AS THE SEASONS GO BY — LMK
PAIRING: mark x female reader SUMMARY: it takes a full cycle through the earth's seasons for you to come to terms with how you feel about mark lee. GENRE: friends to lovers! au, college! au, romance, humour, fluff, pining, some angst WARNINGS: swearing, alcohol consumption, sex jokes, stats jargon, ryujin x haechan, brief mark x lia, mark is kinda an asshole in the middle (sorry) WORD COUNT: 20.2k NOTE: jesus christ this took me forever to get out. since i started working on this i've moved out, graduated, started a new job twice, and picked up bouldering (quarter life crisis indicator). my writing has gotten pretty rusty since i finished thesis work, hence why this has been 11 months in the making. hope it doesn't disappoint too much :)
It was spring when you first made the acquaintance of Mark Lee.
Or, as you had known him then, the middle one in the second row trio.
Specifically, it was a Wednesday afternoon at the tail end of March, four weeks into the spring semester. Tutorials for most courses had started the previous week, and you found yourself sitting in front of the same computer as you had been last Wednesday, waiting for your tutor to arrive.
As luck would have it, the only time slot that fit your schedule had to be the one in the (supposedly) haunted computer lab, down in the basement of the data science building. The haunted part didn’t bother you as much as the basement part did — no windows, no natural light, and a faint musty smell that had to be an indicator of health-jeopardising mould.
Dear god, this building needed some renovations. What else were your student loans good for?
The centuries-old door to the room creaked open and you looked up, expecting to see the haggard face of your tutor. Not only did the room suck, but the post-grad statistics student assigned to this time slot wasn’t much help either. Last week, he flicked through the slides of the first tutorial pack like it was a Formula One race, and spent the rest of class silently typing away on his own laptop while the rest of you tried to make sense of the content he had whizzed through.
Your hopes for an engaging and informative second tutorial were not high.
However, it wasn’t the face of your tutor that peeked out from behind the ancient door.
It was a familiar face though. You had seen him at the lectures for this subject a few times since the start of the semester. Usually, you could find him at the front of the auditorium, sitting in the second row, and always sandwiched between two boys who you had come to refer to in your head as Moles and Teeth.
Thus, middle one in the second row trio.
You needed to come up with a shorter nickname.
“Hey, uh, is this the tute for—” he paused to glance at his phone “—DATA1002?”
He was met with a sad chorus of yeses and other affirmative sounds. It seemed everyone else in this time slot had also pulled the short end of the timetabling stick.
Middle one’s big brown eyes scanned the room and zeroed in on the only unoccupied computer left, which just so happened to be next to you.
“Hey,” he greeted, sliding into the seat beside you, all smiles and pearly teeth, as if you were good friends, and not two people acknowledging each other’s presence for the first time ever. “Did we get up to a lot last week? I had to miss the first tute.”
You were not used to seeing him without the bread pieces of his human sandwich. He looked like he was missing something, somehow.
“Not too much,” you replied after a beat, still trying to adjust to the friendliness that just seemed to exude off this guy. “We went through the tutorial slides. It was pretty much just revision of the lecture content. The pack’s on the Canvas tutorial page, if you haven’t found it yet.”
“Okay, cool. I looked through it already, so I should be good.” He reached down to pull his laptop out of his bag before flashing you another grin. “Thanks dude.”
You gave him a smile that said no problem, though with far less enthusiasm. The mould in this dungeon of a computer lab was getting to you already.
“Oh, I’m Mark, by the way. Mark Lee,” he added.
At least you had gotten the first letter right.
“Hi Mark,” you said, introducing yourself.
Your tutor chose that moment to make his entrance, impossibly even more exhausted than he had been last week. The life of an academic had to be dire if this was what they looked like.
In addition to the tutorial slides, he had brought along another friend — a stack of worksheets, which were passed around the room with the solemnity of a death sentence. Luckily, the slide pack was short, sparing you from having to read the screen at the speed of light.
The focus of today’s lesson was the worksheet, comprising a few problems using the statistical software mentioned in this week’s lectures. Standard stuff, thank god. There would be no need to ask the tutor for help in class today.
It was just as well, because you didn’t want to call him by the wrong name (you were about 80% sure his name was Kun, or something else starting with K), and he was not old enough for you to be addressing him by ‘sir’.
You made quick work of booting up the software on the campus computer, and following the steps listed on the worksheet to produce the required output. Just as you were filling out the table in question 5, there was a light tap on your shoulder.
“Hey.”
It was midd—Mark.
“You kinda look like you know what you’re doing,” he began, a sheepish smile on his face. This guy was always smiling. “Do you think you could help me out?”
You peered at his worksheet, where he had jotted down his name in the top right corner, and a few equations under question 1 that looked like they had been mistranslated from some ancient hieroglyphic text.
There was a moment where you considered passing him off to Kun, because wasn’t that what the tutor was supposed to be doing anyway? Helping students with their questions? A quick glance towards the front of the room afforded you the sight of the post-grad hunched over his own laptop, the frown on his face so deep you wondered if he was having a facial muscle spasm.
Better leave him be.
“Sure,” you finally agreed. It would do you some good to explain things to someone else anyway.
Mark flashed you a grateful smile and shifted his worksheet on the desk so that you could properly read what he had written.
“So this one here, you need to calculate standard deviation, so you’ll need to use the population mean, not the observed score.”
“Oh.” He paused, blinking a few times. “Are they different numbers?”
Oh boy.
By the time you reach the end of the first section, Kun (you were almost certain of his name now) was already packing up his laptop and turning off the projector.
You looked around the room, finding that most of the other students had left already. The next group of unfortunate souls to enter the lab were already waiting outside obediently, faces long and pinched at the thought of having to spend the following two hours in this dark and damp-smelling prison of a classroom.
“We should probably leave. The next class is here,” you said, logging off from the lab computer.
Mark’s head turned towards the door. “Oh shit, I didn’t realise class was over already.” He flicked a glance down at your worksheet, which had remained untouched ever since he tapped you on the shoulder. “Sorry I took up all your time.”
“It’s fine,” you replied off-handedly, sticking the papers into your tote. You could work on them later. Right now, your priority was getting the hell out of this lab and booking it across campus to your microeconomics lecture.
He was quick to follow, shoving his things into his bag with considerably less care and trailing after you as you made a hurried exit from the room.
“Can I get you a coffee or anything? Just as a thank you for today.”
This guy must have a ton of friends.
You stopped on the landing at the top of the stairs, looking down at him. He did have pretty eyes. From this angle, they were big, and round, and there was a kind of twinkle about them, though that could’ve just been a reflection of the fluorescent lights in this underground bunker.
“I’ve got class now, so maybe another time,” you said.
“Okay.” Mark smiled. Nothing ever seemed to faze him. “I’ll see you next week, then.”
“See you next week.” With that, you pushed open the door and stepped out into the spring sunlight.
Wonderful, mold-free, fresh air. You’d never take it for granted again.
True to his word, you did see Mark next week, though you didn’t have to wait until Wednesday.
Mark spotted you as you walked into the lecture hall the following Monday, at precisely 8:57am. (Yes, the lecture had a 9am start. DATA1002 was seriously the stuff of nightmares.)
Your friend and roommate Ryujin squinted at the front of the auditorium.
“What did you say his name was again? Michael?”
“Mark,” you corrected, returning his enthusiastic wave with a much smaller one of your own. He had way too much energy for a Monday morning.
Ryujin made a proud little noise. “Hey, at least we had the first letter right. What about the other two?”
“No idea. They’re still Moles and Teeth to me.”
Mark was beckoning you over now, drawing the attention of both Moles and Teeth, who turned around, eyes pointed in your direction.
“I think, maybe, he wants you to go sit with them,” Ryujin said. You could hear the shit-eating grin in her voice without even having to look at her.
There was no way you could pretend you hadn’t seen him, not when you had made eye contact and waved back to him already. You looped an arm around Ryujin’s and tugged her along as you made your way down the rows.
“You’re coming with me,” you said to her through your teeth, mouth fixed into a smile as you approached the front.
Thankfully, she didn’t put up much of a fight. As usual, Mark was in the middle, sandwiched between the two boys you didn’t know. To avoid sitting next to a stranger and speaking over them, you shuffled into the third row, situating yourself directly behind the trio.
“Hey, you’re here!” he greeted, his smile as radiant as ever.
You gave him one back, though yours only had half the voltage. “Well, it is class time.”
On his left, Moles choked down what sounded like a laugh.
“Oh, this is Haechan and Jaemin, by the way. My roommates.” No wonder they always came to class together. You and Ryujin introduced yourselves as you settled into your seats (by this point in the semester you were well-versed in the torturous exercise of self-introductions).
“My friend, from the Wednesday tutorial,” Mark explained, because apparently that was what you were now. “She basically saved my life last week. Pulled me out the deep end.”
Haechan (Moles) gave you an awe-filled look. “Do you have space for one more on your lifeboat?”
Thankfully, you were saved from answering by the arrival of Professor Oh. Today’s lecture was fairly straightforward, following on from last week’s content on population variance. Being an econometrics major, numbers and mathematical concepts came easily to you. An hour later, at the conclusion of the lecture, there was a remarkable absence of lines between your brows compared to the three boys in front of you.
“I’ll see you later. I’ve got my modelling lecture,” Ryujin said, giving you a quick side hug.
Haechan turned around and surveyed her with curiosity. “You’re a model?”
Ryujin flashed you a loaded look.
“Uh—“
“I think she means statistical modelling, genius,” Jaemin (Teeth) quipped.
Haechan leaned back in his seat and let out a strung-out whine. “Guys, I really think we picked the wrong subject.”
Ryujin received an enthusiastic string of ‘nice to meet you’s before she was off. Haechan mumbled something about being flogged by this week’s tute, to which Jaemin replied something along the lines of keeping his BDSM fantasies out of data analytics, and then both of them were gone too.
“Do you have class now?” Mark asked, startling you slightly. He had walked out of the lecture hall with you, and seemed to be in no rush to be anywhere else.
“No, actually, I was just about to get something to eat. Haven’t had breakfast yet, so…”
He perked up. “Me neither,” he said, as if the empty status of your stomach was the greatest news he had heard all morning. “My friend works at the cafe by the quad. We can go and see if he’s on today.”
You wondered if this friend fit closer to his definition of the word, or yours.
“Plus, I can make good on that coffee I promised you. Seriously dude, I would have been lost without you last week.”
One thing you were learning about Mark — he was insistent, but you had decided there was something endearing about it.
You followed him to The Milk Bar, a cosy little coffee shop tucked away in the corner of one of the buildings lining the quadrangle. The smell of fresh coffee grounds hit you hard and fast as he pushed the door open, and you felt the seedling of an incoming headache disappear almost immediately. Such were the healing powers of Arabica beans.
“Jungwoo, dude, good to see you,” Mark grinned at the boy manning the counter. The cafe was still relatively quiet for the mid-morning, with few other customers around to complain while the two boys gave each other the universal bro-handshake-greeting. You and Jungwoo exchanged yet another round of introductions (you had definitely said your own name too many times for one day).
“My friend from that data course I’m taking,” Mark added, gesturing at you.
The more he said it, the more you were starting to believe that you were, in fact, friends. Nevermind that your supposed friendship had only started 5 days ago, during the course of which you had spoken at Mark for an hour while he made confused faces that slowly turned into understanding faces.
“Hey, any friend of Mark’s is a friend of mine,” Jungwoo said, smiling at you kindly. “But dude, my manager found out I wasn’t charging you and I got chewed the fuck out,” he lamented.
Mark sucked in a breath. “Oh shit, dude, my bad. You didn’t have to do all that.” He paused to let out a chuckle. “And all this time I thought The Milk Bar just had the cheapest sandwiches on campus.”
The two of you found a table under the awnings by the quad, and just in time too. The cafe had begun to fill up in the time it had taken the two of you to order. You nibbled at the raspberry and white chocolate muffin that Mark had so kindly paid (full price) for, despite your insistence on covering your own. He happily munched away at a club sandwich, and you could’ve sworn he was humming to himself with each bite.
“How come you’re in the Wednesday tute? I thought you would’ve wanted to be with your friends,” you asked, sipping on the iced latte he had bought for you.
This place was good. You might even need to make the switch from your regular joint permanent.
“I forgot to put my timetabling preferences in on time,” he explained, pulling a face. “My schedule for this sem is seriously messed up. On Mondays I have class at 9, and then nothing until 4 in the afternoon. What am I supposed to do for the 6 hours in between?”
You couldn’t help but smile. Mark opened up to people like a well-oiled hinge. It came naturally to him in a way that you couldn’t quite fathom, but there was something comforting about how easily he could make you feel like a member of his private and inner world.
“You could study. Maybe. Just an idea.”
He shot you an unimpressed look, but it soon gave way to another smile.
“Thank you for helping me though, seriously. This is my first time taking one of these data courses, and like, numbers and equations just really aren’t my thing.”
“It’s no problem at all,” you waved him off. “I get that it’s not really intuitive if you’ve never done it before.”
“Yeah,” he agreed wistfully. “You really do seem to get it though. And your friend as well.”
“Ryujin and I are both econometrics, so it’s basically like a second language.”
“That makes sense,” he nodded, chewing thoughtfully. The slight pout he sported while he ate was kind of cute. “I’m a creative writing major, so this stuff is like a whole new world to me.”
You stared at him.
“You’re a creative writing major.”
He nodded.
“And you’re taking Foundations of Data Analytics.”
He nodded again.
“…Why?”
The bluntness of your question didn’t seem to bother him at all.
“I thought it could be interesting,” he shrugged. “And it seems like something I should probably know a little bit about. You know, in a world that’s becoming increasingly digitised everyday.” He paused to take a solemn sip of his americano. “Everything we do becomes a data point. And it takes all of those data points to tell a good story.”
“Okay, yeah, I’m hearing the creative writing come through,” you laughed. “What about your friends? Something tells me Haechan isn’t really a numbers guy either.”
“He’s a music major. And Jaemin’s physiology.”
You raised an eyebrow. “Correct me if I’m wrong, but it doesn’t sound like any of you really need to know what sample spread is.”
Mark stopped chewing, suddenly turning serious, and set the rest of his sandwich back down on the table.
“Don’t laugh,” he prefaced, but the mere warning itself was enough to have the corners of your mouth turning upwards. “We kind of have this bet going on.”
Ah, yes. The competitiveness of university-aged boys was not lost on you.
“Each semester, we agree on one elective that all three of us have to take, and then whoever scores the worst at the end of the sem has to carry out a punishment,” he explained. “This sem, the loser has to shave their head.”
“That certainly sounds… interesting.”
“Last sem we picked Intro to Psychology. Haechan lost by a mile and had to get a full body wax.”
“When you say full body…”
He nodded gravely. “Brazilian included.”
You pressed your lips into a thin line in an effort to keep the laugh locked away.
“Shaving your head sounds pretty tame in comparison, I have to admit,” you said, after making sure you weren’t at risk of any unwanted giggles escaping. It was really Mark’s fault for airing out his friend’s business with no warning.
He sighed. “You’re right. But I really don’t want it to be me this time.” He paused, carefully patting around his head. “Shaving my head will make it look even bigger than it already is.”
“Having a big head only means you have a big brain,” you grinned, watching as the slight frown on his face smoothed out at your words.
“I like the sound of that,” he said, cheeks raised in a happy smile. “But I mean, I’d rather just do well in this course, or at least better than both of them, and avoid having to shave my head altogether.” He flashed you a hopeful look.
You were quick to catch on to the pleading glint of his big, round eyes.
“And you want my help.”
He nodded sheepishly.
“Is this why you wanted to buy me coffee so badly? You’re trying to bribe me with iced lattes and raspberry white choc muffins so I’ll be your personal data tutor?” you accused, though you were smiling. The joking undercurrent to your voice rang out loud and clear.
“You got me,” he confessed, throwing his hands up in surrender. “Is it working though?”
You brought a hand up to your chin, pretending to think. “Maybe. Just a little.”
There was something inviting about Mark Lee, you decided. Perhaps it was the sincerity that just seemed to radiate off of him (you doubted he ever did anything half-assed). Perhaps it was the fragment of reflective wisdom underlying his friendly nature that you had only caught a glimpse of. Something about him had you thinking he’d be a good person to keep around.
“I’ll help you,” you said, biting back a smile at his celebratory fist pump, “but I have one condition.”
“Anything, dude.”
“Please never tell me about either of your roommates’ special parts ever again.”
Mark broke out into a fit of pitched giggles that echoed across the quad. It was a captivating noise. You’d never heard someone laugh with such conviction before.
“Deal.”
It was summer when you came to know the taste of Mark’s friendship.
And what a sweet taste it was.
Mark approached the world with an unadulterated curiosity. It was the kind of curiosity that many people lost as they gained a greater understanding of the world, yourself included, but Mark had never relinquished that child-like thirst for knowledge, the desire to learn and fill his life with new experiences.
He was clever, contrary to what he’d have you believe. Mark’s wisdom took a different form from yours. His empathy knew no bounds, and he had a way of tapping into the emotions that were so inherent to human nature.
Above all, he always strived to see the good — in things, in people, in the world.
What an incredible thing that was.
“Oh my god, dude, you’re a lifesaver,” was his exalting greeting as he pulled open the door.
“Me and Ryujin basically cleared the shelves at the convenience store on the corner,” you said, passing the bag into his waiting hands as you bent down to untie your shoes. “Asahis and Guinness in my bag.”
“Heinekens and extra Jinro in mine,” Ryujin added, handing her bag over as well. “Birthday boy will be spoiled for choice. He gets so whiny when he doesn’t have his beers.”
You and Mark exchanged a look. Then he ushered the both of you in, shutting the door with his foot, and disappeared into the kitchen to put the goods in the fridge.
The smell of greasy pizza and fried chicken was a welcome and familiar one to their shared apartment, judging by the handful of times you had been over to study with Mark. (You preferred the library — Haechan’s presence was too distracting.)
Bruno Mars was playing at a respectable volume from the speaker system — a surprisingly sophisticated piece of hi-fi furniture for an apartment inhabited by three university boys. Hopefully a noise complaint would not be on the agenda for today. Someone (you suspected Jaemin) had connected their laptop to the television, which was currently cycling through a slideshow of baby kittens, each transition more ridiculous than the last. You watched as one kitten bounced out of frame and another zoomed in, the image expanding as it spiralled in the centre of the screen.
Above everything hung a string of gold foil balloons that spelled out HBD NAHCEAH, and then in smaller balloons below, FUCK DATA1002.
The birthday boy spotted you and Ryujin and immediately bounded over. “Wassup wassup?” Haechan greeted. “The nerds have arrived!”
“The balloons were your idea?” you asked, begrudgingly taking the party hat he thrust into your hands.
“Of course,” he beamed, chest puffing with pride, though the smile quickly dropped. “Can you believe it’s the only subject I had to take an exam for this sem? Like seriously, fuck DATA1002.”
Ryujin snickered. “But does DATA1002 want to fuck you?”
“Shut up. No slandering the birthday boy on his birthday at his birthday party.”
“Your birthday was two weeks ago, dumbass,” she fired back.
“Yeah, it was, and you know why I couldn’t celebrate my birthday on my actual birthday? Because I was studying for that stupid exam. So it’s fuck DATA1002, now and forever.”
You slowly stepped away as the two of them continued to bicker, watching as Haechan nearly lost a hand in the process of forcibly trying to get the party hat over Ryujin’s head. Mark appeared at your side, handing you an ice cold Asahi that he had uncapped for you. You accepted with grateful hands and clinked the bottle against his awaiting one before taking a cold, refreshing sip.
“Do you see what I mean? There’s something more to their dynamic,” you deduced. “They get into it too easily.”
Mark made a contemplative noise. “I honestly think he likes it when she threatens him. He gets that weird look in his eyes.”
“That’s what I’m saying.”
“But then again, he makes that same face at me when I yell at him to do the dishes,” he added, sounding unconvinced. You both took another long sip and watched as Haechan was caught trying to tap Ryujin’s bottle with the bottom of his. She sent him away with a venomous glare that rivalled the bite of a cobra.
“Ten bucks says they hook up tonight.”
A bout of giggles rippled through him, and he had to throw an arm around your shoulders to stay upright. Mark never shied away from emotion, least of all amusement. Laughter was something he expressed with his entire body.
“Dude, you’re ridiculous,” he finally managed. “And you’re going to be ten bucks poorer by tomorrow morning.”
You were reminded of how nice it was to see real people again, after the two or so odd weeks you had spent with your eyes glued to your laptop screen in the typical fashion of finals prep. Summer infiltrated the post-exam season — you could feel it in the slight stickiness in the evening air, and hear it in the laughs that carried across the living room.
The best memories from university often had nothing to do with being in class. There had to be something ironic about that.
In between bites of hawaiian pizza and garlic soy chicken, you made the rounds, coaxing a dark-under-eyed Jaemin into joining you for a few soju shots to obliterate any malingering thoughts about his neuroscience final. You caught up with a few of Mark’s other friends too, eyes widening at the pictures on Renjun’s phone of his final assignment for his art class. Jungwoo strong-armed you and Ryujin into joining a round of the flip cup game they had started on the dining table. Ryujin carried, as to be expected, though you suspected Jungwoo was already on his way to an early night passed out on the couch before the game had even started.
As wide as Mark’s heart was, it wasn’t infinite, and neither was the introvert model of the social battery he ran off. It wasn’t long before you found yourself in the quiet of his room, back against the foot of his bed, sipping slowly from a can of pear juice. Mark had his limbs splayed out across the floorboards, staring up at the ceiling with eyes that were a little more glassy than usual.
“Are you going home for the break?” he asked, poking your knee through the rips in your jeans. It tickled, but not enough for you to shake him off. Plus, Mark was an affectionate drunk. Pushing him away would have been like taking a stuffed toy away from a child.
You shook your head lightly. “I signed up for summer intensives with Ryujin.”
“Why? You deserve a break too,” he fussed, playing with the frayed fabric.
“If I can get more credits in earlier, I can take less classes during fourth year and focus more on my internship,” you explained. “Assuming I’ll actually score an internship by then.”
“You will,” he reassured. “You’re so smart. And driven. And self-disciplined. You’re gonna be amazing at whatever you end up doing. I just know it. You’ll be so successful.”
Mark was an affectionate and emotional drunk.
You didn’t mind it though. His words and actions were unfiltered, but never in a way that would have people thinking he was rude or ill-mannered. Sometimes, your conversations would take a deep philosophical turn out of nowhere, like that one time you tried to explain economic scarcity to him (at his request), and at the end of it all, he had asked you if you thought there was more to the world than money.
(Of course you did. But it would be hard to pursue those things without some level of financial stability in the capitalistic world we lived in.
He had seemed pretty satisfied with that answer.)
Smiling fondly, you reached for the glass of water beside you and pressed it into his hand. “Drink up, Plato. Otherwise you’ll wake up to a raging headache.”
He sat up from the floor and took the glass, obediently gulping down half of it in one breath. Something about the droop of his shoulders and his big round eyes reminded you of a puppy. The thought brought another quiet smile to your face.
“Are you spending semester break at home?” you asked.
Mark nodded, breaking out into a grin. “Can’t wait to be home. I miss my mum’s cooking. She makes the best chicken, you’ll have to try it one day.” His eyes lit up. “I’ll bring some back for you when the semester starts.”
You were just about to thank him for the thought — you hadn’t had a home-cooked meal for months, and though the cafeteria meals were decent, you could tell they weren’t made with love — when there was a thud against the door, followed by some fumbling with the handle. The door swung open and two figures tumbled into Mark’s room.
Two figures who, by the looks of it, were seconds away from jumping each other’s bones, if the tight press of their bodies together was anything to go by.
“—finally putting that smart mouth of yours to good use?”
“I’ll show you exactly what this smart mouth can—wait.”
A pregnant pause.
“This isn’t my room.”
“What’s up, guys?” you asked cheerily.
Haechan detached his face from Ryujin’s with lightning speed, head whipping around to find you on the floor, struggling to hold back a triumphant laugh. Mark could only stare wordlessly, mouth hanging open and eyes wide as he took in the scene before him.
This would be an interesting talk for when you got back to your dorm.
“Uh—fuck, uh, we were just, um, t-trying to—”
“Sorry!” Ryujin interrupted, pulling Haechan out of the room and slamming the door shut with a loud bang.
A loaded silence followed. Mark was still frozen in place with his eyes on the door.
Had they sent him into medical shock?
“Yo, they were definitely about to fuck.”
The giggles escaped then, great big ones that bounced around the walls of his room. Mark slapped your leg as you doubled over, clutching your stomach with both hands.
“I do believe you now owe me ten bucks,” you finally managed once the laughter had died down.
Mark reached for his wallet on the nightstand, begrudgingly fishing out a ten dollar bill and placing it into your outstretched hand.
“Don’t spend it all in one place,” he teased.
“Try and stop me.” You tucked the bill into the back pocket of your jeans. “Okay, come on, let’s go back out there.”
Mark blinked up at you as you pushed yourself onto your feet. “Go? But I want to stay here with you,” he pouted.
“Isn’t Haechan’s room next to yours?”
He took a look at the wall separating the two of you from whatever unspeakable things were about to happen in the adjacent room, and got to his feet in an instant.
“I’m going. I’m gone. I was never even here.”
Three weeks later, during a study session with Ryujin at the uncharacteristically empty library, you finally received the call you had been waiting for.
“So? Am I gonna get to see you bald or not?”
“Not in this lifetime, if I can help it,” came Mark’s reply. You could hear the smile in his voice. “Dude, I got a distinction!”
“Mark, that’s amazing!” you exclaimed. “See? I knew you’d do well. You aced that midterm. And now you’ve aced the final as well.”
“Couldn’t have done it without you. Like seriously, you hard carried me through the semester.” Even through the phone, his sincerity was unmistakable.
Truthfully, you felt like you had done little in your post-class study sessions to warrant this level of gratitude from him. Mark just needed things explained a little differently, in a way that made more sense to his writing-wired brain. After that, he hadn’t needed all that much of your help, despite his insistence on attributing his success in DATA1002 to you.
“I’m buying you dinner at that samgyetang place off campus when I get back,” he promised, though it sounded more like a threat than a generous offer. “Don’t even try to weasel out of it. And don’t try to sneak off and pay the bill either.”
You let out a small chuckle. “Are you treating me or threatening me?”
“Whatever gets the message across.”
Against all odds, you found yourself missing Mark, having gone from seeing him almost everyday for three months to being sorely devoid of his presence for at least another few weeks. He kept you updated enough, bombarding you with pictures of his mum’s cooking in between random little voice notes about the stray cat he saw behind his building, or how much his school uniform had shrunk since he had last worn it.
You missed his company. For the first time in your university career, you found yourself impatient for the academic year to pick up again.
“Hang on, so who actually lost the bet?”
“Oh, it was Haechan,” Mark announced gleefully. “We all saw it coming. He’s home right now, but once we’re all back on campus, me and Jaemin are going to do the honours. You and Ryujin are more than welcome to come and watch. Or participate, if you want.”
Next semester genuinely could not come quickly enough.
You assured him you were doing fine, and that campus was actually kind of nice without the usual throngs of students crowding the hallways (how wonderful it was to have whole study tables to yourself), before he had to go.
“Catching up with some friends from high school. Everyone changes so much every time I’m back,” he said wistfully. “Anyways, miss you dude, I’ll talk to you later.”
Ryujin was still glumly poring over the textbook pages when you hung up. You tapped her on the arm with a smile on your face that was way too chipper for a mid-course review on financial markets.
She raised a quizzical eyebrow at you. “What is it?”
“Wanna shave Haechan’s head when he’s back?”
Autumn arrived, and like the leaves, your friendship with Mark began to change.
“Your head is really quite small.”
“Shut up,” Haechan glowered, tapping the controller keys with a little more force than before.
“I honestly think it looks fine,” you offered, trying to soothe the blow of Ryujin’s words. “They probably took too much off to start with, but it’s much better now. Your hair grows back fast.”
He turned around and flashed you a grateful smile. “You’re the only one who’s nice to me.”
“His hair grows back fast because he’s a pervert,” Ryujin responded under her breath.
Haechan threw his controller down on the couch. “Enough, woman,” he huffed, pushing her legs off his lap. Jaemin’s character scored a quick victory on the television, and the boy let out a cheer. “You could have prevented this, you know. Why didn’t you tutor me? I was literally on my knees begging for your help.”
“You handed me a pack of Pepero with a sticky note stuck to it that said ‘pwease’. P-w-e-a-s-e,” she said flatly.
“Was that not a clear cry for help?”
“For literacy assistance because you don’t know how to spell? Maybe.”
“If you need help with academic writing, there’s free resources on the university portal,” Jaemin supplied. “I showed you where they are, remember?”
You choked down a laugh. Haechan put his head in his hands, fingers skipping across the close cropping of hair in search of something, anything to grab onto. He ultimately came up short.
Ryujin sighed, a fond yet exasperated noise. “Honestly, I kind of wanted to see what you’d look like,” she mused, lightly raking her nails over his scalp. “To see if I still liked you even if you were bald. Which it seems I do, unfortunately, so…”
Haechan looked up at that, eyes crinkling into a pleased smile. “Aww, babe,” he cooed, burying his face in between her neck and shoulder.
You and Jaemin shared a look over the top of their heads. Their dynamic was still puzzling.
“Do I even want to know what you have planned for this semester?” you asked, though you weren’t sure if you were prepared for the answer.
“We actually haven’t decided on the punishment yet,” Jaemin replied, queuing up another game and shoving the unmanned controller back into his friend’s hands. “Haechan wants something that doesn’t involve his body hair this time.”
“We need to go easy. I don’t think I can handle having my entire left eyebrow plucked off strand by strand if I lose again.”
“You could just, uh, not lose. Maybe,” Ryujin suggested.
You were saved from hearing Haechan’s following choice of (no doubt) colourful words by the door to the apartment swinging open. The reason why you had been waiting here in his apartment and enduring the whiplash-esque displays of affection on the couch in front of you had finally returned from class.
“Babies, I’m home!” Mark sing-songed, dropping his bag on one of the stools by the kitchen counter. “Whoa, crime scene on the couch.”
Jaemin eyed the couple beside him with a grotesque kind of astonishment. “I think they might actually be trying to kill each other.”
“RIP Haechan.” Ignoring the indignant noises coming from the almost-bald shape on the couch, Mark turned to you and flashed a smile. “Are you ready to go?”
He must have forgotten to put his contacts in today. The clear frames perched on the bridge of his nose were not an uncommon sight, but a surprising one just the same, and you had not been prepared for the little flip of your stomach in reaction to them.
Mark was gorgeous. You supposed you had always known, but it seemed the realisations dawned more frequently nowadays.
“Uh, yeah, ready,” you answered, standing up to smooth out any creases in your jeans. For a fleeting moment you wondered if your baby tee and cargo jeans were too casual.
Too casual for what? This was just a trip to the department store.
“Ready to go where?” came a whiny voice from the couch. “Without me?”
“Yes Haechan, without you. You hate shopping, remember?” Mark replied. “And you,” he turned to Jaemin, brows furrowing, “don’t you have lab?”
Jaemin stared at him. “I do?”
Mark stared back.
“I do,” Jaemin said slowly, mouth dropping open in realisation. “I do have lab, and it started ten minutes ago.”
He tossed the controller onto the couch without so much as a glance, grabbed his half-unzipped backpack and dashed out the door with his left shoe on backwards. If you looked closely enough, there was a wisp of smoke trailing after him.
There was never a boring day at the Lee-Na residence.
Mark took a quick look at the couch, where the two shapes seemed to have untangled themselves and were coexisting much more peacefully than they were thirty seconds ago.
“Let’s go, before we have to see them jump each other,” he urged under his breath.
“Or jump each other,” you agreed. With those two, you never knew whether they’d be at each other’s throats or on each other’s faces. The best course of action was often to just be away, and minimise the chance of becoming collateral damage.
Mark put his hands on your shoulders and ushered you out of his apartment with little resistance, though you still managed to catch bits of the conversation in the living room.
“See, if that was me, I just wouldn’t have gone to class at all,” said Haechan rather matter-of-factly.
“And that’s exactly why you have no hair right now.”
Thankfully, the door was shut before you could witness Act II of the lovers’ spat.
To be completely frank, shopping was not a pastime you enjoyed all that much either, least of all in department stores. Being followed around by commission-eager sales associates who were most definitely judging you behind the stiff smiles pasted on their faces wasn’t exactly your idea of a perfect afternoon. But when Mark had asked you to come with him to pick out a new suit for his cousin's upcoming wedding, you had agreed without a moment’s hesitation.
You had a hard time saying no to him.
Time with Mark was always time well spent. Even when he almost burnt down his apartment trying to make you scrambled eggs for breakfast.
(He had called it breakfast, but it was definitely afternoon by the time you had blinked yourself awake on his couch, courtesy of the 8 bottles of soju that your little dinner gathering had annihilated the night before.)
His little stunt in the kitchen had ended up in a ruined non-stick pan, the incessant blaring of the smoke alarm, and two hungover and homicidally-inclined roommates who had been woken up by said alarm. Though you ended up at the restaurant around the corner, faces steaming over bowls of hangover soup, it was the thought that counted.
Mark was always thoughtful, and most of all with you.
“Did he mention a dress code or anything? A colour palette?” you asked.
“Only that they’re having a pretty classic wedding, and to keep things simple.” Mark turned to flash you a sage smile. “Knowing Johnny though, he’s definitely planning on wearing something kinda out there. Something that’ll make him stand out.”
“Well, it is his wedding day, so I think he’s probably allowed to stand out just a little.”
Mark chuckled, eyes crinkling at the corners. You once thought his laugh was excessive, and wondered how that much noise could come from a single person. Now, the sound of it only brought a fond smile to your face.
“You two would get along so well. Johnny’s the only person who makes me laugh more than you do.”
“I think you’re just really weak to my jokes,” you replied, but the smile on your face widened nonetheless.
You followed Mark into what looked to be a promising store. The window front was lined with two spiffy mannequins, and the middle-aged sales assistant gave the two of you a warm smile as you entered. Mark perused the racks, picking out a few sets and some separates, pausing every so often to get your opinion on what would look nice.
(Thankfully, you were able to talk him out of a blazer with leopard print on the lapels.)
“What do you think?” Mark asked, giving you a twirl in front of the fitting room. The charcoal grey set he had on was well cut and classy, plus the fitted trousers faithfully cupped the substantial curve of his ass.
Jungwoo had once told you that every night, without fail, Mark did 50 squats before bed. But even then, you couldn’t seem to replicate the same volume or curvature on your own butt despite following the same routine for a month. Mark’s ass was a God-given asset.
“I think this one is the best,” you answered, before making a few less-than-polite gestures at the melons on his backside.
Hopefully the sales assistant, busy rehanging the previous try-ons, was none the wiser.
Mark almost broke out into a fit of giggles at your salacious expression following the compliment, but managed to catch himself. “How about the navy one from before?”
You hummed thoughtfully. “That one was nice too,” you agreed. “I feel like you’d get more wear out of this one though. It fits more occasions. Or am I just making that up?” You tossed a tentative glance at the sales assistant.
“Oh no, you’re absolutely right,” she reassured, smiling at you kindly, before turning to Mark. “The pinstripe on the navy suit from before tends to lend itself more to business settings. This one can be worn for business, but it’s also appropriate for a range of other formal settings as well — business, weddings, graduation, nice dinners. May I ask what occasion you’re shopping for?”
“A wedding,” Mark answered cheerfully. “My cousin’s wedding, actually.”
“Well in that case, I also think the charcoal grey would be the one to go for,” she concluded. “Do you have any ideas for ties and pocket squares? I can help match them to the colour of your date’s dress, or whatever outfit you have in mind.”
She turned to you expectantly.
You stared right back. The blank look on your face seemed to throw her off.
“Have you decided what you’ll be wearing?” she tried again.
Oh.
“Oh, I’m not his—uh, we’re not—”
Your hands gestured wildly between you and Mark. Your tongue flailed uselessly against the roof of your mouth. Your face felt hot all over.
Were you about to have a stroke?
“I actually don’t have a date yet,” Mark supplied, putting an end to the interpretive dance performance your hands were venturing into.
Yes, that was what you were trying to say.
The sales assistant nodded in understanding. “Ah, I see,” she said, not without flashing you a weighty glance that you couldn’t quite decipher.
Was she checking for signs of neurological dysfunction? Strokes usually started with numbness in the arm, or the face, but you felt physically fine. Mostly in control of your muscles.
“I do apologise, I didn’t mean to assume, or insinuate that—” she cut herself off, lightly shaking her head. “I mean, would you like to have a look at suit accessories today?”
Mark politely declined, since the suit was already skimming the top of his budget. As the sales assistant busied herself with putting away the rest of the pieces, he looked over at you with those big, brown eyes.
“Dude, are you okay? You look kind of flushed.”
“Yeah, I uh, I’m just a bit hot, I think,” you managed, tugging at the collar of your shirt. “The air conditioning in here is kind of strong.”
“Tell me about it. I was sweating like crazy getting everything on and off. Which reminds me, actually.” Mark paused, looking down at the grey fabric laid against his body. “I should probably take this suit off before I leave pit stains on it.”
After an hour or two of more wandering around the complex, during which you managed to snag a My Melody plush for half off from Artbox (an absolutely amazing deal), the two of you found your way to the food court. Two steaming bowls of udon sat before you, along with the deep fried sides you had picked out earlier. Mark had gone a bit overboard with the tempura flakes, and they amassed in a mountain atop the broth.
“So how did they meet? Your cousin and his fiancé.”
Mark slurped up a mouthful of chewy noodles. “Oh, they’ve known each other for years. Been friends since high school, or maybe even before that. Honestly, I don’t even know.”
Wordlessly, you exchanged one of your nitamago eggs with a piece of his karaage. The routine was a familiar one, developed over months of shared meals, and you watched as he carefully settled the chicken on your plate.
There was something nice about the domesticity of it all.
“How did they go from long-time friends to getting engaged? What changed?”
“Dude,” he started, gesturing between the two of you with vigour, “we’re always on the same wavelength. That’s exactly what I asked him.”
The glasses perched on his nose bridge fogged up as he dipped his head to take another bite. You bit back a smile.
Had he always been this endearing?
“He told me it just hit him. Like one day, it was like a switch had flipped, and then he couldn’t see her as just a friend anymore.” Mark looked up to lock eyes with you, a hint of disbelief colouring his smile. “It’s kind of crazy, right?”
Sure. Pretty crazy.
“Yeah,” you managed, trying to mirror his expression. “How can you flip a switch on your feelings?”
The sentiments of the heart were not a voltage circuit. The sentiments of the heart were not governed by any real logic, and certainly not anything as ubiquitous as Ohm’s Law. If that were the case, Jungwoo would never have spent 3 weeks pretending he lived on the other side of the city just so he could ride the bus home with this girl from his engineering dynamics class.
Unfortunately for him, Miyeon a) was already taken, and b) batted for the other team.
Jungwoo was still processing.
Of course, you had all reassured him it was nothing to do with him. Still, the forlorn droop of his eyes had yet to disappear.
“I don’t know, it doesn’t really make sense.” Mark took a bite of the egg you had given him and let out a content little hum. “But I kind of admire it. Sometimes I think it would be so nice to end up with someone you were friends with first. You wouldn’t have to go through the whole getting to know each other part of dating where you have to pretend you’re a good person.”
“You say that like you’re not a good person.”
“You know what I mean. The part where you have to be the best version of yourself to impress them.”
You kept a straight face. “So I’m guessing that means you don’t disclose your gas issues with a girl on the first date?”
Mark choked down an udon noodle along with a laugh. “Dude, come on, don’t do that — don’t ever use that against me. You know what yoghurt does to my stomach.”
“I do think you need to see a gastroenterologist about that. In all seriousness.”
The grin on your face was not serious at all.
“It could be lactose intolerance. Or even IBS.”
Mark flicked a piece of soggy tempura flake at you with his chopsticks.
“But see?” he continued, “You’re my friend, so you know all about my stomach problems already. Like how I know that you can’t remember birthdays or anniversaries to save your life—”
“Hey! I remembered your birthday!”
“—or like how I know Haechan always has his feet out because they get sweaty.”
You wrinkled your nose. “Okay, first off, gross. Second, it sounds to me like you should just tell Haechan how you feel. You never know, he might even feel the same way. You guys would make a cute couple.”
Mark’s answering eye roll and hand gesture gave you a pretty good indication of how he felt about your suggestion.
You chewed on your noodles, watching Mark swallow mouthfuls of his soggy tempura sludge with his words on your mind all the while. Perhaps you had already known he was somewhat of a romantic — the guy was a creative writing major, it wasn’t thermodynamics to connect those two dots — but something about hearing him talk about his ideals on love and relationships had unexpectedly struck you.
What would Mark be like as a boyfriend? Sweet, of course. And thoughtful. Maybe he’d write poems about her. Or maybe he’d treat her just like any of his other friends, like the way he treated Haechan, or Jaemin, or even you.
You wanted to know. The wave of curiosity that washed over you was oddly strong, and persistent. It lingered in your thoughts as you finished your meal, and stuck with you on the way back to his apartment. Days were getting shorter, and nights picked up breezes that toed the line between refreshing and just a tad too crisp. You commended yourself for bringing an overshirt. It was much needed for the walk back from the bus stop.
“By the way, you want to go see that new Robert Pattinson movie?” you asked, nudging him. “They have screenings at the boutique theatre off campus this Friday.”
“Hell yeah, let’s—wait, did you say this Friday?”
You gave him an enthusiastic nod back.
“Sorry dude, I can’t do this Friday.”
“It’s fine, I’ll have another look at the session times and we can go next week,” you waved off his apology. “Working on your film assignment?”
The three boys had decided on Cinematic Spectatorship to be the deciding course for this semester. Though it was only a few weeks into the course, based on what you had seen so far, Mark was in a pretty good position to avoid having to violate any of his own body parts this time around.
You still weren’t sure what punishment they had agreed to, but you trusted it would not be tame.
“No, actually,” he paused, a small smile pulling at the corners of his mouth. “It’s not a big deal—”
“Don’t tell me. You’re getting your third nipple lasered off. Wait, no. You need to hide a dead body.”
“I have a date.”
Oh.
You blinked up at him.
“You do? Would I know her?”
“I don’t think so,” he answered. A faint wash of colour tinged his cheeks. “Her name is Lia. We used to go to school together and now she’s a journalism major at Ewha. You know how I went home for the summer?”
A somewhat stiff nod was all you could manage.
“We kind of reconnected over the break. Went out a few times.”
Lia. Her name was pretty. She was probably pretty too, if Mark’s celebrity crushes were anything to judge by.
“You like her?” you asked, trying to sound less wooden.
“Yeah,” he admitted, the flush on his face deepening ever so slightly. “We have a lot in common, and she’s so easy to talk to.”
You hoped the stunted pause that it took for you to find some coherent words to say wasn’t as obvious to him as it felt to you. “Wow. Yeah, that’s—”
“And look, I’m sorry I didn’t say anything sooner. I wasn’t sure it was going to go anywhere when it first started and I didn’t want to make a whole thing out of nothing.” He paused, allowing himself a quiet smile. “But yeah, I think I do really like her.”
“Yeah. I mean—yeah. That’s great.” You swallowed. ”I’m happy for you.” You tried to give him an encouraging smile. “Now Haechan can quit giving you shit about being single.”
Mark flashed you a look. “You know that only means he’s gonna make fun of you even more.”
“And Jaemin.” “And Jaemin,” Mark agreed. His mouth puckered the way it did when he was thinking hard about something. “Maybe you and him should just get together.”
It was your turn to flash him a look.
“Or like, just pretend you’re together or something.”
“Right,” you sounded out slowly. “You’re actually just talking shit now.”
He only answered with a string of laughs, which you couldn’t help but join in on, even if the topic at hand didn’t feel all that funny anyway.
“Dude, don’t worry. You’re smart, and funny, and you always smell nice. The right person will come along, and he’s going to be an amazing guy.”
You looked up at him, reading the sincerity in his big brown doe eyes. Mark really was the sweetest.
“I think it’s snowing!”
You peered through the glass again, squinting to make out the pale flurry outside the window.
“Where? Let me see that.”
“Hey, don’t run with your hot choc—“
“Ow! Haechan what the fuck?”
Five pairs of feet traversed across the living room floorboards to join you by the windows of the holiday cabin. Specks of white were free-falling rapidly, blown in all directions by the wintry gusts of wind. They decorated the darkening night sky as picturesquely as a Christmas postcard, though the snowflakes were just short of sticking — the fire pit had only been put out after dinner about an hour ago and the ground was still warm.
“It’s like he’s never seen snow before,” Ryujin mused next to you, eyes fixed on her boyfriend.
Haechan gazed out of the window with an awestruck look on his face, following the path of the snowflakes as they made their way to the ground.
“Where is your joy?” he asked without turning. Your whimsy? Your childlike wonder? Can a man not just enjoy one of the beautiful feats of nature before his balls freeze off?”
“I did turn on the heating more than half an hour ago, so that sounds like a personal problem,” Jaemin replied.
It had been a week, and yet you still couldn’t quite get used to seeing his head covered in a mop of bright bubblegum pink. Na Jaemin could recite all the glands and tissues of the endocrine system in alphabetical order while blackout drunk on soju yakults, but he could not write a convincing visual analysis of a 2 minute clip from The Godfather.
At least not any better than his two roommates.
“Shut up, Lazy Town,” Haechan quipped back.
“Hey, she wears a wig and it looks chopped. My hair is all real and beautiful.”
Ryujin said something under her breath which you didn’t quite catch, and then Haechan was waxing poetic about the wonders of precipitation again, waving his mug around with much less care than you would’ve thought appropriate giving the steaming contents inside.
You turned to your left out of habit, expecting to meet Mark’s twinkly eyes and exchange an amused glance, or brace your ears for a round of his eruptive giggles — only to find he wasn’t next to you at all. You supposed you should have been used to it by now, but his absence always seemed to catch you by surprise.
Mark was by the other end of the window with Lia, his arms wrapped loosely around her shoulders. He had a lazy smile on his face, his eyes staring off through the glass, though you could tell his focus was elsewhere. Lia turned slightly to mumble something in his ear. The smile on his face widened just a tad, and he squeezed her forearm in response.
Lia’s arm wasn’t the only thing being squeezed. Although, you were pretty sure the invisible fist clenched around your heart was much less affectionate than Mark was.
“Okay,” Ryujin interjected, “have we got all the presents? Just pile them up on the coffee table. No peeking — hey babe? I’m talking to you. Don’t think I don’t know what you’re up to.”
You were beginning to think Johnny had the completely wrong metaphor. There was no switch. It didn’t just flip on and off. It crept up on you, like the way the cold slowly crept into December and laid its icy fingers across the roads. Before you knew it, the chill had settled in your bones.
Was it jealousy? Maybe. It was usually the culprit nowadays.
Whatever it was, it pinched at your insides as you watched Mark drape his arm on the loveseat behind his girlfriend’s back. Lia tucked her knees up to her chest, letting them lean lightly against his side. Mark leaned in to whisper something in her ear and you had to look away, catching Ryujin’s eye as you pretended to admire the furnishings in the living room of the cabin. She could only offer you a commiserate smile.
You liked Lia. Really.
She was kind, and sweet, and clever, and she got along with Ryujin like a house on fire. When you and Haechan had been dragged around by one too many club promoters on an ill-fated Saturday night — though in hindsight, it felt more like Haechan was the one who was dragging you from one bass-thumping venue to another — Lia had called and paid for the taxi back to his apartment. She was the one who got both of you through the door with all your limbs intact, which was no small feat considering Haechan turned into a car dealership inflatable after a mere drop of tequila.
There was nothing not to like about her.
And yet, the twist of your stomach whenever she was around never seemed to subside. Even if you desperately wanted it to. And you knew damn well why.
Haechan clapped decidedly. “Let’s start from me and go clockwise.”
“Why do we have to start from you?”
“And why are we going anti-clockwise?” Jaemin protested. “I’m right here.”
“Because. I want you to get your present last. Anyways. Who had me?”
Jaemin begrudgingly handed over a perfectly wrapped box which Haechan made short work of. From amidst the shredded paper, he pulled out his gift, and let out a squeal.
“Jaeminnie-poo, thank you,” he cooed, crushing the Crayon Shin-Chan plushie to his chest. Jaemin swatted away Haechan’s grabby hands of gratitude, but there was a definite smile on the younger boy’s face.
The Secret Santa reveal continued its way around the room. Ryujin was the lucky recipient of Haechan’s handmade massage vouchers, and in return, Haechan was the recipient of a round of boos from the rest of the living room.
(“What?” he had protested. “We only set an upper limit. Nobody said I couldn’t go as low as I wanted.”)
Lia unwrapped an embroidered tote bag that was both cute and practical, courtesy of Ryujin.
“Thank you, seriously, I actually really wanted a new bag for uni,” Lia beamed, admiring the dainty flowers sewn onto the canvas. Ryujin gave her a warm smile back, which soon soured once she looked down into her lap and saw her luxurious massage vouchers again.
(“Come on babe,” Haechan had coaxed, “they’re really not that bad. I’ll set it up nice with essential oils and use my massage gun.”
“You mean the massage gun you stole from my room?”
“No one asked you, Princess Bubblegum.”
“Princess Bubblegum? Hmm, I actually kind of like that one.”)
And then it was Mark’s turn.
His eyes were bright as he surveyed the remaining packages on the table. “Okay, I’m ready. Who had me?”
You cleared your throat. “Uh, that would be me.”
He looked at you expectantly. The pause after your words had been too long. Hastily, you reached out to grab the small rectangular package and thrust it into his lap without much grace.
“It’s um—I mean, you’ll see in like 5 seconds,” you added as you watched Mark undo the wrapping. His fingers brushed the cover of the book. You held your breath.
What was there to even be nervous about?
“The poetical works of Lord Byron,” he read, looking up at you with those twinkling eyes. “And it’s a fancy hardcover edition as well!”
“Thought you might like it,” was all you said.
It was a beautiful thing, bound in calf-grain leather with gilded edges and a finely-etched spine. On the day you bought it you almost walked straight by, mistaking it for shelf decoration in a quiet little vintage store some half hour away from campus. Mark had mentioned the previous week that he was trying to get more into poetry, partly because there was a poetry-related assignment in his literature history class, but also because it was something he hadn’t explored in depth before, aside from a few primitive discussions on Shakespeare in high school.
“A good writer must be a good reader too,” he had said rather mysteriously, throwing on his scarf before leaving for his date. The leaves were still red back then.
The vintage store owner, a soft-spoken guy in his late twenties, had seemed surprised when you asked for the price, not expecting anyone would buy a dusty old book that had been sitting there on that shelf for months. He was more than happy to let it go at a price that sounded reasonable to a fiscally responsible university student like yourself. You had held onto it ever since, waiting until the leaves on the trees had all fallen off — until Mark went from a daily sight to a weekly occurrence to an odd appearance every now and then.
You weren’t purposely avoiding him, but his days were suddenly filled with a new more-than-friend, and those days were always a little harder to get through when she was around.
This trip up to the holiday cabin was the first time you had properly spoken for the whole month of December.
“This is so great. Dude, really. Thank you,” Mark said earnestly. You gave him a small smile back.
He was still grinning as he stared down at the cover, admiring the intricate gold lettering while Haechan moved on to you.
“Okay, next! Well, it’s either Mark or Lia, so whoever it is, fess up,” Haechan said cheerily.
“You know this isn’t a criminal interrogation, right?”
“If this were a criminal interrogation, you’d be the lame and uncool bad cop who nobody wants to say anything to because he’s lame and uncool and takes the fun out of everything. They would call you Jaemin the joy-sucker.”
Jaemin’s face contorted into an expression that was equally bewildered as it was amused.
“Well, I guess there’s worse things to be sucking.”
“Whereas,” Haechan pushed on, clearly not finished with his explanation, “I would be the good cop who everyone loves because I am funny and easy to talk to. I’d bring them coffee, and then they’d spill all their secrets to me over a styrofoam cup.”
“This analogy has completely lost the plot,” Ryujin sighed quietly, sinking back into the couch.
Amidst the arguing (although, could you really call it arguing if all the arguments were one-sided and nobody was rebutting?) Mark picked up the visibly less nicely-wrapped present from the table and handed it to you with a sheepish grin.
“Sorry, I kind of forgot about this thing until like, the day before we drove up,” he said quietly.
You took it from him with a small smile anyway. It was rather flat and the edges were soft, with a decent weight to it.
Even though you told yourself not to expect much, and you honestly were not, there were still a few embers of hope somewhere, buried deep down. They flickered weakly as you undid the layers of wrapping paper.
Maybe it was the Totoro throw blanket from one of the campus market stalls. You had happily pointed it out to him on the way to The Milk Bar, excited to have something that could match with the new Totoro mug you had bought. Ultimately, you had decided against buying it since the fluffy grey one you owned was still doing a perfectly good job — until you spilled kimchi-jjigae all over it during mid-terms.
The massive orange stain was a shameful reminder of your actions every time you laid eyes on it. (Seriously though, you should’ve known better than to balance the takeout container on your knees while you had them up to your chest.)
Almost two months had passed since then, but the markets had been running until the last week of the semester, and maybe he remembered.
Mark was thoughtful, above all else.
Your fingers closed around something. It was soft. You lifted it out of the wrapping.
And blinked, twice.
If the cartoon reindeer was animate, it probably would have blinked back at you.
“Yikes.”
You were quick to look up at the voice, finding Haechan eyeing the t-shirt in your hands with visible distaste.
“You know we agreed on nice gifts, right?” he asked, question directed at Mark. “Not gag gifts?”
“Says the guy who gave his girlfriend his own massage vouchers,” Mark shot back.
“Hey, I went to the craft store and bought a shit ton of card making stuff so I could hand make them. Fucking glitter and all. Do you know how hard it was to get that out of the sofa cushions?”
You tuned the bickering out, unfolding the shirt so you could see it in all its glory — bright red, short-sleeved, and way too big for your frame. The goofy reindeer print on the front was obnoxiously large, with its eyes crossed and tongue lolling out of its mouth. A few loose threads dangled from the stitching below the left arm.
Clothes from the underground malls in the subway stations were probably better quality than what you currently held in your hands. You reached for the top of the shirt, bringing the neckline closer to examine the label.
XXL
65% polyester
35% cotton
“God, that’s massive,” Ryujin said carefully, catching your eye.
“I thought you could use them as pyjamas. Or something,” Mark offered.
Jaemin scoffed. “Who wears short sleeves to bed in the middle of winter?” he asked, tone largely joking, but there was a bite to it. You heard it.
Mark must have heard it too, judging by the way his face fell ever so slightly. “Dude, chill, what—”
“Thanks, Mark,” you cut in, pasting a shallow smile on your face. A small shake of your head to brush off Ryujin’s concerned glance, and a quick look at Jaemin that said, not here. You had no intention for them to sour the mood on your behalf. “That must mean Jaemin’s present is from you, right Lia?”
And just like that, you moved on.
With all the presents exchanged, the coffee table saw another 7 rounds of Jenga, Ryujin’s flawless and cutthroat Monopoly victory, and fell victim to Haechan’s spilled cocoa — which everyone had seen coming — before its services were no longer needed for the night. A warbled but fairly accurate rendition of Justin Bieber’s Mistletoe echoed down the hall. Haechan had a set of lungs on him. Shower performances were not a rare occurrence, especially when he had some alcohol in him.
In between yawns, you sat down at the vanity in your room, surveying the small collection of bottles and tubs laid out before you. Of course you had to forget something. You could even see the little lip mask tub in your head, sitting on the bathroom counter next to the sink, right where you had put it after reminding yourself to throw it in your bag after applying it the next morning.
(Which, spoiler alert, you didn’t even remember to do in your hurry to leave for the drive here.)
Cracked, crusty lips it was for the next few days. At least the rest of your face would be nice and hydrated.
You had just uncapped your moisturiser when there was a knock at the door.
It was Mark.
“Hey,” was all he said.
“Hey,” you repeated, half a beat late.
“Uh, can I come in?” he asked, standing by the open door. His hair was still half wet, thanks to the lack of hairdryers in the cabin, and there were a few wet patches around the collar of his plaid pyjamas. Black frames sat perched on his nose, a few droplets of water on the lenses too. You hadn’t seen him like this for a while.
“Yeah, sure, of course,” you replied, turning back to the mirror a little too quickly. “Did you need something? I think Jaemin managed to kick Haechan out of the shower, so he should be back in a little bit.”
“Oh, cool. I wasn’t looking for him. I wanted to talk to you.”
The fingers dotting cream across your face stuttered for a fraction of a second.
“To me?”
“Yeah,” Mark answered, settling himself on the twin bed closer to the vanity. On the bed that you had picked. “I feel like I haven’t seen you in ages.”
“I was at your apartment last Tuesday.” And you had seen him for a total of 7 seconds — he walked out of his room with his eyes glued to the phone, barely sparing you and Ryujin a glance, before he was out the door on his way to see Lia. You hadn’t even known he was home.
“Were you?” The surprise in his voice was unmistakable. “Dude, I don’t even remember that. But you know what I mean. We haven’t like, talked. Properly.”
You knew very well what he meant. But all you gave him was a “yeah” and an assenting hum. The direction of this conversation was difficult to chart, and you were far too tired to take the wheel.
Being in his vicinity while Lia was around was more exhausting than you cared to admit.
“Are you upset about the Secret Santa thing?”
Yes.
No.
“It just wasn’t what I was expecting,” you replied after a stilted pause, trying to be as truthful as possible. “I thought you’d get me something more—”
Personal. Thoughtful. Like you actually considered what I might like, what you know I like, for a fraction of a second, instead of grabbing the first thing you saw off the holiday clearance rack.
“—practical.”
But I guess you don’t spare much thought for me anymore.
“It could be like, summer pyjamas. If it’s too cold to wear in winter,” he suggested.
You could think of nothing worse than sweating through your sleep in dyed polyblend during the July heat waves. A deflated sigh begged to be released from your mouth, but you held it in.
“I’m sure I’ll find a use for it,” was what you said instead.
It was funny. You weren’t sure if you could ever remember a time when talking to Mark felt this stiff and unnatural. The ease that you had come to associate with him had slowly but surely dwindled these last few months — whether that was due to his new relationship status or the evolution in your feelings towards him. Having to filter yourself in front of him was foreign and disconcerting.
“Honestly, I’m pretty spent today, so I think I’m gonna go to bed soon,” you said, screwing the lid back on your moisturiser. Hoping he’d take the hint and head back to his own room. You’d be much better at putting on a brave and happy face after some shut-eye.
He hummed, but made no move to stand up. You snuck a glance at him through the mirror, noting the light groove between his eyebrows. For a moment you considered asking him what was on his mind, but then the moment passed, and you settled for reorganising your skincare on the vanity while waiting for him to leave.
Mark, however, had different plans.
“So, are you and Jaemin like a thing now?”
Your hands paused their movements as you turned to face him.
“What?”
His answering shrug was as casual as possible, but there was a challenging, almost accusatory edge to his eyes. Something about it made the blood feel heavy in your veins. You didn’t like it at all.
“No, we’re not,” you responded stiffly. “What makes you say that?”
“Just asking,” he shrugged again. “You guys just seem a lot closer than I remember.”
That was true. You had been spending more time with him in recent months, in Mark’s absence. Na Jaemin was objectively gorgeous, even a blind man would be inclined to agree, but there had never been any romantic undertones in your friendship with him. You were sure of that much.
“We’re just friends.”
“He gave you his coat at dinner.”
You scoffed, incredulous. “Because it was just lying there on the bench, and I specifically asked for it. And anyways, I distinctly remember you were the one who said that we should get together.”
“That was a joke, and you know it,” Mark countered. “Plus, you two are literally rooming together. I don’t think assuming there’s something going on between you is a crazy conclusion to jump to.”
“I don’t—” you began sharply, catching yourself to take a deep breath. It was a necessary interruption to keep your voice steady and low. This wasn’t a verbal exchange you wanted bouncing down the hallways.
“Might I remind you,” you tried again, a little quieter, “the only reason Jaem and I are sleeping in the same room is because you suddenly decided to invite Lia, weeks after everything was booked.”
“Maybe because she’s my girlfriend?” he fired back. “And I seem to remember everyone, including you, was cool about it when I asked. So if you have a problem with her, you better say it to my face. Right now.”
“That’s not what I—god—”
A frustrated noise ripped through you. This was not the way you had imagined the night would end, and it was certainly the last conversation you wanted to be having. Any further and you knew you would say something you’d regret. Even more than you already had.
“You’re right,” you finally said. “She’s your girlfriend, not me, so you should probably get back to her. It’s your first trip as a couple. You guys should enjoy it.”
Mark’s brow creased with confusion. “What do you mean—”
“Look, I’m really tired, and I don’t want to keep arguing with you.” You tugged at your eye rather roughly. “I think it’s best if you just go.”
“Wait, I don’t—”
A careful “hey” sounded from the door, slicing through whatever Mark was about to say.
Perfect timing. Your pink-haired and freshly showered friend hovered in the doorway, peering into the room with thinly-veiled concern. “Is everything okay in here?”
“Yep, everything’s fine,” you answered, straightening up. “Mark wanted some Q-tips.”
Jaemin shot you a dubious look. Q-tips? Really?
“He was just leaving. Have a good night, Mark,” you said without looking at him. This time, the dismissal in your voice was clear.
There was a second or two of silence before a small creak sounded from beside you, shortly followed by the noise of footsteps pattering out of the room and down the hallway. Mark seemed to have gotten the message.
Once you were sure he was gone, you collapsed face-up onto your bed with a defeated groan. Jaemin plopped down on his own bed next to you with decidedly less noise.
“How much of that did you hear?” you asked, rubbing a hand down the side of your face and no doubt smearing all the product that you had just applied.
“You want the honest answer or the answer that’ll make you feel better?”
Your right hand landed a satisfying slap on his calf.
“Ow!”
“Do you think anyone else heard?”
“Well, Lia’s room is on the other side of the cabin, so I doubt she caught any of it. And it’s not like it was anything the other two don’t already know.”
A long, drawn-out sigh escaped you. “Yeah.”
It seemed Mark Lee himself was the only one oblivious to your true feelings towards him.
“He’s a smart guy, but he can be so dense sometimes,” Jaemin mused.
You hummed lightly in response, if only to acknowledge that you had heard him. Maybe if you had told Mark about your changing feelings towards him, instead of fruitlessly waiting for those feelings to disappear on their own, being in his presence wouldn’t be as difficult as it was now. But the window for that had long expired. Your feelings could only be your own burden to bear.
The day had already caught up with you somewhere between the fourth and sixth Jenga game. Another long yawn slipped out, at which Jaemin chuckled quietly.
“Oh, by the way, do you have anything for your lips?” you asked. “I forgot my mask at home.”
“Pink bag, inner pouch,” he immediately rattled off the top of his head. “There’s Vaseline and like 3 Lanolips in there. Go crazy.”
“Na Jaemin, you are a godsend.”
Eight and a half hours of wonderfully restful sleep later — the cabin bed was a cloud compared to the brick back in your dorm room and Jaemin slept soundlessly like an angel — you awoke to thick and powdery whiteness outside the window. The fresh snowfall was gorgeous, turning the surroundings into a holiday postcard. Haechan’s self-declared whimsy and wonder for the miracles of mother nature was well-placed, and you were starting to share in it.
Ryujin popped by to check in on you and see if you were up for a trip down to the village Christmas markets with the rest of the group. Normally you’d be jumping at the chance to explore the stalls in search of new trinkets, but the lingering headache and slight tickle in the back of your throat didn’t seem like the best adventure companions.
You’d make sure to wear your own thick puffer coat out at dinner tonight.
Despite her offers to stay in and keep you company, you steered her out of your room. “Just bring me back some artisanal gingerbread or something. I’ll be fine, really,” you had reassured her.
There was something nice about having the cabin all to yourself. It was quiet, of course, and you were free to admire the snowy view while perched up on the windowsill seat which you did not have to fight anyone for. The mug of lemon ginger tea you had poured earlier in the morning had long gone cold. The Austen novel you had brought down from your room was open and balanced on your knees, but the pages had not been turned for a while. As intriguing as Emma’s matchmaking machinations in Hartfield were, they had sadly fallen short of their purpose in distracting your mind from revisiting the exchange with Mark last night.
You had been too defensive. That much you could admit. But Mark’s pointed tone and his insistence on the existence of something romantic between you and Jaemin had been unusually charged, and something about it had struck a nerve. If it had been anyone else probing into your friendship with the physiology major, you probably would have brushed them off with a light laugh. A dismissive wave of your hand, even.
And suppose there was something there. Perhaps Mark was entitled to know if two of his close friends were seeing each other. Though you weren’t sure if close friend was such a fitting description of you anymore.
All you could do for the time being was wait for your feelings to pass. The rest of winter break would be spent back home with your parents, who you always missed terribly when the temperatures dropped, which meant you wouldn’t be seeing Mark or any of the others for a while after this week. You could only hope that the time apart would speed up the process of getting over him. Even thinking it made you cringe. As if there was actually anything substantial for you to be getting over, other than a friendship drifting apart.
God forbid you bring the truly dismal vibes of an unrequited crush into the new year.
“Hey.”
Speak (or think) of the devil and he shall appear.
You turned around with a start, having grown used to the quiet of what you had believed was an empty cabin up until a second ago.
“Hey,” you greeted, slightly stunned. “Sorry, I thought you were out at the markets with the others.”
Mark stifled a yawn, arms lifting in a slow, languid stretch. The hem of his pyjama top started to rise, and you averted your eyes just as it brushed the waistband of his pants.
“Yeah, I thought it was a lot quieter than it should be. But no, I just woke up.” He ran a hand through his hair. Mark’s bedhead had always been quite severe. “How come you’re not out with them?”
“Oh, I just um, feel a bit under the weather, is all.”
“Right,” he hummed. “Well, have some hot tea and honey. Don’t want you getting sick.”
You nodded once in acknowledgement, unsure what else to say. It was too much to ask for a quiet morning alone. The scene from last night was still fresh on your mind, and clearly on Mark’s too, judging by the slight tension that hung thickly in the air. Your eyes flicked down to the mug of cold tea by your feet as you contemplated retreating to your room.
“There’s some breakfast in the kitchen, if you’re hungry,” you offered. “Haechan made fried rice with the leftover pork belly from dinner yesterday.”
“Oh, great, thanks.” Mark glanced in the direction of the kitchen, but made no move towards it.
Another few seconds of prickly silence passed, and you were ready to admit defeat.
Book in hand, you slid down from the windowsill and tugged the blanket around you a little tighter under your chin. The view from the window in your room was decidedly less nice, but at least you’d be safe from any more awkward conversations within its confines. You doubted Mark would follow you in.
With a tight smile, you brushed past him and headed for the stairs. Never mind if it was obvious you were only leaving because he was there. Your own peace of mind was more important than his ego right now.
But these days, Mark and you never seemed to be on the same page.
“Hey, uh, can we talk? About last night?”
You paused, hand on the railing and a foot up on the first step.
Just keep walking up the stairs. One by one, up the steps. Don’t turn around.
“Um, sure,” you said, turning around to face him.
Go on. Do the exact opposite of what the voice in your head tells you to. That’s fine too.
“Cool.” He shifted his weight from one foot to the other, looking down at the floorboards. “Listen, I just wanted to say sorry. For being so pushy with the Jaemin stuff. Even if you guys were together, it’s not really any of my business, so, yeah. Sorry.”
At least he started off with an apology. That had to count for something.
You gave him what you thought was a reassuring smile. “It’s okay,” you replied, “I probably could’ve been nicer about it.”
“But you’re really not together though, right?”
His answer came in the form of your raised brow. Was this guy seriously doing the same thing he had just apologised for?
“Sorry.” He smiled sheepishly. “But okay, that’s good then.”
Your raised brow quickly lowered into a creased frown.
“That’s good? What’s that supposed to mean?”
“As in, it’s kind of weird trying to picture the two of you together,” Mark explained, his own brows drawn, oblivious to the insult he had just hurled at your ego. “Something about it just doesn’t feel right.”
You chuckled. There was no humour in the sound.
“If that was your way of nicely saying Jaemin is way out of my league, you should probably work on it a little more.”
Nevermind that Jaemin was out of most people’s league, and that was just the truth of the matter. Hearing it implied by Mark of all people — how were you expected to stay civil and keep the edge out of your voice?
Mark balked, as if genuinely taken aback. “That is absolutely not what I was trying to say. Why would you even think—because it’s not true, first of all. I just mean that—”
He paused, eyes flitting down to the floorboards again, and inhaled slowly.
“I feel like I keep saying the wrong thing. And I can’t—I feel like I don’t know how to talk to you anymore. And I just want to go back to how we were before,” he said, looking back up at you. “I want us to be friends again.”
Your steely gaze softened at the pleading edge to his voice. Perhaps he was missing the summer, with its warm nights and compelling conversations about the most mundane of things, even more than you were.
“Mark, we are still friends,” you relented, letting out a sigh. “Of course we’re still friends. We’ve just drifted apart a little, that’s all. I think it’s one of those things that just happens.”
Maybe that wasn’t all of it, but at least you could say that much was true. Mark still looked unconvinced.
“Plus,” you added quietly after a moment’s pause, “I think some distance between us would be a good thing.”
It was his turn to mask his true feelings with a sarcastic scoff. You knew he was hurt. The quick inhale that was a little too sharp, the slight widening of his eyes — you could just tell. It was why you had hesitated to say the last bit, and now you were wishing you had held those words on a tighter rein and never let them out of your mouth.
Mark was never deliberate in hurting you.
“See, now I’m confused,” he said brusquely, nevermind that there was barely a trace of confusion in his expression. “You say we’re still friends, but it sounds to me like you don’t actually want to be.”
“That’s not what I—”
“Which one is it?” he pressed. “Because from where I’m standing, it looks like you don’t want anything to do with me. When I want to talk, you shut me out. You walk out as soon as I enter the room.”
You hadn’t expected him to notice. “That’s hardly fair,” you mumbled. He wasn’t wrong, but you were not explaining why you couldn’t be within his vicinity just to come to your own defense.
“I had to find out from Haechan that you’re moving out of the dorms next week. You don’t tell me anything anymore.”
Somewhere in your gut, you felt it. Something was going to change by the end of this conversation. And by the way it was progressing, the chances of your friendship with Mark surviving the fallout from whatever was still left to be said were not high.
“You’re right,” you said, voice small. “Maybe I don’t tell you everything.” Mark looked ready to agree, but before he could speak, you pushed on, voice growing a little firmer. “But don’t act like I know about anything that’s going on in your life either.”
He raked a rough hand through his hair. You had never seen him this worked up before. Sure, there were instances where he had been pissed off — more often than not at Haechan — but it was never that serious, and watching it unravel from the sidelines was always amusing.
Being on the receiving end of Mark’s frustration was a different experience entirely, and not amusing in the slightest.
“Look,” he sighed. “I know I haven’t really made the time to catch up with you recently, but I’m trying to do that now. I’m the one who’s trying to get us back to the way we were before.”
“And I’m telling you, I don’t think that’s a good idea now that you’re with Lia.”
“Lia?” he echoed. He looked suddenly lost, as if that was the last name he was expecting to enter the conversation. “What does she have to do with anything?”
You stared back at him in despair. “Mark, I don’t—I really can’t get into this—”
The words stuck like bile in your throat. Already, you had said too much, and here he was, asking you to spell everything out.
“I don’t want to be the girl best friend. I can’t,” you finally forced out. “I can’t do that to her. Or to you. I won’t.”
Please don’t make me say any more.
You swallowed once, thickly, hoping the rest of the truth would stay down. Mark always wanted to know, to get to the bottom of things. His determined curiosity was something you appreciated about him, but at this present moment, you had never wanted more for him to shut up and stop asking questions.
But he pressed on, stubborn as ever. “Why does that even matter?”
As you scrambled to spit out an explanation, his next words fell on your ears with the weight of steel bars.
“It’s not like I have feelings for you or anything,” he said.
Yeah.
The human mind was a funny thing. It had its great capacity for logic and reasoning, but those precious things were so easily overruled, with nothing more than the force of a light wind through the trees.
You could know something, and tell yourself over and over again that it was true. With reasoning, and some good self-persuasion, you could make peace with it. And yet, hearing that something said out loud could undo all of that work, and that coherence, and suddenly this was the first time you had ever needed to come to terms with something in your entire miserable life.
It was stupid. So stupid. Your eyes were stinging before you could help it. Hearing it come out of Mark’s own mouth was more wounding than you could ever have imagined.
And above it all, you were so unbelievably tired — of this conversation, of putting on a good face, of the chasm that you could feel splitting between the two of you.
“Yeah,” you breathed, giving in. Even to your own ears, your voice seemed far away. “You’re right. Forget it. I don’t know why I said that.”
Your free hand came up to press at your eyes, in part to make sure no moisture could escape them, but also to try and soothe the dull ache that was building behind them. Another dose of ibuprofen was due — the effects from the morning dose were wearing off already.
The safety of your room beckoned with urgency. You turned, ready to head back up and lock yourself within those walls until the others returned. You’d attach yourself to Ryujin or Jaemin for the rest of the trip, then go back home to see your parents, and hope that a belly full of home-cooked meals and nostalgia tinged with familial guilt could be enough to take your mind off the boy before you for good.
It was a good plan, and you had every intention of seeing it through.
The firm hand that wrapped itself around your forearm stopped you in your tracks.
“Don’t fucking do that shit,” Mark snapped. “Don’t fucking ice me out. I know there’s something you’re not telling me. Just talk to me.”
“I don’t know what you’re talking about,” you responded, your voice thin and monotone. “I need to go and lie down, I’m not feeling too well.”
Please just let it go, you begged silently. Before I say something I regret.
“What is your fucking problem?” he demanded.
You flinched at the bite to his tone. The grip around your arm tightened — not much, but enough for you to feel the imprint of each of his fingers through the wool sleeve.
“Why can’t you just talk to me?”
You wrenched yourself out of his grasp. Dear god, why couldn’t he just leave you alone? The word bile — it was rising again, forcing its way up your throat, and there was nothing left in you to stop it.
Defeated, you threw your hands in the air. “What do you want me to say, Mark? Huh?”
You could feel it. Everything was about to come spewing out.
“You want me to say I can’t stand being in the same room as you when you’re with her? That it genuinely makes my skin crawl? Or how about the fact that I would rather eat glass than watch you two be all touchy-feely in the corner?”
Yeah. You sounded like a downright fucking bitch, and you knew it. But this was what he wanted — the honest truth. Raw, unfiltered, and ugly.
He stared back at you, bewildered. “What the fuck? Why?”
Curiosity killed the cat. You brought this on yourself, Mark.
“Because I have feelings for you!”
There it went.
“That’s fucking why, Mark!”
There was no taking it back now.
In the silence that followed the bomb which you had just dropped on your friendship, you noticed two things.
One, you were trembling.
And two, your cheeks were wet.
You hadn’t meant to cry. Waterworks were so reductive. You thought you knew better than to dissolve into tears when things didn’t go your way and you were forced to do things you didn’t want to do. The throbbing between your temples had intensified with ferocity, and amidst the quiet, that dull ache had acuminated into a sharp one — you weren’t lying when you said you weren’t feeling well.
Too afraid to meet Mark’s eyes and see what he really thought of you written all across that handsome face, you turned away from him, squeezing your own eyes shut. A fat drop escaped your waterline and rolled down your cheek. You thought you felt him reach out for you again, those warm fingers brushing the back of your hand, but you couldn’t be sure.
“Wait,” he began, voice gentler than before, “what do you—”
Before he could finish whatever it was he wanted to say, there was the sound of keys jangling at the front door, which swung open a second later to reveal four merry, slightly red faces.
“Oh, she was definitely flirting with—”
Ryujin cut herself off mid-sentence, catching sight of you and Mark at the foot of the stairs. Hastily, you wiped at your face, hoping the wet tracks running down weren’t so obvious, though anyone with working retinas could probably tell from your bloodshot eyes that you had been crying. Her eyes flicked between you and Mark worriedly.
“Are you guys okay?” she asked, careful not to sound too concerned.
Lia was still stamping the snow off her boots on the doormat outside. At Ryujin’s voice, she looked up, just missing your quick half-step up the stairs and away from Mark.
“Yeah, um, I’m just going to go lie down,” you replied shakily, managing a weak smile. “Think I might be coming down with something.”
Without waiting for a response, you finally turned and left.
Head pounding and tears blurring your vision, you made your way back to your room and buried yourself under the covers, determined to avoid speaking to anyone else for the rest of the day. The guilt was already festering. Just the thought of facing Mark or Lia again brought on a wave of nausea.
So you did your best not to think.
Despite the churning of your stomach, sleep did come — uneasily at first, and then with the force of a freight train. The trembling had less to do with your feelings for Mark than they did with the body chills that preceded a fever. You slept through most of the remaining days at the cabin, enduring a 39 degree temperature, and only ever leaving your bed to use the bathroom down the hall. Jaemin and Ryujin — bless their poor souls, having to navigate the no doubt tense atmosphere for the rest of the trip — took turns to check in on you, bring up food and refill your water.
Even in your fever-stricken delirium, you promised yourself that you’d treat both of them to something nice when you were all back on campus again. Haechan too, for all the cooking.
Mark and you didn’t speak again for the rest of the winter break, aside from a feel better soon text you received the day you all left the cabin. You sent back a thanks just to be polite, and even though you saw the speech bubbles appear and disappear a few times, nothing else was said.
And that was the end of that.
“Club Aura this Friday. We’re all going.”
Renjun was stone-faced. “Oh, absolutely not.”
“Come on,” Haechan whined. “It’s the semester welcome back event. They’re doing 10 shots for the price of 5. Did you hear me? That’s 5 whole free shots. Absolutely unheard of in this economy.”
“You’d basically be losing money if you didn’t go,” Yangyang quipped helpfully.
“See? This guy gets it.” The two exchanged a hi-five over Renjun’s head just as he slumped down onto the wooden table.
It was a beautiful day to be out by the quad. Campus always felt the most alive in those first few weeks of the semester. You weren’t the only ones making the most of the sunshine — the quad was littered with students chatting, working, and even napping on the grass, soaking in the warm afternoon rays.
Since the new academic year started, you and Ryujin had been spending more time with Haechan’s friends from his classes than with his roommates — Jaemin’s pre-med workload was getting much heavier, and you were avoiding the third person for… obvious reasons.
Renjun you were already well-acquainted with — a much needed and appreciated (at least by you) voice of reason — but over the last few weeks, you had gotten to know Dejun, Haechan’s good friend and fellow music major, and Yangyang, a comp sci major who Haechan shared maybe one (?) class with in first year. The two of them just clicked immediately, and you could see why.
Those two were cut from the same, sassy, and chaotic cloth.
“I have to submit my assignment first, then we can go,” Ryujin said. “But if you keep distracting me like last time, I am not stepping foot out of the building.”
Haechan beamed. “Promise to be on my best behaviour.”
Now that you were out of the dorms and no longer had to worry about having points deducted for sneaking non-residents up to your room, your apartment with Ryujin was basically free reign for her boyfriend. Not that you minded too much — Haechan always seemed to liven up your living room, and getting to enjoy his cooking on the regular was certainly nothing to complain about.
You hoped he’d stick around. It would be a shame if you never tasted his doenjang-jjigae again.
“I’m down,” you added. Nights out with Haechan were always a good time, even if your head and bowels were inclined to disagree the next morning. Plus, the weeks you had spent back home with your parents had made you miss the feeling of being young and getting completely shit-faced to welcome the weekend.
Dejun caught your eye, his shapely brow raised and an inquisitive smile on his mouth. You only shrugged, though the corners of your lips did turn upwards ever so slightly.
“Count me in too, then,” he declared.
You did not miss Ryujin’s well-aimed kick underneath the table. While the boys hooted and hollered, trying their best to coerce Renjun into going, she shot you an all-knowing look. Ryujin was convinced Dejun had a thing for you, and you were starting to believe her.
Maybe you’d even entertain it. You certainly weren’t opposed to the idea. Dejun was sweet, stupidly handsome, funny when he chose to be (and wasn’t being made fun of by Yangyang), and he always laughed at your jokes, though never as much as M—
You shook your head, cutting off the train of thought. That was besides the point.
“Renjun, I will massage your feet for ten whole minutes.”
“You know you’re supposed to offer me things that I actually want.”
Yangyang was quick to counter. “Okay. Then you can massage my feet for ten minutes.”
“What the actual fuck is wrong with you.”
With an amused smile, you reached for your phone, wanting to check the rest of the schedule for today. You were pretty sure there was an economic forecasting lecture in your timetable that, given the gorgeous weather this afternoon, you were rather inclined to skip. The whole campus seemed to be out on the grass today, and you did not want to be one of the sad few stuck inside an auditorium reading overcrowded powerpoint slides.
Scrolling through your calendar with your head down and eyes focused on the screen, you didn’t notice the figure approaching your table until it spoke.
“Hey,” it said, in that voice you knew too well.
Your fingers froze.
God, you should’ve known better than to think of him.
“Mark!” Renjun greeted brightly. You didn’t look up, but you could hear shuffling down the bench across from you. “Wanna sit?”
“I’m good, thanks,” Mark replied. Casual. Easy-going. “Actually, um…”
You tried to sneak a glance at him, only to find he was already looking at you. The moment your eyes locked, you felt it — a little stutter in the rhythm of your heart.
“Do you have a minute?” he asked.
All the attention was on you. Renjun looked a little perplexed, obviously unaware of what had happened between you and Mark over the winter break, and you were thankful for it. Dejun surveyed you with curiosity. Ryujin tried to remain neutral, but it was clear to you she had been caught off-guard by his appearance too.
“Uh—”
Too fast. Your mouth opened before you knew what you were going to say. You didn’t think your throat had ever been drier in your whole life.
“—sure,” you finally croaked. The most normal and natural sounding sure to ever be said.
Sliding your tote bag over your shoulder, you awkwardly slid out from under the wooden table and followed Mark as he headed away from the group. When he approached an empty bench and sat down, you hesitated. Mark noticed — you knew he caught the slight stutter in your movements — and a flash of something passed across his eyes. But he said nothing, and you settled yourself on the same bench a few seconds later.
You weren’t really sure why you had agreed to talk. Of course, you didn’t want to make a scene by outright blowing him off in front of your friends, but if you were being honest with yourself, you had missed him. Mark had been your friend first, before anything else.
“How have you been?” he asked, so simply.
“Good,” you replied without looking at him, gaze fixed straight ahead. Not that it mattered whether your eyes were on him or not — you were aware of his every movement anyway. “Busy now that school’s started, but good. You?”
“Yeah, not bad,” was his answer. “Been better, but I’ve also been worse.”
You hummed lightly in acknowledgement. The two of you lapsed into another subdued silence. It wasn’t quite comfortable, but it was more bearable than you were expecting, and certainly much less tense than the last few you had shared.
Then Mark sighed, a deep and resigned sound. It was coming, whatever it was, whatever reason had made him come over and pull you aside to talk. Your fingers tightened around your tote bag, clinging to the canvas like it was a safety blanket, as if the rough fabric could protect you from the next words to come out of his mouth.
“I am sorry about how we left things. Over the winter break,” he said. Then he paused. Waiting to see if you’d close up and shut him out again at the broach of the topic.
But you only sighed too, shoulders relaxing slightly as you leaned back against the bench. Maybe you had subconsciously been expecting him to tell you what a horrible person he thought you were. The tension dissipated from you, little by little. Time had made you all the more forgiving, and you were grateful for it.
“Me too,” you replied.
You did want to keep Mark as a friend. He brought a certain colour to your life — one that made you appreciate the small but certain pockets of happiness that existed in the mundaneness of the everyday. For that, you were willing to put your own feelings aside.
Besides, you’d like to think you were making progress on that front anyway. Maybe the tight little skirt and matching halter top in the back of your closet would be making an appearance this Friday night, and catch the attention of a certain bold-browed music major.
Or at least one could hope.
You sighed, releasing the tote bag from your severe grip, and let your hands fall to your lap with a soft pat.
“How’s Lia?” you asked. There was a second unspoken question in there somewhere, if he cared to decipher it.
Does she know what happened? Does she think I’m a homewrecking little bitch?
“I don’t know if you heard, but we’re actually not together anymore.”
The “oh” that escaped your mouth like a reflex was so blunt and poorly timed that you had to wince. Evidently, you had not heard. Haechan was gracious and considerate enough to avoid bringing his roommate up in conversation when you were around, and it wasn’t like you were scrounging for updates either.
“I didn’t know. I’m sorry.”
“Don’t be,” he reassured. “All things considered, it was a pretty good split. We kind of both agreed we were better off as just friends. She’s on exchange now in Copenhagen, and really enjoying it, last I heard.”
“That sounds nice,” you offered, not sure what else to say. “I hope she has a wonderful semester there.”
The silence returned. Out of the corner of your eye, you could see Mark wringing his hands in his lap. It was odd to see him struggle with what to say when words usually came to him so effortlessly. The Mark you knew could wax poetic about MBTI compatibility for hours on end if he felt so inclined, even though Renjun had explained to him it was all pseudoscience anyway.
“I’ve been thinking about… what you said,” he began, a little unsteadily. “After that day, things kind of—I don’t know, things just clicked, I guess? And started to make more sense.”
You inhaled sharply. “Look, I don’t—I shouldn’t have said all that. It was my mistake, and it—”
“No.” He was quiet, but firm. “I don’t think it was a mistake.”
You convinced yourself the shiver that ran through you was from the breeze, and nothing else.
“When Lia and I were together, it was good, don’t get me wrong, but it always felt like there was something missing. And I thought that it would just fill in and sort itself out over time. But it didn’t, and I couldn’t figure out why.”
Mark was looking at you now. You could feel his eyes on you, but you didn’t dare turn in his direction.
“Until I forced it out of you. And it was like someone finally turned the lights on in my brain.”
He wasn’t—he couldn’t be. Your fingers were working at the cotton of your bag again, clenching the fabric with unprecedented strength.
“Honestly, the past few weeks have just been… fucking unbearable. Without you. Without being able to just talk to you about whatever’s on my mind. Because with you, everything is easy, and everything feels right.”
He paused for a quiet laugh, though it was a bit shaky.
“I guess what I’m trying to say is, I have feelings for you,” he finally said.
Your fingers stopped their frantic dance. The breath you hadn’t even realised you were holding slipped out of your mouth without a sound.
“If you don’t feel the same as you did last winter, I’m not asking you to reciprocate,” he continued, voice wavering, “but you are an important person to me, and I still want you in my life. I would really like for us to be friends again.”
At last, you looked up to meet his eyes. Those big, beautiful brown eyes. They were earnest, and hopeful, and comfortingly familiar.
Despite yourself, a small smile broke out across your face. You really had missed him. He smiled back, a real, big one that lit up his whole face, and any resolve you had left to keep your heart safe from the boy in front of you was scattered away, like sand in the wind. There was nothing left to do but resign to your own fate.
“I’d like that too.”
“Guess who I saw sneaking out of my living room this morning?”
Mark dropped his bags by the couch and perched himself on the kitchen island, watching as you manoeuvred around the stove.
“I figured, she didn’t come home last night,” you replied. “Also, you’re early. I’m still making the sauce. And I still have to cook the noodles.”
“That’s okay, I can wait,” he reassured. “Is Ryujin at class?”
You shook your head. “She’s working today. We were so happy when she got the internship, but they’re seriously working her like a dog.” The poor thing was having to juggle that on top of a full time academic workload. No wonder she was scheduling late night rendezvous with a not-so-mystery man — she needed the stress relief.
“I just don’t get it,” Mark sighed, dropping his chin down to his hand. “Why go on a break if you’ll just act like you’re still in a relationship anyway? I mean, the only thing that’s really changed is we all have to pretend they’re not still sleeping together.”
“Who knows,” you mused, letting out a sigh of your own. “I do hope they figure it out. Ryujin misses him, I can tell.”
Mark scoffed. “And Haechan definitely fucking misses her. He’s always so sulky nowadays.”
You hummed in agreement. It was your sincere hope that they’d make it through this, whatever this was. Those two were clearly meant for each other. That, and you weren’t sure how much longer you could keep acting like you bought Ryujin’s excuses when she’d come home at 1am — after some very vigorous studying indeed, if studying could do that to her hair.
They’d work it out. You had hope.
The sauce was almost there, just needing another 15 minutes or so to simmer on the stove. You took out a pot and began filling it with water for the noodles. By no means did you consider yourself a great cook — you were just decent at best — but Mark genuinely revered your kitchen like it was a local hidden gem, a decades-old establishment that had been passed down through the generations.
Despite his confession, nothing that overstepped platonic boundaries had transpired since that day on the quad. Of course, you had restored your friendship — slowly at first, and then all at once it seemed — and things were almost completely back to the way they used to be. But Mark was more careful now. He hadn’t brought up the topic since, and despite things being good between you again, you could tell he was still giving you the space he thought you needed.
“So, how much longer is it going to take?”
You whirled around, accusingly brandishing your chopsticks at him. “You said you could wait!”
“Okay, you’re right,” he chuckled, pushing off the counter. “I promise I’ll—hang on,” he cut himself off, suspicion creeping into his voice. “Turn around again.”
“Seriously, do you want me to finish cooking or not?” Exasperated, you obliged, preparing to fix him with a withering look that said stop distracting me or I’ll be boiling you instead of the noodles.
But Mark’s eyes didn’t meet yours. Instead, they were zeroed in on your torso, and the incriminating print that covered it, and suddenly you remembered why you didn’t want Mark to be here when you were still hovering over the stove to tend to the sauce in case it splattered.
“Is that—”
“It’s not what it looks like,” you cut in nervously, backing away from the counter with your hands raised.
Mark rounded the corner slowly. “So you haven’t been using poor Rudolfo as an apron?”
“I mean—well, uh…no?”
“Right. So those big orange stains on his face — what are those about?”
Your eyes flitted around. That was between you and your favourite kimchi-jjigae place. “Um, you know, it’s a funny story actually…”
He was closing in. Your window of possible escape was only shrinking with each second that passed. The marble countertop that once stood between you could protect you no longer. There was only one thing left that you could do.
Flee.
“You massacred my boy!” Mark lamented, giving chase as you darted away from him towards the living room.
“He was fugly to begin with!” you shot back over your shoulder, a peal of laughter ringing out.
You skirted around the dining table and chairs with ease, but Mark was too quick, catching up to you the moment your hand brushed the edge of the couch. Strong arms locked themselves around your midsection, and then you were toppling over the armrest, hands latching onto the nearest thing you could find to try and anchor yourself.
It just so happened that the nearest thing was Mark.
The two of you landed with a thud loud enough to raise concern. One of your legs was half folded underneath itself, and a dull ache radiated from your hip where you had made contact with the furniture.
The more pressing matter at hand, however, was the presence of Mark’s face a mere breath away from your own. A gentle hand carefully cradled the back of your head, protecting it from hitting the opposite end of the couch. Mark was breathing hard, whether that was from your impromptu game of cat and mouse, or something else entirely.
“Sorry,” he murmured.
He was so close. He smelled like laundry detergent, with a hint of something herbal, like he always did — it was so very Mark. You could see yourself reflected in the dark, glassy pools of his pupils. He really did have the most gorgeous eyes. They flickered down to your mouth, for the briefest of seconds, and your breath caught in your throat.
Then he was moving, and the knee that had been wedged between your thighs was shifting, and he was pulling away, avoiding your eyes the whole time while he tried to extricate himself from you.
That was when you decided you had enough.
Your hands, which had latched onto his shoulders during your fall, tightened their grip, stopping him from any further movements.
“Mark,” you said. Voice low, but firm. He looked up slowly, finally locking eyes with you again.
Truth be told, you had made up your mind about Mark Lee weeks ago.
You supposed you always knew how things would turn out. You just hadn’t expected it to take this long. But you knew Mark was being careful this time around, respecting your space, never trying to make you uncomfortable or overstep a boundary in case you didn’t feel the same.
The ball was in your court now, just as it had been since he had made his feelings plain.
“Kiss me,” you said.
He paused, eyes searching yours to make sure he had heard you correctly, for one last sign of confirmation. A single, barely perceptible nod from you was all it took.
The brush of his mouth against yours was gentle, and slow at first. He was careful. You could feel the hesitancy in his movements. But then your hands moved, sliding up his shoulders to loop around his neck, and Mark abandoned all and any remaining caution he had left in him.
By the time you broke apart, you may as well have just ran a marathon with the way your heart was thundering in your chest.
“So,” he forced out through heaving breaths, resting his forehead on yours. “Does that mean you like me back?”
You pulled back just enough so you could flick his forehead, a teasing smile decorating your face despite the gasps of air you were taking in. “Okay mister. Did you forget that it was me who liked you first?”
“Well yeah, but I didn’t know if you still do, so…”
“Mark.” You clasped his face with both hands, forcing him to look at you. “In case my tongue wasn’t clear enough—”
“Aw, come on dude, don’t say it like that.”
“—I like you,” you finished. “A lot.”
Probably too much for my own good.
He grinned. A big one, where all his teeth were out on display, the shape of it so wide you wouldn’t be surprised if it was just a little painful. His eyes were so bright, you were sure the universe had misplaced a constellation within them.
“That makes me really happy.”
“Are you going to say it back? Or just leave me hanging?”
Mark laughed, lowering to place a quick kiss to the tip of your nose. “You already know I like you. Sometimes I think maybe too much.”
You smiled so hard you were sure your cheeks would split.
He looked down at the cursed shirt from last year’s Secret Santa wryly. “It was a pretty shit gift, hey?”
“Yeah,” you hummed thoughtfully, “but I don’t know. I’ve kind of grown attached to it now. Rudolfo has that sadness in his eyes that you only see in Eastern European gay porn.”
You were rewarded with a round of his giggles. Somewhere along the way, they had become your favourite sound.
“Dude, you are fucking ridiculous.”
It was spring when Mark Lee stumbled his way back into your life again.
Only this time, he was here to stay.
taglist: @fancypeacepersona















