third bowl of rice.”
He swats your hand away. “It’s my second bowl—”
“Not the point,” you cut in. “Listen, I just need—”
Mingyu groans again, slumping back in his chair, already regretting every choice that led to this moment. He knows, deep in his soul, that whatever you’re about to ask is going to be something ridiculous.
And yet, for some godforsaken reason, he doesn’t immediately tell you to leave.
“I need help moving some furniture.”
Mingyu blinks. “That’s it?”
“Yes, that’s it,” you deadpan. “Are you going to help or not?”
He stares at you. It’s one of those things that’d be a given for anybody else. Mingyu was the type of friend who would drive someone to the airport, would help someone move, would cook if someone was sick. Those were things he’d do for someone he was friends with— something the two of you were decisively not.
“And why, exactly, would I do that?” he challenges.
“Because you owe me?”
He lets out a laugh. “I owe you?”
“Yes, for—” you flounder for a reason, “—for existing, Kim Mingyu. Do you know how exhausting that is?”
Unconvincing to a fault. Mingyu is half-tempted to call you out for being a spoiled brat, but he’s not interested in escalating this argument in front of his team.
“Not my problem,” he settles on saying.
“You’re the fucking worst.”
“And yet, here you are.”
The two of you go back and forth like that, the jabs mostly inoffensive and subjective. Mingyu is vaguely aware of Seungcheol pinching his nose like he’s nursing a headache, Vernon sipping his drink as if watching a spectacle, and Wonwoo calmly chewing his food, unfazed.
Finally, Seungcheol decides he’s had enough.
“Both of you,” he interjects, voice firm. “Can you stop fighting for five minutes?”
To Mingyu’s shock, you actually fall silent. You roll your eyes but begrudgingly listen, arms still tightly crossed.
Mingyu scoffs. “Oh, so you can listen to people,” he mutters. “Didn’t know you were capable of being nice.”
Your head snaps toward him. “I am capable of being nice. Just not to you.”
“Right, because you’re a little devil sent from hell just to ruin my life.”
“Your life was already in shambles before I showed up. Don’t blame me.”
The bickering immediately picks back up, much to the dismay of Mingyu’s teammates. Vernon exhales dramatically. “Mamma mia,” he sing-songs jokingly to Wonwoo, “here we go again.”
You suddenly reach out, snatch a piece of Mingyu’s pork right off his plate, and pop it into your mouth as you ready to leave. His jaw drops; he’s stolen your food a fair amount, but you’ve never done it to him. “Hey—”
You’re already turning on your heel and walking away, not sparing him another glance. “Thanks for absolutely nothing,” you chirp.
Mingyu watches, speechless at the petulant display.
“Did she—” he starts, then stops. His grip tightens around his chopsticks. None of his teammates push, all too wary of the dark look that passes over his expression. Seungcheol promptly tries to change the topic.
Mingyu finishes his meal in a foul mood, stabbing at his food with unnecessary force.
He doesn’t understand why you’ve gotten so absurd with him lately. Every interaction with you feels like a new test of patience, like one day you just woke up and decided to amp up all the ways you could make him miserable. He had almost started to believe, for one fleeting second, that maybe, maybe you weren’t that bad.
But no. The night at the reunion was just a fluke— when you’d danced together and he’d privately thought it was something he could get used to.
You were always meant to be his worst nightmare, and he resolves that he’s not waking up any time soon.
▸ S01E11: THE ONE WITH THE REASON.
The joint family meal is as lively as ever, voices overlapping in conversation, laughter ringing between bites of food. You, as always, have taken it upon yourself to make Mingyu’s life difficult today.
“Wow, even you managed to show up on time for once,” you remark as he slides into the seat across from you. “Did hell freeze over?”
Mingyu shoots you a deadpan look, clearly not in the mood for your antics. “Not today, Satan.”
You grin, but there’s something off about him. He doesn’t come back with anything more biting, doesn’t engage in the usual back-and-forth. His shoulders are tense, and there’s a blankness to his gaze that makes you wonder.
Your mother places a generous serving of food onto your plate, and you idly push some rice around with your chopsticks, gaze flickering toward him again. “What, got scolded for being too slow on the field?”
Mingyu finally looks at you properly. His frustration is clear. “Can you not today?” His voice is quieter than you expect, worn at the edges. “I had a shitty day at training, and I really don’t have the energy for you right now.”
The words catch you off guard. You could leave it at that, let him have his peace for once. A part of you— one you stubbornly refuse to acknowledge— almost wants to ask why, wants to pry into what’s bothering him and offer something resembling comfort.
Instead, you shove that impulse down. Whatever this is, whatever softening that night at the reunion did to you, needs to be stomped out immediately.
So you double down.
You spear a piece of your meat a little too forcefully. “Right, because I’m the problem here. You always find a way to suck at things all on your own.”
Mingyu’s expression shutters. For the first time ever— in all of your interactions with him— you feel something unpleasant coil in your stomach. He shakes his head and then goes back to eating without another word.
There’s a small, screeching voice in the back of your head that wants to demand an explanation. Not for Mingyu’s dismal mood, no, but for that flicker of disappointment that’d passed his face when he shook his head.
Why would he be disappointed over your cruelty? Why would he expect anything else from you?
The rest of the meal passes without his usual jabs in return, and you tell yourself that’s a victory. It feels like anything but.
As dessert is doled out, your mother calls out to the pair of you. “You two, go somewhere else for a while. The adults need to discuss business.”
You open your mouth to protest. You’re both adults already; surely you and Mingyu could sit in, rather than be forced into yet another awkward situation neither of you can run from.
But Mingyu is already pushing his chair back with a grumbled “fine.” The look your mother shoots you indicates that this is not about to be up for debate. You follow Mingyu out, both of you stepping into the cool evening air.
The restaurant’s outdoor area has an old playground— rusting swing sets, a chipped slide, and monkey bars that have seen better days. You walk ahead and hop onto a swing, the chains creaking slightly as you push off the ground.
Mingyu stands nearby, watching you for a moment. “Didn’t take you for the type to get sentimental,” he snorts, and that slight edge in his tone gives you just a bit of hope that he doesn’t completely despise you.
“I’m not. I just need somewhere to sit that’s far away from you,” you say matter-of-factly.
He huffs but doesn’t argue. Instead, he heads towards the monkey bars. He grips one, testing his weight against the metal. “Remember when you got stuck on these in second grade?” he asks as he free-hangs.
“I wasn’t stuck,” you sniffle in protest. “I was strategizing.”
Mingyu lets out a bark of laughter. “Strategizing how to fall on your ass?”
You drag the tip of your shoe against the dirt, narrowing your eyes. “If I recall correctly, you weren’t any help. You just laughed at me until my dad had to come pull me down.”
“Hey, in my defense, it was funny.” He swings himself onto the lowest bar, legs dangling. “You had snot running down your face and everything.”
You lunge half-heartedly to kick at his shin, but he pulls his leg away just in time. There’s a beat of silence, the air filled with the distant chatter of your families inside. It’s strange, this reminiscing. The usual bite to your exchanges is still there, but it’s smooth around the edges, tinged with something dangerously close to fondness.
Mingyu exhales, gaze fixed on some nondescript point in the distance. You think he’s gearing up for his next jab about something. Probably your embarrassing high school days, or that one summer vacation you hate talking about. Instead—
“Why aren’t we friends?” he asks. His voice is quiet, thoughtful.
You blink. The question is so absurd it momentarily stuns you. “What?”
“I mean,” he shifts, “we’ve known each other our whole lives. Shouldn’t we— I don’t know— be close?”
If you didn’t know any better, you’d think he was teasing. But the question doesn’t sound rhetorical, and he seems almost wistful.
You hate it.
You hate him.
Your chest tightens, unbidden memories surfacing. There were plenty of reasons. The bickering, the competition. But at the core of it, there was one moment. One day that cemented everything in place, whether Mingyu realized it or not.
You were seven. It was summer, the sun blazing high as the neighborhood kids gathered for a game of soccer. Everyone had been split into teams, and you had waited, jittery with anticipation, as Mingyu— the fastest, the strongest, the boy everyone wanted to follow— started picking players.
One by one, he called out names, grinning as kids ran to his side. You had stood there, heart pounding, willing him to say your name next. You were family friends! Sure, you were a girl, but surely Mingyu could see how fast and strong you were, too.
In the end, Mingyu had picked everyone but you. When there was no one left, you had been shuffled onto the other team by default. You still remembered the sting of it. The two of you were already acquainted, and yet he hadn’t even seen you as an option.
It was stupid. It was petty. And yet, that wound had never quite healed. Everything that came after was just a domino effect after that.
If you were a little meaner to Mingyu than you had to be, if you were much more curt and snappy with him than you were with anyone else? It all came back to that. That moment where Mingyu hadn’t seen you— worse.
He had pretended not to.
You swallow, dragging yourself back to the present. Mingyu is watching you expectantly, waiting for an answer.
“Because you didn’t pick me,” you say at last, the words slipping out before you can stop them. “That one time.”
Mingyu’s brows knit together. “What?” he asks, and it feels like a punch in the gut.
The look of confusion on Mingyu’s face— you don’t know if it’s a curse or a blessing. He doesn’t remember. Of course he doesn’t. Why would he?
But you do. You remember, and you hold on to it for the lack of a better thing to hold on to.
Hating Mingyu is easy. Seeing him in any other light takes work, and you’re tired of trying to figure that out.
Mingyu opens his mouth. For a second, it looks like he might protest. His brows pull together, his lips part, and there’s something foreign in his expression— something that makes your stomach twist uncomfortably. But before he can say anything, you hear your mother beckoning for you from the restaurant.
You stand up and brush nonexistent dust off your clothes. “Well, that’s my cue,” you say airily, praying to any higher power at all that Mingyu won’t call out the way your voice shakes. Just a little bit.
Instead, he remains by the monkey bars, watching you with an impassive look on his face. You can feel the weight of his stare even as you turn away.
You hesitate for half a second before glancing back at him. “We’re probably better off this way,” you say, because you always have to have the last word.
His grip tightens around the swing’s chains, knuckles going white. There’s a pause.
Then, finally, he nods. A jerky, forced thing.
“Yeah,” he says, voice strangely even. “Probably.”
You don’t acknowledge the way the word sits heavy between you, don’t let yourself linger on the way it sounds more like reluctant acceptance than agreement. Instead, you pretend not to hear it at all, turning on your heel and walking back toward the restaurant.
Hating Mingyu is easy. It’s all you’re good for. As you leave him standing alone, you hope it feels a little bit like that day in your childhood— when you’d been the name he hadn’t called.
▸ S01E12: THE ONE WITH THE SMILE.
Mingyu doesn’t get it.
He’s been off his game for days.
It’s not an injury. It’s not exhaustion. He’s been training the same way, eating the same meals, sleeping the same hours. And yet his shots don’t land the same. His passes are sloppy. He misses easy blocks he could have made blindfolded.
It pisses him off.
The ball soars past him yet again, hitting the back of the net with a dull thud. Vernon cheers and Wonwoo does a victory lap. Mingyu just stands there, hands on his hips, jaw locked tight. His fingers twitch at his sides, itching to punch the goalpost out of sheer frustration.
Seungcheol, ever the captain, jogs over. “That’s enough,” he barks, voice edged with authority.
Mingyu bites the inside of his cheek. He knows what’s coming for him, and yet he still tries to protest. “One more round.”
“No. You’re done.” Seungcheol’s tone leaves no room for argument. “Go home. Figure out whatever’s got you playing like shit and come back when your head’s on straight.”
Mingyu has to bite back the retort that he’s not playing like shit, that he does have his head on straight. The numbers don’t lie. There’s no talking his way out of this one. With a sharp exhale, he yanks off his gloves and stalks off the field, muttering curses under his breath.
As he grabs his bag and heads toward the exit, he runs through every possible reason for his sudden slump.
Training? No. Diet? No. Stress? Maybe, but it’s never affected him like this before.
You?
You’ve been distant ever since that night at the playground. The constant quips, the snarky remarks, the way you always seemed to find a reason to pester him— it’s all dialed down to nearly nothing.
It should be a relief. He should be thriving with all this newfound peace and quiet.
Instead, he’s a goddamn mess.
Mingyu kicks a stray rock on the pavement as he walks to his car. He doesn’t get it. He doesn’t get you. And worse, he doesn’t get why it bothers him so damn much.
It’s entirely by accident, how he ends up spotting you. Maybe it’s some form of twisted divine intervention, some cruel twist of fate.
He’s at a red light, drumming his fingers against the steering wheel, when he happens to glance to the side. And there you are, ripped right out of his scrambled brain, standing outside a café with a group of friends.
You’re wearing one of those preppy outfits he always mocks you for, all pristine pleats and crisp collars. It’s the kind of thing he’d usually say makes you look like you stepped straight out of some rich kid catalog. He tucks away the insult in his mind, filed for the next time you annoy him.
But then—
You’re laughing. Your head tilts back; your eyes crinkle at the corners. The street lights catch on the soft highlights in your hair, the gentle slope of your nose, the flush on your cheeks from whatever ridiculous joke was just told.
You look light. At ease. So effortlessly happy.
Mingyu watches, unseen, his grip tightening on the steering wheel.
He’s seen you smirk, seen you grin in that infuriating, self-satisfied way when you get under his skin. He’s seen you scoff, roll your eyes, pout. But he doesn’t think he’s ever seen you smile like that in front of him.
And what’s worse—
Why does he want it?
He presses on the gas pedal once the light turns green. By the time he pulls into his parking lot, his mind is still spinning. He kills the engine but doesn’t move, just sits there, glaring at the wall in front of him.
Then, out of the corner of his eye, he sees it. A stray hair tie, wedged between the seats. One of yours.
He stares at it, his brain stalling. The last time you sat in his passenger seat… when was that? His mind scrambles, trying to pinpoint the moment, but he comes up empty. The fact that he doesn’t know unsettles him more than it should.
Something else comes, too. A stupid, fleeting burst of happiness. An excuse to message you, to return it, to say something anything just to get you talking to him again.
The realization slams into him all at once.
His frustration. His inability to focus. The way your absence has been gnawing at him. The way your happiness without him made his chest ache.
Mingyu slumps forward in his seat, his forehead resting against his steering wheel.
Not even the screeching sound of his horn is able to drag him out of the horrific realization that he’s off his game because he likes you.
He likes you, the one person in the world he shouldn’t. The one person in the world he can’t have.
“Fuuuck,” he grouses, banging his head on the steering wheel so that the beeps come in sporadic bursts. “Fuck, fuck, fuck!”
He’s fucked.
▸ S01E13: THE ONE WITH THE PLANNING.
You don't know when it started— this weird, drawn-out awkwardness with Mingyu.
It’s not like you’ve stopped arguing. You're still giving him shit for his stupid hair, his dumb socks, his loud chewing habits. But lately, he’s... off. Slower to snap back. Not quite meeting your eyes.
Worst of all? He’s barely even tried to make fun of your outfit today.
It’s part of the Mingyu playbook. Some wisecrack about your clothes, some comment about how you should be running hell in Satan’s place. If he’s feeling particularly inventive, he even deigns to bring your course into it.
Today, though, it’s all painfully polite. Curt answers and absentminded nods. You know you’ve frozen him out since that night on the playground, but you didn’t expect to get the same chill in return.
“So what I’m hearing is,” you say, tapping something into your phone, “you’re fine with anywhere as long as there’s pasta. Are you five?”
Mingyu squints at you like he's struggling to come up with a comeback. He opens his mouth. Closes it. Shrugs.
You narrow your eyes at him. “Wow. Riveting. Have you always been this dull or did I finally break you?”
He laughs, but there's no real bite to it. “I’m just being agreeable,” he offers. Even the snark in that is half-hearted, hesitant. “You should try it some time.”
“Oh, don't get all mature on me now,” you scoff, scrolling through the list of local restaurants your parents emailed. “God forbid you grow a personality overnight and forget how to argue.”
Mingyu mutters something under his breath that sounds suspiciously like “still better than yours.” He seems distracted, for the lack of a better term. The two of you have the unfortunate task of deciding on the next joint family meal’s venue, and he’s been uncharacteristically civil throughout it all.
Somehow, it unnerves you more than when he’s being an insufferable asshole.
“Seriously, are you okay?” you press, a touch of concern making its way into your tone. “You're kinda giving... robot with a mild software glitch."
“Yeah, ‘m fine,” he grumbles. “Just tired."
“Tired or scared I’ll beat you in the battle of wits today?”
“Not scared. Letting you have the spotlight for once.”
“Touching. Very generous.” You know a lost battle when you see one, so you scroll down the list again before turning your phone so he can see it. “Okay, vote: Overpriced fusion place with truffle everything or rustic hipster café that serves lattes with art so complicated it should be in a museum?”
Mingyu squints. “The second one has better lighting.”
“... Lighting?”
He raises his shoulders in a shrug. “For your parents’ photos. You know how your mom gets.”
Something twists in your stomach.
The fact that Mingyu is considering your mother’s happiness, that he knows how she is and he’s not complaining— instead accommodating?
You feel almost grateful, almost admiring, but you shake it off with a dramatic sigh. “Fine. Hipster café it is. Let’s go, then.”
“I’m literally only here because you begged me to come.”
“Yeah, but I begged louder. So I win.”
There it is— the ghost of a smile tugging at the corner of his lips. Not quite a comeback. But closer.
It doesn’t quite explain why his ears have turned pink, but that’s a can of worms you decide you’re not ready to open up just yet. Instead, the two of you go to scope the venue, lest your parents call you out for not fulfilling your duty-bound obligation to this godforsaken tradition.
The café is aggressively quaint. All pastel walls and potted plants and menus printed in cursive. A waitress greets you at the door with a bright smile and a clipboard in hand.
“Table for two?”
“Yeah,” Mingyu says.
She glances between the two of you, then beams. “Perfect! You're just in time for our couple’s lunch special. It comes with two entrees, a shared appetizer, and dessert for only half the price.”
For a moment, you wish you could see yourself through the waitress’ eyes. You can’t imagine a single thing that might give off the impression that you and Mingyu were a couple. There’s too much space between the two of you, and the look you two share is enough for you to gleam that he’s equally flabbergasted.
He turns to look back to the unassuming waitress. “Oh, we’re not—”
The world’s most brilliant idea strikes you then. You act on it before you can develop a semblance of shame.
“We'll take it,” you cut in smoothly, linking your arm through Mingyu’s before he can ruin it. You smile sweetly at the waitress, completely ignoring the way Mingyu goes rigid beside you.
As you’re led to a corner table by the window, he leans down to frantically whisper, “What the hell was that?”
“A good deal,” you respond cheerfully. “Unless you want to pay full price just to protect your ego.”
He glares. “You’re unbelievable.”
“You knew that when you got in the car.”
The waitress sets down your menus and tells you she’ll be back shortly for your order. Mingyu slumps in his seat, looking very much like you’ve told him he can never play soccer ever again.
“Cheer up,” you say, nudging his shin under the table. “If you play your cards right, I might even feed you.”
His eyes narrow. "You wouldn’t dare."
Ah, but you would dare. The moment the pasta arrives, you’re already grinning. You twirl the noodles with your fork; he tries to communicate with his gaze that he wants you dead.
“Say ahhh, loverboy,” you sing-song.
“Absolutely not.”
You kick him again. He hisses mid-sip of water. “Just pretend, Mingyu,” you say through the teeth of your smile. “God, have you never faked a relationship for free food before?”
“I have not, actually,” he retorts. “Fuckin’ cheapskate.”
Begrudgingly, he opens his mouth. He at least seems to know that you’re not about to let up. You shove the fork into his mouth; he retaliates by ‘feeding’ you some chicken piccata, though it’s more of him forcing the bite into your mouth even after you’ve protested the presence of peas.
The next half hour is full of increasingly absurd couple behavior. You fake gasp when he offers you water. He pretends to be offended when you steal his garlic bread. You stage-whisper pet names across the table just loud enough for the waitress to hear, coos of baby and sweetheart in between eye rolls and grimaces.
And through it all, there are moments— brief, fleeting— when his eyes linger on yours just a second too long. When his smile is a little too soft. When his hand brushes yours and he doesn’t pull away immediately.
You tell yourself it’s all part of the act.
But maybe that’s not the whole truth.
The meal ends as it should. Mingyu foots the bill, and he does it without complaint. On your way out, the waitress smiles at the two of you like you’re some couple to be revered.
Pride sparks like a flint in your chest. You douse it as quickly as you can manage.
Outside, the sun is bright and the sidewalk smells like coffee and car exhaust. With your joint scoping done, the two of you walk a little slower than usual. You’re unsure why you’re not rushing to get back to the car.
“Well,” you say casually, “you make a convincing boyfriend. Color me shocked.”
Mingyu gives you a flat look. “Glad to know my fake relationship skills impress you.”
“What can I say? Low expectations,” you chirp, then jab him lightly with your elbow. “Now that I think about it— you're pretty single, huh. Why is that, again?”
It’s a jab that you’ve delivered far better in the past. Jokes about him being unable to pull. Remarks of him not knowing the first thing about romance or women.
Today, though, it comes out as a query of genuine curiosity. One you typically might throw at someone you wanted to gauge interest in, and my God, how damning was that?
Mingyu doesn’t make a big deal out of it. He answers your question with frustrating casualness, toying with his car keys as he drags his feet. “Busy. Not looking. The usual.”
You raise an eyebrow. “Lame excuse. Try again.”
“What about you?” he counters, the attempt at evasion only driving you a little more crazy. “Still turning down anyone who doesn’t meet your god-tier standards?”
You tilt your chin up, mock-offended. “Absolutely. Only the best for me.”
“Yeah? What does that even mean?”
It’s obvious. You know the answer to this.
“Someone who’s funny. Smart. A little annoying but not, like, murder-worthy,” you ramble. “Tall, but not weird-tall. Knows how to argue without being a total asshole. Kind to animals. Can cook. Probably has nice hands.”
The words come out easily, too easily. You mean to keep it jokey, casual, but the list tumbles out before you can really filter it. It’s only when you hear it out loud that it hits you.
You know someone like that.
Your mouth goes dry. A beat passes.
You realize, too late, that you've gone quiet. That the silence between you has shifted. It’s not awkward, but it’s charged.
Mingyu bumps your shoulder with his, snapping you out of your reverie. “That’s oddly specific,” he taunts. “Anyone I know?”
You scoff and shove him away. “Shut up.”
From the corner of your eye, you can see him fighting down a teasing grin. You can feel your pulse thudding in your ears, can feel the heat creeping up the back of your neck.
You don’t dare look at him.
You hope Mingyu doesn’t know. You hope he doesn’t realize you just described someone that sounds suspiciously like—
▸ S01E14: THE ONE WITH THE WORST SEVEN MINUTES OF MINGYU’S LIFE.
Mingyu knows better than anyone, just how true the platitude every second counts is.
He plays soccer. Of course he knows the value of a ticking clock, of a last-minute save, of seconds that tick by arduously slow.
The clock has always been his enemy. But, today, it’s his friend.
Every second that ticks by moves the hands on the clock. Every movement on the clock will end this game faster.
He had this coming, really. When Ryujin dared him to kiss a girl— any girl— in the circle, he had known he was being baited. They all wanted him to choose you, to confirm whatever stupid assumptions they’d made about your complicated relationship.
Mingyu lived to defy expectations, so he leaned over and pulled Chaeyoung into his lap, and he kissed her like it meant something. Did his eyes briefly flicker open to check if you were watching? Did he feel some sort of sick, perverse triumph when he saw that you looked annoyed?
He should have known that karma would bite him back fast. You had the tendency to do that— knowing just how to piss him off right back.
It’s been two minutes and thirty-five seconds since you stepped into that goddamn pantry with Yugyeom.
“Seven minutes in heaven,” Jinyoung had teased when the bottle landed on you, giving you free rein to choose anyone.
And Mingyu knew immediately that it wouldn’t be him.
Your high school friend group had jeered and laughed and teased when you reached for Yugyeom. Mingyu was not an inherently violent person, but he wanted so badly, in that moment, to wipe the smug smirk off the other man’s face.
You didn’t even look at Mingyu as you slinked away with Yugyeom.
Mingyu is nursing a new bottle now.
Trying to focus on the game. Trying to ignore the empty spaces in the circle. Someone’s daring something scandalous, a strip tease of some sorts—
You’re wearing his jacket, Mingyu realizes. From the little spat earlier this night when you’d spilled rum down the front of your shirt. Before you could throw a hissy fit, he’d shoved his varsity jacket in your arms and told you to suck it up.
The thought of Yugyeom unbuttoning that piece of clothing— that one thing on your body that might mark you as Mingyu’s, if it mattered at all— has the keeper clenching his beer bottle a little tighter.
It’s been three minutes and twelve seconds. Mingyu doesn’t know why he’s counting it down, but he also doesn’t know how to keep his cool.
His brain keeps supplying him with images of what he might do if he were in Yugyeom’s place.
The realistic answer: You’d sulk, probably. Find a way to blame him for the situation. The two of you would bicker the entire seven minutes and then come out of the secluded pantry in foul moods. Seven minutes in hell, he would say sarcastically, when asked, and you’d flip him off.
Underneath the realistic answer, though, is something that’s close to a fantasy. His hands resting at your sides, his touch warm over your— his— jacket. Your fingers entangled in his hair. The way he'd have to lean down, to tilt his head.
Would you taste like all the alcohol you’d drank that night?
Would you taste like everything he’s ever dreamed of?
Mingyu shakes his head and takes a sip of his beer, his fingers trembling around the bottle. Eunwoo is stripping as part of a dare; Mingyu tries to focus on that, and not on the fact that it’s been five minutes and fifty-two seconds.
Jungkook lets out a loud squeal. The sound pierces through the pre-drunk migraine that Mingyu already feels coming on. The sound—
What would you sound like?
In his arms. Against his mouth. Underneath—
“Fuck,” Mingyu cusses lowly, the word spoken mostly to himself.
He’s drunk. He’s riled up. And you’re just so pretty tonight—
“Oi, lovebirds!” Jinyoung calls out in the direction of the pantry. “Seven minutes are up!”
Mingyu barely registers the sharp ring of the seven-minute alarm going off, or the jabs that everybody else throws out. His gaze is now fixed on the pantry door, the one he has to fight every urge to approach. Every second that ticks past the required mark has his head spinning with thoughts, with ideas that he would rather not dwell on.
Yugyeom emerges first, that smirk of his still in place. You come out right after, looking unruffled as you smooth out the front of your shirt.
You don’t waste a single beat. Your eyes find Mingyu’s face, where he’s poorly concealed just how much more intoxicated he's gotten in your absence.
A corner of your mouth tilts upward in a vicious smile. The action you give him next is so brief, he could have imagined it.
You pucker your lips.
A flying kiss.
Mingyu has never wanted you so badly.
▸ S01E15: THE ONE WITH THE WORST SEVEN MINUTES OF YOUR LIFE.
Seven minutes.
You could do anything in seven minutes.
Say something stupid. Say something brave. Let someone kiss you. Let someone else go.
You step into the pantry and it smells like cinnamon and dust and maybe a little bit of regret. Yugyeom’s behind you, grinning like this is just another game. And maybe to him, it is. A dare. A kiss. A story to laugh about later.
The second the door shuts, the world dulls. Muffled cheers and drunken cackles blur into the walls, and it’s just the two of you in this cramped little time capsule. His hand grazes your arm. Your breath catches, but not for the reason it’s supposed to.
“Hey, pretty,” Yugyeom greets, and there’s some sort of vindication in knowing he actually does think you’re pretty.
This was an evening of unepic proportions, of high school friends coming together for a birthday party and bad decisions. In your head, there’s some small consolation to the fact that there’s not much light in the pantry.
Just the hint of fluorescence flooding through the door crack, reminding you of a loose circle where Mingyu is seated.
The thought of him makes your skin crawl. It’s bad enough that you don’t know how to act around him anymore. But then he went in to make out with Chaeyoung of all fucking people—
“Let’s get on with this, Kim,” you tell Yugyeom, trying to sound convincing, sultry.
Your voice wavers just a bit on the surname. Wrong Kim.
To give Yugyeom some credit, he laughs softly before leaning in. His lips are warm. Kind. And you think, briefly, that he must be good at this. The kind of guy who gets picked in these games a lot. The kind of guy who smiles and means it.
You wonder if you’ll feel anything when he kisses you.
You don’t.
It’s not bad. It’s just not… anything.
You try. You really, really do. Your fingers curl at the front of Yugyeom’s shirt; his own hands dance over your sides. Over the jacket, over Mingyu’s jacket, and you wince because you’re thinking of him, of the way he’d introduced himself to the unfamiliar faces with that winning smile and that nickname of his, the stupid Gyu you never get to call him—
“Mmm,” Yugyeom hums against your lips. He pulls back, eyes still closed, a lazy grin on his face. “Did you just say ‘Gyu’?”
Fuck.
You blink at Yugyeom, your brain slow to catch up. “No, I didn’t,” you sputter.
He opens one eye. “You totally did.”
You could say you said Gyeom. You could simply shut Yugyeom up with a fiercer kiss, maybe a little more action.
But it’s there, out in the open, curling in the space between you two like something dangerous and damaging
The slip wasn’t just a slip. It was your heart showing its cards. A royal fucking flush you can’t even begin to run from.
Your hand falls to your side. Yugyeom steps back.
No annoyance, no dramatics— just something soft in his smile that makes it worse. “You wanna try that again? With the right guy’s name this time?”
You cover your face with your hands. “Yugyeom,” you groan, because while you can’t bring yourself to try making out again, you can at least say the right name. “Please don’t make fun of me.”
“Never,” he chirps. He shifts to lean on one of the pantry’s low shelves, hands tucked in his hoodie. “So. Mingyu, huh?”
You don’t answer right away.
Because what is there to say? That you’ve spent more than half your life wrapped in arguments and almosts and the kind of tension that should’ve burned out by now but hasn’t? That the sound of your name in Mingyu’s mouth makes you want to scream or kiss him or both? That he gave you his stupid jacket and you’re still wearing it like it means something?
“It’s complicated,” you gripe.
Yugyeom cackles. “That’s the most girl-who’s-in-love thing I’ve ever heard.”
“Shut up.”
He doesn’t. “You know he was watching the door like a lovesick puppy, right?”
That shouldn’t make your heart flutter. It does anyway. “He was?” you ask, and you could kick yourself for just how giddy you sound.
It’s as close to a direct confirmation that Yugyeom is going to get. You think that he might be grinning, but it’s not something you can be sure of in the darkness. It’s something you hear instead, bleeding into his words. “Pretty sure he was ready to fight me.”
You sit beside Yugyeom. The shelf creaks. Your hands are cold in your lap, but your face is burning.
“Do you love him?” he asks, and it’s so straightforward you want to laugh.
You don’t say a thing. It’s one of those silence-means-yes moments, one of those things that should go unsaid.
The sun is warm, the sky is blue, and you’re in love with Kim Mingyu.
Despite how much the fact has simmered underneath your skin, it’s something you can’t bring yourself to say out loud. Because it’s not that easy. Because it’s him. Because you know the way he is— impulsive and stubborn and so good at pretending he doesn’t care when really, he cares too much.
And so you don’t answer Yugyeom. The two of you kill the remaining minutes in silence; it’s almost like your friend is letting you sit with the truth, the realization.
After a long moment, he leans in to press a chaste, friendly kiss to the top of your head.
“Whatever it is,” he mumbles into your hair, “he’s one lucky bastard.”
You let out a watery laugh. You hadn’t even realized you were tearing up— the sheer fear of the reality overwhelming you.
Jinyoung’s voice echoes from outside. “Oi, lovebirds! Seven minutes are up!”
“Come on. Gotta act like we had some fun in here,” Yugyeom urges. “You picked me to make him jealous, right? Let’s make it look like that.”
“I owe you my first born child,” you respond, genuinely grateful despite everything.
“Hopefully the one you’ll have with Ming—”
“Let’s not go there.”
He messes with your hair. You rumple up his shirt. It’s all a farce, a show, and Yugyeom is kind enough to play along. He throws you a conspiratorial wink as he steps out, that smirk of his slotting right back on to his barely-swollen lips.
You take a deep breath, and then you follow.
It’s almost like a magnet, how your eyes seek out Mingyu. He looks just a little more drunk; a feat, considering the fact you’ve been gone for only seven minutes.
You can’t help it. Your mouth twitches in a fond grin. The way his gaze is burning into you, the way he’s clutching his beer bottle just a little too tightly?
That might be what compels you. It’s a flicker of an action, a ghost of a tease. You throw him a flying kiss, giggling to yourself when his face flushes a shade of red.
You have never wanted Mingyu so badly.
▸ S01E16: THE ONE WITH THE ‘MISTAKE’.
He doesn't want to be mad.
Truly. Logically. On paper— whatever. Mingyu knows he started it.
He kissed Chaeyoung first. He played the game. He played you. And now here you are, sitting cross-legged on his couch in your usual over-the-top family dinner outfit. Like that one night at the party didn’t end with him counting down seconds that felt like drowning.
You’re humming some song under your breath. You’re so calm, so nonchalant.
Mingyu is not. He stomps and clenches his hands into fists and slams his drawer with more force than necessary.
You glance up from your phone. “Damn,” you say with a low whistler. “Did the closet offend you or something?”
He doesn’t answer. He’s pulling clothes out of his dresser like they all personally insulted him. Button-down, slacks, watch, socks. All too formal for something that’s supposed to be casual, but tonight everything feels like a performance.
He ducks into his room and dresses quickly. By the time he emerges, you’re already standing by the front door. It shoots a momentary panic through him, the thought of you leaving.
But then you’re quipping, “You said we had to leave at seven. It’s 6:55. Just reminding you before you start blaming me for being late.”
“I’m not blaming you,” he grunts, padding across his living room in search of his wallet.
He can see you looking skeptical in his peripheral vision. “Sure feels like it,” you huff.
“Can you not?”
“Can I not what? Breathe in your general direction?”
Mingyu exhales sharply. He should stop. He should apologize. He should not make this worse.
He does.
“Yeah?” His tone drips with derision as he finally shoves his essentials into the pocket of his trousers. “Maybe if you weren’t so good at pretending nothing ever touches you, I wouldn’t have to.”
You laugh; the sound is incredulous, sharp. Offended?
“Right, because clearly you’re the one who’s been suffering,” you jeer. And then, completely out of the left field—
“I forgot how hard it must’ve been for you, kissing Chaeyoung like your life depended on it.”
There’s so much to unpack. The way you’re bringing this whole thing up days after it happened, even after you and Mingyu have just kind of… bristled at each other a lot more. Mingyu wanted to think your patience was just a lot thinner than usual— as was his— but he hadn’t imagined it would be related to that night. Or to Chaeyoung.
It makes his heart, the traitor that it is, practically stop in his chest.
He knows where you’re getting at. He knows what this could mean. He just has to make sure, and it’s in the way he tries to keep up with his rage when he snaps, “What does that have to do—”
“Why didn’t you kiss me?”
And there it is.
The question cuts through everything. Your voice— loud at first, angry— is suddenly small. Wounded.
Mingyu’s head spins.
You wanted him to kiss you.
You wanted him to kiss you.
His mouth opens then closes. Your face is incandescent, burning with shame. He knows this about you, knows you’ve never been able to deny yourself a thing. You’re an open book, a heart-on-the-platter type of girl. As badly as he wants to try and figure out all the signs he might have missed, he’s more concerned with the fact that you’re already trying to take it back.
Your hand is on the door handle. You’re about to make a run for it, Mingyu realizes, and that’s not something he’s going to let happen.
Before you can get too far, his fingers are wrapping around your wrist and tugging you back.
When you look up at him, his expression is contorted into a mix of torment and want. You’re not looking any better yourself; you look caught between desire and fear, like all the years you’ve shared are bearing down on the two of you.
You look as crazy as Mingyu feels.
“I was waiting,” Mingyu breathes, his eyes wide and wild. “I was waiting—”
“For what?” you bite out. “What were you waiting for?”
His sharp response is softened by the desperation edging his tone. “For the perfect moment,” he snaps.
Mingyu tugs you into his space. He’s gentle, still, as he snakes an arm around your waist and pulls you closer until you’re chest to chest. He has to tuck his head to press his forehead against yours, and he can’t breathe.
You’re holding your breath, too, like you’re fighting every instinct to kick up a fuss at how patient he’s being. He has to be. He has to be, or else he’s going to give you everything when the two of you have to meet your families for the night.
His breath ghosts over your lips, which are already parted so beautifully for him.
“But I guess,” he whispers, his heart in his throat, at your feet, in your hands, “my shitty apartment is as good as any for a first kiss, huh?”
Mingyu doesn’t even wait for you to answer.
He closes the distance and presses down into you, enough that you end up taking a step back. When your nails sink into Mingyu’s shoulders to hold yourself steady, he lets out a low hiss against your mouth but refuses to pull away.
He kisses you like he’s thought about doing it for years.
And maybe he has. Maybe it’s always been there— this prospect, this possibility, and he could’ve gone his whole life just wondering what it might be like.
Now that he has it, has you, he doesn’t know if he can go without it.
It might be a mistake. He knows that.
He’s crossed a line you’ve both danced around for too long. There's a part of him— rational and careful— that screams this could ruin everything.
But then you kiss him back.
You kiss him back like you mean it, like you’re angry about all the years wasted not doing this. Like you want to climb into the marrow of him and stay there.
Mingyu doesn’t know how long it lasts. Doesn’t care. Eventually, the space between you pulls taut again, and you're both left staring, dazed, stunned, as if the world has shifted under your feet.
His fingers ghost over his lips. They’re swollen, just like yours, and he knows there’s no going back from this. There’s no way he’ll ever be able to convince himself that you’re some annoying pest instead of the love of his goddamn life.
“We— we should go,” Mingyu says hoarsely, barely above a whisper. It’s all he can manage.
And for once, you don’t fight him.
▸ S01E17: THE ONE WITH THE PROMISE.
The bane of your existence drives you to your family’s monthly dinner in his car with its one working speaker, and a half-eaten protein bar wedged into the cupholder.
You complain about the lack of legroom. He snarks back about your giant tote bag taking up all the space. It’s almost impressive how easily the two of you slip back into the familiar routine of bickering.
If someone were to eavesdrop, they’d never guess you’d made out half an hour ago. That he’d kissed you like you were the only thing keeping him breathing; that you’d kissed him like he had all the answers to the questions you’ve been afraid to ask.
Mingyu parallel parks like an asshole— too far from the curb— and you mutter something under your breath as you slam the door shut behind you.
“You could say thank you,” he says, locking the car.
“Thank you,” you echo. “For the trauma.”
He almost smiles. The sight of him fighting that back reminds you of his lips, how they’d been so soft against yours despite the heated, desperate way he moved.
Your brain is going to be in the gutter the whole evening. You’re sure of it.
Your families are already there at the vouchsafed hipster café when the two of you walk through the door. For a treacherous moment, everything feels like clockwork again. The smell of garlic bread wafts through the air. His mother greets you with a warm hug. His dad already has a story locked and loaded. Your parents give him the same doting affection.
It’s so normal you almost forget what’s changed.
Almost.
Mingyu sits next to you instead of across from you. He offers you the breadbasket first, tops your glass when nobody else is looking.
At one point, you arch a brow at him, suspicious. He says nothing.
It’s all suspicious.
Conversation flows easily enough. Your families are familiar, loud, opinionated. There’s some rapport between you and Mingyu; if your parents notice that it’s not as scathing as usual, they don’t point it out.
Under the table, something changes.
You feel it before you see it. Mingyu’s hand, careful and tentative, resting on your knee. His touch is featherlight, like he’s giving you a chance to move away.
You don’t.
It’s hidden by the table cloth, and you think you might be imagining it until you glance at him.
He’s already looking at you.
His expression is half-agony, half-hope.
And that’s the thing about Kim Mingyu. He’s always been too much and never enough. Too loud, too cocky, too frustrating. Never thoughtful enough, never serious enough, never willing to make the first move until now.
You’re done keeping score. This isn’t a battle of wits, a challenge of who can hold out better. This is a game neither of you will win.
No. This is a game you no longer have to play.
You lace your fingers through his.
Mingyu’s shoulders drop like he’s been holding that breath for years. He squeezes your hand, and you think you could get used to this, to him. You’ll have to talk about it later, to decide; for now, though, the promise of it is more than enough.
You used to think there was no universe in which you and Kim Mingyu could ever get along.
But maybe— just maybe— this one will do.
#mingyu x reader#svt x reader#seventeen x reader#svthub#keopihausnet#mingyu imagines#mingyu fluff#svt imagines#seventeen imagines#svt fluff#seventeen fluff#kim mingyu x reader#(💎) page: svt#(🥡) notebook
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big fan of clark not being a fan of bruce wayne. all of the tacky one-liners and come-ons roll off of clark's back with barely concealed disgust.
he had a history with tasteless billionaires and he's just about had it with them and their ilk, thinking they own the world just because they had the money to buy it. the clash of his humble midwest upbringing and lex luthor's animosity spelled bruce wayne's doomed first impression at some party or other, where clark gets a face full of wayne's pearly whites, alcohol for cologne, and batty-eyed flirtation. clark gives up hope for a scoop and leaves the party as soon as he's able to.
but then, he falls down the rabbit hole: wayne industries and other properties, learning they offer the best-paying jobs, are a top-rated company, for a reason, all the benefits and the charity works, supporting smaller local businesses. and bruce wayne may be ditzy but he grew up from a tragedy that took his family and now, he's growing a new one. clark figures, rich or not, no person's life should be this dramatic and plastered on newspaper—that means it's deliberate.
and, of course, the after: his partner-in-justice, with a penchant for the shadows and doing thankless work, coinciding with that fake, glittery persona. it made sense in a way it never would've made sense before now. bruce wayne is batman, and batman is bruce wayne.
so, of course, the next time bruce wayne is seen flirting with clark kent at some party or other—now burdened with the knowledge of who exactly bruce is, clark blushes and stutters and begrudgingly accepts his fate.
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Thomas: Son, I have a dark family secret I have to share with you.
Bruce nodding: I'm adopted
Thomas: That's not it.
Bruce nodding: I'm actually the biological son of Alfred and Mother, but you raised me as your own anyway.
Thomas: No
Bruce side eyeing him: You stole me from a park when I was little.
Thomas: No! Geez, you think I would pick you out of all the park kids?
Bruce: Hurtful but fair. What's the secert then?
Thomas: We stole your bother Danny from a park when he was little.
Bruce: No! Not little Danny! He likes the stars father! He was innocent!
Thomas: I know! But I couldn't stop Martha or Alfred! Oh my dear son, I have lived with shame for years! I can take it no longer!
Bruce: You must turn yourself in father. Face justice for what you've done!
Danny standing three feet away: I'm was kidnapped?
Martha: Meh, you fell through a glowing portal of death, and when everyone ran away screaming, Alfred and I just scooped you up and took you home. Thomas doesn't believe us about the portal, though, and has been trying to find your birth family for years.
Danny: Is that why he keeps asking for me to do DNA tests?
Alfred: Yes. Master Thomas fancies himself a detective.
Martha: What's so unbelievable about a glowing white-haired teenager falling from a swirling portal of death and shrinking into a few months old human baby due to his terrible injures? Storks bring babies all the time!
Alfred: I just think Master Thomas isn't as well traveled as he should be. I've seen the same protal at least five times back in London.
#dcxdpdabbles#dcxdp crossover#from a fic i never wrote#Danny de-age and adopted by the Waynes#Thomas/Martha/Alfred ship#Thomas is convinced his partners stold a baby#but raised him as his own anyway#Bruce and Thomas are copies of eachother#Danny took more after his Mother and Pa
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