BLONDE JAKE, BLONDE JAMES, BLONDE NI-KI.
almost home
KIROKAZE

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@bunnyjhs
BLONDE JAKE, BLONDE JAMES, BLONDE NI-KI.
some fics really make me feel this deep in my heart man fanfics are so amazing. I love fanfics
𝑇ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑘 𝑢, 𝑛𝑒𝑥𝑡 / 𝐴𝑓𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑦𝑜𝑢 | 𝑀𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑖𝑛
: ̗̀➛ A CORTIS Martin oneshot.
: ̗̀➛ Fluff + a little bit of angst
: ̗̀➛ Regina George × Rodrick Heffley dynamic 🌝 ALSO MY FAVOURITE SHIP URGH. Bless the person who came up with it.❤️
: ̗̀➛ Do not plagiarise my works or post them on other sites without my permission. You will get blocked and reported immediately.
: ̗̀➛ Thank you so much for reading ❤️🐇
: ̗̀➛ Songs
•Thank u, next - Ariana Grande
•Into you - Ariana Grande
•Boyfriend - Ariana Grande
•Bang Bang - Jessie J, Ariana Grande & N*cki M*naj
•Overflow - Evan/Heeseung
•Go away - Weezer
•Lovers - Anna of the north
•Birds of a feather - Billie Eilish
•Open arms - SZA ft Travis Scott
•We don't talk anymore - Charlie Puth ft Selena Gomez
•Attention - Charlie Puth
•Genie in a bottle - Christina Aguilera
•Friends - Chase Atlantic
•Nothin on you - B.o.B ft Bruno Mars
•Dirty little secret - The All American Rejects
•Freaks - Surf Curse
•Girlfriend - Avril Lavigne
•Obsessed - Mariah Carey
•Toxic - Britney Spears
•Hollaback girl - Gwen Stefani
•Long way 2 go - Cassie
•Naught girl - Beyoncè
•Everybody here wants you - Jeff Buckley
•Emo boy - Ayisha Erotica
•Maneater - Nelly Furtado
•Cupid's chokehold/ Breakfast in America - Gym Class Heroes
•LoveGame - Lady Gaga
•Paparazzi - Lady Gaga
: ̗̀➛ Tags (open but please follow and let me know if you would like to be part of the list✨): @vanishingnana @quantumspawntraitor @loveliezzzlinaa22 @delicate-lotus
Prologue
The first time Martin Edwards saw Madeline Goldman cry, they were seven years old, and she scraped her knee on the paving during recess. He gave her his favorite Pokémon card: a holographic Charizard, to make her stop. She sniffled, clutched it to her chest like it was made of gold, and promised to marry him someday.
The last time Martin Edwards saw Madeline Goldman cry was three weeks ago, when she stood in the airport security line with her back to him, her shoulders shaking so violently he thought she might shatter into a million pieces.
End Prologue
September
The first day of senior year arrived with oppressive humidity that made the halls of Crestwood High smell like dread and cheap deodorant. Martin slumped against his locker, watching the chaos unfold with the aloof amusement of a nature documentary narrator. Freshmen scattered like startled deer, juniors strutted like they already conquered the world and seniors moved with the sluggish weight of people who knew the end was coming but weren't quite sure how to feel about it.
And then there was Madeline.
The doors swung open and there she was. She wept through the corridor like she owned it. Because she did. Her hair blew perfectly in the imaginary wind. She cut it shorter over the summer, just above her collarbones, and the style suited her so well that it made Martin's chest ache. Her blazer was tailored to fit like a second skin. Her Victoria's Secret kitten heels were so pristine they practically glowed. A gold chain rested on her collarbone. Her makeup was minimal but still captivating: a swipe of mascara and a hint of gloss. She moved with the precision of a general surveying her troops, nodding at the right people and dismissing others with a glance so cutting it could draw blood.
She looked like she just stepped out of a magazine. Out of his dreams. She moved through the crowd like a queen through her court, and the crowd parted for her. It wasn't conscious. No one stepped aside because they were told to. They just...did. There was something magnetic about Madeline, something that made people want to be near her or get out of her way. There was no in-between.
Martin felt his jaw tighten. His fingers curled around the strap of his worn-out backpack, his knuckles whitening.
"Easy, tiger." Juhoon, his best friend and bandmate, murmured, appearing at his side.
"I'm fine." Martin said, his voice flat.
"You're doing the thing where your eye twitches."
"I don't have a thing."
"Bro, you're literally doing it right now. It's like a full-body spasm that happens whenever she walks into a room. The doctors call it Mad-itis. Very rare. Very tragic."
Martin shoved Juhoon. His gaze was already drifting back to Madeline, who stopped to talk to some guy Martin has never seen before. He was tall, a brunette and perfect, making Martin's teeth ache. The guy was laughing at something she said, his hand resting on her arm like he had any right to touch her.
Something hot and ugly coiled in Martin's chest. He recognized the feeling immediately. It was the same one that took up permanent residence in his ribcage since grade 10, when everything fell apart.
"Ahh...Woojin..." Juhoon said, following his gaze. "...the guy who transferred from some private school back in grade 9. His dad is a businessman or something. Very rich."
"Couldn't care less." Martin replied.
"Figured that's why you look like you're about to commit a homicide."
Martin forced himself to look away. To breathe and remember that Madeline Goldman was no longer his concern. She made that abundantly clear when she laughed in his face during the winter formal of grade 11, surrounded by her flock of sycophants, and announced to everyone within earshot that she "outgrew" him.
The memory still burned. It was meant to hurt him in every way.
"She's dating him..." Juhoon added, almost as an afterthought. "...already. First day of school and she's already got a new one. That's gotta be a record, even for her."
Martin's blood boiled. He felt it in his fingers, his toes and the space behind his eyes. His face remained impassive. It was a skill he perfected over the past two years. The art of feeling nothing, or at least looking like he felt nothing.
"Good for her." He said, and walked away before Juhoon could see the jealousy in his eyes.
Madeline knew exactly where Martin was standing. She always knew. It was like some kind of sixth sense, a radar that pinged whenever he was within fifty metres. She could feel the weight of his gaze on her skin even when she wasn't looking at him.
Madeline kept her attention fixed on Woojin, who was saying something about his father's yacht and the summer he spent in the Hamptons. He was quite handsome and stylish in a unique way. His smile was cute. His manners were impeccable. His future was already mapped out. He was set to go to Yale, then med school, then land himself a nice, high-paying job and a wife who would look perfect on his arm at charity galas.
Madeline could be that wife. She trained for it her whole life.
"Madeline? Everything okay?" Woojin's hand was on her arm, his brows furrowed with concern. "You seem...distracted."
"I'm fine." She said, her voice smooth as glass. "Just thinking about all the work we have this year."
"Don't worry about it. I'll help you with anything you need."
She smiled at him, a perfect smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. "You're sweet."
From across the hallway, she heard a low, sarcastic laugh. She didn't have to turn around to know it was Martin. She could picture him perfectly, leaning against the lockers with that insufferable smirk, his arms crossed and eyes glinting with mockery. He was probably filming her on his phone. He did that sometimes, recording her like she was some kind of zoo animal, a specimen to be studied and ridiculed.
It made her want to scream.
Instead, she laughed loudly, and leaned closer to Woojin. "Tell me more about the Hamptons..." She said. "...I've always wanted to go."
Madeline didn't look back. She never looked back.
⏳
The cafeteria was loud, but the moment Madeline approached the table, the volume around Martin's usual spot dropped.
Martin didn't look up immediately, but his shoulders visibly tensed. He knew her footsteps and that stupid, fruity scent of hers. For months, they the two were operating in this suffocating, silent warfare, feeling miserable without each other and treating their breakup like a wound they refused to let heal. But seeing Zoe leaning so close to Martin and laughing at something on his phone, pushed Madeline past her limit.
Zoe noticed her first. She blinked, her smile faltering slightly under Madeline's icy gaze. "Oh, hey Madeline."
Madeline didn't answer. She didn't even look Zoe in the eye. Instead, she reached down, picked up Zoe's half-eaten sandwich from her plate, and held it up by the crust with two fingers, inspecting it with deep disgust.
"Is this yours?" Madeline asked, her voice soft, dripping with a terrifyingly sweet concern.
"Um, yeah?" Zoe said, shifting uncomfortably.
Madeline dropped it back onto the tray with a heavy thud. "Right. Well, I was just over there talking to Phoebe, and we were wondering if you could maybe move your things to a different table? Or, honestly, just eat outside."
Zoe's face paled. "What? Why?"
"Because you're making people uncomfortable." Madeline said simply, tilting her head. "The way you breathe when you chew is really loud, and frankly, nobody at this table wants to sit next to someone who looks like they scavenged their outfit from a dumpster, let alone look at that skin up close while trying to eat. It's repulsive, Zoe. The least you could do is hide out in a bathroom stall so the rest of us don't have to suffer through looking at that face."
A sudden, dead silence fell over the surrounding tables. Zoe sat there frozen, her lips parting as a sharp, humiliating sting hit her chest.
"Madeline shut up." Martin warned, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. He finally looked up, his eyes blazing, but she didn't look back at him. She kept her focus entirely on her prey.
"I'm not trying to be mean. I'm actually doing you a favor." Madeline continued, her tone conversational, like she was offering skincare advice. She leaned in a fraction closer, ensuring her voice carried across the aisle. "You've been trailing behind Martin for weeks like a desperate little dog, and it's getting really sad to watch, Zoe. He's just too polite to tell you that you smell, and that your little 'quirky girl' act is genuinely exhausting. Everyone is getting second hand embarrassment."
Madeline didn't wait for Zoe to pack up. With a look of casual boredom, she reached down, picked up Zoe's full cup of iced coffee, and poured it directly over her head. The dark, sticky liquid drenched Zoe's hair, soaked through her charity-bin cardigan, and left her gasping in pure shock as the entire cafeteria erupted into a stunned, jaw-dropped silence. "Aww, oops..." Madeline murmured, dropping the empty plastic cup onto the tray with a hollow clatter. "...looks like you needed a wash anyway."
Zoe's eyes welled with instant, hot tears. A girl at the next table gasped quietly. Zoe looked at Martin, then back at Madeline's unblinking, flawless face, before she pushed her chair back so violently it screeched against the tile. She grabbed her bag and bolted towards the exit, sobbing into her hand.
Martin sat there, completely paralyzed in a state of sheer disbelief. He stared up at Madeline, his jaw clenched so hard a muscle twitched violently in his cheek. He looked at her as if she were a total stranger. An insufferable monster. He knew she was angry and that they were both drowning in the bitter aftermath of their split, but this level of harshness was sickening. It made him furious, but under the rage, it made him feel hopeless. She was completely out of control.
"You are disgusting." Martin spat out, the words heavy with hatred.
He didn't give her the satisfaction of an argument. He stood up, shoving his chair back, and stormed off after Zoe, his hand instantly reaching out to catch the double doors before they slammed shut.
Madeline stood alone in the gap he left behind. The entire cafeteria was watching her, waiting for a breakdown or a smirk. She kept her chin up, her posture rigid and perfect, her face a mask of indifference. She cleared the space. She got rid of the girl. But as she stared at the empty doorway where Martin ran out to comfort someone else, a sharp, suffocating panic caught in her throat. The confidence in her chest completely collapsed, leaving behind a hollow, aching pressure that made her eyes burn.
October
The Halloween party at Stacey Chen's house was legendary. Everyone knew it, and everyone went. Even the kids who pretended they were too cool for high school parties showed up eventually, lurking in corners with red plastic cups and expressions of profound boredom.
Madeline arrived with Woojin at her side, dressed as a version of herself but more. More glitter and more skin. Her costume was a "fallen angel," complete with tattered wings and a halo that sat crookedly on her head.
Woojin was dressed as a vampire. Because of course he was. He spent forty-five minutes trying to convince Madeline to match with him, suggesting they go as a "dark immortal couple," which she vetoed with a smile so sharp it could cut glass.
"Let's get a drink..." Madeline said, tugging him towards the kitchen. "...I need something to take the edge off."
Madeline didn't need to take the edge off. She needed to find Martin. That's what the edge was, really, has always been. The gnawing, insistent itch that flared up whenever she was in the same room as him and not actively engaged in trying to destroy him.
She spotted him in the living room, surrounded by a group of people who were hanging on his every word. He had that effect on people. He was wearing a black t-shirt with some obscure band logo on it, ripped jeans, and a leather jacket that was probably his dad's. His hair was a mess. His smile was drunk and lopsided. He looked like every mistake she ever made and every one she wanted to make again.
Martin was in the middle of some story, gesturing animatedly, and the people around him were laughing. One of them, a girl Madeline recognized immediately, was touching his arm, her fingers lingering on the sleeve of his jacket.
Madeline's hand tightened around her cup. The plastic cracked, just slightly, sending a trickle of red juice down her fingers.
"We should dance!" She said abruptly, turning to Woojin. "I want to dance."
Woojin blinked. "But you said you hated dancing."
"I changed my mind."
Madeline grabbed his hand and pulled him towards the makeshift dance floor in the middle of the room. The music was loud, thumping in her chest like a second heartbeat. She pressed herself against Woojin and started grinding in a way that captivated him and in a way that she knew would draw attention.
She saw Martin's head turn. His eyes found her immediately. She noticed the brief flicker of something. Jealousy? Before his face smoothed into that infuriating mask of nonchalance.
The bass hit first, a low thrum that vibrated through the floorboards and up through the soles of Madeline's heels. The song shifted into something silkier, more dangerous. The opening notes of "Naughty Girl" by Beyoncé curled through the crowded living room like smoke.
This was her moment.
All night, Madeline watched Martin from across the room laughing with that Zoe girl who kept touching his arm like she had any right to. Watching him pretend he didn't see her or that she existed.
Well. She would make him see her now.
Martin smiled. And then he pulled out his phone and started filming her.
Madeline's blood went cold, then hot. The humiliation washed over her in waves, mingling with the anger, and she had to physically stop herself from marching over there and smashing the phone out of his hands.
"What's wrong?" Woojin asked, his voice fuzzy and distant. "You look upset."
"I'm fine." Madeline spat. She always said that. It was easier than explaining the truth.
They continued dancing. Woojin's movements were stiff and awkward. He swayed with her, his hands finding her waist.
Madeline didn't care. Woojin wasn't the one she was performing for anyway.
She moved against him,her hips tracing circles that had nothing to do with the beat and everything to do with the eyes she could feel burning into the back of her skull. She arched her back, letting her hair fall away from her face, letting the dim light catch the curve of her neck. Her hands found Woojin's shoulders, then slid down his chest, and she felt him stiffen under her touch.
"You're really into this tonight." He said, his voice strained.
"Shut up and dance."
Madeline turned around, pressing her back against his chest, and let her body move. Her hips rolled in slow, lazy figure-eights, her arms lifted above her head and her fingers splayed like she was reaching for something. The gold chain around her neck caught the light, glinting with every sway of her body.
She could feel him watching her. Martin. She could feel the weight of his gaze, impossible to ignore.
She pushed harder. Let her movements become more exaggerated and provocative. She dipped low, ran her hands down her thighs, rose back up with a sinuous roll of her spine that made someone in the crowd whistle. Her short dress that hugged every curve, rode up just slightly, and she didn't bother to fix it.
Woojin's hands tightened on her hips. His breathing was shallow, his body reacting in ways that were obvious and slightly pathetic. He was completely lost in her, drowning in the performance, unable to see that she wasn't dancing for him at all.
"Madeline..." He murmured against her ear, his voice thick. "...maybe we should-"
"Keep quiet." She twisted in his arms, facing him again, but her eyes drifted over his shoulder, searching for someone.
Martin looked like he wanted to kill someone. He looked like he wanted to slaughter Woojin. He looked like he wanted to cross the room and drag her away from him, and the thought sent a thrill through her.
She smiled at him. Evil.
Martin watched Madeline dance with Woojin and felt something in his chest crack open. It was that familiar feeling, the same one that was eating away at him for two years. He got good at ignoring it and burying it under layers of sarcasm and performative nonchalance.
But it was still there. It was always there.
He lowered his phone, the recording forgotten. The smile slipped from his face. He could feel Zoe pressing closer, her fingers tracing patterns on his arm.
"You okay?" Zoe asked. "You look kind of...intense."
"I'm fine." Martin said, the same lie Madeline told Woojin. It tasted bitter in his mouth.
He should let it go. He should walk away, find Juhoon, get drunk and forget about the whole thing. That was the smart play. That was what a reasonable person would do.
But Martin was never reasonable when it came to Madeline.
He got up abruptly and pushed through the crowd, leaving Zoe behind without a second glance. The music seemed to get louder as he approached the dance floor, the bass thrumming through his bones. He could see Madeline's hair, the curve of her spine and the way her body moved against Woojin's. She was trying to provoke him...
It was working.
"Hey..." Martin called, loud enough to be heard over the music. "...Mads!"
She turned around, her eyes widening just slightly before they shuttered. "Martin. What do you want?"
He held up his phone, the screen still recording. "Just wanted to get a good shot of you making a fool of yourself. Figured I'd post it to the school page later. You know, for posterity."
The words came out meaner than he intended. That was the problem with Martin. He never knew where the line was until he already crossed it.
Madeline's expression flickered. For just a moment, he saw something wounded under the perfection. And then it was gone, replaced by the cold mask she wore all the time.
"Go ahead..." Madeline said, her voice dripping with disdain. "...post it. That's all you're good for, isn't it? Taking cheap shots from the sidelines. Pathetic like you've always been."
Woojin stepped forward, his hand on Madeline arm. "Maybe you should back off, man. She's not interested."
Martin laughed, the sound harsh and hollow. "Oh, I know she's not interested. She only cares about herself. She collects people like trophies, uses them up like a tramp, and then tosses them aside. You're just the latest in a long line, Woojin. Enjoy it while it lasts."
He saw Madeline flinch and the flash of pain in her eyes. It was the same pain he felt when she laughed at him in the winter formal and told the whole school he meant nothing to her.
He wanted to hurt her back and he succeeded. So why did it feel like he was the one bleeding?
"I fucking hate you." Madeline said, her voice barely audible over the music.
Martin smiled, his expression razor-sharp. "I know. That's the only thing you've ever been honest about."
He turned around and walked away.
November
The English project was announced on a dreary November morning, a day where the sky hung low and gray and everyone's existential dread was at an all-time high.
"This is going to be the biggest project of the year..." Mrs. Peters announced, her voice bright with enthusiasm that no one else felt. "...you will be creating a detailed roadmap of your life for the next ten years. Career, relationships, personal goals. Everything. I want to see who you are and who you want to become!"
Madeline stared at the outline on the board and felt her stomach drop. A roadmap of her life? Ten years? Every step of her life was predetermined. Her parents already did this for her. She would go to Harvard, then law school, then a prestigious firm and finally, a husband who could further her career or, at the very least, not detract from it. Have two-point-five children, a house in the suburbs with a white picket fence and a golden retriever named something sensible like Max Verstappen or Sam.
It never occurred to her to ask what she truly wanted for herself.
Across the room, Martin was slouched in his chair, his feet propped up on the desk in front of him. He looked like he didn't sleep in days. He had dark circles under his eyes, hair sticking up at odd angles and an air of total disengagement from everything around him.
Mrs. Peters cleared her throat. "Mr. Edwards, perhaps you could contribute something more than disdain to this discussion."
Martin blinked, straightening slightly. "Oh, I'm contributing plenty. My contributions just happen to be in the form of healthy skepticism. Ten-year plans are for people who think they're in control of their lives. Spoiler alert: they're not."
There was a ripple of laughter through the room. Mrs. Peters' expression tightened.
"That's very philosophical for someone who still hasn't turned in last week's essay."
"Procrastination is a lifestyle choice, Mrs. P. You have to respect the commitment."
Madeline watched him, her pen frozen over her notebook. There was something different about the way he was acting today. The usual bravado felt more brittle. Like a mask that was starting to crack.
She heard from Juhoon that he got into a big fight with his dad about college. That his parents wanted him to apply to business schools, go the safe route and make something of himself. Martin told them that he was going to audition for a music program across the country, and they laughed in his face.
She wasn't supposed to care. He made sure of that. But the thought of him giving up his music and letting his family crush the only thing that made him him...made something twist in her chest.
She looked away before he could catch her staring.
December
The winter formal came and went. Madeline went with Woojin. Martin went alone. They avoided each other with the determination of two people who memorized each other's habits, tells and weak points.
They still managed to find each other anyway.
It happened in the parking lot afterwards, when everyone was drifting towards their cars and the night was crisp and cold and full of stars. Madeline broke away from Woojin to find some peace and quiet. She needed to get away from his desperate hands and his even more desperate questions about why she seemed so "distant" tonight. Instead, she found Martin sitting on the hood of his beat-up car, staring up at the sky.
Madeline knew she should have walked away.
"God, why do I always have to run into you of all people." She sighed and said instead, rolling her eyes.
"My parking spot mind you." Martin frowned.
Madeline stared at him, that infuriating smirk playing at the corners of his mouth. His tuxedo was rumpled, his bowtie undone and hanging loose around his neck. He looked like he got into a fight...and lost.
"This isn't your parking spot..." She said flatly. "...you don't have a parking spot. You drive a piece of junk that barely qualifies as a vehicle."
"Ouch. Right in the self-esteem."
Madeline rolled her eyes. "Anyways, your stinky girlfriend Zoe is looking for you." She said.
Martin turned around, his expression unreadable. "Your crybaby boyfriend is probably looking for you too."
"He's not my boyfriend. We're just...seeing each other."
"Riiiight. Seeing each other. That's what they're calling it these days."
"Why do you care?" The question slipped out before she could stop it. "Why do you always have to..." She stopped, shaking her head. "...never mind. It doesn't matter."
But Martin was already standing and walking towards her, and suddenly they were face to face, close enough that she could see the flecks of gold in his eyes and the faint scar above his eyebrow from the time they fell out of the treehouse together.
"I care because you're making a mistake..." Martin said, his voice low and intense. "...you've changed you know. And not in a good way."
Madeline laughed bitterly. "You're one to talk. You're always busy pretending you don't care that you're about to throw away everything you've ever wanted. That's not cute."
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"I heard about the audition from Juhoon. The music program. Your dad is trying to stop you, right?"
Something flickered in his eyes. Surprise, then wariness. "Why do you care? You hate me, remember?"
"I never said-"
"You said it at the party. You said you fucking hated me. Those were your exact words."
She opened her mouth to argue, to tell him that she was angry at his harsh words, that she never meant it and that of course she didn't hate him. But the words wouldn't come out. They were trapped somewhere in her throat, tangled up with all the other things she never said.
"I was angry..." Madeline said finally. "...I didn't mean it."
"Yes, you did. And that's okay, Mads. You're supposed to hate me. That was the deal, remember? The pact? But then sometimes I get scared that you mean it or you don't want anything to do with me anymore. You're a different person lately."
The word hit her like a physical blow. She looked around, suddenly paranoid, but the parking lot was empty except for them and the fading echoes of the party.
"Don't talk about that..." Madeline hissed. "...not here."
"Why not? Because it's the truth? Because we made a choice, and now we have to live with it?" Martin stepped closer, and she could feel the heat radiating off of him. "We broke up to make each other stronger. And look at us now. We're both miserable."
"I'm not miserable."
"Bullshit. You're dating a guy whose personality is basically just daddy's money, you're always with a different guy every second week because you're never truly fulfilled with each one, you're awfully mean to people, you're forced to be on a path that's been laid out for you since birth and you're so scared of disappointing your parents that you've forgotten how to be happy."
"How dare you stand there and pretend like you know me. You don't. You don't know anything!" Madeline frowned.
"I know you used to laugh. I mean really laugh, not that fake thing you do now. You used to be such a nice person and now you're insufferable and rude. What you did to Zoe was really uncalled for."
Madeline couldn't speak. The tears were coming, and she couldn't stop or hide them. Hearing this from Martin, the one boy whose opinion she really only ever cared about, made her want to crawl into a hole and never come out. For the first time ever, she felt embarrassed. Two years of pretending, two years of performing and two years of being the person everyone feared, detested or expected her to be, and her façade was all crumbling around her.
"Well she deserved it for being so close to you-"
"See this is exactly what I'm talking about Madeline. You seriously need to grow up!-"
"I need to grow up? Oh that's rich coming from you. You're a total hypocrite, Martin."
Martin's jaw tightened, the accusation hitting exactly where it hurt, but he looked at Madeline dead in the eyes. "Maybe I am. But I'd rather be a hypocrite than a malicious, insecure bitch." The words hung heavily in the freezing air, shocking them both. His chest heaved with a toxic mix of adrenaline and pure frustration. He hated how easily she crawled under his skin, and he hated himself for still caring enough to be this angry. Martin spun on his heel and stormed off into the building, his boots crunching violently against the gravel as he left her standing alone in the cold.
January
The new year arrived without fanfare. Madeline broke up with Woojin on New Year's Day, in a conversation that was polite and sterile and left her feeling nothing at all. He took it well, probably because he was already eyeing some grade 11 from the debate team.
"I applied to Harvard early for early action. Just waiting on a response from them..." Madeline told her mother at dinner that week. "...that's what you want, right?"
Her mother beamed. "Of course, sweetheart! I knew you'd make the right decision."
She didn't tell her mother about the application she secretly filled out to another university across the country. The one with the creative writing program she was researching late at night, when she was supposed to be studying. Columbia university was three thousand kilometres away from everything she ever knew.
And the one where Martin's music school was located. Even though they hadn't spoken for weeks, nearly a month, Madeline still couldn't stop thinking about him and what he said to her that night at the winter formal.
February
Valentine's Day was a disaster, as Valentine's Day always was at Crestwood High. The hallways were decorated with hearts and Cupids. The cafeteria served pink-frosted cupcakes. Everyone was either coupled up or desperate to be.
Madeline spent the day ignoring the whole thing. She texted a few polite messages to her exes: Woojin, the guy from lacrosse and the brief, ill-advised fling with the student teacher who transferred to another school and then she turned off her phone and retreated to the library.
That's where Martin found her.
"The party is downstairs you know. Everyone is trying to get laid. It's a hard watch."
Madeline looked up to find Martin standing there, shifting his weight nervously, his leather jacket smelling like the crisp February air. His ego was practically screaming at him to turn around and walk away, but the ache of missing her for the last two months finally overrode his pride.
"What do you want, Martin?" She asked, her voice sharp but lacking its usual venom.
"I wanted to apologize for what I called you at the winter formal. It was out of line, and...I'm sorry. Truly." He blurted out. He took a seat opposite her, his dark eyes intensely serious.
Madeline looked up from her book, surprised and caught off guard. She recovered her composure instantly. She leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms and tilting her head with that familiar, regal authority. "Wow. An actual apology from the great Martin Edwards." She murmured, a feisty, teasing spark returning to her eyes. "I mean, it's a start. But you called me a bitch. You can't just say 'sorry' and expect me to throw myself back into your arms." She leaned forward, a quirky, triumphant little smile playing on her lips. "You're going to have to actually earn it. And trust me, I am very expensive to please."
Martin let out a quiet, breathless laugh, the heavy tension in his chest finally cracking as he looked at her. "Right..." He said softly, a genuine smile tugging at his mouth. "I know. On that note, Juhoon is throwing a party at his place later. I would like for you to come with me."
"A party? I don't-"
"Don't say you don't want to. Juhoon said to tell you that he would really love for you to be there."
She wanted to argue, but then again she was drifting through the past few weeks like a ghost, going through the motions of her life without actually feeling any of it. She needed to get out a bit.
"Fine." She said. "I'll go."
Martin grinned, and for a moment, it was like they were younger again, like none of the years of hurt ever happened. "I'll pick you up at eight."
"Who said you were picking me up?"
"I did. Now shut up and finish your book. You're making me look like a bad influence."
Juhoon's party was exactly the chaotic, reckless thing Madeline needed. The house was packed with people, music blasting from speakers in every room, and the energy was infectious. She found herself laughing at something Juhoon said, and the sound of it surprised her.
Martin was across the room, talking to Zoe again, who was clearly still trying to make a move. He was polite but distant, his eyes flicking towards Madeline every few seconds.
Later, when the party was winding down and most people went home, she found Martin on the back porch, staring up at the stars.
"Hey..." She said, sliding onto the porch swing next to him. "...your girlfriend is looking for you."
"Not my girlfriend..." He didn't look at her, but she saw the corner of his mouth twitch. "...I'm not really into the whole relationship thing, you know?"
"Yeah, I've noticed..." Madeline bumped her shoulder against his. "...but I'm also pretty sure you're a lying liar who lies."
"Is that supposed to be an attack?"
"More of a fact." Madeline shrugged.
They sat in comfortable silence for a while, listening to the music drifting from inside. The night was cold and clear, and the stars were scattered across the sky like glitter.
"I got into the music program." Martin said finally.
Madeline's heart lurched. "Wow, look at you! That's amazing, Martin."
"Meh, it's nothing. I probably won't go anyway. My dad is quite clear about that."
"Why would you give it up?"
"Because..." He stopped, then shook his head. "...it's complicated."
"Then uncomplicate it."
He turned to look at Madeline, and his eyes were so full of things he wasn't saying that it hurt to look at him. "Because I can't leave you."
The words hung in the air.
"I don't..." She shook her head. "...what are you talking about?"
"I'm talking about the pact. The reason we broke up in the first place..." He laughed, humourless. "...we were so young, Mads. We thought we could separate for two years, become the people we wanted to be, and then just...reunite. Like a movie or something. And it was supposed to make us stronger. But all it did was change us and make us miserable."
"You're not supposed to talk about that."
"I'm tired of not talking about it! I can't pretend anymore." He reached for her hand, his fingers cold against hers. "I'm tired of watching you walk away, filming you and mocking you because it's the only way I know how to get your attention. I'm tired of being the guy who makes you hate him."
"Martin-"
"Let me finish." His voice was trembling, but he pushed on. "Even if I end up going to that school, playing music, failing or succeeding and letting whatever happens happen, I want you to know that if you ever need me...for anything...I'll drop everything. I mean it, Mads. I'll drop it all."
"You can't just say things like that." Madeline frowned.
"Why not? It's the truth."
The music from inside faded into something slower. She leaned into him, her head on his shoulder, and let herself imagine what it would be like if things were different.
"What if we didn't have to wait?" She whispered.
"What?"
"What if we just...stopped pretending? Right now. And decided to be together and everyone else could go to hell?"
He was quiet for a long moment. Then he laughed softly. "Is that what you want?"
"Yes. No. I don't know." Madeline pulled back, feeling frustrated. "I have this application to Columbia. It's near where your school is. I applied without telling anyone because I didn't think I'd get in, but then I did, and now I don't know what to do."
Martin stared at her. "You got into a school near me?"
"I know it's stupid. We haven't even...said the words or made it official or whatever. But I've been so scared, Martin. I've been so scared of losing you again, and I thought if I went somewhere new and close to you, maybe we could-"
Martin kissed her before she could finish.
It wasn't a gentle kiss. It was desperate, hungry and filled with two years of longing, and when she kissed him back, she felt something in her chest unlock.
He let out a growl against her mouth, his hands coming up to frame her face, his thumbs digging into her jaw to hold her still. Their breathing turned into ragged gasps as they fought for air without wanting to break the contact. He shifted, his arm locking around her waist to pull her against his chest, lifting her slightly just to feel her closer. Madeline was the only air he wanted.
"I love you..." Martin muttered against her lips, the words breathless as he dragged his mouth across her jaw then neck, his lips hot and damp against her skin before anchoring back to her mouth. "...I've always loved you Madeline. I never stopped."
Madeline pulled back slightly, her eyes searching his face. She could see the vulnerability there, the way he laid himself bare for her. But instead of saying the words back and giving him what he so clearly wanted, she tilted her head and let a slow, wicked smile spread across her face.
"That's adorable." Madeline said, her voice dripping with mock sweetness. "Really, Martin. Very cute. I'm sure you've been practicing that speech all week."
"Mads-"
"You know, for someone who's spent the last two years filming me like I'm a zoo animal and making my life a living hell, you sure do have a lot of nerve sitting here and telling me you love me." She reached up and patted his cheek condescendingly. "I mean, really. The audacity."
Martin stared at her, his expression caught between hope and frustration. "You don't mean that."
"I don't?" She laughed teasingly. "I'm just saying, if this is your idea of a grand romantic gesture, you might want to work on your delivery. The whole 'I've been tormenting you for two years because I love you' thing is a little...on the nose, don't you think?"
"Mads, I'm being serious."
"And I'm being serious too." Her smile softened, just barely, and she reached up to touch his face. "I think it's really, really sweet that you love me. But if you think I'm just going to fall into your arms and say it back after everything you've put me through-"
"Then what do you want me to do?"
She leaned in, her lips brushing against his ear. "Grovel. And maybe stop filming me like I'm a nature documentary. That would be a good start."
"Madeline-"
"Shut up and kiss me again, Edwards."
March
For a few weeks, everything was perfect. Their birthdays, which were two days apart, were celebrated with their closest friends and families. They were careful at school. Nothing too obvious, no PDA that would raise eyebrows. But everyone knew something changed. Madeline was happier, a little less meaner. Martin was softer. Somehow, his grades improved.
They spent their afternoons in the treehouse, the same one they built as kids, making plans for the future together.
"You're really going to do it?" Martin asked, his head on her lap as she played with his hair.
"I'm going to do it..." Madeline smiled down at him. "...I'm going to go to Columbia. I don't care what my mom says."
He reached up and tangled his fingers with hers. "You know I love you, right?"
"I know." She kissed his forehead.
It was the happiest Madeline ever was. And she should have known it wouldn't last.
April
Her parents found the acceptance letter.
Madeline should have known something was wrong the moment she walked through that door. She hid it in her desk drawer, behind the yearbooks and the old photographs. Her mother was looking for a checkbook. It was a coincidence, an accident and a stupid, simple mistake that shattered everything.
"Columbia?" Her mother's voice was ice. "What is this?"
Madeline stood in the doorway of the study, her heart pounding so hard she could barely hear. "It's college. I applied and I got in."
"Columbia is three thousand kilometres away! We've been planning for Harvard since you were twelve Madeline. What is wrong with you?!"
"Nothing's wrong with me!" She was shaking, but she forced her voice to stay steady. "This is what I want. It's what I've always wanted mom, I just didn't-"
"What you want?" Madeline's mother repeated, the words dripping with disdain. "Do you think I wanted to give up my career to raise you? Do you think I wanted to spend eighteen years of my life making sure you had every opportunity, every advantage and every single thing you could possibly need to succeed?? I sacrificed everything for you, Madeline. Everything. And this is how you repay me?"
"I didn't ask you to sacrifice anything."
"You didn't have to. That's what mothers do. We sacrifice. We give. We pour ourselves into our children so they can have the lives we never could. And you want to throw it all away for what? A boy? A writing degree that won't get you a job? A fantasy?!"
"This isn't about a boy! This is about me!"
"Don't get smart with me little girl. I know he's the one filling your head with these ridiculous ideas! He's a distraction. He has no direction! He's going to ruin your future if you let him." Her mother stepped closer, her eyes blazing. "You are going to Harvard. You are going to be a lawyer. You are not going to throw everything away for some grungy, unkempt musician who can't even keep his DAMN IQ up."
"Don't talk about him like that. You don't know him-" Madeline's eyes were stinging with tears now.
The slap came out of nowhere.
It was fast and brutal, the sound of it cracking through the study like a gunshot. Madeline's head snapped to the side, and she felt the sting bloom across her cheek. Her hand flew to her face, pressing against the skin, and she could feel the heat of the impact radiating through her fingers.
Her mother was standing there, breathing hard, her hand still raised, her eyes wild with madness.
"Don't you ever talk back to me." Her mother said, her voice low and trembling.
Madeline stared at her. The tears were coming, but she refused to let them fall. She refused to give her mother that satisfaction.
"You just just hit me." Madeline said, her voice barely above a whisper.
"Because you needed to be taught a lesson. This isn't a game, Madeline. This is your life. And if you throw it away, you will regret it. You will spend every single day of your life regretting it, just like I did."
"I'm not you!" Madeline's voice was shaking, but she forced the words out. "I'm not going to end up BITTER like you."
"You're going to be nothing if you keep this up. One day you're going to look back on this moment and wish you listened to me." Madeline's mother said.
"No. I won't. I'm gonna wish I stood up to you sooner."
The silence that followed was deafening. They stood there, mother and daughter, facing each other across the study, the space between them feeling like an ocean.
"Get the hell out." Her mother demanded, her voice cold. "Get out of my sight."
Madeline didn't move. She stood there, her hand still pressed to her burning cheek.
"You can't control me..." She said quietly. "...not anymore, mom. I'm not a child. I'm not your puppet. I'm not your second chance at a life you threw away. I am my own person, and I'm going to make my own choices, and there's nothing you can do to stop me."
"Fine. But if you walk out that door, you're on your own. No money. No support. No family. You understand? You will be nothing."
Madeline was in disbelief. She wanted to fight her mom. She wanted to scream and rage and refuse to back down. But the pressure was too immense. She was raised to please them, to be the perfect daughter, and the thought of disappointing them was a weight she couldn't bear. Ever.
So she did what she always did when it came to them. She gave in.
May
Madeline couldn't tell Martin. She tried to, so many times. She would open her mouth to say the words, and then she would look at his face, at the hope shining in his eyes, and the words would die in her throat.
How could she tell him that she failed? That she was too weak to stand up to her parents? That she was going to Harvard after all, three thousand kilometres away from him and everything she wanted?
She couldn't. So she decided not to tell him at all. She would leave quietly, slip away in the chaos of graduation, and let him think she just...vanished. It was cowardly and cruel. But it was the only way she could think of to protect him.
He would get over her eventually. She had to believe that.
June - Graduation Day 🎊🎓
The ceremony was interminable. Speeches and names and the rustle of caps and gowns. Madeline sat in her assigned seat, staring straight ahead, not daring to look at Martin in the row behind her. She could feel his gaze on the back of her neck, warm and questioning.
She was avoiding him for weeks. He tried to talk to her, ask what was wrong, and she brushed him off every time. She could see the hurt in his eyes, the confusion, and it made her chest ache.
After the ceremony, everything was chaos. Families swarming, cameras flashing, people crying, laughing and hugging. Madeline took one last look around the gymnasium at the school she hated, the people she pretended to love, the boy she loved so much it hurt. And then she slipped out the side door.
She drove to the airport in a daze. Her parents were meeting her there. The flight was at six. She had three hours to get on a plane and leave everything behind.
Martin searched for her everywhere. The gym, the parking lot and the treehouse. She wasn't at any of them. His phone buzzed with calls and texts, all from people who wanted to congratulate him, and he ignored every single one. His cap was somewhere in the crowd, lost in the sea of black and gold. His gown was unzipped, hanging open over his wrinkled button-down. His heart was pounding so hard he could feel it in his throat.
Martin pulled out his phone, his fingers shaking as he typed out a text.
Where are you? I've been looking everywhere. Text me back okay.
The message delivered. He waited. One minute. Two. Three.
No reply.
He tried calling but it went straight to voicemail.
"Hey, it's me..." He said, his voice strained. "...I don't know where you are, but I need to see you. I need to talk to you. Please. Just...call me back. Please."
He hung up and stared at the screen, willing it to light up with her name. Nothing.
Martin's mind was racing. What if something happened? What if her parents took her? What if she changed her mind about everything? What if she decided that he wasn't worth it after all, that the whole plan was a mistake?
"Hey, man." Juhoon found him outside of the gym, looking worried. "What's going on? Are you okay? You look like you've seen a ghost."
"Have you seen Mads?"
"She's not here. I think she already left." Juhoon answered.
"Left to where?"
"I don't know. Her parents weren't at the ceremony. They're probably still upset with her after the fight..." Juhoon hesitated. "...or maybe they took her to the airport. She said she's supposed to fly out today."
Martin's blood went cold. "Wait wait wait wait wait, what fight? What airport?"
"I don't know. She was rambling on about a fight with her mom and that she threatened to cut her off completely if she didn't accept Harvard's offer for an early start. She's leaving today." Juhoon explained.
Martin felt like he was punched in the gut. "She didn't tell me. She didn't say anything."
"She probably couldn't. You know how her mom is. That woman is..." Juhoon stopped, shaking his head. "...look, man, I'm sorry. I know this is a lot. But if you want to catch her, you need to go now. Her flight is at six."
Martin checked his watch. 5:15 pm.
"Oh my God." He was already running towards his car, his legs pumping and lungs burning. "I have to get there. I have to stop her."
"Martin, wait!" Juhoon was running after him. "You can't drive. You're too freaked out. Let me take you."
"I don't have time-"
"Let me drive." Juhoon grabbed his arm, pulling him back. "Get in the car. Now."
Martin didn't argue. He yanked open the passenger door of his beat-up car and threw himself inside. Juhoon was in the driver's seat a second later, the engine roaring to life.
"Buckle up." Juhoon said, and then they were flying.
✈︎
The drive to the airport was a blur. Martin stared out the window, his heart pounding. The city sped past him. It all felt surreal, like he was watching himself from outside his own body.
"How long has she known?" Martin asked, his voice strained.
Juhoon's hands tightened on the steering wheel. "I don't know. I only heard about it yesterday. I assumed you knew too. But she's been acting weird for weeks, right? Avoiding you?"
Martin thought back to the past few weeks. The way she pulled away from his touch, the way she stopped meeting his eyes and the way she made excuses to leave early to go home and be anywhere but with him.
"She didn't want me to get hurt." He said, the realization hitting him.
"Or she was scared of telling you and what you would say."
"Why would she be though?" Martin laughed. "I love her. I would follow her anywhere. I'd give up everything for her. My music. My whole stupid life. Everything."
"That's exactly what she was afraid of. She didn't want you to make that choice and give up your dream for her."
"It's not a choice though Juhoon! It never was. She's my dream. She has always been my dream. We grew up together. You know how much I care for her."
Juhoon was quiet for a moment. Then he said, his voice soft, "I know. That's why we're going to catch her."
✈︎
The airport was crowded, a sea of anonymous faces. Martin pushed through the crowds, ignoring the angry shouts and muttered curses. He had to find her. He had to stop her.
He spotted her in the security line, her hair a beacon in the chaos. She was wearing a simple sundress, a little bit of makeup and she looked so exhausted that it broke his heart.
"Madeline!"
She didn't turn around. The noise of the terminal was too loud with overwhelming chaos.
"Mads!" He shouted again, louder this time.
She turned around, her eyes widening. "Martin?? How did you-"
"You can't leave." He reached her, ignoring the stares from the people around them. "You can't just go without saying anything."
"I couldn't. I tried to tell you, but I couldn't." Her voice was barely above a whisper.
"Tell me what? That you're going to Harvard? That you're leaving me?"
She flinched. "It's not that simple."
"The hell it isn't." He grabbed her hands, holding them tight. "Come with me. We'll figure it out. We'll get married, or I'll move, or whatever it takes. Just don't leave me. Please."
Madeline laughed."You make it sound so easy. You think I chose this? I wanted to leave you behind?"
"Of course you didn't choose this. But we can fight together. Let me help you, Madeline. We can figure this out together."
"The line is moving, Martin." She looked at the TSA agent, who was motioning her forward. "I have to go."
"Then I'll come with you."
"What? That's insane! You have your own life and your own plans."
"Forget my plans! Forget everything. I'll come with you. We'll go to Harvard together. I'll find a job. I'll do whatever it takes. I don't care about any of it if you're not there."
"Martin, listen to me." She grabbed his face, forcing him to look at her. "You are not going to throw your life away for me and give up your music. And you certainly aren't going to follow me across the country and watch yourself become something you don't want to be. I won't let you."
"I can't let you go Madeline! I can't be happy without you." Martin heaved, feeling hopeless.
"Quit being so stubborn and crazy! You're being stupid and I love you so much it hurts."
"Then stay. Stay with me."
"I can't." She pulled her hands away. "I can't, Martin. My parents...they're going to cut me off if I don't do this. I can't support myself-"
"Then we'll figure it out."
"Not this time." She shook her head, her voice breaking. "I have to go. It's the only way."
The line moved forward. It was her turn. The TSA agent was waiting, her expression bored and impatient.
"Please." Martin said, his voice raw. "Please don't do this."
She reached out, touching his face one last time. "I love you." She said. "I always will."
And then she was gone, disappearing through the security checkpoint, leaving him alone in the crowded airport with nothing but the echo of her voice.
Martin stood there for a long time. People flowed around him, a river of strangers, and he was frozen in the middle, unable to move.
Juhoon appeared at his side. "Martin? What happened?"
"She's gone." His voice was hollow and empty.
Juhoon put a hand on his shoulder. "I'm sorry. I really am."
Martin didn't answer. He was staring at the security checkpoint, at the door she walked through and at the last place he saw her.
"I gave up my audition." He said quietly. "The music program. I told them I wasn't going."
"What? Martin, why would you do that?"
"Because I thought...there was still a chance. That we could be together. That all of it meant something." Martin shook his head. "It doesn't matter anymore."
Martin walked away, his shoulders hunched. He pulled out his phone. He stared at her contact photo. It was a picture of her laughing, her head thrown back, and felt his heart shatter all over again.
I love you... he typed. I'll always love you.
He pressed send, not expecting a reply.
The phone buzzed a moment later. He looked down, his heart in his throat.
1 new message
Mads ❤️
I love you. Always. I'm sorry Martin.
He stared at the words for a long time. Then he turned off his phone and shoved it back in his pocket.
Outside, a plane lifted off into the darkening sky. Martin watched it go, knowing that somewhere on that plane was the girl he loved.
And knowing that he might never see her again.
Three Months Later
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, a plain white envelope with no return address. Martin almost threw it away, assuming it was another bill or another rejection from a school he never wanted to attend.
But something made him open it.
Inside was a single sheet of paper, covered in familiar handwriting.
Dear Martin,
I don't know if you'll ever read this, but I need you to know the truth.
I didn't leave because I wanted to. I left because I was scared. Scared of disappointing my parents and failing. I was scared that if I stayed, I'd ruin you the way I ruined everything else.
But being here, at Harvard, doing everything they wanted me to do, I realised I'm not living. I'm just existing. And I've realized that the only time I was ever really alive was when I was with you.
I'm going to leave. I'm going to transfer to Columbia, the school I told you about. I've already been accepted. I know it's crazy and risky. But I'd rather be crazy and happy than safe and miserable.
I don't know if you still want me. I don't know if you've moved on. But I had to tell you the truth. I had to tell you that I'm coming back.
I love you, Martin. I always have.
Yours,
Madeline ᥫ᭡
Martin read the letter three times. And then he laughed, the sound echoing off the walls of his empty apartment.
"Crazy." He muttered, shaking his head. "She's absolutely crazy."
He grabbed his phone and started typing.
One Week Later
The airport was crowded, just like it was before. But this time, Martin wasn't chasing after someone. He was waiting. For about an hour, maybe longer. He lost track of time somewhere between the third cup of coffee and the fifth time he checked his phone for updates of her flight.
He saw her before she saw him. She was wearing the same sundress and the same tired but hopeful expression. She looked exhausted, like she never slept in days.
"Madeline!" Martin called out.
When she saw him, her face broke into a smile as bright as the sun. "Martin!"
Martin crossed the distance between them in three quick strides, pulling her into his arms. She crashed into him, her body colliding with his, and he wrapped his arms around her so tightly he was probably cutting off her circulation. She smelled like lavender and something underneath that was just her.
"You came." Madeline whispered into his chest.
"I told you I would." Martin's voice was thick, choked with emotion.
She pulled back, her eyes red-rimmed. She looked exhausted and so beautiful.
"Well?" Madeline started, tilting her chin up in that defiant way he missed so much. "Did you miss me? Of course you did. You probably spent every single day crying into your pillow, didn't you?"
Martin laughed. "Something like that."
"Good. As you should." She reached up and cupped his face, her thumb tracing the line of his jaw. "And you better not have been flirting with anyone else while I was gone. I'll be very upset if I find out you've been documenting other girls like they're some kind of exhibit."
"Only you, Mads. Only ever you."
In this economy??😭 Martin please.
Written by: Bunny_JHS ©
𝑇ℎ𝑎𝑛𝑘 𝑢, 𝑛𝑒𝑥𝑡 / 𝐴𝑓𝑡𝑒𝑟 𝑦𝑜𝑢 | 𝑀𝑎𝑟𝑡𝑖𝑛
: ̗̀➛ A CORTIS Martin oneshot.
: ̗̀➛ Fluff + a little bit of angst
: ̗̀➛ Regina George × Rodrick Heffley dynamic 🌝 ALSO MY FAVOURITE SHIP URGH. Bless the person who came up with it.❤️
: ̗̀➛ Do not plagiarise my works or post them on other sites without my permission. You will get blocked and reported immediately.
: ̗̀➛ Thank you so much for reading ❤️🐇
: ̗̀➛ Songs
•Thank u, next - Ariana Grande
•Into you - Ariana Grande
•Boyfriend - Ariana Grande
•Bang Bang - Jessie J, Ariana Grande & N*cki M*naj
•Overflow - Evan/Heeseung
•Go away - Weezer
•Lovers - Anna of the north
•Birds of a feather - Billie Eilish
•Open arms - SZA ft Travis Scott
•We don't talk anymore - Charlie Puth ft Selena Gomez
•Attention - Charlie Puth
•Genie in a bottle - Christina Aguilera
•Friends - Chase Atlantic
•Nothin on you - B.o.B ft Bruno Mars
•Dirty little secret - The All American Rejects
•Freaks - Surf Curse
•Girlfriend - Avril Lavigne
•Obsessed - Mariah Carey
•Toxic - Britney Spears
•Hollaback girl - Gwen Stefani
•Long way 2 go - Cassie
•Naught girl - Beyoncè
•Everybody here wants you - Jeff Buckley
•Emo boy - Ayisha Erotica
•Maneater - Nelly Furtado
•Cupid's chokehold/ Breakfast in America - Gym Class Heroes
•LoveGame - Lady Gaga
•Paparazzi - Lady Gaga
: ̗̀➛ Tags (open but please follow and let me know if you would like to be part of the list✨): @vanishingnana @quantumspawntraitor @loveliezzzlinaa22 @delicate-lotus
Prologue
The first time Martin Edwards saw Madeline Goldman cry, they were seven years old, and she scraped her knee on the paving during recess. He gave her his favorite Pokémon card: a holographic Charizard, to make her stop. She sniffled, clutched it to her chest like it was made of gold, and promised to marry him someday.
The last time Martin Edwards saw Madeline Goldman cry was three weeks ago, when she stood in the airport security line with her back to him, her shoulders shaking so violently he thought she might shatter into a million pieces.
End Prologue
September
The first day of senior year arrived with oppressive humidity that made the halls of Crestwood High smell like dread and cheap deodorant. Martin slumped against his locker, watching the chaos unfold with the aloof amusement of a nature documentary narrator. Freshmen scattered like startled deer, juniors strutted like they already conquered the world and seniors moved with the sluggish weight of people who knew the end was coming but weren't quite sure how to feel about it.
And then there was Madeline.
The doors swung open and there she was. She wept through the corridor like she owned it. Because she did. Her hair blew perfectly in the imaginary wind. She cut it shorter over the summer, just above her collarbones, and the style suited her so well that it made Martin's chest ache. Her blazer was tailored to fit like a second skin. Her Victoria's Secret kitten heels were so pristine they practically glowed. A gold chain rested on her collarbone. Her makeup was minimal but still captivating: a swipe of mascara and a hint of gloss. She moved with the precision of a general surveying her troops, nodding at the right people and dismissing others with a glance so cutting it could draw blood.
She looked like she just stepped out of a magazine. Out of his dreams. She moved through the crowd like a queen through her court, and the crowd parted for her. It wasn't conscious. No one stepped aside because they were told to. They just...did. There was something magnetic about Madeline, something that made people want to be near her or get out of her way. There was no in-between.
Martin felt his jaw tighten. His fingers curled around the strap of his worn-out backpack, his knuckles whitening.
"Easy, tiger." Juhoon, his best friend and bandmate, murmured, appearing at his side.
"I'm fine." Martin said, his voice flat.
"You're doing the thing where your eye twitches."
"I don't have a thing."
"Bro, you're literally doing it right now. It's like a full-body spasm that happens whenever she walks into a room. The doctors call it Mad-itis. Very rare. Very tragic."
Martin shoved Juhoon. His gaze was already drifting back to Madeline, who stopped to talk to some guy Martin has never seen before. He was tall, a brunette and perfect, making Martin's teeth ache. The guy was laughing at something she said, his hand resting on her arm like he had any right to touch her.
Something hot and ugly coiled in Martin's chest. He recognized the feeling immediately. It was the same one that took up permanent residence in his ribcage since grade 10, when everything fell apart.
"Ahh...Woojin..." Juhoon said, following his gaze. "...the guy who transferred from some private school back in grade 9. His dad is a businessman or something. Very rich."
"Couldn't care less." Martin replied.
"Figured that's why you look like you're about to commit a homicide."
Martin forced himself to look away. To breathe and remember that Madeline Goldman was no longer his concern. She made that abundantly clear when she laughed in his face during the winter formal of grade 11, surrounded by her flock of sycophants, and announced to everyone within earshot that she "outgrew" him.
The memory still burned. It was meant to hurt him in every way.
"She's dating him..." Juhoon added, almost as an afterthought. "...already. First day of school and she's already got a new one. That's gotta be a record, even for her."
Martin's blood boiled. He felt it in his fingers, his toes and the space behind his eyes. His face remained impassive. It was a skill he perfected over the past two years. The art of feeling nothing, or at least looking like he felt nothing.
"Good for her." He said, and walked away before Juhoon could see the jealousy in his eyes.
Madeline knew exactly where Martin was standing. She always knew. It was like some kind of sixth sense, a radar that pinged whenever he was within fifty metres. She could feel the weight of his gaze on her skin even when she wasn't looking at him.
Madeline kept her attention fixed on Woojin, who was saying something about his father's yacht and the summer he spent in the Hamptons. He was quite handsome and stylish in a unique way. His smile was cute. His manners were impeccable. His future was already mapped out. He was set to go to Yale, then med school, then land himself a nice, high-paying job and a wife who would look perfect on his arm at charity galas.
Madeline could be that wife. She trained for it her whole life.
"Madeline? Everything okay?" Woojin's hand was on her arm, his brows furrowed with concern. "You seem...distracted."
"I'm fine." She said, her voice smooth as glass. "Just thinking about all the work we have this year."
"Don't worry about it. I'll help you with anything you need."
She smiled at him, a perfect smile that didn't quite reach her eyes. "You're sweet."
From across the hallway, she heard a low, sarcastic laugh. She didn't have to turn around to know it was Martin. She could picture him perfectly, leaning against the lockers with that insufferable smirk, his arms crossed and eyes glinting with mockery. He was probably filming her on his phone. He did that sometimes, recording her like she was some kind of zoo animal, a specimen to be studied and ridiculed.
It made her want to scream.
Instead, she laughed loudly, and leaned closer to Woojin. "Tell me more about the Hamptons..." She said. "...I've always wanted to go."
Madeline didn't look back. She never looked back.
⏳
The cafeteria was loud, but the moment Madeline approached the table, the volume around Martin's usual spot dropped.
Martin didn't look up immediately, but his shoulders visibly tensed. He knew her footsteps and that stupid, fruity scent of hers. For months, they the two were operating in this suffocating, silent warfare, feeling miserable without each other and treating their breakup like a wound they refused to let heal. But seeing Zoe leaning so close to Martin and laughing at something on his phone, pushed Madeline past her limit.
Zoe noticed her first. She blinked, her smile faltering slightly under Madeline's icy gaze. "Oh, hey Madeline."
Madeline didn't answer. She didn't even look Zoe in the eye. Instead, she reached down, picked up Zoe's half-eaten sandwich from her plate, and held it up by the crust with two fingers, inspecting it with deep disgust.
"Is this yours?" Madeline asked, her voice soft, dripping with a terrifyingly sweet concern.
"Um, yeah?" Zoe said, shifting uncomfortably.
Madeline dropped it back onto the tray with a heavy thud. "Right. Well, I was just over there talking to Phoebe, and we were wondering if you could maybe move your things to a different table? Or, honestly, just eat outside."
Zoe's face paled. "What? Why?"
"Because you're making people uncomfortable." Madeline said simply, tilting her head. "The way you breathe when you chew is really loud, and frankly, nobody at this table wants to sit next to someone who looks like they scavenged their outfit from a dumpster, let alone look at that skin up close while trying to eat. It's repulsive, Zoe. The least you could do is hide out in a bathroom stall so the rest of us don't have to suffer through looking at that face."
A sudden, dead silence fell over the surrounding tables. Zoe sat there frozen, her lips parting as a sharp, humiliating sting hit her chest.
"Madeline shut up." Martin warned, his voice a low, dangerous rumble. He finally looked up, his eyes blazing, but she didn't look back at him. She kept her focus entirely on her prey.
"I'm not trying to be mean. I'm actually doing you a favor." Madeline continued, her tone conversational, like she was offering skincare advice. She leaned in a fraction closer, ensuring her voice carried across the aisle. "You've been trailing behind Martin for weeks like a desperate little dog, and it's getting really sad to watch, Zoe. He's just too polite to tell you that you smell, and that your little 'quirky girl' act is genuinely exhausting. Everyone is getting second hand embarrassment."
Madeline didn't wait for Zoe to pack up. With a look of casual boredom, she reached down, picked up Zoe's full cup of iced coffee, and poured it directly over her head. The dark, sticky liquid drenched Zoe's hair, soaked through her charity-bin cardigan, and left her gasping in pure shock as the entire cafeteria erupted into a stunned, jaw-dropped silence. "Aww, oops..." Madeline murmured, dropping the empty plastic cup onto the tray with a hollow clatter. "...looks like you needed a wash anyway."
Zoe's eyes welled with instant, hot tears. A girl at the next table gasped quietly. Zoe looked at Martin, then back at Madeline's unblinking, flawless face, before she pushed her chair back so violently it screeched against the tile. She grabbed her bag and bolted towards the exit, sobbing into her hand.
Martin sat there, completely paralyzed in a state of sheer disbelief. He stared up at Madeline, his jaw clenched so hard a muscle twitched violently in his cheek. He looked at her as if she were a total stranger. An insufferable monster. He knew she was angry and that they were both drowning in the bitter aftermath of their split, but this level of harshness was sickening. It made him furious, but under the rage, it made him feel hopeless. She was completely out of control.
"You are disgusting." Martin spat out, the words heavy with hatred.
He didn't give her the satisfaction of an argument. He stood up, shoving his chair back, and stormed off after Zoe, his hand instantly reaching out to catch the double doors before they slammed shut.
Madeline stood alone in the gap he left behind. The entire cafeteria was watching her, waiting for a breakdown or a smirk. She kept her chin up, her posture rigid and perfect, her face a mask of indifference. She cleared the space. She got rid of the girl. But as she stared at the empty doorway where Martin ran out to comfort someone else, a sharp, suffocating panic caught in her throat. The confidence in her chest completely collapsed, leaving behind a hollow, aching pressure that made her eyes burn.
October
The Halloween party at Stacey Chen's house was legendary. Everyone knew it, and everyone went. Even the kids who pretended they were too cool for high school parties showed up eventually, lurking in corners with red plastic cups and expressions of profound boredom.
Madeline arrived with Woojin at her side, dressed as a version of herself but more. More glitter and more skin. Her costume was a "fallen angel," complete with tattered wings and a halo that sat crookedly on her head.
Woojin was dressed as a vampire. Because of course he was. He spent forty-five minutes trying to convince Madeline to match with him, suggesting they go as a "dark immortal couple," which she vetoed with a smile so sharp it could cut glass.
"Let's get a drink..." Madeline said, tugging him towards the kitchen. "...I need something to take the edge off."
Madeline didn't need to take the edge off. She needed to find Martin. That's what the edge was, really, has always been. The gnawing, insistent itch that flared up whenever she was in the same room as him and not actively engaged in trying to destroy him.
She spotted him in the living room, surrounded by a group of people who were hanging on his every word. He had that effect on people. He was wearing a black t-shirt with some obscure band logo on it, ripped jeans, and a leather jacket that was probably his dad's. His hair was a mess. His smile was drunk and lopsided. He looked like every mistake she ever made and every one she wanted to make again.
Martin was in the middle of some story, gesturing animatedly, and the people around him were laughing. One of them, a girl Madeline recognized immediately, was touching his arm, her fingers lingering on the sleeve of his jacket.
Madeline's hand tightened around her cup. The plastic cracked, just slightly, sending a trickle of red juice down her fingers.
"We should dance!" She said abruptly, turning to Woojin. "I want to dance."
Woojin blinked. "But you said you hated dancing."
"I changed my mind."
Madeline grabbed his hand and pulled him towards the makeshift dance floor in the middle of the room. The music was loud, thumping in her chest like a second heartbeat. She pressed herself against Woojin and started grinding in a way that captivated him and in a way that she knew would draw attention.
She saw Martin's head turn. His eyes found her immediately. She noticed the brief flicker of something. Jealousy? Before his face smoothed into that infuriating mask of nonchalance.
The bass hit first, a low thrum that vibrated through the floorboards and up through the soles of Madeline's heels. The song shifted into something silkier, more dangerous. The opening notes of "Naughty Girl" by Beyoncé curled through the crowded living room like smoke.
This was her moment.
All night, Madeline watched Martin from across the room laughing with that Zoe girl who kept touching his arm like she had any right to. Watching him pretend he didn't see her or that she existed.
Well. She would make him see her now.
Martin smiled. And then he pulled out his phone and started filming her.
Madeline's blood went cold, then hot. The humiliation washed over her in waves, mingling with the anger, and she had to physically stop herself from marching over there and smashing the phone out of his hands.
"What's wrong?" Woojin asked, his voice fuzzy and distant. "You look upset."
"I'm fine." Madeline spat. She always said that. It was easier than explaining the truth.
They continued dancing. Woojin's movements were stiff and awkward. He swayed with her, his hands finding her waist.
Madeline didn't care. Woojin wasn't the one she was performing for anyway.
She moved against him,her hips tracing circles that had nothing to do with the beat and everything to do with the eyes she could feel burning into the back of her skull. She arched her back, letting her hair fall away from her face, letting the dim light catch the curve of her neck. Her hands found Woojin's shoulders, then slid down his chest, and she felt him stiffen under her touch.
"You're really into this tonight." He said, his voice strained.
"Shut up and dance."
Madeline turned around, pressing her back against his chest, and let her body move. Her hips rolled in slow, lazy figure-eights, her arms lifted above her head and her fingers splayed like she was reaching for something. The gold chain around her neck caught the light, glinting with every sway of her body.
She could feel him watching her. Martin. She could feel the weight of his gaze, impossible to ignore.
She pushed harder. Let her movements become more exaggerated and provocative. She dipped low, ran her hands down her thighs, rose back up with a sinuous roll of her spine that made someone in the crowd whistle. Her short dress that hugged every curve, rode up just slightly, and she didn't bother to fix it.
Woojin's hands tightened on her hips. His breathing was shallow, his body reacting in ways that were obvious and slightly pathetic. He was completely lost in her, drowning in the performance, unable to see that she wasn't dancing for him at all.
"Madeline..." He murmured against her ear, his voice thick. "...maybe we should-"
"Keep quiet." She twisted in his arms, facing him again, but her eyes drifted over his shoulder, searching for someone.
Martin looked like he wanted to kill someone. He looked like he wanted to slaughter Woojin. He looked like he wanted to cross the room and drag her away from him, and the thought sent a thrill through her.
She smiled at him. Evil.
Martin watched Madeline dance with Woojin and felt something in his chest crack open. It was that familiar feeling, the same one that was eating away at him for two years. He got good at ignoring it and burying it under layers of sarcasm and performative nonchalance.
But it was still there. It was always there.
He lowered his phone, the recording forgotten. The smile slipped from his face. He could feel Zoe pressing closer, her fingers tracing patterns on his arm.
"You okay?" Zoe asked. "You look kind of...intense."
"I'm fine." Martin said, the same lie Madeline told Woojin. It tasted bitter in his mouth.
He should let it go. He should walk away, find Juhoon, get drunk and forget about the whole thing. That was the smart play. That was what a reasonable person would do.
But Martin was never reasonable when it came to Madeline.
He got up abruptly and pushed through the crowd, leaving Zoe behind without a second glance. The music seemed to get louder as he approached the dance floor, the bass thrumming through his bones. He could see Madeline's hair, the curve of her spine and the way her body moved against Woojin's. She was trying to provoke him...
It was working.
"Hey..." Martin called, loud enough to be heard over the music. "...Mads!"
She turned around, her eyes widening just slightly before they shuttered. "Martin. What do you want?"
He held up his phone, the screen still recording. "Just wanted to get a good shot of you making a fool of yourself. Figured I'd post it to the school page later. You know, for posterity."
The words came out meaner than he intended. That was the problem with Martin. He never knew where the line was until he already crossed it.
Madeline's expression flickered. For just a moment, he saw something wounded under the perfection. And then it was gone, replaced by the cold mask she wore all the time.
"Go ahead..." Madeline said, her voice dripping with disdain. "...post it. That's all you're good for, isn't it? Taking cheap shots from the sidelines. Pathetic like you've always been."
Woojin stepped forward, his hand on Madeline arm. "Maybe you should back off, man. She's not interested."
Martin laughed, the sound harsh and hollow. "Oh, I know she's not interested. She only cares about herself. She collects people like trophies, uses them up like a tramp, and then tosses them aside. You're just the latest in a long line, Woojin. Enjoy it while it lasts."
He saw Madeline flinch and the flash of pain in her eyes. It was the same pain he felt when she laughed at him in the winter formal and told the whole school he meant nothing to her.
He wanted to hurt her back and he succeeded. So why did it feel like he was the one bleeding?
"I fucking hate you." Madeline said, her voice barely audible over the music.
Martin smiled, his expression razor-sharp. "I know. That's the only thing you've ever been honest about."
He turned around and walked away.
November
The English project was announced on a dreary November morning, a day where the sky hung low and gray and everyone's existential dread was at an all-time high.
"This is going to be the biggest project of the year..." Mrs. Peters announced, her voice bright with enthusiasm that no one else felt. "...you will be creating a detailed roadmap of your life for the next ten years. Career, relationships, personal goals. Everything. I want to see who you are and who you want to become!"
Madeline stared at the outline on the board and felt her stomach drop. A roadmap of her life? Ten years? Every step of her life was predetermined. Her parents already did this for her. She would go to Harvard, then law school, then a prestigious firm and finally, a husband who could further her career or, at the very least, not detract from it. Have two-point-five children, a house in the suburbs with a white picket fence and a golden retriever named something sensible like Max Verstappen or Sam.
It never occurred to her to ask what she truly wanted for herself.
Across the room, Martin was slouched in his chair, his feet propped up on the desk in front of him. He looked like he didn't sleep in days. He had dark circles under his eyes, hair sticking up at odd angles and an air of total disengagement from everything around him.
Mrs. Peters cleared her throat. "Mr. Edwards, perhaps you could contribute something more than disdain to this discussion."
Martin blinked, straightening slightly. "Oh, I'm contributing plenty. My contributions just happen to be in the form of healthy skepticism. Ten-year plans are for people who think they're in control of their lives. Spoiler alert: they're not."
There was a ripple of laughter through the room. Mrs. Peters' expression tightened.
"That's very philosophical for someone who still hasn't turned in last week's essay."
"Procrastination is a lifestyle choice, Mrs. P. You have to respect the commitment."
Madeline watched him, her pen frozen over her notebook. There was something different about the way he was acting today. The usual bravado felt more brittle. Like a mask that was starting to crack.
She heard from Juhoon that he got into a big fight with his dad about college. That his parents wanted him to apply to business schools, go the safe route and make something of himself. Martin told them that he was going to audition for a music program across the country, and they laughed in his face.
She wasn't supposed to care. He made sure of that. But the thought of him giving up his music and letting his family crush the only thing that made him him...made something twist in her chest.
She looked away before he could catch her staring.
December
The winter formal came and went. Madeline went with Woojin. Martin went alone. They avoided each other with the determination of two people who memorized each other's habits, tells and weak points.
They still managed to find each other anyway.
It happened in the parking lot afterwards, when everyone was drifting towards their cars and the night was crisp and cold and full of stars. Madeline broke away from Woojin to find some peace and quiet. She needed to get away from his desperate hands and his even more desperate questions about why she seemed so "distant" tonight. Instead, she found Martin sitting on the hood of his beat-up car, staring up at the sky.
Madeline knew she should have walked away.
"God, why do I always have to run into you of all people." She sighed and said instead, rolling her eyes.
"My parking spot mind you." Martin frowned.
Madeline stared at him, that infuriating smirk playing at the corners of his mouth. His tuxedo was rumpled, his bowtie undone and hanging loose around his neck. He looked like he got into a fight...and lost.
"This isn't your parking spot..." She said flatly. "...you don't have a parking spot. You drive a piece of junk that barely qualifies as a vehicle."
"Ouch. Right in the self-esteem."
Madeline rolled her eyes. "Anyways, your stinky girlfriend Zoe is looking for you." She said.
Martin turned around, his expression unreadable. "Your crybaby boyfriend is probably looking for you too."
"He's not my boyfriend. We're just...seeing each other."
"Riiiight. Seeing each other. That's what they're calling it these days."
"Why do you care?" The question slipped out before she could stop it. "Why do you always have to..." She stopped, shaking her head. "...never mind. It doesn't matter."
But Martin was already standing and walking towards her, and suddenly they were face to face, close enough that she could see the flecks of gold in his eyes and the faint scar above his eyebrow from the time they fell out of the treehouse together.
"I care because you're making a mistake..." Martin said, his voice low and intense. "...you've changed you know. And not in a good way."
Madeline laughed bitterly. "You're one to talk. You're always busy pretending you don't care that you're about to throw away everything you've ever wanted. That's not cute."
"What's that supposed to mean?"
"I heard about the audition from Juhoon. The music program. Your dad is trying to stop you, right?"
Something flickered in his eyes. Surprise, then wariness. "Why do you care? You hate me, remember?"
"I never said-"
"You said it at the party. You said you fucking hated me. Those were your exact words."
She opened her mouth to argue, to tell him that she was angry at his harsh words, that she never meant it and that of course she didn't hate him. But the words wouldn't come out. They were trapped somewhere in her throat, tangled up with all the other things she never said.
"I was angry..." Madeline said finally. "...I didn't mean it."
"Yes, you did. And that's okay, Mads. You're supposed to hate me. That was the deal, remember? The pact? But then sometimes I get scared that you mean it or you don't want anything to do with me anymore. You're a different person lately."
The word hit her like a physical blow. She looked around, suddenly paranoid, but the parking lot was empty except for them and the fading echoes of the party.
"Don't talk about that..." Madeline hissed. "...not here."
"Why not? Because it's the truth? Because we made a choice, and now we have to live with it?" Martin stepped closer, and she could feel the heat radiating off of him. "We broke up to make each other stronger. And look at us now. We're both miserable."
"I'm not miserable."
"Bullshit. You're dating a guy whose personality is basically just daddy's money, you're always with a different guy every second week because you're never truly fulfilled with each one, you're awfully mean to people, you're forced to be on a path that's been laid out for you since birth and you're so scared of disappointing your parents that you've forgotten how to be happy."
"How dare you stand there and pretend like you know me. You don't. You don't know anything!" Madeline frowned.
"I know you used to laugh. I mean really laugh, not that fake thing you do now. You used to be such a nice person and now you're insufferable and rude. What you did to Zoe was really uncalled for."
Madeline couldn't speak. The tears were coming, and she couldn't stop or hide them. Hearing this from Martin, the one boy whose opinion she really only ever cared about, made her want to crawl into a hole and never come out. For the first time ever, she felt embarrassed. Two years of pretending, two years of performing and two years of being the person everyone feared, detested or expected her to be, and her façade was all crumbling around her.
"Well she deserved it for being so close to you-"
"See this is exactly what I'm talking about Madeline. You seriously need to grow up!-"
"I need to grow up? Oh that's rich coming from you. You're a total hypocrite, Martin."
Martin's jaw tightened, the accusation hitting exactly where it hurt, but he looked at Madeline dead in the eyes. "Maybe I am. But I'd rather be a hypocrite than a malicious, insecure bitch." The words hung heavily in the freezing air, shocking them both. His chest heaved with a toxic mix of adrenaline and pure frustration. He hated how easily she crawled under his skin, and he hated himself for still caring enough to be this angry. Martin spun on his heel and stormed off into the building, his boots crunching violently against the gravel as he left her standing alone in the cold.
January
The new year arrived without fanfare. Madeline broke up with Woojin on New Year's Day, in a conversation that was polite and sterile and left her feeling nothing at all. He took it well, probably because he was already eyeing some grade 11 from the debate team.
"I applied to Harvard early for early action. Just waiting on a response from them..." Madeline told her mother at dinner that week. "...that's what you want, right?"
Her mother beamed. "Of course, sweetheart! I knew you'd make the right decision."
She didn't tell her mother about the application she secretly filled out to another university across the country. The one with the creative writing program she was researching late at night, when she was supposed to be studying. Columbia university was three thousand kilometres away from everything she ever knew.
And the one where Martin's music school was located. Even though they hadn't spoken for weeks, nearly a month, Madeline still couldn't stop thinking about him and what he said to her that night at the winter formal.
February
Valentine's Day was a disaster, as Valentine's Day always was at Crestwood High. The hallways were decorated with hearts and Cupids. The cafeteria served pink-frosted cupcakes. Everyone was either coupled up or desperate to be.
Madeline spent the day ignoring the whole thing. She texted a few polite messages to her exes: Woojin, the guy from lacrosse and the brief, ill-advised fling with the student teacher who transferred to another school and then she turned off her phone and retreated to the library.
That's where Martin found her.
"The party is downstairs you know. Everyone is trying to get laid. It's a hard watch."
Madeline looked up to find Martin standing there, shifting his weight nervously, his leather jacket smelling like the crisp February air. His ego was practically screaming at him to turn around and walk away, but the ache of missing her for the last two months finally overrode his pride.
"What do you want, Martin?" She asked, her voice sharp but lacking its usual venom.
"I wanted to apologize for what I called you at the winter formal. It was out of line, and...I'm sorry. Truly." He blurted out. He took a seat opposite her, his dark eyes intensely serious.
Madeline looked up from her book, surprised and caught off guard. She recovered her composure instantly. She leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms and tilting her head with that familiar, regal authority. "Wow. An actual apology from the great Martin Edwards." She murmured, a feisty, teasing spark returning to her eyes. "I mean, it's a start. But you called me a bitch. You can't just say 'sorry' and expect me to throw myself back into your arms." She leaned forward, a quirky, triumphant little smile playing on her lips. "You're going to have to actually earn it. And trust me, I am very expensive to please."
Martin let out a quiet, breathless laugh, the heavy tension in his chest finally cracking as he looked at her. "Right..." He said softly, a genuine smile tugging at his mouth. "I know. On that note, Juhoon is throwing a party at his place later. I would like for you to come with me."
"A party? I don't-"
"Don't say you don't want to. Juhoon said to tell you that he would really love for you to be there."
She wanted to argue, but then again she was drifting through the past few weeks like a ghost, going through the motions of her life without actually feeling any of it. She needed to get out a bit.
"Fine." She said. "I'll go."
Martin grinned, and for a moment, it was like they were younger again, like none of the years of hurt ever happened. "I'll pick you up at eight."
"Who said you were picking me up?"
"I did. Now shut up and finish your book. You're making me look like a bad influence."
Juhoon's party was exactly the chaotic, reckless thing Madeline needed. The house was packed with people, music blasting from speakers in every room, and the energy was infectious. She found herself laughing at something Juhoon said, and the sound of it surprised her.
Martin was across the room, talking to Zoe again, who was clearly still trying to make a move. He was polite but distant, his eyes flicking towards Madeline every few seconds.
Later, when the party was winding down and most people went home, she found Martin on the back porch, staring up at the stars.
"Hey..." She said, sliding onto the porch swing next to him. "...your girlfriend is looking for you."
"Not my girlfriend..." He didn't look at her, but she saw the corner of his mouth twitch. "...I'm not really into the whole relationship thing, you know?"
"Yeah, I've noticed..." Madeline bumped her shoulder against his. "...but I'm also pretty sure you're a lying liar who lies."
"Is that supposed to be an attack?"
"More of a fact." Madeline shrugged.
They sat in comfortable silence for a while, listening to the music drifting from inside. The night was cold and clear, and the stars were scattered across the sky like glitter.
"I got into the music program." Martin said finally.
Madeline's heart lurched. "Wow, look at you! That's amazing, Martin."
"Meh, it's nothing. I probably won't go anyway. My dad is quite clear about that."
"Why would you give it up?"
"Because..." He stopped, then shook his head. "...it's complicated."
"Then uncomplicate it."
He turned to look at Madeline, and his eyes were so full of things he wasn't saying that it hurt to look at him. "Because I can't leave you."
The words hung in the air.
"I don't..." She shook her head. "...what are you talking about?"
"I'm talking about the pact. The reason we broke up in the first place..." He laughed, humourless. "...we were so young, Mads. We thought we could separate for two years, become the people we wanted to be, and then just...reunite. Like a movie or something. And it was supposed to make us stronger. But all it did was change us and make us miserable."
"You're not supposed to talk about that."
"I'm tired of not talking about it! I can't pretend anymore." He reached for her hand, his fingers cold against hers. "I'm tired of watching you walk away, filming you and mocking you because it's the only way I know how to get your attention. I'm tired of being the guy who makes you hate him."
"Martin-"
"Let me finish." His voice was trembling, but he pushed on. "Even if I end up going to that school, playing music, failing or succeeding and letting whatever happens happen, I want you to know that if you ever need me...for anything...I'll drop everything. I mean it, Mads. I'll drop it all."
"You can't just say things like that." Madeline frowned.
"Why not? It's the truth."
The music from inside faded into something slower. She leaned into him, her head on his shoulder, and let herself imagine what it would be like if things were different.
"What if we didn't have to wait?" She whispered.
"What?"
"What if we just...stopped pretending? Right now. And decided to be together and everyone else could go to hell?"
He was quiet for a long moment. Then he laughed softly. "Is that what you want?"
"Yes. No. I don't know." Madeline pulled back, feeling frustrated. "I have this application to Columbia. It's near where your school is. I applied without telling anyone because I didn't think I'd get in, but then I did, and now I don't know what to do."
Martin stared at her. "You got into a school near me?"
"I know it's stupid. We haven't even...said the words or made it official or whatever. But I've been so scared, Martin. I've been so scared of losing you again, and I thought if I went somewhere new and close to you, maybe we could-"
Martin kissed her before she could finish.
It wasn't a gentle kiss. It was desperate, hungry and filled with two years of longing, and when she kissed him back, she felt something in her chest unlock.
He let out a growl against her mouth, his hands coming up to frame her face, his thumbs digging into her jaw to hold her still. Their breathing turned into ragged gasps as they fought for air without wanting to break the contact. He shifted, his arm locking around her waist to pull her against his chest, lifting her slightly just to feel her closer. Madeline was the only air he wanted.
"I love you..." Martin muttered against her lips, the words breathless as he dragged his mouth across her jaw then neck, his lips hot and damp against her skin before anchoring back to her mouth. "...I've always loved you Madeline. I never stopped."
Madeline pulled back slightly, her eyes searching his face. She could see the vulnerability there, the way he laid himself bare for her. But instead of saying the words back and giving him what he so clearly wanted, she tilted her head and let a slow, wicked smile spread across her face.
"That's adorable." Madeline said, her voice dripping with mock sweetness. "Really, Martin. Very cute. I'm sure you've been practicing that speech all week."
"Mads-"
"You know, for someone who's spent the last two years filming me like I'm a zoo animal and making my life a living hell, you sure do have a lot of nerve sitting here and telling me you love me." She reached up and patted his cheek condescendingly. "I mean, really. The audacity."
Martin stared at her, his expression caught between hope and frustration. "You don't mean that."
"I don't?" She laughed teasingly. "I'm just saying, if this is your idea of a grand romantic gesture, you might want to work on your delivery. The whole 'I've been tormenting you for two years because I love you' thing is a little...on the nose, don't you think?"
"Mads, I'm being serious."
"And I'm being serious too." Her smile softened, just barely, and she reached up to touch his face. "I think it's really, really sweet that you love me. But if you think I'm just going to fall into your arms and say it back after everything you've put me through-"
"Then what do you want me to do?"
She leaned in, her lips brushing against his ear. "Grovel. And maybe stop filming me like I'm a nature documentary. That would be a good start."
"Madeline-"
"Shut up and kiss me again, Edwards."
March
For a few weeks, everything was perfect. Their birthdays, which were two days apart, were celebrated with their closest friends and families. They were careful at school. Nothing too obvious, no PDA that would raise eyebrows. But everyone knew something changed. Madeline was happier, a little less meaner. Martin was softer. Somehow, his grades improved.
They spent their afternoons in the treehouse, the same one they built as kids, making plans for the future together.
"You're really going to do it?" Martin asked, his head on her lap as she played with his hair.
"I'm going to do it..." Madeline smiled down at him. "...I'm going to go to Columbia. I don't care what my mom says."
He reached up and tangled his fingers with hers. "You know I love you, right?"
"I know." She kissed his forehead.
It was the happiest Madeline ever was. And she should have known it wouldn't last.
April
Her parents found the acceptance letter.
Madeline should have known something was wrong the moment she walked through that door. She hid it in her desk drawer, behind the yearbooks and the old photographs. Her mother was looking for a checkbook. It was a coincidence, an accident and a stupid, simple mistake that shattered everything.
"Columbia?" Her mother's voice was ice. "What is this?"
Madeline stood in the doorway of the study, her heart pounding so hard she could barely hear. "It's college. I applied and I got in."
"Columbia is three thousand kilometres away! We've been planning for Harvard since you were twelve Madeline. What is wrong with you?!"
"Nothing's wrong with me!" She was shaking, but she forced her voice to stay steady. "This is what I want. It's what I've always wanted mom, I just didn't-"
"What you want?" Madeline's mother repeated, the words dripping with disdain. "Do you think I wanted to give up my career to raise you? Do you think I wanted to spend eighteen years of my life making sure you had every opportunity, every advantage and every single thing you could possibly need to succeed?? I sacrificed everything for you, Madeline. Everything. And this is how you repay me?"
"I didn't ask you to sacrifice anything."
"You didn't have to. That's what mothers do. We sacrifice. We give. We pour ourselves into our children so they can have the lives we never could. And you want to throw it all away for what? A boy? A writing degree that won't get you a job? A fantasy?!"
"This isn't about a boy! This is about me!"
"Don't get smart with me little girl. I know he's the one filling your head with these ridiculous ideas! He's a distraction. He has no direction! He's going to ruin your future if you let him." Her mother stepped closer, her eyes blazing. "You are going to Harvard. You are going to be a lawyer. You are not going to throw everything away for some grungy, unkempt musician who can't even keep his DAMN IQ up."
"Don't talk about him like that. You don't know him-" Madeline's eyes were stinging with tears now.
The slap came out of nowhere.
It was fast and brutal, the sound of it cracking through the study like a gunshot. Madeline's head snapped to the side, and she felt the sting bloom across her cheek. Her hand flew to her face, pressing against the skin, and she could feel the heat of the impact radiating through her fingers.
Her mother was standing there, breathing hard, her hand still raised, her eyes wild with madness.
"Don't you ever talk back to me." Her mother said, her voice low and trembling.
Madeline stared at her. The tears were coming, but she refused to let them fall. She refused to give her mother that satisfaction.
"You just just hit me." Madeline said, her voice barely above a whisper.
"Because you needed to be taught a lesson. This isn't a game, Madeline. This is your life. And if you throw it away, you will regret it. You will spend every single day of your life regretting it, just like I did."
"I'm not you!" Madeline's voice was shaking, but she forced the words out. "I'm not going to end up BITTER like you."
"You're going to be nothing if you keep this up. One day you're going to look back on this moment and wish you listened to me." Madeline's mother said.
"No. I won't. I'm gonna wish I stood up to you sooner."
The silence that followed was deafening. They stood there, mother and daughter, facing each other across the study, the space between them feeling like an ocean.
"Get the hell out." Her mother demanded, her voice cold. "Get out of my sight."
Madeline didn't move. She stood there, her hand still pressed to her burning cheek.
"You can't control me..." She said quietly. "...not anymore, mom. I'm not a child. I'm not your puppet. I'm not your second chance at a life you threw away. I am my own person, and I'm going to make my own choices, and there's nothing you can do to stop me."
"Fine. But if you walk out that door, you're on your own. No money. No support. No family. You understand? You will be nothing."
Madeline was in disbelief. She wanted to fight her mom. She wanted to scream and rage and refuse to back down. But the pressure was too immense. She was raised to please them, to be the perfect daughter, and the thought of disappointing them was a weight she couldn't bear. Ever.
So she did what she always did when it came to them. She gave in.
May
Madeline couldn't tell Martin. She tried to, so many times. She would open her mouth to say the words, and then she would look at his face, at the hope shining in his eyes, and the words would die in her throat.
How could she tell him that she failed? That she was too weak to stand up to her parents? That she was going to Harvard after all, three thousand kilometres away from him and everything she wanted?
She couldn't. So she decided not to tell him at all. She would leave quietly, slip away in the chaos of graduation, and let him think she just...vanished. It was cowardly and cruel. But it was the only way she could think of to protect him.
He would get over her eventually. She had to believe that.
June - Graduation Day 🎊🎓
The ceremony was interminable. Speeches and names and the rustle of caps and gowns. Madeline sat in her assigned seat, staring straight ahead, not daring to look at Martin in the row behind her. She could feel his gaze on the back of her neck, warm and questioning.
She was avoiding him for weeks. He tried to talk to her, ask what was wrong, and she brushed him off every time. She could see the hurt in his eyes, the confusion, and it made her chest ache.
After the ceremony, everything was chaos. Families swarming, cameras flashing, people crying, laughing and hugging. Madeline took one last look around the gymnasium at the school she hated, the people she pretended to love, the boy she loved so much it hurt. And then she slipped out the side door.
She drove to the airport in a daze. Her parents were meeting her there. The flight was at six. She had three hours to get on a plane and leave everything behind.
Martin searched for her everywhere. The gym, the parking lot and the treehouse. She wasn't at any of them. His phone buzzed with calls and texts, all from people who wanted to congratulate him, and he ignored every single one. His cap was somewhere in the crowd, lost in the sea of black and gold. His gown was unzipped, hanging open over his wrinkled button-down. His heart was pounding so hard he could feel it in his throat.
Martin pulled out his phone, his fingers shaking as he typed out a text.
Where are you? I've been looking everywhere. Text me back okay.
The message delivered. He waited. One minute. Two. Three.
No reply.
He tried calling but it went straight to voicemail.
"Hey, it's me..." He said, his voice strained. "...I don't know where you are, but I need to see you. I need to talk to you. Please. Just...call me back. Please."
He hung up and stared at the screen, willing it to light up with her name. Nothing.
Martin's mind was racing. What if something happened? What if her parents took her? What if she changed her mind about everything? What if she decided that he wasn't worth it after all, that the whole plan was a mistake?
"Hey, man." Juhoon found him outside of the gym, looking worried. "What's going on? Are you okay? You look like you've seen a ghost."
"Have you seen Mads?"
"She's not here. I think she already left." Juhoon answered.
"Left to where?"
"I don't know. Her parents weren't at the ceremony. They're probably still upset with her after the fight..." Juhoon hesitated. "...or maybe they took her to the airport. She said she's supposed to fly out today."
Martin's blood went cold. "Wait wait wait wait wait, what fight? What airport?"
"I don't know. She was rambling on about a fight with her mom and that she threatened to cut her off completely if she didn't accept Harvard's offer for an early start. She's leaving today." Juhoon explained.
Martin felt like he was punched in the gut. "She didn't tell me. She didn't say anything."
"She probably couldn't. You know how her mom is. That woman is..." Juhoon stopped, shaking his head. "...look, man, I'm sorry. I know this is a lot. But if you want to catch her, you need to go now. Her flight is at six."
Martin checked his watch. 5:15 pm.
"Oh my God." He was already running towards his car, his legs pumping and lungs burning. "I have to get there. I have to stop her."
"Martin, wait!" Juhoon was running after him. "You can't drive. You're too freaked out. Let me take you."
"I don't have time-"
"Let me drive." Juhoon grabbed his arm, pulling him back. "Get in the car. Now."
Martin didn't argue. He yanked open the passenger door of his beat-up car and threw himself inside. Juhoon was in the driver's seat a second later, the engine roaring to life.
"Buckle up." Juhoon said, and then they were flying.
✈︎
The drive to the airport was a blur. Martin stared out the window, his heart pounding. The city sped past him. It all felt surreal, like he was watching himself from outside his own body.
"How long has she known?" Martin asked, his voice strained.
Juhoon's hands tightened on the steering wheel. "I don't know. I only heard about it yesterday. I assumed you knew too. But she's been acting weird for weeks, right? Avoiding you?"
Martin thought back to the past few weeks. The way she pulled away from his touch, the way she stopped meeting his eyes and the way she made excuses to leave early to go home and be anywhere but with him.
"She didn't want me to get hurt." He said, the realization hitting him.
"Or she was scared of telling you and what you would say."
"Why would she be though?" Martin laughed. "I love her. I would follow her anywhere. I'd give up everything for her. My music. My whole stupid life. Everything."
"That's exactly what she was afraid of. She didn't want you to make that choice and give up your dream for her."
"It's not a choice though Juhoon! It never was. She's my dream. She has always been my dream. We grew up together. You know how much I care for her."
Juhoon was quiet for a moment. Then he said, his voice soft, "I know. That's why we're going to catch her."
✈︎
The airport was crowded, a sea of anonymous faces. Martin pushed through the crowds, ignoring the angry shouts and muttered curses. He had to find her. He had to stop her.
He spotted her in the security line, her hair a beacon in the chaos. She was wearing a simple sundress, a little bit of makeup and she looked so exhausted that it broke his heart.
"Madeline!"
She didn't turn around. The noise of the terminal was too loud with overwhelming chaos.
"Mads!" He shouted again, louder this time.
She turned around, her eyes widening. "Martin?? How did you-"
"You can't leave." He reached her, ignoring the stares from the people around them. "You can't just go without saying anything."
"I couldn't. I tried to tell you, but I couldn't." Her voice was barely above a whisper.
"Tell me what? That you're going to Harvard? That you're leaving me?"
She flinched. "It's not that simple."
"The hell it isn't." He grabbed her hands, holding them tight. "Come with me. We'll figure it out. We'll get married, or I'll move, or whatever it takes. Just don't leave me. Please."
Madeline laughed."You make it sound so easy. You think I chose this? I wanted to leave you behind?"
"Of course you didn't choose this. But we can fight together. Let me help you, Madeline. We can figure this out together."
"The line is moving, Martin." She looked at the TSA agent, who was motioning her forward. "I have to go."
"Then I'll come with you."
"What? That's insane! You have your own life and your own plans."
"Forget my plans! Forget everything. I'll come with you. We'll go to Harvard together. I'll find a job. I'll do whatever it takes. I don't care about any of it if you're not there."
"Martin, listen to me." She grabbed his face, forcing him to look at her. "You are not going to throw your life away for me and give up your music. And you certainly aren't going to follow me across the country and watch yourself become something you don't want to be. I won't let you."
"I can't let you go Madeline! I can't be happy without you." Martin heaved, feeling hopeless.
"Quit being so stubborn and crazy! You're being stupid and I love you so much it hurts."
"Then stay. Stay with me."
"I can't." She pulled her hands away. "I can't, Martin. My parents...they're going to cut me off if I don't do this. I can't support myself-"
"Then we'll figure it out."
"Not this time." She shook her head, her voice breaking. "I have to go. It's the only way."
The line moved forward. It was her turn. The TSA agent was waiting, her expression bored and impatient.
"Please." Martin said, his voice raw. "Please don't do this."
She reached out, touching his face one last time. "I love you." She said. "I always will."
And then she was gone, disappearing through the security checkpoint, leaving him alone in the crowded airport with nothing but the echo of her voice.
Martin stood there for a long time. People flowed around him, a river of strangers, and he was frozen in the middle, unable to move.
Juhoon appeared at his side. "Martin? What happened?"
"She's gone." His voice was hollow and empty.
Juhoon put a hand on his shoulder. "I'm sorry. I really am."
Martin didn't answer. He was staring at the security checkpoint, at the door she walked through and at the last place he saw her.
"I gave up my audition." He said quietly. "The music program. I told them I wasn't going."
"What? Martin, why would you do that?"
"Because I thought...there was still a chance. That we could be together. That all of it meant something." Martin shook his head. "It doesn't matter anymore."
Martin walked away, his shoulders hunched. He pulled out his phone. He stared at her contact photo. It was a picture of her laughing, her head thrown back, and felt his heart shatter all over again.
I love you... he typed. I'll always love you.
He pressed send, not expecting a reply.
The phone buzzed a moment later. He looked down, his heart in his throat.
1 new message
Mads ❤️
I love you. Always. I'm sorry Martin.
He stared at the words for a long time. Then he turned off his phone and shoved it back in his pocket.
Outside, a plane lifted off into the darkening sky. Martin watched it go, knowing that somewhere on that plane was the girl he loved.
And knowing that he might never see her again.
Three Months Later
The letter arrived on a Tuesday, a plain white envelope with no return address. Martin almost threw it away, assuming it was another bill or another rejection from a school he never wanted to attend.
But something made him open it.
Inside was a single sheet of paper, covered in familiar handwriting.
Dear Martin,
I don't know if you'll ever read this, but I need you to know the truth.
I didn't leave because I wanted to. I left because I was scared. Scared of disappointing my parents and failing. I was scared that if I stayed, I'd ruin you the way I ruined everything else.
But being here, at Harvard, doing everything they wanted me to do, I realised I'm not living. I'm just existing. And I've realized that the only time I was ever really alive was when I was with you.
I'm going to leave. I'm going to transfer to Columbia, the school I told you about. I've already been accepted. I know it's crazy and risky. But I'd rather be crazy and happy than safe and miserable.
I don't know if you still want me. I don't know if you've moved on. But I had to tell you the truth. I had to tell you that I'm coming back.
I love you, Martin. I always have.
Yours,
Madeline ᥫ᭡
Martin read the letter three times. And then he laughed, the sound echoing off the walls of his empty apartment.
"Crazy." He muttered, shaking his head. "She's absolutely crazy."
He grabbed his phone and started typing.
One Week Later
The airport was crowded, just like it was before. But this time, Martin wasn't chasing after someone. He was waiting. For about an hour, maybe longer. He lost track of time somewhere between the third cup of coffee and the fifth time he checked his phone for updates of her flight.
He saw her before she saw him. She was wearing the same sundress and the same tired but hopeful expression. She looked exhausted, like she never slept in days.
"Madeline!" Martin called out.
When she saw him, her face broke into a smile as bright as the sun. "Martin!"
Martin crossed the distance between them in three quick strides, pulling her into his arms. She crashed into him, her body colliding with his, and he wrapped his arms around her so tightly he was probably cutting off her circulation. She smelled like lavender and something underneath that was just her.
"You came." Madeline whispered into his chest.
"I told you I would." Martin's voice was thick, choked with emotion.
She pulled back, her eyes red-rimmed. She looked exhausted and so beautiful.
"Well?" Madeline started, tilting her chin up in that defiant way he missed so much. "Did you miss me? Of course you did. You probably spent every single day crying into your pillow, didn't you?"
Martin laughed. "Something like that."
"Good. As you should." She reached up and cupped his face, her thumb tracing the line of his jaw. "And you better not have been flirting with anyone else while I was gone. I'll be very upset if I find out you've been documenting other girls like they're some kind of exhibit."
"Only you, Mads. Only ever you."
In this economy??😭 Martin please.
Written by: Bunny_JHS ©
Tumblr Girl | Martin
ᥫ᭡. A CORTIS Martin oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Fluff oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Actually my original oneshot got ERASED by Tumblr and now I have rewritten my precious oneshot.😭 Tumblr I will NEVER forgive you. As much as I LOVED my first version, I think this version is much better though. The first one was quite short too. Tumblr if you mess with this again istg I'm suing. EVERYBODY will get nuked.
ᥫ᭡. This love story takes place in the year 2008. Martin and Tessa are 18 years old and in their final year of high school. ✨
ᥫ᭡. Thank you guys so much for reading my stories ❤️🩹🐇 Please like + follow. Would be highly appreciated. 🍒
ᥫ᭡. Songs
•Tumblr Girls - G-Eazy ft Christoph Andersson
•You're still the one I want - Shania Twain
•My own worst enemy - Lit
•Lovers Rock - TV girl
•The Blonde - TV girl
•Summer's over - Jordana, TV girl
•Just a girl - No doubt
•Teenage Dirtbag - Wheatus
•So into you - Tamia
•Someone to call my lover - Janet Jackson
•Hopelessly devoted - Olivia Newton
•Bleeding love - Leona Lewis
•We fell in love in October - girl in red
•A thousand miles - Vanessa Carlton
•Kiss me - sixpence
•Cant take my eyes off of you - Lauryn Hill
•Time after time - Cyndi
•Rude! - Hearts2hearts
•Rude - MAGIC!
ᥫ᭡. Tags
@vanishingnana @kittyhooncatalogues @ptolemaea4a @loveliezzzlinaa22
𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
Prologue
cherrybomb-dirt 🍒
Metro-Central High confessional-08
Okay, kittens, let's talk about someone who thinks a whitening strip can scrub away her sins. Sweet little 'V' didn't just borrow her BFF's Daniel Cho replica for the winter formal. She "borrowed" her boyfriend, too. In the photo booth. For a full seven minutes of face-sucking. You're not a friend, sweetie, you're a walking, talking STI-risk. But hey, maybe just ask before you slobber, yeah? XOXO, Gossip Girl wishes she was me. 🌪️💋🍒
The cursor blinked on the pale blue screen, waiting. In the glow of a family desktop computer at 1:47 AM, fingers flew across a keyboard that has seen better days. The 'E' key was slightly sticky from a soda spill three years ago, and the spacebar made a little squeak every time it was pressed.
Another post, another secret, and another piece of someone's life that they thought was safe.
The girl pushed her crooked glasses up her nose for the fifth time that minute. She checked over her shoulder one more time, then, hit
Post.
⏳
May 2008. Senior year was winding down like a cheap watch and everyone could feel it in their bones. The air smelled like cheap cologne, desperation and the faint, sweet rot of spring turning into summer. Lockers slammed with extra emphasis while hallway crushes were reaching their fever pitch because, hello, time was running out.
Prom was in a week.
The announcements crackled over the intercom that Thursday morning. Mr. Hernandez's voice, always too loud, sounded through the intercoms. "Will all seniors please report to the auditorium immediately. This is not a drill. Repeat, all seniors to the auditorium."
A murmur rippled through the halls and people exchanged looks. Not a drill? What did that even mean? Did someone die? Did graduation get moved? Was there a gas leak?
Three hundred and eleven teenagers shuffled into the auditorium like cattle. The lights were too bright. The seats were sticky with something nobody wanted to think about or imagine. And Mr. Hermandez stood on stage at the podium, his tie slightly too tight and his mustache twitching like it had a life of its own.
"Quiet down..." He said, and nobody quieted down. "I said quiet!"
The chatter died down instantly. He held up a stack of papers and in the front row, someone gasped. Those were printouts. Of a blog....
Of the blog.
"It has come to my attention...." Mr. Hernandez said slowly. "...that someone in this grade has been operating a Tumblr page dedicated to spreading malicious, hurtful, and frankly vulgar gossip about their peers."
The auditorium went dead silent.
"This page..." He continued, adjusting his glasses. "...has been brought to my attention by a concerned student who wishes to remain anonymous. And let me be clear: whoever is behind 'cherrybomb-dirt' has exactly twenty-four hours to come forward to my office before I involve the proper authorities regarding defamation and cyber harassment."
A girl in the third row started crying. Nobody knew if she was the Tumblr Girl or just a victim of her posts.
"The dance will go on as scheduled..." Mr. Hernandez finished. "...but know this: I will find out who you are. And you will face harsh consequences."
He walked off the stage and immediately, the whispers exploded like a flock of startled birds.
"Who is she?"
"Is it Amanda? She's always been shady."
"No, it's definitely one of the art kids. They're all like...super weird."
"I heard she knows about what Derek and that girl did in the hot tub."
"Oh my God, shut up, my mom follows my Tumblr."
In the back row, a girl with a messy bun and crooked glasses pulled her hoodie tighter around her shoulders. Her heart was pounding so hard she could feel it in her throat, her ears and her fingertips.
She kept her face perfectly neutral in the midst of all this disaster.
Breathe, Tessa. Just breathe. She thought.
Nobody looked at her. Nobody ever looked at her.
And that was the whole point.
The following Day ⏳
The boys' basketball team ran their third suicide drill of the night, and Martin Edwards thought his lungs might actually climb out of his throat and walk away without him.
"Again!" Coach yelled, whistle bouncing against his beer belly. "You call that effort? My grandma runs faster than that."
It was 7:45 PM. Practice ended forty-five minutes ago, but Coach was in one of his moods. The team was running laps, doing drills, and then more laps for what felt like an eternity. By the time Coach finally blew the final whistle, Martin was pretty sure his legs were going to detach from his body and file for separation.
"Hit the showers..." Coach grunted. "...and you, Edwards, stay after to mop."
Martin blinked. "Me? Why me?!"
"Because you missed that free throw in the third quarter, and God doesn't forgive lazy shooters."
"That doesn't even make sense-"
"Mop, Edwards. Now."
Martin sighed, running a hand through his blonde, floppy hair. He was tall. Six-foot-three and counting, all elbows and knees. His shoulders were broad but he hadn't quite grown into them yet, so he walked like a newborn giraffe learning to use its legs. Girls didn't look at him twice. Well, girls didn't look at him once, if he was being honest.
He had a nice face, or so his mom said. Strong jaw with green-ish brown eyes that looked almost golden in certain light. He had a habit of talking too fast about things nobody really cared about. Things like the hidden meanings in Radiohead lyrics, or why the 1999 cinematic masterpiece The Mummy was actually a perfect film. So people thought he was weird.
And he owned it.
By the time he finished mopping the gym (poorly), the rest of the team cleared out. The building was quiet now, just the hum of the vending machines and the distant thrum of the HVAC system. He tossed the mop back into the supply closet, grabbed his gym bag and started heading towards the parking lot.
That's when he saw the light.
It was coming from the computer lab at the end of the east hallway. It was a soft, blue-white glow that flickered through the frosted glass window on the door.
Why was someone in there at 8:30 PM. on a Thursday. He thought to himself.
Martin frowned. The computer lab was supposed to be locked after 6 PM. He knew that because he tried to use it to print something out last week and found the doors chained tighter than Fort Knox.
Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back, or whatever that saying was. Martin crept down the hallway, his sneakers squeaking softly on the tiles. The door was slightly ajar and slowly, he pushed it open.
And there she was.
A girl he saw maybe a hundred times in the hallways without ever really seeing. Her messy bun was held together by what looked like two pencils and sheer willpower. Her glasses sat crookedly on her face as she stared at the screen intensley. She wore a faded hoodie from a band he recognized and jeans with a hole in the left knee.
She was hunched over the keyboard, typing furiously, her eyes darting across the screen. Her lips moved slightly as she wrote, mouthing the words to herself. And on the screen....
Martin's breath caught in his throat.
It was Tumblr. A Tumblr page. With a familiar dark red background and a URL he saw countless screenshots of, passed around like Delaney from choir.
cherrybomb-dirt.
The girl's fingers paused as she tilted her head, reading over what she wrote. A small, almost imperceptible smile tugged at the corner of her mouth. Then she hit "Post" and leaned back in her chair, exhaling slowly.
Martin's foot scraped against the floor and she quickly whipped around. For a moment, neither of them moved. Somewhere in the distance, a janitor's radio played "Low" by Flo Rida. The girl's eyes, wide, brown and magnified behind those crooked lenses, locked onto his. Her face went pale, then flushed red, then pale again.
"Oh..." She whispered. She looked back at the computer screen. "Oh no."
Martin opened his mouth. Closed it. Then opened it again.
"You're-" He started.
"Don't..." She said, her voice cracking. "Please. Please don't."
He looked at the screen again. The latest post was still there, glowing in all its messy glory:
cherrybomb-dirt 🍒 just posted:
Metro-Central High confessional-08
rumors about the star shooting guard and his "mono" are way off. Let's just say the only thing he's passing is a little something extra he picked up from a very "friendly" encounter after the Lake Oakridge away game. a course of antibiotics should clear it right up. Stay safe, kids. Wrap it up. 🦠🎀
🫢🍒
also: mr. stevens thinks he's sooo slick with the threats but he's got a secret too. remember the "conference" he went to in february? that wasn't a conference. that was couples counseling with his wife because she found his secret myspace page where he's been messaging a "model" from "canada." spoiler: she's not a model and she's not from canada.
prom is in four days. i know things about your dresses. i know things about your dates. i know things about your parents!
see you there. 😘🍒
♡ 489 notes
Martin read the post. Then he read it again. Then he looked back at the girl who looked like she was about to either cry or throw up. Possibly both.
"That's..." He said slowly. "...actually kind of impressive."
She stared at him. "What?"
"The Mr. Stevens thing. I mean, it's...it's terrible. Obviously. You're like, exposing people's private lives. That's bad. Morally bad. But also...the journalism is solid. The sourcing is- are you okay? You look like you're having a seizure."
She was, in fact, hyperventilating into the sleeve of her hoodie.
"I'm not going to tell anyone..." Martin said quickly. "...I mean, I don't even know your name. Wait, no, I do know your name. You're...you're Tessa, right? Tessa something. We had English together back in grade 8. You did that presentation on gothic literature and the whole class booed you. I thought you were pretty brave."
Tessa stopped hyperventilating. She blinked at him. "You...remember that?"
"Yeah..." Martin shrugged. "...learnt quite a bit from your presentation to be honest."
A beat of silence.
Then, very quietly, Tessa laughed. It was a small, surprised sound, like she didn't expect Martin Edwards to remember the most embarrassing moment of her life.
"Please don't tell anyone..." She said again, softer this time. "...I know it's wrong but...people...they're so mean to me, you know? They don't even see me. And I hear things. I just...I can't help writing them down. It's like the words want to be free."
Martin leaned against the doorframe, crossing his arms. His brain was doing a thousand calculations per second. This girl...this Tumblr Girl...had all the secrets. All of them. And she was standing right in front of him, looking like a deer caught in the headlights of an oncoming truck.
And then, because Martin Edwards was both a genius and an idiot, an idea formed in his head. A terrible, wonderful and morally bankrupt idea.
"I won't tell..." He started. "...on one condition."
Tessa's eyes narrowed. "What condition?"
"Pretend you're my girlfriend. And go to prom with me."
She stared at him like he just suggested they rob a bank together. "I'm sorry, what?"
"Just for one night. We show up together, we take some pictures, we dance a little. That's it. And then I never tell a soul about your little...hobby."
"Why?" Tessa demanded. "Why would you want me to pretend to be your girlfriend? You don't even know me."
Martin hesitated. He thought about the girl who sat two rows ahead of him in calculus. The one with the blonde hair, perfect smile and the boyfriend who was a senior at their rival school. The one who never once looked in his direction. The one he was crushing on since freshman year.
"Because..." He admitted. "...if I show up to prom with someone who looks like they might have some kind of social life, maybe the right person will finally notice me."
Tessa's expression shifted. Something flickered behind her eyes. Was it understanding, perhaps? Or pity. It was hard to tell.
"You're using me." She said quietly.
"And you're using the entire school for content..." He shot back. "...so I think we're even."
She chewed on her bottom lip, thinking. The pimple patch on her chin caught the light again and Martin tried not to stare at it.
"Fine..." She said finally. "...but you have to be convincing. None of that awkward arm-around-the-shoulder stuff. If we're doing this, we're doing this."
Martin grinned. "Deal."
They shook on it. Her hand was small and warm in his. Neither of them let go for a second too long.
The next morning, Martin found Tessa at her locker. It was a dented, sad-looking thing in the C-wing that everyone walked right past without noticing. She was wearing the same hoodie, the same jeans and the same crooked glasses. Her hair was somehow messier than it was the night before, if that was possible.
"Good morning, girlfriend." He said, leaning against the locker next to hers.
Tessa jumped. "You can't just....people are watching-"
"Exactly." Martin smiled, and for the first time, he noticed the way her eyes crinkled at the corners when she was annoyed. It was...kind of cute. "We're supposed to be convincing, remember?"
He slung an arm around her shoulders and she stiffened like a board, then slowly and awkwardly, relaxed. "Fine..." She muttered. "...if anyone asks, we met at a coffee shop. A cute one. With exposed brick."
"Noted."
As they walked to first period together, people stared. Not because they were a couple, most people didn't even register Tessa's existence, but because Martin Edwards, the weird tall kid who talked too much about The Mummy, was touching someone. Voluntarily.
It was a slow-motion train wreck of teenage awkwardness, and Martin loved every second of it.
That afternoon, he showed up at her house.
"How did you find out where I live?" Tessa demanded from behind the screen door.
"You're in the yearbook. The student directory. Page forty-seven."
"That's creepy."
"That's resourceful."
She let him in. Her house was small and cozy, always filled with the smell of something baking. Family photos lined the hallway walls: Tessa as a gap-toothed kid, Tessa in a school play, Tessa with her arms around a girl who looked like an older, taller, more put-together version of herself.
"My sister..." Tessa said, following his gaze. "...Gretchen. She's a third year in college. She thinks I'm a lost cause. But she loves me."
"I think you're a complex project..." Gretchen called from the kitchen, not bothering to look up from her magazine. "...there's a difference."
Martin grinned. "I like her."
"Everyone likes her..." Tessa muttered.
She led Martin upstairs to her bedroom, which looked exactly like what he expected. Band posters of The Killers, Fall out boy and Panic! at the Disco were on every corner of the wall. A desk buried under textbooks and crumpled papers and a bed that looked like it hasn't been made in years. There were piles of laundry everywhere, empty soda cans and a lava lamp that bubbled pink goo in the corner.
"So..." Martin started, collapsing onto her desk chair. "...how do you get the gossip? Like, actually?"
Tessa sat on the edge of her bed, pulling her knees to her chest. "I listen. People forget I exist. They talk in the hallways, in the bathrooms, in the parking lot. They think I'm invisible. So I just...absorb. And then I write."
"And you don't feel bad?"
She was quiet for a moment. "Sometimes. But then I remember that Marcie T. called me 'Pizza Face' in front of the entire lunchroom last year, and I stop feeling bad pretty fast."
Martin nodded slowly. "Fair."
And that was how it started. Over the next couple of days, they fell into a strange, unexpected rhythm. Martin would pick Tessa up for school (she lived four blocks away, but he insisted). They would eat lunch together in the corner of the cafeteria, their heads bent close to each other while whispering about the gossip she gathered. She'd show him the drafts of her Tumblr posts, and he would help her make them meaner.
"Say 'allegedly' more..." He suggested. "...It makes it sound more official."
"You're a terrible influence."
"Thank you."
One afternoon, she came over to his house. His room was the opposite of hers. It was neat, almost obsessively so. Records lined the walls, a wooden guitar sat in the corner and a keyboard was tucked under the window, covered in dust but clearly loved.
"You play?" Tessa asked, pointing at the guitar.
Martin rubbed the back of his neck, suddenly feeling shy. "Uh, yeah. I make music. It's stupid."
"Play something."
"Nahh."
"Please?"
He groaned, but grabbed his guitar and sat down anyway. His fingers found the strings and after a moment, a melody emerged. Then he started singing and Tessa's heart did something strange in her chest.
His voice was raspy, not quite on key, but honest. Like he meant every word, even when the words were silly.
"This is a song I just made up...." He said. "...about a girl who writes secrets and has very strong opinions about gothic literature."
"Martin, no-"
"Tessa, Tessa, she's got a messy bun~ She knows all the things that everybody's done~ She wears her glasses crooked and she doesn't even care~ And when she walks into the room, I'm like, 'Hey, that's my nightmare~"
She threw a pillow at him, laughing so hard she snorted. "That's awful Martin!"
"It's a masterpiece!"
"It's bad!"
But she was smiling. Really smiling. And Martin realized, with a jolt, that he has never seen her smile like that before. Wide and unguarded, like she forgot to be invisible.
Like she was just herself.
The following night, Martin climbed back through her bedroom window at 11 PM with a bag of fruit snacks and a plan.
"How did you even get up here?" Tessa whispered, watching him tumble onto her floor.
"Your neighbor's fence and that tree in your backyard. It was easier than I thought. You should really lock your windows."
"I should call the police."
"But you won't."
She sighed, but she was smiling again. He joined her on the bed, tearing open the fruit snacks with his teeth. For an hour, they talked about a heck of a lot. The teachers they hated, the movies they loved, the future they were both terrified of.
"Where do you want to go after graduation?" Tessa asked, picking at a loose thread on her comforter.
"I don't know..." Martin admitted. "....somewhere far away. Somewhere where nobody knows my name."
"Same..." She said softly. "New York, maybe. Or Portland. Somewhere weird."
"Somewhere you can be weird without people staring?"
"Exactly."
Their eyes met. The lava lamp bubbled in the backrgound and the room began to feel smaller suddenly. And warmer.
"We should sleep..." Tessa said quickly, looking away. "...big day tomorrow."
"Prom." Martin agreed.
"Prom."
He left the way he came. Through the window, down the tree and over the fence. But when he got home and climbed into his own bed, he couldn't stop thinking about the way she looked at him.
🍒The following day 🍒
Prom was held at the Luminary Hotel, a fancy venue on the other side of town that smelled like old money. The theme was "A Night Under the Stars," which meant the decorating committee hot-glued approximately ten thousand plastic stars to everything that didn't move.
But none of that mattered.
Because when Tessa walked down her staircase that night, Martin forgot how to breathe. She was wearing a dress the color of a sunset. It was pink and whimsical with layers of tulle that floated around her like she was made of clouds. Her hair, usually a disaster, was curled into soft waves that framed her face perfectly. Her makeup, done by her sister Gretchen who apparently had hidden talents, was light and glowing, accentuating her cheekbones and the soft curve of her jaw.
Her glasses were gone. "Contacts." Gretchen explained proudly. "She can see and everything."
"Close your mouth, Martin..." Gretchen said from the top of the stairs. "...you're drooling."
He closed his mouth, opened it, then closed it again.
Tessa looked up at him through her lashes and for the first time, she looked almost...nervous. "Is it too much? I feel like it's too much. Gretchen picked it out. I wanted to wear something simpler, but she said-"
"You look..." Martin began, and his voice came out rough. "...like a goddess."
Tessa's cheeks felt hotter than her in that dress. "That's....you don't have to-"
"I'm not being nice. I'm being honest."
Her mom appeared from the kitchen with a camera in her hand, tears already streaming down her face. "Oh, my baby~ My darling baby~" She pulled Tessa into a hug, careful not to smudge the makeup. "You look beautiful. I'm so proud of you."
"Mom, it's just prom-"
"It's not just prom. It's you. Stepping out of your shell. Finally letting people see how gorgeous you are."
Martin watched the exchange, his chest tight. He thought about the popular girl, Iris, with her perfect hair, perfect boyfriend and perfect life. He was so sure she was the answer. So sure that if he could just get her attention, everything would fall into place.
But standing here, watching Tessa glow under her mother's praise, he couldn't remember why Iris even mattered.
They took pictures on the front porch. Tessa's dad, a quiet man with a kind face, showed up from the living room and shook Martin's hand like he was evaluating a used car.
"Take care of her..." He said. "...or I'll find you."
"Dad!"
"I'm just saying."
They drove to the hotel in Martin's beat-up Alfa Romeo, the windows down while "So into you" by Tamia played on the radio. Tessa sang along, off-key and laughing, and Martin couldn't stop looking at her.
"What?" She said, catching his stare.
"Nothing. Just...you're different tonight." Martin softy said.
"Different good or different bad?" Tessa frowned.
"Different good."
She smiled, and turned back to the window.
The moment they walked into the ballroom, the room went quiet.
Not metaphorically. Literally.
People stopped mid-sentence. A girl dropped her clutch and someone's date choked on his punch.
"Who is that?" Someone whispered, not quietly enough.
"Is that...Tessa? Tessa Johnson?"
"No fucking way."
Martin felt a swell of pride so fierce it almost knocked him over. He offered Tessa his arm and she took it, her fingers trembling slightly against his sleeve.
"You've got this." He murmured.
"I don't have anything..." She whispered back. "...I'm wearing a dress and someone else's face."
"It's still you. Just...less messier." Martin grinned.
They walked through the crowd like they owned the place. People parted for them. Actually parted. Iris was standing by the punch bowl and for a split second, she looked almost jealous.
Martin should have felt triumphant. Instead, he felt...nothing.
The two of them danced together. Fast songs, slow songs, songs that nobody knew the words to but everybody sang anyway. Tessa let loose in a way Martin never saw before. She was throwing her arms up, spinning in circles and laughing until her sides hurt. Her dress twirled around her like a flower blooming in fast-forward.
When the song "Bleeding Love" by Leona Lewis came on, Martin pulled her closer.
"Is this okay?" He asked, his hands on her waist.
She nodded, her arms looping around his neck. "It's okay."
They swayed together, not quite in time with the music, but close enough. Her forehead rested against his chest. He could smell her shampoo. It was something fruity, like strawberries. He could feel her heartbeat, fast and light, matching his own.
"Martin..." She said quietly.
"Yeah?"
"I'm glad it was you. The person who found out. I'm glad it was you."
He pulled back just enough to look at her face. The fairy lights strung across the ceiling reflected in her eyes, making them look like they were full of stars.
"Me too." He said.
He leaned in. Her lips were half-open, her breath warm against his mouth. He could feel the moment stretching, pulling taut like a rubber band about to snap. Just a little closer, and-
"EVERYBODY LISTEN UP! "
The voice came from the stage. It was Iris, a microphone in her hand and her face twisted into something ugly and triumphant.
"I have something to say..." Iris announced, "...and you're all gonna wanna hear it."
The music cut, the dancers stopped and every head turned toward the stage.
"There's someone in this room..." Iris continued. "...who has been making all of our lives miserable. Posting our secrets. Spreading our pain like it's entertainment. And I know who it is."
Tessa's hand tightened on Martin's arm. Her face turned pale.
"Someone told me tonight..." Iris said, her eyes scanning the crowd. "...that the girl behind 'cherrybomb-dirt' is standing in this very ballroom. And her name is-"
No. Martin thought. No, no, no!
"Tessa Johnson."
The name landed like a bomb.
People turned and heads swiveled. And there, in the middle of the dance floor, glowing pink under the fairy lights, stood Tessa.
"I didn't...." She started, but her voice broke. "I-"
"Is it true?" Someone shouted.
"Did you write about my parents?"
"My disease?"
"My life?"
Tessa looked up at Martin, and the betrayal in her eyes cut deeper than any knife. "You told her..." She whispered. "...you told her."
"I didn't." He said desperately. "I swear, Tessa, I didn't-"
But she was already running. Her heels clicked against the floor, then slapped as she kicked them off, bolting for the doors in her bare feet. The crowd parted again, but this time it wasn't from admiration. It was from disgust.
Martin tried to follow her, but a hand grabbed his arm. His best friend, Eom Seonghyeon, a junior who wasn't even supposed to be at prom, pulled him back.
"Let her go, man." Seonghyeon said. "She's not worth it."
Martin stared at him. "You."
Seonghyeon's face flickered. "Look, I heard you talking on the phone. About the Tumblr thing. And Iris has been nice to me, okay? She said if I gave her something good, she'd-"
Martin's fist connected with Seonghyeon's jaw before he could finish the sentence and chaos erupted. Someone screamed. Someone else started filming on their camcorder. A teacher lunged for Martin, but he was already running, shoving through the crowd, bursting through the double doors into the cool night air.
"Tessa!"
The parking lot was empty. Her sister's car was already pulling away, taillights disappearing around the corner. Martin stood there, breathing hard, his knuckles throbbing and his heart a shattered mess in his chest.
⏳
He called her house forty times yet no one answered.
He called her cell phone and everytime, he received a voice mail from her.
Hey, it's Tessa! Leave a message. Or don't. Whatever.
"I'm sorry..." He said into the phone after the fifth beep. "...I'm so sorry Tessa. It wasn't me. It was Seonghyeon. He heard me talking to my mom about..about everything. I never would have...please, Tessa, just pick up-"
Nothing.
By the time he reached her house, it was midnight. The lights were off in her room, but he could see a faint glow from behind her curtains. She was awake. She just wasn't answering.
He threw rocks at her window. Pebbles at first, then bigger ones. The first one bounced off the glass. The second hit the frame. The third one...
The curtain moved, just a sliver, but it remained closed.
"Tessa!" He called up. "Please! Just give me five minutes!"
No response.
Martin looked at his car. He looked at the trunk. And then, because he was an idiot and a romantic and possibly the dumbest person alive, he had an idea.
He popped the trunk and pulled out the beat-up boombox he kept in there for some reason, then, climbed onto the roof of his Alfa Romeo.
The metal groaned under his weight. He wobbled dangerously and nearly slipped, then caught his balance.
"TESSA JOHNSON!" He shouted. "I'M SORRY! I'M AN IDIOT! AND I'M GOING TO PROVE IT BY MAKING A COMPLETE FOOL OF MYSELF!"
He set the boombox on the roof beside him and hit play.
The opening notes of "You're Still the One" by Shania Twain filled the quiet suburban street. And Martin Edwards, six-foot-three, lanky, disaster of a human being, started to sing.
"LOOks LikE wE mAde it...."
His voice cracked on the first line.
"LOok hOw faR wE've coMe, mY BabY~"
He was off-key. Terribly, magnificently off-key. His voice was raspy from yelling, soft on some lines and too loud in others. He didn't hit most of the notes. He didn't even come close.
But he sang like his life depended on it.
"We mIghTa tOOk tHe loNg way~"
He threw his arms out for emphasis, almost falling off the car, but he kept going.
"We kNeW we'D geT thEre sOmeday~"
The curtain flew open.
Tessa stood at her window, her face blotchy from crying and her mascara smeared down her cheeks like dark rivers. Her hair escaped its waves and returned to its natural state of chaos. She was wearing an oversized T-shirt and sweatpants, and she looked like the most beautiful thing Martin has ever seen.
"You're still the one I run to~"
"What are you doing?" She yelled down at him.
"SERANADING YOU!"
"The one that I belong to~"
"You're going to wake up the whole neighborhood!"
"You're still the one I want for life~~"
"Martin!"
He stopped singing. The music on the boombox kept playing, filling the silence he left behind. He stood on the roof of his car, his arms out, hair a mess and face flushed bright red, breathing hard.
"I didn't tell anyone..." He said, his voice raw. "It was Eom Seonghyeon. He overheard me on the phone with my mom. I never would have....I swear, Tessa. I would never do that to you."
She stared at him as the music played on.
"I know what I asked you to do was wrong..." He continued. "...pretending to be my girlfriend just so I could impress some girl who doesn't even know I exist. That was stupid. That was cruel. But somewhere along the way, I stopped pretending."
He swallowed hard.
"I stopped pretending, Tessa. And I don't want Iris. I never wanted Iris. I want you. With your messy hair and your crooked glasses and your pimple patches. I want the girl who writes down secrets because she's too scared to share her own. I want the girl who thinks gothic literature is the best thing on earth and who sings along to Britney Spears like she's at a concert."
His voice broke.
"I want you. The real you. Not the prom version. Not the Tumblr Girl. Just you, Tessa."
The boombox clicked and the song ended.
Silence.
Then the front door suddenly flew open. Gretchen stood in the doorway, her face a thundercloud of fury. "YOU!" She screamed, pointing at Martin. "YOU ABSOLUTE PIECE OF TRASH! You break my sister's heart, you humiliate her in front of the entire school, and then you show up here with a boombox like you're in some kind of movie?!"
"Technically, it's a Sony-"
"I don't CARE what brand it is! Get off my property before I-"
"Gretchen stop." Tessa said, her voice soft but firm.
She was standing behind her sister now, barefoot on the porch, her arms wrapped around herself. Her eyes were red, her face was a mess, but she wasn't crying anymore.
"Gretchen." She said again. "Go inside."
"But-"
"Please."
Gretchen looked at her sister, then at Martim, then back at her sister. She muttered something under her breath that and possibly a word that would make a sailor blush. Then she turned and stomped back inside, slamming the door hard enough to rattle the windows.
Tessa walked down the porch steps, across the lawn and towards the boy standing on top of a car like an idiot.
"I'm still mad at you." She said.
"I know."
"You ruined my mascara."
"It looks good that way. Very...gothic."
She laughed. A small, broken sound. "You're such a idiot."
"I know that too."
She stopped in front of him. He climbed down from the car, nearly tripping over his own feet, and stood face to face with her. She was so much shorter than him that he had to look down to meet her eyes.
"I'm sorry..." He said again. "...for all of it. For blackmailing you. For dragging you into this. For not protecting you from Seonghyeon. For-"
"Martin."
"Yeah?"
"Shut up and kiss me already."
He blinked. "What? Really?"
"Really."
He leaned down as she stood on her tiptoes. And their lips met in the middle.
It wasn't perfect. His nose bumped her cheek. She let out a little surprised squeak. Their teeth almost clacked together. But then they found the rhythm. It was soft and slow. His hand cupped the back of her head, tangling in her messy hair. Her fingers curled into the fabric of his shirt, pulling him closer.
Martin's lips were firmer than she imagined. The first press was just pressure, a testing of warmth. Then he tilted his head, and the world tilted with him.
The kiss deepened, like they've been practicing for this moment without even realizing it. Martin didn't rush. His palm cupped her jaw, thumb brushing her cheekbone, lingering there as if memorizing the angle of her face. Her hands fisted the front of his shirt now, not to push him away, but to anchor herself.
His other hand found her hip, thumb pressing into the bone just as his tongue swept against hers. She tasted like coffee and a sweet treat. And in that moment he realised how much he truly wanted to kiss her all along.
When they finally pulled apart, both of them were breathless.
"That was..." Tessa whispered. "...not bad."
"Not bad?" Martin grinned. "I'll take it."
"I might need more practice."
"Me too."
He kissed her again. Shorter this time, but sweeter. When he pulled back, she was smiling. A real smile, wide and unguarded, the kind that made her eyes crinkle at the corners.
From the upstairs window, Gretchen's voice drifted down, "IF YOU TWO ARE DONE BEING DISGUSTING, IT'S PAST MIDNIGHT AND I HAVE CLASS IN THE MORNING!"
They both looked up. Gretchen was watching from behind the curtain, shaking her head but smiling either way.
"Go home, Martin." Tessa said.
"Come with me."
"To your house?"
"Anywhere. I don't care. Just...stay with me."
She looked at him for a long moment. Then she grabbed his hand, laced their fingers together, and pulled him towards the front door.
"Fine..." She said. "...but you leave in the morning. Through the window."
"Yes ma'am."
Martin scooped her up bridal style. She weighed almost nothing, and carried her inside, past a grumbling Gretchen up the stairs and through to her bedroom where they'd fall asleep almost immediately, exhausted from the long night~
Epilogue
The next morning, Tessa woke up to a new post on her Tumblr.
Not from her.
From him.
martin edwards-makes-noise🤟🏼just posted:
my girlfriend is the girl who writes cherrybomb-dirt. and before you come for her, consider this: every single thing she wrote was true. every secret. every scandal and every messy, ugly and beautiful piece of gossip.
you did those things. you said those things and you chose to be the people you are.
she just wrote them down.
maybe be mad at yourselves first for a while.
also she's the prettiest girl in the entire world and she's dating me, so who's really winning here? 😼
♡ 12,403 notes
Tessa read the post three times. Then she put down her phone, rolled over, and punched Martin in the arm.
"You did not."
"I absolutely did."
"Twelve thousand notes?!"
"I know." He grinned, pulling her closer. "We're famous."
"We're dead."
"Tomato, tomahto."
She buried her face in his chest, laughing so hard her shoulders shook. And when he kissed the top of her head, soft and warm and full of something that felt suspiciously like forever, she decided that maybe, just maybe, being seen wasn't so scary after all.
𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
STOP I'M ACTUALLY SOBBING RN 😭😭😭 I enjoyed writing this soooooo much :(❤️🩹 I'm a little sad it's over.
Also, somebody tell Martin Jonathan Woo-Ju Edwards Park personally that I fucking love him. Tell him I said so.
Written by: Bunny_JHS
nah girl i agree with you btw id never be with a man who wanted it up his butt like .. lmfao go get a boyfriend then since you wanna take dick so bad bye
A person who gets it HAHAHAHAHAHAHAH 😭😭 This debate is tew funny. Shi but I don't discriminate. If you're into that you're into that ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Let's switch the narrative, what if a woman liked it in the ass? What does that make her? NOTHING. She just likes it in the ass. A preference. 😒🙄
Okay a woman liking it in the ass is completely different. An*l isn't replacing anything. It's an extra sensation for her, not a substitute. For a man, his prostate is literally stimulated best by a penis. That's biology. So when a man chooses a strap-on over a woman, he's chasing a feeling that's inherently male-on-male. A woman's an*l preference is just a preference. A man's is a stand-in for the real thing. Not the same. At all.
Pegging is a sexual preference whereas being gay is a sexual orientation BUNNY_JHS. 😠
LISTEN TO ME, if a man actively wants something penetrative up his ass, he is seeking a sensation that's BIOLOGICALLY designed for a PENIS, and the only natural match for that is another MAN! OKAY. MAN! Wanting that feeling is not a "preference." It's mimicking gay sex, literally replacing a woman with a strap-on because a real penis would be the ideal. At that point, the desire is NOT straight. It's a substitute for the real male thing. That's repressed homosexuality with extra steps I'M TELLING YOU BRO.
(again, this is all a friendly little banter. Please don't take it seriously).
Pegging IS NOT homosexual.
YES IT IS. I could go on and on about how a man wanting to be pegged is very homo. He likes it up his ass he might as well take actual dih up there. You can't change my mind LMAO
𝐿𝒾𝒸𝓀 𝐼𝓉 | 𝒩𝐼-𝒦𝐼
ᥫ᭡. An ENHYPEN NI-KI oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Ni-ki as a tattooist. Does he know I'm crazy?
ᥫ᭡. Very specific genre for a VERY SPECIFIC AUDIENCE therefore
⚠️‼️Mdni‼️⚠️
ᥫ᭡. 18+
ᥫ᭡. Smut
ᥫ᭡. Songs
•Backshots - Swae
•Headshot - ptasinski & RJ Pasin
•Heaven - Julia Michaels
•Wet the bed - Chr*s Br*wn ft Ludacris
•Feel something - Chr*s Br*wn
•Candy shop - 50 cent ft Olivia
•Drunk in love - Beyoncè ft J*yZ
•Slow Down - Chase Atlantic
•Church - Chase Atlantic
•Tidal Wave - Chase Atlantic
•When we - Tank
•Pillowtalk - ZAYN
•Chaconne - ENHYPEN
•Girl with the tattoo - Miguel
•Why'd you only call me when you're high? - Arctic Monkeys
•R U Mine - Arctic Monkeys
•Nasty - Ariana Grande
•off the table - Ariana Grande & The Weeknd
•Everyday - Ariana Grande ft Future
•Living room flow - Jhenè Aiko
•Shirt - SZA
•One night only - Sonder
•Care - Sonder
•Void - The Neighbourhood
•Poison - Brent Faiyaz
•All mine - Brent Faiyaz
•Kiss it better - Rihanna
•Needed Me - Rihanna
•Talk 2 me - Montell Fish
•Altitude - Montell Fish
•Bathroom - Montell Fish
•Destroy myself just for you - Montell Fish
•Girls need love - Summer Walker
•Morning - Teyana Taylor ft Kehlani
ᥫ᭡. Tags (open but please follow to be part of the list ✨): @vanishingnana @kittyyhoon
The bell above the door chimed a tinny, hollow sound that did nothing to soothe the spike of irritation thrumming under Kira's skin. She hated changing her routine. She hated having to outsource something as intimate as skin modification to a stranger, but her regular artist had a six-month waiting list, and this downtown parlor advertised a rare, last-minute tat session. Kira just wanted the ink done. The finality of it. She wanted to look down at her hip and see something beautiful and entirely hers. A fresh start. A sharp contrast to the chaotic, fractured mess her life has been since the breakup eight months ago. She never thought about him in weeks. She actively trained her brain to treat his memory like a ghost town, assuming he did what he always threatened to do: pack up his machines and move three countries away to escape the suffocating weight of his own head.
Then she heard it. A low, gravelly and completely unmistakable grunt from the back corner chair, shielded partially by a heavy velvet curtain.
Kira froze, her breath catching in her throat. "You've got to be fucking kidding me."
The curtain was nudged aside with the blunt end of an elbow. Riki looked up. The heavy, industrial coils of his tattoo machine whined down to a low hum, the needle hovering mere millimeters above a customer's half-shaded forearm. His expression didn't shatter. Riki was a man built out of granite and pure spite, a permanent scowl etched into the sharp, hard lines of his brows. But she saw the exact second the recognition hit him. His jaw clenched so hard a corded muscle leaped in his throat, and his dark eyes narrowed into slits of pure, unadulterated ice. He didn't say a single word. He just stared at her, the silence stretching between them like a tightrope over a canyon, heavy with the suffocating weight of everything they burned to the ground.
Kira's instinct was to bolt. She was normally the carefree one, the sweet, chilled-out presence who smoothed over Riki's jagged edges, but the sheer toxicity of their relationship left her cautious, guarded and fiercely stubborn. She already paid a non-refundable hundred and fifty-dollar deposit and she wasn't going to give him the satisfaction of fleeing. When she turned to the receptionist, the poor girl looked like she wanted to swallow her own tongue, awkwardly skimming through the shop's schedule book. "Uh…yeah, so our other tattooist Heeseung called in sick for today. It's...it's Riki's chair....or we can rebook you in about three weeks."
"I'm staying." Kira said, her voice dropping an octave.
Riki didn't break eye contact as he finished the final line on his current customer's arm. The moment the man left the shop, Riki stood up, towering and imposing in his black denim, his movements detached. He tore off his contaminated gloves, threw them into the biohazard bin with a wet snap, and walked over to the stainless-steel sink. He washed his hands without a word, the harsh scent of green soap filling the air, the rhythmic scrubbing acting as a countdown to the inevitable collision. When he finally walked over to his station, he didn't offer a greeting. He just held out a gloved hand for her design.
Kira handed him the crumpled paper. It was a picture of a lily. White lilies were traditionally symbols of rebirth, fresh beginnings and the cleansing of the past. But this lily was particularly unique because she asked for the edges of the petals to be slightly frayed, bleeding into sharp, geometric lines with the word Sovereign drawn over it. It was meant to go on her lower hip, curving just above the lace of her panty line, a declaration that her body belonged to no one but herself.
Riki looked at the stencil. He smirked. Just once, a bitter, knowing twist of his lips before he wiped it clean off of his face, his professional mask locking back into place. "You sure about this? That's a pretty sensitive area."
"Just do it, asshole." Kira shot back, her voice a dangerous purr.
Riki didn't argue with her. He prepared the site, his movements clinical but tense. When Kira hopped onto the high leather chair, leaning back and pulling the waistband of her jeans down just far enough to expose the soft curve of her hip, the air in the room thinned. Riki prepped the skin with alcohol. It was cold, a stark contrast to the sudden heat radiating from his body as he leaned in. He kept his boundaries professional for the first five minutes, his gloves, stencil alignment and the initial bite of the needle tearing into her flesh. Kira locked her jaw, refusing to give him a sound, focusing entirely on the burning sensation of the ink entering her dermis.
But as the minutes bled into a heavy, agonizing half-hour, the professional distance disintegrated. Riki leaned in closer than necessary, his broad shoulders blocking out the lights of the shop, trapping her in his shadow. His breath, warm and smelling faintly of mint and cannabis, ghosted over the bare skin of her stomach. Every time he reached for a paper towel to wipe away the excess ink and blood, his knuckles brushed deliberately against the sensitive, hyper-reactive skin just above her crotch. He called it "expanding the canvas," but they both knew the truth. He was reclaiming the territory. His thumb pressed firmly against her pelvic bone, adjusting her position, his touch lingering a second too long, always sliding just a fraction of an inch under the material of her underwear.
Kira was furious. She was humiliated by her body's betrayal. Because despite the hatred boiling in her chest, the proximity was doing exactly what it used to do: lighting a fire between her thighs. She could feel the heavy, thumping ache deep in her pussy, a wetness pooling against the cotton of her panties. She knew he noticed. He noticed every single time her thighs pressed together involuntarily and every sharp, hitching inhale she took when his hand grazed her, every tremor of her abdominal muscles.
Riki knew her body better than he knew his own. He knew exactly what he was doing to her.
Kira tried desperately to ignore it, pulling out her phone and scrolling mindlessly, her teeth grinding together so hard her temples ached. The silence between them was a living, breathing thing. It felt suffocating. Finally, Riki broke it. His voice wasn't cold. It dropped into that quiet and rough, almost gentle register he only used when they were alone, stripped of their armor.
"Quit being so nervous and stay still."
Kira snapped, locking her phone and glaring down at the hair on his head. "I can't if you keep doing that on purpose."
Riki paused the needle. The sudden silence of the machine was deafening. He slowly lifted his head, looking up at her from where he sat perched between her parted legs. His dark eyes were burning, completely stripped of his usual nonchalant indifference. "Doing what Kira?"
"Being...close. Stop."
"I'm doing my job, genius..." He murmured, his gaze dropping to her lips before snapping back to her eyes. The ridiculous lie hung in the humid air between them and neither of them bought it.
He lowered his head again, finishing the final shading of the lily. The needle dragged across her skin, a beautiful pain that felt like an exorcism and an invitation all at once.
The hum of the tattoo machine finally died, leaving a heavy, suffocating silence in the shop. The air smelled of rubbing alcohol and blood. Riki didn't pull away immediately. He sat on his low stool, trapped between her parted legs, staring down at the fresh, angry red welt on her hip. He used a piece of green-soap-soaked paper towel to wipe away the excess ink and the tiny beads of blood rising to the surface of the lily. His touch was firm, pushing into her skin just hard enough to sting and make her hips twitch.
"A lily huh?" He started, his voice a deep rasp that cut through the quiet. He didn't look up at her face yet. His thumb traced the swollen contour of the petals, pressing just hard enough to make her inhale sharply. "Rebirth. Clean slate. That's what this means, right? You look up the meanings online or something?"
Kira locked her jaw, her fingers gripping the edges of the leather chair. "It means whatever I want it to mean, Riki. Just wrap it up so I can leave."
"You're trying to wash your hands of me. That's what it means..." He countered directly, his eyes finally snapping up to meet hers, dark and turbulent. "...you wanted Heeseung to do it, but you got stuck with me because you can't get rid of me that easily, Kira. It's a joke, putting this on your skin. You think a flower could wash away your sins and change the fact that we practically burned each other alive?"
"Oh God not this again..." Kira whispered rolling her eyes, her voice lacked its usual lightness. It trembled. "....this is me moving on. I wanted something beautiful. Something that wasn't toxic like us. I'm actually glad I left your ass so I no longer have to deal with your childishness. Finish up so I can get out of here."
Riki let out a harsh, cynical breath, his thumb running over the word Sovereign freshly carved into her skin. "Beautiful? Kira look at it. It's bleeding. It's a white lily, but it's stained with your blood and my ink. That's our entire fucking relationship. You wanted a clean slate. To start over, but you came back to the one person who you claimed 'destroyed your life'. You can't separate the beauty from the damage. This bullshit doesn't mean anything. You're a hypocrite."
Kira's chest heaved, his words cutting deeper than the needles ever could. The sheer paradox of it paralyzed her. He was right. She sought out an act of rebirth, but by a twisted stroke of fate, she delivered her canvas to the executioner of her terrible past. Their love was never, ever gentle. It was a beautiful, volatile disaster, much like the frayed, bleeding edges she requested on the petals. Kira wanted to be free of Riki, yet she just allowed him to permanently alter her flesh, binding his craftsmanship to her body for the rest of her life.
"Moving on doesn't look like this..." Riki murmured, his gaze dropping to her mouth, then back to the fresh wound. "...you're shaking. You've been shaking since you sat down. And I know it's not because of the needle."
"God you're a narcissist!" She shot back, though there was no real venom in it, only desperation. "...you think everything revolves around you."
"When it comes to this skin? Yeah, I do." Riki said, his voice dropping an octave as he stood up, his massive frame instantly looming over her, trapping her against the backrest of the chair. He tore off his latex gloves and threw them into the bin. He leaned in, placing one hand on the armrest beside her head, his face centimetres away from hers. "...do you hate me?"
"I do." She breathed, her heart hammering against her ribs, the proximity making her dizzy.
"Good. Because I hate you too..." He confessed, his jaw clenching so hard a muscle leaped in his throat. His façade completely cracked, revealing the raw vulnerability he only ever showed her. "...I hate that you walked out on us. I hate that I can't sleep because the bed feels too big. And I fucking hate that you came into my shop with that stupid sketch looking for a clean slate." He mocked. "You're basically saying that you and I are completely through. It pisses me off. You're making me want to ruin you all over again."
Kira looked up at him, the walls she built up over the last eight months crumbling under the intensity of his gaze. She didn't want the clean slate anymore. She wanted the feeling of excitement that came with the chaos he brought to her life. She reached up, her fingers tangling in the collar of his black shirt, pulling him down.
"What's stopping you then." She whispered.
Riki's mouth crashed into hers with a rough, desperate violence that shattered any remaining illusion of hatred. It was a punishing, bruising kiss that confessed everything Riki's pride never would:
I hate you.
I hate how much I need you.
I haven't slept a full night since you walked out.
I still see your legs wrapped around my neck every time I close my eyes.
His dick throbbed harder now. Kira let out a groan into his mouth, her fingers tangling in his blond-ish platinum hair, pulling him closer until their teeth clashed.
They didn't make it to the back room. The other artist left early a while ago, leaving the shop entirely empty with the front neon sign buzzing. Riki broke the kiss just long enough to stride to the front door, his heavy boots clicking against the floor. He threw the deadbolt with a heavy thud, flipped the sign to 'Closed,' and turned back to her like a predator cornering its prey.
The tattoo chair was still warm when he ripped her jeans down past her knees. Riki didn't waste time with gentleness. Their entire relationship was a push-and-pull of intense passion and volatile arguments, and this was the culmination of eight months of starved frustration. He grabbed her by the hips, lifting her off the chair and slamming her back down against the sleek, cold stainless-steel counter of his workstation. The contrast of the freezing metal against her bare backside made her gasp, her legs instantly wrapping tightly around his waist, her heels digging into his back.
"Riki-" Kira choked out, but he silenced her with his mouth, his tongue invading hers as his large hands ripped her panties off, discarding them carelessly onto the floor.
He didn't use protection and frankly, he didn't care, and neither did she. He fumbled with his own belt, his jeans dropping slightly as he freed his length, thick, hard and pulsing with a desperate need. Riki guided himself to Kira's entrance, which was already dripping with pre-cum, desperate for him. He paused for one second, staring into her eyes, his chest heaving.
"Tell me to stop..." He growled, a rare flash of vulnerability breaking through his gruff exterior. "...tell me to stop, Kira, or I'm going to ruin you."
"Go ahead. You've done it before, why stop now." She breathed, her hands clutching his broad shoulders.
Riki drove into her with a heavy, single thrust that embedded him deep within her core. Kira's head snapped back, a sharp, ragged scream catching in her throat as her internal muscles clamped around him, fiercely tight.
"Aw, fuck yeah!" Kira moaned. He was too large, stretching her pussy completely, filling the emptiness that plagued her for months. He didn't wait for her to adjust. He began to move, his strokes long, hard, and punishing, slamming his pelvis against hers with a rhythmic, wet heat that echoed through the empty parlor.
The pleasure was blinding, sharp and laced with the stinging ache of her fresh tattoo. Riki's hand reached down, his large palm gripping her hip right next to the raw, blood-stained lily, his fingers digging into her flesh to anchor her as he pounded into her. Every thrust jarred the fresh wound, a beautiful, sadomasochistic blend of pain and ecstasy that had Kira crying out, her tears blurring the sight of his face above her.
"Fuck you feel so good princess!" Riki groaned.
Kira locked her fingers in his hair, her grip tightening until it was an uncompromising command that forced his head back. "Kneel." She rasped, her voice dripping with an authority that shattered his façade again. "Look at what you did, and clean it up. Lick it."
Riki's chest heaved, a dangerous flare in his dark eyes before he pulled out and dropped heavily to his knees between her thighs, completely submitting to the gravity of her touch. He leaned his face into the soft curve of her lower hip, his hot breath ghosting over the fresh, weeping ink of the lily before his tongue flicked out, tracing the raw, slowly stinging line of the stem, lapping up the tiny beads of blood and clear plasma with a reverence that felt religious. The sharp, copper tang on his tongue only fueled his desire, and without a word, he slid his hands under her thighs, parting her further as he buried his face directly into her soaking puh. Riki didn't hold back. His tongue parted her swollen lips with broad and heavy strokes, drinking her in, while his nose pressed deep against her clit, his harsh, rhythmic breaths driving her absolutely wild as he ate her with a fierce, starved desperation that echoed through the quiet shop.
"That's right!~" Kira cried out.
He was tenacious. He changed their position, dragging her down onto the floor, using his discarded jacket as a meager barrier against the hard floor. He pinned her hands above her head, his chest crushing her boobs as he drove back into her from above, his movements frenzied, a chaotic release of all the words he never spoke and lonely nights.
"You're mine." Riki growled against her neck, his teeth biting into the sensitive skin of her shoulder, marking her in a different way. "You think you can just walk in here and get a flower to wash me out? You're fucking insane Kira. You'll always be mine no matter where you go or who you're with. You will fucking remember me in every face you see."
Kira couldn't speak. She could barely breathe. The friction was a wildfire, the heat of their bodies making a desperate, sticky sound with every hard shove. Kira's hips arched up to meet him, begging for the final release, her toes curling as the contractions began to ripple through her lower abdomen.
Sensing her climax, Riki shifted Kira again, dragging her to her feet and walked towards the high wooden reception desk near the front door, bending her over the table. He forced her torso flat against the wood, pulling her hips back until she was perfectly aligned for him. He thrusted into her from behind, deep and hard. To keep her from screaming loud enough to alert the people on the street outside, Riki brought one large calloused hand around, pressing his palm firmly over her mouth.
Kira's eyes widened, looking at their reflection in the dark front window of the shop as Riki took her brutally.
"Oh gosh YES!" Kira screamed.
With his hand muffling her cries, Riki bit down fiercely on her shoulder, his teeth sinking into her flesh to anchor himself as the orgasm finally ripped through the both of them. It was a violent, shattering release that left Kira's entire body trembling, her internal walls pulsing around his dick in tight, frantic waves. Riki let out a low, guttural roar into her hair, his pace accelerating into a blinding blur before he gave one final, deep thrust, burying himself to the hilt as he filled her, his body shuddering violently as he spent himself inside her.
The silence that followed was heavy, punctuated only by their ragged, echoing breaths. They stayed like that for a very long moment, chest to back, the reality of what they just did slowly settling into the room. True to their nature, neither of them said I love you or I'm sorry. The damage was done a long time ago, the fire burned and the ashes were still hot.
Riki slowly pulled out and got dressed thereafter. He walked to the back, his nonchalant, grumpy demeanor locking back into place like iron shutters. When he returned and handed her a cold bottle of water, his eyes averted as he picked up his tattoo machine to clean it.
"Don't go to another artist next time. Come to me." He muttered, his voice rough.
Kira leaned against the desk, her legs shaking, her hair a wild and tangled mess. She let out a breathless, disbelieving laugh. "Next time?"
Riki shrugged, his back turned to her, though the tight set of his shoulders betrayed his tension. "Your tattoo needs a touch-up in two weeks. It's a delicate spot. Ink bleeds a lot."
Kira didn't answer him. She gathered her jeans, slipping them on with a wince as the denim rubbed against her raw tattoo. She walked out of the shop into the cool midnight air, the heavy door clicking shut behind her. She got into her car, staring at her reflection in the rearview mirror before shifting her gaze down to her waistband. She pulled it back. The lily was perfect. It was a symbol of rebirth, yes, but it was carved into her skin by the very man who destroyed her, proving that some endings were never truly...an end?
"Kira, what are you doing." She muttered to herself, her senses finally returning.
Her phone buzzed in the cup holder.
1 new message
Fuckass piece of shit
You forgot your panties on my floor :)
Kira did not read the message nor did she reply. She put the car in drive and pulled away into the city, regret slowly sleeping into her bones after realising what she's done.
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
Written by: Bunny_JHS©
Do u think Niki likes getting pegged?
Probably not? 😭
Hot take: pegging is homosexual. DON'T COME FOR ME PLEASE.
SOOOO HOT 😔😔😔✊🏼✊🏼✊🏼
editing is just you vs. past-you in a duel of questionable comma placement and emotional instability
𝐿𝒾𝒸𝓀 𝐼𝓉 | 𝒩𝐼-𝒦𝐼
ᥫ᭡. An ENHYPEN NI-KI oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Ni-ki as a tattooist. Does he know I'm crazy?
ᥫ᭡. Very specific genre for a VERY SPECIFIC AUDIENCE therefore
⚠️‼️Mdni‼️⚠️
ᥫ᭡. 18+
ᥫ᭡. Smut
ᥫ᭡. Songs
•Backshots - Swae
•Headshot - ptasinski & RJ Pasin
•Heaven - Julia Michaels
•Wet the bed - Chr*s Br*wn ft Ludacris
•Feel something - Chr*s Br*wn
•Candy shop - 50 cent ft Olivia
•Drunk in love - Beyoncè ft J*yZ
•Slow Down - Chase Atlantic
•Church - Chase Atlantic
•Tidal Wave - Chase Atlantic
•When we - Tank
•Pillowtalk - ZAYN
•Chaconne - ENHYPEN
•Girl with the tattoo - Miguel
•Why'd you only call me when you're high? - Arctic Monkeys
•R U Mine - Arctic Monkeys
•Nasty - Ariana Grande
•off the table - Ariana Grande & The Weeknd
•Everyday - Ariana Grande ft Future
•Living room flow - Jhenè Aiko
•Shirt - SZA
•One night only - Sonder
•Care - Sonder
•Void - The Neighbourhood
•Poison - Brent Faiyaz
•All mine - Brent Faiyaz
•Kiss it better - Rihanna
•Needed Me - Rihanna
•Talk 2 me - Montell Fish
•Altitude - Montell Fish
•Bathroom - Montell Fish
•Destroy myself just for you - Montell Fish
•Girls need love - Summer Walker
•Morning - Teyana Taylor ft Kehlani
ᥫ᭡. Tags (open but please follow to be part of the list ✨): @vanishingnana @kittyyhoon
The bell above the door chimed a tinny, hollow sound that did nothing to soothe the spike of irritation thrumming under Kira's skin. She hated changing her routine. She hated having to outsource something as intimate as skin modification to a stranger, but her regular artist had a six-month waiting list, and this downtown parlor advertised a rare, last-minute tat session. Kira just wanted the ink done. The finality of it. She wanted to look down at her hip and see something beautiful and entirely hers. A fresh start. A sharp contrast to the chaotic, fractured mess her life has been since the breakup eight months ago. She never thought about him in weeks. She actively trained her brain to treat his memory like a ghost town, assuming he did what he always threatened to do: pack up his machines and move three countries away to escape the suffocating weight of his own head.
Then she heard it. A low, gravelly and completely unmistakable grunt from the back corner chair, shielded partially by a heavy velvet curtain.
Kira froze, her breath catching in her throat. "You've got to be fucking kidding me."
The curtain was nudged aside with the blunt end of an elbow. Riki looked up. The heavy, industrial coils of his tattoo machine whined down to a low hum, the needle hovering mere millimeters above a customer's half-shaded forearm. His expression didn't shatter. Riki was a man built out of granite and pure spite, a permanent scowl etched into the sharp, hard lines of his brows. But she saw the exact second the recognition hit him. His jaw clenched so hard a corded muscle leaped in his throat, and his dark eyes narrowed into slits of pure, unadulterated ice. He didn't say a single word. He just stared at her, the silence stretching between them like a tightrope over a canyon, heavy with the suffocating weight of everything they burned to the ground.
Kira's instinct was to bolt. She was normally the carefree one, the sweet, chilled-out presence who smoothed over Riki's jagged edges, but the sheer toxicity of their relationship left her cautious, guarded and fiercely stubborn. She already paid a non-refundable hundred and fifty-dollar deposit and she wasn't going to give him the satisfaction of fleeing. When she turned to the receptionist, the poor girl looked like she wanted to swallow her own tongue, awkwardly skimming through the shop's schedule book. "Uh…yeah, so our other tattooist Heeseung called in sick for today. It's...it's Riki's chair....or we can rebook you in about three weeks."
"I'm staying." Kira said, her voice dropping an octave.
Riki didn't break eye contact as he finished the final line on his current customer's arm. The moment the man left the shop, Riki stood up, towering and imposing in his black denim, his movements detached. He tore off his contaminated gloves, threw them into the biohazard bin with a wet snap, and walked over to the stainless-steel sink. He washed his hands without a word, the harsh scent of green soap filling the air, the rhythmic scrubbing acting as a countdown to the inevitable collision. When he finally walked over to his station, he didn't offer a greeting. He just held out a gloved hand for her design.
Kira handed him the crumpled paper. It was a picture of a lily. White lilies were traditionally symbols of rebirth, fresh beginnings and the cleansing of the past. But this lily was particularly unique because she asked for the edges of the petals to be slightly frayed, bleeding into sharp, geometric lines with the word Sovereign drawn over it. It was meant to go on her lower hip, curving just above the lace of her panty line, a declaration that her body belonged to no one but herself.
Riki looked at the stencil. He smirked. Just once, a bitter, knowing twist of his lips before he wiped it clean off of his face, his professional mask locking back into place. "You sure about this? That's a pretty sensitive area."
"Just do it, asshole." Kira shot back, her voice a dangerous purr.
Riki didn't argue with her. He prepared the site, his movements clinical but tense. When Kira hopped onto the high leather chair, leaning back and pulling the waistband of her jeans down just far enough to expose the soft curve of her hip, the air in the room thinned. Riki prepped the skin with alcohol. It was cold, a stark contrast to the sudden heat radiating from his body as he leaned in. He kept his boundaries professional for the first five minutes, his gloves, stencil alignment and the initial bite of the needle tearing into her flesh. Kira locked her jaw, refusing to give him a sound, focusing entirely on the burning sensation of the ink entering her dermis.
But as the minutes bled into a heavy, agonizing half-hour, the professional distance disintegrated. Riki leaned in closer than necessary, his broad shoulders blocking out the lights of the shop, trapping her in his shadow. His breath, warm and smelling faintly of mint and cannabis, ghosted over the bare skin of her stomach. Every time he reached for a paper towel to wipe away the excess ink and blood, his knuckles brushed deliberately against the sensitive, hyper-reactive skin just above her crotch. He called it "expanding the canvas," but they both knew the truth. He was reclaiming the territory. His thumb pressed firmly against her pelvic bone, adjusting her position, his touch lingering a second too long, always sliding just a fraction of an inch under the material of her underwear.
Kira was furious. She was humiliated by her body's betrayal. Because despite the hatred boiling in her chest, the proximity was doing exactly what it used to do: lighting a fire between her thighs. She could feel the heavy, thumping ache deep in her pussy, a wetness pooling against the cotton of her panties. She knew he noticed. He noticed every single time her thighs pressed together involuntarily and every sharp, hitching inhale she took when his hand grazed her, every tremor of her abdominal muscles.
Riki knew her body better than he knew his own. He knew exactly what he was doing to her.
Kira tried desperately to ignore it, pulling out her phone and scrolling mindlessly, her teeth grinding together so hard her temples ached. The silence between them was a living, breathing thing. It felt suffocating. Finally, Riki broke it. His voice wasn't cold. It dropped into that quiet and rough, almost gentle register he only used when they were alone, stripped of their armor.
"Quit being so nervous and stay still."
Kira snapped, locking her phone and glaring down at the hair on his head. "I can't if you keep doing that on purpose."
Riki paused the needle. The sudden silence of the machine was deafening. He slowly lifted his head, looking up at her from where he sat perched between her parted legs. His dark eyes were burning, completely stripped of his usual nonchalant indifference. "Doing what Kira?"
"Being...close. Stop."
"I'm doing my job, genius..." He murmured, his gaze dropping to her lips before snapping back to her eyes. The ridiculous lie hung in the humid air between them and neither of them bought it.
He lowered his head again, finishing the final shading of the lily. The needle dragged across her skin, a beautiful pain that felt like an exorcism and an invitation all at once.
The hum of the tattoo machine finally died, leaving a heavy, suffocating silence in the shop. The air smelled of rubbing alcohol and blood. Riki didn't pull away immediately. He sat on his low stool, trapped between her parted legs, staring down at the fresh, angry red welt on her hip. He used a piece of green-soap-soaked paper towel to wipe away the excess ink and the tiny beads of blood rising to the surface of the lily. His touch was firm, pushing into her skin just hard enough to sting and make her hips twitch.
"A lily huh?" He started, his voice a deep rasp that cut through the quiet. He didn't look up at her face yet. His thumb traced the swollen contour of the petals, pressing just hard enough to make her inhale sharply. "Rebirth. Clean slate. That's what this means, right? You look up the meanings online or something?"
Kira locked her jaw, her fingers gripping the edges of the leather chair. "It means whatever I want it to mean, Riki. Just wrap it up so I can leave."
"You're trying to wash your hands of me. That's what it means..." He countered directly, his eyes finally snapping up to meet hers, dark and turbulent. "...you wanted Heeseung to do it, but you got stuck with me because you can't get rid of me that easily, Kira. It's a joke, putting this on your skin. You think a flower could wash away your sins and change the fact that we practically burned each other alive?"
"Oh God not this again..." Kira whispered rolling her eyes, her voice lacked its usual lightness. It trembled. "....this is me moving on. I wanted something beautiful. Something that wasn't toxic like us. I'm actually glad I left your ass so I no longer have to deal with your childishness. Finish up so I can get out of here."
Riki let out a harsh, cynical breath, his thumb running over the word Sovereign freshly carved into her skin. "Beautiful? Kira look at it. It's bleeding. It's a white lily, but it's stained with your blood and my ink. That's our entire fucking relationship. You wanted a clean slate. To start over, but you came back to the one person who you claimed 'destroyed your life'. You can't separate the beauty from the damage. This bullshit doesn't mean anything. You're a hypocrite."
Kira's chest heaved, his words cutting deeper than the needles ever could. The sheer paradox of it paralyzed her. He was right. She sought out an act of rebirth, but by a twisted stroke of fate, she delivered her canvas to the executioner of her terrible past. Their love was never, ever gentle. It was a beautiful, volatile disaster, much like the frayed, bleeding edges she requested on the petals. Kira wanted to be free of Riki, yet she just allowed him to permanently alter her flesh, binding his craftsmanship to her body for the rest of her life.
"Moving on doesn't look like this..." Riki murmured, his gaze dropping to her mouth, then back to the fresh wound. "...you're shaking. You've been shaking since you sat down. And I know it's not because of the needle."
"God you're a narcissist!" She shot back, though there was no real venom in it, only desperation. "...you think everything revolves around you."
"When it comes to this skin? Yeah, I do." Riki said, his voice dropping an octave as he stood up, his massive frame instantly looming over her, trapping her against the backrest of the chair. He tore off his latex gloves and threw them into the bin. He leaned in, placing one hand on the armrest beside her head, his face centimetres away from hers. "...do you hate me?"
"I do." She breathed, her heart hammering against her ribs, the proximity making her dizzy.
"Good. Because I hate you too..." He confessed, his jaw clenching so hard a muscle leaped in his throat. His façade completely cracked, revealing the raw vulnerability he only ever showed her. "...I hate that you walked out on us. I hate that I can't sleep because the bed feels too big. And I fucking hate that you came into my shop with that stupid sketch looking for a clean slate." He mocked. "You're basically saying that you and I are completely through. It pisses me off. You're making me want to ruin you all over again."
Kira looked up at him, the walls she built up over the last eight months crumbling under the intensity of his gaze. She didn't want the clean slate anymore. She wanted the feeling of excitement that came with the chaos he brought to her life. She reached up, her fingers tangling in the collar of his black shirt, pulling him down.
"What's stopping you then." She whispered.
Riki's mouth crashed into hers with a rough, desperate violence that shattered any remaining illusion of hatred. It was a punishing, bruising kiss that confessed everything Riki's pride never would:
I hate you.
I hate how much I need you.
I haven't slept a full night since you walked out.
I still see your legs wrapped around my neck every time I close my eyes.
His dick throbbed harder now. Kira let out a groan into his mouth, her fingers tangling in his blond-ish platinum hair, pulling him closer until their teeth clashed.
They didn't make it to the back room. The other artist left early a while ago, leaving the shop entirely empty with the front neon sign buzzing. Riki broke the kiss just long enough to stride to the front door, his heavy boots clicking against the floor. He threw the deadbolt with a heavy thud, flipped the sign to 'Closed,' and turned back to her like a predator cornering its prey.
The tattoo chair was still warm when he ripped her jeans down past her knees. Riki didn't waste time with gentleness. Their entire relationship was a push-and-pull of intense passion and volatile arguments, and this was the culmination of eight months of starved frustration. He grabbed her by the hips, lifting her off the chair and slamming her back down against the sleek, cold stainless-steel counter of his workstation. The contrast of the freezing metal against her bare backside made her gasp, her legs instantly wrapping tightly around his waist, her heels digging into his back.
"Riki-" Kira choked out, but he silenced her with his mouth, his tongue invading hers as his large hands ripped her panties off, discarding them carelessly onto the floor.
He didn't use protection and frankly, he didn't care, and neither did she. He fumbled with his own belt, his jeans dropping slightly as he freed his length, thick, hard and pulsing with a desperate need. Riki guided himself to Kira's entrance, which was already dripping with pre-cum, desperate for him. He paused for one second, staring into her eyes, his chest heaving.
"Tell me to stop..." He growled, a rare flash of vulnerability breaking through his gruff exterior. "...tell me to stop, Kira, or I'm going to ruin you."
"Go ahead. You've done it before, why stop now." She breathed, her hands clutching his broad shoulders.
Riki drove into her with a heavy, single thrust that embedded him deep within her core. Kira's head snapped back, a sharp, ragged scream catching in her throat as her internal muscles clamped around him, fiercely tight.
"Aw, fuck yeah!" Kira moaned. He was too large, stretching her pussy completely, filling the emptiness that plagued her for months. He didn't wait for her to adjust. He began to move, his strokes long, hard, and punishing, slamming his pelvis against hers with a rhythmic, wet heat that echoed through the empty parlor.
The pleasure was blinding, sharp and laced with the stinging ache of her fresh tattoo. Riki's hand reached down, his large palm gripping her hip right next to the raw, blood-stained lily, his fingers digging into her flesh to anchor her as he pounded into her. Every thrust jarred the fresh wound, a beautiful, sadomasochistic blend of pain and ecstasy that had Kira crying out, her tears blurring the sight of his face above her.
"Fuck you feel so good princess!" Riki groaned.
Kira locked her fingers in his hair, her grip tightening until it was an uncompromising command that forced his head back. "Kneel." She rasped, her voice dripping with an authority that shattered his façade again. "Look at what you did, and clean it up. Lick it."
Riki's chest heaved, a dangerous flare in his dark eyes before he pulled out and dropped heavily to his knees between her thighs, completely submitting to the gravity of her touch. He leaned his face into the soft curve of her lower hip, his hot breath ghosting over the fresh, weeping ink of the lily before his tongue flicked out, tracing the raw, slowly stinging line of the stem, lapping up the tiny beads of blood and clear plasma with a reverence that felt religious. The sharp, copper tang on his tongue only fueled his desire, and without a word, he slid his hands under her thighs, parting her further as he buried his face directly into her soaking puh. Riki didn't hold back. His tongue parted her swollen lips with broad and heavy strokes, drinking her in, while his nose pressed deep against her clit, his harsh, rhythmic breaths driving her absolutely wild as he ate her with a fierce, starved desperation that echoed through the quiet shop.
"That's right!~" Kira cried out.
He was tenacious. He changed their position, dragging her down onto the floor, using his discarded jacket as a meager barrier against the hard floor. He pinned her hands above her head, his chest crushing her boobs as he drove back into her from above, his movements frenzied, a chaotic release of all the words he never spoke and lonely nights.
"You're mine." Riki growled against her neck, his teeth biting into the sensitive skin of her shoulder, marking her in a different way. "You think you can just walk in here and get a flower to wash me out? You're fucking insane Kira. You'll always be mine no matter where you go or who you're with. You will fucking remember me in every face you see."
Kira couldn't speak. She could barely breathe. The friction was a wildfire, the heat of their bodies making a desperate, sticky sound with every hard shove. Kira's hips arched up to meet him, begging for the final release, her toes curling as the contractions began to ripple through her lower abdomen.
Sensing her climax, Riki shifted Kira again, dragging her to her feet and walked towards the high wooden reception desk near the front door, bending her over the table. He forced her torso flat against the wood, pulling her hips back until she was perfectly aligned for him. He thrusted into her from behind, deep and hard. To keep her from screaming loud enough to alert the people on the street outside, Riki brought one large calloused hand around, pressing his palm firmly over her mouth.
Kira's eyes widened, looking at their reflection in the dark front window of the shop as Riki took her brutally.
"Oh gosh YES!" Kira screamed.
With his hand muffling her cries, Riki bit down fiercely on her shoulder, his teeth sinking into her flesh to anchor himself as the orgasm finally ripped through the both of them. It was a violent, shattering release that left Kira's entire body trembling, her internal walls pulsing around his dick in tight, frantic waves. Riki let out a low, guttural roar into her hair, his pace accelerating into a blinding blur before he gave one final, deep thrust, burying himself to the hilt as he filled her, his body shuddering violently as he spent himself inside her.
The silence that followed was heavy, punctuated only by their ragged, echoing breaths. They stayed like that for a very long moment, chest to back, the reality of what they just did slowly settling into the room. True to their nature, neither of them said I love you or I'm sorry. The damage was done a long time ago, the fire burned and the ashes were still hot.
Riki slowly pulled out and got dressed thereafter. He walked to the back, his nonchalant, grumpy demeanor locking back into place like iron shutters. When he returned and handed her a cold bottle of water, his eyes averted as he picked up his tattoo machine to clean it.
"Don't go to another artist next time. Come to me." He muttered, his voice rough.
Kira leaned against the desk, her legs shaking, her hair a wild and tangled mess. She let out a breathless, disbelieving laugh. "Next time?"
Riki shrugged, his back turned to her, though the tight set of his shoulders betrayed his tension. "Your tattoo needs a touch-up in two weeks. It's a delicate spot. Ink bleeds a lot."
Kira didn't answer him. She gathered her jeans, slipping them on with a wince as the denim rubbed against her raw tattoo. She walked out of the shop into the cool midnight air, the heavy door clicking shut behind her. She got into her car, staring at her reflection in the rearview mirror before shifting her gaze down to her waistband. She pulled it back. The lily was perfect. It was a symbol of rebirth, yes, but it was carved into her skin by the very man who destroyed her, proving that some endings were never truly...an end?
"Kira, what are you doing." She muttered to herself, her senses finally returning.
Her phone buzzed in the cup holder.
1 new message
Fuckass piece of shit
You forgot your panties on my floor :)
Kira did not read the message nor did she reply. She put the car in drive and pulled away into the city, regret slowly sleeping into her bones after realising what she's done.
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
Written by: Bunny_JHS©
Tumblr Girl | Martin
ᥫ᭡. A CORTIS Martin oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Fluff oneshot
ᥫ᭡. Actually my original oneshot got ERASED by Tumblr and now I have rewritten my precious oneshot.😭 Tumblr I will NEVER forgive you. As much as I LOVED my first version, I think this version is much better though. The first one was quite short too. Tumblr if you mess with this again istg I'm suing. EVERYBODY will get nuked.
ᥫ᭡. This love story takes place in the year 2008. Martin and Tessa are 18 years old and in their final year of high school. ✨
ᥫ᭡. Thank you guys so much for reading my stories ❤️🩹🐇 Please like + follow. Would be highly appreciated. 🍒
ᥫ᭡. Songs
•Tumblr Girls - G-Eazy ft Christoph Andersson
•You're still the one I want - Shania Twain
•My own worst enemy - Lit
•Lovers Rock - TV girl
•The Blonde - TV girl
•Summer's over - Jordana, TV girl
•Just a girl - No doubt
•Teenage Dirtbag - Wheatus
•So into you - Tamia
•Someone to call my lover - Janet Jackson
•Hopelessly devoted - Olivia Newton
•Bleeding love - Leona Lewis
•We fell in love in October - girl in red
•A thousand miles - Vanessa Carlton
•Kiss me - sixpence
•Cant take my eyes off of you - Lauryn Hill
•Time after time - Cyndi
•Rude! - Hearts2hearts
•Rude - MAGIC!
ᥫ᭡. Tags
@vanishingnana @kittyhooncatalogues @ptolemaea4a @loveliezzzlinaa22
𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
Prologue
cherrybomb-dirt 🍒
Metro-Central High confessional-08
Okay, kittens, let's talk about someone who thinks a whitening strip can scrub away her sins. Sweet little 'V' didn't just borrow her BFF's Daniel Cho replica for the winter formal. She "borrowed" her boyfriend, too. In the photo booth. For a full seven minutes of face-sucking. You're not a friend, sweetie, you're a walking, talking STI-risk. But hey, maybe just ask before you slobber, yeah? XOXO, Gossip Girl wishes she was me. 🌪️💋🍒
The cursor blinked on the pale blue screen, waiting. In the glow of a family desktop computer at 1:47 AM, fingers flew across a keyboard that has seen better days. The 'E' key was slightly sticky from a soda spill three years ago, and the spacebar made a little squeak every time it was pressed.
Another post, another secret, and another piece of someone's life that they thought was safe.
The girl pushed her crooked glasses up her nose for the fifth time that minute. She checked over her shoulder one more time, then, hit
Post.
⏳
May 2008. Senior year was winding down like a cheap watch and everyone could feel it in their bones. The air smelled like cheap cologne, desperation and the faint, sweet rot of spring turning into summer. Lockers slammed with extra emphasis while hallway crushes were reaching their fever pitch because, hello, time was running out.
Prom was in a week.
The announcements crackled over the intercom that Thursday morning. Mr. Hernandez's voice, always too loud, sounded through the intercoms. "Will all seniors please report to the auditorium immediately. This is not a drill. Repeat, all seniors to the auditorium."
A murmur rippled through the halls and people exchanged looks. Not a drill? What did that even mean? Did someone die? Did graduation get moved? Was there a gas leak?
Three hundred and eleven teenagers shuffled into the auditorium like cattle. The lights were too bright. The seats were sticky with something nobody wanted to think about or imagine. And Mr. Hermandez stood on stage at the podium, his tie slightly too tight and his mustache twitching like it had a life of its own.
"Quiet down..." He said, and nobody quieted down. "I said quiet!"
The chatter died down instantly. He held up a stack of papers and in the front row, someone gasped. Those were printouts. Of a blog....
Of the blog.
"It has come to my attention...." Mr. Hernandez said slowly. "...that someone in this grade has been operating a Tumblr page dedicated to spreading malicious, hurtful, and frankly vulgar gossip about their peers."
The auditorium went dead silent.
"This page..." He continued, adjusting his glasses. "...has been brought to my attention by a concerned student who wishes to remain anonymous. And let me be clear: whoever is behind 'cherrybomb-dirt' has exactly twenty-four hours to come forward to my office before I involve the proper authorities regarding defamation and cyber harassment."
A girl in the third row started crying. Nobody knew if she was the Tumblr Girl or just a victim of her posts.
"The dance will go on as scheduled..." Mr. Hernandez finished. "...but know this: I will find out who you are. And you will face harsh consequences."
He walked off the stage and immediately, the whispers exploded like a flock of startled birds.
"Who is she?"
"Is it Amanda? She's always been shady."
"No, it's definitely one of the art kids. They're all like...super weird."
"I heard she knows about what Derek and that girl did in the hot tub."
"Oh my God, shut up, my mom follows my Tumblr."
In the back row, a girl with a messy bun and crooked glasses pulled her hoodie tighter around her shoulders. Her heart was pounding so hard she could feel it in her throat, her ears and her fingertips.
She kept her face perfectly neutral in the midst of all this disaster.
Breathe, Tessa. Just breathe. She thought.
Nobody looked at her. Nobody ever looked at her.
And that was the whole point.
The following Day ⏳
The boys' basketball team ran their third suicide drill of the night, and Martin Edwards thought his lungs might actually climb out of his throat and walk away without him.
"Again!" Coach yelled, whistle bouncing against his beer belly. "You call that effort? My grandma runs faster than that."
It was 7:45 PM. Practice ended forty-five minutes ago, but Coach was in one of his moods. The team was running laps, doing drills, and then more laps for what felt like an eternity. By the time Coach finally blew the final whistle, Martin was pretty sure his legs were going to detach from his body and file for separation.
"Hit the showers..." Coach grunted. "...and you, Edwards, stay after to mop."
Martin blinked. "Me? Why me?!"
"Because you missed that free throw in the third quarter, and God doesn't forgive lazy shooters."
"That doesn't even make sense-"
"Mop, Edwards. Now."
Martin sighed, running a hand through his blonde, floppy hair. He was tall. Six-foot-three and counting, all elbows and knees. His shoulders were broad but he hadn't quite grown into them yet, so he walked like a newborn giraffe learning to use its legs. Girls didn't look at him twice. Well, girls didn't look at him once, if he was being honest.
He had a nice face, or so his mom said. Strong jaw with green-ish brown eyes that looked almost golden in certain light. He had a habit of talking too fast about things nobody really cared about. Things like the hidden meanings in Radiohead lyrics, or why the 1999 cinematic masterpiece The Mummy was actually a perfect film. So people thought he was weird.
And he owned it.
By the time he finished mopping the gym (poorly), the rest of the team cleared out. The building was quiet now, just the hum of the vending machines and the distant thrum of the HVAC system. He tossed the mop back into the supply closet, grabbed his gym bag and started heading towards the parking lot.
That's when he saw the light.
It was coming from the computer lab at the end of the east hallway. It was a soft, blue-white glow that flickered through the frosted glass window on the door.
Why was someone in there at 8:30 PM. on a Thursday. He thought to himself.
Martin frowned. The computer lab was supposed to be locked after 6 PM. He knew that because he tried to use it to print something out last week and found the doors chained tighter than Fort Knox.
Curiosity killed the cat, but satisfaction brought it back, or whatever that saying was. Martin crept down the hallway, his sneakers squeaking softly on the tiles. The door was slightly ajar and slowly, he pushed it open.
And there she was.
A girl he saw maybe a hundred times in the hallways without ever really seeing. Her messy bun was held together by what looked like two pencils and sheer willpower. Her glasses sat crookedly on her face as she stared at the screen intensley. She wore a faded hoodie from a band he recognized and jeans with a hole in the left knee.
She was hunched over the keyboard, typing furiously, her eyes darting across the screen. Her lips moved slightly as she wrote, mouthing the words to herself. And on the screen....
Martin's breath caught in his throat.
It was Tumblr. A Tumblr page. With a familiar dark red background and a URL he saw countless screenshots of, passed around like Delaney from choir.
cherrybomb-dirt.
The girl's fingers paused as she tilted her head, reading over what she wrote. A small, almost imperceptible smile tugged at the corner of her mouth. Then she hit "Post" and leaned back in her chair, exhaling slowly.
Martin's foot scraped against the floor and she quickly whipped around. For a moment, neither of them moved. Somewhere in the distance, a janitor's radio played "Low" by Flo Rida. The girl's eyes, wide, brown and magnified behind those crooked lenses, locked onto his. Her face went pale, then flushed red, then pale again.
"Oh..." She whispered. She looked back at the computer screen. "Oh no."
Martin opened his mouth. Closed it. Then opened it again.
"You're-" He started.
"Don't..." She said, her voice cracking. "Please. Please don't."
He looked at the screen again. The latest post was still there, glowing in all its messy glory:
cherrybomb-dirt 🍒 just posted:
Metro-Central High confessional-08
rumors about the star shooting guard and his "mono" are way off. Let's just say the only thing he's passing is a little something extra he picked up from a very "friendly" encounter after the Lake Oakridge away game. a course of antibiotics should clear it right up. Stay safe, kids. Wrap it up. 🦠🎀
🫢🍒
also: mr. stevens thinks he's sooo slick with the threats but he's got a secret too. remember the "conference" he went to in february? that wasn't a conference. that was couples counseling with his wife because she found his secret myspace page where he's been messaging a "model" from "canada." spoiler: she's not a model and she's not from canada.
prom is in four days. i know things about your dresses. i know things about your dates. i know things about your parents!
see you there. 😘🍒
♡ 489 notes
Martin read the post. Then he read it again. Then he looked back at the girl who looked like she was about to either cry or throw up. Possibly both.
"That's..." He said slowly. "...actually kind of impressive."
She stared at him. "What?"
"The Mr. Stevens thing. I mean, it's...it's terrible. Obviously. You're like, exposing people's private lives. That's bad. Morally bad. But also...the journalism is solid. The sourcing is- are you okay? You look like you're having a seizure."
She was, in fact, hyperventilating into the sleeve of her hoodie.
"I'm not going to tell anyone..." Martin said quickly. "...I mean, I don't even know your name. Wait, no, I do know your name. You're...you're Tessa, right? Tessa something. We had English together back in grade 8. You did that presentation on gothic literature and the whole class booed you. I thought you were pretty brave."
Tessa stopped hyperventilating. She blinked at him. "You...remember that?"
"Yeah..." Martin shrugged. "...learnt quite a bit from your presentation to be honest."
A beat of silence.
Then, very quietly, Tessa laughed. It was a small, surprised sound, like she didn't expect Martin Edwards to remember the most embarrassing moment of her life.
"Please don't tell anyone..." She said again, softer this time. "...I know it's wrong but...people...they're so mean to me, you know? They don't even see me. And I hear things. I just...I can't help writing them down. It's like the words want to be free."
Martin leaned against the doorframe, crossing his arms. His brain was doing a thousand calculations per second. This girl...this Tumblr Girl...had all the secrets. All of them. And she was standing right in front of him, looking like a deer caught in the headlights of an oncoming truck.
And then, because Martin Edwards was both a genius and an idiot, an idea formed in his head. A terrible, wonderful and morally bankrupt idea.
"I won't tell..." He started. "...on one condition."
Tessa's eyes narrowed. "What condition?"
"Pretend you're my girlfriend. And go to prom with me."
She stared at him like he just suggested they rob a bank together. "I'm sorry, what?"
"Just for one night. We show up together, we take some pictures, we dance a little. That's it. And then I never tell a soul about your little...hobby."
"Why?" Tessa demanded. "Why would you want me to pretend to be your girlfriend? You don't even know me."
Martin hesitated. He thought about the girl who sat two rows ahead of him in calculus. The one with the blonde hair, perfect smile and the boyfriend who was a senior at their rival school. The one who never once looked in his direction. The one he was crushing on since freshman year.
"Because..." He admitted. "...if I show up to prom with someone who looks like they might have some kind of social life, maybe the right person will finally notice me."
Tessa's expression shifted. Something flickered behind her eyes. Was it understanding, perhaps? Or pity. It was hard to tell.
"You're using me." She said quietly.
"And you're using the entire school for content..." He shot back. "...so I think we're even."
She chewed on her bottom lip, thinking. The pimple patch on her chin caught the light again and Martin tried not to stare at it.
"Fine..." She said finally. "...but you have to be convincing. None of that awkward arm-around-the-shoulder stuff. If we're doing this, we're doing this."
Martin grinned. "Deal."
They shook on it. Her hand was small and warm in his. Neither of them let go for a second too long.
The next morning, Martin found Tessa at her locker. It was a dented, sad-looking thing in the C-wing that everyone walked right past without noticing. She was wearing the same hoodie, the same jeans and the same crooked glasses. Her hair was somehow messier than it was the night before, if that was possible.
"Good morning, girlfriend." He said, leaning against the locker next to hers.
Tessa jumped. "You can't just....people are watching-"
"Exactly." Martin smiled, and for the first time, he noticed the way her eyes crinkled at the corners when she was annoyed. It was...kind of cute. "We're supposed to be convincing, remember?"
He slung an arm around her shoulders and she stiffened like a board, then slowly and awkwardly, relaxed. "Fine..." She muttered. "...if anyone asks, we met at a coffee shop. A cute one. With exposed brick."
"Noted."
As they walked to first period together, people stared. Not because they were a couple, most people didn't even register Tessa's existence, but because Martin Edwards, the weird tall kid who talked too much about The Mummy, was touching someone. Voluntarily.
It was a slow-motion train wreck of teenage awkwardness, and Martin loved every second of it.
That afternoon, he showed up at her house.
"How did you find out where I live?" Tessa demanded from behind the screen door.
"You're in the yearbook. The student directory. Page forty-seven."
"That's creepy."
"That's resourceful."
She let him in. Her house was small and cozy, always filled with the smell of something baking. Family photos lined the hallway walls: Tessa as a gap-toothed kid, Tessa in a school play, Tessa with her arms around a girl who looked like an older, taller, more put-together version of herself.
"My sister..." Tessa said, following his gaze. "...Gretchen. She's a third year in college. She thinks I'm a lost cause. But she loves me."
"I think you're a complex project..." Gretchen called from the kitchen, not bothering to look up from her magazine. "...there's a difference."
Martin grinned. "I like her."
"Everyone likes her..." Tessa muttered.
She led Martin upstairs to her bedroom, which looked exactly like what he expected. Band posters of The Killers, Fall out boy and Panic! at the Disco were on every corner of the wall. A desk buried under textbooks and crumpled papers and a bed that looked like it hasn't been made in years. There were piles of laundry everywhere, empty soda cans and a lava lamp that bubbled pink goo in the corner.
"So..." Martin started, collapsing onto her desk chair. "...how do you get the gossip? Like, actually?"
Tessa sat on the edge of her bed, pulling her knees to her chest. "I listen. People forget I exist. They talk in the hallways, in the bathrooms, in the parking lot. They think I'm invisible. So I just...absorb. And then I write."
"And you don't feel bad?"
She was quiet for a moment. "Sometimes. But then I remember that Marcie T. called me 'Pizza Face' in front of the entire lunchroom last year, and I stop feeling bad pretty fast."
Martin nodded slowly. "Fair."
And that was how it started. Over the next couple of days, they fell into a strange, unexpected rhythm. Martin would pick Tessa up for school (she lived four blocks away, but he insisted). They would eat lunch together in the corner of the cafeteria, their heads bent close to each other while whispering about the gossip she gathered. She'd show him the drafts of her Tumblr posts, and he would help her make them meaner.
"Say 'allegedly' more..." He suggested. "...It makes it sound more official."
"You're a terrible influence."
"Thank you."
One afternoon, she came over to his house. His room was the opposite of hers. It was neat, almost obsessively so. Records lined the walls, a wooden guitar sat in the corner and a keyboard was tucked under the window, covered in dust but clearly loved.
"You play?" Tessa asked, pointing at the guitar.
Martin rubbed the back of his neck, suddenly feeling shy. "Uh, yeah. I make music. It's stupid."
"Play something."
"Nahh."
"Please?"
He groaned, but grabbed his guitar and sat down anyway. His fingers found the strings and after a moment, a melody emerged. Then he started singing and Tessa's heart did something strange in her chest.
His voice was raspy, not quite on key, but honest. Like he meant every word, even when the words were silly.
"This is a song I just made up...." He said. "...about a girl who writes secrets and has very strong opinions about gothic literature."
"Martin, no-"
"Tessa, Tessa, she's got a messy bun~ She knows all the things that everybody's done~ She wears her glasses crooked and she doesn't even care~ And when she walks into the room, I'm like, 'Hey, that's my nightmare~"
She threw a pillow at him, laughing so hard she snorted. "That's awful Martin!"
"It's a masterpiece!"
"It's bad!"
But she was smiling. Really smiling. And Martin realized, with a jolt, that he has never seen her smile like that before. Wide and unguarded, like she forgot to be invisible.
Like she was just herself.
The following night, Martin climbed back through her bedroom window at 11 PM with a bag of fruit snacks and a plan.
"How did you even get up here?" Tessa whispered, watching him tumble onto her floor.
"Your neighbor's fence and that tree in your backyard. It was easier than I thought. You should really lock your windows."
"I should call the police."
"But you won't."
She sighed, but she was smiling again. He joined her on the bed, tearing open the fruit snacks with his teeth. For an hour, they talked about a heck of a lot. The teachers they hated, the movies they loved, the future they were both terrified of.
"Where do you want to go after graduation?" Tessa asked, picking at a loose thread on her comforter.
"I don't know..." Martin admitted. "....somewhere far away. Somewhere where nobody knows my name."
"Same..." She said softly. "New York, maybe. Or Portland. Somewhere weird."
"Somewhere you can be weird without people staring?"
"Exactly."
Their eyes met. The lava lamp bubbled in the backrgound and the room began to feel smaller suddenly. And warmer.
"We should sleep..." Tessa said quickly, looking away. "...big day tomorrow."
"Prom." Martin agreed.
"Prom."
He left the way he came. Through the window, down the tree and over the fence. But when he got home and climbed into his own bed, he couldn't stop thinking about the way she looked at him.
🍒The following day 🍒
Prom was held at the Luminary Hotel, a fancy venue on the other side of town that smelled like old money. The theme was "A Night Under the Stars," which meant the decorating committee hot-glued approximately ten thousand plastic stars to everything that didn't move.
But none of that mattered.
Because when Tessa walked down her staircase that night, Martin forgot how to breathe. She was wearing a dress the color of a sunset. It was pink and whimsical with layers of tulle that floated around her like she was made of clouds. Her hair, usually a disaster, was curled into soft waves that framed her face perfectly. Her makeup, done by her sister Gretchen who apparently had hidden talents, was light and glowing, accentuating her cheekbones and the soft curve of her jaw.
Her glasses were gone. "Contacts." Gretchen explained proudly. "She can see and everything."
"Close your mouth, Martin..." Gretchen said from the top of the stairs. "...you're drooling."
He closed his mouth, opened it, then closed it again.
Tessa looked up at him through her lashes and for the first time, she looked almost...nervous. "Is it too much? I feel like it's too much. Gretchen picked it out. I wanted to wear something simpler, but she said-"
"You look..." Martin began, and his voice came out rough. "...like a goddess."
Tessa's cheeks felt hotter than her in that dress. "That's....you don't have to-"
"I'm not being nice. I'm being honest."
Her mom appeared from the kitchen with a camera in her hand, tears already streaming down her face. "Oh, my baby~ My darling baby~" She pulled Tessa into a hug, careful not to smudge the makeup. "You look beautiful. I'm so proud of you."
"Mom, it's just prom-"
"It's not just prom. It's you. Stepping out of your shell. Finally letting people see how gorgeous you are."
Martin watched the exchange, his chest tight. He thought about the popular girl, Iris, with her perfect hair, perfect boyfriend and perfect life. He was so sure she was the answer. So sure that if he could just get her attention, everything would fall into place.
But standing here, watching Tessa glow under her mother's praise, he couldn't remember why Iris even mattered.
They took pictures on the front porch. Tessa's dad, a quiet man with a kind face, showed up from the living room and shook Martin's hand like he was evaluating a used car.
"Take care of her..." He said. "...or I'll find you."
"Dad!"
"I'm just saying."
They drove to the hotel in Martin's beat-up Alfa Romeo, the windows down while "So into you" by Tamia played on the radio. Tessa sang along, off-key and laughing, and Martin couldn't stop looking at her.
"What?" She said, catching his stare.
"Nothing. Just...you're different tonight." Martin softy said.
"Different good or different bad?" Tessa frowned.
"Different good."
She smiled, and turned back to the window.
The moment they walked into the ballroom, the room went quiet.
Not metaphorically. Literally.
People stopped mid-sentence. A girl dropped her clutch and someone's date choked on his punch.
"Who is that?" Someone whispered, not quietly enough.
"Is that...Tessa? Tessa Johnson?"
"No fucking way."
Martin felt a swell of pride so fierce it almost knocked him over. He offered Tessa his arm and she took it, her fingers trembling slightly against his sleeve.
"You've got this." He murmured.
"I don't have anything..." She whispered back. "...I'm wearing a dress and someone else's face."
"It's still you. Just...less messier." Martin grinned.
They walked through the crowd like they owned the place. People parted for them. Actually parted. Iris was standing by the punch bowl and for a split second, she looked almost jealous.
Martin should have felt triumphant. Instead, he felt...nothing.
The two of them danced together. Fast songs, slow songs, songs that nobody knew the words to but everybody sang anyway. Tessa let loose in a way Martin never saw before. She was throwing her arms up, spinning in circles and laughing until her sides hurt. Her dress twirled around her like a flower blooming in fast-forward.
When the song "Bleeding Love" by Leona Lewis came on, Martin pulled her closer.
"Is this okay?" He asked, his hands on her waist.
She nodded, her arms looping around his neck. "It's okay."
They swayed together, not quite in time with the music, but close enough. Her forehead rested against his chest. He could smell her shampoo. It was something fruity, like strawberries. He could feel her heartbeat, fast and light, matching his own.
"Martin..." She said quietly.
"Yeah?"
"I'm glad it was you. The person who found out. I'm glad it was you."
He pulled back just enough to look at her face. The fairy lights strung across the ceiling reflected in her eyes, making them look like they were full of stars.
"Me too." He said.
He leaned in. Her lips were half-open, her breath warm against his mouth. He could feel the moment stretching, pulling taut like a rubber band about to snap. Just a little closer, and-
"EVERYBODY LISTEN UP! "
The voice came from the stage. It was Iris, a microphone in her hand and her face twisted into something ugly and triumphant.
"I have something to say..." Iris announced, "...and you're all gonna wanna hear it."
The music cut, the dancers stopped and every head turned toward the stage.
"There's someone in this room..." Iris continued. "...who has been making all of our lives miserable. Posting our secrets. Spreading our pain like it's entertainment. And I know who it is."
Tessa's hand tightened on Martin's arm. Her face turned pale.
"Someone told me tonight..." Iris said, her eyes scanning the crowd. "...that the girl behind 'cherrybomb-dirt' is standing in this very ballroom. And her name is-"
No. Martin thought. No, no, no!
"Tessa Johnson."
The name landed like a bomb.
People turned and heads swiveled. And there, in the middle of the dance floor, glowing pink under the fairy lights, stood Tessa.
"I didn't...." She started, but her voice broke. "I-"
"Is it true?" Someone shouted.
"Did you write about my parents?"
"My disease?"
"My life?"
Tessa looked up at Martin, and the betrayal in her eyes cut deeper than any knife. "You told her..." She whispered. "...you told her."
"I didn't." He said desperately. "I swear, Tessa, I didn't-"
But she was already running. Her heels clicked against the floor, then slapped as she kicked them off, bolting for the doors in her bare feet. The crowd parted again, but this time it wasn't from admiration. It was from disgust.
Martin tried to follow her, but a hand grabbed his arm. His best friend, Eom Seonghyeon, a junior who wasn't even supposed to be at prom, pulled him back.
"Let her go, man." Seonghyeon said. "She's not worth it."
Martin stared at him. "You."
Seonghyeon's face flickered. "Look, I heard you talking on the phone. About the Tumblr thing. And Iris has been nice to me, okay? She said if I gave her something good, she'd-"
Martin's fist connected with Seonghyeon's jaw before he could finish the sentence and chaos erupted. Someone screamed. Someone else started filming on their camcorder. A teacher lunged for Martin, but he was already running, shoving through the crowd, bursting through the double doors into the cool night air.
"Tessa!"
The parking lot was empty. Her sister's car was already pulling away, taillights disappearing around the corner. Martin stood there, breathing hard, his knuckles throbbing and his heart a shattered mess in his chest.
⏳
He called her house forty times yet no one answered.
He called her cell phone and everytime, he received a voice mail from her.
Hey, it's Tessa! Leave a message. Or don't. Whatever.
"I'm sorry..." He said into the phone after the fifth beep. "...I'm so sorry Tessa. It wasn't me. It was Seonghyeon. He heard me talking to my mom about..about everything. I never would have...please, Tessa, just pick up-"
Nothing.
By the time he reached her house, it was midnight. The lights were off in her room, but he could see a faint glow from behind her curtains. She was awake. She just wasn't answering.
He threw rocks at her window. Pebbles at first, then bigger ones. The first one bounced off the glass. The second hit the frame. The third one...
The curtain moved, just a sliver, but it remained closed.
"Tessa!" He called up. "Please! Just give me five minutes!"
No response.
Martin looked at his car. He looked at the trunk. And then, because he was an idiot and a romantic and possibly the dumbest person alive, he had an idea.
He popped the trunk and pulled out the beat-up boombox he kept in there for some reason, then, climbed onto the roof of his Alfa Romeo.
The metal groaned under his weight. He wobbled dangerously and nearly slipped, then caught his balance.
"TESSA JOHNSON!" He shouted. "I'M SORRY! I'M AN IDIOT! AND I'M GOING TO PROVE IT BY MAKING A COMPLETE FOOL OF MYSELF!"
He set the boombox on the roof beside him and hit play.
The opening notes of "You're Still the One" by Shania Twain filled the quiet suburban street. And Martin Edwards, six-foot-three, lanky, disaster of a human being, started to sing.
"LOOks LikE wE mAde it...."
His voice cracked on the first line.
"LOok hOw faR wE've coMe, mY BabY~"
He was off-key. Terribly, magnificently off-key. His voice was raspy from yelling, soft on some lines and too loud in others. He didn't hit most of the notes. He didn't even come close.
But he sang like his life depended on it.
"We mIghTa tOOk tHe loNg way~"
He threw his arms out for emphasis, almost falling off the car, but he kept going.
"We kNeW we'D geT thEre sOmeday~"
The curtain flew open.
Tessa stood at her window, her face blotchy from crying and her mascara smeared down her cheeks like dark rivers. Her hair escaped its waves and returned to its natural state of chaos. She was wearing an oversized T-shirt and sweatpants, and she looked like the most beautiful thing Martin has ever seen.
"You're still the one I run to~"
"What are you doing?" She yelled down at him.
"SERANADING YOU!"
"The one that I belong to~"
"You're going to wake up the whole neighborhood!"
"You're still the one I want for life~~"
"Martin!"
He stopped singing. The music on the boombox kept playing, filling the silence he left behind. He stood on the roof of his car, his arms out, hair a mess and face flushed bright red, breathing hard.
"I didn't tell anyone..." He said, his voice raw. "It was Eom Seonghyeon. He overheard me on the phone with my mom. I never would have....I swear, Tessa. I would never do that to you."
She stared at him as the music played on.
"I know what I asked you to do was wrong..." He continued. "...pretending to be my girlfriend just so I could impress some girl who doesn't even know I exist. That was stupid. That was cruel. But somewhere along the way, I stopped pretending."
He swallowed hard.
"I stopped pretending, Tessa. And I don't want Iris. I never wanted Iris. I want you. With your messy hair and your crooked glasses and your pimple patches. I want the girl who writes down secrets because she's too scared to share her own. I want the girl who thinks gothic literature is the best thing on earth and who sings along to Britney Spears like she's at a concert."
His voice broke.
"I want you. The real you. Not the prom version. Not the Tumblr Girl. Just you, Tessa."
The boombox clicked and the song ended.
Silence.
Then the front door suddenly flew open. Gretchen stood in the doorway, her face a thundercloud of fury. "YOU!" She screamed, pointing at Martin. "YOU ABSOLUTE PIECE OF TRASH! You break my sister's heart, you humiliate her in front of the entire school, and then you show up here with a boombox like you're in some kind of movie?!"
"Technically, it's a Sony-"
"I don't CARE what brand it is! Get off my property before I-"
"Gretchen stop." Tessa said, her voice soft but firm.
She was standing behind her sister now, barefoot on the porch, her arms wrapped around herself. Her eyes were red, her face was a mess, but she wasn't crying anymore.
"Gretchen." She said again. "Go inside."
"But-"
"Please."
Gretchen looked at her sister, then at Martim, then back at her sister. She muttered something under her breath that and possibly a word that would make a sailor blush. Then she turned and stomped back inside, slamming the door hard enough to rattle the windows.
Tessa walked down the porch steps, across the lawn and towards the boy standing on top of a car like an idiot.
"I'm still mad at you." She said.
"I know."
"You ruined my mascara."
"It looks good that way. Very...gothic."
She laughed. A small, broken sound. "You're such a idiot."
"I know that too."
She stopped in front of him. He climbed down from the car, nearly tripping over his own feet, and stood face to face with her. She was so much shorter than him that he had to look down to meet her eyes.
"I'm sorry..." He said again. "...for all of it. For blackmailing you. For dragging you into this. For not protecting you from Seonghyeon. For-"
"Martin."
"Yeah?"
"Shut up and kiss me already."
He blinked. "What? Really?"
"Really."
He leaned down as she stood on her tiptoes. And their lips met in the middle.
It wasn't perfect. His nose bumped her cheek. She let out a little surprised squeak. Their teeth almost clacked together. But then they found the rhythm. It was soft and slow. His hand cupped the back of her head, tangling in her messy hair. Her fingers curled into the fabric of his shirt, pulling him closer.
Martin's lips were firmer than she imagined. The first press was just pressure, a testing of warmth. Then he tilted his head, and the world tilted with him.
The kiss deepened, like they've been practicing for this moment without even realizing it. Martin didn't rush. His palm cupped her jaw, thumb brushing her cheekbone, lingering there as if memorizing the angle of her face. Her hands fisted the front of his shirt now, not to push him away, but to anchor herself.
His other hand found her hip, thumb pressing into the bone just as his tongue swept against hers. She tasted like coffee and a sweet treat. And in that moment he realised how much he truly wanted to kiss her all along.
When they finally pulled apart, both of them were breathless.
"That was..." Tessa whispered. "...not bad."
"Not bad?" Martin grinned. "I'll take it."
"I might need more practice."
"Me too."
He kissed her again. Shorter this time, but sweeter. When he pulled back, she was smiling. A real smile, wide and unguarded, the kind that made her eyes crinkle at the corners.
From the upstairs window, Gretchen's voice drifted down, "IF YOU TWO ARE DONE BEING DISGUSTING, IT'S PAST MIDNIGHT AND I HAVE CLASS IN THE MORNING!"
They both looked up. Gretchen was watching from behind the curtain, shaking her head but smiling either way.
"Go home, Martin." Tessa said.
"Come with me."
"To your house?"
"Anywhere. I don't care. Just...stay with me."
She looked at him for a long moment. Then she grabbed his hand, laced their fingers together, and pulled him towards the front door.
"Fine..." She said. "...but you leave in the morning. Through the window."
"Yes ma'am."
Martin scooped her up bridal style. She weighed almost nothing, and carried her inside, past a grumbling Gretchen up the stairs and through to her bedroom where they'd fall asleep almost immediately, exhausted from the long night~
Epilogue
The next morning, Tessa woke up to a new post on her Tumblr.
Not from her.
From him.
martin edwards-makes-noise🤟🏼just posted:
my girlfriend is the girl who writes cherrybomb-dirt. and before you come for her, consider this: every single thing she wrote was true. every secret. every scandal and every messy, ugly and beautiful piece of gossip.
you did those things. you said those things and you chose to be the people you are.
she just wrote them down.
maybe be mad at yourselves first for a while.
also she's the prettiest girl in the entire world and she's dating me, so who's really winning here? 😼
♡ 12,403 notes
Tessa read the post three times. Then she put down her phone, rolled over, and punched Martin in the arm.
"You did not."
"I absolutely did."
"Twelve thousand notes?!"
"I know." He grinned, pulling her closer. "We're famous."
"We're dead."
"Tomato, tomahto."
She buried her face in his chest, laughing so hard her shoulders shook. And when he kissed the top of her head, soft and warm and full of something that felt suspiciously like forever, she decided that maybe, just maybe, being seen wasn't so scary after all.
𓂃˖˳·˖ ִֶָ ⋆🌷͙⋆ ִֶָ˖·˳˖𓂃 ִֶָ
݁ ˖Ი𐑼⋆
STOP I'M ACTUALLY SOBBING RN 😭😭😭 I enjoyed writing this soooooo much :(❤️🩹 I'm a little sad it's over.
Also, somebody tell Martin Jonathan Woo-Ju Edwards Park personally that I fucking love him. Tell him I said so.
Written by: Bunny_JHS
ᴄʜᴇᴏɴɢᴅᴀᴍ ɢᴇɴɪᴇ | ᴋᴇᴏɴʜᴏ
ᥫ᭡. A CORTIS Keonho oneshot.
ᥫ᭡. Themes:
•Violence
•runaway kids
•Yakuza
• the mafia
⚠️mentions underage drinking (do NOT EVER try this if you are not 18 or 21. If I catch you imma whoop yo ass)
•kissing
⚠️ mentions trafficking.
ᥫ᭡. Also, I've been contemplating on whether to turn this into a full story 🌝 I'll let it marinate first then decide.
ᥫ᭡. Thank you for reading ❤️🐇
ᥫ᭡. Songs
•Rainism - Rain
•TnT - CORTIS
•Purple Rain - Prince
•Beetle on the vinyl - Insoomi
•do I clench my fists - ridgeclub
•where am I supposed to go - ridgeclub
•If anything - Damdamgugu
•Love on the brain - Rihanna
•Shy guy - Labrinth
•Elliot's song - Dominic Fike, Labrinth, Zendaya
•Never felt so alone - Labrinth & Zendaya
•Dear mind - Jeon Yeong Rok
•Sparks - Jeon Yeong Rok
•Hate that I made you love me - Ariana Grande
•Risk it all - Bruno Mars
•Novacane - Frank Ocean
•Bad Religion - Frank Ocean
•Rivet gun (slowed down) - Mother Soki
•Vamoose - Hana Stretton
•Nettles - Ethel Cain
•Stars in the sky - Phora ft Jhene Aiko
ᥫ᭡. Tags (open but please follow to be part of the list ✨): @vanishingnana @kittyhooncatalogues @delicate-lotus @loveliezzzlinaa22
The old lady behind the convenience store counter didn't know she was talking to a ghost.
She was complaining about her son-in-law gambling again, stealing from her pension and showing up drunk at 2 AM to scream through her door. The teenage boy across from her nodded sympathetically, with one elbow on the glass counter and his chin in his hand. His name was Ahn Keonho, but she called him "that nice young man who buys banana milk at odd hours."
"I swear..." She said, wiping the counter with a rag. "...if someone made him disappear tomorrow, I'd dance on his grave."
Keonho tilted his head. His smile was warm and boyish. "People like that always get what's coming, ajumma. Don't lose sleep over him."
He bought two banana milks and left.
The son-in-law was found dead three days later in the trunk of his own car parked outside a casino.
Cause of death: blunt force trauma to the head that looked like a robbery gone wrong.
The old woman cried at the funeral. Not from grief, but from feeling relieved. She told her neighbors, "It's like I made a wish and the universe listened."
She wasn't wrong about the wish part. She was wrong about the universe. That was Keonho's twelfth job that month. He was only seventeen.
He lived in the cracks of the city.
Cheongdam-dong was a district of neon and neglect. Luxury apartments were rising next to demolished love motels with rooftop churches next to basement gambling dens. Keonho knew every shortcut, every broken CCTV camera and every rooftop with a tarp he could sleep under. He carried everything he owned in one of his many backpacks: a change of clothes, a fat roll of cash, a hunting knife wrapped in a towel and a burner phone that buzzed with messages from handlers he has never met face-to-face.
He worked for the Yakuza's Korean branch. Or maybe the Korean branch of something bigger. He never asked. The messages always came in coded phrases.
"Delivery to Mapo Bridge, 3 AM."
"The man in the blue suit needs a vacation."
"Collect from the pharmacy in Itaewon."
And he delivered, collected and cleaned up.
And in between, he drank banana milk, flirted with the waitress at the 24-hour kimbap shop, and helped old ladies cross the street. Because here was the thing about Ahn Keonho: he genuinely liked making people smile. It just didn't mean anything.
He never felt real emotions since he was six years old, sitting on a bus station bench with a backpack full of clothes that no longer fit, watching his mother's car disappear around a curve. After a while, the cold inside him stopped being pain and started being empty, quiet and useful space. He could put anything in that space. A joke, a threat....
or a bullet.
The Yakuza gave him purpose and the rest of the city gave him cover. They called him the Cheongdam Genie because they thought he was magic. They didn't know he was just lonely and very, very good at violence.
⏳
Haneul saw him for the first time on a Tuesday night behind the dumpster of a PC bang.
She was sleeping there. She was there for three weeks, ever since she ran from the man who bought her from her uncle. The man's name was Mr. Jang, and he ran a "hostess bar" in Gangnam that was really just a cage with lipstick. Mr. Jang circled her like a butcher inspecting meat, his thumb pressing her jaw open to check her teeth and his fingers sliding through her hair as if she were livestock. She remembered the room with the red lights and the mattress on the floor, the way the other girls stared at nothing with their wrists bruised from silk ties that looked pretty but bit like wire. She remembered the first client. He was a businessman who wept while he touched her. And then the second one, and the third, and the way she learned to count ceiling tiles while laying on that filthy bed so she wouldn't have to count seconds or feel anything.
Haneul escaped through a bathroom window barefoot, still wearing the red dress he made her put on.
She was only sixteen at the time, but she looked older that night. Starvation did that.
Tuesday night, she woke up to the sound of footsteps. They weren't drunk footsteps. More like a cat's steps. She pressed herself against the brick wall, holding her breath and watched a boy her age walk out of the PC bang's back door.
He was pretty. That was her first thought. Sharp jaw, messy black hair and a mouth that looked like it smiled a lot. He was holding a knife. The one soldiers carried. The blade was wet and crimson. Behind him, through the crack in the door, she saw a man on the floor of the PC bang's storage room. He wore a blue suit with a tie wrapped around his neck. He wasn't moving.
The boy wiped the knife on his jeans, pulled out a burner phone and typed something with his thumb. Then he pocketed it, bought a banana milk from the vending machine, and walked away while whistling.
Haneul didn't scream nor did she call the police. She learned that police didn't help girls like her.
Instead, she followed him.
She was good at following. Mr. Jang's men hunted her down for three weeks, and she eluded them all. She knew how to stay in the shadows, match footsteps to ambient noise and disappear behind tall pillars. Keonho didn't notice her for six blocks.
On the seventh block, however, he stopped.
They were in an alley behind a closed hair salon. Keonho turned around slowly, banana milk still in his hand and his eyes found her immediately. He didn't look surprised. Just...curious.
"You're lighter than you look..." He said. "...most people, I feel their gaze like a cold finger on my neck. You're more like a moth."
Haneul stepped out of the shadow. She was wearing a hoodie three sizes too big and sneakers with a hole in the left toe. Her face was gaunt, but her eyes were sharp like a feline's. They looked older than her years, the way violence makes people old.
"I saw you." She started.
Keonho tilted his head and flashed that boyish smile of his. "Saw me doing what? Buying milk?"
"The man in the blue suit."
The smile didn't falter. If anything, it widened. "That's a serious accusation. I'm just a student. Cram school until midnight, you know how it is."
"I don't care what you did..." Haneul said. "...I need someone gone too. But I want to watch you do it."
For the first time, Keonho's expression shifted. But not to fear. To genuine amusement. He laughed, his voice low, and walked towards her. Close enough that she could smell cigarettes and something bloody under his cologne.
"You can't afford me, pretty." He said.
"I'm not offering money."
"Then what are you offering?"
Haneul held his gaze. "I know you don't have a home. Neither do I. You kill people for a boss you've never met. I can help you meet him."
Keonho's smile froze. Just for a second. Then it came back, softer this time, and he reached out to tuck a strand of hair behind her ear. His fingers were cold.
"You're interesting..." He said. "....most people who threaten me end up in the Han River."
"I'm not threatening you. I'm offering a trade."
He studied her for a long moment. Then he handed her the banana milk.
"Drink..." He said. "...you look like shit. And tell me the name while you walk."
They walked until dawn.
⏳
Haneul told Keonho everything. She told him about the uncle who sold her to Mr. Jang for gambling debts, the bar with the red lights, the room with the mattress on the floor and the clients who didn't care that she was sixteen. She told it flatly, without tears, the way you recite a grocery list. Keonho listened with the same flatness.
When she finished, he finally responded. "Jang is connected."
"I know."
"Connected to the people I work for. Not directly, but tangentially. If I touch him, it starts a war."
"I know."
Keonho stopped walking. They were on a pedestrian bridge over the Han River now, the sky turning lavender with dawn. He leaned against the railing and looked at her with those empty, pretty eyes.
"So you're not just asking me to kill a pimp..." He continued. "...you're asking me to burn my own cover and possibly get killed by my employers. And for what? You don't have money, you don't have connections, you don't have anything I want."
Haneul stepped closer. Close enough that he could count her eyelashes if he wanted to.
"I have something you didn't know you wanted." She said.
"Which is?"
"Someone who sees you. You're in need of a companion right?"
Keonho stared at her. The wind of the river moved his hair across his forehead. For a moment, just a moment, something flickered in his chest. Not warmth but recognition.
"You're insane." He said.
"Probably."
He laughed again, and this time it wasn't warm at all. It was the laugh of a predator who just found a playmate.
"Fine..." He said. "...but we do it my way. And when it's over, you walk away and never speak my name again."
Haneul nodded.
⏳
They spent three weeks preparing.
Keonho taught her things. Not how to kill, but how to disappear. How to spot a tail. How to pick a lock with a bobby pin. How to read a room for exits, weapons and cameras. They moved between rooftops and abandoned saunas, never sleeping in the same place twice. He flirted with her constantly too.
"You'd look prettier if you smiled, you know."
And she ignored him just as constantly, until one night she didn't.
They were on the roof of a half-demolished department store, sharing a single blanket against the autumn cold. Keonho was sitting with his back to the ledge, cleaning his knife with a rag. Haneul lay with her head on his backpack, staring at the stars.
"Why do you do it?" She asked.
"Do what?"
"Kill people. You don't seem to enjoy it. But you don't seem to hate it either."
Keonho paused.
"Because I'm good at it..." He said finally. "...and because when you're good at something, the world finds a way to make you do it again. Whether you want to or not."
"Do you want to?"
He looked at her and the mask he always wore slipped. Just barely. For a second, he looked seventeen. Tired and young in a way that made her chest ache.
"I don't want anything..." He said. "...that's the thing."
Haneul sat up and the blanket fell. She crawled across the rooftop concrete until she was close to him, feeling his breath.
"That's not true..." She said. "...you want me to stay right?"
Keonho didn't deny it nor did he confirm it. He just looked at her with those empty eyes, and then slowly, like a boy learning a new language, he reached out and touched her face. His palm was calloused. His thumb began to trace her cheekbone.
"You're going to get us both killed." He whispered, letting go of her face.
"Perhaps." She quietly. "You never told me the real reason why you do it you know."
"I told you. I'm good at it."
"That's not a real reason. That's an excuse."
Keonho turned his face to look at her.
"When I was six..." Keonho started, "...my mother left me at a bus station. She said she was going to buy snacks. That was eighteen years ago...." He paused. "...no. Eleven years ago. I'm seventeen. I forget that sometimes."
Haneul didn't say I'm sorry. He was grateful for that.
"The first person I killed was a man who tried to steal my backpack..." He continued. "...I was nine. He was drunk. I found a broken bottle on the ground and put it in his neck. I didn't really feel anything. I just...watched him bleed and thought, Oh. That's what it feels like. Like flipping a switch."
He pulled out his knife, the one he cleaned every night, and turned it over in his hands. The blade caught the city lights.
"After that, it was easy. Older boys who wanted to fight. Men who thought a runaway kid was easy prey. By the time the Yakuza found me, I already killed about seven people. They didn't have to train me. Just point me in a direction and say go."
Haneul finally looked at him. Her eyes were dark and unreadable. "Do you dream about them?" She asked.
"Nope."
"The people you killed?"
"No.." He said again. "...I don't dream at all."
The wind blew again and the blanket fluttered. Haneul shifted closer to him. Not too much though, just enough that their shoulders touched. The contact was electric. Keonho couldn't remember the last time someone touched him without wanting something. Without wanting him to die.
"You're not what I expected." Haneul said.
"What did you expect?"
"A monster."
Keonho laughed. "I am a monster."
"Maybe. But you're also the only person who's ever made me feel safe." Haneul smiled lightly.
The words hung between them, feeling as fragile as glass. Keonho stopped breathing. His hand stilled on the knife. He looked at her and for the first time in ten years, he didn't see a target, or a witness, or a liability.
He saw a girl. Just a girl. Tired and broken and still somehow standing.
He set his knife down. The movement was slow but not hesitant. Like he was disarming himself. He turned his body towards her, with one knee bending on the blanket, and reached out with a hand that trembled just barely. His fingers found her face again. Her skin was cold from the wind, but under the cold was warmth. He traced her cheekbone with his thumb. Then her jaw. Then the corner of her mouth.
Haneul's breath caught. Her eyes widened, but she didn't pull away. She didn't speak. She just watched him with those sharp, feline eyes of hers, waiting.
"I don't know how to do this." Keonho admitted. His voice was rough, stripped of its usual charm. "I don't know how to want something that isn't a job."
"Then stop thinking..." She whispered. "...just feel."
He leaned in.
It was slow. Agonizingly slow. The wind held its breath. Keonho's forehead touched hers first: a gentle knock, skin to skin, and they stayed there for a heartbeat or two, sharing the same air, the same heat and the same terrible uncertainty.
Then his lips found hers.
The kiss was soft at first. Tentative. A question asked in the dark. But Haneul answered immediately, her hand coming up to grip the collar of his shirt, pulling him closer, and the softness shattered into something else entirely.
Desperate. That was the word. The kiss was desperate. Keonho kissed her like a drowning man gasping for air, his free hand sliding into her hair and tangling in the dark strands. She tasted like salt and the sweets they ate hours ago.
Haneul made a sound against his mouth. It was not a moan or a sigh, but something in between, and Keonho swallowed it like a prayer. He pulled her closer, one arm wrapping around her waist, and she came willingly, her body fitting against his as if they were built to hold each other. The blanket bunched next to them. The concrete bit into his knees but he didn't care
He kissed her harder. Not rough, needy. His hand slid from her hair to the nape of her neck, cradling her skull and tilting her head to deepen the angle. Her fingers clutched his shirt, twisting the fabric and anchoring herself to him. The knife lay forgotten beside them. They both seemed to forget everything by the simple, terrifying warmth of another person's mouth.
When they finally broke apart, both of them were breathing hard. Keonho's forehead rested against hers. His eyes were closed and his lips were swollen.
"Shit." He whispered.
Haneul laughed, breathless.
He opened his eyes. Keonho looked at her for a long moment. The wind played with her hair. The neon sign flickered pink across her face. She was beautiful even when broken. When he kissed her again, slower and softer this time, his hand cradling her face like something precious, he decided he no longer cared about anything anymore. He would stay by her side until the end.
And for the first time in eleven years, Keonho felt something other than cold. It terrified him, but he kissed her anyways, hoping that the feeling wouldn't go away.
⏳
The job was supposed to be clean.
Keonho had a contact. It was a low-level Yakuza associate who owed him a favor. The contact confirmed that Mr. Jang would be alone at his Gangnam bar on a Thursday night, between 1 AM and 3 AM, conducting "business." Keonho planned to enter through the roof, disable the security cameras with a magnet and make it look like a rival syndicate hit.
Haneul insisted on coming.
"You can watch from here." Keonho said.
"You promised I could watch."
"I promised you could watch me do it. From a distance. Not from inside the kill box!"
They argued in whispers on the rooftop of a building across from the bar. Keonho was already dressed in a white compression shirt, sweatpants and tactical gloves with the hunting knife strapped to his thigh. Haneul was wearing the same hoodie, her face pale but determined.
"I'm not a child." She said.
"No..." Keonho agreed. "...you're a liability."
She slapped him on the face. It wasn't hard though. She was too weak for hard. But it surprised him. He rubbed his cheek and stared at her.
"If you die in there..." She said. "....I'll have no one left. So either let me help you, or I'll follow you anyway."
Keonho exhaled. Then he unstrapped a smaller knife from his ankle and handed it to her.
"Stay behind me. Don't speak. And if I tell you to run, you run and you don't look back."
She took the knife. Her fingers brushed against his. Neither of them mentioned the tremor.
⏳
The bar was a trap.
They realized it the moment they entered through the roof access. The lights were on and music was playing. It was some tinny trot song from the speakers. "Dear Mind" by Jeon Yeong Rok it was. And standing in the middle of the room, flanked by six armed men was Mr. Jang.
He was quite fit for fifty, wearing a velvet tracksuit. His smile was the smile of a man who thought he already won.
"The Cheongdam Genie..." He said, clapping his hands slowly. "...I've heard so much about you. My men have been following your little stray for weeks. Did you really think I'd let her go?"
Keonho's hand moved to his knife and two of Jang's men raised their pistols.
"I wouldn't do that if I were you..." Jang said. "...you're fast, but you're not faster than bullets. And I have a message from your boss."
Keonho went very still. "My boss doesn't know I'm here."
"Oh, he knows everything. He's the one who told me you'd come. See, the girl wasn't just a stray. She was bait."
Haneul's face went white. She looked at Keonho but he didn't look back.
"The thing you don't understand..." Jang continued, lighting a cigarette. "...is that you've been a problem for a while. A genie that grants wishes without permission? That's bad for business. My business and your boss's business. So we made a deal. Your life for peace between our organizations."
Keonho laughed. It was the cold, predator's laugh. And it made Jang's men shift uncomfortably.
"You think six guys with guns can kill me?" Keonho said.
Jang chuckled, shifting his gaze Haneul. "No. But that pest next to you will die."
Haneul felt the cold press of metal against her lower back. One of Jang's men circled behind her during the conversation. He was holding a revolver to her spine.
"Drop your weapon..." Jang demanded. "...or she dies first. Then you."
Keonho looked at Haneul. She looked at him and in that look, everything unspoken passed between them: the rooftop kiss, the way he tucked her hair behind her ear like she was something precious.
She shook her head. A tiny movement.
Don't.
Keonho dropped his knife.
They forced him on his knees and put her beside him. Jang stood in front of them, smoking his cigarette and enjoying himself.
"The boss sends his regards..." Jang said. "...he says you were a good investment, but investments have to mature eventually."
Keonho said nothing. His hands were cuffed behind his back. But his face was calm. Eerily calm. The calm of a bomb waiting for a trigger.
Jang crouched in front of Haneul. He grabbed her chin and turned her face side to side.
"You cost me a lot of money, you little bitch. But I'll get it back. There's a ship leaving for Japan at dusk. New clients and a new country"
She spat in his face.
Jang backhanded her so hard she tasted blood. Keonho moved but not much, just a twitch of his shoulders. One of the guards kicked him in the ribs and he folded.
"Kill the boy first..." Jang said, wiping the spit off his cheek. "...I want her to watch."
The guard with the revolver stepped forward. Haneul screamed a raw, animalistic sound, and lunged. They quickly grabbed her and held her back. She thrashed and bit and clawed, but she couldn't reach Keonho.
Keonho, however, looked at her and smiled. It wasn't his boyish smile. It wasn't his predator's smile. It was something else. Something tender, broken and final.
"I lied..." He said softly. "...I did want something. I wanted you to stay."
The guard raised the revolver to Keonho's head and Haneul stopped fighting.
She went still. So still that the men holding her hesitated. And in that hesitation, she reached into her hoodie pocket and pulled out the burner phone she stole from Keonho weeks ago. The one he didn't know she kept.
She pressed a single button and the lights went out. Not the bar lights, the building lights. Every circuit in the block overloaded simultaneously, a cascade failure that Keonho rigged weeks ago as a contingency. He told her about it once, laughing and saying, "If things go really bad, I flip the switch and run."
She memorized the switch. In the darkness, Keonho moved.
Two seconds.
He picked the handcuffs fifteen minutes ago, a trick he taught her a hundred times. A knife appeared from Keonho's sleeve (a backup, because he always had a backup).
Jang was screaming orders in panic. "Lights! Get the fucking lights! Kill him!" But his men were disoriented, their night vision ruined by the sudden plunge from brightness into absolute dark. The emergency backups wouldn't kick in for another forty-five seconds. Keonho knew this because he sabotaged them himself.
He was a professional. Professionals had contingencies for their contingencies.
The second guard was reaching for a flashlight on his belt. Keonho didn't shoot him as gunfire would give away his position. Instead, he closed the distance in three silent strides and drove his palm upward into the man's jaw. The crack was audible even over the chaos. The guard's teeth clacked together like dice, and he crumpled, unconscious before he hit the ground.
Keonho caught his fall and lowered him quietly. No point in making more noise than necessary
Ten seconds.
Haneul was on the ground. She threw herself flat on the ground the moment the lights went out, just like Keonho taught her.
"If you can't see, make yourself small. Make yourself invisible. Don't move until I come for you."
She was pressing her cheek against the cold tile, the stolen phone still clutched in her fist, her heart hammering so loud she was sure the guards could hear it.
Someone grabbed her ankle. She didn't scream. She kicked, hard and blind, her heel connecting with something soft. A man grunted. His grip loosened and she scrabbled backward on her elbows, knocking over a chair, and then Keonho was there.
She knew it was him before she saw him. His scent, cigarette smoke, minty gum and that cheap cologne he bought from the convenience store. His hand closed around her wrist and pulled her upright.
"Stay behind me..." He breathed into her ear. "....count to twenty. Then go to the back door."
"Keonho-"
"Count."
He was gone.
Fifteen seconds.
The fourth guard found the light switch. He was fumbling with the breaker box on the far wall, his phone's flashlight illuminating his own terrified face. Keonho was already in motion, but the guard saw him and raised his gun.
Keonho threw the revolver. Not shot it. Threw it. The metal cylinder smashed into the guard's forehead with a sound like a hammer hitting a pumpkin. The guard's gun fired once into the ceiling, a wild shot that sprayed plaster dust, and then he was down, twitching, his frontal lobe ringing like a bell.
Keonho picked up the guard's pistol. Now he had two guns.
Twenty seconds.
The emergency lights flickered on.
It wasn't full illumination, just a dim, sickly orange glow from the backup fixtures along the baseboards. Enough to see shapes and bodies.
There were two guards remaining now. Keonho killed 4. The fifth one was crawling towards the bar with one hand pressed to his thigh where a piece of shattered glass lodged itself into his skin during the chaos. The sixth one was nowhere to be seen.
Jang was behind the bar, crouched like a rat, his velvet tracksuit stained with his own urine. He was screaming into a phone. "Father! Father, he's here! He's-"
Keonho stepped over the crawling guard and walked to the bar. His footsteps were calm and unhurried. He pulled an open bottle of gin from the shelf, bit the cap off and took a long drink. The alcohol burned his throat. He liked the burn.
Jang looked up at him. His eyes were wild.
"You're dead..." Jang whispered. "...my father will-"
Keonho finished the gin, set the bottle down and wiped his mouth with the back of his hand.
"I don't give a fuck what your father will do." He said.
Keonho didn't kill Jang. Not yet. He needed Jang alive for the next part. The part where Haneul's knife pressed against his throat and the part where the boss heard his son scream through the phone.
But the fifth guard, the one crawling towards the bar? The one who was reaching for a dropped pistol with shaking fingers?
Keonho shot him in the back of the head without looking.
The sound was flat and final. The guard's body sprawled across the tile, leaving a smear of blood that looked black in the dim orange light.
Thirty seconds.
Haneul appeared at the back door, just as Keonho told her. She was pale, her lips covered in a bit of blood, but her eyes were sharp. She was holding the knife he gave her in a white-knuckled grip.
"The sixth one ran..." She said. "...out the front. He's gone."
"Let him run..." Keonho said. "...he'll tell the boss what happened. That's the point."
Haneul looked at the bodies and the blood. The way Keonho stood in the middle of it all, soot-streaked and calm with two guns tucked into his waistband.
"Are you...okay?" She asked hesitantly.
Keonho smiled. It was the boyish smile, the one that didn't reach his eyes. "Yeah..." He casually replied. "...now help me tie up Jang. We have a phone call to make."
He tossed her a length of electrical cord he pulled from the breaker box. She caught it without looking. Behind the bar, Mr. Jang began to cry. Keonho stood over Jang, breathing hard. His white shirt was ruined and his face was splattered with blood.
"You said you wanted to watch..." Keonho said to her. His voice was hoarse. "...watch this."
He pulled Mr. Jang up by the hair and put the knife to his throat.
"The boss's son." Haneul said suddenly.
Keonho stopped and Jang's eyes went wide.
"What did you say?" Keonho whispered.
"The boss's son..." Haneul repeated. Her voice was steady now, even though her hands were shaking. "...It's him. Jang is the boss's secret son. The one no one knows about. The one the boss hid to protect him from rivals."
Keonho looked at Jang. Jang's face was the color of old cheese.
"How do you know that?" Keonho asked Haneul.
"Because I overheard him on the phone the time he still had me. He was talking to someone. 'Father, the girl is loose, but I'll find her.' I didn't know who 'Father' was until the night I met you."
Keonho laughed. It was an ugly and broken laugh. "You used me..." He said. "...you knew this would happen. You knew killing him would start a war, so you made sure I had no choice."
Haneul walked closer towards him, stepping over bodies, until she was close enough to touch his bloody face.
"I didn't make you do anything..." She said. "...you could have walked away. You could have let them kill me. But you didn't. Because for all your emptiness, you wanted me to stay."
Keonho's hand trembled on the knife. "I'm not a good person, Haneul." He said.
"Neither am I..." She said. "...but I'm yours. And you're mine. And that boss of yours, the one who sold you out, he's going to find out what happens when you make a wish on a monster."
Jang whimpered.
Keonho looked at him. Then back at Haneul. "Together?" He asked.
She took the knife from his hand and her fingers closed over his. "Together." She said.
They killed Jang slowly and brutally. Not because they enjoyed it, though in the end, they did a little, but because the boss needed to hear his son scream before he died. When it was over, Keonho sat on the bar floor among the bodies and put his head in his hands. He wasn't crying. He forgot how to. But Haneul sat beside him and pulled his head to her shoulder anyway.
"We can't stay here." She said.
"I know."
"The boss will send everyone."
"He will."
Keonho raised his head. His eyes were red, but dry. "I don't have a plan..." He said. "...I've never not had a plan."
Haneul smiled. "Then let's make one." She said. "First step: leave the city. Second step: find somewhere new. Third step-"
"Kill the boss." Keonho finished.
"Eventually."
He stared at her. Then he laughed, a real laugh, tired and young and almost warm.
"You're fucking insane." He said again.
"So are you."
He kissed her and she tasted like blood. But he didn't mind.
⏳
Epilogue
They didn't run.
That was the first thing Haneul noticed. After the slaughter, the screams, the blood and the way Keonho stood in the middle of it all like a scarecrow in a field of corpses, they walked. Calmly and quietly. Out the back door of the bar, down a service alley and past a row of sleeping shopfronts.
Keonho's hands were still wet with blood. He wiped them on his sweats as he walked, but the material was already too soaked to absorb more. His white shirt looked tie-dyed now, with crimson blood spreading across the chest, the sleeves and the collar. None of it was his.
Haneul followed two steps behind him. Her own hands were clean, but she felt dirty in a way that had nothing to do with blood. She watched him kill and cripple five men. She handed him the knife for Jang and she held Jang's head back by the hair so Keonho could slash his throat.
We're the same now, she thought.
The thought should have terrified her. Instead, it felt like coming home.
They stopped in a dead-end alley between a fried chicken franchise and a shuttered DVD room. The air smelled like grease and mildew. A single streetlight flickered at the mouth of the alley. Haneul leaned against the wall and slid down until she was sitting on the damp concrete. Her legs started shaking ten minutes ago. She couldn't make them stop. Keonho stood over her, looking down. His expression was unreadable. The way a house looks after all the furniture has been removed.
"You did good." He said.
"I didn't do anything."
"You stayed alive. That's the only thing that matters."
He crouched down in front of her. His knees cracked. She didn't realize he was old enough for his knees to crack, but then again, maybe seventeen was ancient in this life. He reached out and tilted her chin up with one finger. His touch was gentler than she expected.
"You're in shock..." He said. "...It'll pass."
"Are you in shock?"
Keonho's mouth twitched. "I don't know what that feels like anymore."
He stood up and offered her his hand. She took it. Her palm was sweaty and his was sticky with drying blood. They held on anyways.
"Where to?" She asked.
"Bridge first. Then we decide."
Cheongdam at 4:30 AM was a ghost wearing neon.
The luxury apartments were dark, their residents dreaming of stock options and extramarital affairs. The convenience stores glowed like beacons, empty except for the cashiers, who nodded at Keonho as he passed by. They knew him here. The nice boy with the banana milk. No one looked twice at the blood on his shirt because in this neighborhood, blood was just another kind of fashion.
Haneul stayed close to his side. She pulled her hood up, but her face was too thin and pale not to notice. They crossed the main road at a pedestrian overpass. Below them, a single taxi idled at a red light, its driver slumped over the wheel, asleep or dead or just tired. The city held its breath between night and dawn. This was the hour when anything could happen, and usually did.
The bridge was an old pedestrian bridge over the Han river, rusted and graffitied and mostly forgotten. Commuters used it during the day, but at this hour, it belonged to stray cats, runaway kids and people like Keonho, who carried their lives in backpacks and their secrets in their teeth.
He led her to the south side of the bridge, where the railing had a loose bolt. He unscrewed it with his fingers (the bolt was fake, just a prop) and pulled a section of the railing outward. Inside the hollow metal tube was a black dry bag, the one kayakers used. He hauled it out and set it on the bridge floor.
"Go bag..." He explained. "...I've got six of them across the city. This one is the biggest."
He unzipped it. Haneul knelt beside him and looked inside. Two changes of clothes were in there. One for him and one for a smaller frame. Hers. He packed for her before he even knew her name.
Fake IDs: Korean, Japanese, Chinese and Filipino. Four different faces and four different names.
Keonho was pulling out the rest of the contents: a brick of cash wrapped in plastic, about fifty million won, she guessed, maybe more, a first-aid kit, two burner phones, a box of 9mm ammunition, a passport-sized photo of a woman she didn't recognize, and a folding knife small enough to hide in a bra.
"The photo." Haneul said.
Keonho's hand paused. For a moment, just a moment, something flashed across his face. Pain, maybe?
"My mother..." He said. "...before she left."
He tucked the photo back into the bag without another word and zipped it closed.
"We need to move..." He said. "...Jang's body will be found by sunrise. The boss will have people in the streets by then."
Haneul stood up. Her legs were steadier now. "Where are we going?"
Keonho swung the bag over his shoulder and looked out at the river. The water was black and slick, reflecting the last stars. A cargo ship moved slowly downstream, its lights low and yellow.
"The countryside..." He suggested. "...there's a place I know. A farmhouse around Buyeo. It's abandoned. No neighbors for kilometers."
"Whose farmhouse is it?"
"No one's. Someone died there a few years ago. The bank owns it now, but banks don't check such things anymore." Keonho shrugged. He started walking ahead and Haneul followed.
"How do we get there?" She asked.
"By boat."
She stopped. "Boat?"
Keonho glanced back at her. "There's a fishing dock twenty minutes from here..." He explained. "...I know a man. He owes me. He'll take us down the Han to the West Sea, then up the Geum River to Buyeo. Eight hours, maybe nine."
"And the man won't talk?"
Keonho's expression didn't change, but his hand drifted to the knife at his belt.
"No...he won't talk." He replied.
Haneul understood immediately.
The fishing dock was a splintered wooden skeleton jutting into the dark water, surrounded by abandoned warehouses and the smell of dead fish. A single boat was tied to the pilings. It was a rusty fishing trawler with a covered cabin and a diesel engine that looked older than both of them combined.
The man was waiting. He was in his sixties, leather-skinned and missing three fingers on his left hand. He was smoking a cigarette and not looking at them.
"Keonho." He said.
"Uncle." Keonho greeted, bowing at a ninety-degree angle.
"You brought company?"
"She's with me."
The man, though he wasn't really an uncle, flicked ash into the water and finally turned. His eyes were yellowed and rheumy. He looked at Haneul for a long time. Then he looked at Keonho's blood-soaked shirt.
"You've been up to no good again?" He chuckled.
"Tonight wasn't the best night ever." Keonho replied, shrugging his shoulders.
"They'll come looking for you, boy. You better have some sort of plan cooking."
"Let them."
Uncle grunted. He tossed his cigarette into the river and untied the boat. "Get in. Both of you. I'll take you as far as Gunsan. After that, you're on your own."
Keonho helped Haneul onto the boat. Her sneakers slipped on the wet deck, and he caught her elbow, steadying her. His grip was firm. Warm, almost.
"Thank you." She said quietly.
He didn't answer. He just guided her to the cabin, pushed open the door, and gestured for her to sit on a bench bolted to the wall. The cabin smelled of diesel, old sweat and the sea. A single bare bulb hung from the ceiling.
Keonho sat across from her. The bag sat between them. The engine rumbled to life below their feet, and the boat began to move. It was slow at first, then faster, pulling away from the dock, away from Cheongdam, away from the bodies and the blood and the bar where five men stopped breathing.
Haneul watched the city shrink through the cabin's grimy window. The lights blurred together and then, all at once, they were gone. Just darkness and water and the low growl of the engine.
"Do you think we'll ever come back?" She asked.
Keonho was cleaning his knife with a rag. The blade caught the light, bright and hungry.
"We'll come back..." He said. "...when the boss is dead."
"And after that?"
He looked up. His eyes were the color of the river, black, deep and impossible to read.
"After that..." He continued, "...we find somewhere else. There's always somewhere else."
Haneul leaned her head against the wall. The vibration of the engine hummed through her bones. She was tired. Not just body-tired, but soul-tired.
"Keonho?" She said.
"Yeah?"
"Did you really mean what you said on the roof?"
He stopped cleaning the knife. The boat rocked gently. Somewhere above them, a seabird cried out.
"I might've." He said.
"Does it scare you?"
He was quiet for a long time. The engine chugged. The water slapped against the hull. When he finally spoke, his voice was soft. Softer than she's ever heard it.
"Yeah..." He said. "...It scares the hell out of me."
He reached across the bag and took her hand. His palm was calloused. His fingers were cold but she still held his hand.
The rest of the boat ride to Gunsan was an eight-hour baptism by diesel fumes and water. Haneul fell asleep within the first hour, her head lolling against the cabin wall and her bruised face softening under the light. Keonho stayed awake. He always stayed awake. The engine hummed a low lullaby, and the cabin's single bulb flickered with each swell, emitting shadows across her cheekbones, her parted lips and the slow rise and fall of her chest under the borrowed hoodie.
She looked peaceful. Genuinely peaceful. Not the hollow stillness of someone who learned how to sleep with one eye open, but the deep, boneless surrender of a child who finally stopped running. Her fingers were curled loosely around the strap of the go bag, as if even in sleep she was afraid it would vanish. Keonho watched her for a long time. Longer than he watched anyone. The knife was still in his hand. He didn't realize he was still holding it, and he set it down slowly, afraid the sound might wake her.
Stupid, he thought. This was stupid. You don't keep people. You don't keep anything. That's the rule. The rule that kept him alive for eleven years. No attachments, no home or name that meant anything. And now here he was, on a boat with a girl who saw him kill five men and didn't even flinch, heading towards a farmhouse in the countryside he never planned to share. The boss would send hunters. The Yakuza would burn every bridge he ever crossed. And for what? For a pair of feline-like eyes and a mouth that said together like it meant something?
He didn't know. That was the part that frightened him the most. Keonho always knew. He knew the exit routes, the kill shots, the lies to tell and the truths to bury. But sitting here, watching this girl breathe, he had no idea what was to come. No plan. No contingency. Just the diesel-scented dark and the weight of a decision he couldn't take back.
So go with it, he told himself. You've survived worse than not knowing. You'll survive this too.
He reached out and brushed a strand of hair from her forehead. She didn't stir. His fingers lingered for a moment longer than necessary, and then he pulled his hand back and tucked it under his arm.
By the time they reached Gunsan, the sky was brighter than ever. Uncle cut the engine and let them drift into a shallow cove hidden by reeds. "End of the line." He said, not looking at them. Keonho helped Haneul onto the muddy bank, handed Uncle an envelope thick enough to buy his silence, and watched the trawler disappear around the bend without a word of thanks.
From Gunsan, they walked three hours along a disused railway track not far from the city. The gravel crunched under their mismatched sneakers and the morning sun burnt off the river mist. Haneul didn't complain, even though her limp returned and her breath came in shallow gasps. Keonho matched her pace, neither rushing nor slowing down, and when she stumbled, he caught her quickly. They passed through villages that were barely names. A handful of houses, a single convenience store and an old woman hanging laundry who didn't look up. Keonho bought rice balls and bottled water at a gas station, and they ate standing up, watching a tractor crawl across a furrowed field.
The countryside opened up around them. Rice paddies stretched to the horizon, mirror-bright and green. Mountains rose in the distance, blue with haze. The air smelled of earth and manure and something sweet. Wildflowers, maybe? Or the last ghost of summer. Haneul stopped in the middle of the road and turned in a slow circle, her face tilted towards the sky.
"I've never been this far from the city." She said.
"First time for everything."
"Does it feel strange to you? The quiet?"
Keonho listened. There were no sirens, no traffic and no footsteps echoing off concrete. Just wind, birds and the distant hum of a tractor.
"Yeah..." He said. "...It does feel kinda isolated."
They reached the Geum River by noon and followed it south by boat, keeping to the tree line and avoiding the main roads. Keonho had a map in his head of landmarks he memorized months ago, back when the farmhouse was just a contingency and not a destination. An abandoned ferry dock. A copse of bamboo. A bridge with a broken railing. Each landmark brought them closer to the farmhouse, and each step felt like a door closing behind them.
By the time the sun began to set and it was dark, Haneul was leaning on him, her weight warm against his side. He didn't shrug her off. He didn't know why.
Stupid, he thought again.
They reached Buyeo by evening.
The farmhouse was two kilometers inland, up a dirt road choked with weeds. It was smaller than Haneul imagined: two rooms, a rusted tin roof and a well in the yard. The windows were boarded up, but Keonho knew which boards were loose. He pushed one aside and climbed through, then unlocked the door from the inside.
The air was stale and cold. Dust covered everything. But there was a mattress in the corner, a wooden stove, and a stack of canned goods in the cupboard.
"Home." Keonho said. The word sounded strange in his mouth.
Haneul dropped the bag on the floor and looked around. It was a prison and a palace. It was the first place she stood in weeks where no one was trying to hurt her.
"It's perfect." She said.
Keonho looked at her. Really looked. Not a quick glance, but something almost human.
"We'll stay here until the heat dies down..." He said. "...a month, maybe two. Then we move again."
"And the boss?"
Keonho walked to the window. Through the gap in the boards, he could see the last light bleeding out of the sky.
"The boss will find us eventually..." He said. "...or we'll find him. Either way, it ends the same."
Haneul came up behind him. She pressed her forehead between his shoulder blades and wrapped her arms around his torso. He was warm under the clean shirt he changed into.
"Together." She said.
Keonho closed his eyes.
"Together." He agreed.
Outside, the countryside went dark. In here, in this small farmhouse with the dust, the canned goods and the boarded windows, two monsters held each other in the dark.
It wasn't a happy ending.
But it was a start.
Written by: Bunny_JHS